Wife of Eugene C. Aber, m. March 16, 1881, Union County, Illinois.
Source: Jonesboro Gazette, May 21, 1915
Almeda Aber died Wednesday, May 19, 1915 at home at 227 South Fourteenth Street in Murphysboro, Jackson County, of heart trouble, aged 60 years, and was buried at Murphysboro. Her funeral was at the Presbyterian church.
She was born Feb. 17, 1855, in Cobden, the daughter of Martin Rendleman. She married E. C. Aber when she was 26. He was the foreman of the Mobile & Ohio Railroad. They moved to Jackson, Tenn., and later to Murphysboro, where he became bridge foreman.
She left her husband, two daughters, Helen Aber, a teacher, and Hattie Aber, both of Murphysboro; three sisters, Mrs. George Rich, Mrs. James Venerable, and Mrs. Charles Norris, all of Cobden; and one brother, Thomas Rendleman, of Alto Pass.
Wife of Eugene C. Aber, m. March 16, 1881, Union County, Illinois.
Source: Jonesboro Gazette, May 21, 1915
Almeda Aber died Wednesday, May 19, 1915 at home at 227 South Fourteenth Street in Murphysboro, Jackson County, of heart trouble, aged 60 years, and was buried at Murphysboro. Her funeral was at the Presbyterian church.
She was born Feb. 17, 1855, in Cobden, the daughter of Martin Rendleman. She married E. C. Aber when she was 26. He was the foreman of the Mobile & Ohio Railroad. They moved to Jackson, Tenn., and later to Murphysboro, where he became bridge foreman.
She left her husband, two daughters, Helen Aber, a teacher, and Hattie Aber, both of Murphysboro; three sisters, Mrs. George Rich, Mrs. James Venerable, and Mrs. Charles Norris, all of Cobden; and one brother, Thomas Rendleman, of Alto Pass.
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