If this site was useful to you, we'd be happy for a small donation. Be sure to enter "MLA donation" in the Comments box.
Yoder, Ida Plank (1897-1973): Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 20: | Line 20: | ||
Survivors include her three sons, John Arnold of Yoder, Colo., Lawrence and Dr. Vernon, both of Newton; one daughter, Mrs. Ransom (Mary Kathryn) Stucky of Burrton; 16 grandchildren; a brother, John Plank, and a sister, Ella Plank, both of Harper. | Survivors include her three sons, John Arnold of Yoder, Colo., Lawrence and Dr. Vernon, both of Newton; one daughter, Mrs. Ransom (Mary Kathryn) Stucky of Burrton; 16 grandchildren; a brother, John Plank, and a sister, Ella Plank, both of Harper. | ||
Mennonite Weekly Review obituary: 4 Oct 1973 p. 8 | |||
Birth date: 1897 | |||
text of obituary | |||
[[File:Newton&vic.jpg|center]] | |||
• A large number of friends and relatives attended funeral services for Mrs. Ida Plank Yoder, writer of the ‘Through My Kitchen Window’ column in the Review, last Thursday afternoon at the Hesston Mennonite Church. Mrs. Yoder died Monday morning, Sept. 24. Officiating at the services were Rev. John Duerksen and Rev. Paul Friesen, both of whom gave meditations. Personal tributes were given by Orpha Zimmerly of Schowalter Villa, former dean of women at Hesston College, and Menno Schrag, editor emeritus of the Review, both of whom had known Mrs. Yoder for many years. Because of wet conditions the committal service was held in the sanctuary. Burial was made later in East Lawn Cemetery. | |||
[[Category:Mennonite Weekly Review obituaries]] | [[Category:Mennonite Weekly Review obituaries]] |
Latest revision as of 09:27, 8 April 2025
Mennonite Weekly Review obituary: 27 Sep 1973 p. 11
Birth date: 1897 Dec 3
text of obituary

Mrs. Ida Plank Yoder of Hesston, writer of the "Through My Kitchen Window" column in the Mennonite Weekly Review for nearly 30 years, died early Monday morning at Bethel Deaconess Hospital, Newton.
Mrs. Yoder had been a resident of Schowalter Villa since February of this year. She was admitted to the hospital Sunday morning, and that evening went into a coma from which she failed to rally.
Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. Thursday at the Hesston Mennonite Church, where she had been a member for 53 years. Rev. John Duerksen and Rev. Richard Yordy, the pastor, will officiate.
Ida M. Plank was born Dec. 3, 1897 at East Lynne, Mo. to Mr. and Mrs. Solomon B. Plank. When she was three years of age the family moved to Strang, Neb., becoming charter members of the Salem Mennonite Church at Shickley. When she was 19 the family moved to Harper, Kan. Her marriage to Eli T. Yoder took place there in 1920.
After their marriage Mr. and Mrs. Yoder lived on farms in Harvey County, Kansas for 47 years, moving to Hesston in 1967. Mr. Yoder died in September 1972.
Mrs. Yoder was a member of the Creative Writers Club, a member of the Kansas Authors Club for 30 years, an associate member of the Herald Publishing Company, and member of the Harvey County Board of the American Cancer Society. She taught school for four years in Nebraska and Kansas, and for seven years taught released time Bible classes at Walton. Her first column appeared in the Review on May 11, 1944.
Survivors include her three sons, John Arnold of Yoder, Colo., Lawrence and Dr. Vernon, both of Newton; one daughter, Mrs. Ransom (Mary Kathryn) Stucky of Burrton; 16 grandchildren; a brother, John Plank, and a sister, Ella Plank, both of Harper.
Mennonite Weekly Review obituary: 4 Oct 1973 p. 8
Birth date: 1897
text of obituary

• A large number of friends and relatives attended funeral services for Mrs. Ida Plank Yoder, writer of the ‘Through My Kitchen Window’ column in the Review, last Thursday afternoon at the Hesston Mennonite Church. Mrs. Yoder died Monday morning, Sept. 24. Officiating at the services were Rev. John Duerksen and Rev. Paul Friesen, both of whom gave meditations. Personal tributes were given by Orpha Zimmerly of Schowalter Villa, former dean of women at Hesston College, and Menno Schrag, editor emeritus of the Review, both of whom had known Mrs. Yoder for many years. Because of wet conditions the committal service was held in the sanctuary. Burial was made later in East Lawn Cemetery.