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Show MRS. GALLUP CALLED HOME Ellenor Warren Gallup, 76, died Wednesday forenoon at her home in Mapleton. She was the widow of James Gallup, an early Indian interpretor and Black Hawk Indian In-dian war veteran. Mrs. Gallup was born in Springville Spring-ville November 8, 1858. She was married September 23, 1875, in Spanish Fork and two years later was married in the Salt Lake endowment en-dowment house by President Heber Heb-er C. Kimball. Mrs. Gallup has always been a faithful member of the L. D. S. church. She has served as Relif society teacher and trustee and was a member of the Mapleton camp D. U. P. During her early life she did considerable nursing among pioneer pio-neer families, with the joy of the work being her only compensation. She moved from Springville to Mapleton in 1884. Mr. Gallup died in 1910. Surviving are eleven sons and daughters, the father and mother being the only deaths in the family. The children are Mrs. Parley Perry, Mrs. R. D. Bird, Mapleton, Mrs. J. H. Wood, Salt Lake City, Mrs. J, M. Bowen, Spanish Fork; Mrs. E. A. Wood, Farmington; Mrs. La Veil Ostler, Springville; Mrs. Charles A. Wig-nall, Wig-nall, Mrs. George Vincent, Arthur L. Gallup, Provo, J. A. Gallup, Venice, Calif., A. L. Gallup, Alberta, Al-berta, Canada. She also leaves 59 grandchildren; 53 great grandchildren grand-children and the following sisters and a brother, Mrs. Steven Dallin, Springville; Mrs. Frank Fullmer, Salt Lake City; Mrs. Millie Hinch, Sand Point, Ida., John Warren, Salem. The body is at the Claudin funeral fun-eral home pending funeral arrangements, ar-rangements, z |