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Show . i 1 ' Hxi i John O. Nash, victim of a sudden heart attack for whom services were held on Wed. at Wheeler Mortuary. Funeral services Wednesday for John 0. Hash, 61 Funeral services were held Wednesday at Wheeler Mortuary, Mortu-ary, for John O. Nash, 61, who died Sunday, April 17, 1966, of a sudden heart attack, at his home 470 East First North. Bishop Waldo Jacobsen of the Tenth Ward, was in charge of the services. Burial was in the Evergreen Cemetery. Mr. Nash was born Sept. 21, 1904, in Payson, a son of Oliver Ol-iver H. and Agnes Francom Nash. He married Cloteel Tanner Tan-ner Jan. 23, 1925, in Provo, and their marriage was later solemnized sol-emnized in the Manti LDS Temple. Following their marriage, they lived in Eureka from 1926 to 1930, where Mr. Nash (cont. on back page col. 3) Funeral services here for John O. Nash (continued from page one) engaged, in bartering. They lived in Santaquin two years, and had been in Springville since 1941. During World War U, Mr. Nash worked at Pacific States Cast Iron Pipe Co., and was also employed as a carpenter at Dugway Proving Grounds and Geneva Steel Plant. Since 1943 he has followed bartering in the Provo area. He was a member of the LDS Church, and while in Eureka Eu-reka was active as superin-l tendent of the Sunday School! and MIA. Surviving are his widow, one son and one daughter, Robert Gordon Nash of Orem and Mrs. Jack R. (Lois) Nielsen of Spanish Fork; 11 grandchildren; grandchild-ren; a stepmother, Mrs. Oliver H. Nash of Springville; four brothers and two sisters: Floyd Nash of Eureka; Mrs. Florence Rynearson of Salt Lake City; Mrs. Leland (Erma) Pearson of Grander; Neldon Nash of Palmyra; Arvin and Verl Nash of Aberdeen, Idaho. |