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Show SERVICES HELD TUESDAY FOR MRS. ELLA MINER Many relatives and friends paid final tributes of respect to Mrs. Ella Dalton Miner, 69, at funeral services conducted Tuesday in the Second ward chapel. Mrs. Miner died of a heart attack Saturday morning, at a Provo hospital, where she had been confined since the preceding Tuesday. Burial was in the Evergreen cemetery, directed by A. Y. Wheeler and Son Mortuary. Mrs. Miner was born in Springville, Spring-ville, Nov. 25, 1877, a daughter of Simon E. and Jane Huntington Dalton. She had resided in Springville Spring-ville all her life with exception of a few years in Montana, Idaho, and Washington and various places in Utah, while her husband was on road contract work. Mrs. Miner, with her husband, had traveled extensively the past few years, covering most places in the United States and visiting all LDS temples in this country and in Canada. She had always been active in civic affairs and in church work. She assisted in organizing the LDS ward while they resided in Hiawatha and served as president of the Primary organization there. She had also been president of the Mutual Improvement Association in the Second ward and had been a teacher in every auxiliary organ- i ization of the church. I For many years she did nursing ; work in Springville. She was a member of Camp ' Aaron Johnson DUP. 1 She was married to M. F. Miner I on February 6, 1S95, in the Salt Lake temple. They were parents ! of seven sons and daughters. Survivors include her husband, one son and two daughters, Mrs. Vanda Jensen, Mapleton; Mrs. Marian Wright, Burley, Idaho; Eugene Miner, Springville; 10 grandchildren; three great-grandchildren; four brothers and sisters, Dr. S. Eugene Dalton, Atlantic City, N. J.; Miss Hilda Dalton, j Salt Lake City; Mrs. Emma Rus- : sell, Berkeley, Calif.; Oliver H. I Dalton, Springville. |