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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

84-year-old man wins $254 million

Associated Press The Spokesman-Review

CHESTERFIELD, Mo. – A World War II veteran and his family stepped forward Monday to claim a Powerball jackpot worth more than a quarter-billion dollars, one of the largest single-ticket lottery prizes in U.S. history.

Jim Wilson II, 84, and his wife, Shirley, 79, along with their three sons, claimed the winning prize from last Wednesday’s drawing.

“I was absolutely astonished,” said Jim Wilson, a retired electrician who served in the Army’s 82nd Airborne Division in Africa and Europe, at an afternoon news conference.

He bought the winning ticket – with the numbers 9-19-29-42-53 and a Powerball number of 17 – at a grocery store in St. Louis County. The store will get $50,000.

The couple said they will share the money with their sons. The St. Louis family has been buying family Powerball tickets for years with the understanding that they’d share any winnings, according to the Missouri Lottery.

Two sons – Bill, 54, and Jim, 59 – lost their jobs in the past year, though Bill Wilson has found a new one. Another son, Terry, 53, said he hasn’t had a vacation in 30 years and will probably go to Australia.

The couple also said they will set aside money for their grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

The Wilsons’ prize is the 10th-largest single-ticket lottery prize in world history, with all 10 coming from the United States, Missouri Lottery officials said. The largest was a $365 million prize won by eight Nebraska meatpacking plant workers last February.