Herman Wunder


Funeral Rites Held At Manning Sunday For Herman Wunder
Funeral services for Herman Wunder, 52, were held in the Ohde Funeral home at 2 o'clock Sunday afternoon. The Rev. J.J. Brabbs of the Methodist church conducted the rites. Burial was in the Manning Cemetery. Veterans of World War I acted as pallbearers: Henry Meyers, Henry Dethlefs, Henry W. Hagedorn, Henry J.M. Hansen, Emil Kuhl, and Peter Struve.

Emil Ewoldt Post. No. 22 of the American Legion conducted the graveside rites. Members of the post, of which Mr. Wunder was a member, attended in a body.

Mr. Wunder was born March 22, 1893, in Manning, the son of Johan Hannes and Mary Elizabeth (Vogt) Wunder.

He spent the greater share of his life in Manning. Mr. Wunder was a member of the well-known Emil Ewoldt post American Legion Drum and Bugle Corps.

He had been in the employ of the city of Manning before his illness.

He is survived by his wife, the former Gladys Hunter of Manning. A son, Keith, came for the services from Alaska, where he was stationed with the army. His father and step-mother and two half-brothers, John and Henry Albert, also survive.

Herman Wunder Succumbs Today At Manning Home
Herman Wunder, 52, died at his home here at 5 o'clock this morning, July 26, 1945, after an illness of nearly a year. A Veteran of World War I, he had previously been in the Veterans hospital at Des Moines, having returned home from there five months ago.

The body is at the Ohde Funeral home here.

Funeral arrangements have not been made, awaiting word from a son, Keith, with the United States Army in Alaska.

Besides his wife and son, Mr. Wunder leaves his father, Johan Hannes Wunder, and two half-brothers, John and Henry Albert, all of Manning.