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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)

Std Lums P'ough Comput Oil Inc Inc Sci 161 741 8- 2 218 Herald MONDAY, NOV. 10, 1969 Provo. Utah Obituaries Death Claims Rites Wednesday For Former Juventa Payson Resident Paxman, 82 Juventa Greenwood Paxman. 82, 630 N. 3rd Provo, died Sunday morning at the Utah Valley Hospital of a short illness.

She was born Jan. 26, 1887, in America Fork, a daughter of Samuel and Elien Julian Green- wood. She Mrs. Paxman married Ernest Paxman on March 20, 1907, in the Salt Lake LDS Temple. Mrs.

Paxman received her education in the American Pork City schools. Following her marriage they made their first home in American Fork. In 1913 they moved to Cowley, for two years, and later to Rexburg, Ida. They returned to American Fork in 1918, and then moved to Provo in 1923, where her husband taught school. She was active in the LDS Church, serving as a Primary teacher and a member of the Manavu Ward Choir.

She had served as a visiting teacher in the Relief Society for 30 years. Active in the Daughters of the Utah Pioneers, she was a member of Camp Manavu. She was also member of the Provo High School Teachers auxiliary and of La Gail Matrons social club. Surviving are her husband of Prove; three sons and five daughters, Howard E. Paxman, San Francisco, Ralph LeSueur and Mrs.

William (Margaret) Preece, both cf Salt Lake City; Mrs. Mark S. Paxman, Austin, Richard G. Paxman, Santa Anna, Mrs. Malcolm F.

(Edith) D. (Ruth) Bowen, Spanish Fork; Mrs. Lucille P. Goates, San Mateo, and Mrs. Karl J.

(Carol) Thalman, Provo; 23 grandchildren. Funeral services will be conducted Wednesday at noon in Manavu LDS. Ward Chapel. Bishop John R. Halladay officiating.

Friends may call at the Berg Mortuary, 185 E. Center, Provo, Tuesday from 6 to 8 p.m. and at the ward Chapel Wednesday after 11 am. Burial will be in the American Fork City Cemetery. Myrl Murphy Succumbs of Heart Attack phy, 79.

2901 W. died Sunday evening MurCenter, Provo, at a local hospital of a heart attack. A April She 25, was Chester, 1890, born in Sanpete a daughter of William Adelbert and Anna Lavina Nielson Allred. She Mrs. Murphy married Albert C.

Christensen on June 28, 1911, in the Manti LDS Temple and he died January 1919, She then married Samuel Bert Murpny on Jan. 6, 1928, in Manti and he died in December of 1954. She was educated in Chester schools and attended Snow demy. She lived in Chester for 22 years, Ephraim from 1911 to 1928, and in Salina for 10 years, before moving to Provo 31 years ago. A member of the LDS Church, she was in the Provo Eight Ward and had been a visiting teacher and Primary teacher.

She was a member of Camp 1 of the Daughters of Utah Pioneers. Her hobbies were crocheting and handwark. Survivors include five sons and three daughters, Dallis A. Christensen, and Audie (Verna) and Mrs. L.

A. Carpenter, (LaVee) Holmes, all of Provo; Mrs. Thad (Sheleth) Lewis. Hollywood, DelMoine Christensen, Springville, Jerry B. Murphy, Bethalto, Ricnard D.

Murphy, Claypool, Roger H. Murphy, with the U' S. Army in El Paso, 27 grandchildren; nine great-grandchildren. Funeral services will be held Thursday at 11 a.m. in the Berg Drawing Room Chapel, 185 E.

Center, Provo. Friends may call Wednesday from 6 to 8 p.m. and Thursday prior to services. Burial will be in the Ephraim City Cemetery Weather Roundup By United Press International Provo, Lake City, 0g- den: Partly cloudy today, tonight and Tuesday; higns 50-55, low tonight near 30; probability of less than 10 per cent. Utah: Few showers and clearing south and partly cloudy north today; generally fair tonight and Tuesday but with variable clouds north; warmer afternoons south; highs in 505; low tonight 25-35.

UTAH-IDAHO TEMPERATURES Max. Min. Pcp. Burley 51 31 Cedar City 53 34 .03 Gooding 54 Idaho Falls 50 32 Lewiston S1 43 Logan 52 21 Ogden 54 35 Pocatello Provo 55 Roosevelt 56 25 St. George 60 45 .03 Wendover 48 33 NATIONAL TEMPERATURES Max.

Min, Pep. Atlanta 72 40 Bismarck 58 24 Boise 35 Chicago 47 41 Cleveland 47 .32 Denver 29 Des Moines 64 Detroit Fairbanks 07 Fort Worth 56 .02 Indianapolis Jacksonville 47 Juneau 37 Kansas City Las Vegas Los Angeles 60 Memphis 69 38 Miami 63 07 Mpls-St. Paul 56 40 New Orleans 79 New York 55 50 .02 Omaha 62 43 Phladelphia 58 53 Portland, Ore. 59 46 St. Louis 64 Salt Lake City 55 San Diego 66 ..0 San Francisco 70 56 Seattle 54 50 Spokane 52 39 Washington 58 54 .34 Winnipeg 41 36 Sunday's high was 90 at McAllen, Beeville and Houston, Tex.

This morning's low was 16 at Winnemucca, Nev. Native of Nephi Succumbs; Rites Wednesday LEAMINGTON, Millard County Mary Erva Pay Bradfield, 60, a native of Nephi, died at a Salt Lake hospital Saturday of natural causes. Mrs. Bradfield was born July 18, 1909 in Nephi, a daughter of William G. and Sarah Fowkes Pay.

She married Rand all A. Mrs. Bradfield Bradfield on July 9, 1930. in the Manti LDS Temple. Mrs.

Bradfield was active in the organizations of Primary, MIA and Relief Society in the LDS Church in Leamington. Survivors include her husband of Leamingion; one son, R. Dee Bradfield of Sandy; three grandchildren; two brothers, Clarence H. Pay and William F. Pay, both of Nephi; three sisters, Vilda Kay, of Goshen; Norma Anderson, Salt Lake City; Betty Sherwood, Provo.

Services will be conducted Wednesday at 11 a.m. in the Leamington LDS Ward Chapel. Friends may call Tuesday evening from 7 to 9 p.m. at the Anderson Funeral Home in Nephi, and at the chapel in Leamington on Wednesday morning prior to the services. Burial will be in the Vine Bluff Cemetery at Nephi, under the direction of Anderson Funeral Home.

use instead "geographic or pairing of classes, or both." Three law firms joined in the appeal petition with Attorney General Jack Gremillion cf Louisiana. The government, however, contended freedom of choice systems have delayed effective desegregation. Makes Eating With FALSE TEETH Easier and Faster Clinical tests prove you can now eat and chew better- make dentures more effective if you just sprinkle 8 little FASTEETH on your plates. FASTEETH is an easy -to-use powder that holds dentures firmer longermakes them feel more comfortable. FASTEETH is not acid- doesn't sour.

There's no gummy, gooey, pasty taste. Dentures that fit are essential to health. See your dentist regularly. Get FASTEETH at all drug counters. Commandos Hit U.S.

Airfield SAIGON (UPI) -Viet Cong commandos this morning broke into the U.S. airfield that provides helicopter support for South Vietnamese troops going it alone against the guerrillas' Cambodian border offensive. Five of the attackers, firing bazooka-type rockets, destroyed three trucks inside the Ban Me Thuot base while a simultaneous mortar barrage scored direct hits on six huts and a bunker, wounding eight Americans. Military spokesmen said one of the commandos was killed in the raid 157 miles northeast of Saigon, apparently in an effort to reduce the effectiveness of helicopter operations supporting South Vietnamese. None of the 'copters was damaged.

South Vietnam's 23rd Division, headquartered at Ban Me Thuot, has been dispatched to the border area north of Saigon to fight the guerrilla threat on their own in a major test of the Saigon army's readiness to take over the war. Since Oct. 2 28, the Allied troops have killed 276 Communist soldiers in border fights, officials said. In other developments today; -The U.S. Command said 4,500 GIs left the war zone last week under President Nixon's troop cutback program, reducing the U.S.

troop commitment to 490,700, the lowest level in more than 21 months. -American officials released a captured Viet Cong document calling for attacks across the battlefield Nov. 14 and 15, this Friday and Saturday, to coincide with antiwar demonstrations in the United states. The attack against Ban Me Thuot was one handful of skirmishes across the battlefield overnight. Spokesmen said a totai of 200 Viet Cong and North Vietnamese were killed against two Americans dead and 34 wounded.

One of the other fights this morning saw Viet Cong troops kill nine South Vietnamese militiamen and wound seven in an attack 120 miles southwest of Saigon on the Cambodian border. None of the attackers was killed. The guerrillas fired 33 rocket and mortar barrages against Allied targets during the night, inflicting light losses, spokesmen said. Thirteen Americans were wounded. Ban Me Thuot's airfield is the supplier of U.S.

helicopters and spotter planes for the counterdrive against the 7,000 man North Vietnamese offensive now under way along the border 110 to 130 miles above Saigon. The base also is headquarters for the South Vietnamese Army's 23rd Division, going it alone withoui U.S. ground troops against the buildup of Communist troops. One of the threatened Green Beret camps in the border region, at Due Lap, weathered a 40-round mortar attack Sunday without casualties. "We thing they are trying to get their coordinates straight" for artillery bombardments, a Green Beret officer said.

"This thing hasn't developed yet." He said a ground attack should come late this week. Trying to forestall such a Orem Lady Gives Birth To Daughter at Home OREM "Mama's having was the cry baby of Mr. and Mrs. Gale neighbors Lamoreaux, 1820 S. 400 Orem, received Friday noon.

By the time anyone arrived however, the ordeal was over and the Lamoreaux family had an additional member girl, weighing eight pounds five ounces, and measuring 21 inches long. Mrs. Lemoreaux, the former Mary Scheffler, was taken tail Utah Valley Hospital by the Orem ambulance, where she remained until Sunday evening, when both she and the baby returned home. She said that the only ones home at the time the baby was born were her three daughters and one son, ranging Stock Market Moves Higher NEW YORK (UPI)-The market moved higher Monday, with chemicals. oils and aircrafts leading the way.

Trading was moderate. After almost two hours, the UPI marketwide indicator was up 0.26 per cent on 1,444 issues on the tape. There were 711 gainers and 471 losers. The Dow Jones industrial average, which reflects movement in 30 selected blue chips, climbed 4.69 at 865.17. Du Pont rose more than 2 in the chemical group, while Atlantic Richfield and Natomas picked up better than a point each in the oil group.

Analysts said there was "plenty of cash on the sidelines," and some of it was making its way into the market despite an absence of stimulating news. U.S. to Seek (Continued from page One.) attempt at obtaining such information through efforts at the United Nations. North Vietnam is not a member of the world organization. The spokesman said the United States would argue that North Vietnam violates international law by refusing to disclose the men's names and refusing to allow the Red Cross access to them.

Hanoi has said that the American prisoners are war criminals and therefore are not entitled to the rights' under international law and the Geneva Convention on war prisoners. thrust, the U.S. Command this morning sent three waves of B52 bombers on raids along the Cambodian border, one of them hitting three miles southwest of the Bu Prang Special Forces camp, the sister outpost of Duc Lap. Military spokesmen said action across war zone overnight was generally light, with the exception of an apparently unsuccessful guerrilla ambush 105 miles southwest of Saigon, also on the Cambodian border. There, headquarters said, the Viet Cong attacked a South Vietnamese artillery convoy but were turned back by counterattacking helicopter gunships and armored personnel carriers.

FREE HEARING-AID SERVICE CENTER ROBERTS HOTEL Every Tuesday 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. phone 373-3400 or Springville 489-5919 TOM NELSON "Let me help you now" BELTONE 317 South Main Street-Salt Lake City, Utah 84111 HONOR TO VETERANS will be given at a special Veterans Day program tomorrow at Cherry Hill Elementary School in Orem. Three students, pictured above, currently have relatives serving in Asia. Don Hibbert, left, and Darrell Crompton have brothers in Vietnam and Thailand, while Leo Rowley, father of Sharlet Rowley, right, is a pilot in Vietnam.

Vets Due Honor By Cherry Hill Students OREM All war veterans, particularly those in the Orem area who have served in the Asian Theater, will be honorat a special Veterans Day program at Cherry Hill Elementary School. Nine veterans of the Vietnam war will be in attendance at the program and will be presented with copies of a book compiled by Robert B. Fox and enitled "Our Freedom, Our Liberty." They are Daniel P. Aldridge, Walter E. Berhow, C.

Eldon Bitter, Dennis Christen, Ricky Christensen, Paul Craig, Hy Hills, Eddie Nelson, and Wilburn Talbot. Three children of the school currently having relations serving in the Asian Theater. They are Don Hibbert, whose brother, Russell, is in Vietnam; Darrell Am. Fork Man Dies In Hospital AMERICAN FORK Leonard Giles Shoell, 70, 321 East Lane, American Fork, died Sunday in the American Fork City Hospital of natural causes. He was born Dec.

13, 1898, in Pleasant Grove, a son of Edwin G. and Sarah Melvina Cobbley Shoell. He married Mr. Shoell Hazel Lee Hunter on Sept. 21, 1921 in the Salt Lake LDS Temple.

Mr. Shoell was a lumber dealer. Active in the LDS Church, he had served as a high priest and a ward cierk. Surviving are his widow of American Fork; two sons and three daughters, Cecil H. Shoell, Ogden; Kenneth L.

Shoell, Pleasant Grove; Mrs. Beth Manning, American Fork; Mrs. Daniel (Vera) Cardwell, Roy; and Mrs. Kent (Melva Jane) Peterson, Lehi. 19 grandchildren, and twe brothers and two sisters, Phillip E.

Shoell, Clearfield; R. K. Shoell, Salt Lake City; Mrs. Orval (Caroline Carter, Pleasant Grove, and Mrs. Eunice Shumway, Lindon.

Funeral services will be conducted Wednesday at 11 a.m. in the American Fork LDS Eighth Ward Chapel. Friends may call at the Anderson and Sons Mortuary in American Fork Tuesdav from 7 to 9 p.m. and Wednesday until 10:30 a.m. Burial will be in the American Fork City Cemetery, MAKE A LITTLE MAGIC HAPPEN Brighten someones day with a gift of beautiful FLOWERS FROM ROHBOCK SONS FLORAL 1042 S.

STATE-OREM 225-3100 in age from seven to two. Her son, she said, roused the neighbors to her aid, but the new arrival was just in too much of a hurry to see the great big world and didn't wait for anyone. So, Mrs. Lamoreaux delivered the baby herself. The brown-haired, biue-eyed miss was born at approximately 4:50 p.

m. Friday afternoon and is in excellent condition. PAYSON Funeral services for John Edwin Peterson, 46, Salt Lake City, a former resident of Payson, will be Wednesday at 2 p.m. at the Payson LDS First Fifth Ward Chapel, 225 S. 400 Payson, Bish0 Dorman Seeley, PayMr.

Peterson son First Ward officiating. Mr. Peterson died Saturday in the Holy Cross Hospital in Salt City of a lingering illness. Friends may call at the Keith Jolley Mortuary in Payson from 7 to 9 p.m. and Wednesday prior to services.

Mr. Peterson was born Sept. 20, 1923 in Payson, a son of John L. and Flora Andreason Dallin on Sept, 3, 1946, in ProPeterson. He married Belva A vo.

They were later divorced. Mr. Peterson was a member of the LDS Church. He was a former employee of the Utah Poultry Farmers Co-op in Payson. Surviving are one son and two daughters, John E.

Peterson Jr. and Karen Peterson, both of Payson, and Mrs. Janet Lowe, Springville; two grandchildren, and one sister, Mrs. Melba Bryan, San Bernardino, Calif. Burial will be in the Payson City Cemetery.

Afton Reed Dies of Heart Attack Afton Waddoups Reed, 78, 91 N. 10 Provo, died Saturday at her home of a heart attack. She was born March 26, 1891, in Bountiful, a daughter of Mark and Cynthia Call Waddoups. She married Heber J. Reed on Oct.

5. 1910, in Mrs. Reed Salt Lake LDS Temple. Mrs. Reed received her education in Bountiful City schools, graduating from Davis is High School.

Following her marriage she and her husband resided in Delta until 1928, when they moved to Payson. In 1945 they moved to Provo, where they resided until her death. Active in the LDS Church, she had served as a teacher in the Primary and MIA, and had taught religion classes in the Relief Society for several years. She had also worked as a work director in the Relief Society. She was a past member of the Daughters of Utah Pioneers in Payson and was a member of the Jolley Stitchers.

Surviving are her husband of Provo; three sons and two daughters, Carl W. Reed and Merrill Reed, both of Orem; Mrs. LaVoire (Alice) Tanner, Provo; LeGrand Reed, Corona, and Mrs. Howard (Helen) Brereton, Lake, View; nine grandchildren; great-grandchildren, and two brothers and two sisters, Mark Waddoups, California; Vee Waddoups, Milford; Mrs. Armenia Kynaston, Salt Lake City, and Hazel Walker, Springville.

Funeral services will be conducted Tuesday at 11 a.m. in the Olpin Family Mortuary, 85 E. 300 Provo, where friends may call tonight from 6 to 8 p.m. and Tuesday prior to the services. Burial will be in the Bountiful City Cemetery.

High Court (Continued from page One.) (1968 case that "freedom of choice" plans were invalid when they were clearly failing to bring about desegregation. The 5th Circuit the "freedom of choice" plans were not adequate in the Louisiana cases. in all but one of them, the 5th Circuit ruling overturned lower court cases. In the case involving the Tangipahoa Parish school board, it affirmed the lower court, which had ordered the board to scrap its freedom of choice program and URGENTLY NEEDED BLOOD DONATIONS for Gordon Gregson, former Canadian. Any type accepted PHONE 374-4581-373-2340-374-9042 Market Quotations Furnished by Goodbody and Company.

Member New York Stock Exchange. 43 University Ave. NYSE MOST ACTIVE STOCKS Complete Volume Close Changes Am Tel Tel 320.200 537 a 149,000 Memorex Cp 143.600 129,900 321 Monroe Equip 125.600 39 111,400 Cal 106.430 Motors 105.200 12124 Occident Pet 98.300 24 Victor Comp 97,500 Texaco 85.300 303 Int Tel Tel 84.300 58 Crown Cork 82.600 Data 75.200 12012- Benguit 75.800 800 Crompton, who has a brother, Brent, in 1 Thailand; and Sharlet Rowley, whose father Leo, is a pilot in Vietnam. Special guests will be introduced by Fenton Prince, principal, and the flag ceremony will be presented by representatives of the Oren: High School ROTC. Each grade will have a special part on the program in song, and a talk will be given by Stephen Hales, fifth grader.

Response to the talk will be given by Col. C. Eldon Bitter, who recently returned from Vietnam. The program will conclude with the playing of Taps and singing of "God Bless America." Patriotic colors of red, white, and blue will be featured in the dress of students and faculty members. Stennis (Continued from page One.) sons, Mrs.

Smith and Rivers are unhappy over the compromlise fashioned last week that was to guarantee quick Senate approval of the lottery legislation. Their ultimate reaction could be crucial. The House passed the lottery bill Oct. 30. But Stennis to bring the bill to the Senate floor without assurances from Sen.

Edward M. Kennedy, D- Mass and other reformminded senators that they would not try to rewrite the entire Selective Service Act. Mrs. Smith, ranking Republican on the committee, did not hesitate to say she was suspicious. A compromise terminating the draft during an election year she observed, had written all over it." Rivers, chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, is known to feel somewhat betrayed over the whole affair.

Those close to him note that Rivers, never a great admirer of the lettery concept, agreed to push it through Congress at the behest of Nixon. For months it had appeared dead for the year. Having done his part, Rivers is said to feel any problems developing in the Senate were the Senate's reponsibility to clear up. He also is said to be less than happy Kennedy appears to be getting credit for breaking a logjam which Rivers maintains was of Kennedy's own making. SWEATERS DRY CLEANED THE SANITONE WAY Which restores the natural oils to your clothes and gives them that brand new look and feel.

When your clothes Sanitone are sparkling clean Sanitone coats them with a SOIL Confied Master your stay clean twice as REPELLENT that makes clothes long. Exclusive Electronic Sanitone Dry Cleaning at- ALL AT NO EXTRA COST TO YOU University On 74 The E. 835 Curb N. 1150 PROVO-373-4743 7th Across N. E.

From and CLEANERS BYU Fieldhouse NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE Close Open Allied Chem. 30 Allis Cham. 2814 Alum. Ltd. American Can 48 Amer.

and Arz. Pub. Serv. 23 2244 Arians Dept. Bell and How.

Beth Steel 291 Celanese Corp. 65 Chrysler Corp. 403 401 Colo. Fuel 23 23 Dow Chem, 7358 Du Pont 122 East Kodak 76 76 El Paso Gas Ford Motors Gen. Dynam 30 Elec.

85 Gen. Foods Gen. Motors Gen. Refrac. 14 Good Year 311 Amer.

Air Gulf Oil 327 Hecla Mng. Howard Johnson IBM 365 365 Kennecott 45 45 Ling. Tem. V. 36 Litton Ind.

56 56 McDonald Corp, McDonnell 30 Min. Mng. Mfg. 117 Monsan Chem. 413 Marcor 51 51 Mt.

States 231 Mou. Fuel Sup, Ogden Corp. Olin Mathieson Outboard Mar. Pac. G.

and El. Pan. Am. Air Parke Davis Penney 55 Phil. Pet.

Polaroid Corp. Proct. Gam. Rca Repub. Steel Revelon Inc.

1011 Tobacco 463 Seaboard Air. 201 Sears Roe. Stauffer Chem. 345 Studeback-Worth 48 Std. Oil of Cal.

25 Texas Gulf Textron Inc. 301 Tink R. Bear Transamerica TWA Twen. Cent. 21 Un.

Carbide Un. Pacific 43 United Airlines United Park U. S. Steel Ut. Power and Lt.

34 West Airlines 26 West Bancorp 43 433 Westg. Elec. 62 Woolworth Co. AMERICAN STOCK EXCHANGE Close Open Airwest Day Mines Deseret Pharm. 48 Res.

6 Federal 101 103 New Park Skaggs Drug 743 Syntex Warrants 1838 TWA Ut. Ida. Sug. OVER-THE-COUNTER STOCKS Bid Ask 10.25 10.75 Albertson's Amer. Savings 16.50 17.50 69.25 69.62½ of Amer.

Equity Oil 15.75 16.75 Berg Mortuary Services Phone HR $-1841 Carol Ann Wall, Provo, funeral services will be conducted Wednesday at 11 a.m. in the Berg Drawing Room Chapel of Provo. Friends may call Tuesday from 6 to 8 p.m. and Wednesday prior to services. Interment in the Provo City Cemetery.

Vee William Ivie, Orem, funeral services will be conducted Tuesday at 10 a.m. in the Berg Drawing Room Chapel of Orem, 500 North State. Friends may call at the mortuary Monday evening from 6-8 and "Luesday prior to services, Additional services will be conducted Tuesday at 2:30 p.m. in the Loa Ward Chapel. Friends may call at the chapel prior to services.

Burial in the Loa City Cemetery. Juventa Greenwod Paxman funeral services will be conducted Wednesday at 12 noon in the Manavu Ward Chapel, 395 East 600. North. Friends may call at the Berg Mortuary of Provo Tuesday evening from 6-8 and at the Chapel after 11 a.m. Burial in the American Fork City Cemetery.

Myri Alired Christensen Murphy funeral services will be conducted Thursday at 11 a.m, in the Berg Drawing Room Chapel of Provo. Friends may call at the mortuary Wednesday evening from 6-8 and Thursday prior to services. Interment in the Ephraim City Cemetery..

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About The Daily Herald Archive

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