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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)

SUNDAY, JttT Annie H. Wright Daphne R. Loveless Weather Forecast Sunday Herald Touch-Down for Astronauts on Moon Expected to Occur Sometime Today Obituaries By United Fret Isterutkaal Pwo Salt Lake City, Ogden and Logan: Partly cloudy through today; highi in the upper 90s; probability of rain in the valleys If per cent scanered thunder shoers with risk of few heavy showers The second blast was of 17 seconds duration and lowered As th spacecraft settled into lunar orbit, Armstrong mjulo UlUUfcll WUdV, UdJ ujn -r i BOrth with few afteraoon! telecast. Collins signed off by, and evening thunderchowers; As th. moon nks.

Brother Of Springville Woman Dies ORDERVILLE Funeral ser- vices for Robert Dovington Chamberlain, 58, Orderviite, Ia Rrinl(r. Dr. Delbert R. Holes Am. Fork Physician Dies at 52 rwi AMERICAN FORK Dr.

Del- Pi. Grove Native Succumbs OGDEN Funeral services for Annie H. Wright, 89, Ogden, a native of Pleasant Grove, were held Saturday in Ogden. causes incident to age. Burial will be in the Ogden City Cemetery.

Arthur Penrod Native Of Provo Dies Of Illness see oi the walls of other craters. It was quite remarka b3e- Bs Gd Day a Late Saturday the astronauts firi another burst on the engine of the main spacecraft which Collins will fly in lunar orbit while Armstrong and A'drm take their monn walk. i ii lis xrjuu riLFin uuuci nm south: lowi 5S4S5. 'boa bert R. Hales, 52, 16 N.

Center, of SpringviUei wm be Won-American Fork an American day pm ta 0 1 pnysi-ns dan, "imay caU Monday from noon to I in the Salt Lake LDS Temple. SALT LAKE CITY Ma? Most Banks, Merchants WilL Remain Open for 'Moon Day' Government offices and, up services both Monday and schools will generally be closed J4- JJeovo City library Monday to mt schools in the area will moon landing, while st banks remain open PnrA. Sak I jit. Pity native of Provo, died Thursday at tne veterans nospiiai ra aaii Lake City of a long i'iness. He was born Oct 31, 1912, in Provo, a son of William Fuiwia and Sf-rah Good man Pfnrod.

He married Velma Elizabeth Denhal- ter on Oct. 9, 1937 Heber. i Mr. Penrod! Mr. Penrod attended Pro-1 vo Citv Schools, participating in all variety of sports.

He grad uated from Provo High School. from ICS in accounting and i later apprenticed for Blumen- thai Plumbing and Heating. Company of Provo. Following his marriage, he and hi wife made their first home in Provo. They later mov.

ed to Venice, in 1940, where Mr. Penrod attended a special school in refrigeration and piumDing ror snipping ves- sels at San Pedro, taw. I 1 As a veteran of World Warirns Ward OiaM M5 son Orem Lady Succumbs To Stroke 1 i OREM Daphne Robests Loveless, 71, 665 E. 800 at born Nov. 1893 in Provo, a daugnter of Adelben and Martha E.

York Roberts. She married George W. Mrs. Loveless Loveless March 27, 1911, in Provo. Their marriage was later solemnized rs.

juovriess ucuueu rruru Public schools and later the Active is the LDS Church, she served in the Relief Society. She had raised her children on what is now known as the Sharon LDS Stake Welfare rarra Her n0DDies icfcded fishing 811(1 other outdoor sports and music. She plied the piano and 'ang. Surviving are six daughters and seven sons, Mrs. John (Maureen) Hazard, Jeffersos- ville, Murray G.

Loveless, Mrs. Milt (Helen) Iittlefield, IMrs. Wayne (Leola) Jacobsen, Mrs. Grant (Dixie) Mildenhall, Delbert L. Loveless and Robert L.

Loveless, all of Orem; Glen w. Loveless, Dean E. Loveless and Wendell R. Loveless, all cf Provo; Mrs. Boyd (Norma) Worthen, Austin, Mrs.

Robert (Fae) Lewis, Bountiful, and Don R. Loveless, Granger; 49 grandchildren, and 25 great- grandchildren, Funeral services will be Tues- Ujav at 1 n.m. at the Orem 31st Orem, Bishop DeLynn Heaps officiating. Friends may call at the Sund- berg-Olpin Mortuary, 495 S. State, Orem, Monday from 7 to 9 p.m.

and Tuesday prior to the services at the ward chapel. Burial will be in the Orem City Cemetery. Alvie Young Mona Man Succumbs MONA Funeral services for Alvie Young, 55, Mona, are Monday at 1 p.m. at the Mona LDS Ward Chapel. Mr.

Young died in Billings, Wednes day of an illness. Friends may call at the An derson Funeral Home in Nephi, tonight from 7 to 9 p.m. and Monday at the Relief Society room at the chapel prior to the services. Mr. Young was born Dec.

27, 1913, in Mona, a son of Os borne and Bertha Molyneux Young. He married Katherine LaVerne Orgill in 1944. They later separated. Mr. Young received his education in Mona and at Juab High School.

He was a rancher most of his life. Survivors include his widow of Nephi; three sons and three daughters. Mrs. Bud (Vicky) Van Ausdal, Grantsville, and Ted Young, Jolene Young, Deb-ra Young. Dennis Young afid Kevin Young, all of Nephi; three grandchildren, and two sisters and one brother, Mrs.

Kenneth (Danelda) Newberry and Mrs. Lincoln (Cora) McMaghlan, both of Heber, and Herman Young, Mona. Burial will be in the Mona City Cemetery. Edith Nash, 84 Dies Friday Edith Hone Nash, 84, 10th S. 10th Springville, died July 18 in a Spanish Fork rest home.

Services, tentatively set for Wednesday, will be announced detail by the Wheeler Mor- tuary, Springville, Valleylcioudy of ff'. in Salt Lake, City of cancer. He was born Dec. 2, 1918, in Ameri can Dr. Hales Fork, son of ti Rav and Laura Bird Hales He married Barbara Bailey on June 11.

1947, in tht Salt Lake LDS Temple. Dr. Hales graduated from Spanish Fork High School in 1936, and later graduated from Brigham Young University in 1942 with a BA degree. In 1950 he attended the University of Pennsylvania Medical school graduating at this time. He interned it the LDS Hospital in Salt Lake City prior to prac ticing medicine.

At a veteran of World War II. Dr. Hales served as a mem ber of the OSS in the Middle Fast, and later as a counter Intelligence otficer following the invasion Normandy. Active in the LDS Church, he served a mission to Germany from 1937 to 1939. He was a seventy end had served in the Alpina Stake Sunday School jjuperintendency.

ZTAs a physician, Dr. Hales Sad practiced medicine in Xmericaa Fork for 18 years. Et was a member of the Utah County Board of Health and had seived as president of the American Fork Hospital staff two different terms. He has also bt a director of the Utah Academy of General Practice. Surviving are his widow of American Fork; four daughters and two sons, Karen Hales, JoAnne Hales, Laura Hales, Caroly.i Hales, David Ray Hales and Mark Bailey Hales, all of American Fork; his par ents of Springville, and one sister and one brother, Mrs, Hal M.

(Aileen) Clyde, Spring ville, and Dr. George G. Hales, Blackfoot. Ida, Funeral services are Monday at 11 a.m. in the Alpine LDS Stake Tabernacle.

Friends may call at the Anderson and Sons Mortuary in American Fork tonight from 6 to 8 p.m. and Monday until 10:30 a.m. Burial will be in the American Fork City Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, the family suggests contributions be made to the Dr. Delbert R.

Hales Memorial at tht American Fork Hospital. Emron M. Birch Native Of Juab County Dies at 60 SALT LAKE CITY Funeral I jr hi vis Midway Native Succumbs DUCHESNE Funeral services for Claude Davis, 76, Duchesne, native of Midway, are Monday at 1 p.m. in the Olpin Mortuary in Heber, where friends may call tonight from 7 to p.m. and Monday prior to the services.

Mr. Davis died at an Orem nursing home of causes incident to age. He was born June 24, 1893, in Midway, a son of Fred and Mary Ann Luke Davis. He married Ella Muni They were later divorced. He married Stella Powell in Duchesne.

She died May 26, 1954. Mr. Davis was owner and operator of Davis Garage in Duchesne from 1926 to 1960. Surviving are three sons and two daughters, Harry Davis, Salt Lake City; Eugene Davis, Duchesne; Ted Davis, Orem; Mrs. Rex (Fern) McDonald, Heber, and Mrs.

George (Winnie) Gollinger, Kearns; 1 2 grandchildren, and 13 great-grandchidren. Burial will be ta the Heber City Cemetery. Gory W. Curtis Services Held for Man, 38 SALT LAKE CITY Funeral services were Saturday in Salt Lake City for Gary Williams, Curtis, 38, Salt Lake City, a native of Santaquin. Mr.

Curtis died Thursday at a Salt Lake hospital of an illness. He was born Oct. 13, 1931, in Santaquin, a son of Norman D. and Vilate M. Garfield Curtis.

He married Barbara Fair in 1948, in Salt Lake City. They were later divorced. He was a member of the LDS Church. Mr. Curtis was a veteran of the Korean War.

Surviving are one son and one daughter, Raymond D. Curtis, and Patricia Ann Sparks, both of Glendale, one grandchild; his parents of Salt Lake (City, and three brothers and one sister, Clair Curtis, Taylors, ville; Richard Curtis, Hunter; Kent Curtis, Salt Lake City, and Marilyn Higley, Provo. Burial was In the Salt Lake City Cemetery. James W. Howarth Last Rites For Nephi Native Set SALT LAKE CITY Funeral services for James Whitworth Howarth, 82, Salt Lake City, a native of Nephi, were Saturday in Magna.

Mr. Howarth died Wednesday i na Salt Lake nursing home of natural causes. reported: "Apollo 11 is getting Ha first view of the landing approach. Good Preview "The pictures that were brought back by Apollo 10 gave us a very good preview of what to took for here. It looks very much like the pictures, but like the difference between watching a real football game and one on TV.

"There's no substitute for actually being here." Later, he said: "We're over Mt. Marilyn at the present time." The mountain, named after the wife of Apollo I astronaut James A. Lovell, is one of the landmarks leading to Apollo landing site on the barren Sea of Tranquillity. Although the Apollo 11 crew hasn't been known for its talkativeness, Armstrong started radioing back description even before the spaceship swung behind the moon and into lunar orbit As the spaceship made its approach, he told ground control: "The view of the moon that we've been having recently is really spectacular. It fills about three Quarters of the hatch window, and of course, we can see the entire circumference even though part of it is in complete shadow and part of it is in earthshine.

"It's a view worth the price of the trip." scheduled to be beamed back to The touchdown itself will be at a speed of about two miles per hour, and if all goes as scheduled will come at 4:14 p.m. EDT Sunday (2:15 p.m. MDT). The moon walk itself could come anytime after the land ing, depending upon what Armstrong decides. The original plan was to give the astronauts about 10 hours rest on the lunar sunace before letting mem begin the arduous moon walk in their heavy moon suits a task which has been likened to walking around in a deep sea divers suit This plan was devised, however, before officials knew how well the Apollo 11 crew would sleep on its outward voyage, and before Armstrong confessed that he probably would be too keyed up to sleep on the surface of the moon, in any event The initial scenes of the scheduled 2 hour and 40 minute telecart should scow Armstrong near the bottom of the sloping ladder on the left side of the screen.

Stretching out on the right of the screen will be the bleak lunar Sea of Tranquillity, with the horizon a scant half mile distant. After Armstrong becomes accustomed to walking in moon gravity-and his gait likely will be more of a nop man a waiK he will make his way to the camera, take it from its bracket and show Aldrin coming down the ladder to join him on tin hostile moon's surface where the temperature varies from 250 degrees beio zero to 250 degrees above. Earth viewers will also see Armstrong jab an eight-foot staff bearing a S-by-5 nylon United States flag into the lunar crust A spring-loaded wire will hold the flag out "fly" above the airless moon. COPIES While You Watch STANDARD OFFICE SUPP11 40 W. TOO N.

Ph. 373-5256 I Berg Mortuary Services Arthur Penrod, Salt Lake City, funeral services will conducted Tuesday at 2 pm. In the Berg Drawing Boom Chapel of Provo. Friends may call at the mortuary Monday evening from 6- p.m. and Tuesday prior to services.

Bishop Robert Manookin of the Provo 2nd Ward will officiate in the services. Full military rites will be accorded by the Wasatch 1 Disabled Veterans of Provo. Interment In tht Provo City Cemetery. Eta Ward Heal, Provo. funeral services will be held Tuesday at 11 a.m.

in the Berg Drawing Boom Chapel of Provo. Friends may cau Monday evening at the mortuary from 6-8 p.m. and Tuesday prior to services. Bishop Max C. Rawlings or the Provo Hth Ward will officiate in the services.

Interment In tht Provo City Itheir orbit to a Pt" rargag from about 62 to 7 miles mgn- a by 108 mph. the moon PM Armstrong reported matter or factly. The astronauts then pressurized their lunar lander, "Eagle -riitig on the nose of the command moduie-for a two hour checkout to be sure all was in readiness for Sundays historic landing. cwi restrict gum- mer classes will dose except secondary level music classes, and outdoor classes held at the Joaquin and Maeser schools. VIA tVTV fcJWrv The music classes will continue because participants are planning concerts either Monday or Tuesday and the final rehears als are vital.

Utah Technical College at Provo announced Thursday it would not held classes Monday, in compliance with the Cover-nor's proclamation. Classes will be held Monday at BYU, but the student body, just beginning the second ses sion cf summer school, is in vited to watch television coverage on sets placed throughout the campus whenever any stu dent is free to do so. According to Warren Gaston, retail merchants council chairman, only four stores will They are, Hoover's, Shriver's Clothing Store, Clark's, and Knight's Men's Shop. At least SO percent of the food "1 Timetable (Continued froai Page One) pounds of dirt and rock fragments). 3:33 a.m.

Moon explorers deploy scientific experiments on lunar surface. 3:37 a.m. Astronauts begin collection of detailed sample of moon material. Sample (also about 50 pounds) taken from documented areas and data carefully recorded on it. 4:19 a.m.

Alarm climbs back up ladder and enters cabin of lander. 4:34 a.m. Armstrong re enters cabin of moon lander. Astronauts pump air back in and take off outer moonwalk garments. 5:46 a.m.

Astronauts open cabin hatch and toss out equipment and supplies they no longer need. Hatch closed for last time. 6:05 a.m. Armstrong and Aldrin eat, then rest for four hours and 40 minutes. 1:10 p.m.

Astronauts fire ascent engine of lunar lander, a critical step if they are to return to command ship circling overhead. 1:57 p.m. Ascent half of landing craft inserts into intermediate moon orbit. 2:48 p.m. Lander begins series of maneuvers, aiming toward rendezvous and docking with command ship where Collins waits.

5:27 p.m.-Command ship and lunar lander dock. Arm strong and Aldrin vacuum clean their equipment and spacesuits in preparation for entering mothership. 9:20 p.m. Ascent stage of moon lander jettisoned from command ship and abandoned in moon orbit. ANOTHER UTAH VALLEY OPERA TRIUMPH hit MUSICAt PREMIER! FOUR STAGE PERFORMANCES JULY 23, 24, 23, 26 el ft OREM HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM TICKETS ARE GOING FAST AT WAKEFIELD'S in PROVO OREM CHAMBER of COMMERCE fcfll "ly '1 4ii 1 P.m.

Mr. Chamberlain died of heart "ilment Thursday in Fairvlew, Sanpete County, eunai wui 09 in iu uruer- viile Cemetery. Eva W. Heal Provo Lady Succumbs In Hospital Eva Ward Heal, 88, 341 S. 300 Piovo, mother of prominent Provo residents, died Friday at the Utah Valley JfrfjUt Hospital of causes incident to age, She was brrn March 4, 1881, in Pleasant Grove, a daughter of Edwin J.

and Mary Alice She married Mrs. Heal Backus Ward. Thomas Henry Heal on Dec. 8, 1909, in the Salt Laxe LDi Templa. He died Feb.

6, isw. Mrs. Real received ner eariy education in the Pleasant Grove schools. In 1889 she moved with her parents to Provo. where she completed her schooling at the old Webster School, where the Provo First LDS Ward chapel now stands.

She later attended Franklin School and Parker School. Mrs. Heal attended Brigham Young University, studying music under Professor A. Lund and Madame de Lorey. In 1902 she was Miss liberty Belle of Provo.

While attending Parktr schools she was organist. Prior to her marriage she worked with her father in their lumber mill. Following her marriage she made her home in Provo with her husband. Later, from 1946 to 1948, they served a two-year mission to England. Active in the LDS Church, she was a member of the Provo Sixth Ward.

She had served in the Provo 14th Ward Primary, Relief Society and other organ izatioos for many years prior to her Sixth Ward membership, She served as an organist and chorister, and had done ordi nance work in the Salt Lake Temple from 19S7 to 1960. Her hobbies were singing, fancy needlework, gardening and music. She had sung at many church and civic gatherings, including one occasion where she sang for President Tsft at the Provo Tabernacle. She hal also sang in the Salt Lake Tabernacle and at the Grand Theatre In Salt Lake City. Surviving are three sons and one daughter, Stanley H.

Heal. W. Ward Heal and Ray M. Heal, all of Provo, and Mrs. George (Evelyn) Pewtress, Magna; 16 grandchildren; 23 great-grandchildren, and one sister, Mrs.

Samuel P. (Grace) Park, Provo. Funeral services are Tuesday at 11 a.m. at the Berg Drawing Room Chapel, 185 E. Center, Provo, Bishop Max C.

Rawl-ings, Provo 14th LDS Ward, officiating. Friends may call at the mortuary Monday from 6 to 8 p.m. and Tuesday prior to the services. Burial will be in the Provo! City Cemetery. 37J-M4J 225-6124 7S5-350S Stent HUU Shea.

Ma pie ton, requiem mass will be conducted Monday at 9 a.m. in the St Francis Church in Provo. Koly Rosnry will be held Sunday at 8 p.m. at the Olpin Family Mortuary, 86 East 800 mth, Provo, where friends may call Sunday evening from 6-8. Burial in the Mt.

Calvary Cemetery in Salt Lake City. I 4 v. I Olpin ana mercnanu ww i open, but there are exceptions on most levels. A spokesman for the Utah Bankers Association said the state's money institutions will not observe a "moon day," but will remain open in compliance with banking regulations. The spokesman said the banks are remaining open because neither President Richard M.

Nixon nor Governor Calvin L. Rampton has declared a legal holiday. On the federal scene, the So cial Security Department will close, but the Post Office and Forest Service will work on the usual holiday schedule. State offices will close except for those agencies essential to the public safety or welfare. Such departments as the Highway Patrol and Utah State Hospital will continue to function.

All liquor stores will be closed. Utah County offices will close except for a brief time Monday morning when a pre-hearing meeting will be held in the county commission chambers at 10 a.m. on the proposed Provo Canyon highway develop- ment. The east door, adjacent to the parking lot will be opened st 9:30 a.m. and will be closed following the meeting.

The sheriff's office will be closed, but deputies will cos- tinue to patrol, answering calls as usual. Provo City government offi ces will observe the holiday, but the Waste Removal Department will continue normal pick Russian Luna (Continued from Page One) landing or landing attempt but said Luru 15 was carrying out its "scientific research in near moon space." The Soviet government continued the silence it has maintained since Luna 15 was launched last Sunday but scientific sources have predict ed it would scoop up some moon sou ahead of Apollo 11, The speculation was that this might have been accomplished by a Lunar module. The reports circulating in Moscow of a possible landing would account for an unusumly long telemetry report picked up by the British tracking station at Jodrell Bank. Sir Bernard Lovell, director of Jodreli Bank, reported a 64-minute burst of signals today and a new orbit which spokesman said would make chances of a collision with Apollo 11 "absolutely infinitesimal." No Indication Lovell said, "You cannot absolutely exclude the possibility that it might have been transmitting to a capsule on the surface of the moon." But spokesmen at the tracking station said tney iiad no indication a Russian probe actually was on the moon. 49S I.

Stat. Oram 223-1 350 Wood row Que Draper funeral services will be conducted Wednesday at 1 p.m. in the Orem Sixth Ward Chapel, 1500 North State Street. Friends may call at the Sundberg-Olpln Mortuary of Orem Tuesday evening from 7-9 and Wednesday at the Chapel prior to services. Burial in the Orem City Cemetery.

Raphne Roberts Loveless funeral services will he held Tuesday at 11 a.m. in the Orem 31st Ward Chapel, 545 South 8uO East in Orem. Friends may call at the Sundberg -Olpin Mortuary in Orem Monday evening from 7-9 and Tuesday at the chapel prior to services. Interment in the Orem City Cemetery. Cumbers II, he entered the service Nov.

30, 1943, serving with the Yankee Division of the 104th Infantry Regiment which was active in the European Theatre during the war. He was wounded in action in France and re ceived his discharge in 1946. After his discharge he return ed to Provo where he went to work for Dennies Own Bever age Company for several years. For 15 years he worked as a pipe fitter for U.S. Steel at Geneva.

He moved to Salt Lake City in 3967 to be close to the Veteran! Hospital because of ill health. Mr. Penrod was a member a. the LDS Church. He war also a member of the Wasatch Disabled Veterans of Provo, and of the United Steel Workers of America.

His hobbies were sports, and he was active in forming Little League Baseball in Provo. Surviving are his widow of Salt Lake City; five sons and one daughter, Arthur Byron Penrod, Samuel Kaye Penrod and Charles Ryan Penrod, all of Salt Lake City; John William Penrod and Mrs. Keith (Mary Ellen) Scott, both of Provo. and Ronald Wilmot (SDike) Penrod, Fort Bliss, tt fAx trrandchildren; ms mother of Spanish foric, ana one brother and four sisters, David Penrod, California; Mrs. Faye Clayton, Orem; Mrs.

Arnold (Deon) Mooney, Provo; Mrs. Victor (Pearl) Norman, Salt Lake City, and Mrs. Elbert (Beth) Davis, Spanish Fork. Funeral services are Tuesday at 2 p.m. in the Berg Drawing Room Chapel, 185 East Center, Provo, Bishop Robert Man-ookin, Provo Second LDS Ward, officiating.

Friends may call at the mortuary Monday from 6 to 8 p.m. and Tuesday prior to the services. Burial will be In the Provo City Cemetery, where full military, rites will be accorded by the wasaten uisaDiea veiw and of Provo REMAIN OPEN SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)- The firms which will remain, open Monday, the day of the Apollo moon lanaing, mciuae Astro Cleaners, Orbit Graphic Arts Company find Space TV Service. MEMORIALS ef BEAUTY ta'ri'iiw'i- KM Tit tOUUtl if BEESLEY Monument Vault Company 725 S. State Ph.

374-0580 services for Emron M. Bircfi, 60, Salt Lake City, a native of Knightsville, Juab County, were held Saturday in Salt Lake City. Mr. Birch died Wednesday at a Salt Lake hospital of natural causes. He was born Aug.

21, 1908, 'in Knightsville, Juab County, a son of E. Franklin and Rosel- tha McEwan Birch. He married Helen Gear on Feb. 21, 1930, in the Salt Lake LDS Temple. For 25 years he had been a Denver and Rio Grande Rail-road of filial.

had also been secretary "and treasurer for the Sioux Consolidated Mining Company, -the Eureka Mercantile Commission Company and other positions. Mr. Birch had served as sistant postmaster in Eureka for several years also. OPEN SUNDAY 1 1 cm. 9 p.m.

1 1 to fill your rfll ImI emer9ency rSCmv Jy drug needs Is yyj IE. CENTER ''p? 'I 373-7210 CSTY MUQ I Express Sympathy with a FLORAL SPRAY PROVO FLORAL 2M EST 1st SOUTH 373-7001 'J VUttrf ft! 8.

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About The Daily Herald Archive

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