Treva Ujka
| Date of Interment or Death | 10/08/1991 |
|---|---|
| Location | Garden of the Christus |
| Block and Lot | 075C |
| Grave | 2 |
Obituary
Treva Ujka
Wahpeton
Treva Ujka, 71, died at a Grand Forks hospital on Saturday, Oct. 5, 1991. The funeral will be Tuesday at 10:30 a.m. at Immanuel Lutheran Church, Wahpeton with Rev. Dr. Ernest Bartels, officiating. Interment will be in Fairview Memorial Gardens, Wahpeton.
Visitation will be Monday from 3-9 p.m. at the Vertin-Munson Wahpeton Funeral Home with a 7 p.m. prayer service. Visitation will continue one hour prior to service at the church.
Casketbearers will be Steve Peters, Tim Matz, Mike Matz, Chris Kalash, Nathan Matz and Scott Kalash.
Treva was born Nov. 14, 1919 to Roland G. and Angeline Mae (Osmondson) Matz in Wolverton, Minn. She grew up in the Wolverton area and attended schools in Wolverton and graduated from Breckenridge High School. She then attended Waldorf College in Forest City, Iowa. She then returned to the Wahpeton area where she worked at Liebers and also at the First National Bank, both of Wahpeton. She married Louis A. Ujka on June 9, 1941 in Wahpeton. The couple lived in Wahpeton where she worked for Johnson, Milloy and Eckert Law Firm and then for the Red River Valley Clinic where she worked until she retired in 1982. Louis died Sept. 14, 1972 and she continued to live in Wahpeton. She enjoyed being active, especially bowling, where she traveled to various tournaments in the area. She was a member of Immanuel Lutheran Church and the LWML.
She is survived by two daughters, Sherri (Mrs. Dwight) Kalash, Thompson, N.D.; and Jane Collier, Lawndale, Calif.; three grandsons, Christopher Kalash, Grand Forks; and Matthew Kalash, and D. Joseph Kalash, both of Thompson; two sisters, Doris Ballard, San Diego, Calif.; and Bette Peters, Fargo; and a brother Harold Matz, Wolverton.
She was preceded in death by her parents and her husband.
Headstone photograph(s)
Location
The Garden of the Christus is located in the Memorial Gardens, which comprises the northern half of the cemetery.
