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The Capital Times from Madison, Wisconsin • 12

Publication:
The Capital Timesi
Location:
Madison, Wisconsin
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

12 Til CAPITAL TIMES, Monday, Oct. 22, 1962 Earl W. Garth Dios at Aire 75 Ur. Mary Stephenson Mis, Mary II, Stiphcnsun, 79. of 622 Constitution Line, died Sun- Fred Winnie Fred E.

Winnie, 86, of 2145 Johnson a retired Oscar May- George M. Smilli'r Area Deaths Funeral Tuesday At Milwaukee EDGKRTON Mss I Ttuiislon, 73, died Sunday. funeral home, Edgerlon, nigtit. Born In the (own of Manchester, Green county, in 1873, he was a Madison resident for 18 years. He retired 10 years ago f()m Co ai Funeral smites will be held, a member of the East Side 1 r.i.

Tuesday in the East Evangelical Lullieran Church. Eai I W. Rurth, 75, of 2uti N. ay at the home of George Mur-jer and Co. employ, died Sabir day night in a Madison hospital.

i Houte Verona, where she Thornton ave, died Sunday 1 Iliad been Visiting for the past in a hospital here. He retired lere. He retired a week, Obituaries i'liII-IUnmletl Indian 6 Josh9 Sanford Rccdsburg Sauk County CD Chief 9 Dies un employe of the North Western Hoad 111 1953. lie had been She but was born In Mineral Point, had lived most of her life In Madison. She was a memlier of Side English Lutheran Church, with Die Rev.

Karl G. Best officiating. Burial will he in the Suleinville cemetery. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Allied Fond du Lae; a son, LaVerne, 2115 E.

Johnson st a stepsister, Mrs. Faye El- -urine Jones liEI.LEVILl.K Mis. Cecde Francois, 84, died Sunday at Verona. Ket ker funeral home, Bello-vide. PRAIRIE I)U SAC Edward El.sing, 80, died Sunday.

Schoilde funeral home, Prairie du Sac, Columbus Fred F. timnicht. 73, died Sunduy. June funeral home, Columbus. MT.

HOREH Milo Ke-s, 72, town of Perry, died there Sunday. Gesme funeral borne, Mt. Horeb. POYNETTE Mrs. Rudolph Gaiibel, 79, died Sunday at Portage.

Pflunz funeral home, Poy- First Methodist Church. Frlends may call at theihson, Purdceville; five grand- Funeral rife for George M. Smith, 50, Wisconsin lieutenant overnor from 1949 to 19.75, who died Saturday In a Milwaukee hospital, will be held Tuesday at 1 pm. in the Max Sass funeral home, 1515 W. Oklahoma Milwaukee.

Burial will he fn Arlington Paik cemetery there. Friends may call at the funeral home after 4 pm, today. Mr. Smith, a virtually unknown man who came out of political obscurity to serve three consecutive terms as lieutenant governor, had operated tlte George Siirviv'ng are four sons, Rutscrt Schnw-sk-r funerul home, 3325 E. children; and two great-grand-St.

Paul, Rnrold I Washington today and to-lcbiidien. Madison resident the past 40 years 1 Mr. Barth was born In Freeport, 1836. He his wife observed their 55th wedding in and hi Tipp City, Ohio: Lt. Col.

Paul Ft, Monroe, and Philip 622 Constitution lane; a daughter, amiiver-'-11' F'rank Denson, Woodland ofjllills, a brother, C. grandchil- May of a brother. Kitto, Beloit; and 14 grt REEDMilHG Joshua D. Jush" Sanford, 43, Heedsburg, a full blooded Indian, currently full-time Sauk county civil de-f tense director and a fmmer Flying 1 Tiger under Kcuinclh Payne, Editor and IJ.W. Alumnus, Dies I hava lo Uh fill the rod your rvlrt.

pledged II.V ol mvurlf prlfululrs, rLfJ 4m HUirt and rfS VI L. Sinclair A. I I vary in I J1" year. Survi i be-Afn- IXJsides his wife, are at llie FrauUchi two daugh s. funera, J20 wison gt Smith Insurance agpney at 1 nettc.

Ctrliftnt II wring Aid Audiologttf Kenneth Wilcox Payne, 72. editor of Header- Digest from 1940 until his retirement in 11, died Friday in imtm Pound Itidgc, LANCASTER fail Graney, 64, rural Lancaster, died Sunday near Boscobel. Harris and Wop-king funeral home, Lancaster. Ray A. 1 where friends may call from 4 (ormer home In Greenfield.

Milwaukee suburb, from 1935 until May, 1961. A Republican, he was defeated hit his partys nomination for lieutenant governor In 1954 by incumbent Warren Knowles. Zl-c. MIMIC IB Da? Tr Trial No lon on approved credit 10 rar on mdrl Prvarriputm HUutg Member ISMCA8 SINCLAIR in a vino Ato iftvirf Wl iw ir AhT -lai Mr. Barth Mrs.

Schwartz, 1514 A lino and p. m. Tuesday until tunc of serv-Gladys, at home; four sons, liar- ices, old, Film Grove; John, Platte- Funeral rites will be held Wed-ville, athletic director at Platte- nrsd.iy at 10 30 a. m. In the fu- It was reported by tile Assocl-! afed Press.

Mr. Payne, ho joined He has suffered from chronic the magazine a nephritis, and had been partly paralyzed since breaking his back in a fall four months ago. Mrs. Roll! Illeimehl STOUGHTON Mr. Rollie Blclmehl, 75.

a native of Stoughton, died today in a Highland ville State Teachers College; James, at home, and Robert, 4109 Hanover three sisters, nerul home, with the Rev. Norman D. Stephenson of the First Methodist Church officiating. Burial will be in Forest Hill ceme- ADVERTISEMENT hospital. She was the Mrs.

James Stujrt, Milwaukee; former Ellen Johnson, daughter of Mrs. OLaughlen, Alas- Asthma Formula Prescribed Most By Doctors -Available Now Without Prescription ka, and Emcrctta, Chicago; one brother, Walter, Milwaukee, 8nd 16 grandchildren. Eduard Thule Surviving Mr. Smith are his wife, Jannct: a son, George with whom he was living; two daughter, Mrs. Merilyn Dahlman and Miss Sharon Smith, both of Milwaukee; a sister, and two brothers.

rnnanlt In Var If, 1 died Sunday in a Madison hospital niter a brief ill ness lie was a former resident of Hillsboro. Mr. Sanford mas awarded two Dis-, tingmshed Flying Crosses and two Mr. Sanford Air Medals in of his flying exploits over China, Including 102 combat flights with the 75th Fighter Squadron, 14th Air Force. He was shot down or ditched 12 times He retired from the service with the rank of cnptu.n, the only American Indian to serve with the famed Flying Tigers.

He was the Decorah. His father, a Seneca, was a Cornell University graduate. Mr. Sanford was born in a wigwam in Friendship vicinity. He was a memlier of American Legion and the Veterans of Foreign Wars.

He was credited with extensive advance planning in Sauk county civil defense and was to head the CD communica- executive -'distinguished f.TlS'm. Golden UW. Mrs. 69, in 1931, was na- live of Cleveland. An alumnus of the University of Wisconsin School of Journalism, he was one of six (Tien standing in American journalistic fields who were cited for achievements at the Anniversary dinner of the School in February, 1953.

tiie late Mr. and Mrs. Julius Johnson. Her father was a well known businessman here. Mrs.

Bleimehl- husband died in 11. She is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Earl Gosswiller, 9140 S. Clairemont Chicago; a son, Rollie C. Bleimehl, Madison; a brother, Julius Johnson, and sev eral nieces and nephews in Stoughton, and five grandchildren.

F'uncral rites will be in Highland Park on Wednesday and burial will be in the Highland Park cemetery. Funeral services for Eduard C. Thale, 65, of 430 N. Baldwin aerson lunerai nome. 1936 vwnne- avs, bago sL, Tuesday from 4 to 9l" formuls pri--ribl mor, than any 9 a m.

Tuesday at St. Patrick other by doclora for their prii Catliolic Church. Tlie Rev. Francis E. Doherty, of St.

Patrick's Church, will officiate. Burial will Resurrection cemetery. Funcral rites will be held the funeral home at 2 30 pm. Wednesday, with the Rev. L.

Hoffman of Lake View Stop Attacks in Minute patient i now available to asthma aulftrers without preemption. Medical teat proved thi formula top atthma attack in minute and give hours of freedom from recur-be in renra of painful asthma pasm. Prinnrk Thu formula ia so effrctiva that It Is the physician's leading asthma Relief Last for Houral In tiny tablets ctHM Tbti Fnmattnt TabUta apta bronchial tubet, loottn eonyetUon, rrltera taut nervous tenaion. Ail viihout painful Injoctiona. The sarrat la PrimaUna combine I m4lictnes (in full preaenpUoa trenpth) found most affectiva in combination for acthma distrasa.

Larh perform a special parpoaa. So look forward to Bleep at night and freedom from asthma spasma FrimaUna at any drugstore directed that now it can be fold without prescription la moat sutaa Lutheran Church officiating. Burial will be in Forest Hill Mrs. William Smith Mrs. William T.

Smith, 41, of 6216 Winnequah died today in a Madison hospital to which she was admitted Oct. 5. The body was taken to the B. Booth funeral home. Oregon.

may call at the Frautschi funeral precription--to hej ud At Kitchen, Decatur, Dies BRODIIEAD Mrs. Jay Kitchen, a resident of Decatur tons center (7 lT uthwe7ternJ'ownshiP- GrCc" cnlr- counties tW0 ycars- who lived Surviving Mr. Sanford are his'" 'cars Orfordviile wife. a daughter. Maureen.

area- lcf tfxiay in a Monroe and a son. Conant William, aIllhosPitaI- The former Jessie of Rccdsburg; and two half-brothers. Steven and Arthur Kirkwood, both of Chicago. Fricnds may call after 7 tonight at the Gant funeral home, Rccdsburg. The rosary will be recited there Tuesday night at 8 30.

Funeral services will be held Wednesday at 10 a. m. in Sacred Heart Catholic Church, Reeds-burg, with the Rev. Eugene F. Kiernan officiating.

Burial will be in Hillsboro. Ghden, she was born in Adams county. She was married in 1910. Her husband died in November, 1961. Surviving Mrs.

Kitchen are five sons, Morris, Superior; Vernon, Coloma, Waushara county; Lyle, Janesville; Leonard, Racine, and Harley, Rockford, two daughters, Mrs. W. B. Heller, Janesville, and Mrs. Leon Baumgartner, Brodhead; 25 grandchildren; nine great-grandchildren; three sisters, Mrs.

Ethel Bailey and Mrs. Macel Moore, both of Milwaukee, and Mrs. Lucy Ne'-son, ML Vernon, and one brother, Ernest Ghden, Mt. Horeb. Friends may call at the Newcomer Death Takes Mrs.

Laufcnhcrg HIGHLAND Mrs. George Laid-enberg, 83, a lifelong Highland resident, died Sunday in a Dodge-viilc hospital. The former Mary Cody i born in Highland and was mar-1 funeral home here, with the Rev. ried there on Jan. 14.

1895. Her, Haul Gibson of the Brodhead husband died in 1940. Evangelical United Brethren Madison survivors includes Church officiating. Further funeral home, Brodhead, Tuesday night and until time of services. Fur.eral rites will be held Wednesday at 2 pm.

in the services will be held Thursday at 1.30 p.m, in the Coloma Methodist Church, and burial will be in White cemetery, Coloma. son, Edward, 834 W. Badger rd. Friends may call at the Roach-Mindermann funeral home, Dodgcville, until time of services. rosary will be recited there tonight at 8.

Funeral rites will be held Tues-ay at 9 a.m. in the funeral home, and at 10 in St. Philips Catholic Church, Highland. Henry Sundby STOUGHTON Funeral services for Henry R. Sundby.

67, of rural Stoughton, who died Saturday, will be held at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at First Lutheran Church, Stoughton, with the Rev. A. W. Stolen officiating.

Burial will be in the East Side Lutheran cemetery here. Friends may call at the Holz-huter funeral home after 2 p.m. Tuesday. J. Creal Hopper J.

Creal Hopper, 66, Wild Rose, Washara county, a salesman for the Central Petroleum Oil died Saturday in a Madison hospital. Funeral services will be held at 1.30 pm. Tuesday in the Gunderson funeral home, 1936 Winnebago where friends may call until then. Burial will be at 4 East Lawn p. m.

Tuesday at Mrs. Lutisha Adams Mrs. Lutisha O. Adams, 82, Su- gar Grove Ridge, formerly of Madison, died Sunday in a Dane cemetery, Beloit. Born in Coloma.

Wausharacounty hospiul county, in 1896, he lived in Boloit mayors include two sons, Hol-for many years before moving to Us Prairie du SaC; cle0 pe was an Wild Rose in 1955. Army World War I one of the survivors of Waukesha; a sister, Mrs. George "trl-Joncs. Prairie du Chien; a brotn-er, Siebe Appleman, Rockton four grandchildren; and sever great-grandchildren. Funeral services will be held at 1:30 p.m.

Tuesday at the Frautschi funeral home, 120 E. Wilson sL Rev. J. Ellsworth Kalas, of the First Methodist Church, will officiate. Burial will be in the Forest Hill cemetery.

Friends may call at the funeral home after 7 tonight off the coast of Wales in 1917. Surviving are his wife, Kathryn; a daughter, Mrs. Qorothy Keyes, Rockford, two sons, Edwin, Beloit; and Duane, Fremont; two sisters, Mrs. Mildred Quinn, 3102 Lindbergh and Mrs. William Farmer, 5114 Marathon two brothers, Ira and Clifford, both of Milwaukee; and five grandchildren.

FITCH-LAWRENCE FUNERAL HOME "MADISON'S OLDEST FR.ir FUNERAL DIRECTORS Air Conditioned AMPLE PARKING 24-HOUR SERVICE DIAL AL 6-8818 ED. J. LAWRENCE, President S. D. SANFILLIPPO, Secretary Trcas.

626 UNIVERSITY AVE..

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Pages Available:
1,147,674
Years Available:
1917-2024