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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)

-4- Sunday Herald SUNDAY, JANUARY 14, 1908 Ule County. Thermometer Vice President Tells Suspect In Hoidup Arrested Obituaries Democrat Workshop Of Party Unity Need Calling Harry S. Truman one of i-Ll JOHN H. ZENGER Jcmes Goulding Ex-Provo, Orem Man Dies at 65 i HENRIEVILLE, Garfield County James Orlo Gould- ing. 65, former Provo and Orem resident, died Saturday in a Salt Lake City hospital.

He was bora Dec. 22, 1S32, at St. Anthony. a ion of James Arthur and Dora Smith Goulding. He married Fawn Mr: Goulding Hancock on Aug.

27, 1924, at the Salt Lake LDS Temple. When he was very young, Utah Valley Hospital Director Will Retire jonn n. veneer, aominis- 1 TT ft adminis- trator of the Utah Valley Hos- pital in Provo, will retire after 25 years c' service to tiiat in stitu'ion. stituuon GPANT C. BURGON Association and as a member aim as a of the Board of Trustees of the Idaho Blue Cross Plan, i Idaho delegate to the Amen- lean Hospital Association and can Hospital Association and LDS Hospital.

Heart Doctors Worried In General' He will be succeeded by een on a nduona countu Grant C. Burgon, currently the Jrerted at the health ad care administrator of the Idaho dians- Falls LDS Hospital. Mr. Bur-j Mr. Burgon has been at the gon will assume his duties on Idaho Falls Hospital for 12 March 31.

years, prior to this he served Mr fpniw aa involved years at the Salt Lake Mr. Goulding moved with his view. He died Nov. 27, 1929. country is as close to being family to Henrievllle were he She was a member of the their ally as even the Corn-grew up and attended school.

LDS Church and had been a munists could wish." After his marriage, he and his visiting teacher in the Relief I He urged Kennedy to "leave wife made their first home In Society. i the new left and return to the magna, where he worked In the Maena-Arthur MilL. In 1927 they moved Henrieville where they lived unti! mnvinff to Orem In 1942. 'then to Provo In 1947. iT1Vnr TJ i2 took him to several western states.

He and iiis wlfa served a two-year building mission in New Zealand from 1M to 1962, farming to be tax evaluated as CAPE TOWN, South Africa 'farmland instead of the land's (UPI) Doctors attending Philip1 potential. Blaiberg said Saturday they The association also raggest-were worried "in general way" that no predators such as about the world's third heart imported to the state transplant patient. and at the federal govern- "Nothing specific is worrying; ment provide fences around Because of ill health, he re tired two years ago and opened a specialty shop in Henrieville where he did custom cabinet work. the three major programs which increased the physical services of the hospital from 50 to 240 beds. During his Association of Western Hos- pitals, member of councils of the American Hospital Asso ciation, a fellow of the Ameri can College of Hospital Administrators, president of Blue Cross of Utah, member of the governing board of the National Association of Tuberculosis, president of the Utah Association and in many other health related as well as civic-oriented pro grams.

Prior to h' apmointment as administrator of the Utah Valley Hospital he had served ten years at the Salt Lake LDS Hospital. Grant C. Burgon is a graduate of BYU and has just com pleted 'i extensive expansion program which has brought the Idaho Falls LDS Hospital into the position of being one of the laregst and best equipped hospitals in the state of Idaho, according to LDS Church Hospital System officials. Mr. Burgon has served as President of the Idaho Hospital SALT LAKE CITY iL'PIi, A Salt Lake City man was arrested Saturday in connection with a bank holdup Thursday in Salt Lake.

The Federal Bureau of Lives-ligation identified the suspect as George Gilbert Sterling 323 W. North Temple, Salt Lake City. FBI Special Agent Earl Dal-ness and Salt Lake County Sher-iff's Deputies assisted in the arrest. Sheriff's deputies said Sterling had been free on bond after being charged in connection with the robbery of a safe- way supermarket less than two weeks ago. Sterling, a cafe operator, w-as hatnrn TT u'" "Iin tw rai ment Saturday Bond wa bat fl Jt wa? rpnnrterf that tJ1t.

hw man jn xhuray-s noldup at the Southgate Brancn of First Security Bank, 46 E. 3790 South, sterling is being held in the Salt Lake County Jail. i Provoan (ContiDUd from Page 0ne) of trespassing, me wool Growers also passed a resolu tion requesting passage of all five Utah constitutional amendments which will appear on the November ballot including one allowing lana used tor improved recreation sites oa of Land Management and Forest Service Lend. Legislation providing for compensation to stockmen when grazing land is removed from the public domain, the establish- reduction In wool tariffs were also suggested. The "Sheepman of the Year" award went to Lawrence W.

Matthews, Grantsville, from the Future Farmers of America for his "dynamic role in promotion of the sheep indus- try in Utah and his many con- Itributions to rural youth." Matilda C. Brady Dies at 93 of Natural Causes EUREKA Matilda Cruser Brady, 93, died Friday at the PayMin City Hospital of natur- causes. She had been a resi- dent of the i Wignall Rest home in Pay- son for the a a past 7H years, S'l ana Df lor to Lit UiQL iiOU LWH resident of Liz. Eureka for 46 years. She had lived in frr Mrs.

Brady 40 years before she moved to Eureka. Mrs. Brady was born July 18, 1874, tt Salt Uke City, to Charles Christian and Annie 1 Matilda Anderson Cruser. She marnea unasay a. uraay III on July 22, 1897, at Fair- Survivors include two sons and three daughters: James Bra'.

Santaquin; Webster (Ted) Brady, Moab; Mrs. Vio tor (Artie) Pett and Mrs. (May) Rostrom, both! of Murrav: Mrs. Kenneth! Kenneth 1 (Ona) Spurrier, Highland, 16 VandchUdren; 36 ei ter. Mrs.

Annie Johnston, Red' lands, Calif. Fun'eral "services will be Tuesday at 11 a.m., Keith Jol- ley Mortuary in Payson, lwhere friends may call Mon. from 7 to 9 and prior to serfim 'Burial wiJ1 at Fain-m Cemetery. Four-Year Old Orem Girl Dies in Hospital Beth Suzanne Koenie. 4.

174 West 900 South, Orem. died Saturday of complications fol- the Uni- versity Hos pital in Salt Lake City. She was born May 1, 1963 in Canon City, the daughter of Edward Walter and Rene a Koenig. Beth Beth moved to Provo July 1965 and to Orem in June 1967. She was a member of St.

Mary's Episcopal Church in Provo. She is survived by her parents; grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Waiter Koenig, Erwm, Tenn. and Mr.

and Mrs. John Carr Sikeston, great-grandmothers, Mrs. J. E. (Irene) Carr, Atlanta, Ga.

and Mrs. Winnona Adcock, Monroe, two borthers, Edward Walter Koenig III and John Memorial services win De held 10 a.m. Monday at St Mary's Episcopal Church in Provo, with Father J. A. Fra-xer Crocker officiating.

Friends may donate to a Memorial Fund at St. Mary's Episcopal Church in ihe name of Beth Koenig in lieu of flowers. Interment is to be in Erwin, Tenn. Weather Forecast Salt Provo: Lake City, Ogden and fair todav is cn in is is us, Dr. Christiaan Barnard said of the 58-year-old dentist wno reccivea we neart of a colored man 11 days ago.

"His throat infection has just about cleared. It's just that we don't quite know where we are. An active member of the LBS. Church, he was a high "priest. He served a home two stake missions, taught priesthood and Sunday School classes and was an adult 'Aaronlc Priesthood leader.

1 He, served, as mayor of 2 Henrieville and was on the "Garfield County School Board. JHe was active in the Republi- Barnard described Blaiberg 'ment of a rangeland fire "a little tired" and said trol fund and corjosition to any tne live greatest presidents of the century. Humphrey said Johnson is "that kind of a man. Give him the chance. Give him your best." A weaknesS of nation is division among us," he con- tinued -A challenge of this na.

tion unftrtaintv sem to refiect to the rest of the worra. "So give your suonort, not to a war, but to a cause." Humphrey talked of reforms instituted by the Democrat Par iy since 1960 and admonished delegates, "It's Ume you got thp maccorra Thpv'rp nrnorimc iwfi5. vj vtiauia Pdged by your party." Sargent Shriver, director of the Office cf Economic Oppor- tunity and former director of the Peace Corps, was scheduled to sneak at a noon luncheon in- to speak at a noon luncheon to- day. in Separate Utah Roads pedestrian, were killed in Friday highway accidents. In a spectacular thiee vehicle accident near Roy, 39-year-old Mrs.

Ospina Myriam DeBarr Columbia, South America, was killed. Her car was struck broadside by a semi-trailer in the intersection of SR 79 and SR 84. Ford Jeppesson, 53, Tremonto was critically Injured in the same accident He was driving a pickup truck which was ram med by the semi-truck following the larger truck's collision with the car. The semi and the pickup ca reened off an embankment with the semi coming to rest on top of the smaller truck. Jeppesson was pinned in his truck for more than an hour.

The driver of the semi, Leon Fisher, Po-catello, escaped with minor injuries. Sixteen-year-old Cynthia Bur rows, Granger, was killed when she was struck by a car at 4160 W. 3500 South about 9:30 p.m. Friday night. She was walking with three friends when she was struck as the four apparently tried to cross 3500 South.

The driver of the car, Janice Quarberg 33, was not injured. Cuy, Super-sued blanket to wrap comfort. Outstanding wy savings can Party Survivors include four and five daughters; Lavar 0. Still Flirts With Zero Wsekend minimum temperatures stayed frigid Friday night and early Saturday flirting with zero both above and below-but a little relief was forecast for last night and early today. Minimum temperatires ear- ly Saturday morning -vere- KOVO-government weather sta- tion in far southwest Provo, tnree below zero; aowniown Mountain Fuel station, six above, ana byu upper camp- us.

six aoove. uLnrA far uintr in-vviu wnw mi is nine below, reached a cou- pie of time, at the KOVO sta- tion which is always several degrees colder than downtown anfl Of! thft famnilS Farley Has Po 0n attacks the morals of the armed forces, the integrity of tne Pres- ident and the movites of his Democratic pany. I think if he re-examines his changing and confused positions, he will," Farley said. Labeled "Pled Pipers" The long time Democratic leader also criticized the "whole school of poltical pied pipers" including. Dr.

Benjamin Spock, and William Sloane Coffin, chaplain of Yale University, who "are misleading American Jfr out of A5811 Heritage. He said columnist Walter Lip-ting these pied pipers" by cll-ing the United Sttes a "corrupted democracy." "Any American who calls our country a corrupted democracy corrupting our youth and is himself corrupted by vanity. and cynicism. Farley called President Johnson a "great president" and predicted Johnson and Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey "will receive the overwhelming endorsement of the Amer- lean people when they go to tne polls in the November election." t-i i I reamer, aargem aimvei, ui-rector of the office of Economic Opportunity, urged the Democrats to make use of the war poverty as a rallying point the 1968 elections.

Shriver referred to the domestic war on poverty as the number two issue, behind the war In Vietnam facing the United States today. He said, "The war on poverty no longer a political liability. This war is now a political asset for the Democratic Party." Unification Successful Shriver told the Democrats from six western states the success of domestic programs a "unified Democratic Party." He added that poverty programs have also gained wide support among members of the Republican Party in the past three years. He pointed with pride to the gains made by the Office of Economic Opportunity In the past congressional session. "Congress has given unprece-dented endorsement to OEO.

We are the only domestic pro-eram to get more out of the past congressional session than we did the year Detore, ann-ver said. "The poverty program is suc cessful. This is one war we are winning." The OEO Director, referring to a recent story in a Wash ington newspaper, said, "The real issue in the upcoming presidential election is whether the United States will main- "Two Great enses" "The two great crises to be resolved by the elections are the war in Vietnam and the war on poverty in the streets of Amarica." Shriver called President Johnson a "global American." Berg Mortuary Services Phont F8 MI4I Mary Ilendricksen funeral services will be conducted Tuesday 11 a.m. in the Berg Drawing room Chapel of Provo. Friends may call at the Mortuary Monday evening from 6 to 8 p.m.

and Tuesday prior to services. Interment in the Provo City Cemetery. Dottie (fUchel Elisabeth) Bower funeral services will be conducted Monday at 12 noon in the Berg Drawing Room Chapel of Provo. Friends may call at the mortuary Sunday evening from 6 to 8 and Monday prior to services. Interment In the Provo City Cemetery.

It i i S.ALT LAKE CITY (LTD msiaeni nuDen h. Hum- Prey repeatedly echoed a con- vention theme of unity at a Democratic Party regional workship Friday, telling dele- gates, It time you got the message. Humphrey told more than 600 delegates from six western r-v states, "It's your party and I rfnn't infpnrf tfi vnn nfr thp r-r In hat began as a partisan ''T? sianuy reienea 10 spiuurr gnd saj(J one thj JohMon. t- i flnm siratmn stands for is concern" for the world and people of society. He said the Democrats have la history of disorganization, which he called "spring rain- ins" hut sinr th iOs havn ing." but since ths 1930s have pulled together at elections, 3 Persons Die Accidents on By United Press Internationa three persons were killed in separate highway accidents dur ing the weekend, pushing Utah's 1968 highway death toll to lour, The latest victim was a Roos evelt man killed in a three-car mishap on U.S.

Highway 40 near Roosevelt early Saturday. Dead was Joe King Grivet, 60. who was thrown from the car he was driving. Three oth er persons all women, sustained minor injuries. Grivet was driving alone at the time of the crash.

Two women, one of them a Provo Boy (Continued from Page One) plications of new problems with which he was faced as a result of the ever-changing situations inherent in a coun-terinsurgency operation. "The energetic application of his extensive knowledge has materially contributed to the overall effort of the United States in Vietnam. Reflect Credit "He was a motivating ex ample to all with whom he came in contact His devotion to duty, loyalty, and meticu lous attention to detail are in keeping with the finest tradi tions of the United States Army, and reflect great credit upon himself, his unit, the 25th Infantry Division, and the military service." Major Phillip C. Jeans, U.S. Army Reserves advisor, mad the awards after Sgt.

First Class Robert Perelmrji read the citations. Family Attends Attending the ceremonies with Eric were his mother, now Mrs. Omar R. Henkel, 641 E. 420 North, Provo; Mr.

and Mrs. Burns B. Riggs, the soldier's parents; Marjene Riggs, his sister; John E. Riggs, his brother; and members of Company 3rd Bat talion, 38th Infantry, 191st Brigade, Army Reserves. Many of the reserves had! attended Provo schools with Pfc Riggs.

Each of the members ol the immediate family received Gold Star lapel buttons which are given to the family of sol diers who die in battle. Emmy Lazarus, American poet, was born In New York City of Jewish parentage. 1 Htovy Steal Rtinforctd Concrete Covr and Vault. 2 V-typ groov plastic asphalt Mai unit ccvar Mcurely with vault. 3Archtd construction of eovor and V-typo sal afford oddl.

tior.al strength whore oorth weight and stress it greatest. 4 Available with artistically designed moulded cover for distinctive appearance or with ploin round cover. 5Beesley vaults are thoroughly seasoned for addtd strength and durability. Beesley Vaults are available through leading Funeral Directors. BEESLEY Monument Cr Vault Company 725 S.

State Ph. 374-0580 I 1 1 jr Goulding, Stockton, Thorald S. Goulding, Miller-' 1 Qhio; Mrs. (Dora) Monson, Provo; Mrs. Arhme Hasbrouck, Arcadia, Calif.1; Mrs.

William E. (Mazie) Francis, Ogden; Calvin A. Goulding, Chico, Burt D. Goulding, San Bernardino, Mrs. Dale H.

(Ruth) Harper, Sandy; Mrs. Ernest (Zoe) Maes, Albuquerque, N. 38 grandchildren, four brothers and three sisters, German Goulding, Orem; Ken-C. neth Goulding, Reed Goulding and Nephi Goulding, all of Henrieville; Mrs. Hugh (Aril minia) Farnsworth, Parowan; 'C Mrs.

Lawrence (Lavinia) Chy-t noweth, Grantsville; Mrs, Frank (Clatie) Savage, North 2 Las. Vegas, Nev. 5 "fttneral services have been orders had been issued to take his blood pressure every two to four hours instead of every 15 minutes so ftat he would not be disturbed so often. The Alaska Highway, longest gravel road in America, was hastily built as a military road in 1942. 1 Oust Covered Baking Wt efcimiisesely ttfttitMj 10 get tentatively for Wednesday Al TT 111 MT in the Henrieville LDS Ward when you open (or add to) your Dsseret Federal account in the amount of $250.00 or more.

jj Chapel. tain its global ideals or with-Generallv draw into isolationism. Aaron J. Sabey Dies at in Lehi LEHI Aaron J. Sabey, 76, died Friday evening at his home, 557 N.

400 Lehi, following a heart attack. He was born Dec. 10, 1891, in Lehi, the son of John and Amanda Bushman Sabey. He mar ried Ivy Sorenson on June 21, 1916 at the Salt Lake LDS Tem- pie. She died Feb.

22 1937, and he married Rachel Southwick on June 11, 1938, at Salt Lake City. Their marriage was later solemnized In the Salt Lake! Lui uempie. Mr. Sabey was educated in the Lehi schools. He was employed by Utah County for 21 years to worn ai weed anq in- Beci control, Piece Danish Swirl Milk Whits Casserole Set.

you in Corning Were! 1J4 (IWt, pa per lie Otlec issins is. 1 Worfti Saving for Safefo Your account is insured safe to $15,000 by a permanent agency of the U.S. Government Outstanding Earnings DFS currently pays the highest earnings on insured sayings in the Intermountain West. Outstanding Record of Service For 62 years, through wars, depressions and times of prosperity. DFS has never failed to pay a dividend and on t'me! LONGER HOURS TO SERVE YOU 8:30 a.m.

to 4:30 p.m. Monday thru Thursday 8:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Friday, with some high cloudiness and little change in temperatures; highs 25 to 35 and lows at night zero to 5 above: probability measurable precipitation less than 10 per cent, Logan: Fair through Sunday Provo's low for Saturday Morning was a chilly 3. The high for Saturday was 29.

National low for Saturday morn- jng was -33 at Bismark, N.D, Slopes cf Japan's Mt. Fuji are crowded with as many as 18,000 hikers a day during July and August A Floral Spray carries the feeling of sincert lympathy when words teem awkward. Rohbock Sons Floral 1042 SO. STATE OREM 225-SIOS ON SAYINGS CERTIFICATES "A member of the LDS Church, he was an elder in the Lehi Second Ward. Survivors include widow of Lehi; two sens and two daughters: Arthur Sabey, Mrs.

Wayne (Nida) Shaw, and Mrs. Kay (Elsie) Thompson, all of Lehi, and Soren Sabey, Afton, 13 grandchildren; 10 great-grandchildren; one brother and one sister, Jacob Sabey, Sheraden, and Mrs. Lexic S. Adams, Provo. Funeral services will be conducted Tuesday, 1 p.m.

at the Wing Mortuary Chapel with Bishop Dean Worlton of the Lehi LDS Second Ward officiating. Friends may call at the mortuary Monday from 7 to 9 p.m.- and Tuesday prior to the services. B2tial will be at the Lehi Cemetery. ON PASSBOOK SAVINGS ACCOUNTS SAVE AT THE SAVINGS rORNtt.

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About The Daily Herald Archive

Pages Available:
864,343
Years Available:
1909-2009