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Show ' ' ' ; i 1 Mrs. Emily T. Anderson, for whom services will be held Friday, with burial in Logan. Funeral rites Friday for Emily Anderson Funeral services for Mrs. Emily T. Anderson, 68, widow of Woodruff H. Anderson, will be held Friday at 10:30 a.m., in the Third Ward, with Bishop F. Calvin Packard in charge. She passed away Tuesday, February Feb-ruary 4, 1964, after a long illness. ill-ness. Friends may call at the Wheeler Mortuary tonight from 7 to 9 p.m. and Friday, before the services. Burial will be in the Logan City Cemetery, at approximately 3:30 p.m. Mrs. Anderson was born March 1, 1895, in American Fork, a daughter of Thomas and Betsey Adamson Thornton. She spent her early girlhood in Iona, Idaho, and filled an LDS Mission in the Eastern States. She was married to Woodruff Wood-ruff H. Anderson, June 25, 1925, and they subsequently made their home in Big Piney, Wyoming, in Bunkerville, Nev., and in Payson, before moving in 1934, to Springville, where Mr. Anderson was the vocational agriculture teacher in high school. He died a number num-ber of years ago. Mrs. Anderson had been active ac-tive in church work serving as a Primary and as a Relief Society So-ciety teacher, and had done extensive temple work. She was a member of the D. U. P. and of the Home Culture Club, serving as secretary of the latter club at the time of her illness. Surviving are one son and one daughter, E r w i n W. Anderson, Springville and Mrs. Bernell T. (Beth Ann) Hone of San Diego; also nine grandchildren grand-children and seven brothers and sisters, Edward and Clifford Clif-ford Thornton of Idaho Falls, Idaho; Carl Thornton of West Yellowstone; Arnold Thornton, Redlands, Calif.; Harry Thornton, Thorn-ton, Mrs. W. H. Croft and Mrs. William Walker of Idaho Falls, Idaho. i Mecklenburg County, N. C, celebrates its own Independence Independ-ence Day every May 20. Declared De-clared its independence from the British Crown in 1775. |