OBITUARY, ALLIANCE SEMI-WEEKLY TIMES, Tuesday, July 30, 1918:
MRS. L.N. WORLEY DIED HERE SATURDAY
Mrs. L. N. Worley, one of the most favorably known women of this section died at the family home on Box Butte Avenue at two o'clock Saturday morning from a lingering illness of long duration. Everything known to medical science was done for her by local physicians and later she was taken to the Mayo Bros. hospital at Rochester. She returned a few weeks ago and since that time she underwent a gradual decline. Throughout her illness she exhibited supreme fortitude and met the end comforted and sustained by a true Christian character. A large number of sympathetic friends attended the funeral held at the home Monday afternoon and many beautiful floral offerings told in the language of flowers of the high esteem and love in which she was held by all who knew her. Rev. J.W. Morris, paster of the Methodist church with which the deceased was affillated, took as his subject: "Mother, Home and Heaven." and he paid a beautiful tribute to the memory of a kind and loving wife and mother. Besides her husband, she is survived by five children, Ralph, Guy, Izola, Mabel and Harvey to each of whom is extended the sympathy of all in the hours of their bereavement. She was born in Council Bluffs, IA in 1862. The remains were laid to rest in the Greenwood Cemetery amid the scenes she had known and loved for more than thirty years.
OBITUARY, ALLIANCE SEMI-WEEKLY TIMES, Tuesday, July 30, 1918:
MRS. L.N. WORLEY DIED HERE SATURDAY
Mrs. L. N. Worley, one of the most favorably known women of this section died at the family home on Box Butte Avenue at two o'clock Saturday morning from a lingering illness of long duration. Everything known to medical science was done for her by local physicians and later she was taken to the Mayo Bros. hospital at Rochester. She returned a few weeks ago and since that time she underwent a gradual decline. Throughout her illness she exhibited supreme fortitude and met the end comforted and sustained by a true Christian character. A large number of sympathetic friends attended the funeral held at the home Monday afternoon and many beautiful floral offerings told in the language of flowers of the high esteem and love in which she was held by all who knew her. Rev. J.W. Morris, paster of the Methodist church with which the deceased was affillated, took as his subject: "Mother, Home and Heaven." and he paid a beautiful tribute to the memory of a kind and loving wife and mother. Besides her husband, she is survived by five children, Ralph, Guy, Izola, Mabel and Harvey to each of whom is extended the sympathy of all in the hours of their bereavement. She was born in Council Bluffs, IA in 1862. The remains were laid to rest in the Greenwood Cemetery amid the scenes she had known and loved for more than thirty years.
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