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Show M Popular Student Dies Suddenly Milford people, young and old, were shocked with grief Saturday afternoon of last week with the sudden death of E. Phillip Carlisle, Car-lisle, 18, son of Mr. and Mrs. P. C. Carlisle, death following an appendectomy ap-pendectomy performed Tuesday morning. Funeral services were held Monday afternoon in the Milford Mil-ford L. D. S. ward chapel, followed follow-ed by services in Salt Lake City Tuesday afternoon and burial in that city. Preparation of the body for the local services and shipment ship-ment to Salt Lake City was attended at-tended to by the Southern Utah Mortuary. Local services were held at 2:00 o'clock Monday under the direction direc-tion of Bishop Avin H. Baker and the speakers included himself, Principal E. R. Moody of the Mil-for Mil-for high school and Laurence Peterson of the ward bishopric. Musical numbers included two selections se-lections by a quartet composed of Mrs. Vance Fisher, Mrs. J. M. Hughes, Doris Hughes and Mrs. George Moore, accompanied on t(he piano by Mrs. E. L. Smith; vocal solos by Dan Ferguson, accompanied accomp-anied by Mrs. Smith, and by Bishop Bish-op Baker, accompanied by Mrs. Parley B. Fisher. The opening and closing prayers were by J. M. Hughes, and Melbourne Hesling-ton. Hesling-ton. Boy classmates of the de-deceased de-deceased acted as pallbearers and girl classmates as flower-bearers. Eugene Phillip Carlisle was born in Salt Lake City, February 1, 1922, the son of P. C. and Har-dina Har-dina Olsen Carlisle. The early years of his life were spent there, the family moving to Milford six years ago. Phillip had been unusually un-usually active in music and dramatic dra-matic work throughout his high school career and served as class president during 'his junior year and student body president dulling dull-ing his senior year, 'graduating last spring, the recipient of some of the highest honors accorded by the local high school. Since graduation gradu-ation he had been assisting in the the Corner drug store, preparatory prepara-tory to attending college this fall, his parents having made plans to move to Salt Lake City in a few weeks. Thoughtful and consider- ate, a thorough gentleman at all times and conspicuously devoted to his mother, Phillip was one of the most popular young men ever to attend the local high school, a fact eloquenty proved by the large number of young people in attendance attend-ance at the services. His untimely passing is felt as a severe loss to young and old alike. |