Lamont Neal

Neal_Lamont_12 Jan 1933
Funeral services for Lamont Neal will be conducted by Bishop G. Howard Neal at Malad First LDS Ward Chapel, Saturday at 1 p.m.
Mr. Neal died in a plane crash Tuesday. Details appear in another article in The Enterprise. He was born here Jan. 12, 1933 to Archie L. and Letha Tubbs Neal. He was educated here and graduated from Malad high school. He attended Utah State University at Logan for two years; Brigham Young University, Provo, one year, and Idaho State College at Pocatello, two years. A member of the LDS Church, he served a two-year mission in the Northern California field. At the time of his death he was employed by Aero Specialties, Inc., and was an instructor in aircraft engineering.
Survivors include his parents: four brothers and four sisters; BerNon, John A., Timothy, Lowell, Dian, Eileen, all of Malad; Mrs. Ray (LaRonna) Anderson, Salt Lake City; Mrs. Lincoln(Bardonna) Zollinger, Mackay; grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. John Neal, Tremonton, and Albert Tubbs, Malad.
Friends and relatives may call Friday evening and Saturday morning at the family home, 445 Bannock.
Burial will be at the Malad City Cemetery directed by Benson Funeral Home.
Three Die in Airplane Crash Near Aberdeen
Three men, two from Pocatello, and the other from Inkom, were killed Tuesday when their light airplane crashed in the lava beds about 17 miles northwest of Aberdeen.
The dead:
When the plane did not arrive at Grangeville, an air search was started at about 3 p.m.
An unidentified pilot radioed that he spotted the wreckage at about 4 p.m. Efforts to locate the wreckage by ground Tuesday night were fruitless.
Latest reports indicated the airplane had crashed about four miles from the Bingham Power County line, inside Power County.
The crash was only about 17 miles northwest of Aberdeen, but the extremely rough country and wet roads were hampering efforts to reach the airplane.
Elle said he flew over the wreckage today with pilot Gary McCulloch. He was able to see the men and identify them before ground fog closed the area in again.
The men were carrying with