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Daisy Ruth Carter

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Daisy Ruth Carter

Birth
Shelby County, Missouri, USA
Death
4 Jun 1910 (aged 2)
Tiger Fork Township, Shelby County, Missouri, USA
Burial
Sigsbee, Shelby County, Missouri, USA GPS-Latitude: 39.9007185, Longitude: -91.8737116
Plot
Row 7 Grave 4
Memorial ID
View Source
COD: Tubercular Meningitis

MO d/c 18876

Obituary.
Daisy Ruth Carter, daughter of B. F. and B. A. Carter, departed this life June 4, 1910, at her home six miles east of Bethel, aged 2 years, 1 month and 25 days. She died of congestion of the brain and suffered greatly for 10 days when the Lord called her home. Little Daisy was a sweet baby and loved by all who knew her. She will be greatly missed by father, mother, relatives and friends, but we feel our loss is her eternal gain. She has only gone on before us and is at home where there is no sickness and where sorrow and sin never come. Weep not for her dear father and mother for she has gone to her heavenly home. We will be separated for a short time but we hope to meet her on yon beautiful shore.
Her funeral was preached by Rev. Ingold, then she was laid to rest in Concord churchyard.
We shall sleep but not forever,
There will be a glorious dawn;
We shall meet to part — no never!
On the resurrection morn.
In the bright eternal city
Death can never, never come;
In his own good time he'll take us
There to rest with him at home. — A Friend.
Shelby County Herald, Shelbyville, Missouri · Wednesday, June 29, 1910; Page 3, Column 1
COD: Tubercular Meningitis

MO d/c 18876

Obituary.
Daisy Ruth Carter, daughter of B. F. and B. A. Carter, departed this life June 4, 1910, at her home six miles east of Bethel, aged 2 years, 1 month and 25 days. She died of congestion of the brain and suffered greatly for 10 days when the Lord called her home. Little Daisy was a sweet baby and loved by all who knew her. She will be greatly missed by father, mother, relatives and friends, but we feel our loss is her eternal gain. She has only gone on before us and is at home where there is no sickness and where sorrow and sin never come. Weep not for her dear father and mother for she has gone to her heavenly home. We will be separated for a short time but we hope to meet her on yon beautiful shore.
Her funeral was preached by Rev. Ingold, then she was laid to rest in Concord churchyard.
We shall sleep but not forever,
There will be a glorious dawn;
We shall meet to part — no never!
On the resurrection morn.
In the bright eternal city
Death can never, never come;
In his own good time he'll take us
There to rest with him at home. — A Friend.
Shelby County Herald, Shelbyville, Missouri · Wednesday, June 29, 1910; Page 3, Column 1


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