Mrs. Charles Cleaver Dead
Mrs. Charles W. Cleaver, died this morning at 3:15 o'clock in the Halstead Hospital, following an operation yesterday afternoon. She had been in the hospital a week. Mr. Cleaver and her sister, Mrs. L.D. Jacobs, were with her.
The body will arrive in Emporia tomorrow morning on Santa Fe train No. 8, at 8:05 o'clock. Funeral services will be held Thursday afternoon at 3 o'clock at the home 502 Union Street.
Besides Mr. Cleaver, Mrs. Cleaver is survived by two sisters, Mrs. Jacobs, of Garnett, and Mrs. L.F. Chapman, of Chicago.
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Emporia Gazette, Wednesday, 22 February 1922; p. 8, c. 3
Funeral of Mrs. C.W. Cleaver
Funeral services for Mrs. Charles W. Cleaver, who died yesterday morning in Halstead hospital, following an operation Monday morning, will be held Thursday afternoon at 3 o'clock at the home 502 Union street. Rev. J.H.J. Rice, pastor of the First Congregational Church, will conduct the services. Interment will be in Maplewood Cemetery.
Mrs. Cleaver is survived by her husband, Charles W. Cleaver, and three sisters, Mrs. L.D. Jacobs, of Garnett; Mrs. Gertrude Morris, of Oklahoma, and Mrs. L.F. Chapman, of Chicago.
Mrs. Cleaver was member of the First Congregational Church, the Literary League and the Women's City Club. She was an active worker in the Red Cross activities, in the liberty Bond drives, and in other branches of patriotic work during the war.
Mrs. Cleaver came to Emporia in her girlhood, and has seen the community grow from prairie village to a thriving country town. In the seventies and eighties she was one of a score of pretty girls of whom Mrs. Pemberton, Mrs. Finlay, Mrs. George Newman, Mrs. Jacobs and Mrs. Howard Dunlap were leaders. She has taken her full part in all community matters, and her friends has held leadership in all good works through the passing years. Year by year the ranks of these fine women are thinning. But the work they have done or Emporia can never be estimated.
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Emporia Gazette, Friday, 24 February 1922; p.5, c. 4
Funeral of Mrs. C.W. Cleaver
Funeral services for Mrs. Charles W. Cleaver, who died Tuesday at Halstead, were held Thursday afternoon at 3 o'clock at the home, 502 Union Street. Rev. J.H.J. Rice, pastor of the First Congregational Church, conducted the services. The pallbearers were W.H. Brooks, C.G. West, F.O. Lakin, Frank Warren, John Martin and E.K. Lord. Burial was in Maplewood Cemetery.
Mrs. Charles Cleaver Dead
Mrs. Charles W. Cleaver, died this morning at 3:15 o'clock in the Halstead Hospital, following an operation yesterday afternoon. She had been in the hospital a week. Mr. Cleaver and her sister, Mrs. L.D. Jacobs, were with her.
The body will arrive in Emporia tomorrow morning on Santa Fe train No. 8, at 8:05 o'clock. Funeral services will be held Thursday afternoon at 3 o'clock at the home 502 Union Street.
Besides Mr. Cleaver, Mrs. Cleaver is survived by two sisters, Mrs. Jacobs, of Garnett, and Mrs. L.F. Chapman, of Chicago.
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Emporia Gazette, Wednesday, 22 February 1922; p. 8, c. 3
Funeral of Mrs. C.W. Cleaver
Funeral services for Mrs. Charles W. Cleaver, who died yesterday morning in Halstead hospital, following an operation Monday morning, will be held Thursday afternoon at 3 o'clock at the home 502 Union street. Rev. J.H.J. Rice, pastor of the First Congregational Church, will conduct the services. Interment will be in Maplewood Cemetery.
Mrs. Cleaver is survived by her husband, Charles W. Cleaver, and three sisters, Mrs. L.D. Jacobs, of Garnett; Mrs. Gertrude Morris, of Oklahoma, and Mrs. L.F. Chapman, of Chicago.
Mrs. Cleaver was member of the First Congregational Church, the Literary League and the Women's City Club. She was an active worker in the Red Cross activities, in the liberty Bond drives, and in other branches of patriotic work during the war.
Mrs. Cleaver came to Emporia in her girlhood, and has seen the community grow from prairie village to a thriving country town. In the seventies and eighties she was one of a score of pretty girls of whom Mrs. Pemberton, Mrs. Finlay, Mrs. George Newman, Mrs. Jacobs and Mrs. Howard Dunlap were leaders. She has taken her full part in all community matters, and her friends has held leadership in all good works through the passing years. Year by year the ranks of these fine women are thinning. But the work they have done or Emporia can never be estimated.
**********************
Emporia Gazette, Friday, 24 February 1922; p.5, c. 4
Funeral of Mrs. C.W. Cleaver
Funeral services for Mrs. Charles W. Cleaver, who died Tuesday at Halstead, were held Thursday afternoon at 3 o'clock at the home, 502 Union Street. Rev. J.H.J. Rice, pastor of the First Congregational Church, conducted the services. The pallbearers were W.H. Brooks, C.G. West, F.O. Lakin, Frank Warren, John Martin and E.K. Lord. Burial was in Maplewood Cemetery.
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