Mom’s funeral is today at 2pm. At Maine Presbyterian Church near Underwood, Minnesota. We will walk across the road to Silent Vale Cemetery to bury her afterwards. And there will be refreshments in the church basement as well. I hope to see you today.
Mom loved the lake country of Northern Minnesota. She grew up there, she swam in the lakes as a child, and when life took her away from that region, she continued to return in her adult life. She loved to visit her brother Duane, and the lake he lived on until his death. She loved spending time on lakes, and her screensaver was filled with pictures of them to remind her. Here she is pictured with her brother Arlan, on his boat. She loved the water. She loved boats. And I have no doubt she is spending time on the water right now.
Mom’s funeral will be taking place at Maine Presbyterian Church near Underwood, Minnesota this coming Saturday the 16th at 2pm. Burial will take place immediately after at Silent Vale Cemetery within sight of her parent’s resting place. Anyone who wishes to come is welcome and I will be happy to see you there.
Mom’s obituary will be running in the Fergus Falls Daily Journal on Wednesday. A death notice will run in the Rochester Post Bulletin on Saturday. Both papers are down to two publications per week now, which limits the exact availability of print times. Her full obituary is also available at epilogg, where you can find directions to the service on Saturday.
https://epilogg.com/obituary/judy-hanson-prohaska-rochester-mn-usa-5479
Louis Mattioli is a good man. He hasn’t always been, and he has paid the price for that, but he has chosen to be good in the life he has now. I will aid him on his current path. I owe him that. I also owe him the real story of the man we called Snake. I will write it, and he will be the first to see it. And if he wants, it will then be released to the public so everybody knows who that man really was. What Louis walked away from when he chose to be the lawyer he is now. But it will be his choice. I owe him that too. So if it never gets out there, trust me when I say that most of the stories are very wrong about him. He was better than they say. And sometimes worse. He was an amazing friend and a terrifying enemy, and none of the stories fully grasp the whole picture. He was a Cowboy, through good and bad, in life and in death. He succeeded and he failed. He was the best and the worst of us. He was, in the end, human.




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