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Show A THE JOURNAL d By R. J. SCOTT'S SCRAP BOOK SCOTT ! j I i ! Final Rites Are Held For A. F. Barnes, Jr. Arthur SALT LAKE CITY 1349 of Franklin Lames, Jr. Gl, Princeton Ave., Salt Lake City, Bia $ROUP oj CROSSES- DLA.Tt prominent businessman and church worker died at his residence Tuesday at 5 a.m., of a heart ailment after an extended illness. Mr. Barnes was a member ot the Church of Jesus Christ ot Latter-da- y Saints and had been Richards ward, Salt of bishop Lake City. He was Sunday ? - SLkiloH, 12 PEOPLE. WERE. KILLED )H A'fWO'CAR AXCIDEHT, rSCQAPS1 KiVust uKlus dku (School superintendent in Rich-- i arils and Yale wards and had served as bishop of Brighton ward for 11 years. He was a (high councilman apd president (of the High Priests quorum ot jBonneville Stake. He was treasurer of the Sons of Utah Pio-- . noers, National Association. He n mission filled a 1009 to in church for the LI)S AOOUHjfc 75 fLRLN Tor. O? ALL KHOWU foRM. LITE. of A.HmXL 9 WSEC ,000,000 SlMit NERVE CELLS ACTIVE iH't'itL till MAH " CI A new kind off 1911. BRAUl. WM ll, fMt Swiss-Germa- 1 'ml'O In the business field, Mr. Barnes entered the banking profession at an early age. He was with the Deseret National Bank in Salt Lake for ten years and for .2 years was secretary-treasure- r for Edward L. Burton and company. He was an officer and director of several important business and financial institutions in Salt Lake City and Kaysville. He was born September 13, 1889, in Salt Lake City, a son of Arthur Franklin and Eliza-- 1 beth Harriet Samson Barnes. Every summer during h i s youth, he spent his vacations mtnH. sandwich That your Party Line neighbors will love. Lovely Linen relin KaysxilU with his many He was educated in atives. Salt Lake City schools and attended the LDS college. He was married to Millie liijge Sept. 24, 1914, in the Salt lake LDS temple. Survivors are his widow, three sons and two daughters, J. Richard and Edward Dale Mil. Barnes and Mrs. Paul Lake dred) Jones, all ot SaltBountiT. Barnes, ; Robert City ful, and Mrs. Thomas Cali-L. (Ruth) White, Petaluma, one fornia, 13 grandchildren, sister and three brothers; Mrs. T. Edgar (Louise) Beard and Ralph A. Barnes, both of Salt Lake City; Harold S. Barnes, Glendale, Calilornia, and C. Douglas Barnes, Long Beach, California. Funeral services will be held in the Yale ward LDS chapel, Salt Lake Citv tomorrow (Friday) at 12:15 p.m. Interment will follow in the Salt Lake City cemetery. Mr. Barnes died just about 11 hours following the death of his aunt, Mrs. Maud Barnes Barton. Funeral services for Mrs. Emily Maud Barnes Barton were held today (Thursday) at 1 p.m. in the Thirteenth ward chapel. Salt Lake City. Interment took place in the Memorial Park. ( IRi I !,ST 2.,, Pj;,. Hill Air Force Employe Dies In Clearfield CLEARFIELD Funeral serv- ices were held Tuesday afternoon for Theodore Thomas Long, 17 who died Thursday, August it;, at a Salt Lake City hospital of a heart He resided in Layton ailment. park. He was born in Louisville, Ky., on Feb. L'u, l'.KH. son of Henry and Laura Long. He was married to Eleanor Lee, May :r. :;, ut 1 Sparks. Nev. They came to Ogden in p.ijr, and moved to Clearfield about three and one-hal- f years ago. Before his illness he was an employee of Hill air base as a supply clerk. lie was a peace-tim- e veteran and a member of Clearfield Second ward LDS church. He was also a member of the Disabled American veterans. Survivors are his widow, a son. Theodore Thomas Long, Jr., Clear-- ! field; also four Kay (and Kenneth Kinner, Clearfield; Lt. A. V. Kinner, U. S. air force, Mather Field, Calif.; Richard Kinner, Reno, Nevada; one sister and one brother. Mrs. Charles Riordan, Long Beach, Calif.; John Martin Long, Burbank, Calif., and two nephews. Wayne and Raymond Long, Burbank, Calif. Bishop J. Kay Nelson presided at the funeral services which we.re as follows: Prelude and postlude music played by Mrs. Adele Hancock. Prayer by Milton Hodge. A vocal duet was given by Doris Ashby and Gertrude Mitchell. The first speaker was Clarence Stoker, followed by a violin solo by Emmett Wiggins, entitled A Per-- j The second speaker feet Day. Mr. and Mrs. was the KAYSVILLE chaplain from the Veter-- j David E. Benton announce the ar- ans hospital in Salt Lake, Emerson rival of a daughter in an Idaho Curtis, llis speech was followed by Falls hospital, Wednesday, Aug- another vocal duet by Doris Ashby ust l.". The little girl has two and Gertrude Beautiful Mitchel, sisters, Dorothy 7, and Susan of Somewhere. Closing prayer Isle and a brother, David, :!. Mr. and was given by Allen Hodson. Mrs. R. W. Benton, Kaysville, and was in the Salt Lake Burial Mr. and Mrs. Marcus K. Codey, Pallbearers and flower cemetery. Newton, Cache Co., are the ladies were neighbors of the Longs. The grave was dedicated by David Kays-ville-Layt- step-childre- n. on Stork Talk Layton. A BOY AND HIS DREAM CAR Betwoon any two telephone calls on your party line ... slip one small slice of TIMB delightful Ingredient can be used in various ways perhaps to wash out a pair of nylons , to water the plants , This or merely to take 25 deep breaths. Oarnith with a sprinkling of consideration for others on the line. a Serve at any hour... particularly when others want to use their telephones. We guarantee that sandwiching a little TIME between your calls will make you extremely popular with your party line neighbors. tim Mountain States Telophono and Telegraph Company By VERA WINSTON LINEN Is enjoying Its biggest and best season In years in everything from the simplest of casual dresses, through beach andsports wear to formal afternoon and informal evening clothes. Designed for formal afternoon occasions is this handsome affair of heaven blue lined with lace dyed to match. A band of Alencon lace studded with stones and seed pearls is set into the skirt at the hip yoke and into the scooped out neckline. Sunburst tucking adds extra charm to this French linen dress, one guaranteed to win sartorial honors at even the smartest gathering. in m Tommy Mills sees the car in his future drawn by Chrysler illustrator Maxine Regan at the Chrysler Corporations New Worlds In Engineering show. Tommy is oie of the quarter of a million people who have seen the shows seventy exhibits in New York, Boston and Pittsburgh The show opens in Dallas, Texas, on October 6 and will be seen in th major Western cities this winter. |