Rites Tuesday for Mrs. Roggish
Funeral services will be at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the Ohde Funeral Home here for Mrs. Edward A. Roggish, 73, who died at her home Saturday morning, December 2, 1950. The Rev. Brown Garlock, minister of the Methodist Church, will officiate. A quartet composed of Mae (Mrs. Nick C.) Schrum, Mrs. Albert Dietz, Ray Pratt, and Clifford M. Johnson will sing "Good Night and Good Morning" and "Abide With Me."

Burial will be in the Manning Cemetery.

Mrs. Roggish was born Katrina Miller October 26, 1877, in Hatzbach, Hessen - Nassau, Germany. She received her early education in Germany and was baptized and confirmed in the Reformed Lutheran Church there.

At the age of 16 years, she came from Germany to the home of her uncle, Conrad W. Miller, at Exeter, Nebraska. After living there a few years, she accompanied her brother, Conrad Miller, to Audubon.

Later, she moved to Atlantic, where she married Mr. Roggish December 24, 1902. A daughter, Mamie, was born while the couple lived in Atlantic.

They moved from Atlantic to Manning in 1907, and from Manning to Sioux City, where Mr. Roggish was employed as a mechanical engineer. Another daughter, Elaine, was born while they lived in Sioux City.

Returning to Manning in 1911, Mrs. Roggish had lived here since then. She had been in poor health the last two years, her condition becoming worse six months ago.

Surviving are her daughters, Mrs. Lester Mendenhall (Mamie), Wahoo, Nebraska, and Mrs. Wayne McCrory (Elaine), Ames; two grandchildren, Coleen Rae and Terry Lester Mendenhall; two brothers and one sister in Germany.

Her husband died May 17, 1939. Two brothers, Conrad and Will Miller, are also deceased.
Carroll Daily Times Herald, December 4, 1950

Mrs. Edward A. Roggish
Services were held Tuesday afternoon at the Ohde funeral home for Mrs. Edward A. Roggish, 73, who died Saturday. The Rev. Brown Garlock officiated and burial was at Manning.

Mrs. Roggish, the former Katrina Miller, was born October 26, 1877, in Hatzbach, Hessen-Nassau, Germany. She was educated there and became a member of the Reformed Lutheran Church. She came to the United States at the age of 16 and lived with an uncle, Conrad Wilhelm Miller at Exeter, Nebraska. She later moved to Audubon and still later to Atlantic.

After her marriage December 24, 1902, the family lived at Manning, Sioux City, and later returned to Manning.

Surviving are two daughters. Mrs. Lester Mendenhall of Wahoo, Nebraska; Mrs. Wayne McCrory of Ames; two grandchildren; two brothers and a sister.
Daily Nonpareil, Council Bluffs, December 6, 1950