She was only 33 years old & died, presumably, as a result of childbirth, although no record of this child has been found.
On December 14, 1890 she married Edward Clark Beaty, son of Joseph R. (1844-1908) & Emily J. Kelsey (1844-1893).
This union produced two daughters – Floy Lucille Beaty-Priebe (1892-1976), & Mary Flo Beaty-Frame (1898-1985).
An unnamed infant boy Beaty was buried in 1896 in Iconium Cemetery, presumably theirs (same stone as Ida M.)
The two girls were essentally raised by their Grandmother, Mary L. Dicks-Maiken. Mary kept the same farm going for three generations, as Floy and her family lived there until Mary died in 1934 - at the ripe old age of 86.
Edward remarried and had a son, Lewis R. (1908-1994). After his second wife died, he remarried a third time and died in southern Missouri in 1941.
She was only 33 years old & died, presumably, as a result of childbirth, although no record of this child has been found.
On December 14, 1890 she married Edward Clark Beaty, son of Joseph R. (1844-1908) & Emily J. Kelsey (1844-1893).
This union produced two daughters – Floy Lucille Beaty-Priebe (1892-1976), & Mary Flo Beaty-Frame (1898-1985).
An unnamed infant boy Beaty was buried in 1896 in Iconium Cemetery, presumably theirs (same stone as Ida M.)
The two girls were essentally raised by their Grandmother, Mary L. Dicks-Maiken. Mary kept the same farm going for three generations, as Floy and her family lived there until Mary died in 1934 - at the ripe old age of 86.
Edward remarried and had a son, Lewis R. (1908-1994). After his second wife died, he remarried a third time and died in southern Missouri in 1941.
Inscription
Farewell dear, but not forever.
There will be a glorious dawn.
We shall meet to part-no never!
On the resurrection morn.
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