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Show we ; Herald WEDNESDAY, APRIL Daily a> ae8, 1964 MineStrike Showdown of commerce in Utah were named in Provo today. They are, from left, seated ; Mrs. Odessa Cullimore, first vice president; Mrs. Fern Ercanbrack, president, and Mrs. Rollo J. Anderson, second vice president. Standing, Mrs. Ernest J. Wilkins, third vice president. LadiesForm [Mary A. Whitehead First Utah Springville CC Division (Continued from Page One) Simeon Boyd Turpin Long Illness WomanDies Fatal for SPRINGVILLE — Mary Alice By United Press International SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) — The western coal mining operations of United States Steel Corp have been completely halted by a series of strikes. About 90 men left their jobs at Somerset Mine near Paonia, Colo., Tuesday, bringing to 400 the number who have been idled by the walkouts. The dispute began last week at Columbia Mine near Dragerton, Utah, when 60 men quit work in a dispute over application of a new contract between the United Mine Workers and Bituminous Coal Operators Association. The work stoppage spread later to U.S. Steel’s coal-cleaning plant near Wellington, Utah. U.S Steel officials have termed the strike a “wildcat” walkout. Union officials said the dispute centered around the number of men required on a crew to comply with safety regulations. NEW YORK (UPI) — Reynolds & Co. says it feels the long period of rising stock prices has not ended and advises customers to “‘let their profits run.” Temporary price setbacks, it says, should be used to make new purchases. 10 DAY SALE Apr. 9 thru 18 Thursday thru Saturday CITY DRUG committee said such action could be done without altering existing parallel parking by painting lines on the street marking four lanes. The commission moved to have Police Lt. Paul Anderson mark the street for four lanes and also mark a center line on First South. The committee said that if traffic congestion then continues on Center Street, First South should be altered to four lanes by removing parking on the street. A last recommendation by the committee stated that if traffic congestion persisted after converting both First North and First South to four lanes, consideration should be given to changing First North, First AYTINAL eg. $2.4 Reg. $3.98 AYTINAL 2 3X4 Y DROPS Anefrin. 3/, There is no better way to show your love and ect than with a Barre Guild Certified Monument. Call today or visit our monument display. BEESLEY MONUMENT AND VAULT CO. 725 So. State St. Ph. FR 4-0580 BARRE GUILD Monuments OREM 1042 Seuth State _ AC 6.3100 ASPIRIN °o ® f O54 = NYLONS ® i 2:70") 5 98° Shave Cream 3 a> aN \ Giant 11 ox. Aer Liver OIL 2299' 85° Shampoo With Essargg. Formula 20, 8 Ox......rccccsescescceesenscseonseese: PERFECTION 49° Baby Oi SEAMLESS °o a Plain, Flavored. Pt. ALY 2:99" MOUTH WASH All-Family formula. Hand Lotion Guards against Finest quality. 3 @...00-sscereccemesesese: detergent burn, 75° Babykot Syrup 9580) Bottles. Pleasant taste. 4 O£........csccssscesspeseqeoes E_G9* BEBatyLotion290" SmokersToothaste_9279° 2/24 Sustained Action | ‘ COLD ‘CAPSULES of 190 Multi-vitamins for children. Rohbock Sons Floral SUPPOSITORIES Glycerin. Infants or Adults, 12's...........-.------ k Cleansing-Refreshing. Keller. Pi VITAMINS with MINERALS Reg. $3.98 OLA VITOL|) OLUTION every cccasion. bali aoa) OF THE GOLDEN RULE Grove it Odorless. Walgreens. Pint.......cccseser-cscceceee. oz ‘= —S) $1.98 arrangements AS! ie 2" 2 |\Vitamin C Tabs: fashioned for Pleasant ment will be in the Springville Evergreen Cemetery. Rubbing, Pt. .......... Dralelercleleiceristerers Bottles mam. Reg. Exquisite the until 12:30 Saturday, Inter- 69 MINERAL OIL Multi-Vitamins Pleasant Cherry Flavor, tool West to one-waystreets. Her... in Mary Alice Barkdall Whitehead funeral services will be held in the Springville 3rd Ward Chapel Saturday, April 11 at 1 p.m. Friends maycall at the Berg Mortuary of Springville Friday from 7 to 9 p.m. and at the Mortuary BH JUNIORcnewaste South, First West and Third will please Interment City Cemetery. Simeon Boyd Turpin services pending. | 98° SACCHARIN Children Love... Pleasant Grove man of the traffic committee. 8 and Thursday prior to services. SERVICES Harry Gamber funeral services will be held in the Berg Drawing room Chapel Thursday April 9 at 2 p.m. Friends may call Thursday prior to services. Interment will be in Springville Evergreen Cemetery. 5 gr. Walgreens. Bottle of 100,...--cccce-seere-- Susie Ethel Miller Woodard funeral services will be held in the Orem Community Church, 100 No. 400 East, Rey. Don Foster officiating. Friends may call at the church prior to services. Interment will be in the Orem City Cemetery. William N. Whittaker is chair- mortuary Wednesday from 6 to MorTUARY 55 ALCOHOL. 256 (Under The Time and Temperature Sign) Mortuary Orem FR 3-6668 Amanda Elizabeth Farr funeral services will be held Thursday 1:00 p.m. at Our Chapel of Memories. Friends may call at the f TWO for the Price of ONE Plus ONE CENT! CENTER STREET and UNIVERSITY AVENUEin PROVO Olpin-Sundberg to the Center Street project. The| of the language. 85 East, 300 South BerG--- Fy SaHL suggested that First North from |or-bound notto report anyof it First East to Fifth West be|as long as MacArthur wasalive changed from a two-lane street|because of the seriousness of to a four-lane street in regards|the charges and the frankness Our Chapel of Memories ULM, Germany (UPI)—West German Chancellor Lidwig Erhard Tuesday scotched talk af a planned meeting -with Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev as “speculation without any reality.” He said he was ready for such a meeting “at the right time and if there is any prospect of reaching an understanding. ” WITH PURCHASE FROM OUR bo) elem a Cael aa ae Road Proposal | Betrayal landing ‘just “before. the _neartragic mishap’ sent the plane “bumping” into the swamp. The nose of the airplane plowed into the mud and the blue and white jetliner cracked “Tike a hard boiled egg.” The crack in the fuselage occurred just forward of the wings. Crew Calms Passengers Later, p gers reported that near-hysteria had gripped the travelers but the quick-acting nine-man, Miami-based crew calmed the 136 passengers, leading them out emergency doors on to the wings or placing them in quickly inflated life rafts. There was no fire. Airport emergency crews, New York City firetrucks, ambulances and policemen converged on the crash area, about 200 feet south of a heavily traveled boulevard. Police used shears to cut through a wire mesh fence surrounding the airport grounds to rescue the passengers. ‘Walgreen AGENCY J" Provo Man Barkdull Whitehead, 84, 60 E. Simeon Boyd Turpin, 51, 664 of the division and aid its fi- 500 N., Springville, died this N. 6th W., Provo, died Tuesday |morning in the q. evening at Utah Valley Hospital nancially when necessary. |Eldred Hospifollowing a lingering illness. During the meeting today, ital of causes © He was born Feb. 1, 1913 in seven women forming the nu- jincident to. oe Fairview, a son of Clarence and — cleus of the division accomp- | age. Caroline J. Brady Turpin. He maried Phyllis Matson Jan. 24, lished early requirements for She was born | *" 1937 in Nephi. He was educated organization such as electing Feb. 26, 1880 in Fairview and Mt. Pleasant officers.. Other items such as |in Hatton, Millard county, a and was graduated from the bylaws will come at later meetdaughter of Sanpete High Scliool. Mr. Turings. pin worked as a coal miner in Elected to aid Mrs. Ercan- Samuel Michjael and Mary Mrs. Whitehead Huntington. brack were Mrs. Lloyd L. CulFollowing his marriage he president;|Ann Littlewood Barkdull. She| limore, first vice Mrs. Rollo J. Anderson, second|married William Whitehead|™moved to Fairview and then vice president; and Mrs. Ern- |Feb. 8, 1901 in Provo. He died moved to Huntington where he worked in the Fairview and est J. Wilkins. |March 20, 1944. The marriage Huntington Deer Creek mines. | Seven directors were also se| was later solemnized in the Salt He moved to Bingham Canyon} lected and include: Mrs. Frank |Lake Temple. Mrs. Whitehead in 1940 where he worked for the H. Gardner, Mrs. J. Robert |attended school in Meadow and U. S. Mine. In 1944 he moved Bullock, Mrs. Richard D. Poll, following her marriage she to Castle Gate, where he workMrs. Kent Tolboe, Mrs. Max moved to Springville where she ed in the Castle Gate Mines. Hansen, Mrs. Ivo Anderson and had resided since. She was a In 1950 he moved to Provo Mrs. Lynn Knudsen. Mrs. Ann memberci the Springville Third |where he worked for Geneva Spears, chamber secretary, Ward, was active in Relief So- Steel where he worked in the will be secretary for the diviciety, genealogy and temple blast furnace department. He sion. Mrs. Ercanbrack said. that work until her recent illness. was also employed by the DTR She worked several years on the Co. for several years. For the more directors may be added Old Folks Committee of the past two years he has been emwhen the division is fully organized and a need for more Third Ward. Mrs. Whitehead ployed as the Fourth District was a member of the DUP, Court bailiff. He was an elder directors is shown. The immediate aim now, she Spring Creek Camp. Her hobby and a ward teacher in the LDS | Church. said, is to obtain membership. was making quilts. Surviving are five scons and Surviving are his widow, ProMr. Wotherspoon said that one daughter, Lloyd, and Grant vo; one son and two daughters, such a division of the chamber would serve to tie together the Whitehead and Mrs. Golden | Reynold B. Turpin, Provo; Mrs. interests of women’s groups in (Olga) Smith, all of Spring-| John G. (Pauline) Clark, Provo; Provo in carrying out projects ville; William Whitehead, Blue- Mrs. Duane H. (LuAnn) Berand goals requiring united ef- bell; Clifton Whitehead, Salt rier, Salt Lake City; two grandLake City; James M.; Spokane; children; two brothers and two fort. 11 grandchildren and -11 great- sisters, Clarence M., Fairview, grandchildren; one brother, Wil- Rex J., Orem; Mrs. Ralph E. liam Barkdull, Inkom, Ida. (Thelma) Jorgensen, Provo; Funeral services will be held and Mrs. Vernon (Ina) Hicks, Saturday at 1 p.m. in the Eugene, Ore. (Continued from Page One) Springville Third Ward Chapel Fuenral services will be held Taylor Burton, but noted that with Bishop F. Colvin Packard Friday at 11 a.m. in the Berg officiating. Friends may call at Drawing Room Chapel with if the experiment is done, the street would no longer function the Berg Mortuary, Springville, Bishop Blaine Norton officiatas a state highway. He there- Friday from 7 to 9 p.m. and ing. Friends may call at the fore suggested the removal of Saturday until 12:30 p.m. Inter- mortuary Thursday from 6 to the five-block segment from the |ment will be in the Springville 8 p.m. and Friday prior to ser| Bvereceet Cemetery. vices. Interment will be at 3 state system. p.m. at the Fairview Cemetery. If the road becomes a city Friends may call at the Fairstreet, he said, the city could view South Ward Chapel beutilize it as desired. tween 2 and 3 p.m. Commissioner Luke Clegg said that before the city took |(Continued from Page One) ST. PETERSBURG, -Fla. such an action he would want to study all the facets of the way and hinted that former (UPI) — Outfielder Frank |Secretary of State Dean AcheThomashas been sent back to situation regarding the condition of the street and what its main- |son curbed Trumans instincts New Yorkfor further treatment for an all-out war for victory in of his ailing left shoulder. tenance costs are. Thomas who has been out of The city commission did act |Korea, according to Lucas. on a suggestion of Chamber of |_ Lucas, who won a Pulitzer action for about a week, inCommerce traffic committee,|Prize for his coverage of the jured his shoulder reaching for the Internal Circulation Com-|Korean War, kept the memoin a line drive while playing third mittee which met Monday and his files until today, feeling hon- base March 23. (Continued from Page One) away-from-home expenses. The railroads had served notice that any strike against an individual railroad wotld be OREM — William Albert considered a strike against all Smith, 57, died in San Jose, lines. Management had blocked Calif. Monday after a lingering two previous threatened strikes illness, Mr. Smith was a foragainst individual lines with mer resident of Orem. ~ court injunctions. © He was born Feb. 3, 1907 in After 7,200 engineers, firemen, Richville, Morgan county, a son conductors and trainmen struck of William and Mary Ann Smith. the Illinois Central, Wolfe met He was a teacher and a farmer with top railroad negotiators, by profession. Mr. Smith gradthen issued this announcement: uated from Brigham Young Uni“The operating unions’ assault versity. He was . member of on the public, launched without the LDS Church. He married warning in the dark of night Cindy M. Alkilma in 1931. They against the Illinois Central and werelater divorced. He married its customers, is typical of the Wanda Davis Gray June 29, unions’ continued irresponsibili- 1940, They were later divorced. He is survived by his father ty in the featherbedding dispute. “As neither the railroads nor| of Morgan; one daughter, Diane the public can tolerate this S. Bath, Orem; two sons Nolan guerrila warfare, the railroads Bert Smith, Provo; Wesley Smith, Orem; two grandplan to post their revised rules, | Evan Kv as affirmed by the U.S. Supreme) children; one brother, Frank Court at 12:01 a.m. Friday,|Smith, Richville and twd sisters, Mary S. Smith, Morgan; April 10.” and Lucy S. Spong, Ogden. To Post Work Rules Funeral services will be held | A spokesman for Wolfe said the rules would be posted on all| Friday at 1 p. m. in the Myers major roads except the Southern| Mortuary, Ogden. Friends may Railway, Florida East Coast,|call at the mortuary Thursday and the Central of Georgia.|evening and Friday prior to Those carriers are bargaining| services. Burial will be in the Morgan City Cemetery. separately. The unions had been attempting to conduct individual nego-| prevent strikes against them. The railroads’ strategy has tiations with the Southern Pacific and the Louisville & Nash-| been to block any separate talks ville. Restraining orders were|and force the unions into naobtained by the companies to'tionwide bargaining. Citizen Dies Pits Spreads ong SCOTCHES TALK Jet Crashes FormerOrem (Continued from Page One) AtU.S.Steel WOMEN CC LEADERS—Officers of the first women’s division of a chamber William Albert Smith $1.29 a Dre oa 84FirsthidCream929° $12 Antacid Liquid 39°Cold Sore Balm 9:40° 159° Children’s Aspirin 2: 60° EF 98° Acne Cream 2:99° Y/, gr. Walgreens. 100 age ColdCream : 299° e Cleansing “Perfection.” 8 |