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The Daily Herald from Provo, Utah • 4

Publication:
The Daily Heraldi
Location:
Provo, Utah
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

torena C. Nelson S. A. Carter WEDNESDAY, MAY 3U-lXt Utah Obituaries Daily Herald Ex-SpanisK Fork Man Dies In Carbon County urn JNGTON. Carbon Coun Death Claims Woman Of Lehi Orem Officer Injured in Wyoming Crash OREM Orem police report Stock Market PURN1SH3 IY OOOMOOY AND CO WANT Members ef Now Ysxk Stock txchcmg SALT LAKE CITY James Rodger Farn worth, 21, died Saturday; funeral Thursday noon, Cannon Second LDS Ward Chapel, 1173 Gkndale Drive (1140 West).

LaPreal Baam Ames, 71, died Monday; funeral Thursday 11- Grant 11th LDS Ward Chapel, 3151-Ninth East Ott Ernest Dolotinske, -72, died Monday; funeral Thursday 2 p.m., E. 7th South. OGDEN Harry B. ESert-son, 56, died Monday; funeral Thursday 11 a.m., Chapel of Flowers Mortuary, Ogden. Esther Kathrya Berner Ziegler, 71, died Monday; funeral services needing from Myers Mor BOW JONS AVIRAGtS Tatal WW MMuotrMs lUHi MMW Monday1 CI UN.N aM tO-J M.I4-M4 tuary.

Ogden. Debra A. ty Funeral services for John Franklin rmegw, tru ton, a former r-rw Spanish Fork resident, will be conducted Thursday at am in tne Wellington Second LDS Ward Chapel with Bishop Rateh Chris- tensen efflaat- mt. noegw htf. He died Sunday at the Carbon County Hospital in Price of complications following an automobile accident, i He was bore April 7, 1891, at Smimville, De Kalb the son of Harvey Ander son and Josie Cleopatra nne-gar.

He had been a resident, of Utah for the past 66 years. He married Grace Mud Ellis, Sept 10, 1918, in the salt Lake LDS Temple. He had resided to Spanish Fork from 1933 to 1958 where he was engaged to the insurance business. For the past 10 years he owned and operated the John F. Pinegar Insurance Agency and the-Tuxedo ington.

An active member of the LDS Church, he had served as a stake missionary in Palmyra Stake, Spanish Fork, past pres ident of the Third Ward Elders Quorum, secretary of the High Priest Quorum in Palmyra Stake, group leader of the High Priest Quorum and secretary and coordinator of the LDS Wel fare Program in the southeast ern region of Utah. He had also served as a Sunday School teacher for many years. He received his early education in the Wellington Schools. Survivors include his wife of Wellington; four sons and two daughters, David Ralph Pine-gar, Spanish Fork; W. Lynn Pinegar and Max L.

Pinegar, both of Salt Lake Oty; Rex Pinegar, Provo; Mrs. Jack (Murl) Christianson of Orem, and Mrs. J. E. (Jean) Hyder of East Flat Rock, NrC.j four sis ters, Mrs.

Elden (Sarah) Van Wagoner, Salt Lake City; Mrs. Josie Eves. Anaheim. Calif- Mrs. Walter (Ellen) Van Moor- lehem of Cucamonga, and Mrs.

Kenneth (Martha) sampi of Las Vegas: 33 grand children and eight great-grand- cnuaren. Friends may cafl at Chanel of Memories Mortuary in Spanish Fork tins evening from 7 to 9 p.m. and one hour prior to ser vices at tne Wellington Second Ward Thursday. Burial will be" in the Wellington Cemetery. Speedway (Continued from Page One) spun and collided on the northeast turn, and before the green came out again Art' Pollard, among the first ten.

spun out on the northwest turn. The cars were single file, in the same position as when the race was called Tuesday and with Jones in the lead, when today's installment of the "500" roared off just before 11 a.m. EDT. There were 32 cars in the field Fabrics for spring sewing have two common denominators exotic combinations of primitive colors -and designs, and total launderability. 1 LEHI Vera Victoria Stewart Schow, 71, died Tuesday in the American Fork Hospital fol lowing a stroke and short illness.

She was born Jan. 2, 1896, in Lehi, a daughter of of Harry Jasper and Hannah Victoria norm StemarL Ste was mar- Mrs. Schow ried to A. Randal Schow, May 29. 1018, in the Salt Lake LDS Temple.

Mrs. Schow was a member of the LDS Church, having held positions as a teacher, auxiliary leader and genealogy worker. Prior to her illness she was stake president of the Primary, and had been working as a Re lief Society visiting teacher. Survivors include her husb and; five sons, Alvin G. Schow Lehi; Russel S.

Schow, Pleasant Grove; Wesley S. Schow, Travis Air Force Base, Randal Dee Schow, La Habra, Morris Schow, Downey, 22 grandchildren and one great-grandchild; brothers and sisters. Raymond H. Stewart and Mrs. George (Eva) Carson, both of Lehi; Harry G.

Stewart of Ogden; J. B. Stewart of Salt Lake City, and Mrs. John (Isola) Lewis of Orem. Funeral services will be con ducted Friday at 1 pm, in the Wing Mortuary of LeM, where mends may can iTJursday from 7:30 to 9:30 pjn.

and Friday prior to services Burial will be to the Lent CMy oemetery L. Ashton, Royden G. Derrick, Robert B. Hilbert, Herbert F. Smart, and C.

Rell Swensen, all Salt Lake County; John A. Lambert Summit County; LeRoy Morrill Y. Siddoway and Briant H. Stringham, all Uintah County. Lynn S.

Ludlow acts as sec retary-manager of the district The area of the Sevier River Basin was recently added to the. district and Wallace Jeffery, Delta, was named to represent the Millard area the basin on the board of di rectors. A representative the Sevier area of the basin will be. named in the near future and each of these two men will have one-half vote on the board. Following today's ground breaking, three projects making! up the Starvation Complex will begin construction simultaneously.

Starvation Dam itself, located about three miles above Du chesne on the Strawberry River; Knight Diversion Dam, on the nearby Duchesne River; and Starvation Feeder Conduit, which will carry water backed up by the Knight Diversion Dam to Starvation Reservoir, will be built at the same time. W. W. Clyde Construction Springville is the contractor for the feeder conduit, Goodfellow Construction Com pany will built Starvation Dam and United Structures, will construct the diversion dam. NECTARINE MELBA Top scoops of vanilla ice cream with ripe fresh nectarine halves, then spoon on slightly thawed frozen raspberries.

Orem Man Dies at 83 OREM Samuel AuthneS Carter, 8S, 377 W. 400 Orem, died Tuesday at the loarea hos- ptUd of natural He was born Sept 23, 1883, in Mt Pleas ant a son of John and Jan nett McArtb urr Carter. He Bjarried Susan Ashton, July i in Mr. Carter the Logan LDS Temple He attended school at Wa- satch Academy rJutf.Brigham Young University. Mrr Carter served a British Mission from 1905 to 1907, and held the position of High Priest the LDS Church at the time of bis death.

He bad served in the bishopric of the Mt Pleas ant ward, and as ward clerk the Sharon Ward in Orem. He had always been interested in genealogy work, working both in ward and stake positions. He had "workeT ta theNorm Sanpete Bank in Mt, Pleasant and was a fruit farmer and poul-tryman. He had recently owned a saw sharpening business. Survivors include his wife of Orem; sons and daughters, Ray Carter, Orem; Mrs.

William R. (Beth) Bugler, Orem; Eari A. Carter. Alpine: Mrs. Frank J.

(Fern) Terry, Salt Lake City; Mrs. Leland (Tbelme) Erkkson of Bountiful; 24 grandchildren and six great-grand(Mdren; one sister, Mrs, M. P. (Akneda) Warren of Whitebird, Ida. Funeral services wiQ be con ducted Friday at noon in the Orem Third LDS Ward.

50 S. 750 with Bishop Garth Seastrand officiating. Friends may call at the OlpirrSuraerg Mortuary in Orem Thursday from 7 to 9 p. m. and at the chapel one hour prior to services Friday.

Burial will be in the Orem Oty Cemetery. Payson Lady Continued from Page One) married to Lyman Kapple Sept 14, 1910, the Salt Lake LDS Temple. She attended schools in Pay- son and Snow College at Eph-raim in addition to State Agri cultural College. Active in Church She was an active member the LDS Church, working in the Primary for 35 years, two years of which she served as president. She and her husband served a six-month mission in the Northwestern States In 1946.

Mrs. Kapple was well-known as an organist and pianist and had given lessons on both. At the time of her death she was organist for the Third Ward Relief Society. She had prev iously served as organist where she had lived in Arizona and Nevada, and was organist at the St George Temple in 1960. Survivors include her hus band of Payson; one daughter, Mrs.

Glen R. (Wilda) Peterson of Bunkerville, three grandchildren and four great grandchildren; three brothers, Robert Allen Taylor, Richfield; Joseph Hiatt Taylor of Payson and James Milton Taylor of Provo; five sisters, Mrs. Adelia Houghton and Mrs. Frank (May) Keele, bom of Salt Lake City; Mrs. Manassa (Luzetta) Blackburn; Mrs.

Nora Jane Royes of LeGrande, and Mrs. Floyd (Dora) Pendleton of Provo. FuneraJ-seraces-wflUe4 nounced by Rigby Mortuary of Payson. Commercial timberlands cover four million acres in Utah. About one third of the state is forested.

Public ownership includes more than 3.3 million acres of these forests and private ownership amounts to acres. MM ipjumihj, to that Vera Stiel, identification officer for the police depart ment is being transported to Orem today by police ambulance from Laramie, Wyo. Officer Stiel was injured seriously last weekend in a one-car ac cident outside of laramie. mt. wue.

wno was also injured in the accident T7as able to return home Officer Stiel suffered a broken bone and other injuries when the car rolled over several times. Further details were lacking. Starvation Dam (Continued from Page One) the entire southwest is fast ap proaching the critical stage. In his speech. Representative Aspenall traced the history of the Colorado River, pointing out that Utah is entitled to the con- supmtive use of 1,265,000 acre- feet annually of Colorado River water.

He said this is sufficient to provide water-needed for the taitiathasenr Utah Project (including the Bonneville Unit) for the next 20 to 25 years. 'However," he warned, "there would not be sufficient water to meet more than half the supply for the ultimate! phase of the Central Utah Project as presently planned." Power Revennes Mr. Aspenall pointed out that the CUP will produce, over the repayment period, $92 mil lion in excess power revenue assist development in Utah and the 21.5 per cent of the Colorado River Storage Project excess power revenues will amount to about $208 million. Other special guests sched uled to speak briefly, at the Bonneville Unit Day ceremonies included all four members of Utah's congressional dele gation Senators Wallace F. Bennett and Frank E.

Moss and Representatives Laurence J. Burton and Sherman P. Lloyd. Former U.S. Senator Arthur V.

Watkins was slated to give the invocation and Utah Gov ernor Calvin Rampton was on the speaker list Represen tative Aspinal was in trod by Floyd E. Dominy, commis sioner of the Bureau of Recla mation who also spoke briefly. Indian Dance A colorful ceremonial tribal dance was to be presented by the Ute Indians of the Uintah- Ouray Reservation. The ceremonies marked the beginning of construction for Starvation Dam, the first pro tect to be undertaken on the giant Central utan- rrojecrs Bonneville Unit. When the Bonneville Unit is comDleted.

over the next 15 years, a total of some $325 mil lion will be spent in construction and the units of the project will develop water in the Uintah Basin and transport this water to the Wasatch Front area. Water will be made available for irrigation, municipal indus' trial and power use from Salt Lake" City south to the Sevier River Basin, Special facilities for flood con trol, fish and wildlife and recre ation are also incorporated into the units. Water District The Central Utah Project is being administered by the board of directors of the Cen- ral Utah Water Conservancy County, is serving as presi dent, with Leo L. Brady, uu-chesne County, as vice president. Other directors biclude Leo P.

Harvey, G. Marion Hinckley and Sterling D. Jones, all Utah County; Leo H. Haueter and William J. Ostler, both Duchesne County; Roscoe Garrett Juab County; Clifford i' $QQ Santaquin Woman Dies at 84 SANTAQUIN Lorena Carson Nelson, 84, died of natural causes Tuesday at the Paysoi city Mospnai.

She was born Sept 4, 1882, in Fairfield, Utah, a daughter of John and Emma Partridge Car- son. She was married to Wil- Ham christian Nelson hi Pro- Mrs; NeJsoa vo. Their was later solemnized in the Salt Lake IDS Temple. He died Jan. 1933.

She was educated in the Fair- field and Lehi Schools. A member of the LDS ChurdL Mrs. Nelson was active in the Relief Society. Her hobbies were garuenW. quilting and sewing.

survivors-jncwae- two-sons and one daughter, Rees Nelson of Santaquin, Charles Nelson oi Provo, and Mrs. Cree (Melba) dren and five great-grandchildren; one brother and two sis ters, Warren Carson, Orem; Mrs. Jerry (May) Hancock of Los Angeles, and Mrs. Minnie Tegan of Bountiful. Funeral services will be conducted Friday at 11 m.

in the Santaquto-Tintic Stake Center, with Bishop O. Doyle Crook officiating. Friends may call at -Chapel of Memories Mortuary in Spanish Fork Thursday from 7 to 9 p.m., and Friday at the Stake House prior to services. Burial will be in the Santaquin City Cemetery. CLOUDINESS of the variable kind with show ers mis afternoon, tonight and Thursday.

A few afternoon or evening thundershowen. Coo-tinned cool. Highs this after. noon Thursday near 68. lows uus afternoon and Thursday near 60.

Lows tonight near 40. Probability of rain 81 per cent ATHENS (UPI)-The, Greeks-have a word for their tourist business "good." Figures released by the National Tourist Organization showed there were 24,080 independent arrivals Greece in February this year, compared with 21,302 in February, 1966, an increase of 13 per cent In terms of foreign currency earned from tourists, figures available cover the month of January, 1967, when the amount was $6,041,000, compared with $4,034,000 in January, up 49.7 percent OR CALL B.YJJ. Extension 2087 JUNE SPECIAL 1 All I Garden SuppliesV rio w3o. I HAILSTONE I PETS AND PLANTS If RIVERSIDE PLAZA UM County, SttJSl.J W-J Jli -77 .11 IM-T ww-rf AMfftlCAN STOCK EXCHANOI OWOTATttNo anday waonaaoay ua wan onana Air Wa IW Day MUM 10 Paoarat Ranrvo TVt TV Nav Park a SH Paomrajtwi Wi Itovca SaaOoanJ Air Unaa If JH mm IS OVtk THE COUNTER WaAwioty' Quotation: Aibartton' Amau Sua Pfd STOCKS Bid Aakao MB 400 SlOt MM 7I OS 4.00 SIS H.7S 4 50 SO 00 370 WIS S.7S 4.50 S.7S 22 00 22.75 AmHciii Saving Bank of Amarfca Doaaraf Ptiarmae Equity Oil Pirat Saeurl Xarp Fir at Sacurlk Inv oooWop Rfs Skagg Drug Com 00 Skaggt Drug Ptd si.r Suraty LH aJS State Hospital 'Fire' Proves false Alarm An tnparft ottort in the wir- kkj of (be fir alann system the Utah State Hospital set off the sJarn) at the Provo Fire Department shortly befow noon today. Three trucks responded to the alarm, but when they arirved they found no cause lor excitement Soviet Ships (Con tinned from Page One) force of troops were airlifted to the United Arab Republic today to bolster Nasser's forces, Baghdad Radio reported.

There rwere no details of size of the unit but the troops included Lt Qais Abdel Rahman Aref, 18, eldest son of Iraqi President ABdel Rahman Aref, He told a farewell ceremony, "you will fight with your brothers in the UJUt against Zionism. Join Kiwiitl Troops The Iraqi troops will win brigade of Kuwaiti troops Another Cairo report quoted Sudanese presidential council member Khadr Hamad as saying the Sudan was sending troops, applies end cattle "for fighting a decisive battle against Israel and imperia lism." Early Ankara reports said two Russian ships completed the Bosporous passage this morning. The Dardanelles re port came later. According to political circles in Ankara are con vinced the Soviet ship move ment was due directly to the Middle East crisis. They said the Russians wanted the ships there to offset the American and British warships already in the eastern Mediterranean.

U.S. Ships Near Commanders of the U.S. 6th Fleet, which Arabs have ac cused of being a potential shield for Israeli "aggression" in the current Israel-Arab confrontation, have declined to say where their ships are. But at least one fleet task force was reported not far off the Israeli coast. Another task force' built around the mammoth aircraft Carrier America moved in the Sea of Crete.

UPI staff correspondent Harry Stathos reported from the America the force had been shadowed by a Soviet destroyer and trawler for several days. One group of 6th Fleet ships was earring 2,000 Marines on a routine exercise." Under the 1936 Montreaux agreement ships can pass through the strategic Bosphor- ous: without asking Turkish permission. But warships must ask the Turks for approval Sides With Arabs The Soviet ships moved as Al Ahram, the semi-official Cairo newspaper, reported that Turk ey- key U.S. defense ally- has vowed not to allow American military bases on her soil to be used against the Arabs in the current Middle East crisis. ki Kabul, Afghanistan, visiting Soviet President Nikolai V.

Podgorny warned Tuesday night Flowers or gift of beauty for any occasion. PROVO FLORAL 201 WEST 1st 8. PBOVO S73-7M1 OpaaSdayt waak a.m. lo 1 1:30 pj. NEW VOftK STOCK IXCHANCC OJUOTATMiS Monaty Wianaiaoy CM Opto ARM OMmtcal StV AM CMnr tMk AMntnwn Ui Amarfcaa Can American and SH Sti Aiinra Pub tarvfco Artant Da AMI I It I Kit Bwr HM 3 7V CunM Chrytur Corp 41 40 Cto Fval and Iran I Dow CtiHnloftl KMA Da Pont MS 144 Eaatman Kesak lMVt 13SV El Po Natural Gaa isv M'4 For Motor Camp JO SO Gararal Dynamic Caaaral ElaoMc Central Food Ganaral Mators Cora) 73Vs 7Wt 7ft 7SV 41V 41' attt 4A CH OU Hada Mi Int But Mack sa 47 470 Karfflocotf Cappor v7 JW ISM IXVk 4IVk Ung Tarn lM LHio Ina ft SAeOomN Aircraft 41 Mum Mng Mrs iv Moruan OMmtcal 4H Mont90rr)ary War) S4I MM Fual Supply 88 Mm ttam ana: Mta Ogom Cora 9 OMn MawJiawi 7 Outooar Marina SW Pacific ea an Eta Pan Anartcaa Park Davt Pannay Vt PtvlHlpt Patrelaum PotaroM Corp KM Praetor and Gambia tm Radio Corp of Amor aWt Rapubhc Mao) 44ft Ravlan 45 Raynoldt Tobacco Ww hn Raabuck aft OH Cat ttuoabtkar Corp .7 on Taxat Ovtf tutehar Ut Tdttro Ine n4 Timkan RoUor RoorfflOj 409k Tranaamar Trfi WofM Warrants Wfc TwiwHtiti CsflKpyy aooo W4 Union C)fMda (Mian PacWe P.

4Mt Unltad Mr Una to Umias Park Ctty 4M Umttd Ifataa Stool 44 (Man Powar and Light a Wtatorn Ak Unas 45 WafNrn Ban Car) SW4 aaNnghout Elao nww hi ma WartWngton Corp) 6ft 1M S6'4 Vk 4l t7M 4 MV K4 S7 01 US 404 70 nt 47t SH 4U 4JV4 Ml SOV slant U.S. Bombs JContinoed from Page One) Vietnamese troops from eon-trolling the border. Two companies of the 4th Marine Regiment took Hill 174 Monday and the Memorial Day sweeps pushed gainst Communist bunktra grounding the MIL The Communists had used the bill to fir mortars it Con Thlen. U.S. officials said seven North Vietnamese were killed in the fighting and one Marine died.

They said 45 other Marines Were wounded. A battalion of the 9th Marine Regiment uncovered a vast camouflaged North Vietnamese camp a sweep Tuesday about three miles Kuth-eouthwest of Con Thlen. The camp, containing 100 bamboo bunkers covered with dirt, was used by Communist troops harrassing tne Marines. In the air, U.S. jets flew through light ground fire to tomb and strafe the Hoa Lac MIG base for the ninth time.

'The jets hit runways and taxiways at the base 20 miles west of Hanoi Three Planes I Communist guns shot down an "Air Force F4C Phantom over the North Tuesday. Both crew members were rescued. Spokes- men also said a U.S. Marine A4 (jet and a UH1W helicopter were i lost while supporting the Marine sweeps in the northern provin-J ces. The jet's pilot was killed but the' crew aboard i helicopter escaped injury.

U.S. pilots also bombed i strings of railroad yards along the lines running between Hanoi and Communist China. The payloads sent smoke curling 3,000 feet into the sky at the Kep rail yard 28 miles northeast of Hanoi. I At the same i Vietnam boasted that Commu- nist troops had killed 175,000 allied soldiers, including 70,000 i American GIs, in South Viet-t Dam in a seven month period ending April 1967. According to U.S.

reports, just more than 10,000 Americans have been slain in the 5, entire war. OLPIN SUNDBERG innez, two-year-old daughter of Val and Oralie Spinoza Dom- inguei, died Monday; Mass of the Angels Thursday 10 a.m., St Mary'i Catoiic Church, Ogden. KEARNS Betty Gillies Harris, 52, died Monday; funeral Saturday 10:30 a.m., 4330 S. Redwood Road. MAGNA Rah William Jenkins, 54, died Monday; priv ate funeral Thursday; 11 a.m., 8525 W.

2700 Magna. MT. PLEASANT Airman Second Class Clifford LeRoy Menzies 20, died Sunday; funeral services will be in Ger sham, Ore. BEAVER Abram Glenn Gillies, 75, died funeral Friday 1 p.nu, Beaver First-Third LDS Ward Chapel. John C.

Brownflekl, 96. died Mon day; funeral Thursday 1 p.m., Beaver Second LDS Ward ChapeL Erma W. Warburton PL Grove Woman Succumbs PLEASANT GROVE Erma White Warburton, 71 died of natural causes Tuesday in an Orem-reat home. She was born July 2, 1895, In Pleasant Grove. daughter of Hanmer J.

and A i Fenton White. She was mar- Mrs, Warburton ried to Wei lington Warburton, Sept 28, 1911. in Pleasant Grove. He died Oct 4, 1965. Mrs.

Warburton was a former Utah State Training School nurses aide. She was a member of the LDS Church. Survivors Include one son and three daughters, LaVerl Warburton Pleasant Grove; Mrs. Clifford (Annivhe) Mans field, Samaria, Mrs. Charles (Gwen) Strohm of Ann Arbor, and Mrs.

Ralph (Carole) Lee of American Fork; 17 grandchildren and 22 trreat-erandchildren; one foster son and a foster daughter, Cecil Clark and Mrs. Vera (LaVetta) Newman, both of Magna. Funeral services will be conducted Friday at noon in the Timnanoeos IDS Stakr House, Friends may call at the Olpin Mortuary in Pleasant Grove Thursday from 7 to 9 p.m. and Friday prior to services. Buna will be in the Pleasant Grove Cemetery.

his nation will take "all possible measures against moves violat- toe neace anfjsunty in the Near East" "The imperialists want to violate the independence of the Arab nations by providing dangerous plots against he said. The ship movement reflected international concern that the Arab-Israeli confrontation. could light the spark of major warfare. All of these important feat ures are combined in a ticking made of Ffterglas Beta-whlch can be kept clean by simply sponging all surfaces with dense soap or detergent suds. 2-Drowcr XII S.IS.S.

AA Utter Size JM .95 Utah Office HE. CENTER, PROVO Open Fit and Mo. tU I lono ai vtpia i CAMPUS EDUCATION VJEEK PRE-REGISTRAUON SAVES MONEY AND TIME The registration fee for the full event Is $5.00. A Special Price of $4.00 is offered to those who register before Jane 4. Registration Card BRIGHAM YOUNG UNIVERSITY EDUCATION WEEKUnne 6-9, 1967 Send to 118 HRCB, B.Y.U, Provo, Utah 84601 Now Chedc This Businessmen Attorneys Doctors WHY BUY A NEW AUTOMOBILE? Don't Tie Up Your Money LEASE New BUICK-Electra or Rivisra (Please Print) i (Mr.) (Mrs.) (Miss) Lett Name First Middle Home address City and State ztp Code Stake ee Mission Ward or Branch Church Position wrth Air Conditioning.

Ai low i (Please fill out completely) MAIL TO: CAMPUS EDUCATION WEEK 118 HRCB, B.Y.U. PROVO, UTAH 84601 New Prix or Bonneville with Air Conditioning. SfiQ Ai low at 1 1 month MOTOR CO. Spanish Fork Ph. 489-5634 or 489-5635 Sowaal Aothaal Cortor, fmoroJ aanrlca will bo conductad Hday of 12 noon tha Oram Third Word Oiapal 50 South 750 W.

rland moy call at tha dpln-Sundbarg Moduory Tlwrodoy avanlns from 7-9 and of tha Chopal 1 hour prior to larvica. Intarmant lo iha Oram City Xatno-- "tJ 1.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
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