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Green Bay Press-Gazette from Green Bay, Wisconsin • Page 40

Location:
Green Bay, Wisconsin
Issue Date:
Page:
40
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Feb. 24, 1971 Green Bay DEATH NOTICES and FUNERALS Mrs. Geraldine Blodgett Mrs. Geraldine Blodgett, 1801 Libal died Tuesday morning in a local hospital after long illness. The former Geraldine Huguet was an Allouez resident most of her life.

Mrs. Blodgett was a member of Christian Mothers of St. Matthew Church. Her husband, Lawrence Blodgett, preceded her in death in 1966. Survivors are six daughters, Mrs.

Chris (Virginia) Kocken, Oconto Falls; Mrs. Willis (Dor1s) Bergsbaken, Rt. 2, Pulaski; Mrs. Robert (Joan) Lange, Green Bay; Mrs. Robert (Judy) Girard, Appleton; Mrs.

Richard (Pat) Dickenshied and Mrs. Philip (Bonnie) Cornelisen, both of Green Bay; two sons, Herbert and Bernard (Bud), both of Green Bay; 46 grandchildren and six great-grandchildren. Two brothers, Ralph and Marcel Huguet, both of Green Bay; one half-sister, Mrs. Tony (Jeanette) Bushman, De Pere; one Claude guet, "Montana. Two brothers, Harold and Bob, preceded in death.

At Schauer and Schumacher East Side Funeral Home 2 p.m. Thursday. Wake se service 8 p.m. Thursday, Funeral 10:30 a.m. Friday St.

Matthew Church with the Rev. Norbert Rank ficiating. Burial in Allouez Cemetery. Fred W. Zingsheim Fred W.

Zingsheim, 68, West Bend, formerly of Green Bay, died Wednesday, Feb. 17 at the Samaritan Hospital and Nursing Home, West Bend, after a long Illness. Survivors are his wife, Mary; one son, Frederick, Madison; one daughter, Mrs. Paul (Alice) Nordeng, Windsor, two grandchildren, Donald and Kristi; three sisters, the Misses Alice Rose Zingsheim; and Mrs. Frank Urban, all of Green Bay.

Funeral services were held Saturday, Feb. 20 at Holy Angels Church, West Bend. Burial was in Allouez Cemetery, Green Bay. John Thibodeau John Thibodeau, 72, Rt. 3, Lena, died Tuesday in Marinette General Hospital.

Born Nov. 26, 1898 in Coleman, he was employed by F. X. Hammes Co. from 1920 until 1945.

In 1946 he formed a partnership with his nephew, Mark Thibodeau, and operated Thibodeau's IGA Market in Coleman until his nephew's death in 1951. From 1951 until his retirement in 1965, Mr. Thibodeau owned and operated the grocery store. He resided with his daughter, Mrs. Ray Koller, since 1961.

He married the former Rose Harley in 1918 in Lena. She preceded him in death in 1927. He then married the former Nellie Gray June 4, 1928 in Lena. In 1959 she preceded him in death. Mr.

Thibodeau was a member of the Independent Grocers' Assn. and a member of St. John Catholic Church, Coleman. Survivors are one son, Donald, Rt. 3, Lena; two daughters, Mrs.

Jeff (Kathleen) Taylor, Milwaukee; Mrs. Ray (Carol) Koller, Rt. 3, Lena; five grandchildren; one great-grandchild. At Rhodes Mortuary, Coleman, after 2 p.m. Thursday.

Parish bible vigil at 8 Thursday evening. Funeral 10:30 a.m., Friday, St. John Catholic Church, Coleman, with the Rev. Byron Belanger officiating. Burdal in the church cemetery.

Ernst Siebert Ernst Siebert Ernst C. Siebert, 80, Rt. 2, Greenleaf, died Tuesday at a Green Bay hospital. Born March 30, 1890 in the Town of Morrison, the son of the late William and Alvina Krueger Siebert married Esther Fuelle April 28, 1918 at Zion Lutheran Church, Wayside. The couple celebrated their golden wedding anniversary in 1968.

Mr. Siebert retired 18 years ago from farming and then was employed at the former Willard's Bakery Green Bay. He was a former Town of Morrison supervisor. Survivors are his wife; two daughters, Mrs. Mildred Borchardt, and Mrs.

Harvey (Dolores) Klug, both of Rt. 2, Greenleaf; one brother, Albert Rt. 2, Greenleaf; one sister, Mrs. Bernard (Serena) Larsen, Manitowoe; eight grandchildren, five children. He was preceded in death by five brothers, four sisters, and one son-in-law.

At Nickel Funeral Home, Mor- Coroner Appointed For Marquette-Co. MADISON (AP) Gov. Patrick J. Lucey today announced the appointment of Walter Brudnowski of rural Neshkoro as Marquette County coroner. Brudnowski, 31, succeeds ter 0.

Bubolz, who resigned Feb. 15. France Shows Off New Rockets rison, after 3 p.m. Thursday, until noon Friday, and then at Zion Lutheran Church, Wayside. 64, Funeral 2 p.m.

Friday at the church, with the Rev. Herbert Harthun officiating. Burial in church cemetery. the Mrs. Lee (Margaret Jane) Monroe, 70, 426 E.

South Street, Kewanee, Ill. died Thursday, Feb. 18. The daughter of the late Walter and Jennie Brown was born March 20, 1900; in Bellevue, Colo. She was preceded in death by her husband, parents and one daughter, Margaret, in infancy.

Survivors are five daughters, Mrs. David (Eileen) Swanson, Green Bay; Mrs. John (Ruby) Potter and Mrs. Robert (Marilyn) Hinton, both of Milan, Mrs. Helen Santianni, Rockville, Mrs.

Nathan (Evelyn) Dubel, Bend, five sons, Clinton White, Moline, Robert, Lawton, James, Clarion, Iowa; John and Lee Monroe, both of Kewanee, one brothHu-ler, Alfred Brown, Yakima, one sister, Mrs. Bessie her Dirks, Harrisburg, S.D.; grandchildren; one great-granddaughter. after, Funeral was held Monday Kewanee, Ill. Burial in Pleasant View Cemetery, Kewanee, Ill. Mrs.

Lee Monroe Mrs. Dorothy Anna Sands Mrs. Dorothy Anna Sands, 64, 822 Grignon formerly of Rhinelander, died Tuesday. She was born June 27, 1906, in Breed to the late John and Anna Quandt. Her husband, Rupert Charles Sands, preceded her in death, Dec.

28, 1956. Mrs. Sands was a member of Snowflake Rebekah Lodge 51 of Rhinelander. Survivors are one son, David, Wilmington, one daughter, Mrs. Robert (Elaine) Hackbarth, Green Bay; eight grandchildren; one great-granddaughter; two sisters, Mrs.

Hattie Rayfort and Mrs. Beth Oakley, both of Rhinelander; two brothers, Oscar Quandt, Rhinelander, and Allen Quandt, Milwaukee. One brother and one sister preceded her in death. At Findeisen-Greiser Funeral Home from 7 to 9 tonight and from 10 a.m. until 1:30 p.m.

Thursday at First Church, Rhinelander. Rebekah memorial service 1:30 p.m. Thursday. Funeral 2 p.m. Thursday, at the church, with the Rev.

Robert Mc Keithen officiating. Burial in Forest Home Cemetery, Rhinelander. A memorial fund has been established for the Odd Fellows Home. Lawrence John Daul Lawrence John Daul, 72, Rt. 3, Luxemburg, died Tuesday at his home.

He was born Feb. 20, 1899 in the Town of Luxemburg. Mr. Daul was a member of St. Joseph Society of St.

Mary Church, Luxemburg. Survivors are five sisters, Mrs. Mary Salentine, Mrs. Louise Collins and Mrs. Sophie Gellin, all of Green Bay; Mrs.

Roy (Pauline) Dixon, Gillett; Mrs. Joseph (Catherine) Swoboda, Rt. 3, Luxemburg; one brother, Peter Daul, Green Bay. Two brothers and three sisters preceded him in death. At Mc Mahon Funeral Home, Luxemburg, after 2 p.m.

today. Rosary 8 this evening. Funeral 11:15 a.m. Thursday, St. Mary Church, Luxemburg, with the Rev.

Benedict Marx officiating. Burial in church cemetery. Hjalmar Carlson Hjalmar Carlson, 85, 855 Phoebe died Tuesday evening at a local hospital. Born July 9, 1885 in Varmland Sweden, he came to the United States in 1905, and married the former Julia Erickson Aug. 1911, in Chicago, Ill.

Mr. CarIson was a machinist for the A. Lawton Co. until his retirement in 1954. He was a member of Verdandi Lodge No.

3, Independent Order of Svithiod Chicago. Survivors are his wife; two sons, Ralph, Green Bay; Walinter, Milwaukee; three daughters, Mrs. Arnold (Harriet) Wickman, and Mrs. Evelyn Beauron, both of Green Bay; Mrs. Willard (Violet) White, Kansas City, three grandchildren; one great grandson; four brothers and one sister, in Sweden.

At Lyndahl Funeral Home ter 2 p.m. Thursday. Funeral 1:30 p.m. Friday at the funeral home. Burial in Fort Howard Cemetery.

Funeral Services Joseph C. Lorberblatt At Coad Funeral Home after 3 day. Wake service 8 tonight. Fu(neral 10 a.m. Thursday, St.

Jude Catholic Church, with Rev. A. J. Baier. Allouez Cemetery.

Erland Wotruba At Lyndahl Funeral Home after 2 today. Funeral 1:30 p.m. Thursday, Trinity Lutheran Church, with Rev. Gordon Thorpe. Fort Howlard Cemetery.

LANDES TEST STATION, France (AP) With a flash of white, an eight-foot rocket popped out of a plastic tube mounted on a tank and curved gradually out to sea toward a scarcely visible target plane. A hundred foreign military attaches, defense ministry officials and journalists, watched from a windswept dune. The French officials held their breath, because riding on slender, 139-pound tube of fuel, electronic gear and explosives was one of France's hopes of enlarging the market for its rocket weapons. First Public Test The test Monday was the first public of the Roland SAM, an antiaircraft missile which SNIA, the French national aerospace company developed in coopera- Man Goes Berserk, Kills Two, Wounds Six in Family GENOA, Italy (AP) "He was crazy. We have known it for quite a while," Domenico Brutto's son told police today after his father went berserk in hospital, killed his sister-inlaw and another son, and wounded six other relatives.

Robert Brutto said his father had been upset and nervous because: he was awaiting trial for shooting at a religious painting; he had lost his job; his two sons, both sailors, were often away from home; and he feared his son Pasquale would not recover from complications after an Police gave this account of the killings: Brutto, 58, entered 23-year-old room at the University Clinic Tuesday night and shot him in the forehead, killing him instantly; then he fatally wounded his wife's sister, who was sitting with Pasquale, ran into an adjoining room and opened fire. His wife and two others were wounded critically and three other relatives were hit. "Don't call the police," he shouted to a telephone operator as he ran into a corridor. "There is no need for that as have killed them all." He ran through the corridor and out of the hospital firing two pistols. Doctors, nurses and patients took cover, and nobody else was hit.

Brutto was arrested without resistance today at dawn in boarding house at nearby Recco. Magnets' Name Greek Magnets take their name from the ancient Greek city of Magnesia, where lodestones first were discovered. A lodestone is a piece of iron oxide with natural magnetic properties. with West Germany's Mes. serschmitt-Bolkow-Blohm.

Last year SNIA sold 322,690 rockets to 35 countries. While this accounted for less than 10 per cent of the total $920 million worth of aerospace exports last year, it still kept thousands employed. Now France is bringing out a second generation of rockets ranging from the 24-pound MiIan, with which a lone soldier should be able to knock off a tank a mile and a quarter away, to the tank-mounted Pluton, designed to wipe out an army camp 75 miles away with a nuclear warhead. The new Exocet is fired from a patrol boat, and SNIA says it will sink cruisers 20 miles away -far over the horizon. The rocket zips along just over the waves, making it extremely ditficult to counter.

Protect Tank Columns The Roland was designed to protect tank columns from air attack. Its tank mount is equipped with radar to pick approaching planes and identify them as friend or foe. Then, to reduce the cost, a gunner takes over and aims by sight. The company says the effective range is four miles. The Roland hit the target, but the warhead didn't go off.

A second shot exploded prematurely. The prospective buyers shrugged. The next demonstration was a perfect firing of a MiIan through a paper target 800 yards away. CO 16 in Change of Command-Capt. 1st Lt.

Patrick Finton, right, Robert Cappock, commander of who transferred from 29 Palms the Marine Corps Reserve Cen- Marine Corps Base in Califorter here for the past 18 months, nia. Capt. Cappock is retiring of- was relieved in change-of-command ceremonies Tuesday by from the corps and will live in Green Bay. (P-G Photo) 822 Mayor Candidates Tilleman Criticizes 'Wild, Vague' Candidate Promises Mayor Donald Tilleman today criticized primary election opponents for "vague and wild promises and accusations." In his first public statement since announcing he would seek a third term as Green Bay's top executive, Tilleman attacked candidates' statements about reducing taxes and cutting waste and inefficiency in city government. "It is popular now for candidates to promise decreases in taxes," Tilleman's prepared statement read.

The mayor then asked, "How?" He also noted candidates were promising to "cut waste and inefficiency." The mayor asked, "'Where?" Asks Specifics Tilleman then asked the candidates, who, he said, have never called him or department heads with recommendations, and most if not all have taken no active part in city government, to be specific. "Let these candidates," the statement said, "with their wild promises come forth now with specifics shall we cut -garbage collections to either once a month or every other week shall we skip plowing the streets of snow shall we reduce our already undermanned police and fire departments shall we eliminate 150 teachers from the school system?" The mayor said it was the candidates' duty as citizens to seek improvement in city government. He said the budgets during his six years as mayor have "been scrutinized by me in detail. Every bit of fat in my opinion and in those of the aldermen has been trimmed, much to the unhappiness of department heads who have been forced to do more work with less money." Favors Reductions stated he favored Tilleman tax reductions, and "we must, repeat must, seek relief for elderly, those on Social Security or meager pensions." Tilleman then called the tion, state and city wealthy, continued, "but unfortunately our wealth is being diverted from what I consider worthy causes to other avenues." He alluded to money spent, primarily at the national for military purposes, the port of the war in Southeast Asia and in space exploration, while the domestic needs of people go unmet. Supports Sharing He indirectly supported al revenue sharing by pointing out that Wisconsin receives less than $1 for every dollar sent to Washington.

"How much improvement our educational system ready one of the top in the tion could the billions spent space provide here?" he asked. Tilleman also noted that Woman Diets To Help Fatten Church Funds BRACKNELL, England (AP) Joyce Boden, 154 pounds, has gone on a diet to help her Berkshire church's finances. Parishoners will in Money weekly, pound by reducing pound, as she weighs in before each Sunday service on the way down to 126 pounds. (80 per cent of the city and school budgets is for salaries, "wages which in turn feed our economy." He said it was almost impossible to reduce wage costs. "Do we want to close our schools? Do we want to live in fear of tragedy by fire or of thieves and bandits roaming our streets?" he asked.

Murphy on Bridges Another candidate for mayor, James J. Murphy, Tuesday called on Mayor Tilleman to produce facts to substantiate a claim that a medium-level bridge at Mason Street would require a minimum amount of property acquisition. Tilleman had given this as one of the points in favor of the bridge plan in response to a question posed by the Press-Gazette for use in a candidate section published last Saturday. "I would like Mayer Tilleman to tell the public many parcels of property the city has purchased up to date, the address of each parcel, owner, amount paid for parcel and amount paid for relocation, Murphy said, "Also how many parcels of property remain to be acquired and at what cost for property and relocation. This will give the public a chance to judge whether this is a minimum amount or not." Student 81st Traffic Victim By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The death of a Stevens Point State University student in a car-snow plow mishap Tuesday raised Wisconsin's 1971 traffic toll to 81 compared to 104 on this date last year.

James Hackbarth, 20, of rural Merrill, was killed Tuesday when his car struck the rear of a Marathon County snow plow that had stopped on a median strip of the Wausau Highway 51 bypass near the Rothschild interchange, authorities said. Two other students with Hackbarth suffered minor injuries. U.S. Weather Furnished by the U. S.

Weather Bureau level, Green Bay Weather Sunrise Sunset Today 6:39 5:33 Tomorrow 6:37 5:35 Tuesday Wednesday 3 p.m. 32 a.m. 4 p.m. 31 2 a.m. 5 p.m.

29 3 a.m. p.m. 24 4 a.m. 10 p.m. 24 5 a.m.

00 p.m. 23 6 a.m. 0 p.m. 16 a.m. 10 p.m.

14 00 a.m. 11 p.m. 12 9 a.m. 12 13 10 a.m. 16 Degree Days 44.

Mean Temperature 21. Degree Above Normal. High for this date 53 in 1930. Low for this date -21 in 1889. Weather Elsehwere Station and High Low PreWeather for Yester- Last cipitaUnited States day Night tion GREEN BAY, WIS.

32 3 Bismarck, N. D. 29 9 Boston, Mass. 35 24 .46 Brownsville, Tex. 71 69 Buffalo, N.

Y. 38 30 Chicago, Ill. 34 32 Denver, Colo. 35 14 Detroit, Mich, 35 31 Duluth, Minn. 39 8 Escanaba, Mich.

36 15 .03 Grand Rapids, Mich, 33 24 .03 Kansas City, Kan. 36 30 Los Madison Angeles, Calif, 34 67 48 16 Marquette, Mich. 33 Beach, Fla. 82 68 Milwaukee 32 23 Minneapolis-St. Paul 37 13 New Orleans, La.

63 36 New York, N. Y. 39 34 .05 City, Okla, 47 27 Phoenix, Ariz. 64 Pittsburgh, Pa. 38 45 16 .07 Rapid City, S.

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