Marston
Newspaper Articles
7 Oct 1909 - Salt Lake Herald - Come to City to be Married
Happy Young Couple From Kaysville Try to Evade Fun-Loving Friends.
The hair dressing parlors of Mrs. M. Grant at 126 South Main street were converted into parlors for a delightful wedding reception yesterday afternoon. The wedding was that of Carl L. Marston and Laura B. Young, both of Kaysville. The pretty little reception followed the happy culmination of a delightful romance.
Ten years ago the bride and groom of yesterday began their little school-day love affair. From first acquaintance a deep affection was evidenced.
Eight years ago the young man went to Wyoming to raise sheep. During the eight years were frequent letters and three weeks ago the young man returned to Kaysville to claim his bride.
During the eight years of separation Marston grew to be a handsome, athletic and prosperous young man, and the bride became the beauty of Kaysville. Indeed, her personal charm was known farther than the limits of Davis county, and yesterday, when she became the wife of Carl Marston, no more charming bride could have been found anywhere.
The people of Kaysville, alive to the romance in the pretty little village, planned many pranks, but the young couple outwitted their friends and slipped down to Salt Lake to be wedded.
In the course of the preparation for the wedding the bride went to Mrs. Grant's hair dressing parlors. The charming proprietress, alive to the little romance, planned and executed a neat little reception. A portion of the parlors was turned over to the bride as her boudoir, and when she emerged in her wedding gown she was showered with rice.
The couple went to the city and county building, where they were quietly married by J. C. Eldredge, sr. On their return to the hair dressing parlors there was more rice and more congratulations. More than that, there was some one mischievous enough to tell the friends of the couple at Kaysville of the happy event, and there was more jollity and more rice in store for them when they stepped from the afternoon train on their return to Kaysville.
23 Aug 1921 - Salt Lake Telegram - Announce Services for Carl Marston
Kaysville, Aug. 23 - Funeral services for Carl Marston, who died at the Dee hospital at Ogden Saturday evening after several weeks' illness of typhoid fever, will be held from the West Layton chapel Wednesday afternoon at 2 o'clock, with interment in the Kaysville cemetery. Mr. Marston was the son of the late Joseph and Ellen Webster Marston and was born in Kaysville May 23, 1883, and had resided in Davis county all his life. He is survived by a widow and the following children: Keith, Doris, Richard, Viola and Belle, and by the following brothers and sisters: Mrs. Mary Weller of Salt Lake, Moroni Marston of Kaysville, Fred Marston of Riverdale, Mrs. James Davis and Ernest Marston, both of McCammon, Ida.
26 Aug 1921 - Davis County Clipper - Carl Marsden Dies of Typhoid Fever
Carl Marsden Dies of Typhoid Fever
Carl Marsden [Marston], of Layton, died at the Dee hospital in Ogden Saturday evening of typhoid fever, after an illness of several weeks. Mr. Marsden was the son of the late Joseph and Ellen Webster Marsden, being born in Kaysville and was 38 years old on the 23rd of last May. He had lived in Davis County all his life. He is survived by a widow and the following children: Keith, Doris, Richard, Viola and Bell, and by the following brothers and sisters: Mrs. Frank Weller, of Salt Lake City, Moroni Marsden, of Kaysville, Fred Marsden, of Riverdale, Mr.s James Davis and Mrs. Ernest Marsden, of McCammon, Ida. Funeral services were held in West Layton meeting house, Wednesday afternoon at 2 o'clock, and internment took place in the Kaysville cemetery.
Happy Young Couple From Kaysville Try to Evade Fun-Loving Friends.
The hair dressing parlors of Mrs. M. Grant at 126 South Main street were converted into parlors for a delightful wedding reception yesterday afternoon. The wedding was that of Carl L. Marston and Laura B. Young, both of Kaysville. The pretty little reception followed the happy culmination of a delightful romance.
Ten years ago the bride and groom of yesterday began their little school-day love affair. From first acquaintance a deep affection was evidenced.
Eight years ago the young man went to Wyoming to raise sheep. During the eight years were frequent letters and three weeks ago the young man returned to Kaysville to claim his bride.
During the eight years of separation Marston grew to be a handsome, athletic and prosperous young man, and the bride became the beauty of Kaysville. Indeed, her personal charm was known farther than the limits of Davis county, and yesterday, when she became the wife of Carl Marston, no more charming bride could have been found anywhere.
The people of Kaysville, alive to the romance in the pretty little village, planned many pranks, but the young couple outwitted their friends and slipped down to Salt Lake to be wedded.
In the course of the preparation for the wedding the bride went to Mrs. Grant's hair dressing parlors. The charming proprietress, alive to the little romance, planned and executed a neat little reception. A portion of the parlors was turned over to the bride as her boudoir, and when she emerged in her wedding gown she was showered with rice.
The couple went to the city and county building, where they were quietly married by J. C. Eldredge, sr. On their return to the hair dressing parlors there was more rice and more congratulations. More than that, there was some one mischievous enough to tell the friends of the couple at Kaysville of the happy event, and there was more jollity and more rice in store for them when they stepped from the afternoon train on their return to Kaysville.
23 Aug 1921 - Salt Lake Telegram - Announce Services for Carl Marston
Kaysville, Aug. 23 - Funeral services for Carl Marston, who died at the Dee hospital at Ogden Saturday evening after several weeks' illness of typhoid fever, will be held from the West Layton chapel Wednesday afternoon at 2 o'clock, with interment in the Kaysville cemetery. Mr. Marston was the son of the late Joseph and Ellen Webster Marston and was born in Kaysville May 23, 1883, and had resided in Davis county all his life. He is survived by a widow and the following children: Keith, Doris, Richard, Viola and Belle, and by the following brothers and sisters: Mrs. Mary Weller of Salt Lake, Moroni Marston of Kaysville, Fred Marston of Riverdale, Mrs. James Davis and Ernest Marston, both of McCammon, Ida.
26 Aug 1921 - Davis County Clipper - Carl Marsden Dies of Typhoid Fever
Carl Marsden Dies of Typhoid Fever
Carl Marsden [Marston], of Layton, died at the Dee hospital in Ogden Saturday evening of typhoid fever, after an illness of several weeks. Mr. Marsden was the son of the late Joseph and Ellen Webster Marsden, being born in Kaysville and was 38 years old on the 23rd of last May. He had lived in Davis County all his life. He is survived by a widow and the following children: Keith, Doris, Richard, Viola and Bell, and by the following brothers and sisters: Mrs. Frank Weller, of Salt Lake City, Moroni Marsden, of Kaysville, Fred Marsden, of Riverdale, Mr.s James Davis and Mrs. Ernest Marsden, of McCammon, Ida. Funeral services were held in West Layton meeting house, Wednesday afternoon at 2 o'clock, and internment took place in the Kaysville cemetery.
Links
Original Documents
Marston Carl Levi - WWI Draft Registration Card.jpg | |
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Marston Carl Levi - Death Certificate.jpg | |
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