Norman J. Getz Stricken Fatally
Norman J. Getz, 616 Olive St., was pronounced dead on arrival at State Hospital Thursday morning a short while after being stricken ill at home. He had reportedly been in ill health for some time.
Son of the late Frederick and Catherine Dimmler Getz, he was a lifelong resident of this city. Mr. Getz was a retired miner. His wife, Kathryn, died some time ago.
Surviving are a daughter, Winifred, California; four brothers, Edward, Cleveland, Ohio; Alfred, Johnson City, N.Y., and Willard, city patrolman and supervisor of the Adult School Patrol, and Kenneth, both of this city, and two sisters, Mrs. Raymond McCarthy, East Orange, N.J., and Mrs. Stanley Doloksy, this city.
The funeral will be Saturday at 10 a.m. from the Miller Funeral Home, 436 Cedar Ave., with the Rev. W. Russell Straw, Christ Presbyterian Church, officiating. Interment, Newton Cemetery. Friends may call 2 to 5, 7 to 9 p.m.
Published by The Tribune on May 21, 1965.
Norman J. Getz Stricken Fatally
Norman J. Getz, 616 Olive St., was pronounced dead on arrival at State Hospital Thursday morning a short while after being stricken ill at home. He had reportedly been in ill health for some time.
Son of the late Frederick and Catherine Dimmler Getz, he was a lifelong resident of this city. Mr. Getz was a retired miner. His wife, Kathryn, died some time ago.
Surviving are a daughter, Winifred, California; four brothers, Edward, Cleveland, Ohio; Alfred, Johnson City, N.Y., and Willard, city patrolman and supervisor of the Adult School Patrol, and Kenneth, both of this city, and two sisters, Mrs. Raymond McCarthy, East Orange, N.J., and Mrs. Stanley Doloksy, this city.
The funeral will be Saturday at 10 a.m. from the Miller Funeral Home, 436 Cedar Ave., with the Rev. W. Russell Straw, Christ Presbyterian Church, officiating. Interment, Newton Cemetery. Friends may call 2 to 5, 7 to 9 p.m.
Published by The Tribune on May 21, 1965.
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