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Mrs. Sallie P. Kimball, wife of Buford H. Kimball, died at the family home, three miles north of New Bloomfield, last Saturday, of dropsy after an illness lasting about two years. Funeral services were conducted Saturday at the New Bloomfield Christian church, of which she was a member, by Rev. Frank Powell, and internment was in the New Bloomfield cemetery.
Mrs. Kimball was born in this county February 27, 1864, the daughter of John P. Herring, a Callaway pioneer. She was married to Mr. Kimball, February 22, 1837.
Besides her husband, she leaves three children, namely: Earnest, Harvey, and Addie. Three sisters and three brothers also survive as follows: Mrs. E.E. Hall, Corvallis, Mont., Mrs. William Ferguson, Miss Celia Herring and James W., Thomas C., and William R. Herring, of this county.
Mrs. Kimball's life was that of a high-minded woman who fulfilled life's highest duties. Her amiable and cheerful nature won the love of all with whom she came in contact, and her death brings sorrow to a wide circle of relatives and friends. The bereaved family has the sympathy of the community in their grief.
From The Fulton Weekly Gazette
March 11, 1910
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Mrs. Sallie P. Kimball, wife of Buford H. Kimball, died at the family home, three miles north of New Bloomfield, last Saturday, of dropsy after an illness lasting about two years. Funeral services were conducted Saturday at the New Bloomfield Christian church, of which she was a member, by Rev. Frank Powell, and internment was in the New Bloomfield cemetery.
Mrs. Kimball was born in this county February 27, 1864, the daughter of John P. Herring, a Callaway pioneer. She was married to Mr. Kimball, February 22, 1837.
Besides her husband, she leaves three children, namely: Earnest, Harvey, and Addie. Three sisters and three brothers also survive as follows: Mrs. E.E. Hall, Corvallis, Mont., Mrs. William Ferguson, Miss Celia Herring and James W., Thomas C., and William R. Herring, of this county.
Mrs. Kimball's life was that of a high-minded woman who fulfilled life's highest duties. Her amiable and cheerful nature won the love of all with whom she came in contact, and her death brings sorrow to a wide circle of relatives and friends. The bereaved family has the sympathy of the community in their grief.
From The Fulton Weekly Gazette
March 11, 1910
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