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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)

Leonard B. Nielsen Long Illness Claims Provoan, 80 Leonard B. Nielsen, 80, 910 W. 2nd died Wednesday in a Provo nursing home after a lingering illness. He was born March 5, 1886, in PIe a sant Grove, the son of Mads and Mariea Christensen Nielsen.

He was married to Zanna Peterson in Heber. He attended Mr. Nielsen the. Pleasant Grove schools. Mr.

Nielsen went to Canada in 1942, where he lived for several years. He attended BYU until 1913, when he left to serve an LDS mission to England. He returned to and graduated from BYU after his mission. An active member of the LDS Church he was a member of the Provo Pioneer Ward and held the office of high priest at the time of his death. He worked.

throughout Utah County, retiring in 1954 after 31 years with the Ironton Steel Plant. After his retirement he worked for Provo City for 10 years as a crossing guard. Survivors. include his wife; one son, Gordon Nielsen of Salt Lake City; three stepsons, Gurg Madsen of Orem; Bud Madsen of Salt Lake City, and Verl Madsen of Orem; seven grandchildren. Reds Turn (Continued from Page One) aggressive war.

in Viet Nam and spread the flame of war to other Asian areas." Even before the conference began Hanoi had made it clear through official broadcasts it would not accept any peace terms. Throughout it called the meeting a "farce." Today's commentary came in the official newspaper Dhan and was believed to have been written by a ranking North Vietnamese government official. It said the "peaceful solution proposed by the U.S. at the Manila conference is still more cynical and insolent than the conditions which the U.S. had earlier put to the Vietnamese people and had been categorically rejected by the latter." The Manila communique promised that U.S.

and foreign troops would withdraw from Viet Nam six months after Hanoi ceased its aggression against South Viet Nam. Hanoi said this means "that the U.S. will withdraw its troops only when their stooges have consolidated their rule in South Viet Nam and South Viet Nam has become a new type colony of the U.S. This was the way the U.S. withdrew from the Dominican Republic." LARGEST COUNTY DALLAS (UPI) The largest county in Texas 1 is Brewster in western Texas.

It's 6,208 square miles are equivalent to Connecticut and Rhode Island combined. FLOWERS for your HOSTESS FREE DELIVERY LET US SERVE YOU Rohbock Sons Floral 1042 South State OREM AC 5-9100 Herald THURSDAY, County, OCTOBER Utah 27, 1966 Stock Market FURNISHED BY GOODBODY AND COMPANY Members of New York Stock Exchange DOW. IONES AVERAGES Total Volume Wednesday Closet 6.760,000 Thursday Open: 1.620,000 NYSE MOST ACTIVE STOCKS Complete Volume Close Palla Rag 106,300 36 Us Steel 105,500 Am Tel Tel 85,900 Boeing 80,000 Beth Steel 75,800 65.100 SCM Corp 61.600 East- Air 61,400 57 Cam 59,000 110 Fair Motors 55,400 Gen Comwith: Oil 54,300 Itek. Corp 50,100 Chrysler 49,900 34 Xerox Corp 46.200 1621 McDonnell 40,800 NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE QUOTATIONS Wednesday Close Chem Allis Cham 20 Alum Lid American Amer and Arizona PS Arians Atch and 28 Bell and How Beth Steel Bunker Hill Burroughs Celanese Chrysler 34 Colo Fuel Douglas Dow Chem DuPont East Kod El Paso Ford Motor Gen Dynam Gen Elec Gen Foods Gen Motor Goodyear: Gulf oil Hecia Mng Int Bus Mac .3291 Kennecott Korvette Lear Siegler Ling Tem 495 Litton Min Mng Mfg -Monsan Chem Mont Ward Mtn Fuel Sup Mt Sts Tel Ogden Olin Math Outboard Mar Pac and El Parke Davis J. Penney Phil Pet Polarold 1371 Proct and Gam RCA Repub Steel Revion 37 SALT LAKE STOCK EXCHANGE Chngs.

Wednesday Quotations Bid Asked Banner Mng 59.00 63.00 Bristol Silver Bullion Exp .05 Bullion Mon 21 .25 Chief Con Com 3.00 3.62½ Chief Con Pfd 2.621 2.75 unch. Clayton Silver .44 ,45 Colo Cons .09 ,10 Comb Metals Comet Coal .20 .25 Cons Eureka .001 Croff Oil .04 Crown Point .25 Dragon East. Utah Empire Mines .13 Eureka Mines .05 .07 Thursday Eureka Eureka Std Lully Con .42 .45 Open Golconda 8-121 8:371 20 Goid Chain .18 Grand Deposit .31 .35 Horn, Silver ,15 Kashmir .18 A Kennebec .20 Keystone .25 11 281 Mammoth 4.00 6.50 New. Moviematic Park 3.37½ 3.87% New Quincy .10 .15 North Lily .65 .75 66 Park City Con Rico Argentine 4.87½ 5.12½ a Coal Sage Oil 3.00 3.50 60 Sioux Mines .10 14 '154 South Standard .95 1.05 Standard Metal 4.621 5.12½ Sundance .35 .42 Tintic Lead 12 .13 Tintic Standard 4.87½ 5.12½ Utah Con .07 .13 96 Williston .40 .50 SALT LAKE EXCHANGE SALES Chief Pid 100 at 2.50/ 100 at 2.621 500 2.75 Utah 5,000 at 500 Eureka Standard 1,000 Golconda 300 at 8.25 Kennebec 1,000 at .17 New Quincy 1,000 at .10 Park City Con 3,000 at .07 4834 Tintic Standard 500 at 4.89 Williston 300 at :43 MUTUAL FUNDS Wednesday Quotations Bid Affillated Fund 8.21 8.89 Asked 30 Dividend Shares 3.31 3.63 Dow Theory 6.52 7.05 Dreyfus 11.53 12.58 53 and Bal Fund 11.75 12.77 and Bal Stock 14.57 15.83 Fidellty Fund 17.28 18.68 Fundamental Inv 10.75 11.78 Incorporated Inv 6.81 7.44 Manhattan Fund 7.76 8.48 Mass Inv Growth 9.90 10.82 751 Mass Inv Trust 15.51 16.95 Putnam 14.57 15.92 Putman Growth 10.24 11.19 Wellington Fund 13.26 14.46 Repub Steel Revion 37 Ryn Tob Sears Seaboard Air Line Std Oil Cal 65 Socony Std OIl NJ Studebaker Texas Gulf Textron Timk Bear Transamer TWA Transworld 561 TWAW Twen Cent 33 Un Carbide Un Pacific Unit Air Lines Unit Pk City US Steel Utah and Wes Air Lines Westnbancorp Westg Elec Woolworth Worthington AMERICAN STOCK EXCHANGE Wednesday Quotations Bid Asked Bonanza 13 Day Federal Mines Res 1014 New Park Paddington Revco Rico Argentine Syntex Utah Ida Sug OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Wednesday Quotations Bid Asked Albertson's 8.75 9.25 Amalgama Sug 8.37½ 9.25 Amer Savings 3.00 3.50 Bank of Amer 52.00 54.00 Deseret Pharm 20.00 22.00 Equity Oil 14.75 15.25 First Sec Inv 4.00 4.75 First Sec Corp 29.00 30.00 Frontier Refg 4.50 5.00 Surety Life 4.25 4.75 Skaggs Drug Com 10.00 10.50 Conference (Continued from Page One) Tuesday, De Gaulle indirectly attacked the United States as being responsible for the "odious" Vietnamese war. Moscow radio said the conference and President Johnson's tour of Asia were linked with the November elections in the United States.

It made no comment on the conference resolutions. Legal Notice Civil No. 30,151 IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT IN AND FOR UTAH COUNTY, STATE OF UTAH ELIZABETH ANNE HENDERSON, Plaintiff, VS. RONALD LESLIE HENDERSON, Defendant. THE STATE OF UTAH TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFENDANT: You are hereby summoned and required to serve upon or mail to plaintiff's attorney at 84 East 100 South, Provo, Utah, an answer in writing to the complaint and file a copy of said answer with the clerk of the above entitled court within twenty (20) days after service of summons upon you, if you fail so to do, judgment by default will be taken against you for the relief demanded in said complaint which has been filed with the clerk of said court, and a copy of which is hereto annexed and herewith served upon you.

This is an action for a Decree of Divorce. Dated this 11th day of October, 1966. GEORGE S. BALLIF For BALLIF BALLIF Attorneys for Plaintiff 84 East 100 South Provo, Utah Published in The Daily Herald Oct. 13, 20, 27, Nov.

3, 1966 Former Utah County Man Dies In California SAN GABRIEL, Calif. Eldores a former Provo and Pleasant Grove resident, died heart ailment Monday at his home. He was born July 9, 1905, in Pleasant Grove, the son of Earl C. and Elizabeth Baxter Smith. He married Vesta Strong, June 25, Mr.

Smith 1930, in the Salt Lake LDS Temple. He attended schools in Pleasant Grove and graduated from the Pleasant Grove High School. Before leaving Utah to make his home in California, he was employed as a pharmacist with A. K. Thornton and Sons Drug Store in Pleasant Grove, Rexall Drug Company in Springville, and Hedquist Drug Company in Provo.

He worked for Upjohn Company as a pharmaceutical sales representative in the district of Los Angeles and -the surrounding area for 20 years. Survivors include his wife; one brother, Benarr Smith of Austin, four sisters, Mrs. G. L. (Luretha) Bezzant, Mrs.

Vern (Cumorah) Cullimore and Mrs. Paul (Winnifred) Adamson, all of Pleasant Grove, and Mrs. Alma (Leah) Stewart of Orem: Funeral services will be conducted Friday at 1 p.m. in the Olpin-Sundberg Mortuary in Pleasant Grove, where friends may call prior to services. Burial will be in the Provo City Cemetery.

Utah Obituaries SALT LAKE CITY Gordon Thornburg, 74, died Wednesday; funeral Friday 11 a.m., 574 E. 1st South. Jose Vazquez Sandoval, 25, died Monday; Requiem Mass Friday 9 a.m., Cathedral of the Madeleine, 331 E. South Temple. Rosary Thursday 7 p.m., 372 1st South.

Lucille Hultgren Wardlow, 64, died Tuesday; funeral Saturday noon, 4760 S. State Street. Russell Gerrans Chegwidden, 68, died Wednesday; funeral Friday 2 p.m., 4330 S. Redwood Road. June Davis Young, 68, died Wednesday; funeral Saturday 1 p.m., 13th LDS Ward Chapel, 1068 Jefferson Street (140 West).

Stella Jane Blake, 85, died Tuesday; funeral Friday 11 a.m., 372 E. 1st South. Peter Redmond, 64, died Tuesday; funeral services pending. Ina Dora Ferguson Patterson Peterson, 70, died Tuesday; funeral Saturday 1 p.m., 36 E. 7th S.

Charles A. Mueller, 78, died Tuesday; Requiem Mass Friday 10 a.m., St. Peter's Catholic Church, Gunnison. Rosary Thursday 8 p.m., Miller Funeral Home, Gunnison. LAYTON Edna Pearl Taylor Chapman, 79, died Wednesday; funeral Saturday 10 a.m., Layton 11th LDS Ward Chapel.

MIDVALE Duane Irving Presler, 59, died Wednesday; funeral Saturday 1 p.m., 8090 S. State. RIVERTON Niel Madsen 78, died Wednesday; funeral Saturday 11 a.m., Riverton Sec. ond LDS Ward Chapel. FAIRVIEW, Sanpete County -Florence Titcomb Jensen, 74, died Monday; funeral Friday 1 p.m., Fairveiw South LDS Ward Chapel.

PLEASANT VIEW, Weber County Kevin Jay McMillan, infant son of Don J. and Judy Renee Smith McMillan, died Tuesday; funeral and burial in Madison County, Mont. TOOELE John Aubrey Halgren, 67, died Tuesday; funeral Saturday, 1 p.m., Tooele Fourth LDS Ward Chapel. FOR SALE or RENT Story and Clark PIANOS HEINDSELMAN MUSIC CO. 136 W.

CENTER-PROVO Former Wasatch County Resident Dies In California DANIELS, Wasatch County Virgil R. Pearson, 73, died Wednesday morning in a Long Beach, hospital of natural causes. He was born April 10, 1893, in Jamison, the son of Edward J. and Louise Stucker Pearson. He married Viola O'Brien in 1935.

'She died. Mr. Pearson was a veteran of World War I and a member of VFW. He is survived by four stepchildren, Leo Mortimore of Springville; James Mortimore of Saratoga, Glen MoDaniel of Los Angeles, and Mrs. Jay (Virginia) Smith of Daniels; 16 step grandchildren, and six step great grandchildren; one brother and three sisters, Paul Pearson of Lindonhurst, Nina Leidy, Bell, Edna Marco of Omaha, and Mary Curwick, Monon, Ind.

Funeral services will be conducted Friday at 2 p.m. at the Olpin Mortuary of Heber, where friends may call Friday one hour prior to services. Burial will be in the Midway Cemetery. Senior Officers To Be Honored At Retirement HILL AFB (UPI) Retirement ceremonies will be held Saturday for two senior officers of the Ogden Air Materiel Area. Honored at the 5 p.m.

ceremony will be Brig. Gen. Howard W. Moore, Ogden AMA deputy commander, and Lt. Col Frederick J.

Betz, special assistant to Maj. Gen. T. Alan Bennett, Ogden AMA commander. Bennett will present retirement certificates to the two officers at the ceremonies.

Brothers Get Parole Dates POINT OF THE MOUNTAIN (UPI) Two Salt Lake City brothers serving terms for murder were' among 10 Utah State Prison inmates who received parole dates Wednesday from the State Board of Pardons. Anasticio and Juan R. Galle. gos were given release dates of Oct. 14, 1969.

They have served three years of 10 years-to-life sentences. MIGHTY ORINICO CARACAS (UPI) The Orinico River, located in southeastern Venezuela, is the nation's greatest river and one of the largest in the world about 1,500 miles from where it is born in the Amazon jungle to the Caribbean Sea. The Orinico, with its innumerable tributaries, has a drainage area of several hundred thousand square miles. Berg Mortuary Services Phone FR 3-1841 Magnus Paulson funeral services will be conducted Saturday at 11 a.m. in the Berg Drawing Room Chapel.

Friends may call at the Berg Mortuary of Provo Friday evening from 6 to 8 and Saturday prior to services. Interment in Provo City Cemetery, Leonard B. Nielsen funeral services will be held Friday at 11 a. m. in the Berg Drawing Room Chapel.

Friends may call at the Berg Mortuary of Provo Thursday evening from 6 to 8 and Friday prior to services. Interment in the Ephraim City GYMNASTICS FOR BOYS WILL OFFER A PROGRAM FOR BOYS IN THREE DIFFERENT AGE GROUPS Section 1, Boys age 6 to 10 Section 2, Boys age 11 to 14 Section 3, Boys age 15 to-18 The boys will be instructed by Jim October 29, 1966 to Gilbert, assistant BYU Gymnartics Coach. He will be assisted by two December 17, 1966 members of the BYU Gymnastics Team. TIME Instruction will be given in tumbling, Section 1, 8:30 to 10:00 A. M.

Section 2, 12:00 to 1:30 P.M. trampoline, parallel bars, still rings, Section 3, 1:30 3:00 P.M. to and the vaulting horse. Game activi- DATES ties will be utilized for the younger October 29, 1966-December 17, 1966 FEE $10.00 age group while routines and specific gymnastic skills will be taught the PLACE Room 146, East. Extension of the older boys.

George Albert Smith Fieldhouse (Gymnastics Gym) SPECIAL COURSES AND CONFERENCES, ROOM 242 HERALD R. CLARK BUILDING Brigham Young University Provo, Utah 374.1211, Ext. 3256 Suffocation Ruled Cause Of Death SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) The State Industrial Commission says suffocation caused the deaths of two miners in the Cactus Mine near Milford last week. The official commission ruling released Wednesday closed investigatton into the deaths Willis A. Finch, 52, Goshen, Utah and Calvin Small, Cimarron, Ariz.

Death certificates of the two were signed by Dr. D.A. Symond, who ruled they died suffocation and not as the suit of a possible explosion. Their bodies were found deep in a shaft of the abandoned mine last Thursday. Red China Accused In Soviet Note MOSCOW (UPI) -The Soviet Union formally accused Red China Thursday of organizing a Red Guard seige of its Peking embassy.

It said the seige was marked. by obscene gestures, spitting and "unspeakable curs. ing." At the same time, 41 Chinese students left for home under a Kremlin expulsion order chanting "'The East Is Red," and another Maoist anthem, "The Voyage Depends on the Helmsman. In a note handed the Chinese charge d'affaires, the Russians claimed that "entry to the USSR embassy has been blocked since Oct. 23.

"Threats and insults addressed to Soviet diplomats and also foreign guests visiting the USSR embassy are being shouted from crowd gathered at the embassy gates. The note said Chinese police stood by while "participants in the disorders allow themselves hooligan actions, unspeakable cursing, indecent gestures and poses, spitting and the like." The Russians added: "The organization of new provocations at the Soviet embassy is simply another intentional step on the Chinese side calculated to further aggravate SovietChinese international relations." Brother Of American Fork Woman Dies CEDAR CITY- -Edward Rex Humphries, the brother of an American Fork resident, died of natural causes Tuesday in a Cedar City hospital. He was born Feb. 19, 1909, in Virgin, Washington County, the son of Franklin L. and Ada Lee Humphries, He married Clara Galey, April 27, 1936, in Cedar City.

He was an employe of the Columbia Iron Mine. Mr. Humphries was a member of the LDS Church. He is survived by his wife and five sons, and a sister, Ardell Wilson of American Fork. Heart Illness Claims Man In Duchesne County ALTAMONT, Duchesne County Funeral services for Lindon Kent Farnsworth, 72, the brother of an American Fork resident, who died of a heart ailment Tuesday, will be Saturday at 1 p.m., in the Altamont LDS Ward Chapel.

He was born Sept. 7, 1894, in Frisco, Beaver County, the son of David Barclay and Minnie Johnson He married Lila Bell Mecham, July 3, 1923, in Duchesne. Their marriage was later solemnized in the Salt Lake LDS Temple. He was a veteran of World War I. Survivors include several and a brother, Alden Farnsworth of American Fork.

Friends may call at the chapel after 11:30 a.m., Saturday. Burial will be in the Home Cemetery in Altamont, with American Legion graveside rites. $75,000 Fire (Continued from Page One) and equipment were valued at $23,000 at the time Mr. Gurney took over operation of the per club. The hardwood floor was worth $5000, he said.

Before being re-opened as a supper club, the building had been used as a grocery store, then as a roller rink. It was the third major fire: J. Claude Hicken, 80 Prominent Heber Man Dies 30 Industrials 20 Rails 15 utilitles 65 Stocke 801.11 194.49 136.00+2.10 280.90 806.79 5.68 194.14- -35 136.094 .09 281.86+ .96 3 Utah (Continued from Page One) 4th Lindon, son of Mr. and Mrs. Elmon F.

Christensen, suffered a severe bump on his head and lacerations of the arms and face when he apparently alighted from a school bus before it came to a stop. He was treated at American Fork Hospital and released. Pleasant Grove Police offlcers investigated the accident, which occurred in Lindon about 3:25 p.m. Wednesday, The bus involved was driven by LaMont Blackhurst, 44. 500 East State, Pleasant Grove.

from Officers the said the youth jumped bus as it was coming to a stop and landed on the highway. Hhe then stumbled and fell, striking his head on the pavement. Victims (Continued from Page One) injured out on stretchers. Almost every one of the 32 apartments in the building was Most of them were gutted. When It is full, approximately 65 persons occupy the building.

One tenant estimated at least 40 persons were in the building when the fire started. All the stairways in the structure were reduced to rubble and the hallways were blistered. A dead cat was on the front porch of the building, burned to death. Ray McElroy, another of the survivors, ran out of the building yelling for help shortly after the flames started to race down he hallway of the first floor. "I couldn't get my stuff out.

It's all that I had," he said. Firemen led him back into the structure after the flames were extinguished to help him locate his belongings. Two Catholic priests went into the building with the firemen. HEBER CITY J. Claud Hicken, 80, well-known lifetime Heber resident, died Wednesday at his home after a long illness.

He was born Sept. 19, 1886, in Heber City, the son of Addison and Elizabeth Moulton Hicken. He married Verna M. Mahoney, Oct. 10, 1906, in the Salt Lake LDS Temple.

She died July 26, 1964. Mr. Hicken was the owner and operator of the Hicken Feed Produce Mill from 1930 to 1964. He was co-operator of the Hieken Truckline from 1932 to 1941. He was owner and operator of a meat, butter and egg business serving Heber City and Park City from 1910 to 1927.

He was a poultry farmer and cattleman. He was a charter member of the Utah Poultry Association. Mr. Hicken served on the Heber City Council from 1920 to 1923. He was an active member of the Heber Fourth LDS Ward and served in the Heber Third Ward bishopric from 1920 to 1931.

Survivors include two sons, Cyril M. Hicken and Don L. Hicken, both of Heber City; three daughters, Venice H. Watson and Mrs. Glade B.

(Yvonne) Horner, both of Heber City, and Mrs. C. Harvey (Nelda) Rawlinson of Pleasant Grove; 20 grandchildren and 31 greatgrandchildren; three brothers, Eliah M. Hicken, Logan; J. Errol Hicken of Heber City, and William T.

Hicken of Berkeley, two sisters, Mrs. C. R. (Elthora) Leininger of San Jose, and Mrs. Stanley (Olive) Ramlose of Salt Lake City.

Funeral services will be conducted Saturday at 1 p.m., In the Heber Fourth LIDS Ward Chapel. Friends may call at the Olpin Mortuary in Heber City, Friday from 7 to 9 p.m., and Saturday prior to services. Burial will be in the Heber City Cemetery. for Orem in 10 months. -Utah Valley Builders Supply suffered an estimated $50,000 loss on New Year's Eve, and Bailey Furniture was destroyed with a loss of $40,000 in April.

ELECT M. DAYLE JEFFS FOR A Working County Attorney TRIAL LAWYER Respected by other Lawyers, Dayle has practiced Law in Utah County for nine years with trial experience in all types of Civil and Criminal cases. He is the President of the Utah County Bar Association. INVESTIGATOR From 1952 to 1954 Dayle was Supervisor of the Army Counter Intelligence Security Investigations for Utah, Idaho, Montana and Wyoming. LEGAL COUNSELOR Dayle is a respected counselor and legal advisor to various businesses, organizations, industries and individuals on both governmental and private He is one of the co-founders of the Utah Couty Legal Aid Association and served three years as its director.

PUBLIC SERVANT A former member of an L.D.S. Bishopric and Stake High Council, Dayle is a dedicated public servant, having been active for many years in scouting, little league baseball, freedom week celebrations and the Sertoma Service Club. This year Dayle was General Chairman of Provo's Fourth of July Freedom Festival. M. Deryle Jeffs will be a working County Attorney who will assist the development of new industry in Utah County and work to reverse the increase property taxes.

He will be a capable legal counselor to the County Officers and as a prosecutor he will gage a war on crime to effectively protect our citizens and their property. It Is Time For Us To Elect A Working County Attorney I ELECT M. DAYLE JEFFS REPUBLICAN Paid Political Adv. by Citizens for Jeffs..

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About The Daily Herald Archive

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