OCR Text |
Show FINAL RITES HELD F0R1F. MEAD A last tribute 'was paid John Franklin Mead, 61, of Copperton, in funeral rites held Sunday at 1:30 p. m. in the Bingham high school auditorium. Friendship lodge, No. 27, I.O.O.F., of Salt Lake City had charge and conducted con-ducted graveside services at Mt. Olivet cemetery in Salt Lake City. Alvin Paul of Salt Lake City was a speaker and the Rev. Meredith Mere-dith Smith of the M. E. Community Commu-nity church gave the sermon. Musical numbers included a vocal vo-cal duet by Mrs. Clive Siddoway and Miss Annie Masters, "Beautiful "Beau-tiful Isle of Somewhere"; a violin solo by Mrs. C. A. Morley; a vocal solo, "Sometime We'll Understand," Under-stand," by Mrs. Meredith Smith. The floral tributes were many, and a large proportion of the friends crowding the auditorium joined the cortege to the cemetery. ceme-tery. Mr.. Mead died Sept. 26 of a heart ailment in a Salt Lake City hospital. He was born January 22, 1879, in Wallaceburg, Ontario, On-tario, Canada, and came to Utah 28 years ago. He was a foreman for the Utah Copper company. He married Clara Kirkpatrick in Faribault, Minn., August 26, 1908. Surviving are his widow, two daughters, Mrs. Frances Sayato-vic Sayato-vic of Salt Lake City and Mrs. L. W. Sumnicht of Copperton, four sisters and a brother living in the east and three grandchildren. grandchild-ren. s . |