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Show Mrs. Sarah Embley I Called to Reward i Announcement of the death of. i Sarah Ann Puffin, the beloved wife of Chas. II. Embly, has cast a shad-j shad-j cw of gloom over the entire oor.i-; oor.i-; nmnity and friends and relatives ' bowed their heads in grief and sor- row. when the word was sent forth that Mrs. Eblcy had passed to the great unkonwn. Mrs. Embly was stricken with influenza and a week I later she suffered an attack of pneu- monia. The dread disease worked , rapidly and within twenty-four hours after she died. i Mrs. Embley was a native of San- pete county, being born at Moroni, October 10, lSGO. She was the i daughter of Edward and Margaret Gledhill Duffin. At the age of six (years she, with her parents, went to I Monroe and later came to what was ' then known as Fort Gunnison, and j had since resided in the valley ui.Ul , death called her. In 1879 she was ! married to Chas. H. Embley, the . ceremony having been performed at ! the Endowment house. Surviving, ! besides the husband, are four daughters, Mrs. John Anderson of Sterling; Mrs. J. L. Willardson, Ephraim; Eph-raim; Mrs. S. S. Barton, Ogden, and Mrs. G. W. Funk, Salt Lake, and two sons, Chas. F. Embley, Center-field, Center-field, and J. S. Embley, Ogden. Mrs. Embley also leaves two brothers, Ti. A. Duffin of Portland, Oregon, and J. W. Duffin of Gunnison, and three 'sisters, Mrs. Martha Bardsley ..f ; Gunnison, Mrs. Alice Bardsley ,u j Centerfield, and Mrs. Lizzie ,Ic;i-nings ,Ic;i-nings of Levan, and twelve grand ; children and three great grandchildren. grandchild-ren. j Mrs. Embley, all during her life, j was an ardent member of the Mormon Mor-mon church. She served efficiently I in primary and Rcl'ef society work, j serving as president in the last or-1 or-1 ganization and she did her work with credit and won the admiration and love from her many associates. Solemn and impressive funeral services were held from the Center- field ward meeting house last Sun-j Sun-j day afternoon at one thirty. Bishop i C. A. Peterson had charge of tin-! tin-! funeral and Sidney J. Fjeldsted dl-i dl-i reeled the musical program, which I (Continued on Inst page) Mrs. Sarah Embley Called to Rewarc (r.,r..:iiU.'il from ; a;.-e 1 ) v;,3 ,-:.-.. n l.y a si-lcctc-J quartet. Th. i, i:.;:ul iiuilU-m 1-y the- quarte. v.de "Oh, .My Iathvi-," "I Have Reac ,i a Luautii'ul City," and "I Kr.ov H.at -My Jti-Jeemt-r Lives." A solo "i'a'O to Face',' was given by Mrs ;-.-a Jensen. Those makins addresses as a las '.rlwjU to Mrs. Embley were Mrs Hannah Chillis, president of the Re lief society. She also read a poei; written especially fur the occasion by Mrs. Geneva Buchanan; Sidne. 1'jeldsted, A. E. Park and John Lar son of Gunnison; Chris. Willardsoi and Dr. A. J. Nielson of Ephraim Invocation was offered by Hans C Jensen, benediction by Chris P. Lar son, and the grave was dedicated b President Moroni Lazenby of th North Sevier stake. The remains of Mrs. Embley wei tenderly laid to their final resting place in the Centerfield cemetery Airs. Embley was a lover of flower, and friends and relatives remember ed this and the grave was bankec with beautiful floral tributes. Relatives and friends from outside points attending the funeral of Mrs Embley were as follows: Mr. anc. Airs. J. L. Willardson, Mr. and Mrs. Chris. Willardson, Cannon Willardson, Willard-son, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Braith-waite, Braith-waite, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Anderson, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Oviatt, Dr. A. J. Nielson and Prof. II. E. Jensen, Ephraim; John Anderson and family, fam-ily, Ervin Marks and family and Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Funk, Sterling; Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Embley, Mr. anc, Mrs. S. S. Barton and son Kent, Og-den; Og-den; Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Funk, Sah Lake; A. F. Wall and Mr. and Mrs. Alva Wall of Castledale; Moron Lazenby and Wallis Lazenby ol Aurora. Prof. Armont Willardson grandson of Mrs. Embley, motored from Downey, Idaho, a distance oi 250 miles, to attend the funeral Prof. Armont returned north Sunday Sun-day evening. |