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Show 'ACCIDENT TAKES LIFE OF LOCAL RESIDENT Funeral Services Saturday For Clarence Savage Fatally Injured at Ironton Funeral services will be conducted con-ducted Satdrday at 2 p. m., in the Fourth ward chapel, for Clarence Blaine Savage, 28, who was fatally injured in an accident at the Columbia Co-lumbia steel plant at Ironton Tuesday night. Bishop G. Ray Hales of the Third ward will be in charge of the services. Friends may call at the family residence, 36 East, Fourth North street, before the services. Burial will be in the Evergreen cemetery, directed by the Claudin funeral home. According to a report of the accident, ac-cident, he suffered a crushed hip and leg, and badly injured left arm when he was crushed between two freight cars at the plant. He was rushed to the Utah Valley hospital at Provo, but died soon after arriving. He had been employed at the steel plant as a switchman for about two years, and had previously prev-iously been employed on road construction con-struction work. He was born in Salt Lake City, December 29, 1915, a son of John LeRoy and Anna Hedman Savage. The family moved here in 1922. He attended the Springville high school, where he was especially active in music events, being a member of the school band, and a drum major. He graduated as an honor student. He married Rose Lamb at Kan-ab, Kan-ab, June 3, 1939. Surviving, besides his widow and parents, are three children, Robert Clarence, LaRue, and Katherine Helen Savage, Springville; also five brothers and sisters, Frank LeRoy Savage, Kearns, Utah; John H., Janet, and Marcille Ann Savage, and Mrs. W. R. Clyde, of Springville; a grandmother, Mrs. Anna Peterson, Salt Lake City. |