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Lurana Elenor <I>Forbush</I> Nay

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Lurana Elenor Forbush Nay

Birth
Manti, Sanpete County, Utah, USA
Death
22 Feb 1919 (aged 60)
Richfield, Sevier County, Utah, USA
Burial
Richfield, Sevier County, Utah, USA Add to Map
Plot
A.42.11.04
Memorial ID
View Source
Mrs Myron Nay Succumbs to Heart Trouble

Mrs Myron Nay, formerly of Monroe, died here last Saturday at the home of her daughter, Mrs Lester Nelson, of leakage of the heart, following an operation. She had been in ill health for several years, and for the past seven months she had made her home here, spending four months of that time in the hospital.
She was born in Manti in 1859. She is survived by her husband, three daughters, Mrs Albert [Mary] Mower, Garfield; Mrs Lester [Lurana] Nelson and Mrs Adrian [Vera] Nelson, Richfield; two sisters, Mrs Clarissa Heath of Idaho Falls, Mrs William [Sarah] Edmisten, Picabo, Idaho; and one brother, William Forbush of Union, Utah.
Funeral services were held in the cemetery on Wednesday. H N Hayes and Bishop Seegmiller offered words of comfort to the bereaved, and music numbers were furnished by a quartette. The floral tokens were beautiful.

Richfield Reaper; March 1, 1919, Page 1.
Mrs Myron Nay Succumbs to Heart Trouble

Mrs Myron Nay, formerly of Monroe, died here last Saturday at the home of her daughter, Mrs Lester Nelson, of leakage of the heart, following an operation. She had been in ill health for several years, and for the past seven months she had made her home here, spending four months of that time in the hospital.
She was born in Manti in 1859. She is survived by her husband, three daughters, Mrs Albert [Mary] Mower, Garfield; Mrs Lester [Lurana] Nelson and Mrs Adrian [Vera] Nelson, Richfield; two sisters, Mrs Clarissa Heath of Idaho Falls, Mrs William [Sarah] Edmisten, Picabo, Idaho; and one brother, William Forbush of Union, Utah.
Funeral services were held in the cemetery on Wednesday. H N Hayes and Bishop Seegmiller offered words of comfort to the bereaved, and music numbers were furnished by a quartette. The floral tokens were beautiful.

Richfield Reaper; March 1, 1919, Page 1.


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