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Show Irma Sullivan Nord Dies At Iron County Hospital Sunday, Mar. 22 CEDAR CITY, Utah. Death came Sunday afternoon in the Iron county hospital to Irma Sullivan Nord, 29, wife of Rex Clark Nord, of Los Angeles, and formerly of St. George. She died of heart attack at-tack after a few days illness. Born in Leeds, August 26, 1912, she was the eldest of six children of Frank and Ellen Sullivan. After graduating from the Hurricane Hurri-cane high school she attended the Dixie junior college one year before be-fore marrying Rex Clark Nord in Leeds, June 14, 1935. They made their home in Los Angeles. She had been visiting her parents in St. George five months because of ill health. Surviving besides her parents and husband, are two daughters, (Continued on page eight) Irma Nerd Death (Continued from first page) Pauline and Eleaner Nord, aged four and three, of St. George; five brothers and sisters, Frank R. Sullivan of Long Beach; Mack Lloyd Sullivan, with the U. S. Army near Los Angeles; Mrs. Pauline Shimek of Los Angeles; Ladonna and Grace Sullivan of St. George; her maternal grandmother, Mrs. David McMullin, aged SO; and paternal grandfather, William D. Sullivan, aged S3, both of Leeds. Funeral Services Bishop Wilford Schmutz conducted conduc-ted funeral services in the stake Tabernacle at 2 p.m., Wednesday for Mrs. Nord, with a large attendance at-tendance of relatives and friends, many coming from Leeds and Hurricane, where Mrs. Nord resided re-sided with her family through childhood. Paul Thompson was at the organ. Music numbers for the service included a vocal duet, "Jesus, Lover of My Soul", Kenneth Judd and Juanita McQuaid; trumpet solo, Earl J. Bleak with Mrs. Bleak accompanying; vocal solo, "Teach Me To Pray", Clive Hart-man; Hart-man; and vocal trio, "Sometime We'll Understand", Louie H. Smith, Margaret Stucki and Elva Terry. Speakers were Robert P. Woodbury, Wood-bury, who gave a deeply religious serman; Pres. Glenn E. Snow, of the Dixie college under whom the deceased graduated from the Hurricane Hur-ricane high school. He told of her rich personality, her intellectual capacity, and her beauty as a woman and a mother. H. L. Reid, a school teacher, told of her brilliant bril-liant record as a student and of her capacity in gaining friends. Prayers were by Pres. Harold S. Snow and Bishop Arthur Cot-tam. Cot-tam. The grave in the St. George city cemetery was dedicated by Edward McMullin of Leeds. |