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Show t - V V . j . - i " c- . f "i I ' ' j MAX B. STEVENSON . . . Korean Casually Services Held For Max Stevenson, Korean Casualty ALTONAH Funeral services were conducted Monday at 1 p.m. in the Mt. Home LDS ward chapel for Pvt. Max B. Stevenson, Steven-son, 21; who was killed July 16 1953, in Korea, where he was serving with the United States military forces. The services were conducted by Bishop Kenneth J. Richards; prelude and postlude music was played by Mrs. Anona Miles; invocation in-vocation by Claude Murray; duet, Mrs. Fern Mitchell and Porter Merrell, accompanied by Mrs. Cheryl Merrill; speaker, Sidney Rust; solobox solo, Glen Shanks; duet, Mrs. Ruth Das-trup Das-trup and Mrs. Rita Hansen, ac-j companied by Mrs. Edith Hansen; Han-sen; speaker, Levi J. Anderton; solo, Robert Poulson, accom-J panied by Mrs. Hansen; benediction, benedic-tion, Fred Lindsay. Burial was in the Mt. Home Cemetery with Ray Oman dedicating the grave. (Continued on back cage) Services Held . . . J (Continued from page 1) ' Pallbearers were Jim Steven-( ' son, Jack Stevenson, Jerald Hicken, Dewey Jessen, Reay i Jessen and Garry Jessen. Pvt. Loren S. Stevenson, a cousin of the deceased was the special escort es-cort and presented Mrs. Max Stevenson with the U. S. Flag. Born June 20, 1932, he was the son of Clifford B. and Ray-da Ray-da Jensen Stevenson, of Mtn. Home. On August 15, 1953 he was married to Minnie Lue Jessen, Jes-sen, of Altonah, all of which survive. Other survivors include in-clude a baby daughter, Maxine Bee Stevenson and the following follow-ing brothers and sisters: Virgil, Salt Lake City; Jack, Karen, Andrew and Mrs. Dorothy Hick-en, Hick-en, Mtn. Home; two grandmothers, grandmoth-ers, Mrs. Brig Stevenson, Salt Lake City, and Mrs. Bert Jessen, Jes-sen, Bynum, Montana. Burial was in the Mtn. Home Cemetery under the direction of Olpin Mortuary of Roosevelt, i |