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Show FUNERAL HELD FOR COALVILLE PIONEER Special to The Tribune. ( .' ) A I A' II A A'-, July 27. Kunera.1 services ser-vices for Samuel Ciark, who died We!-nesdav. We!-nesdav. were held this afternoon in trie Htake tabernacle. p-jshop J. W. Staples of the fiufT ward pr-sidcd. The speakers I were Joseph T. Martin of 10 vans ton. a lifelong friend of M r. Clark; George Heard of Coalville and Bishop W. O. Stephens Ste-phens of Uenefer. Mr ( 'lark way horn in Summer foals, Derbyshire. Finland. August 7. 1S4H. He ma rried Jane P. Morton. January 1 ST 1 . in Knsland. and i anie to Utah the same year. He located at Coalville, where he had resided since that time. lOisht children were born to the above union, five of whom are dead. His wife died on July 17. LSSi. On .November 7. he married Mar tha Rridpe, who died on December 7. ixitn, leaving one child, Wilford B. Clark of this city. He married Malvina Hubhert on December De-cember 9, ISni, who died one year later, leavinp one son, St. Clair Montrose Clark. On November 27, ISOn, he married Amanda Hibbert, by whom he had seven children, two of whom died in infancy. In all, he was t he father of eighteen children, ten of whom are living. He is also survived by twenty-one grandchildren grandchil-dren and two great-grandchildren. Mr. Clark served as a member of the city council of Coalville City and one four-year term as county commissioner of Summit county. For twenty-one years he was foreman of the Wasatch mine, located lo-cated here, and was considered one of the best coal mining men in Utah. |