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The Winona Republican-Herald from Winona, Minnesota • Page 9

Location:
Winona, Minnesota
Issue Date:
Page:
9
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MONDAY, FEBRUARY 18,1952 THE WINONA REPUBLICAN-HERALD. WINONA. MINNESOTA Page 9 J. A. Millar Honored by Odd Fellows About 300 members of Odd Fellows organizations in Minnesota and nearby Wisconsin attended the reception held in honor of J.

A. Millar, major-general, recently elected department commander of the Patriarchs Militant of Minnesota, at the Odd Fellows Temple Saturday evening. Mr. Millar was introduced by Mrs. John Wanek, and 24 members of Mr.

Millar's staff were introduced by R. W. Sparrow, chief of staff and chairman in charge of arrangements for the reception. Mrs. Wanek was co-chairman.

Distinguished guests included Mrs. F. A. Larson, Warroad, president of the state auxiliary to the Patriarchs Militant, and Mrs. John Conlin, Minneapolis, vice president.

A humorous skit depicting the opening and closing of a lodge was presented by the Rev. James C. Hill, Arnold Stenehjem, Mrs. Paul Griesel Mrs. Paul Griesel Mrs.

William 0. Miller, Mrs. John Hamernik, Miss Helen Baer. Mrs. Helen Brewer, Mrs.

Julius Haefner and R. W. Sparrow. Winona, and Mr. and Mrs.

Fred Millard and Lloyd Millard. St. Charles. Mr. Millar was presented with a scrapbook and filing case from the local Odd Fellows organizations, his granddaughter.

Sandra Burt making the presentation. She was introduced by Fred Millard. He also was presented with a leather sword case, hand tooled, the gift of Mrs. Beattie Francis and family, Minneapolis. Dancing followed with Mrs.

Olga Zimdar's three-piece orchestra furnishing the music. Refreshments were served at a table decorated with flowers and candles in purple i and gold, colors of the order Mrs. Haefner and Mrs. Herbert Nichols presided at the table. Assisting Mr.

Sparrow and Mrs. Wanek with arrangements for the reception were Mr. Stenehjem, Mrs. Laura Darling. Mr.

and Mrs. Fred Millard and Lloyd Millard. Society Editor Receives Honor Miss May S. Murray, society editor of The Winona Republican- Herald, won second prize in a news story competition of the Minnesota Press Women, it was announced at the group's convention Sunday at St. Paul.

Miss Murray won the the daily paper news story division. A former Republican-Herald em- Miss Geraldine Sohle, now employed in Minneapolis, received first prize in the daily paper news story contest. Pickwick OES PICKWICK, Robert McNally Jr. presided at the meeting of Pickwick Chapter, Order of the Eastern- Star, at Pickwick Friday. Mrs.

Nellye Rohlfing reported on the progress of the fund being collected for the worthy grand matron's project from the Pickwick chapter. Election of officers for the coming year will be conducted at the first meeting in March. A valentine puzzle game preceded the potluck supper served following the meeting. Circle B-Circle of St. Martin's Lutheran Church will meet with Mrs.

August Sielaff, 562 E. Wabasha Wednesday at 2 p. m. Circle B-Mrs. Joseph Kasper, 532 E.

2nd will be hostess to Circle of St. Stanislaus Church at her home at 8 p. m. today. Soroptimist Dinner-The February dinner meeting of the Soroptimist Club of Winona will be held at the home of Mrs.

George C. Jackson, 409 E. 4th Wednesday at 6:30 p. m. Otto Wagers Honored on 68th Anniversary Mr.

and Mrs. Otto Wager, 513 E. Front who observed their 68th wedding anniversary Feb. 14, were honored at an open house Saturday at Central Lutheran Church. About 100 relatives and friends were present.

Many cards, flowers and gifts were received. A short informal program presented with the Rev. L. Bry- Minneapolis Kappa Delta Pi To Give Tea for Honor Students The annual tea sponsored by Kappa Delta Pi in honor of freshman and sophomore honor students at Winona State Teachers College will be held Wednesday afternoon at the college. General chairman in charge of event is Miss Mary Carlson, nestad presiding.

On behalf of the immediate family a welcome was given by Carl Wager and a response was given by William Peterson of Houston. A thank-you message was given by Mr. Wager and a summary of their lives by Elaine Wager, a granddaughter. Mrs. Wager, the former Christina Jacobson, is the daughter of the late Mr.

and Mrs. Hans Jacobson. She was born May 30, 1865, in Houston County, and is the only one living of a family of ten children. At the age of nine she went with her widowed mother and sisters and brothers to a homestead in Nebraska. They traveled in a covered wagon pulled by two yoke of oxen.

Except for one day she walked all the way. She helped to herd the cattle and sheep taken i to Nebraska. Their first home and other build- Pur- than Committee chairmen i Miss Lois Jean Smith, St. Charles, invitations; Mrs. Vina Naysmith, Sartell; William McCarl, Winona; Mrs.

Vayden Anderson, Winona, and Miss Alma Smith, Winona, food: Gordon Danuser, Winona, music, and Mrs. Arnold Donath, Winona, and Robert Fenwick, Lake City, reception. Attending will be freshmen and sophomores on the fall quarter honor roll, the faculty and present members of Gamma Tau Chapter, Kappa Delta Pi. England Continues Public Functions Despite Mourning LONDON an--Queen Elizabeth II public functions connected These proved to be warm in win- with Britain's government, trade, ter and cool in summer. She can charity or arts to take place as call one winter in which they had scheduled despite mourning for her hjs backi omme i cou ij then turn a severe snow storm.

The snow father, King George VI was up to the roof and they had! The announcement of this by the to make tunnels to the barn. Lord Chamberlain's office said, Boyie's Column Nothing As Temporary As An Army By HAU BOYLE NEW YORK W) The present French-Arab tension in Tunisia must bring back wry memories these days to thousands of American veterans. For just nine years ago this week the U.S. Army's Second Corps was learning a bitter lesson in the art of warfare in the battle of Kas- serine Gap. Their teachers were the combat- hardened warriors of Field Marshal Rommel's famed Afrika Korps.

sued more The Daily Record Feb. 18, 1952 Municipal Court Deposits of one dollar were for- in municipal court this morning by 11 persons for failure to answer charges of minor traffic 1,000 miles across the sands from Libya by Montgomery's tenaci- Hal Boylt ous "Desert Rats," the Nazi commanders were hungry for gas and other supplies. They decided to get them from the Americans, spread thinly along the right flank of the Tunisian corridor. Their was to crash the Yank line, pool their Panzers north to Constantine, a big Allied base, and wrap up the British Second Army en route. With no enemy at They twisted hay for fuel and melted snow for water for the cattle and themselves.

They lived through one of the worst storms. however, that "holding of other functions must be left to the discretion of the organizers, who may wish to allow a week or two to Since there were no trees on the elapse before recommending ar- prairie they had to gather tumble rangements." weeds and buffalo chips for A statement issued Mr. Wager, son of Mr. and Mrs. by Queen Mother Elizabeth Sunday expressed NOW! ijour home can be DON'T STIFLE'YOUR CHILD with an overdone room-full of do-dads and clutter.

This will distract the child and distort his (or her) sense of orderliness. Children are sensitive to their surroundings, they appreciate order and respond Instinctively to cheerful color Give your child the benefit of an environment ol good taste. Remember always to PROVIDE ROOM FOR SELF-EXPRESSION Incorporate. Ideas that encourage and enable the child to pursue hobbles. yet flexible enough to be easily changed as Interests widen.

Storage space is Important for toys, clothing teaches the child neatness. Maps make Ideal wall decor. Tailored rooms appeal more to boys. Girls snow a preference lor frills and Our trained decorators are always happy to give you Ideas for your child's room, or for any room In your home. please feel free to ask for counsel, anytime.

Interior Deeormttnf Studio W. 5th St. Phont 2231 "IT COSTS NO MORE TO BE COKSECT" Peter Wager, was born Dec. 17, 1862, in Houston County. He is the oldest of a family of nine children, and is the only one living of that family.

He stayed home and helped on his father's farm until he was 19 years of age. When he went to Nebraska to visit his brother, A. C. Johnson, he remained there to work, and there he met Christina Jacobson and after a year they were married. On the morning of Feb.

14, 1884, they traveled by lumber wagon to Albin, Neb. to be married. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Jacobson, brother and sister-in-law of the bride, were the attendants.

They lived in Nebraska for nine years. During the latter years of their stay there, their crops were burned. Everything was dry and hot and the sand whipped and piled up like snow. Because of this dry period. Mr.

and Mrs. Wager and two of her sisters and families moved to Nob- inoster. Mo. Here they lived for about three years. During this time they were struck by a diphtheria epidemic, and four of their five children died within two weeks from this disease.

About 1898, with their remaining son, Louis, they moved to Looney Valley, Minn. Here they lived for more than 30 years. They rented farms and Mr. Wager ran a thrashing rig. for more than 20 years.

In 1924, they moved to Winona and lived here four years. During this time their son Louis died- In 1928, they bought a farm on Stocton Hill, and lived there until 1941, when they retired and moved to Winona. A son, Ervin, was killed in an accident Aug. 15, 1946, and a daughter, Ella, (Mrs. Fred Sammann) died Nov.

26, 1951. Carl, Mrs. Louis Npwici (Joy), and Mrs. John Peplinsi (Pearl) are the only living children of then- family of ten. Mr.

and Mrs. Wager have 14 grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren. The anniversary cake was made by Mrs. Ben Jereczek. Out-of-town guests were Mr.

and Mrs. Andrew Torgerson, D. L. Dyer, D. C.

Dyer, William R. Peterson, Lud Torgerson, Miss Ellen Olson, George Hegge, John Hegge, Miss Olga Hegge, Richard Hegge, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Groth, Mrs. Clifford Peterson and Mrs.

Alfred Olson, Houston; Mr. and Mrs. Harold Brostrom, Dakota; Mr. and Mrs. Maynard L.

Brostrom, Minneapolis; Weachter, Mrs. Rachel Decker and Garrit Pollins; St. Charles; Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Johnston and fam ily, Menomonie, Mr.

and Mrs. Alfred Watland and family, Shakopee; Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Wager and Mr. and Mrs.

Tenard Moen, Caledonia; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sutton, Milwaukee; Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Thompson and son Dickie, and Mr.

and Mrs. Thomas McHenry and daughter Patti, La Crosse, and Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Swenson and family, Stewartville. Minnesota City Aid MINNESOTA CITY, The Minnesota City Lutheran Ladies Aid will be entertained by Mrs, Chris Ludwigsen Thursday at 2 p.

m. Mrs. Adolph Martin will be assisting hostess. The meeting is open to friends. To Detroit LAMOILLE, Minn.

Mr. and Mrs. Earl Nottleman, Lamoille, and Mr. and Mrs. Lyndon Lawrynk, Stoddard, left Friday to visit in Detroit, Mich.

They will return home this week. thanks for the "wonderful tributes" her husband and asked "loyalty and devotion" for their daughter, the new queen. "In the great and lonely station to which she has been called, she will need your protection arid your love," the statement, issued from Buckingham Palace, said. With the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh, the Queen Mother and Princess Margaret spent the weekend at Windsor Castle, where King George was buried Friday. Sunday they attended a memorial service him in the private chapel adjoining the royal lodge.

30-Year-Old, $30 Million Fund Reported unique $30,000,000 "humanitarian fund" out of the profits of a soap- making concern has been announced 30 years after it was set up. Word of the fund was given out for the first time last night by Dr. Samuel M. Best, who succeeded Philanthropist George Robert White, as president of the Cuticura of Maiden when the latter died in 1922. Dr.

Best said White ordered the fund set up in a deathbed statement by which the company which he controlled would forever turn over out of every $3 in net profits for charitable purposes, The money was quietly provided by the Cuticura makers of Coodvicw Trinity Guild-The February meeting of the Gpodview Trinity Guild of Goodview Trinity Lutheran Church will be held at 8 p. m. Tuesday at the church with Mrs. Wesley Spence and Mrs. Roy Rose as hostesses.

Officers will be elected. All members are to attend and visitors are welcome. BOSTON --Existence of a his freshly-supplied armor around and deal again with his old foe, Montgomery. Easy Touch The breakthrough plan was almost exactly the same as that employed later in the war by the Nazis in their daring, hppeless gamble in the Battle of the Belgian bulge. And it failed for the same reason--in neither case did the Germans quite reach our supply bases.

But it looked like an easy touch in those early Tunisian days. The Americans were outgunned, outnumbered and relatively untried by battle. Leisurely the Nazis massed and in a sudden night attack seized Faid pass from its French infantry defenders. This gave them an opening down into the plains. Fearful that this was only a diversionary action, and that the Germans would make their main drive through a pass farther north, the Allied command refused to let the Americans group and throw all its force in a single unified counterattack.

The American units therefore went into action one at a time, and were simply chopped to pieces or forced to fall back in the face of the superior weight of the wheeb'ng Panzers. I remember standing with Ernie Pyle on the second day of the battle on a field redolent of almond blossoms shaken from the trees by the blasting guns. As far forward as the eye could see the area was littered with the hulks of burning American tanks, and we felt like crying. There were men in those tanks we had come to know as friends in a few short weeks, and they were dead now in a struggle against hopeless odds. It seemed like a great waste of human brav- Winona Deaths Mrs.

Guy G. Hensel Mrs. Guy G. Hensel, 47, 965 W. 5th died at her home Sunday after an illness of a month.

She or firms involved were: Meter violations Albert H. sons, Earl, Harvey and Edward; her parents, two sisters, Mary Ann and Patricia Kay, her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Daering and Mr. and Mrs.

Joseph Rothering, all of Winona; her great grandmother, Mrs. Frances Valentine. Winona, and a great-great grandmother, Mrs. Elizabeth Callahan, Minneiska. Services were held today, the Rt.

Rev. Joseph F. Hale officiating and burial was in St. Mary's cemetery. Mrs.

Maude Fowlie Funeral services will be held at a Olmstead Donald Loucks, 1204 W. 5th Carl A. Fabian, Winona Rt. Duane Baertsch, Fountain City, Mrs. Vera Hegg, 1067 W.

Broadway; Harold Cady, Lewiston; Winona Paint and Glass Company, 57 W. 2nd and Garret Feils, 253 Olmstead St. Parked in an alley Nathe's Wholesale Meat Company, two violations. Parking overtime in a one-hour parking Mrs. Catherine Martin, Winona Rt.

1. At Winona General Hospital (Visiting hours: 2-4 and 7-8 p. SATURDAY James Church, Trempealeau. Robert Luehmann, Lewiston. Mrs.

Minnie Fernholz, Arcadia. Mrs. Wilfred Lauer 708 W. Broadway. Mrs.

Victor Hornberg, Winona Rt. 2. Birth Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred Lauer 708 W.

Broadway, a son. Discharges Fred Laabs, 521 Wall St. Reuben Fenske, 460 E. Broadway. Mrs.

Albin Vodak and baby, Trempealeau. Mrs. Steven Graves and baby, Elba. Mrs. Robert Lovas and baby, Lake Blvd.

Mrs. David Stark and baby, Fountain City. Alfred Kreuzer, 278 E. Howard St. SUNDAY Admissions Roger Boettcher, 212 Kansas St.

Mrs. John Murray, Minneiska. Mrs. Anna Litscher, Fountain City. Frank Ofenloch, 127 E.

King St. Darrell Kindschy, Fountain City. Mrs. Bernard Bedtka, St. Charles.

Discharges -George Krage, 823 E. Mark St. Mrs. Earl Kreuzer and baby, o75 E. 5th St.

Mrs aren ce Doble and baby, iio9 N. Baker St. Mrs Harry Erdmanczyk and baby, 702 Mankato Ave. Mrs. Raymond Eichman and baby, 727 E.

Broadway. Baby Girl Hildebrandt, 4010 W. iSth St. Mrs. Wilford Wilson and baby, 351 W.

Mark St. Mrs. Hugo Waechter and baby, St. Charles. Mrs.

Florin Beck and baby, 721 E. 3rd St. Brietzke Wfcona 7 2 Nathe's one daughter, Mrs. William (Mar- st Fhomas Wednes- Comp'any 168 J- Bonn and two grand- day at 9 a rs. Maude children, all of Winona, and Fow i ie 68 2 16 W.

King who sister, Mrs. John Dahler, Mankato, i died Sun( a afternoon at Fort Minn. Funeral services will be Do dge, la. She had been ill for Kelly's Funeral Home 2 p.m. i se vp ra i months.

Born in Winona Wednesday, the Rev. Albert Kinz- July 19 1883) Mrs. Fowlie is sur- ler, pastor of Bethel Presbyterian vived by two i ster Mrs. Richard ery then. Ernie That night combat command of the First Armored Division, a tremendous fighting outfit, held a meat sales.

Henry S. needy medical patients, institutions and hospitals. Horsemeat Sales Evidence Promised MILWAUKEE W)--Four Wisconsin Democratic leaders Saturday said they would present evidence to the Office of Price Stabilization today to support their charge that the state department of agriculture was guilty of "possible gross negligence" in investigating horse- Reuss, candidate for U. S. Senator, said he and the other Democrats state Senators Flynn of Racine and Maier of Milwaukee and Assemblyman Me- Parland of Cudahy--would meet with Clem Kalvelage of the Milwaukee district office of OPS today.

In a telegram earlier to Gov. Kohler the four asked for a bipartisan probe of the agriculture department. "There are more questions at stake in this scandal than merely the violation of state laws concerning the proper labeling of horsemeat on the sales counter," Reuss said. "We are going to the OPS with our evidence because certain government regulations may have been violated. Ceiling prices on horsemeat were most certainly violated." Moroccans Shoot At French General CASABLANCA OB--Moroccan nationalists fired three shots Sunday at the automobile carrying French Resident-General Augustin Gufl- laume, the French News Agency reported.

Neither. Gen. Guillaume nor his wife were hurt, ejther by the shots or by stones which demonstrators later threw at the car. Both Morocco and Tunisia are simmering under the fire of Nationalist agitation. There is widespread fear of more violence such as swept Tunisia at the end of January, when nearly 50 were slain.

The chimpanzee has terrific strength, equal to that of several men. In captivity, it seldom lives longer than 15 years. supplies. Those 'that couldn't be removed were put to.the torch, and the flames flickered about the old Roman ruins, ghostly in the black night. This great stand helped defeat the Nazis.

They went on through Kasserine Gap, driving the Americans back 40 Panzers never miles. But reached the the gas dumps for which they were thirsting. British tanks and artillery trundled down to support the hard- pressed Yanks, and baffled by this new strength at Thala pass, Rommel pulled back. It was the beginning of the end for his Afrifca Corps, one of the great armies of history. The battered American force was taken over by two new generals, George Patton and Omar Bradley, and they began to build it into a mighty army.

Where are all these men now, the green soldiers who fought so well in the dry wadis and rocky djebels of Tunisia? Ernie Pyle is dead, and the men he wrote about are scattered widely. Nothing exists of that battle now, except shards of old metal rusting in the timeless sands, and the memories of men who shared loyalty and danger there. Was it all only nine short years ago, or a century? Nothing is as temporary as an army. Entertains Patrons PETERSON. Mum.

(Special)-The Benson Feed Mill, Maynard and Clifford Benson, proprietors, entertained 300 patrons at two dinners Thursday and Friday evenings in the American Legion Hall. The speaker for the evenings was Herb Sugden, sales manager of the North Central States division, Purina Mills. Advertisement BetterCough Relief When new drugs or old fail to stop your cough or chest cold don't delay. Creomuision contains only safe, helpful, proven ingredients and no narcotics to disturb cature's process. It goes right to the seat of the trouble to aid nature soothe and heal raw, tender, inflamed bronchial membranes.

Guaranteed to please yon or drngjist Tefonds money. Creooxnlsionuu stood the test of many millions of nsera. CREOMUirSION Bennie Baker, Cochrane. Mrs. Quentin Burt, 1066 Broadway.

E. 2. Mrs. August Larson, Houston Rt. TODAY Admissions Mrs.

Darol Lee, 367Vz Winona St. Mrs. Paul Rosinski, 1107 E. Sanborn St. Births Mr.

and Mrs. Darol Lee, Winona a daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Rosinski, 1107 E.

Sanborn a daughter. OTHER BIRTHS PETERSON, Minn. Born to the Rev. and Mrs. Norman Benson, Scobey, a son Feb.

9. The Rev. Mr. Benson is the son of Mr. and Mrs.

B. C. Benson, Peter- TODAY'S BIRTHDAYS Janice Chupita, 722 E. Broadway, 3. FIRE RUNS City firemen were called to 1253 E.

Sanborn Saturday at 11:35 p.m. when an oil burner flared. Damage was minor. Reporting the fire was Joseph P. Walsh.

Dance Event Feb. 24 FOUNTAIN CITY, Wis. The Dansations program to be presented by the Martin Studio will 'be given here at St. Mary's Hall 24 under the sponsorship of the Band Boosters. The program, scheduled for last Sunday, was postponed because of a conflict in dates.

Church, officiating. Burial will be in Woodlawn Cemetery. Friends may call at the Kelly Funeral Home Wednesday until the hour of the services. Mrs. Mollie Brown Mrs.

Mollie Brown, Inglewood, former Winona resident, died Saturday at Inglewood. Mrs. Brown at one time was owner and manager of the Band Box, Winona dress shop on East Third St. She operated a shop in California until a few years ago. She had been in poor health for some time.

Survivors include one son. John, Inglewood, and a sister. Funeral arrangements are being completed. Mrs. Frances Ellis Funeral services for Mrs.

Frances Ellis, Chicago, formerly of Winona, were conducted at 9 a.m. today at St. Stanislaus Church, the Rev. Lawrence Ginther officiating. Preliminary services were conducted at the Borzyskowski Mortuary at 8:30 a.m.

Burial was in St. Mary's Cemetery. Pallbearers were Elmer and Clarence Tri- bell, Eugene and Edmund Edel, Paul Herek and Stanley Mlynczak. Ernest E. Choisser Funeral services for Ernest Everett Choisser, 84, Circle, former resident of Winona County, were conducted in Forsyth, recently.

Mr. Choisser was born in Winona County Nov. 17, 1867, moved with his parents to southern Illinois when an infant, and to Montana in 1885. In 1889, he secured a contract for the freighting of supplies to troops at Lame Deer, and also had the mail route from Rosebud to Lame Deer for a number of years. With F.

L. Mefford, he operated a store at Rosebud for several years and also was associated with Mefford Brothers in ranching operations. He was active in helping build the Episcopal Church at Rosebud. From 1924 to 1927, he lived in Forsyth with his sisters, Mrs. Charles B.

Taber and Mrs. C. D. Foster, and then went to Big Dry district and homesteaded on McGuire Creek. He was associated with W.

A. Twitchell Sons, stock ranchers, until his retirement a year ago. Two years ago he trained and rode a winner in horse races at Brockway and Circle. He was a member of the Range Riders. Mr.

Choisser was the last living member of his family. Infant Daughter The infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Blaise Rothering, Minnesota City Rt. 1, died Sunday at 8:10 a.

m. at the Winona General hospital. The child was born at the hospital Feb. 12. She is survived by Tollefson, Beverly Hills, and Mrs.

Arthur Pett, Minneapolis, and one brother, Frank Boland. Stockton. She was a member of the St. Rose of Lima Guild. The Rt.

Rev. Joseph F. Hale will officiate and burial will be in St. Mary's cemetery. Friends may call at the Burke Funeral Home Tuesday afternoon and evening.

Msgr. Hale win say the rosary at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday and the St. Rose of Lima Guild will say the rosary at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday.

Two-State Deaths Olaf Anton Aim RUSHFORD, Minn. A burial service for Olaf Anton Aim, 78, Rushford resident until 1923, who died in Rochester last week, was held here Thursday. He was born April 23, 1873, at Oslo, Norway, and came to the United States when he was 11, settling at Rushford. He was married here Nov. 15, 1896, to the former Carrie Mae Arnold.

They moved to Rochester in 1923 after he retired from printing. Survivors include his wife; two sons, Thornton, Rochester, and Walter, Winona: five daughters, Mrs. George Blanchfield, Rushford, and Mrs. R. L.

Bond, Mrs. Loyd Mclnroy, Mrs. Maynard Dale and Mrs. C. E.

Brown, all of Rochester; nine grandchildren, and seven great-grandchildren. One daughter, Eleanor, is dead. Irving Duxbury ALMA CENTER, Wis. (Special)-- Funeral services will 'be held here Tuesday afternoon for Irving Duxbury, 56. who died Saturday at the Whitehall Community Hospital after four weeks illness.

The Rev. Richard Brooks will officiate at' the Methodist Church here at 1 p.m., with burial in the local cemetery. Friends may call at the Jensen Funeral Home, Hixton, until noon. Duxbury was born in Jackson County in July, 1895. He had been an insurance salesman and farmer.

Surviving are his wife, the former Nellie Edwards; one daughter, Mrs. Ulias Kaas, Alma Center; two sons, Vernon, Alma Center; Donald, Fond du Lac, his mother, Mrs. Effie Duxbury, Alma Center; two brothers, Ralph, Eleva, and Fay, Alma Center and three grandchildren. Marshall G. Hayes STOCKTON, Minn.

--Funeral services for Marshall G. Hays, Stockton, were conducted at 2 p.m. today at the Fawcett-Abraham Chapel, Winona, the Rev. Harper Richardson, St. Charles, officiating.

Burial was in the Saratoga Cemetery. Pallbearers were Henry Kalmes, Bernard, Lyle and Forrest Smith, Emil Guenther and David Meshka. Mrs. Bernard Nissalke FOUNTAIN CITY, Wis. --Funeral services for Mrs.

Bernard Nis- salke, Fountain City, were conducted at 2 p.m. Sunday at St. Michael's Lutheran Church, the Rev. Herbert Nommensen officiating. Burial was in Hiler Cemetery Nodine, Minn.

Pallbearers were Walter Gatzlaff, Henry Bork, Edwin Smith', William Gerth, Emanuel Braatz and Clarence Schank. Train to be a PRINTER Under the I Prtnworlc GRAPHIC ARTS Technical School Wrilt lot 1104 Clinic Minneipolii 3, Minn. i What will you Jor your family be doing 10. "15 or 30 years now? There no oub- stitute. for.

ings. MORRISEY REAL ESTATE AND INSCBASCE AGENCY Hospital. Accident Polio, Auto, Fire, Life, Ret. Annuities. OKIcn 9588 9301 159 Walnut St.

Wlnonn OPEN NEW 7 Days a Week OAKS Benefit Supper Sponsored by Kellogg P.T.A. Wednesday, Feb. 20 M.E. CHURCH HALL Serving 4 p.m. fo 7 p.m.

Adults 0c School Age 25e Prc-Sehoo! Free Enjoy Life! EAT OUT AT THE STEAK SHOP IB Main Phone 3150 TUESDAY SPECIAL Noen end Evening Dinner New England Boiled Dinner 65e Listen to "Sports Roundup" over KWNO Monday through Friday from 7:20 to 7:25 a.m. DANCE to "WHOOPEE" JOHN at Winona Armory Winona, Minn. Tuesday Evening Feb. 26 Annual Masquerade DANCE I American Society Hall Winona, Minn. Wednesday, Feb.

20 Music by Jerry G.ilbertson Costume Prizes 3rd--JS Reg. Admission At Door i Are You a Night Owl? Relax and enjoy your lavorJte drmtf in the friendly atmosphere of Main Tavern. Try our and Manhattan. MAIN TAVERN "Swtif A Hen 123 Mitn Si. Armour's Star-- 4-4 Lb.

Ave. PICNICS Lb 35c Betty Crocker Devils Food CAKE MIX Pkg 27c Standby Pumpkin 2 c3 IGA Luncheon MEAT 41c Betty Crocker Gingercake MIX Pkg. 246 Crisp, Large Heads LETTUCE 2 for 15c Albrechfs 90S W. 5fh St. Phont 4498 Dorn's 500 Huff St.

Phone 8-1531 A I A Cle'in to to burn-W in Your charge jccounl irwittd. LEAN RIB BOILING BEEF Lb. 29 PORK HOCKS Lb. 23 FIRST CUT PORK CHOPS Lb. 37 lanm TER.

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About The Winona Republican-Herald Archive

Pages Available:
38,838
Years Available:
1947-1954