Local and
RNA Matting A meeting of
the Koyal Keignbors of America
loage is scheduled for Thursday,
July 7, at 8 p.m., in the Pythian
building.
Speaker Hera The Rev. Ray
McCoy will speak at the Med
ford Full Gospel church, 609
Western ave., each night this
week at 8 o'clock, church offi
cers announced today. He also
will furnish songs.
Jaan-Janas Dane A square
dance will be sponsored Satur
day, July 9, at 8:30 p.m., at the
Double J barn on Gordon lane,
Grants Pass. Doug Fosbury will
be the caller and women are to
take sandwiches or desserts for
a potluck lunch.
Vacationer Back Joe Hosick,
member of the Conger-Morris
funeral home staff, returned re
cently from a two week vacation
to southern Illinois. He, his wife-j
and two children, visited his par
ents there, and returned by way
of Yellowstone park.
Square Dance A square
dance will be conducted Satur
day July 9, beginning at 8:30
p.m., in the Moose hall on New
town st. The event is open to the
public. Fran Cronin will call the
squares. Women should take
sandwiches for potluck refresh
ments. ' .
Lodge Meeting The Phoe
nix Neighbors of Woodcraft
lodge will meet Thursday, July
7, at 8 p.m. at the Grange hall
for a regular business session. A
report will be given on the dis
trict meeting. Mrs. Dan Adams
and Mrs. L. V. Anderson are on
the serving committee.
.
Visit Here Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Chambers of Puyallup,
Wash., arrived in Medford last
Friday evening for a week's stay
at the home of Dr. and Mrs.
Jouett P. Bray, 317 Lozier Lane.
Chambers, son of Mrs. Bray, and
his wife will return to their
Washington home Friday, July 8-
Brother Visits Cory Bish
of Enumclaw, Wash., is visiting
with his brothers-in-law and sis
ters, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Barne-
burg, 1297 Sunset ave., and Mr.
and Mrs. Don Anderson, 803
Pine st. He is accompanied by a
daughter, Miss Kathrine Bish,
and a granddaughter, Myrna Pat
Pember, also of Enumclaw. They
arrived Saturday and plan to be
here about a week. Tuesday the
group visited Crater lake and
today they planned to be in Ash
land, where Bish formerly lived.
In Portland Mr. and Mrs.
Goguey, 428 Berrydale ave., and
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kruggel
and daughter, Deborah, 945
South Ivy st., visited in Port
land through the holiday week
end with Mrs. Goguey's and
Kruggel' s parents, Mr. and Mrs.
F. E. Kruggel, former valley
residents. They made a trip on
the upper Columbia river and
also viewed a fireworks display
at Jantzen beach.
Assault and Battery Wiliam
S. Hurst, 1125 West Tenth st,
yesterday was arrested by city
police on a warrant charging as
sault and battery, according to
the police department. Hurst
was released on $100 bail and
oleaded innocent in municipal
rfourt this morning. Municipal
Judge James Main set Hurt's
hearing for July 14, police re
ported. William Claude Messer,
422 Laurel st., was the assault
victim, police said.
From Vacation Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Fann, 709i West Jack
son st., returned home the first
of the week from a two-week
vacation. In San Carlos they
visited her father, Anchor Neil-
sen. In San Francisco they vis
ited her grandmother, Mrs. T. J,
Nelsen, and an uncle, Louis Nel
son. In lower California they
visited relatives of Fann. At
Paramount they were with his
grandmother. Mrs. Mary Doty,
and uncles, George Bunnell and
Pete Doty, and their families.
In North Long Beach they vis
ited his cousins, the T. L. Emer-
sons. The Fanns returned by
. way of the Oregon coast and did
some salmon fishing with
success.
fenniai
31
rTAMIVP I Shew at
IMIIES 1:25 p.m
1st DriVe-ln Shewingl
2ND BIG HITl
Personal
From Montana - Mrs. Mon
tana Gilhousen, Rogue River
lodge, has returned after visiting
at Darby, Mont., with her moth
er, Mrs. Earl Schmandt. She
made the week's trip by plane.
At Rogue Motel Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Kramar, Tiburon, Calif.,
and T. S. White, Oakland, are
vacationing this week at Riffles
on - the Rogue on the Upper
Rogue river.
In Grants Pats Dr. and Mrs.
S. Ralph Dippel, 1 Eastwood dr.,
visited last evening with his son
and daughter-in-law. Dr. and
Mrs. Steve DippeJ, and family,
Grants Pass.
Flue Fire West side station
firemen answered a call to a
flue fire about 9:45 p.mT yester
day at the Leon Haskins resi
dence, 816 West Fourth st. They
said there was no damage.
.
Complaints City Fire Mar
shal Truman Nelson yesterday in
vestigated four complaints in
residential areas and inspected
one church. He issued seven or
ders for correction of fire haz
ards. Permit Issued - A building
permit for $350 has been issued
to the State Farm Insurance
company, 135 South Central
ave., for the erection of a sign,
according to records filed at the
city hall.
Assume Name Earl and Edna
Denning, route 1, box 199, Cen
tral Point, have assumed the
business name "Awol' Grocery"
according to records filed in the
Jackson county recorder's of
fice. "
At Community Mrs. Ethel
Sablock, 1025 Alta st., is a sur
gery patient this week at Com
munity hospital, attendants re
ported today. Chester Chastain,
140 Haskell st., Central Point,
was dismissed July 4 after un
dergoing surgery there.
Leave for East Mr. and Mrs.
C. Aubrey Sander, Medford, will
leave by air this evening for
Philadelphia, Pa.,- to attend the
grand lodge session of the Be
nevolent and Protective . Order
of Elks. Sander, who is exalted
ruler of the Medford Elks lodge,
is the local group's official dele
gate. They expect to be gone
about two weeks.
Hubcaps Stolen Emma Lou
Hillman, 141 North Ivy st., re
ported yesterday the theft of two
Cadillac hubcaps valued at $10
apiece from her car while it was
parked on West Fifth st., be
tween Ivy st. and Oakdale ave.,
according to city police. Winford
C. Saylors, 838 Dakota ve., re
ported the theft of a Cadillac
hubcap from his car yesterday,
city police said.
Adding Machine Borrowed
Alvin Fred Krause, 3386 Lone
Pine rd., reported to the city
police yesterday that the adding
machine he had reported stolen
earlier had been borrowed. The
day attendant at the Union ser
vice station from which the ma
chine was missing had loaned it
to a friend of Krause without his
knowledge, police said.
... Cars Collide Cars driven by
Margaret L. Smith, 1542 Grand
ave., and William W. von der
Hellen, Box 1026, Jacksonville
highway, Medford, collided yes
terday on East Main st., between
the bridge and Hawthorne ave.,
according to city police records.
Citations were issued to von der
Hellen for failure to yield the
right-of-way and for not having
his driver's license in his posses
sion.
'
At Lodge Visitors the first of
the week at Rogue River lodge
included Mr. and Mrs. Roy New
ton and sons, David and James,
of Menlo Park, and Mr. and Mrs
G. T. Dynge. The Newtons are in
the valley to visit with his sister,
Mrs. Dynge and her family, and
a brother, Ernest Newton, Toke
tee Falls. Roy Newton is a de
sign engineer with Stanford Re
search institute.
File Claims Charlie T.
Schultz, post office box 475,
Jacksonville, and Clarence E.
Surber, post office box 874, Cen
tral Point, have filed a mining
claim in the Jackson county re
corder's office. The claim, known
as Snowy Ridge North Exten
sion, is in the Little Applegate"
Mining district, and lists chrome
and other minerals. Five claims
in the Mill Creek Mining dis
trict were filed by Vernon F.
Ritchie and Norman Nelson. The
clainu listed no minerals. Ritch
ie listed his address as 785 Stew
art ave., Medford.
O SMORGASBORD-$2.25
Includes Barbecued Spareribs
O WON DERFUL Dl NNERS
Special Prime Ribs of Beef - , '
O ALA CARTE MENU
E3(BH DESDK
FOR RESERVATIONS Phone NOrmandy 4-2513
News About
Servicemen
IN ISLANDS
Pfc. Tom L. Miller, son of Mr.
and Mrs. T. D. Miller. 3210
North Pacific hwy., is now serv
ing with, the 3rd battalion, 4tn
Marine regiment, at the U. S.
Marine Corns air station at
Kaneohe Bay, T. H. The bat-
talhon is supervising the two
weeks training of members of
Hawaii's Marine reserves, after
which the reserves will return to
inactive duty.
DRIVER GRADUATES
Pvt. Eldon K. Durham, a jeep
driver in Headquarters . com
pany of the division's 11th regi
ment, was recently graduated
from the Army's 5th .Infantry
division patrol school in Augs
burg, Germany. Private Dur
ham's wife, Delores, and parents,
Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Durham,
reside at 134 Church St., Ash
land.
TWO COMPLETE TRAINING
Pvts. William L. Brewster and
Laurence' P.Mongold, now, sta
tioned at Camp Pendleton,
Calif., are scheduled to complete
four weeks of individual combat
training July 7 at the Marine
Corps base there. Brewster is
the son of Mr. and Mrs. William
E. Brewster,. Trail, and Mongold
the son of Mr. and Mrs. W. D
Mongold, route 1, Eagle Point.
PREPARING CARRIER
Ralph E. Ettel, aerographer's
mate seaman, and Oscar A
Sheppard, machinist's mate
third class, both of the U. S
Navy, are helping to prepare
the escort aircraft carrier USS
Rendova in San Francisco for
retirement June 30 to the "moth
ball fleet." Ettel's parents are
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph E. Ettel
route 1, Katherine Court, and
Sheppard's.iMr. and Mrs. Ned
A. Sheppard, route 1, box 153,
Central Point.
CN TRANSPORT
Gaylord E. Slack, firemen ap
prentice, USN, is now serving
aboard the transport USS Gen
J. C. Breckinridge of the Pacific
fleet. Before entering the Navy
in January, 1955, Slack attended
Rogue River High school. His
parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. E
Slack, reside at route 1, box
190, Rogue River.
IN EXERCISES
Marine Cpl. John F. Loyd,
son of Mrs. Gladys R. Loyd,
331 West Sixth st., participated
in amphibious training exercises
conducted by the 1st Marine
division's 5th regiment off the
coast of Southern California.
Corporal Loyd is now stationed
at Camp Pendleton, Cam.
IN GERMANY
Sfc. Roland L. Boyd, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Mary M. Aring,
129 Laurel st., Ashland, is now
with the Southern Area Com
mand in Germany. The sergeant
is a supply man in Headquarters
company of the command's
7822d Army unit. His wife, Mar
garet, resides in Princeton, W.
Va. .
On Trip Mrs. Ruby Garris
1563 Biddle rd., is visiting in
Pomona, Calif., while on vaca
tion from Community hospital,
where she is employed.
Change Name The name
"Kucera And Sims Company"
has been retired by James M.
Sims, Don Kucera and Floyd Ku
cera according to records in the
Jackson county recorder's of
fice. Floyd and Don Kucera,
route 1, box 5, Applegate, have
assumed the business name "Ku
cera and Son." .
Pedestrian Hurt Mrs. Naomi
E. Keplinger, 630 Cherry st.,
was admitted about 10:30 a.m.
today to Community hospital for
treatment of a leg injury re
ceived when she was struck by
a car while crossing the inter
section at Eighth st. and Central
ave. Driver of the car was Sam
uel D. Buck, Ashland, who had
stopped at the crosswalk and
struck Mrs. Keplinger as he pro
ceeded into the intersection, ac
cording to a city police report.
She was taken to the hospital
by Medford ambulance.
-
At Sacred Heart ' Several
"new patients were reported at
Sacred Heart hospital - today.
They are George Packman, P.O.
Box 55, Medford; Donald Long,
Route 3, Medford; Mrs. Lester
Carr, Route 3, Medford; Everett
Coe, Los Angeles; John Conrad,
632 Palm st., Medford; Lee Phil
lips, Kirby, and John Cooper,
Phoenix, all medical patients;
and Mrs. Harry Heidenreich,
4205 Lone Pine rd., Karen Dan
cer, . 8, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Waldo Dancer, Myrtle
Creek; and Denisa Offord, three
months, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs: Ray Offord, 2570 Spring
brook rd. - -- - - -
DINING INN
CENTRAL
POINT
Joint Funeral
Arranged Thursday
For Linn Couple
Ashland Joint funeral ser
vices will be held Thursday,
July 7, at 2 p.m. in the First
Methodist church at Ashland for
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Creighton
Linn, who were killed Sunday
evening when their private plane
crashed as they approached the
Fossil, Ore., airport. The Rev.
Ross Knotts will officiate. Inter
ment will be in Mt. View cem
etery. Litwiller funeral home is
in charge.
Mr. Linn was a son of the Ash
land school district superintend
ent, Leland P. Linn, and Mrs.
Linn. She was a daughter of
the Rev. and Mrs. Wayne Brown
of Mrytle Creek. Both were ac
tive in the Methodist church.
Married in February
The couple has lived in Ash
land since their wedding last
reo. in, ana ne naa oeen em
ployed by the city of Ashland.
They planned, to leave soon for
Alaska where he was to have
flown this summer for the Cor
dova Air lines. He- was a pilot
last summer for the same comp
any.
The Linns left Roseburg last
Sunday afternoon for Fossil to
visit with her sister, Mrs. Jean
Roark, and to attend ,a family
reunion before their departure
for Alaska.
Mrs. Linn was thrown clear
of the plane but was unconscious
and died en route to the Heppner
hospital. He was still in the plane
and it is believed he died in
stantly. He was an -experienced
pilot with- hundreds of hours of
flying time and was known as
a conservative pilot.
Mr. Linn was born in Myrtle
pomt, Feb. 28, 1927 and attend
ed grade and high school there.
He served with the Army in
Germany, later attending South
ern Oregon and Oregon State
colleges. His wife also had at
tended Southern Oregon college,
and had taught in Medford
schools. She was the former Miss
Edythe Brown.
Brother and Sister
Mr. Linn's other survivors are
a brother, Phillip, Stockton, Cal.,
and a sister, Mrs. Charles Eliason
of San "Jose, Cal.
Mrs. Linn was born May 31,
1934 at East Coulee, Alberta,
Can.
Her survivors in addition to
her parents, are a brother, Wes
ley, John Day, and four sisters,
Mrs. David Smith, Tygh Valley,
Ore., Mrs. Oliver Calhoun, La
Grande, Mrs. William Fisher,
Redondo Beach, Calif., and Mrs.
Roark, Fossil.. A grandmother,
Mrs. S. P. Brown, Jamieson,
Ore., also survives.
Auspices VFW American Legion and DAY
FHKT TDME
mmn
July 6th to 10th
5 - BIG DAYS - 5
FAIRGROUNDS
I
V V 'Jy
x
FOLLOW THE TWIN SEARCHLIGHTS TO THE BIG SHOW
Gigantic Midway with Chills and Thrills for Everybody! .
THE BIGGEST SHOW IN THE WEST IS HEBE! (
Daily Weather Reporl
DATE July 8. 1955
Sunset tonisht 7:50 D.m
Sunrise
tomorrow 4:41 a.m.
FORECASTS
Medford and vicinity: Considerable
cloudiness through Thursday. Low to
night 48. High Ihursday 75.
western ureeon: Mostly ciouay wun
a little drizzle in places tonight. Fair
Thursday. Low tonight 45-53. warmer
Thursday afternoon with highs 75-tia,
except 60-65 on coast.
Northern California: Fair , through
Thursday except variable low clouds
near coast night and morning hours.
Little temperature change.
LUCAL UA1A
TEMPERATURE: Mean yesterday
60: below normal 10.
Record high this date 104 in 1922.
Record low this date 43 in 1923.
PRECIPITATION : 24 hours to mid
night, none. Midnight to 10 a.m.. none.
Total this month, trace. .05 inch be
low normal.
Total since Sept. 1. 8.88 in.. 8.96
inches below normal.
HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday 40,
highest this a.m. 79 Si.
CITY . High Low Prec.
Brookings 63 46
Crater Lake 51 29
.01
Grants Pass 70 40
Klamath Fails 66
MEDFORD , 68
Portland 63
Seattle 67
Spokane 73
Yakima 77
Eureka : 59
Red Bluff 84
Sacramento 80
San Francisco 60
Los Angeles 72
Phoenix 103
Denver 90
Chicago .. 95
Miami 84
40
47
55
52
50
56
49
58
50
50
57
71
60
73
71
.08
1.32
PORTLAND LIVESTOCK
Portland (U-P.) Cattle 400. Choice
1125 lb. fed steers $23.35: good 1100
lb. steers S20; good 793 lb. fed heifers
$31; utility dairy type heifers- 112-15;
canner-cutters mostly S9-10.50: util
ity cows $11.50-12.75: utility-commercial
bulls $14.50-16; light cutters down
to $12.'
Calves 65. Good-choice vealers $20
22.50; utility-commercial grades $13
19: culls down to $10. 1
Hoes 300. U.S. No. 1 and 2 hutchers
"180-235 lb. $22-22.50; choice 350-550
id. sows si2.au-i4.au. - -
s- Sheep 1500. Choice with some prisae
spring lambs $20; good-choice grades
$18-19; good-choice feeder lambs $13
15.50 with few 80 lb. $16; good-choice
102 lb. shorn yearlings $13.50;. cull
choice ewes $2-4.50.
PORTLAND PRODUCE
Portland (U.P.) Eggs To retail
ers: Grade AA large. 56c doz.: A large.
49-5 lc; AA medium 47-48c doz.; A
medium 46-47c doz.; A small 25 -38c
doz.; cartons, l-3c additional. -
Butter To retailers: AA' grade
prints, 65c lb.: cartons 66c: A prints,
65c; cartons. 66c; B prints. 63c.
Cheese To retailers: A grade Ched
dar. Oregon singles. 42-45:C 5-lb.
loaves. 46'i-49i2c. Processed Ameri
can cheese. 5-lb. loaf, 39 ',2-49 lio lb.
Farm Market
Top quality raspberries sold at $3.00
a 12-cup flat at the sEast Side Far
mers' market today; general straw
berry price range was $2.25-2.50 a
flat; mid-Columbia and Milton Free
water district cherries sold lower at
$18-22 cents a pound: first Willamette
valley pie cherries sold at 10-15 cents
a pound. .
Poultry, Rabbits -
Live Chickens To growers (No. 1
quality f.o.b. Portland): Fryers. 2Yx to
4 lbs.. 32c (nominal) at farm. 31-32c
lb. light hens 18c; heavy hens, all
wts., 20c up: old roosters. 12-14c lb.
Dressed Chicken No. 1 dressed to
retailers: Fryers. New York style, 44
45c lb.; whole drawn, 55-57e lb.; cut
up, 59-62c lb.: hens, light type.New
York style. 29-30C; cut-ups, 41-45c;
hens, heavy type. N.Y. style. 31-32c;
whole drawn. 42-45c lb.
Turkeys To producers for A grade
breeder hens, f.o.b. farm. N.Y. dressed.
26c: eviscerated. 31c; A toms. N.Y.
style, 31c lb., eviscerated. To retailers,
A grade young hens, ready to cook,
48-50c; N. Y. dressed, 37-38c lb.; A
grade toms, oven ready, 40-44c: N.Y.
style, 34-35c lb.; fryer turkeys, 4-8
lbs.. 49-51c.
Rabbits (average to growers f.o.b.
killing plants) Live white. 3-4&
lbs.. 21 -23c up; 5-6 lbs., 17-1 9c: colored
pelts, 4c under; old does, 10-12c lb., a
few higher. Fresh dressed fryers. to
retailers. 57-61c; cut-up, 62-65C.
-Wednesday July 8.1955
Wall Street
New York (U.R) Aristocratic
plutocrats of American industry
led industrial shares to a new
record high on .the stock market
today.
Their poorer companions, the
railroads, took to the sidetrack
to watch the ascent into the rari
fied air. The once spectacular
performers, the utilities, gained
a few cents in their conservative
investment style. .
Dow-Jonas Averages '.
Dow-Jones final stock ave
rages: 30 industrials 4637.41 up
7.99; 20 railroads 160.56 off 1.19;
15 utilities 64.67 up 0.05 and 65
stocks 168.07 up 1.26.
Sales today were about
3,140,000 shares compared with
2,680,000 sharesi yesterday.
Today's closing prices on se
lected stocks:
American T & T ....183
Anaconda IW'z
Chrysler . 83 ss
Curtiss Wright . 29
General Electric 541
General Motors : 12734
Montgomery Ward 8034
Penn. R. R ; . 2W2
Penney, J. C. 96V4
Radio . 57T'8
Southern Co. .
19V4
63 Vs
93
x433
... 45
28
-"Z 69Vz
4&
564
.... 84V4
Southern Pacific
S., Oil of Calif
Texas Gulf Sulphur
Transamenca'
Tri-Continental . .
United Aircraft
S. Rubber .
U. S. Steel '
Youngstown .......
PORTLAND CASH GRAIN
USDA market news service: Wheat
No. 2 soft white, not quoted; No. 2
white oats 38 lb. test. Coast delivery.
so a ton; Portland delivery. $50 ton;
f.o.b.- Portland Coast delivery: sov-
oean meal. $82.57 . ton. cars prompt
dellvrv Prrtlan4 111
$46.50-47 cars; No. 2 yellow corn. East
ern shipping points, $70.50-71.50.
Wholesale hay prices: New crop
Kruano?
NOW HERE!
HELD
OVER
THE NAVY
NEVER HAD IT 1
SOFUNNYIvf Cf
PLUS
Mi I I L J
3
with .... ....
SCOn BRADY
MARY CASTLE
BflGunitJCj
LrfffTH fZL 6:30 pjn.
jnjj ML r iwj show
r i C" DONALD
X I O'CONNOR
WL r MARTHA HYER
a r
3
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X ENDS TONITE
f- K?s
v X:' PLUS
. Vi la Cleriass COlOtl
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE ELEVEN
Stockmen To Continue
4-H Scholarship Plan
The Jackson County Stock
men's association board of direc
tors last night voted to continue
sponsoring a $25 scholarship to
send a 4-H boy to a week-end
campment in eastern Oregon.
The school is sponsored by the
Northwest Section of the Ameri
can Society of Range Manage
ment. The directors also agreed to
compile a list of Jackson county
beef cattle and sheep which may
be offered for sale on markets
this fall. The list will help at
tract more buyers to the area,
they feel.
BIRTHS
. RAY To Mr. and Mrs. Myron,
723 Oak st., July 3, 1955, a girl,
3 pounds 5'2 ounces, at Commun
ity hospital. ..
WOLFF To Mr. and Mrs.
Clifford, Jacksonville, July 4,
1955, a boy, 6 pounds 2Vt ounces,
at Osteopathic hospital.
JIM INEZ To Mr. and Mrs.
Morris, 932 Garden Way, Ash
land, July 4, 1955, a girl, 5
pounds 13 ounces, .. at Sacred
Heart hospital.
CHRISS To Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest, 2230 Aloha st., July 5,
1955, a girl, 7 pounds at Com
muinty hospital.
HIBBS To Mr. and Mrs
Robert, , route 1, box 62, Jack
sonville,-July 5, 1955, a girl, 5Vi
pounds at' Community hospital
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WILLIAM DOUREST ALAN MS
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tar m Som. ky WINSTON MILLS! EDMUND a NORTH
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I 3 .WOMANI
Obituaries
PEARL MINOR
Funeral services are pending
at Perl funeral home for Mrs.
Pearl Minor, who died today at
a local hospital. The deceased
and her husband, Horace, of
Shreeveport, La., had been visit
ing here. v '.
EUGENE BAIRD j
Eugene Ml Baird, 67, died to--day
at the V.A. Domiciliary,
Camp White. Conger-Morris fun
eral home is in charge of funeral
arrangements.
ROY TIEMAN
Funeral services for Roy Tie
man, 46, of Shady Cove, who
died in a local hospital Saturday,
will be held at ISO p.m. Thurs
day in Chapel Mortuary, with
the Rev. D. . Millard of Eagle
Point officiating. Interment will
be in Siskiyou Memorial park.
The deceased was born in
Towanda, 111., on Dec. 2, 1908,
and came to the Rogue valley
from Los Angeles about seven
years ago. He was employed by
the Medford Neon sign company
for several years and recently
has been engaged in orchard
work. "
Survivors include -three broth
ers, John, Lawrence, and Her
man. ?. " v ";
Chicago D.K Miss Martha
Shull, " Jefferson high school
English teacher from Portland,
yesterday -was nominated with
out opposition for the first vice
presidency of the National Edu
cation Association. '
knoD CLr.xo:
- II -v.