Ruth M. Bonner, who lived in Brooklyn Park for 48 years, died Wednesday of kidney failure at Harbor Hospital Center.
She was 89.
She was born Ruth M. Montoney, in HarmanW. Va., and was educated in schools in that area.
She taught in a nearby one-room school until she married Forrest G. Bonner in 1929.
They moved to Baltimore in the mid- 1930's.
She was a member of United Methodist Women at Brooklyn Heights United Methodist Church, 110 Townsend Ave., where services were to be held at 9:30 a. m. today.
In addition to her husband, survivors include three daughters, Maxine Patterson, of Memphis, Tenn.; Barbara Serio, of West Chester, Pa.; and Rosemarie Boniface, of Frederick; a son, Michael Bonner, of Littlestown, Pa.; a brother, Doane Montoney, of Hazelwood, W. Va.; nine grandchildren and ten great-grandchildren.
Ruth M. Bonner, who lived in Brooklyn Park for 48 years, died Wednesday of kidney failure at Harbor Hospital Center.
She was 89.
She was born Ruth M. Montoney, in HarmanW. Va., and was educated in schools in that area.
She taught in a nearby one-room school until she married Forrest G. Bonner in 1929.
They moved to Baltimore in the mid- 1930's.
She was a member of United Methodist Women at Brooklyn Heights United Methodist Church, 110 Townsend Ave., where services were to be held at 9:30 a. m. today.
In addition to her husband, survivors include three daughters, Maxine Patterson, of Memphis, Tenn.; Barbara Serio, of West Chester, Pa.; and Rosemarie Boniface, of Frederick; a son, Michael Bonner, of Littlestown, Pa.; a brother, Doane Montoney, of Hazelwood, W. Va.; nine grandchildren and ten great-grandchildren.
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