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Ida Mary <I>Linville</I> Ringer

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Ida Mary Linville Ringer

Birth
Edina, Knox County, Missouri, USA
Death
8 Mar 1913 (aged 58)
Edina, Knox County, Missouri, USA
Burial
Edina, Knox County, Missouri, USA Add to Map
Plot
Row 11 SWQ
Memorial ID
View Source

Married Rufus Madison Ringer on 17 NOV 1875 in Edina, Knox County, Missouri.


MO d/c 9645


MRS. R. M. RINGER OF EDINA IS DEAD

Wife of President of the Bank of Edina Died This Morning.

Edina, Mo., March 8.—Mrs. R. M. Ringer, wife of the president of the Bank of Edina, died this morning at 9 o'clock, after an illness of two weeks. An operation for appendicitis was recently performed, and she was not able to recover from Its effects.

Mrs. Ringer was about 63 years of age, and was born in Edina, and had always made her home here. Her father was Philip Linville, formerly president of the Bank of Edina, and her brother, Charles Linville, who survives her, is cashier of the same institution. She was a woman of rare social and intellectual attainments and has always been prominently identified with the life of the town.

The husband and one son, Charles, survive, besides the brother.

The Quincy Daily Herald, Quincy, Illinois, Saturday, March 08, 1913; Page: 9

Married Rufus Madison Ringer on 17 NOV 1875 in Edina, Knox County, Missouri.


MO d/c 9645


MRS. R. M. RINGER OF EDINA IS DEAD

Wife of President of the Bank of Edina Died This Morning.

Edina, Mo., March 8.—Mrs. R. M. Ringer, wife of the president of the Bank of Edina, died this morning at 9 o'clock, after an illness of two weeks. An operation for appendicitis was recently performed, and she was not able to recover from Its effects.

Mrs. Ringer was about 63 years of age, and was born in Edina, and had always made her home here. Her father was Philip Linville, formerly president of the Bank of Edina, and her brother, Charles Linville, who survives her, is cashier of the same institution. She was a woman of rare social and intellectual attainments and has always been prominently identified with the life of the town.

The husband and one son, Charles, survive, besides the brother.

The Quincy Daily Herald, Quincy, Illinois, Saturday, March 08, 1913; Page: 9



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