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Show Funeral rites held for Jesse Salisbury Funeral services were conducted con-ducted Monday at noon in the Third ward for Jesse Salisbury 74, retired steel worker, who died Friday night at the Utah Valley Hospital, of a short illness ill-ness resulting from a cerebral cere-bral hemmorrage. Bishop Calvin Cal-vin Packard was in charge. Burial was in the Evergreen cemetery, under direction of Wheeler Mortuary. Mr. Salisbury was born May 22, 1886, in Nephi, a son of David and Anna Madsen Salisbury. Salis-bury. He received his education educa-tion in Nephi schools. During his early life he followed fol-lowed farming in Niphi, and (Continued on Page 10, Col. 6) Funeral rites held for Jesse Salisbury (Continued from Page One.) later was emplayed at the Ironton Plant of U. S. Steel. He retired in June of 1951. He married Annie Falkner on Sept. 22, 1920, in Provo. He was a member of the LDS Church, and a high priest in the Springville Third ward. Surviving are his widow, three sons and two daughters, Frank Salisbury and C. G. Salisbury, Sal-isbury, both of Salt Lake City; Howard Salisbury, Rexburg, Ida.; Mrs. Jesse (Helen) Whiting, Whit-ing, Springville, and Mrs. Donna Don-na Peterson, Murray; 12 grandchildren and 19 greatgrandchildren; great-grandchildren; one brother and two sisters, Elija Salisbury and Mrs. Ada Johnson, both of Nephi, and Mrs. Nell De-Grey, De-Grey, Salt Lake City. The united States has 22 million dogs and 40 suffer from halitosis, says a recent scientific survey. I don't question ques-tion the survey; I'm just glad I didn't have to make it. If it weren't for having all this extra leisure time these days, we don't know how we'd ever get our work done. |