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Ruth, Edna L. (1888-1968): Difference between revisions
New page: ''Mennonite Weekly Review'' obituary: 21 Nov 1968 p. 8 Birth date: 1888 Category:Mennonite Weekly Review obituaries |
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''Mennonite Weekly Review'' obituary: 21 Nov 1968 p. | ''Mennonite Weekly Review'' obituary: 1968 Nov 21 p. 8 | ||
Birth date: 1888 Nov 12 | |||
Text of obituary: | |||
[[Image:Nv11.jpg|400px|center]] | |||
. . . | |||
• Funeral services for Miss Edna L. Ruth, a lifelong resident of the Halstead community, were held at the First Mennonite church there on Nov. 14, with Rev. Melvin Schmidt and Dr. D. C. Wedel officiating. Miss Ruth, a retired violin teacher and millinery shop clerk, died on Nov. 12, her 80th birthday. She was a member of the Kansas Archeology Society and the Wichita Audubon Club. A sister, Alma, of the home survives. | |||
---- | |||
''The Mennonite'' obituary: 1968 Dec 3 p. 754 | |||
Text of obituary: | |||
''Edna L. Ruth'', First Church, Halstead, Kan., was born Nov. 12, 1888, and died Nov. 12. | |||
---- | |||
Funeral program biographical sketch | |||
IN MEMORIUM | |||
Edna L. Ruth, daughter of | |||
Henry G. and Mary Hirschler | |||
Ruth, was born November 12, | |||
1888, in Garden Township, Harvey County, and passed away | |||
on her eightieth birthday, at | |||
2:15 A.M. at the Halstead Hospital, November 12, 1968, of | |||
leukemia complicated by pneumonia. She had been ill with | |||
leukemia since March, 1966 but | |||
despite physical difficulties continued to enjoy her friends, | |||
and took an active interest in | |||
activities about her. Surviving in the home are her older | |||
sister, Miss Alma Ruth, and | |||
her niece, Mrs. Ruth Rose. | |||
In the Grades she attended | |||
Liberty School, District 78 in | |||
the country, and graduated | |||
from Moundridge High School | |||
in 1906 under Professor David | |||
Richert. Round robin class letters and a 50th anniversary | |||
Class Reunion in 1956 were | |||
greatly enjoyed. | |||
She was baptized in the Garden Mennonite Church in 1903 | |||
by the late Rev. S. S. Baumgartner | |||
and continued to work | |||
in the Church after moving to | |||
Haistead in 1913, teaching in | |||
Sunday School, working in | |||
Christian Endeavor, in the Mission Society, and singing in the | |||
choir, or in quartets as she | |||
had a deep melodious contralto | |||
voice. At the time of her ser | |||
vice as church secretary she | |||
helped to tarnsiate the Church | |||
Consitution from German to | |||
English. During World War I | |||
she took a Red Cross Nursing | |||
course and was always a faith | |||
ful nurse for the family. | |||
Many talents were hers, | |||
among them the love of poetry | |||
and the ability to readily | |||
memorize all of her favorite | |||
poems. She often memorized | |||
poems while ironing. Her | |||
readings were particularly enjoyable, say on a moonlight | |||
boating ride while lazily rowing up our Little River. | |||
At the age of 27 she took up | |||
violin, studying under the late | |||
Edgar Hege, and later had her | |||
own violin pupils. Then followed many years of home music | |||
ensembles, with voice, violin, | |||
piano, reed organ, perhaps with | |||
the addition of a second violin, | |||
a cello or flute by members of | |||
the family. | |||
In 1942 she became deeply | |||
interested in amateur ornithology and there followed many | |||
pleasurable years, filled with | |||
nature study, detailed study of | |||
birds, daily diaries, field trips | |||
on foot or by boat, always | |||
Christmas Counts, and for | |||
several years, Junior Audubon | |||
classes. This led naturally to | |||
her publishing articles in magazines, such as the one on the | |||
Townsend’s Solitaire, “Singer | |||
of the Mountains” published in | |||
Audubon Magazine, November-December 1951; on the Inca | |||
Dove in Nature Magazine (now | |||
Natural History) in 1952; on | |||
the Bay-breasted ‘Warbler in | |||
the Kansas Ornithological Soc. | |||
Bulletin in 1953; on the Kaufman Museum at Bethel — “The | |||
Museum That Grew Up and | |||
went to College,” published in | |||
Nature Magazine in 1956; and | |||
other things. She was a contributor to the 12-volume Audubon Nature Encyclopedia published in 1964. | |||
In 1954 she learned to drive | |||
a ear. With what joy she took | |||
to the wheel of “Topsy” Ford | |||
while traipsing thru 32 states, | |||
‘and putting 119,000 miles on | |||
the speedometer, always with | |||
lists of area birders and Pettingill’s Guides to Birding West, | |||
or East, of the Mississippi. These | |||
safaries included trips to Colorado Springs, Salida and the | |||
Collegiates in 1956, later various parts of the Ozarks lake | |||
and springs country; Weatherford, | |||
Oklahoma and the Wichita | |||
Mountains in 1957; Rochester, | |||
Minnesota; the North Shore of | |||
Lake Superior and Lake Itasca | |||
in 1958; the West Coast in 1959 with stops | |||
at the Grand | |||
Canyon, the Los Angeles and | |||
Reedley areas, Grants Park, | |||
Yosemite, Portland, Seattle, | |||
and the Black Hills; in 1960 | |||
New Mexico and the Tuscon | |||
Phoenix-Flagstaff areas; in 1961 the Great Smokies and | |||
Asheville, North Carolina; in | |||
1962 the National Aubudon Society meeting at Corpus Christi, | |||
with return thru Louisiana and | |||
Arkansas; in 1963, Hannibal, | |||
Missouri, Springfield Illinois, | |||
Henderson, Mammoth Cave and | |||
Kentucky Lake, and Big Springs | |||
Missouri; Huron, South Dakota | |||
by way of Kansas City in 1964; in 1965, Florida by way | |||
of the Gulf Coast, from Pensacola to Key West with Ft. | |||
Lauderdale as the base, and | |||
home by way of Charleston, | |||
South Carolina; the Eureka | |||
Springs, Arkansas lake region | |||
in 1966; plus many lesser field | |||
trips to Cheyenne Bottoms, Salt | |||
Plains Wildlife Refuge and | |||
other areas in Kansas and Oklahoma. Until her health failed, | |||
she was active in the Kansas | |||
Ornithological, and the Wichita | |||
Audubon Societies, and helped | |||
to further organizing the Sand | |||
Prairies Nature Conservency. | |||
She had a ready wit and a | |||
great gift for making friends; | |||
she loved people, all ages, and | |||
spent much time visiting shutins. | |||
She fought her battle with | |||
leukemia with spirit and grace, | |||
and a great faith in her ultimate destination. | |||
Among her papers were found | |||
the following poem: | |||
'''My Treasure Chest''' | |||
I’ve gathered up those dearer | |||
things<br /> | |||
With which I would not | |||
part, | |||
And laid them carefully away,<br /> | |||
yet close beside my heart;<br /> | |||
Those things on which Time<br /> | |||
has no lien, The Things I love | |||
the best — | |||
The priceless things more dear<br /> | |||
than life — These are my | |||
treasure chest. | |||
My confidence in fellowman<br /> | |||
And my belief in God;<br /> | |||
The heritage of my old home<br /> | |||
Deep rooted in th’e sod;<br /> | |||
My rosary of sorrow, My<br /> | |||
beatitude of tears;<br /> | |||
The glory of my mother’s love<br /> | |||
Still shining thru the years; | |||
The fullness of the summer<br /> | |||
moon, the o’er-flowing harvest | |||
horn,<br /> | |||
The whiteness of a winter<br /> | |||
night, The flowers of April’s | |||
morn;<br /> | |||
The soul that lurks within a<br /> | |||
song, The faith within a child,<br /> | |||
The beauty that all nature<br /> | |||
holds, For one who loves the | |||
wild; | |||
Mere wisdom never can replace<br /> | |||
Illusions fair of youth,<br /> | |||
And yet these things I’ve<br /> | |||
hoarded up And wrapped about | |||
with truth<br /> | |||
Are recompense for all the<br /> | |||
days. They’ll stand the final | |||
test<br /> | |||
Of the fit and the eternal, Deep<br /> | |||
within my treasure chest. | |||
(—Will S. Denham) | |||
---- | |||
''Halstead Independent'' obituary: 1968 Nov 21 | |||
Text of obituary: | |||
'''EDNA L. RUTH''' | |||
Services for Miss Edna L. | |||
Ruth were held Thursday, November 14 at 3 p.m. at the First | |||
Mennonite Church, Rev. Melvin Schmidt officiating. Dr. | |||
D. C. Wedel of Bethel College | |||
presented the meditation, Favorite hymns “0 Holy Savior, | |||
Friend Unseen”; “Be Still My | |||
Soul”; “The Lord Is on Thy | |||
Side,” and “Have Thine Own | |||
Way, Lord” were sung by the | |||
congregation, with Mrs. Milton | |||
Ewy at the organ. | |||
Casket bearers were Orville | |||
Haury and Glenn Schmitt of | |||
Halstead; and Carl S. Holmes, | |||
Carl S. Packer, Nathan McDonald, Albert Briggs, E. A. Randall, and Ernest Linscheid of | |||
Wichita. | |||
Among relatives who attended were a sister-in-law, Mrs. | |||
Homer G. Ruth, Miss Frieda | |||
Ruth, Mrs. Frieda Andreas and | |||
her brother T. A. van der | |||
Smissen, and the Juston Lemons of Newton; the Emry | |||
Ruths, Miss Sue Haury, and the | |||
Harold Linscheids of Wichita; | |||
the Earl Whites of Hesston; | |||
Howard Ewy of Mcpherson; the | |||
Milton Ewys of Halstead; and | |||
the Orlando Fasts, Barbara, Arlen, | |||
Russell and Galen of | |||
Moundridge. | |||
Out of town friends were: | |||
the Carl Holmes, the E. A. Randalls, Mrs. E. E. Tippin, Sr., | |||
Miss Louise A. Watson, Carl S. | |||
Packer, Nathan McDonald, Albert Briggs, and the Ernest Linscheids of Wichita; the Marcus | |||
Vogts of Hesston; Mrs. John | |||
F. Meyer, Clark Miller, Miss | |||
Lucille Thomas, Mrs. Frank | |||
Vetter, the William P. Schowalters, Rev. and Mrs. David C. | |||
Wedel, and Dr. Dwight Platt | |||
and Ernest Bachman of Newton; | |||
Rev. A. E. Funk of Hillsboro; | |||
Mrs. Dale Martin of Mt. Hope;. | |||
and Mrs. Jean Wedel of Moundridge. | |||
Burial was in the Halstead | |||
Cemetery under the direction | |||
of the Kaufman Funeral Home. | |||
---- | |||
''Newton Kansan'' obituary: 1968 Nov 12 | |||
Text of obituary: | |||
'''Edna L. Ruth''' | |||
HALSTEAD — Miss Edna L. Ruth, Halstead resident since 1913, died today at the Halstead Hospital on her 80th birthday. | |||
She was a retired violin teacher and in earlier years had worked in a hat shop here. | |||
Miss Ruth was born Nov. 12, 1888 in Garden Township. | |||
She was a member of 1st Mennonite Church, Kansas Archaeological Society and the Wichita Audubon Society. | |||
She is survived by a sister, Alma Ruth, of the home. | |||
Funeral arrangements will be announced by Kaufman Funeral Home. | |||
[[Category:Mennonite Weekly Review obituaries]] | [[Category:Mennonite Weekly Review obituaries]] | ||
[[Category:The Mennonite obituaries]] | |||
[[Category: Funeral program biographical sketches]] | |||
[[Category: Halstead Independent obituaries]] | |||
[[Category: Newton Kansan obituaries]] |
Latest revision as of 13:45, 7 February 2023
Mennonite Weekly Review obituary: 1968 Nov 21 p. 8
Birth date: 1888 Nov 12
Text of obituary:
. . .
• Funeral services for Miss Edna L. Ruth, a lifelong resident of the Halstead community, were held at the First Mennonite church there on Nov. 14, with Rev. Melvin Schmidt and Dr. D. C. Wedel officiating. Miss Ruth, a retired violin teacher and millinery shop clerk, died on Nov. 12, her 80th birthday. She was a member of the Kansas Archeology Society and the Wichita Audubon Club. A sister, Alma, of the home survives.
The Mennonite obituary: 1968 Dec 3 p. 754
Text of obituary:
Edna L. Ruth, First Church, Halstead, Kan., was born Nov. 12, 1888, and died Nov. 12.
Funeral program biographical sketch
IN MEMORIUM
Edna L. Ruth, daughter of Henry G. and Mary Hirschler Ruth, was born November 12, 1888, in Garden Township, Harvey County, and passed away on her eightieth birthday, at 2:15 A.M. at the Halstead Hospital, November 12, 1968, of leukemia complicated by pneumonia. She had been ill with leukemia since March, 1966 but despite physical difficulties continued to enjoy her friends, and took an active interest in activities about her. Surviving in the home are her older sister, Miss Alma Ruth, and her niece, Mrs. Ruth Rose.
In the Grades she attended Liberty School, District 78 in the country, and graduated from Moundridge High School in 1906 under Professor David Richert. Round robin class letters and a 50th anniversary Class Reunion in 1956 were greatly enjoyed.
She was baptized in the Garden Mennonite Church in 1903 by the late Rev. S. S. Baumgartner and continued to work in the Church after moving to Haistead in 1913, teaching in Sunday School, working in Christian Endeavor, in the Mission Society, and singing in the choir, or in quartets as she had a deep melodious contralto voice. At the time of her ser vice as church secretary she helped to tarnsiate the Church Consitution from German to English. During World War I she took a Red Cross Nursing course and was always a faith ful nurse for the family.
Many talents were hers, among them the love of poetry and the ability to readily memorize all of her favorite poems. She often memorized poems while ironing. Her readings were particularly enjoyable, say on a moonlight boating ride while lazily rowing up our Little River.
At the age of 27 she took up violin, studying under the late Edgar Hege, and later had her own violin pupils. Then followed many years of home music ensembles, with voice, violin, piano, reed organ, perhaps with the addition of a second violin, a cello or flute by members of the family.
In 1942 she became deeply interested in amateur ornithology and there followed many pleasurable years, filled with nature study, detailed study of birds, daily diaries, field trips on foot or by boat, always Christmas Counts, and for several years, Junior Audubon classes. This led naturally to her publishing articles in magazines, such as the one on the Townsend’s Solitaire, “Singer of the Mountains” published in Audubon Magazine, November-December 1951; on the Inca Dove in Nature Magazine (now Natural History) in 1952; on the Bay-breasted ‘Warbler in the Kansas Ornithological Soc. Bulletin in 1953; on the Kaufman Museum at Bethel — “The Museum That Grew Up and went to College,” published in Nature Magazine in 1956; and other things. She was a contributor to the 12-volume Audubon Nature Encyclopedia published in 1964.
In 1954 she learned to drive a ear. With what joy she took to the wheel of “Topsy” Ford while traipsing thru 32 states, ‘and putting 119,000 miles on the speedometer, always with lists of area birders and Pettingill’s Guides to Birding West, or East, of the Mississippi. These safaries included trips to Colorado Springs, Salida and the Collegiates in 1956, later various parts of the Ozarks lake and springs country; Weatherford, Oklahoma and the Wichita Mountains in 1957; Rochester, Minnesota; the North Shore of Lake Superior and Lake Itasca in 1958; the West Coast in 1959 with stops at the Grand Canyon, the Los Angeles and Reedley areas, Grants Park, Yosemite, Portland, Seattle, and the Black Hills; in 1960 New Mexico and the Tuscon Phoenix-Flagstaff areas; in 1961 the Great Smokies and Asheville, North Carolina; in 1962 the National Aubudon Society meeting at Corpus Christi, with return thru Louisiana and Arkansas; in 1963, Hannibal, Missouri, Springfield Illinois, Henderson, Mammoth Cave and Kentucky Lake, and Big Springs Missouri; Huron, South Dakota by way of Kansas City in 1964; in 1965, Florida by way of the Gulf Coast, from Pensacola to Key West with Ft. Lauderdale as the base, and home by way of Charleston, South Carolina; the Eureka Springs, Arkansas lake region in 1966; plus many lesser field trips to Cheyenne Bottoms, Salt Plains Wildlife Refuge and other areas in Kansas and Oklahoma. Until her health failed, she was active in the Kansas Ornithological, and the Wichita Audubon Societies, and helped to further organizing the Sand Prairies Nature Conservency.
She had a ready wit and a great gift for making friends; she loved people, all ages, and spent much time visiting shutins. She fought her battle with leukemia with spirit and grace, and a great faith in her ultimate destination.
Among her papers were found the following poem:
My Treasure Chest
I’ve gathered up those dearer
things
With which I would not
part,
And laid them carefully away,
yet close beside my heart;
Those things on which Time
has no lien, The Things I love
the best —
The priceless things more dear
than life — These are my
treasure chest.
My confidence in fellowman
And my belief in God;
The heritage of my old home
Deep rooted in th’e sod;
My rosary of sorrow, My
beatitude of tears;
The glory of my mother’s love
Still shining thru the years;
The fullness of the summer
moon, the o’er-flowing harvest
horn,
The whiteness of a winter
night, The flowers of April’s
morn;
The soul that lurks within a
song, The faith within a child,
The beauty that all nature
holds, For one who loves the
wild;
Mere wisdom never can replace
Illusions fair of youth,
And yet these things I’ve
hoarded up And wrapped about
with truth
Are recompense for all the
days. They’ll stand the final
test
Of the fit and the eternal, Deep
within my treasure chest.
(—Will S. Denham)
Halstead Independent obituary: 1968 Nov 21
Text of obituary:
EDNA L. RUTH
Services for Miss Edna L. Ruth were held Thursday, November 14 at 3 p.m. at the First Mennonite Church, Rev. Melvin Schmidt officiating. Dr. D. C. Wedel of Bethel College presented the meditation, Favorite hymns “0 Holy Savior, Friend Unseen”; “Be Still My Soul”; “The Lord Is on Thy Side,” and “Have Thine Own Way, Lord” were sung by the congregation, with Mrs. Milton Ewy at the organ.
Casket bearers were Orville Haury and Glenn Schmitt of Halstead; and Carl S. Holmes, Carl S. Packer, Nathan McDonald, Albert Briggs, E. A. Randall, and Ernest Linscheid of Wichita.
Among relatives who attended were a sister-in-law, Mrs. Homer G. Ruth, Miss Frieda Ruth, Mrs. Frieda Andreas and her brother T. A. van der Smissen, and the Juston Lemons of Newton; the Emry Ruths, Miss Sue Haury, and the Harold Linscheids of Wichita; the Earl Whites of Hesston; Howard Ewy of Mcpherson; the Milton Ewys of Halstead; and the Orlando Fasts, Barbara, Arlen, Russell and Galen of Moundridge.
Out of town friends were: the Carl Holmes, the E. A. Randalls, Mrs. E. E. Tippin, Sr., Miss Louise A. Watson, Carl S. Packer, Nathan McDonald, Albert Briggs, and the Ernest Linscheids of Wichita; the Marcus Vogts of Hesston; Mrs. John F. Meyer, Clark Miller, Miss Lucille Thomas, Mrs. Frank Vetter, the William P. Schowalters, Rev. and Mrs. David C. Wedel, and Dr. Dwight Platt and Ernest Bachman of Newton; Rev. A. E. Funk of Hillsboro; Mrs. Dale Martin of Mt. Hope;. and Mrs. Jean Wedel of Moundridge.
Burial was in the Halstead Cemetery under the direction of the Kaufman Funeral Home.
Newton Kansan obituary: 1968 Nov 12
Text of obituary:
Edna L. Ruth
HALSTEAD — Miss Edna L. Ruth, Halstead resident since 1913, died today at the Halstead Hospital on her 80th birthday.
She was a retired violin teacher and in earlier years had worked in a hat shop here.
Miss Ruth was born Nov. 12, 1888 in Garden Township.
She was a member of 1st Mennonite Church, Kansas Archaeological Society and the Wichita Audubon Society.
She is survived by a sister, Alma Ruth, of the home.
Funeral arrangements will be announced by Kaufman Funeral Home.