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Show C. E. Adderley Funeral Services To Be Held Saturday Afternoon Funeral services for one of Bingham's must respited citizens, citi-zens, Charles Edmund Adderley, 80, 378 Main St., president and founder of Bingham Mercantile Co. and prominent civic worker and business leader, will be eon-ducted eon-ducted tomorrow, Saturday at 1:30 p.m. in the Bingham high school auditorium in Copperton. Friends may call at 450 Main street, Bingham (Friday) this afternoon af-ternoon and evening and at the family residence Saturday from 10:30 a.m. until 1 p.m. Interment will be in Mt. Olivet cemetery under direction of Bingham mortuary. mor-tuary. Mr. Adderley passed away Tuesday, February 28 at 10 a.m. at his residence of causes incident inci-dent to age. A native of Antwerp, N. Y., he f . i ' r i X-'-.'- C. E. ADDERLEY was born June 1, 1869, a son of William and Mary Deijm Adder-ley. Adder-ley. He came to Utah when he was 20 years of age beginning in retail trade at Park City. He worked a short time there, and in 1893 came to Bingham where he was employed by William Strickley and later Charles Lash-brook, Lash-brook, early Bingham merchants. In 1897 Mr. Adderley founded the Bingham Mercantile Company, Com-pany, now the oldest store in the canyon. He remained at the head of the firm until his recent ill hpalth TTf u;is nrpsiitant anH manager. In the fifty three years he had seen Bingham rise and fall, had witnessed its gradual growth from a small "rough and ready" camp to a modem community com-munity with all the up-to-date improvement of this "gasoline age." The institution was founded found-ed seven years before the Utah Copper Company, which was organized or-ganized in 1904 and which has made Bingham Canyon famous. While Mr. Adderley had been outstandingly successful and much respected as a business man, his career was extraordinary extraordin-ary in that on occasions of economic econ-omic depression he found it possible pos-sible to eivo unusu;il pxtonsinn of credit. Residents of the community com-munity owe him more than gratitude. grat-itude. A charter member of the Bingham Bing-ham volunteer fire department, Mr. Adderley was honorary president pre-sident of the firemen's Twenty Year club. He also was a charter member of Bingham Lions club, and a member of Canyon Lodge No. 13, F. & A. M. and of the Salt Lake lodge No. 85 Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks. He served as mayor of Bingham for three years, having been appointed appoint-ed mayor on December 10, 1918 and elected to the next term. He married Daisie Dean Hocking, Hock-ing, April 22, 1896, in Salt Lake City. She died in March 1948. Survivors include a son and three daughters, Charles (Chick) W. Adderley, Mrs. Daisie Bogart and Mrs. Maisie D. Tripp, Bingham, Bing-ham, and Mrs. Pearl Nichols, Holladay; also four grandchildren grandchild-ren and one great grandchild. O |