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Note: Louis Emil Dahm baptised Sept. 22, 1901 in church (First United Methodist Church, Appleton, WI) minister Ray C. Harker - parents - Adolph and Augusta Dahm State of Wisconsin; County of Outagamie; the birth of Louis Emil Dahm, son of Adolph Dahm and Augusta Golz occurred on July 11, 1901, at Appleton, Outagamie County, Wisconsin, and recorded on August 5, 1901. Recorded in Vol. 9; page 275 Ida Dahm single 419 College Avenue received March 30, 1902 by minister, Roy C. Harker, by letter July 8, Amelia Dahm single 419 College Ave received March 30, 1902 by minister, Roy C. Harker, by letter July 8, Augusta Dahm married 419 College Ave received Sept. 22, 1901 minister Roy C. Harker by letter July 8, 1901 Dahm, Adolph; married received Sept.1, 1901 by letter, minister Roy C. Harker By Letter July 8, 1901 Obituary information written by Carol Alger Dahm; Came to Kaukauna in 1928 to take over the Standard Oil Station (on corner of Crooks Ave & 2nd St) which he ran for 13 years. Then went to Thilmanys and worked there for 25 years, retired in July, 1966. Then went to work part time for Larry's Piggly Wiggly on 55 for nine years. Belongs to Quarter Century Club, Retired Mens Club, Masons, Golden Agers. LOUIS E. DAHM Kaukauna Obituary from Appleton Post-Crescent Formerly of 202 E. 8th Street. Age 96, died Thursday, December 18, 1997 at St. Paul Home. He was born July 11, 1901 in Appleton; the son of the late Adolph and Augusta (Goltz) Dahm. Louis was born in Appleton and raised in Waupaca. After his marriage to Carol Alger they moved to 202 E. 8th Street where they lived for 64 years. He had been employed at Thilmany Pulp & Paper Company until 1966. In his retirement he was employed at Larry's Piggly Wiggly for ten years. He enjoyed stamp and coin collecting, loved fishing, cards, bowling, dartball and helping family and friends. He was a member of Immanuel United Church of Christ, their Retired Men's Club and served on the Education Committee. He was also a member of Thilmany Quarter Century Club, Kaukauna Eagles, Kaukauna Masonic Lodge #233 F.&A.M. and AARP. He is survived by two daughters and a son-in-law: Nancy and Lee Cheesbrough, Libertyville, Illinois: Mary Rybacki, Milwaukee: three grandchildren: Cathy (Tom) Gola, Laura (Tim) McGavin, Megan (John) Duffy; four great grandchildren; Mordecai Gola, Eric and Quinn McGavin, Sean Duffy: a sister, Marie Shekelton, St. Louis, Missouri. He is further survived by his wife's brother and two sisters-inlaw: dear friends, Harvey and Irene Alger, Kaukauna, Ruth Wier, Kaukauna: caring nephew, Gene Walker, Kaukauna. He was preceded in death by his wife, Carol in 1996: three sisters: Louise (Owen) Trout, Ida (Herman) Gehrke, Millie (Albert) Schafer: three brothers: Fred (Rose), Julius (Blanche), and Ted Dahm; twin infant brothers; and a brother-in-law, Fred Shekelton. The funeral service will be at 1:30 p.m. Saturday, December 20, 1997 at Immanuel United Church of Christ, Kaukauna, with Pastor Harvey Kandler officiating. Burial will be in Union Cemetery, Kaukauna. Friends may call at Immanuel United Church of Christ, 510 Sullivan Avenue, Kaukauna, from 11:30 a.m. on Saturday until the time of service. A memorial fund has been established for Immanuel United Church of Christ. Fargo Funeral Home, 4oo W. Wisconsin Av., Kaukauna, WI TO MY GRANDPA Thursday, December 18, 1997 Dear Grandpa, The things I write about in this letter to you are for other people to hear, for others to know how I remember you. I know that I will always be able to speak to you in my heart. When Laura & Megan & I were little you would take us fishing and patiently bait our hooks when we thought that part was "icky". You faithfully took us to Bay Beach each summer we came to stay at your house. You let us "build" with wood scraps and showed us things you had saved from your father and your childhood that you thought were special. You shared with us your memories and experiences. Somehow life always seemed an adventure because you always remembered the good stuff. We were always proud that you and Grandma would tell the people at Wigge's, the bakery & Look's Drug store that your grandchildren were coming to town to stay with you for a week or two. You taught us how to play 31 and included us at the fish frys-somehow we still don't appreciate fish. But we appreciate the family memories of the fish frys, treeing at Christmas and the gentle strength you've always shown us. We thought you could do anything-we still haven't been shown differently. You accomplished everything you set your mind to. You have always been a kind, generous, funny Grandpa and I will miss you but I know that you are okay because you can be with Grandma again. I hope that I have learned from you how to be more patient, tolerant, generous and most of all---how to remember the good parts of the difficult times that may come in my life. In this way Mordecai, Eric, Quinn and Sean will also know you in their hearts. I love you, Grandpa, Love, Cathy Cathy read her letter at the funeral service GRANDPA It's hard to talk about my Grandpa without talking about Grandpa and Grandma together, because they were married for over 60 years. I consider myself lucky to have had them for so many years, well into adulthood. Even though we were separated by almost 200 miles, we spent a lot of time with our grandparents and in Kaukauna. Kaukauna was such an integral part of my life as a child that I thought my first grade teacher was mistaken when she told me Kaukauna was NOT a state! Our grandparents were thrifty people-they lived through the depression-and nothing got replaced unless it was broken. Grandpa could fix or make anything in his workshop in the basement. Their home gave us so much comfort in its constant familiarity. Nothing changed from visit to visit and we liked it that way. They were also very generous paople to their family, extended family and friends they surrounded themselves with. From them I learned the secret to happiness is your family and cherished friends. I watched how they aged with dignity and grace and laughter. Grandpa's bottomless curiosity was the stuff of family legend. Any door marked "Dangerous! DO NOT ENTER" -or "Employees Only" was not left unopened. I can remember Grandpa driving my cousin Sandy and I "just a little closer" to a construction site with signs posted all over--"Construction Zone! Hard Hats Only! Do Not Enter"- and being politely kicked out by the construction foreman. His curiosity extended to people and places and he met some very interesting people because of it. Yes, we were so lucky to have Grandpa and Grandma play such a large part in our lives for so long. You live on, Grandpa - you and Grandma - in you children, your grandchildren and your great grandchildren. I miss you already. Laura Dear Grandpa, I know you are in heaven now and free of pain. We were so lucky to have you for all these years, but it is still hard to say goodbye. You and grandma were so much a part of our lives. We saw you on birthdays, holidays, all our graduations and weddings and for visits in between. Your home and your love were a haven for us, something we knew would never change in this world, even as our lives changed rapidly. You were always there for us with love and support, always proud of us just as we were. When we'd visit, you would proudly introduce us around town, take us bowling, and include us in your card games. You would set us up for lemonade tea parties in the yard or garage. We would race around the basement on the scooter you built for us and pull out all the toys you kept there for us. I remember how you and grandma would stay in my room when you visited. At the end of the visit, my bank on the dresser would have an extra dollar or some change added. You would say, "Don't tell your grandma...get yourself something special." You even did it when you visited me five years ago in New York. I recently found that bank. I will leave that money inside to remind me of you and your loving and giving. You were always kind, grandpa. Everyone you met was charmed by your honesty, humor, and humility. We loved to hear the stories about the old days and marvel at life in the early 1900's. You had amazing memories of a good life. You worked hard and were a decent man who knew to enjoy life and family. You had a curious nature. You could figure out how anything worked and explain it to others. You were a bit mischievous, too. There is the story of how you stuck your hand into a boiling Wyoming hot pool, standing right next to a sign warning against it. You just had to know if it was really that hot. I can still hear grandma chiding you with a "That Louie, always getting into something!" There are so many memories of you and grandma. I know that you two are together again, without all the burdens of old age. You have touched the lives of so many people. We will miss you terribly, but know you are in a wonderful place. Megan (She was living in NY and unable to come to the funeral as Sean was a baby and very ill so she wrote the letter and faxed it to the minister) OBITUARY OF LOUIS EMIL DAHM read by Pastor Kandler at funeral service Louis Dahm, Kaukauna, Wisconsin, died Thursday, December 18, 1997, about 2:10 p.m., as a resident of St. Paul Home. He had entered the Home in January, 1997, and was in declining health the last several weeks. He attained the age of 96 years, 5 months and 7 days. Louis Emil Dahm, son of Adolph and Augusta (nee Goltz) Dahm, was born in Appleton, Wisconsin, July 11, 1901. Shortly after, the family moved to Waupaca, where his father was a sheet metal worker, working in plumbing and heating for a hardware store. Louis grew up in Waupaca and completed eight grades of education at the public school there. As a youth he bagan working for the Waupaca Grocery, and later for the railroad (the Soo Line), then for Hartford Kissel Auto Plant as a sheet metal worker, as well as doing some plumbing in Waupaca. In 1924 he worked for the Swift Meat Packing Plant in East St. Louis. In 1925 he started working for a couple of filling stations in Waupaca, 1928-1941 for the Standard Oil Brooks Co., Kaukauna, and then the end of 1941 took employment with Thilmany Pulp & Paper Co., retiring in 1966. After his official retirement, he worked at Larry's Piggly Wiggly as a repair and maintenance man for ten years. He also worked in the Manitowoc Shipyards for a short time in the middle 1920's. Louis Dahm served in the U.S.Navy, 1920-1923, stationed at Norfolk, VA., and for two years in the Canal Zone. Aside from living in Appleton one year, Seymour two years, and Waupaca during his growing up and early adulthood, he lived in Kaukauna on 8th Street for 63 years; then at Golden Venture Apartments, March 1994-Dec. 1996, and finally at St. Paul Home, January, 1997, until the date of his death. Louis Dahm took Carol Alger as his bride May 24, 1930, in a civil ceremony in the Waukegan, Illinois, County Court House, with the Justice of Peace officiating. God blessed them with 66 years of wedded life and sent to their union two children. Louis Dahm was baptized Sept. 22, 1901 in First United Methodist Church, Appleton, and confirmed in the Methodist Church of Waupaca. He became a member of Immanuel Reformed Church (now the United Church of Christ), Feb. 1, 1931. In the church he was a member of the Retired Men's Club and its President from 1971-1995, and his many triples in the monthly dartball games. He was also a member of the Board of Christian Education for 20 years, 1974-1994, and did countless amount of repair work for the church---tables, plumbing, etcl He helped with the hanging of the wood carvings and installed the courtyard fountain for many years. In the city he was a member of AARP, played in the City Dartball League as a part of the City Recreation Program, was a member of the Eagles Club, and a member of the local Masonic Lodge. He loved fishing and loved to share it with others. The deceased was preceded in death by his father, Adolph, 1915, his mother, Augusta, 1923; 3 sisters: Louise, Ida, and Millie; 5 brothers: Fred, Julius, Teddy at 1 1\2 years old (1904), and 2 infant twin brothers, Oscar and Samuel. Louis Dahm is survived by 2 daughters and a son-in-law: Nancy & Leon Cheesbrough, Libertyville, IL, and Mary Jane Rybacki, Milwaukee: one sister- Marie Shekelton, (100 years old), St. Louis, MO; 2 sisters-in-law and a brother-in-law; Irene & Harvey Alger, Kaukauna, and Ruth Wier, Kaukauna; a special nephew, Gene Walker, Kaukauna; (The Algers and Gene Walker helped and cared for him when he had special needs), 3 granddaughters: Cathy (Tom) Gola, Lake Villa, IL, Laura (Tim) McGavin, Oak Park, IL., Megan (John) Duffy, North Babylon, NY; 4 great-grandchildren: Mordecai Gola, Eric & Quinn McGavin, Sean Duffy. Louis Emil Dahm was born July 11, 1901, in Appleton, Outagamie County, Wisconsin, to Adolph Emil Dahm and Augusta Dahm, nee Golz. He was baptised at the United Methodist Church in Appleton. The family lived close to the church. Louie weighed at least 13 pounds at birth. The family moved from Appleton to Seymour, WI and then to North Avenue, Waupaca, Waupaca County, Wisconsin, before 1903. Waupaca was Louie's home base till he married and moved to Kaukauna, Outagamie County, Wisconsin. He had a sister, Helene, who was born and died in West Bloomfield, Waushara County, Wisconsin. His brother Frederick (Fred) W., was also born in West Bloomfield in 1889. Julius Herman, was born in 1891 in Menasha as was Amelia, (Emilie), called Millie in 1893. It is believed twin brothers, Samuel and Oscar, were born in Menasha and the family story says they died after catching a cold after being baptised. We could find no record of their baptisms in the Lutheran Church where Julius and Millie were baptised. We also found no record of their birth or burial in the Menasha area. A daughter Marie, was born August 15, 1897 and baptised at a Methodist Episcopal Church, possibly in Menasha. Adolph had a drinking problem and was told not to attend the Lutheran Church. He became friends with a Methodist Minister, stopped drinking and the family was raised as Methodists. As of 8, 14, 05, we have not found the record of baptism for the twins or Marie. Previous to marrying Augusta, Adolph was married to her sister, Pauline Golz. They had two daughters, Louise and Ida, who were born in Milwaukee, Milwaukee County, Wisconsin. Pauline died in October of 1886 and he married Augusta in November of 1886. His friend, Paul Weise and his wife, wanted to adopt the girls but he wouldn't allow it. Pauline had come to the states in 1881, Adolph in 1882. They were married in Milwaukee in 1883, had Louise in 1884 and Ida in 1885. Louie's sister Millie took care of him a lot while he was growing up. He had a teddy bear named Bit a boo which he loved. According to Marie, if he left it outside while playing during the day, the family would be out at night searching for the bear with lanterns so he would go to sleep. Louie also remembered the time he threw a rock at a fire hydrant and broke the pipe. He said the police knocked on the door during dinner and talked with his Dad. His Dad got some tools together and had Louie go along to help fix the hydrant. The family kept a cow in a field several blocks from their home and the children would bring it home in the morning and evening so their mother could milk it. Louie and his friend Jimmy Jensen would also take their wagons to the woods at the end of North Avenue during the Christmas season, cut and drag the trees into town on their wagons and sell them for a few cents. Jimmy's sister, Blanche, later married Louie's brother Julius. Louie's family was did not have much money but they were very thrifty and he always felt loved. When Louie was a young boy, he and some friends found some cigarettes and went behind the barn to smoke them. Adolph found them and said if they wanted to smoke they should smoke cigars which he told them were better than cigarettes. He gave them cigars and left, they smoked the cigars and became sick. Dad said that cured him of smoking for awhile though he later smoked cigarettes for many years. Louie belonged to the Boys Brigade which had and still has a camp on Onaway Island in the Chain of Lakes outside Waupaca. He attended the camp in the summer and talked about having a great time. Louie's father died in 1915 and Louie went to work. He was unable to attend high school. It was something that always bothered him. He signed up for several correspondence classes but unfortunately never completed them. After his father's death, Louie would pick up laundry from the barber shops which his mother would wash and iron and he would return them to the shops. He also worked at gas stations, a railway station, In 1919 went to Hartford, WI with his sister Millie and her husband Albert Schafer, to work at the Kissel car company. In 1920 he was back in Waupaca, working at a Standard Service Station with Bearcat Schady. He joined the Navy around 1921 and was stationed in Colon, Panama, by the Panama Canal when his mother died in 1923. His leave prior to leaving for Panama was canceled so his brother Fred sent a telegram saying, "Marie going fast, come home. Louie got leave after showing the telegram to his superiors. When he got home, his sister, Marie, was fine and Fred said, I just said she was going fast and she is, back to where she lived. Marie went to nursing school in Ashland, Wisconsin. She said even though Louie was only 15 when their father died, he was the only sibling who sent her money to help her through school. He also sent money to his brother, Fred, to help his mother with her expenses as she did not speak much English. His father had had a small insurance policy but the banker suggested she invest it in the Dakota wheat fields which then had years of drought, etc, so she had very little money. Louie also brought her a phonograph which she could crank and listen to music. We have that phonograph and records. It was at the farm owned by Millie and Albert Schafer for many years. Louie and friends, Bearcat, and a Hanson and others had a stamp and coin club which Louie loved and kept up for years with low cost stamps as he could not afford the more expensive ones. Though Louie's family never had much money, I never heard him complain. His sister would talk about their mother fixing fish head soup, chicken feet soup, etc. Augusta had difficulty with English so Adolph would shop for material for their clothes. Marie said she learned to sew, crochet, knit, and many other handicrafts because her mother was unable to. After being discharged from the Navy at the Brooklyn navy yards, Louie and a friend were going to go to Manhatten, after seeing the congestion, they walked across the Brooklyn Bridge and caught a train back to Wisconsin. Louie had stories of being at the Panama Canal and has two photo albums of pictures he took. One of the things he talked about was a small submarine sinking. They got a chain around it but as it was nearly raised, it slid out of the chain. The next day, they got two chains abound it and got it out. The men in the sub were not injured. He also talked about how they monitored the mosquitoes in trying to prevent yellow fever and malaria. The main problem he had in the navy was getting seasick on the way to and from Panama. After Panama, he worked in Waupaca with his brother Fred for awhile and then went to St. Louis, IL to work at a meat packing plant where his sister Marie was a nurse. Her fiancee, Fred Shekelton, worked in personnel and got him a job there. He talked about driving to St Louis thru Chicago. The road went along Lake Michigan as no lake land had been filled in then. His sister didn't drive so he would drive places for her. Though it was during prohibition and his sister didn't drink, she liked to have medicinal wine. She would find out where to get it and he remembered driving to large caves that were filled with trucks and barrels of wine to pick some up for her. He returned to Waupaca to work and then applied for a job with Standard Oil in Appleton, WI. They asked him if he would be willing to take a small station in Kaukauna, WI which he did. The station was at the corner of Second Street and Crooks Avenue (highway 55). It was a very small station so he worked alone from 8am to 9pm. Before marriage, meals would be delivered by some small restaurants on the south side. Louie was shy. He said when growing up he didn't learn to dance because he would change the records on the phonograph for his friends when they would go out to the dance hall at Indian Crossing on the Chain of Lakes outside Waupaca. Friends in Kaukauna, Marie and Art Anderson, wanted him to go out with them and suggested he ask Carol Alger who worked at a grocery store several doors from the station. He did and they dated. Another mutual friend, Mary Seif (sister-in-law of Carol's sister Lila) and her fiancee, Melvin Seif, wanted Carol and Louis to drive them to Waukegan, IL, to get married. Louie said he would if Carol would marry him while in Waukegan. Carol's parents liked Louie and had told him previously that he had their permission to marry her. The two couples did drive to Waukegan and got married on May 24, 1930. Carol and Louie rented an apartment from the Juneau family on 6th street after their marriage. They later moved to 202 East Eighth Street and lived there till 1993. They originally rented from Carol's parents and later brought the house. In 1941, Louie went to work as a pipefitter at Thilmany Pulp and Paper Mill and worked there till he was 65. He then worked at Larry's Piggly Wiggly store for 10 years. He also did wallpapering, first with Carol's brother, Harvey and later by himself. His nephews, Gene and Dick Walker, would help him paste the paper and cut the borders till they graduated from high school and then I would go with him. I learned to cut, paste and book the paper and loved doing it with him as he never got angry. He had a workbench and saws in the basement and could build and fix anything. He would give me a piece of wood, some nails and a hammer and let me pound away as he was making things. He hunted pheasant, rabbits and squirrels during the war years as meat was scarce but stopped hunting as soon as the war was over. He absolutely loved to fish. In the summer he would fish for perch in Green Bay or at cottages they visited or troll for pike in Lake Winnebago. Ice fishing was on Lake Winnebago during the winter. Many guys had fishing shanties but dad would warm up in the car. He would take Gene, Dick, my friends and I and we would go ice skating, etc and visit my uncles in their fishing shanties. He would sometimes stay when fog was coming and we had difficulty finding the path to drive off the lake. The paths were marked by Christmas trees as there were large cracks around the lake and you had to drive certain paths to get on and off the lake safely. We sometimes found a path 20 or 30 miles from where we got on. In the summer we would continue fishing because fish bite when it is raining or he was always sure they would start biting any minute and if they were biting we stayed because they were biting. When we got home, my grandmother would always tell him he got too many and she wasn't going to help him clean the fish. She would hold out for 10 minutes or so and then help him. As we lived on the highway, neighbors or friends would stop by to see how many fish he caught. No one had freezers so there would be a fish fry with one person saying they had cabbage for cole slaw, another potatoes for potato salad and someone always had rye bread to bring. The fish weren't boned so you learned young how to remove the bones. When dad got older and was unable to get into boats, he would sit and fish off any pier that he could find. He always kept fishing poles in the trunk of the car. He also went fishing with my grandfather, uncles or friends. In later years, he caught a very large fish and kept the head, which eventually became a skeleton, above his workbench. He always laughed about finding a cloth thrown over the head after the grandchildren would play down there. Dad and my sister, Mary Jane, got a tiny black dog at the Pig Fair one Saturday and dad built a small doghouse. The dog grew fairly large and had to really work to get into the doghouse. Unfortunately, the kids from the two schools by the house would tease it to get it to bark. They had to find another home for it as mom was afraid it would bite someone. Dad loved animals and they responded well to him. Our dog, Missy, loved going to visit in Kaukauna. We would tell dad not to feed her if she begged at the table and he would always say okay. Shortly after that dad's hand would go to his side and we would hear Missy gulping the food he had given her. Dad had arthritis which caused his fingers to twist from front to back and back again. His knees were also very bad. He was afraid of doctors which was attributed to when he was young and he got the needle on the sewing machine thru his nail and finger. He passed out when the doctor removed it. He put off knee surgery for many years and finally had two knee replacements at Theda Clark Hospital in Neenah, WI. He knew all the other patients on the unit and befriended a young boy who had been in an accident. They kept in contact and the boy visited him when one of his knee surgeries had to be redone. Children loved dad and his gentleness and caring. When he and Mom were at a parade, a little girl who had never seen them before climbed on Dad's lap and went to sleep. He seldom raised his voice and was always kind and patient. Dad would help Mary Jane and me with our homework, especially math, even though he had been unable to finish high school due to his father's death. He would always get the correct answer though our teachers couldn't understand how he worked the problems. He enjoyed reading but generally fell asleep while reading the newspaper either at the kitchen table or in the sitting room. During the war we had a Victory Garden which dad planted with corn, yellow and green beans, tomatoes, carrots, radishes and peas with gladiolas all around the garden. Mom would can and some years she and grandma would make and bottle catsup. Mom always prided herself on having a lovely Christmas tree. The year Mary Jane was born, he put off looking for a tree as mom had been ill for several months. When he and I went for a tree there was nothing left but some trunks with a few branches which dad got and then asked if he could take some branches that were lying around. I was waiting with dread when dad went to the basement with the tree to put it in the stand and bring it into the living room. He appeared with a beautiful, well shaped tree which thrilled and impressed mom. We decorated the tree and got many compliments on it. After removing the ornaments he asked mom if she wanted to see what he started with and she couldn't believe the few original branches on the tree. He had drilled holes in the trunk and added the extra branches. One fall, when he knew he wouldn't be cutting the grass anymore that year, he emptied the gas from the mower and poured it out in the middle of the alley. He then went in the house to read the paper in the sitting room. Mom later looked out the kitchen window which faced the alley and saw police cars, fire engines, city cars and gas company trucks out in the alley. She asked dad where he dumped the gas and he said the alley, thinking the fumes would dissipate not knowing that the gas company was having someone check the gas lines with a meter looking for leaks that same day. Of course, when the guy got by our alley the meter went wild and he called all the emergency crews in. Dad went out and told them the meter was going wild because he had just dumped gas in the alley. There was a time in the seventies when pet rocks were marketed. Virl and Les were dropping Mom and Dad off after a week at a cottage. Dad had gotten out of the car and then told Les not to come any closer to the garage area. He then came out of the garage with what looked like a rock on a string and they got a laugh out of dad walking his pet rock. What they didn't realize is that when dad got out of the car, he saw some nails in the alley and put a magnet on a string and was trying to determine if there were any other nails as he didn't want Les to get a flat tire. Dad had built a huge workbench in the basement and a side cabinet where he kept oil, etc. He had a padlock on the cabinet which drove mom crazy as she couldn't stand any closed or locked doors or cabinets. She always felt he was hiding something in that cabinet from her. Dad didn't tell her but the padlock was broken and no key was necessary to get it off. Dad loved the grandchildren and great grandchildren. Mom was sick and dad was staying with us when Quinn was born. He was able to see and hold her a few hours after she was born and he was thrilled. He loved Mordecai and Eric and was very happy when Megan brought Sean from New York to see him. Unfortunately, he did not get to see or know the other great grandchildren. 1930 US Census Wisconsin Outagamie county Kaukauna City ward 4 April 16 by Mrs. Anna Smith Louie is lodger at 301 Quinney Av-manager at oil station; house of Panabaker with Percal
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