Digital Augusta

Augusta, Kansas

1986-06-10
Collection: 1986

Title

1986-06-10

1986-06-11

Subject

Wartick, Ella M.

Anderson, Dean e.

Payton, Ira Leorn

Description

Obituaries published in the Augusta Daily Gazette

Creator

Augusta Daily Gazette, Augusta, Kansas, USA

Source

Augusta Historical Museum, Augusta, Kansas, USA

Publisher

Augusta Public Library, Augusta, Kansas, USA

Date

1986-06-10

1986-06-11

Rights

In Copyright In Copyright

Published with permission of copyright holder. Further reproduction prohibited.

Format

Clippings

Language

English

Type

application/pdf



Citation
Augusta Daily Gazette, Augusta, Kansas, USA, “1986-06-10,” Digital Augusta, accessed November 26, 2024, https://augusta.digitalsckls.info/item/389.
Text

The Augusta Daily Gazette
Tuesday, June 10, 1986
Ella Wartick dies at 85
Ella M. Wartick, 85, formerly of Leon, died yesterday at the Walnut Valley Manor nursing home here.
Her graveside service will be 2 o’clock tomorrow afternoon at the Walnut Valley Memorial Park cemetery in El Dorado. Rev. Bobby Payne of the Southern Baptist Church will officiate.
Mrs. Wartick was born Nov. 22, 1900 at Carleton, Neb., to Elmer and Sylvia Meek Martin.
On Oct. 14, 1920, she and the late Archie Wartick were united in marriage during a ceremony in Wichita.
She was a member of the Leon Baptist Church.
Mrs. Hartick leaves a son, Frank of El Dorado; three daughters, Viola Bankston and Margaret Turner, both of Augusta, and Mae Luttrell of Iola; a brother, Wayne Martin of Seneca, Mo.; 15 grandchildren, 21 great-grandchildren, one step great-granddaughter and seven great-great-grandchildren.
The Carlson Funeral Home at El Dorado is in charge of arrangements.

Wednesday, June 11, 1986
Payton to be buried in Douglass
Ira Leorn Payton, 42, of McPherson, will be buried in the Douglass Cemetery at 2:30 p.m. Thursday.
Payton died Monday of leukemia in McPherson Memorial Hospital.
Servies will be held at 10:30 a.m. Thursday at the First Baptist Church in McPherson.

Tuesday, June 10, 1986
Dean E. Anderson dies in Dallas
Dean E. Anderson, 38, son of Mattie and father of David Anderson of Augusta, died in a Dallas, Texas, hospital May 30 after a lengthy illness.
Memorial services were held June 2 at the Walnut Hill United Methodist Church in Dallas. No funeral services were held since Anderson had donated his body to medical science.
Anderson was a programmer/ analyst at AMIGOS Bibliographic Council.
He married Lynne Ann Sellers on May 27, 1979.
Anderson, the son of George E. and Mattie Alice Thompson Anderson, was proceeded in death by his father on May 12, 1981.
He is survived by his wife and two daughters, Meghan Sue and Cristin, in Farmers Branch, Texas.
Other survivors include a brother, Larry of Woodstock, Ga.; two sisters, Linda Chappell of Joliet, Ill. and Carolyn Rozof of Wichita.
A memorial fund has been established for his children at the Walnut Hill United Methodist Church in Dallas.

Wednesday, June 11, 1986
Dean E. Anderson dies in Texas
Dean E. Anderson, 38, died in a Dallas, Texas, hospital May 30 after a lengthy illness.
His mother, Mattie, and brother, David, are residents of Augusta.
Memorial services for Anderson were held June 2 at the Walnut Hill United Methodist Church in Dallas. No funeral services were held since he had donated his body to medical science.

Tuesday, June 10, 1986
Ira L. Payton dies at McPherson
Ira Leorn Payton, 42, of McPherson died Monday of leukemia in McPherson Memorial Hospital.
Services will take place at 10:30 a.m. Thursday at the First Baptist Church in McPherson. Burial will be in the Douglass Cemetery.
Payton was born March 30, 1944, to Melvin and Annabelle Payton.
He married Janice J. James on June 14, 1962, in Douglass.
Survivors include his wife and two sons, Steve and Jeff, of McPherson; mother, Annabelle Ross of Park City; father, Melvin Payton of Howard; and three sisters, Sonja Draper of Mulvane, Alice Foust of Elk City, and Maureen Ingram of Winfield.
Payton was a supervisor at American Maplan in McPherson.
Memorials have been established in his memory with the First Baptist Church, McPherson, and the Leukemia Society of America.

Original Format

Newspaper clipping