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Show Glenn Stonehocker Dies Suddenly In j Salt Lake Hospital Funeral services for 'Glenn E. Stonehocker, 2H, for the past three and a half years manager of the Hhy-.N'ot service station in Mil-iir.l, Mil-iir.l, were held in the local L. D. S. chapel Thursday afternoon under the auspices of the Milford Odd , Fellows lodge, with burial taking i place in the local cemetery, also j by direction of the lodge. The ! rites were conducted by Attorney Harold Cline, noble grand of the . local lodge, with L. A. Wynaught acting as chaplain. Musical numbers num-bers consisted of a vocal solo by Alvin H. Baker and a vocal quartet number by Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Martin, Mrs. F. E. Casterline and Roy Cottrell, with Miss Sarah Cud-1 Cud-1 dy furnishing the piano aecompani-' aecompani-' ment for Mr. Baker's solo and Mrs. Vena Wilson for the quartet. Mrs. Wilson also furnished piano music as the funeral party entered and j left the chapel. E. R. Moody, prin-! prin-! cipal of the Milford high school, spoke briefly as part of the chapel service and told of the high regard re-gard in which the deceased and his sorrowing wife and kiddies are held by the people of Milford, expressing ex-pressing the fervent hope that the sorrow of those surviving should be eased by the knowledge that Glenn had lived a life of which the family could well be proud. Glenn Ervin Stonehocker was born September 13, 1908, at Chap-j Chap-j pel, Nebraska, the family coming to Milford some 12 years ago. Early in 1933, Glenn took over the management of the service station and had been looked upon as one of Milford's progressive young business busi-ness men, always ready to lend a helping hand to community pro-! pro-! gress. Though handicapped in a 1 physical way himself, Glenn took I a keen interest in sports of all I kinds , especially M-Men basketball, basket-ball, attending the team constantly j in its elimination schedule each j year and looking forward to participation par-ticipation in the all-church finals in Salt Lake each of the last three years with as much interest as any : of the players, terming tournament I time as his vacation time and en-I en-I joying it immensely. Shortly- after entering on his business career he was married to , Miss Theone Gillins and his devotion devo-tion to wife and babies, as well as l to his widowed mother, was outstanding. out-standing. As a member and past noble grand of the local I. O. O. F. lodge, he was further loved and respected. re-spected. ' Death took place Monday in a I Salt Lake hospital where he was taken for treatment of hemorrhage, to which he was susceptible. Sur- viving him, in addition to his wife, are two little daughters, Beverly Jean and Janice Elaine, his mother, Mrs. Georgia Stonehocker; a brother, bro-ther, Earl F., and a paternal grandfather. |