Your correspondent being a friend and neighbor of Mrs. Dale Hunter, can only say that a life young, pure and noble has gone. Her ways were all that were kind and pleasant and it is a grief to all to think that her young life should thus early go out. This teaches us that the Reaper whose name is Death does not reap alone the bearded grain but the flowers that grow between. Both mother and child were placed in the same casket, the little one resting peacefully on the arm of its mother, holding in its little hand a flower. She leaves besides the husband, Dale Hunter, her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Nelson R. Conrad, three brothers viz. Clarence and Roe Conrad of Harford, Earl Conrad of Binghamton, on sister, Mrs. Walter Hungerford of Wisconsin. All of the sorrowing ones have our heartfelt sympathy.
-Cortland Standard, 16 Mar 1915
Your correspondent being a friend and neighbor of Mrs. Dale Hunter, can only say that a life young, pure and noble has gone. Her ways were all that were kind and pleasant and it is a grief to all to think that her young life should thus early go out. This teaches us that the Reaper whose name is Death does not reap alone the bearded grain but the flowers that grow between. Both mother and child were placed in the same casket, the little one resting peacefully on the arm of its mother, holding in its little hand a flower. She leaves besides the husband, Dale Hunter, her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Nelson R. Conrad, three brothers viz. Clarence and Roe Conrad of Harford, Earl Conrad of Binghamton, on sister, Mrs. Walter Hungerford of Wisconsin. All of the sorrowing ones have our heartfelt sympathy.
-Cortland Standard, 16 Mar 1915
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