The day was spent playing games and plenty of music and singing. At 6 o'clock ice cream, cake and fruit were served.
Those present were: Mr. and Mrs. Will Langhorst and family, Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Rudolph and family, Mr. and Mrs. Matt. Hoevet, Jr. and son, Garrison, Mr. and Mrs. Milford Childers and family, Mr. and Mrs. Geo. J. Hoevet and daughter, Pearl, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hamman, Mr. and Mrs. Otto Hoevet and family, Mr. and Mrs. Ed P. Hoevet and son, Lemar, Mr. and Mrs. Matt Hoevet, Sr.
At a late hour all departed for their homes, saying, they had had an enjoyable time and for once put a surprise over on the old folks in proper style, and wishing Mrs. Hoevet many more happy birthdays. A Guest.
On March 9, 1869, he was untied in marriage to Miss Mary Joho, to which union were born 12 children.
The deceased was a man who made friends with all whom he came in contact. He was of a very jovial disposition and enjoyed life to the fullest extent.
Mr. Hoevet was a member of the Modern Woodmen, having joined the camp at Grant Park and when he moved to Lowell transferred his membership to the Lowell camp.
Funeral services were held at the home Thursday afternoon at two o'clock and there was a large attendance of his old friends and neighbors, many coming from his old home in Yellowhead Township to pay their last respects to their departed neighbor and friend. Rev. V.B. Servies, pastor of the Methodist church, preached the funeral sermon. Interment was made in the Lowell cemetery. Undertaker Weaver had charge of the burial service. The members of the Modern Woodmen attended the funeral services in a body and performed their ritualistic ceremony at the grave of their departed neighbor. The following Woodmen acted as pall bearers: H.L. Baughman, C.H. Belshaw, Frank Strickland, Sr., William Graves, B.F. Carlin, and Frank Richards.
He leaves to mourn his death his aged wife, ten children, George, Ed P., Mathias H., and Mrs. Milford Childress*, of Lowell; E.L. and Mrs. C.J. Wild, of Tenstrike, Minn.; Albert M., of Monterey, Minn., H.H. of Fort Dodge, Iowa, and Otto and Mrs. Will Langhorst, of Grant Park, Ill. Twenty eight grand children also survive him. The bereaved family have the sympathy of their friends in their hour of sorrow.
Other sources, including her obituary, list the last name of Mrs. Milford (nee Hoevet) as "Childers" rather than "Childress."
Go to Mat Hoevet, "Pioneer History Index," for further information.
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