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Show JOSEPH S. LINDSAY, Sr., who died at his home at j Taylorsville yesterday morn- j I! V 4 ' y . - ..---.v - -- -... r -as V 4r " 1 ; J I1 W- JOSEPH S. LINDSAY " DIES oniuiii Pioneer Resident of Taylorsville Tay-lorsville Contracts Cold on Way to Court. Joseph S. Lindsay, pioneer resident of Taylorsville, died yesterday morning of pneumonia, following an illness of one, day. Mr. Lindsay served as a juror in tho district court Friday, and contracted .a cold whilo on his way to the courtroom. When he reached home Friday night his condition was such as to alarm his family and friends, and dospite the best medical attention to be had he grew steadily worso until his death. Mr. Lindsay, who is tho father, of County . Commissioner J. Lindsay, was born in Liverpool, England, in 1840, and came to Utah in 1859, at the age of 10 years, with his parents, crossing the plains with an ox team as one of a company of settlers. He has been a resident of Utah continuously since that time, with the exception of several sev-eral years spent in England on a mission mis-sion for the Mormon church. He took part in the Black Hawk war, and was also a member of an expedition sent to Arizona to quell an Indian uprising there subsequent to the Black Hawk war. In addition to various ranching interests, ho was interested in several mercantile establishments at Taylorsville. Taylors-ville. Mr. Lindsay is survived by his widow, Emma Bennion Lindsay; three sons, J., Samuel J. and Edgar B. Lindsay, Lind-say, and five daughters, Mrs. Alice Morrison and Miss lleen Lindsay of Taylorsville, Mrs. Milton Bennion ane'l Mrs. Lulu Summerhays of Salt Lake, and Mrs. Edward Bennion of Logan. Funeral services will be held at 1 o'clock Tuesday afternoon in tho Taylorsville Tay-lorsville ward meeting house. " Friends are invited to attend and view the body at the residence in Taylorsville at any time prior to the funeral. Interment In-terment will be in Taj-lorsville cemetery. |