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Show HENRY B. FRY SERVICES FRIDAY Henry Blackmore Fry, 64, office of-fice manager of the Eddlngton Canning company, died at his home in Ogden Tuesday at 12:20 a. m., of a heart ailment following a brief illness. Mr. Fry was born in Morgan on December 13, 1876, a son of Richard and Mary Rawle Fry. He was educated in the public schools there and at the University of Utah, of which he was a graduate. gradu-ate. He was office manager for the Morgan Canning company at Smithfield from 1920 to 1927, and office manager for the Eddington Canning company for the past six years. Much of his life was spent in teaching. He had been principal of the Grantsville high school and was the first principal of Morgan Mor-gan high school, which he was largely instrumental in founding. He later became Morgan county superintendent of schools. He also served as mayor and deputy county recorder at Morgan. An active L. D. S. church worker, he had interested himself especially in Sunday schools, and for several years was assistant superintendent of the Morgan stake Sunday schools. He also taught in the various auxiliary organizations, or-ganizations, and had been a member mem-ber of the stake high council. At the time of his death he was a high priest in the Ogden Thirteenth Thir-teenth L. D. S. ward. Surviving are his widow, Mrs. Mabel Nelson Fry, of Ogden, whom he married in Morgan on July 27, 1904; two sons, Verle Fry of Los Angeles, California, and Burke Fry of Washington, D. C. ; four brothers bro-thers and two sisters, Richard R., Thomas L. and George Albert Fry of Morgan; Charles Fry of Springville; Spring-ville; Mrs. Flora Robinson and Mrs. Winnie May Crouch of Salt Lake City; and one grandson. Funeral services will be conducted con-ducted Friday at 2 p. m. in the Morgan stake tabernacle. Burial will be in South Morgan cemetery, 'under fhe direction of Lindquist and Sons mortuary. Friends may call at the mortuary mor-tuary Thursday from 3 to 9 p. m., and at the residence Friday until 1 p. m. |