Obit of Lovin, Marie Louise - Pottawatomie County, Oklahoma Thanks to http://www.amarillonet.com/ for permission to upload their obits to the USGenWeb Archives. Copyright, http://www.amarillonet.com/ 18 Sep 2005 Return to Pottawatomie County Archives: http://www.usgwarchives.net/ok/pottawatomie/pottawatomie.htm ========================================================================== USGENWEB NOTICE Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm ========================================================================== Amarillo Globe News 18 Jul 1998 Marie Louise Lovin CLAYTON, N.M. - 87, died Friday, July 17, 1998. Rosary will be recited at 7 p.m. Sunday in St. Francis Xavier Catholic Church in Clayton by Louis Montoya, deacon. Funeral mass will be at 10 a.m. Monday in St. Francis Xavier Catholic Church with the Rev. George Silva, pastor, officiating. Burial will be in Clayton Memorial Cemetery by Hass Funeral Directors of Clayton. Mrs. Lovin was born in Shawnee, Okla. She spent her childhood in Oklahoma and moved to New Mexico in 1931. She was employed as a housekeeper and a nanny in Nara Visa and as a school bus driver in Amistad. She moved to Clayton where she was a housekeeper for John Winchester. In 1942, Mrs. Lovin and her husband moved to Albuquerque where she was employed by the University of New Mexico in the Student Union Building cafeteria for many years. In 1972, they returned to Clayton. She was a member of St. Francis Xavier Catholic Church. She married Roy Travis Lovin in 1941 at Clayton. He preceded her in death in March. Survivors include five brothers, Richard Swords of Ponca City, Okla., Leo Swords of Russell, Kan., Jimmy Swords of Tonkawa, Okla., Harold Swords of Midwest City, Okla., and Gerald Swords of Spokane, Wash.; two sisters, Catherine Jueschke of Tonkawa and Marguerite Kimber of Amistad; and a goddaughter, Rose Mary Girard of Nara Visa. -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Return to Pottawatomie County Archives: http://www.usgwarchives.net/ok/pottawatomie/pottawatomie.htm