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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)

re- dost Carson, in Herald MONDAY. MARCH 24. 1969 Provo, Utah Obituaries David H. Carson Former Lehi Judge Dies At 91 in Kanab Hospital LEHI David I1 91, ried Maria Degelbeck Lehi. long time of this 19.

1901, in the Salt city and former precinct judge. Temple. She died May did Saturday night. In1 the Kanab Ho pitali 111 Kane County of natural causes. He was born Apr.

11, 1877, in Fairfield, Utah County, a son of William Franklin and Rachel Lloyd Mr. Carson Carson He mar- Death Claims Sp. Fork Man at 72 Mr. Holt Fork, a son of Samuel and Ellen Lewis Holt. He married Alta Blackett on Jan.

17, 1923 in the Salt Lake LDS Temple. Mr. Holt received his education in the Spanish Fork City schools and later attended the Brigham Young University. For 18 years he was employed at the Illinois Powder Company, now the Trojan Powder Company, in Spanish Fork. He had been a farmer and cattleman in that area for some time.

Mr. Holt was a veteran of World War and was a member of the American Legion Post 68 of Spanish Fork. Active in the LDS Church, he had been a home teacher for many years. At the time of his death he was serving as a high priest. Survivors include his widow of Spanish Fork; one son and five daughters, Paul B.

Holt, Sandy; Mrs. Ruth Bethers, Payson; Mrs J. R. (Ellen) Coffey, Wichita Falls, Mrs. Dail (Mary Davis Lander, Mrs.

John (Lila) Gold, St. Anthony, and Mrs. Norman (Alta Marie) Seamons. Mapleton: 21 grandchildren; 18 greatgrandchildren, and one sister. Mrs.

Leah V. Nelson, Spanish Fork. Funeral services will be conducted Wedensday at 1 p.m. 111 the Spanish Fork 5th-13th LDS Ward Chapel, Bishop Gerald Anderson officiating. Friends may call at the Walker Mortuary in Spanish Fork Tuesday from 7 to 9 p.m.

and Wednesday prior to the services. Burial will be in the Spanish Fork City Cemetery. SPANISH FORK Lewis Payton Holt, 72, Canyon Road, Spanish Fork, long-time ployee of the Illinois Powder Company in Spanish Fork, died in the Pays on City, Hospital Sunday of natural causes, He was born May 18, 1897, in Spanish Mr. Holt Air Pollution Unit Plans Utah Region WASHINGTON. D.C.

Senator Frank (D-Utahi today announced the selection of Salt Lake City as one of 25 new air qualit, control regions by the National Air Poultion Control Administration. "Under the air quality Act. which I co-sponsored and which became law in November. 1967, designation of regions is a fundamental step in starting action by state governments which are responsible under the act for adopting and enforcing stand. ards to control air pollution on a regional Senator Moss said.

Last June the first 32 regions, involving the most serious air pollution problems in the nation, were selected. Today's announcement of the additional 25 selections means that all 50 states are now included in the program. "The National Air Pollution Control Administration listed the new regions in the order in which designation is expected to take place," Senator Moss said, "and Salt Lake City was fourth on the new list. Provoan Leaves For Vietnam Duty Pfc. Manzanares A Provo man has recently left for duty in Vietnam.

Pfc. Tom T. Manzanares, 19, has left for a year's tour of duty in Vietnam after a short leave spent at home with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Transito a zanares, 1343 N.

380 Provo. Pfc. Manzanares Pfc. ate of attended College ceived AIT Manzanares is a graduProvo High Schol and has the Utah Technical for a short time. He rehis basic training and training at Fort Ord, Calf.

Marines (Continued from Page One) believed to be the largest. North Vietnamese rice cache of the war. Lamb said the captured North Vietnamese supply depot, spread over an area larger than two football fields, contained 434 tons of rice. other foods and supples and hundreds of cases of arms and ammunition. The Marines still were tabulating the "hundreds of cases" of mortar rounds, rocket grenades and small arms ammunition.

A task force of 3,000 Leathernecks and 100 tanks rumbled into the mountain country in South Vietnam's northwest corner March 15 with one major assignment--to block a Communist supply "freeway" bringing troops and munitions in from Laos. They set up headquarters seven miles south of Khe Sanh astride Highway 926, reported by reconnaissance patrols to be a veritable freeway for North Vietnamese trucks bringing supplies in from Laos by night. All that remains of the Khe Sanh outpost, where the Marines weathered a 77-day siege in early 1968, is the metal covering on a runway. The new counteroffensive has been code named "Maine Crag." Headquarters said 43 North Vietnamese troops have been killed in the new drive, compared with U.S. losses of 10 Marines slain and 64 wounded.

Accompanying the "Maine Crag" announcemet were disclosures that the 30th day of the Viet Cong North Vietnamese offensive had brought 35 rocket and mortar barrages into four South Vietnamese cities and 31 allied military camps. Over-all losses were said to be light. Among the U.S. military targets, headquarters said, were the air base at Da Nang, the air base at Phan Rang, the field at Kontum and U.S. Army headquarters at Long Binh, 15 miles northeast of Saigon.

Judges of the U. S. courts are appointed by the president, with the advice and consent of the Senate. She has the weather to fight BE COURTEOUS! so 4 so 4 on June Lake LDS 22, 1960. his education Mr.

Carson received his education Fairfield Schools, mov. ing to Lehi as a boy. For many years he was a sheepman in that area. Mr. Carson had served as precinct judge for several years in Lehi Active in the LDS Church, he had served as superintendent of the YMMIA, and was a home teacher for 56 years.

He served a mission to the Northern States Mission from 1906 to 1908. and was a high priest at the time of his death. He was a member of the Sons of Utah Pioncers, and had served as president for a time. He was also life member of the Natonal Organization of Utah Pioneers. Survivors include one son and four daughters, Junior David Carson.

Stockton, Mrs. Edwin (Della) Circuit, Salt Lake City; Mrs. Daniel (Leona) Frost, Kanab; Mrs. Carlyle (Velda) Bunker, Orem, and Mrs. Paul (Bertha) Mathewson, Ogden: 17 grandchildren; 18 grandchildren, and two sisters, Mrs.

Hazel Laughlin, Salt Lake City, and Mrs. Annie Fox, Lehi, Funeral services wll be conducted Tuesday at 1 p.m. at the Wing Mortuary, 118 E. Main Lehi, where friends may call night from 7 to 9 p.m. and Tuesday prior to the services.

Burial will be in the Lehi City Cemetery. Ex-Santaquin Resident Dies At S. L. Home SANTAQUIN-Clara Geneva Johnson, 66. Salt Lake City, former Santaquin resident, died at her home Friday of natural causes.

She was born Sept. 10, 1902, in Santaquin, a daughter of Alfred A. and Mary Borgeson Johnson. She was a member of the LDS Church. Survivors include four brothers and one sister, Sharp F.

Johnson and Grant A. Johnson, both Santaquin; Leslie A. Johnson, American Fork, and Wendell B. Johnson and Mrs. Jack (Viola) Platt, both of Salt Lake City.

Funeral services will be conducted Tuesday at 1 p.m. i in the Santaquin-Tintic LDS Stake Center. Friends may call at the Grant Johnson home. 410 S. 3rd Santaquin, tonight from 7 to 9 p.m.

and Tuesday at the stake center from noon until time of services. Burial will be in the Santaquin City Cemetery. Graveside Rites Held for Infant Graveside services for Kelly Rex Brailsford, infant son of Rex and Norma Jean Leavitt Brailsford. 821 E. 50 Provo, were held today at 4 p.m.

at the Provo City Cemetery under the direction of Sundberg Olpin Mortuary of Orem. The infant died Friday evening of prematurity. He was born March 21, 1969. in Provo. His father is employed as a cement finisher and carpenter for Clegg Construction Company.

Both parents are graduates of Provo High School. His father also attended the Utah Technical College for a time. Mr. Brailsford is a high priest in the LDS Church and has also served as a ward clerk. Survivors include his parents of Provo: one brother and two sisters.

Kevin Brailsford. Cyndra Brailsford and Julid a Brailsford. all of Provo. and grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.

John Brailsford, Provo and H. Lee Leavitt, American Fork. Burial was in the Provo City Cemetery. A golfer who drives a ball 300 yards on earth could propel it more than a mile on the moon, says the National Geographic. BOOKKEEPING AND TAX RECORD BOOKS Also Budget Books, Appointment and Daily Records.

No exparience needed. STANDARD OFFICE SUPPLY 40 W. 1st Prove Ph. 373-5250 ENERGY FROM THE SUN may be gathered by sheets of solar cells, each by 16 feet, which would form panels capturing the sun's rays to power satellites. Artist's concept shows the Large Retractable Solar Cell Array (LRSCA) which can be carried into space rolled up like a windowshade and then unfurled.

The system, developed by Hughes Aircraft, is scheduled for flight test in 1970. Weather Forecast Provo's high for Sunday was 38 with .05 inch of precipitation High for the nation Sunday was 94 at McAllen. Tex. National low this morning was 12 at Bismark, N. Laramie, Wyo, and Bozeman, Mont.

Swimmers Excell At AAU Meet Four swimmers from the BYU Dolphins excelled in the AAU Western Winter Regional Swimming championships held this past weekend at Kearns. All of the swimmers were the elite of the various swimming clubs within the various western states participating in the meet. Kathy Nuttal won first place in the 9-10 year old girls division 50 yard breastroke and was on a winning 200 yard medley relay team. Julie Baxter took third place in the 100 yard butterfly in the 11-12 year old girls division and was on a winning 200 yard freestyle relay team. Kim Black, competing in the 15-17 age girls division, was on three winning relay teams in addition to finishing second in the 200 yard individual medley and fourth in the 200 yard freestyle.

Brad Pendleton was on a 200 yard freestvle relay team which took second place in the 13-14 year old boys division. Stock Market FURNISHED BY GOODBODY AND COMPANY Members of New York Stock Exchange DOW JONES AVERAGE Total alume 30 Friday's Close 9 830,000 920.00- Monday's Open 919 38- NY MOST ACTIVE STOCKS Complete Volume Close Chng Gt Fin 193,400 261 7 Roan Selec 150.900 13 Am Oil 141.800 64 4 Occident Pet 127 800 423 Natomas 107,300 6012 Jones Laughlin 93,700 Middle Ut 82,200 217 Amer and 81.600 52 4 Thrifty Drug 80,500 Lionel 70,700 15 Mobil Oil 70.100 6078 Loews Thea 69,600 Genesco 65,700 38 MAY JOIN DETROIT TORONTO -Carl Brewer, former all-star defenseman of the Toronto Maple Leafs now playing hockey in Europe, may be wearing a Detroit Red Wing uniform before the National Hockey League season ends. Brewer quit the Leafs after a feud with coach Punch Imlach in 1965, but has been in contact with the Red Wings, who hold professional rights to him as part of a trade between Montreal and Detroit. The two clubs tangle Saturday night. Proliferation CHARLOTTE.

N. C. (UPI) Given perfect breeding conditions, a pair of ordinary house flies could blanket the earth three feet deep in insects in a few months, report researchers at Orkin Extrminating Company, a division of Rollins, pest control concern. NEW APPLICATION for an established principle may quadruple maple syrup production, according to Vern Foft, seen here watching sap flowing uphill through plastic tubing. Foft, a dairy equipment expert from Burton, Ohio, wondered why milking cows couldn't maple sap.

This year, in the sugar shack great success and could move more previous methods. a vacuum pipeline system used in be applied to the gathering of he ran tubing from a compressor to the trees and back. He reported farm agents estimate the system than 300 per cent more sap than WHEN SORROW STRIKES SOMEONE NEAR GIVE FLOWERS Rohbock Sons Floral 1042 S. STATE OREM 225-3100 OFF THE STREETS, two fence at a Brooklyn, N.Y., dents complain that play children into crowded streets. boys are framed in broken playground.

Many city resiareas are kept locked, forcing Industrials 20 Rails 15 Utilities 65 Stocks 243 97- 74 130.34 58 321 97- 60 62 243.67- 30 129 79. 55 321 53- 44 NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE QUOTATIONS Friday Monday Close Open Allied Chemical 3118 31 Allis Chalmers 28 2814 American Air Lines 3218 American Can 55 55 American and Arizona Public Service Arians Dept 40 40 Atch and 5 Fe 35 3512 Bell and Howell 6914 Bethlehem Steel 3238 Bunker Hill 1878 32 Celanese Corp Chrysler Corp 53 Colo Fuel and Iron Dow Chemical 75 AMERICAN STOCK EXCHANGE QUOTATIONS Friday Monday Close Open Air West Air Lines 1712 173 Day Mines Deseret Pharmac 49 Federal Reserve New Park 111 Revco Drugs 4212 4212 Skaggs Drug Com 3012 Syntex Drugs 547 30. Utah Idaho Sugar OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Monday's Quotations: Bid Asked Albertson's 13.12½ 13.62½/ American Savings 12.37½ 12.8712 Bank of America 71.50 72.00 Equity Oft 19.75 20.75 Poverty (Continued from Page One) weeks earlier than he had publicly announced earlier. Perkins said last week he was not trying to "get the jump" on anyone by ordering hearings, but the 11-term veteran, a lawyer from Hindman, told reporters that until recently he planned no action on antipoverty legislation before late April. HINT TO MOTORISTS Don't slam on the brakes if your car goes into a skid on slick pavement.

Instead, let up on the gas pedal smoothly and steer the front wheels in the direction of the skid. When the skid is corrected, pump the brakes lightly to bring the car to a safe stop. WORLD ALMANAC FACTS Roadways cover about 10 per cent of Tokyo, 23 per cent of London, 26 per cent of Paris and 35 per cent of New York, The World Almanac says. Yet the percentage of a city's area under asphalt is no indicator of happy motoring. Many cross-town drivers in these cities are convinced that traffic volume simply increases to fill available space, new streets and highways becoming congested soon after completion.

Copyright 1969, Newspaper Enterprise Assn. Our Past Performance speaks for itself. Call on us for help in any emergency. )lpin FAMILY MORTUARY Provo Grove 373-6668 225-6124 785-3500 Hoffa, Cassius to Get Review in Lower Court WASHINGTON (UPI) The Supreme Court ruled today that James R. Hoffa.

imprisoned Teamsters Union chief, and former heavyweight champion Cassius Clay are entitled to lower court review of their claims that they were victims of illegal federal eavesdropping. On the basis of its recent wiretapping decision, the court also ordered similar rehearings in about 13 other federal cases. Despite the rehearing order, there was no indication that Hoffa, now serving an eightyear penitentiary sentence, would be allowed his freedom while the lower court proceedings are conduated. Clay, convicted of refusing to report for draft induction, is free on bail pending outcome of his appeal. Today's rulings stemmed from the court's controversial March 10 decision that government evidence based on illegal eavesdropping must be turned over to defense attorneys in its entirety if the direct conversation of the defendant was overheard or his own premises were bugged.

In ordering the lower court action, the court also rejected out of hand a government appeal for reconsideration of the March 10 decision 011 grounds it would hamstring government national security surveillance activities. The court commented in the rehearing ruling for Hoffa and Clay that "of course. a finding by the district court that the surveillance was lawful would make disclosure and further proceedings unnecessary." In other actions, the court: Rejected a Chicago appeal which challenged the customary practice of states to apportion their school expenditures on the basis of local property taxes. Let stand a government order that Chas, Pfizer Co. must license its drug Tetracycline to other pharmaceutical firms.

Refused to interfere with a lower court ruling in an Oregon case holding that state libel laws do not apply to radiotelevision broadcasts on matters of public interest unless the material was aired with malicious intent. Police Looking For Missing Red Cellist are looking for a 37-year-old cellist with the Moscow State Symphony missing since Friday who may have decided to seek of political asylum in the United States. Vsevolod Lezhnev was last seen in the Hotel Wellington, a few blocks north of Times Square, at 10:30 p.m. Friday. He did not appear for weekend concerts in Baltimore and Washington which ended the orchestra's U.S.

tour. The 120-member symphony. now back in New York. is scheduled to return to Russia in a Soviet airliner Tuesday. Evgeny N.

Alechin, first secretary of the Soviet U.N. mission, reported Lezhnev's disappearance to police Saturday and asked them to try to find him. A representative of the Sol Hurok Agency, which booked the tour, said a telephone caller, speaking perfect English, told officials of the orchestra Friday night that Lezhnev was "in good health and would not be continuing the tour." Police said Lezhnev's luggage and his cello had disappeared from the hotel. NEA. Don't Neglect Slipping FALSE TEETH Do false teeth drop, slip or wobble when you talk, eat, laugh or sneeze? Don't be annoyed and embarrassed by such handicaps.

FASTEETH. AC alkaline (non -acid) powder to sprinkle on your plates, keeps false teeth more firmly set. Gives confident feeling of security and added comfort. No gummy, gooey taste or feeling, Dentures that fit are essential to health. See your dentist regularly, Get FASTEETH at all drug counters.

DR DRAPERIES SLIP COVERS AND RUGS DRY CLEANED By Experts Give your home a fresh Spring outlook, spark your own model! We'll make those tired-looking draperies and slipcovers likenew again. Free pick-up and delivery. PLEATING FREE Certified Master Drycleaner Sanitone University Sanitone Exclusive Dry Cleaning Electronic at- CLEANERS. re 15 E. 1150 N.

and 835 N. 7th The Curb Across From BYU Fieldhouse-373-4743 a Berg Mortuary Services Phone He 3-1841 Frank L. Lawrence funeral services will be held in the Berg Drawing Room Chapel 2 p.m. Tuesday, March 25. Friends may call Monday evening 6-8 p.m.

or Tuesday prior to services. Interment at the Provo City Cemetery..

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About The Daily Herald Archive

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