Funeral Services Is Held Here Saturday For Mrs. M. G. Bean
Last rites were held Saturday for Mrs. M. G. Bean of 104 Graham, who died Friday morning at the Sanitarium of Paris, following a stroke last Sunday. The service was held at Manton-Fry Funeral Home conducted by the Rev. Lawrence Milloy of First Presbyterian Church, and burial was made at Evergreen Cemetery. Pall bearers were O. B. Fisher, Joe Hammack, Ivan T. Smith, Barnabas Harrison, Bud Morgan and Charles Shaeffer. Mrs. Bean, the former Miss Durella Snodgrass, was born in Mt. Pleasant in 1869 and had been a school teacher before her marriage to the late Guy Bean, widely known as a progressive farmer, who lived in the Brookston community. They moved to Paris in 1908, and Mrs. Bean was a member of the First Presbyterian Church. Besides her daughter, Mrs. W. S. (Ted) Biard of Edgewood and one grandson, she leaves a brother, Sam P. Snodgrass of Temple; and a sister, Mrs. J. B. Wear of Dallas.
Funeral Services Is Held Here Saturday For Mrs. M. G. Bean
Last rites were held Saturday for Mrs. M. G. Bean of 104 Graham, who died Friday morning at the Sanitarium of Paris, following a stroke last Sunday. The service was held at Manton-Fry Funeral Home conducted by the Rev. Lawrence Milloy of First Presbyterian Church, and burial was made at Evergreen Cemetery. Pall bearers were O. B. Fisher, Joe Hammack, Ivan T. Smith, Barnabas Harrison, Bud Morgan and Charles Shaeffer. Mrs. Bean, the former Miss Durella Snodgrass, was born in Mt. Pleasant in 1869 and had been a school teacher before her marriage to the late Guy Bean, widely known as a progressive farmer, who lived in the Brookston community. They moved to Paris in 1908, and Mrs. Bean was a member of the First Presbyterian Church. Besides her daughter, Mrs. W. S. (Ted) Biard of Edgewood and one grandson, she leaves a brother, Sam P. Snodgrass of Temple; and a sister, Mrs. J. B. Wear of Dallas.
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