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Show Hi'', f; MRS. DALLON. I'jLfl Last Sunday in Springville a most estimable lady 1 P! jj was laid in her final couch. Mr. and Mrs. John Dal- Htjif !j Ion were married fifty years, for thirty nine years ifi;!' they walked side by side in Utah and their path Bpj,i. was for the greater part of that time filled with liffi'l sharp rocks and lines by thorns. They were old BJy'f I I time Liberals cr ying out for a free government and IHfljf for the equal standing of men. But all that time H P m theie was the calm in their home that comes of per- 1 ,k feet marriage. In calm and storm, in prosperity and Hk i adversity, and there was more adversity than pros- HJr 'P perity, in that home there was the peace that comes 1 of perfect incorporated affections and absolute trust. fje A very sterling woman was Mrs. Dallon. She took m , JL' i up life's duties with the single purpose of carrying if1 them unfalteringly to the end and the purpose never B 'b wearied. As wife and mother and neighbor, she so jjMkjjjft lived that she filled the idea of high womanliness Bu, and when the final shadows began to darken around Hu'j' her, not one self-reproach disturbed her, her clear H j eyes were not dimmed Dy one cloud. As she in life t'l had been uncomplaining and true, so when that life ijj j, began to slip away she fearlessly looked the reality hi u in the face and with perfect serenity approached the h.H final calm. V Her husband and children are comfortless except , i '!, in the knowledge that as her life was blameless here jrjt she has earned the peace that has come to her. |