Here's a sad obituary for three members of the same family. - Jean Griesan Colorado GILLETT. - HENRIETTA GILLETT, January 6, 1868, in the 45th year of her age. BENJAMIN W. GILLETT, January 29th, 1868, in the 17th year of his age. CONDACE E. GILLETT, Feb. 2d, 1868, in the 11th year of her age. Thus, by the ravages of typhoid fever, in less than a month's time, the household of Mr. Elisha Gillett, of Windsor township, Lawrence county, was bereft of three members - the wife and mother, a son and a daughter. Sister Gillett professed conversion and united with the Methodist Episcopal Church, at what was called the Wolf Creek School House Appointment, Burlington Circuit, in the Fall of 1841, and maintained her religious standing in the church down to the close of life. Her husband (Bro. Gillett) says of her, that all that could be said of a devotedly religious wife, equal to more than her part in all the trials and care of life, may be said of her. Benjamin professed conversion and joined the M. E. Church about a year before his death. During his sickness, after receiving some words of encouragement from his father, he engaged in earnest prayer for a time; then fell asleep; then awoke out of his sleep, praising the Lord. He continued in a serene and happy state of mind, often praising the Lord, until his energies were wasted, and the Lord came and took him. Condace - Is it not "well with the child?" Her mother had learned her to say, "Our Father who art in Heaven." "How blest the righteous when he dies, When sinks a weary soul to rest; How mildly beam the closing eyes, How gently heaves the expiring breast. So fades a summer cloud away; So sinks the gale when storms are o'er; So gently shuts the eye of day; So dies a wave along the shore. A holy quiet reigns around - A calm which life nor death destroys; And naught disturbs that peace profound Which his unfettered soul enjoys." WILSON GARDNER. Ironton Journal, Wednesday, April 1, 1868