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Show DAILY HERALD Wednesday, December 3. 2003 D3 OBITUM EES Emily Ford Thomas Emily Ford Thomas, 92, passed away Tuesday, November 25, 2001 She was a resident of Hearthstone Manor having come there in Jury from Chi-nv California where she and her husband had resided with " o, ; Bar- bara, for two years. They had previously been jMMl'-'L'jlii.hresidents of Saint George, Utah for the past twenty phis years. Emily was bora April 9, 1911, the fourth child of eleven to Willard Eugene Ford and Myrtle Roundy in Kanab, Utah. She lived in that community until her marriage to Kenneth Lavar Thomas of Spanish Fork, Utah. In their early married years they lived in Spanish Fork. They moved many times both of them working and improving their situation with each move. Emily was a secretary, bookkeeper and office manager for Sacramento Crane Company for many years and retired from this company. Following her retirement, she and Kenneth traveled extensively throughout the United States Julia Adams Nielson T and Canada. Emily was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-daSaints and held many leadership callings in the ftimary and Young Women's. She took great pride in being a reliable visiting teacher. Emily was an avid genealogist and gathered research information regarding her family. She also loved fjower gardening and did hand work. Her hands were seldom idle and her grandchildren and greatgrandchildren are the benefactors of her labors. Two infant children, Darwin Eugene, and an unnamed girl preceded Emily in death. Emily is survived by her husband, Kenneth, to whom she has been married for 73 years; her children, Barbara EUsworth.of Chino, California and Kenneth Blaine Thomas of San Jose, California. She has four grandchildren and 18 One brother and four sisters also survive her. Services will be held at Walker Family Mortuary, 187 South Main, . Spanish Fork, Utah, on Friday, December 5, 2003. A viewing will be held from 9to 9:45 a.m. followed by services at 10 a.m. Interment will be in the Spanish Fork City Cemetery. Condolences may be sent to the family at www . walkerf amily y McConnell (Mack) Rogers McConnell (Mack) Rogers, age 85, departed this life in Carmel, Indi ana. He was born March 6, 1918 to George W.andlsabell Charlotte Day Rogers at Kanosh, Utah, the youngest of six children. Upon graduation from Millard High School in 1935, Mack attended Henager Business College in Salt Lake City. 1 Inl937he found employment as a stenograph-- . er in the U.S. Post Office Department in Washington, D.C He also studied accounting in the evenings at Benjamin Franklin University where he met his future wife, Margaret (Peggy) Wentz. They were married June 25, 1940. The marriage was solemnized November 6, 1954 in the St. George Temple. In 1942 Mack was appointed as a Federal credit union examiner and transferred to California. After 15 years in civil service and two years in the militarv. he became manager of Farmers Insurance Group Federal Credit Union in Los Angeles, from which he retired in 1980 after Lola Taylor Warnick 26 years of service. While at Farmers Insurance Group he, along with a few other orga- nized the National Association of Federal Credit Unions (NAFCU) withtheaim, principally, of securing passage of legislation to provide federal insurance on credit union savings accounts. This became a reality in 1971. Mack served for five years as president of the association. His church service has included 25 years as ward clerk in three wards and stake clerk in two stakes. He also served as counselor in a bishopric, as stake Sunday School president, stake high councilor, high priest group leader and Sunday School teacher. His wife Peggy preceded him in death Survivors include two sons: James W. (Judy) of Carmel, Indiana and Thomas G. (Cindy) of Citrus Heights, California, six grandchildren and 4 great grandchildren. A viewing will be held at the Memorial Estates Mortuary, 5850 S. 900 E., Salt Lake City, Utah on Thursday December 4, 2003 from 6:00 -- 8:00 p.m. Funeral services will be held in the Kanosh Ward chapel, 155 N. Main, Kanosh, Utah, at 1:00 p.m. on Friday December 5, 2003. Viewing will precede the service at chapeL Interment at the Kanosh City Julia Adams Nielson of Provo was born June 18, 1924, to John Redd and Ver- da Lyman Adams. She passed away af- ter a long ilt ness on Satur- day, November 29, 2003, at the age of 79. She is survived by her husband of 55 years and child hood sweetheart, Howard Curtis Nielson; seven children: Noreen (Steve) Astin of American Fork; Elaine (Stan) Taylor of Provo; John (Louise) Nielson of Cedar Rapids, Iowa; Mary Lee (Paul) Jackson of Sugar Hill, Georgia; Jim (Marilyn) Nielson of Bountiful; Jean (Clay) Cundick of Orem; and Howard (Mariko) Nielson Jr. of Alexandria, Virginia. Julia bad 39 grandchildren and 11 She was preceded in death by her parents and brothers, Reed and John. She is survived by brothers Eugene (Joan) Adams of Fresno, California; and Grant (Eulala) Adams of Ft. Walton Beach, Florida. Julia lived in Parowan, Logan, Richfield and Delta, Utah, in her earh years; then moved to Centra and Fresno, California. She and Howard have made their home in Provo since 1957. The Nielsons have also lived in Eugene, Oregon; Berkeley and Palo Alto, California and Arlington, Virginia. Julia was valedictorian of Caruthers Union High School and Fresno State College. She won numerous awards for Lion's Club oratory contests in high school. She taught English at South High School prior to her marriage and she later taught at Brigham Young University and Provo High Schools. She received her BA from Fresno State College in English and her MS in counseling from BYU. She served as president of the Browning Society and the Utah County Republic Women. She was very supportive of her husband's political activities and was campaign chairman of three of his congressional races. She was an active member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-dae misSaints and she served sions with Howard to Australia and Hungary. She also worked at the MTC and served two stake missions. Julia served in teaching and executive positions in all of the church auxiliaries. Julia loved her church callings and her good friends. She enjoyed learning and traveling (visiting forty five countries) and sharing her gifts of writing, teaching and presenting readings and poetry. She offered her home to numerous students and relatives while they attended college. Julia's family was the focus of her life; and she loved family reunions, vacations, and holiday traditions. She organized neighborhood family caroling outings that continued for generations. She is greatly loved and will be missed by all who knew her. A viewing will be held at Walker Family Mortuary, 85 East 300 South, Provo, on Thursday, December 4, from pm and on Friday, December 5 at the Slate Canyon 5th Ward Chapel, 1498 East 800 South. Provo one hour before the services, which will begin at 10:00 am. Interment will be in the Richfield City Cemetery. To send condolences to the family, please visit www.walkerf y full-tim- 6--8 Donna Hall Please note funeral & viewing change for Donna HalL The viewing and funeral information in Tuesday's Papers for Donna Hall were incorrectly reported. Please note the following times and dates for na Hall's services. Funeral services will be held Thursday, December 4, 2003 at 11:00 am in the Timpanogos Stake Center, 800 North 100 West, Pleasant Grove. Friends may call p.m. Wednesday evening from at the church and on Thursday one hour prior to services. Interment will be in the Pleasant Grove City Cemetery. Funeral directors Olpin Family Mortuary, Pleasant Grove. -- DEATH NOTICES Rita A. Bumiagham, 77, of Orem, died Tuesday. $ervices pending, will be announced by Berg Mortuary of Provo. Floyd Wahofi Brereton, 79, of Provo, died Monday. Services will be announced by Berg Mortuary. Irene Besner, 85, of Provo, died Tuesday, Dec. 2, 2003. Services are pending and will be announced by Walker Sanderson Funeral Home of Orem. Earl Bellamy ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) Earl Bellamy, who directed scores of popular TV shows in a prolific ca- reer that began with the birth of ' commercial television and contin- uedweO into the 1980s, died Sunday of a heart attack. He was 86. The director, who was particularly adept at Westerns, had credits on alnuvt mvamf nrmilar eVimit tf that ffpnre inrhidini? "The Iine Ranger," "Rawhide," "Laredo," "Wagon train," "Daniel Boone," "Sergeant Preston of the Yukon," "The Adventures of Rin Tin Tin," The Monroes" and "The Virginian." He was awarded the prestigious Golden Boot Award last year by the Motion Picture and Television Fund for his contributions to the craft. He was equally skilled at nan-dling situation comedies and dramas, however, and his credits in those areas included "MASH," "I Spy," "Leave it to Beaver," "The Donna Reed Show," "Bachelor Father," "CHipS." "Starsky and Hutch," "Lassie," "Perry Mason," "The Andy Griffith Show," "The Munsters," "Fantasy Island," "Eight Is Enough," "The Mod Squad" "My Three Sons" and "The Love Boat." Bellamy also directed nearly two dozen feature films, beginning with the George Raft Western "Seminole Uprising" in 1955. Other television credits in that ' field included "Hart to Hart," "Trapper John, M.D.," "The Doris Day Show and "Get Smart." Krieger Institute, died Sunday at age 80.. When Capute arrived in Baltimore in 1965 from his native New York, few pediatricians knew how to diagnose or treat children with cerebral palsy, autism, mental retardation and other developmental disorders. Capute waged a nearly battle to create a specialty within pediatrics that focused on children with developmental disorders. The field, called developmental pediatrics, was formally accredited in 1999, In 1965 Capute suffered a heart attack and was advised to find less stressful work. Robert Cooke, then head of the Johns Hopkins pediatrics department, coaxed Capute to Baltimore to study child development. Capute joined the newly opened n John F. Kennedy Institute for of the Mentally and Physicalnow the ly Handicapped Child in Kennedy Krieger Institute ar Habil-itatio- 1967. in the Geneva Heights Stake Faafili dhobitpho10herlldextra.com ! daughter of Lio and Lily Leota Brown. Funeral services will be held Friday, December 5, 2003, at 11.00 a.m. DEADLINES Visit the . obituaries online to sign a Guest Book J or send flowers. See the obitaary section ar www.HarkTheHerald.com nil.h w mi 4 ULJULo Vmma I Customer Appreciation Coupon $74-$1See optician for details. Styles vary by location. Cannot be combined with any other offer, vision care plan, or package pricing. Available at JCPenney stores with a participating center. Offer expires dtyhy and vuit . our Cascade ChapeL ill Optician please nng m the following code when redeeming this coupon: 50M or 22C for RtgJon 220 Audiology 1 350 N. fctwKtCca Fori 783-072- Imost eyeglasses 4 I frames I Esplin & Weight CALL 373-491- ytm ifs all inside: optical lenses complete mum yv ttMtnt provided by indtptndifit ftito Doctors of Optometry. If ' CaU The law firm of Helpinf the injured (or over 32 & I INJURED . letting Utah Valley, ' - optical 13103. If you've been one convenient location t r , mm Savlngt from Owned and operated' ' mm r m I . for over a century at optical Tuesday Saturday: ' 4 00 p.m. Day before publication ' Sunday: 1:00 p m on Saturday Monday 1:00 p.m. on Sunday . For Sunday & Monday publications, or faxed. obits need to be Photo deadlines Same as above. , Dr.tgyne Garrett Family Utah under the direction of the Walker Sanderson Funeral Home of Orem, Utah. Family and friends may visit Thursday evening at the Geneva Heights 3rd Ward, 857 West 800 North, Orem, from 6 to 8 pm and at the Stake Center on Friday morning from 9 JO to 10:30 a.m. prior to services. Burial will be in the East Lawn Memorial Hills Cemetery. ern Samoa, a 4 ;' Cen- ter, 560 North 500 West, Orem, 'wdn.., fl fso Fax '( it's all inside; Daily Herad charges fix obituaries. Death notiqes, brief items identifying the deceased and the funeral home involved; however, run free of charge and mjist be placed by the funeral home, i The Darty Herald obituary rates are as follows: $18 31 ber inch. $15 per pics ture Kx lurlhr inlormalion call You may to great-grand- Lealaitafea, 84, of Orem, Utah, passed away November 29, 2003. She was born March 13, 1919, in West- The Arnold J. Capute BALTIMORE (AP) Dr. Arnold J. Capute, a pioneer in the study and treatment of children with developmental disabilities and member of the original staff of the Kennedy . Faafili Lealaitafea Correction on Location of Viewing OBITUARY FEES NATIONAL DEATHS iTl Og-de- n, 6-- 8 Don- - and love of reading and musk and family togetherness. She was a wonderful cook. She loved to can.. and present to friends and family the peaches, pears, apples, cherries, red and black raspberries and vegetables that Dad always grew. Her mustard pickles and jams were leg , endary. . Reed and Lola moved back to Orem, UT in 1979 to be with many of their children and children's famiShe was lies then residing near-ba private and proud person, but accepted whatever troubles and difficulties she encountered with dignity' and loyalty. She found lasting fulfillment in the lives and achievements of her children. She spent several years caring for Reed in his later years, prior to his death at the age ; of ninty seven in 1993. Lola is survived by her children, Charles Peter (Mamie Alice), Reed Taylor (Kathy), John Michael (Lynel), Whitney Bruce (Loraine), Charlotte Christine Hawkins (David) and Steven Darwin (Sonnie) and one brother, Thomas J. Taylor of Ogden. She is blessed with 32 , grandchildren and 28 children. ..' She was preceded in death by her' husband. Reed, and her grandson, Ward, as well as her parents, two ' brothers and two sisters. Gratitude is expressed for the as- sistance and care provided by the Orchard Park Care Center and for their kindness and patience. Funeral services will be held 3PM, Friday, December 5, 2003, at ' the Orem Windsor 3rd Ward Chapel; 60 E. 1600 N., in Orem A viewing will be held at 1PM at the ; Chapel, prior to the funeraL Interment will be in the Pleasant Grove Qty Cemetery. Funeral directors Olpin Family Mortuary, Pleasant Grove. Orem Our mother, grandmother and great grandmother, Lola Taylor Warnick peacefully left this mortal proba- tion on 30 November 2003. She was born March7. 1910. in Preston, Idaho to Charles Hyde Taylor and Anna Char' lotta Jeppson. Her new home was the first in Preston with running water and an indoor bathroom. At the age of six, Lola's family moved to Brigham City, UT where she started school. Two years later, the family moved to where her father was later Chief of Police. Lola giw up and worked in Ogden. A fond and lasting event in her life was the adventure of moving, with girlfriends to San Francisco, where she worked as a model at I Magnin's Department Store. However, she returned to Ogden several months later to marry, on March 1, 1930, her ardent pursuer, Reed Whitney Warnick, who was involved in the management of the Ogden Livestock Show. Reed and Lola moved to Denver, CO in 1940, where Reed was transferred with his work in the wool and ranch business, and where they raised six children - an effort that included seven years on a farm near Windsor, CO. Lola and Reed became active in the IDS Church, and they were sealed for time and eternity in the Salt Lake Temple on May 6, 1946, and thereafter served in numerous church callings. They sent all five of their boys on successful church missions and saw that aD six of their children obtained a college education and temple marriages. Throughout her life, Lola served faithfully and unflinchingly as a wife and mother. She filled her children's memories with hours of reading stories from good books and taught by example the importance ' Itcimd you or anyone your family in ' Provo: Provo Towne Center needs eyeglasses, or hasn't had an eye exam in the last year, r:a;y n tii tt.3 Can tofl free (877) vtsltXP-EYES.co- m 2 i (801)852-301- 2 JCP-EYE- S ' Salt Lake City: Cottonwood Mall (801)273-096- 6 or Valley Fair Shopping Center (801)966-944- 1 , |