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Show 126 MADELYN CANNON STEWART SILVER they invited Harold's brother, Richard Silver, a student at the University of Utah, to live with them. Their sister, Lucile Silver, was working as a secretary and they invited her to live with them as well. Elizabeth was three and Barnard had just been born, so there was quite a crowd in that little Beeley home. It is a tribute to Harold and Madelyn that they agreed to his con work on his tinuing inventions, although there was little prospect of income from them for several years. Then in September 1933 there was a major test of his newly invented piler, installed at Worland, Wyoming. He sold this first machine at the end of the harvest to the Holly Sugar Company of Colorado Springs, Colorado. Having been offered an opportu nity to manage an iron works in Denver that could produce the piler, he decided to make the move there to begin the produc tion of that and other products he was developing. So in after five in and Salt Lake City, January 1934, years Ogden Harold and Madelyn moved to Denver. It must have been a difficult decision. Madelyn would be leaving all of her Stewart and Cannon relatives and her many friends with whom she had attended the LDS High School and the University of Utah and with whom she had taught at Irving Junior High and LDS University in Salt Lake City. But she went with Harold, and spent the rest of her life in Denver. They rent ed a home on Niagara Street, where they were living when Judith Ann was born on July 4, 1935. In 1937 they purchased a home on Clermont Street, where Brian Quayle arrived on September 8, 1942. The Silvers lived at the Clermont Street home until Madelyn's death in 1961. Indeed, Ruth Silver, Harold's second wife, lives there still. |