1
Local and
Trash Fir - Ashland fire
men were called to 120 Gresh
am st. Sunday afternoon
where a trash fire was out of
control. The fire was next to
a house owned by C. E. Davis.
Patients - Medical patients
today at Sacred Heart hos
pital included John S. Yoa
kum, post office box 524,
Phoenix, and Walter L. Scott,
route 1, box 129, Gold Hill.
Party Planned - Amethyst
Rebekah lodge is sponsoring
a luncheon and card party for
the public at the IOOF hall
on Fourth ave. Wednesday,
March 1, beginning at noon.
Meeting Set - The next
luncheon meeting of the Gold
Hill Chamber of Commerce
will be held Thursday, March
2, at noon, in the dining room
at the Gold Hill Grange hall
on Sixth ave.
Association Meels-The Ore
gon State Alumni association
(the 30 Staters) will meet to
morrow night at Kim's res
taurant for the purpose ,of
nominating and electing of
ficers for the coming year.
A movie of the Iowa-OSC
football game will be shown.
Dinner will start at 7 p.m.
Portland Produce
Portland (UPI) Dairy market:
Eggs To retailers: AA extra
large 47-50; AA large 45-47c; A
large 43-44C, AA medium 40-42c:
AA small 33-36c; cartons l-3c
higher.
Butter To retailers: AA and A
prints 70c lb.; cartons 1c higher;
B prints 68c.
Cheese, medium cured To re
tailers: A grade Cheddar single dai
sies, 47-43c: processed American
S-lb. loaf, 43li-45c.
Portland (UPD Dressed chick
ens No. 1 grade dressed to retail
ers: Fryers, whole drawn, 36-38c
lb.: cut-up, 41-43c lb.; hens, heavy
type whole drawn. 30-43C lb.: light
type hens, cut-up, 33-3Sc lb.;
whole, 28-30C lb.
(ISMWillftl)
.l:ri'IJI,'i!l":iag
NOW OPEN
EVERY NITE!
It's I
HOWl
as AH
Tell
Breaks
Dick POWELL Debbie REYNOLDS
TEXAS
Lady
l.t.TCCHNICOI.OR
1
ENDS TONITE!
ONE COMPLETE SHOW
DOORS OPEN 6:45
fill let t omt ifilmHt mm MontiM
mmi mot mTotm m jiuei ciiiei
j ritetciiif itntKlii
Siiwnu WIUIAM GOETZ -JOSHUA LOGM
TECHNIRAMA TECHNICOLOR
lBMlLL
SK9 "Wl NANCY MS
HEFUN- RAY-FREtMAH-OLSON HUNTER
DOROTHY ANNE JAMES RAYMONO
Cinemascope warnercolor i
'SAYONARA" at ....
"BATTLE CRY" At..
..7:20
..9:50
DO YOU KNOW
WHAT MR. HULOT
IS WATCHING?
TUDOR GUILD
STYLE SHOW
OF COURSE!
ON OUR STAGE!
THE VERY LATEST
: IN FASHIONS
PLUS
A HILARIOUS
SCREEN PROGRAM
Jacques
Tati's
MY UNCLES
ta Eastman COLOR
lv Hi I'll
Personal
Surgery Patients - Robert
Schroeder, 6009 Harris rd.,
Central Point; Mrs. Bessie
Coffman, box 124, Butte Falls;
Walter Reeves, 350 B St., Ash
land'; and Mrs. Alfa Boston,
1104 East 11th st., Medford,
were listed as surgery patients
today at Sacred Heart hos
pital. In Hospital - Surgery pa
tients listed today at Rogue
Valley hospital included
Wildee Beard, 1024 West
Ninth st., Medford, and Mor
gan Hass, 5-year-old son of
Mr. and Mrs. Edmund E. Hass,
1615 Crown ave., Medford.
Births
DORMAN To: Mr. and Mrs.
David B., 1987 Westwood dr.,
Medford, Feb. 27, 1961, boy,
7V4 pounds, at Rogue Valley
hospital.
SAXBURY To: Mr. and
Mrs. Franklin, 512 Fourth sts.,
Central Point, Feb. 26, 1861,
boy, 7 lbs., at Rogue Valley
hospital.
RAGAN To: Mr. and Mrs.
Richard D., route 1, box 49,
Central Point, Feb. 26, 1961,
boy, 7 pounds, at Rogue Val
ley hospital.
PEKAREK To: Mr. and Mrs.
Leonard R., 386 Laurel st.,
Ashland, Feb. 26, 1961, boy,
7 pounds, at Rogue Valley
hospital.
HURLBUT To: Mr. and
Mrs. Walter C, 1214 West
Tenth st., Medford, Feb. 26,
1961, girl, 7V4 pounds, at
Rogue Valley hospital.
BERTAK To: Mr. and Mrs.
George M., 824 Palm st., Med
ford, Feb. 26, 1961,! girl, 7
pounds, at Rogue Valley hos
pital. DALTON To: Mr. and Mrs.
Henry M., route 4, box 385D,
Medford, Feb. 26, 1961, boy, 6
pounds, at Rogue Valley hos
pital. SHOUTS To: Mr. and Mrs.
Corliss, 500 Willamette St.,
Medford, Feb. 26, 1961, boy,
6 pounds, at Rogue Valley
hospital. ,
PARKHURST To: Mr. and
Mrs. David, 391 Bridge St.,
Ashland, Feb. 26, 1961, girl,
8V2 pounds, at Ashland Gen
eral hospital. ' i
ENGLISH To: Mr. and Mrs.
Clyde, Yreka, Feb. 16, 1961,
girl, 10 pounds, at Siskiyou
General hospital.
HUFFMAN To: Mr. and
Mrs. Orville, Ft. Jones, Calif.,
Feb. 14, 1961,, girl, 714
pounds, at Siskiyou General
hospital.
CARSON To: Mr. and Mrs.
Cleland, route 2, box 212,
Central Point, Feb. 24, 1961,
girl, 7 pounds, at Rogue Val
ley hospital.
HILTON To: Mr. and Mrs.
Marion, 308 Ashland ave.,
Medford, Feb. 25, 1961, girl,
7 pounds, at Rogue Valley
hospital.
STEWART To: Mr. and Mrs.
Douglas G., 825 Beekman St.,
Medford, Feb. 25, 1961, boy,
6 pounds, at Rogue Valley
hospital. '
PEART To: Mr. and Mrs.
James L., 1858V4 South Peach
St., Medford, Feb. 25, 1961,
boy, 8 pounds, at Rogue Val
ley hospital.
WILSON To: Mr. and Mrs.
John W., route 2, box 668G,
Central Point, Feb. 27, 1961,
a girl, 6 pounds, at Rogue
Valley hospital.
BABCOCK . To:.. Mr. and
Mrs. William W, route 4, box
479B, Medford, Feb. 27, 1961,
a girl, BVi pounds, at Rogue
Valley hospital.
COLLIER To: Mr. and Mrs.
James, route 1, box 514B,
Eagle Point, Feb. 28, 1961, a
boy, 9 pounds, at Rogue Val
ley hospital.
Mr. Hulot
THE SOCIAL EVENT
OF THE SEASON!
WEDNESDAY
"CURTAIN AT
EIGHT-THIRTY"
John Lutk at tht
Baldwin Organ 8 p.m.
ASHUNO-rmiiW;""
MEDFORD MAIL
Obituaries
MRS GRACE SIKES
Mrs. Grace Sikes, 84. of
1015 Mary Jane ave., Ash
land, died yesterday in a lo
cal nursing home. Funeral
arrangements will be an
nounced by Memory Gardens
Funeral home.
LeROY KIRKENDALL
Funeral services for LeRoy
Kirkendall, 72, who died at
his residence, 2612 Dark
Hollow rd., Friday, will be
held -at Perl Funeral home
Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. The
Rev. Edward Stauffer of the
First Baptist church will of
ficiate. Private committal will
be in the Hillcrest Memorial
park.
Mr. Kirkendall was born
Oct. 18, 1888, in Weeping
Water, Neb., and had been a
resident of this area for 18
years. He was a builder and
contractor.
He was married to Laura
Brill, Feb. 3, 1909, in Clay
Center, Kan., and moved to
Medford in 1943.
Survivors include his wife,
Mrs. Laura Kirkendall, Med
ford; four daughters, Mrs
Taft Killham, Montana; Mrs
Ed Rice, and Mrs. Metta Den
man, both of Washington;
Mrs. W. L. McPherson, Med
ford; one son, W. E. Kirken
dall, Montana; two brothers,
C. C. Kirkendall, Washington,
Frank Kirkendall, California;
two sisters, Mrs. W. E. Darby,
Medford, and Mrs. Ethel Phil
lips, Illinois.
HUGO A. FROHREICH
Hugo August Frohreich, 68,
of 304 North Holly St., died
yesterday. Funeral services
will be held at Conger-Morris
Funeral home downtown
chapel Friday at 1 p.m. The
Rev. John E. Simon of St.
Peter's Lutheran church will
officiate. Committal will be
in Siskiyou Memorial park.
JOHN A. FRASER
Funeral services for John
A. (Jack) Fraser, 62, of 387
Vilas rd., east, who died Sun
day, will be held at Conger
Morris Funeral home down
town chapel Wednesday at
10 a.m. Crater Lake Aeria,
Fraternal Order of Eagles,
Medford, will be in charge.
Committal will be in Hill
crest Memorial park.
Mr. Fraser was born April
11, 1898, in Portland. He
owned and operated the Med
ford Saw Shop on South Ri
verside ave. He was a mem
ber of Crater Lake Aerie
FOE.'and of the Carpenters'
Union, '
Hg was married July 2,
1950, in Reno, to Helen M.
Carston, who survives.
Other survivors include
four sons, George Fraser, San
Francisco; Jack Fraser, New
York; Ray Gamier, Medford;
and Phil Gamier, Susanville,
Calif.; four daughters, Mrs.
Julia Loftes, Mrs. Jane Car
tee, and Mrs. Genevieve Ze
linski, all of San Francisco;
and Mrs. W. F. Gregory, Med
ford; nine grandchildren and
seven great grandchildren.
Moslem Mob Burns
Two While Women
Oran, Algeria-(UPI)-A Most
lem mob today burned to
death two European women
in their automobile, killed a
Moslem auxiliary policeman
and injured three other Euro
peans including a child.
A police patrol which rush
ed to the scene of the terror
outbreak in the "new city"
Moslem quarter of Oran
dragged the driver of the
women's car alive, from the
flames. But later he was re
ported in grave condition.
Police said the mob delib
erately prevented the occu
pants from leaving the car
after they overturned it and
set it afire.
The mob, about 200 strong,
apparently was enraged by
the appearance of the Euro
pean car on the fringe of a
crowd demonstrating in favor
of the Algerian Rebel Nation
al Liberation front.
Over-the-Counler
Western Slocks
The following bid and ask
ed quotations, from the Na
tional Association of Securi
ties Dealers, Inc., do not rep
resent actual transactions.
They are a guide to the range
within which these securities
could have been sold (indi
cated by the "bid") or bought
(indicated by the "asked") at
the time of compilation.
Common Stocks
Bank of America
Bid Asked
58t, 58!!
Calif. -Pacific Utilities .. 25',
Cascades Plywood 2fiJ,i
Cons. Freightways 9
Copco 40 i
Cyprus Mines Corp 26'.
First National Bank .... 5f)
Morrlson-Knudscn 34 t
Northwest Nat. Gas .... 29
Pacific Pwr & Lt 45;
Permanente Cement .... If)1
Portland Gen. Elec 3ol4
U. S. National Bank .... 70
United Utilities 52 Vt
West Coast Tel . 31
Weyerhaeuser 30,,i
27';
28 Ti
fl'i
52!:
28',;
37
31 '!
48!;
20!;
42
75
55i
33
4Hi
Electricity now is available
to more than a third of Mex
ico's 32.350,000 citizens.
Missouri ranks second in
the nation in the production
of American cheese.
TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. ORE.
t4 -cK' m t a v--- .11 i - ij: t 41
1.
is
NEWS CONFERENCE Secretary of Agriculture Orvuie
Freeman is shown at his first formal news conference since
joining the Kennedy cabinet. Freeman said he hopes to chop
TRIP REENACTED - Larry Torgerson of
Eureka. Calif., chats with Mayor George
Cnnstopher in bun Francisco as Torgerson
and his family stopped in the city while on
a trip from Phoenix, Ariz., to Eureka in a
1912 Model T Ford. The trip is a reenact-
East Germans See
Western Allies Out
Of Berlin in 1961
Berlin - ltIPD - When the
chestnuts bloom again the
Western Allies will be out of
West Berlin - that's the pre
diction of East German Com
munists for 1961.
But they're not very re
liable forecasters. They made
the same prediction at the end
of 1959. And it's doubtful
whether they even believe the
prediction themselves.
Eastern predictions aside,
everyone from Mayor Willy
Brandt on down believes the
East - West dispute over the
city probably will come to a
head in 1961.
It's anyone's guess just what
the Communists will do, but
it's a good bet that the city
faces interference of some
sort with its vulnerable trans
port links to the West.
Just how far the Commu
nists will go is a secret prob
ably known only to their lead
ers. Most Western officials
rule out the possibility of a
full-scale blockade.
The degree of trouble prob
ably depends on just how bad
ly Soviet Premier Nikila
Khrushchev wants a summit
meeting and what happens at
the meeting.
Won Victory
But no matter what hap
pens in the future, the city
ROUND TRIP AIR TICKET from PORTLAND
(Meals Included)
GO ANY DAY
BIG BOEING 707 JETS
15-DAY EXCURSION
MAKE RESERVATIONS TODAY
ROGUE TRAVEL SERVICE
We Reserve and Sell Airline and Steamship Tickets
111 East 8th St. SP 2-6779
won another victory in 1960.
It remained free and the Al
lied troops still were in the
city despite Khrushchev's de
mand they get out.
Khrushchev made the de
mand in 1959, in notes pro
posing that West Berlin be
made a so-called free, de
militarized city. '
Khrushchev came no closer
to that goal in 1960 than he
did in 1959, despite a few
Communist harassing actions
against Berlin traUic.
And city officials think
Khrushchev will find John F.
Kennedy an even tougher man
to deal with on Berlin than
former President Eisenhower
was.
They were heartened by a
Kennedy pledge to fight for
West Berlin just as he would
fight for the freedom of New
York or Paris.
Showed Power
The East Germans showed
the power they have over the
city's routes from the West
last September by banning
ground travel by West Ger
mans coming to the city for a
refugee rally.
They also violated other
Four -Power agreements by
barring West Germans from
entering East Berlin without
special passes.
The Soviets in reply to Al
I
Only $23267
several Dilnon dollars from the $5.7 billiun iinmuil budgi-t
charged against the Agriculture Department.
(UPI Tclephoto)
1
feu. ! V 1
ment o a fhoenix-to-fcuieka trip made by
Torgerson s grandfather. Harvey M. Harper,
in 1912. From left are Mrs. Torgerson; Arne,
5; Eic, 10; Greta, l'j, Torgerson; Lorna, 8,
behind her father; Christopher, and Ole, 7,
behind the mayor. (UPI Telephoto)
lied protests said "sovereign"
East Germany could do as it
pleased. But the Soviet Union
did not echo the frequent East
German statements that all
Four-Power agreements on
the city were dead. '
They did say, however, that
the Western Allies will lose
all their rights in the city
once a German peace treaty
is signed.
The Soviets have warned
they will sign a separate peace
treaty with East Germany if
the German problem is not
solved at a summit meeting
held early in 1961. They
might do it - 1961 holds the
answer.
Jobless Benefits
Cleared in House
Washinglon-IUPIi-The house
rules committee today cleared
for a house vote Wednesday
President Kennedy's first an
ti-recession measure a S927
million extension of jobless
pay benefits.
House leaders said there
was no doubt it would pass.
The committee acted at a
closed session, with no audible
noes reported. Action came
after the ways and means
committee, which drafted the
14-OZ.
STEAK $2
COOKED AS YOU LIKE IT
It's Graded USDA Choice
Lots of Golden Brown French Fries
or, if it's After 5 O'clock, You Can Have
Huge Baked Russett Potato
Soup ,nd Salad Our Own Hot Bread
You qet no voqctablo, dessert Is nol included and tha
drink is extra, but vou sure do get a lol of steak and
potatoes of the finest quality money can buy.
OPEN 6 A.M. to 8 P.M CLOSED SUNDAYS
IN THE MEDFORD
Wealher
FOKKCASTS
Medford and vicinity: Thicken
ing cloudiness (anight with
chances or occasional ram Wednes
day inornmu. Low tomorrow morn
ing 38. High tomorrow 55.
Western Oregon: Considerable
cloudiness tonight and Wednesday.
A little rain at. I lines in the ex
treme north portion. A little
warmer. Low tonight ati to -Ni.
IUl'Ii Wednesday SO to iVl.
Northern uaniorma: i-air To
night except cloudy in extreme
north tonight and In north por
tion Wednesday. Occasional rain
in extreme north Wednesday. Lit
tle change in temperature.
LOCAL DATA
TEMPERATURE: Mean yester
day 44; nlmvc normal 1.
Record high tills date 72 in UV23.
Record low this date 1!) in UVA.
PRECIPITATION: 24 hours to
midnight .22 inch. Midnight to 10
a.m., none.
Total this month 2.74 inches, .79
inch below normal.
Total since Sept. I. 1(1.83 inches.
1.0!) inch below normal.
HUMIDITY: Lowest yesterday
Stiri, highest this o m. lOO-v.
Iltcll 4:U0 24
CITY Yi-sier- a.m. Ur.
day Low I'rec.
Brookings ,rj7
41
Crater Lake 2H
Grants Pass S7
Klamath Palls .... 41
MEDFORD 54
Portland 54
14
25
33
40
Seattle
Spokane ....
Yakima
, 4 5
. 5(1
Eureka 55
Red Bluff 62
Sacnimcnntn .... 1)2
San Francisco x (12
Los Angeles (i
Phoenix 4
Denver 3d
Miami Beach ....
New York . . ..
Washington. D.
Investment Funds
Noon quotations on selected
funds:
Fund Hid
Bullock 13.77
Chem Fund 12.011
Colonial Encr 14.24
Enton Howard Slk .. i:i.4a
Fidelity lfl.HH
Fundamental Inc. .. 10.0H
Group Sec Avin Elec 0.72
Group Sec Com Stk 13.52
Group Sec Petr .... in.n3
Keystone B-3 1.1.48
Keystone B-4 0.53
Keystone K-2 17.23
Keystone S-l 22.27
Keystone S-2 12.113
Keystone S-3 14.(15
Keystone S-4 14.00
Mass Inv Cirth Stk lll.nB
National Sec Grtlt .. 0.04"
TV-Elcc S.43
Value Line Iuc 5.51
Wellington 14.02
Asked
15.00
13.07
15.50
14 41
10 36
11.02
10.03
14.110
II. 07
io.no
10 41
in.nn
24.30
' 14.00
III. 32
10.03
18.25
10.54
0.10
0.02
10.20
Portland Livestock
Portland (UPI1 VJSDA Catlle
250. Good steers 22-24.50; standard
21; standnrd-ennd heifers 18-22;
utility cows 14-lfJ; conncr-cultcr
11-13.
Calves 50. Good-chnlce 28-32:
few 32.50: utility-standard 23-27.
Hors 300. U.S. 1 and 2 butchers
20.25-20.50: 2 and 3 (trade heavy
10-20; sows around 300 lb. 17.
Sheep 100. Mostly choice slnuch
ter lambs 15.50-10; some 110 lb.
down to 13.50; cull-chotce ewea 3
0.50. bill, said unemployment still
is rising and warned that it
may continue to worsen even
if business turns up in the
spring.
T - l
SUOPPIHG CENTER
TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 28, 1981
Ocean Depths Found
To Be Strewn With
Valuable Minerals
New York - (Scientific
American Feature) - Studies
made during the recent Inter
national Geophysical Year dis
closed that the depths of the
ocean are strewn with manga
nese, copper, cobalt and nickel
in amounts that could meet
man's need for a million years
at the present rate of con
sumption. Moreover, according to John
L. Mero, staff member of the
Institute of Marine Resources
at the University of Califor
nia, these untapped riches ap
pear to be economically re
coverable. Serious Consideration
"To meet the world's grow
ing demand for metals in an
era when even low-grade de
posits of ore are becoming
ever more difficult to find,"
Dr. Mero stales, "it would
seem desirable to give serious
consideration to the one
source that remains virtually
unexplored and untapped. It
is the sea. Sea water itself
nas some promise; some 60
elements have been identified
in it. By conservative esti
mate, the water in all the
oceans holds 15 billions tons
of copper, 7 trillion tons of
manganese, 20 billion tons of
uranium, half a billion tons
of silver and 10 million tons
of gold. Still, sea water must
be considered a lean 'ore,' ex
cept for a few materials. But
the basins of the oceans are
lined by these same elements
in tlie form of conventional
ores that, in my opinion, could
be profitably mined by apply
ing techniques that are avail
able today. These ores arc
simply lying on the ocean
floor waiting to be dredged
up.
'From an economic stand
point the most promising ore
is manganese dioxide. In deep
sea sediments it takes such
forms as grains, slabs, coat
ings on rocks and impregna
tions of porous materials. Most
important, it also occurs in a
strange product of sea-water
chemistry: the so-called man
ganese nodules, which incor
porate not only manganese
but also iron, nickel, cobalt,
copper and other metals. Gen
erally, these lumps range in
size from one . to nine inches
in diameter. The largest ever
recovered measured about 4
feet long and 3 feet In diam
eter; it weighed 1,700 pounds.
World-wide surveys show that
the deposits cover tens of mil
lions of square miles with con
centrations running to 3.7
pounds of nodules per square
foot of ocean floor.
"In addition to metals
oceanographcrs have also dis
covered economically interest-
News About
Servicemen
ABOARD CARRIER
Dclore P. Sullivan, store
keeper third class, USN, son
of L. B. Sullivan, 219 South
Ivy st., is serving aboard the
attack aircraft carrier USS
Oriskany operating out of San
Diego, Calif.
IN KOREA
Army Pfc. William J
Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs.
John M. Gearhart, Star route,
Shady Cove, recently arrived
In Korea and is serving with
the 7th Infantry division.
Smith, an automatic rifle
man with the division, entered
the Army In January, 1060,
and received basic combat
training at Ft. Ord, Calif.
EARLY BIRD
SPECIAL
Complete $ Q
Dinner It ww
AIL YOU CAN EAT ,
When? SrsThru
5:00 P.M. to 6:00 P.M.
Why
1 To Express
uur Appreciation
Wis 4 1 9 0ur Regular 1.49
Tllldl ( Dinner only 1.19
INCLUDES:
Shrimp Cocktails,
Soup, Appetizers,
15 Salads, 3 Meat Dishes,
2 Desserts
THE GROTTO
Number 10 Front
ing deposits of other sub
stances including phosphorite,
for example. This material is
an important source of ferti
lizer. Phosphate rock sells for
as much as $15.00 per ton,
half of the price representing
freight charges. It has been
calculated that $3.5 million
would pay for the design and
construction of a system to
mine 400,000 tons of sea-floor
phosphorite a year. The
mining cost would be about
$4.50 a ton and transportation
about $1.50 a ton. At a selling
price of $13.50 per ton in
California, the exploitation of
deposits lying off the coast of
that state should result in an
annual return to investors of
fifty-two per cent after taxes.
"As for nodule mining, cal
culations, based upon tech
niques now used to separate
copper, nickel, and cobalt
from lean ores, indicate that
it will cost about $25.00 per
ton to process manganese no
dules into marketable ma
terials. Adding $5.00 for
mining and $10.00 for market
ing, transportation and over
head, the profit would still be
about $20.00 per ten of nod
ules from the southeastern Pa
cific, an area in which particu
larly rich deposits are found.
On paper this would allow an
annual return of thirty per
cent before taxes, on a capital
investment of $100 millions in
a mining rig (a hydraulic
dredge) and processing plant
able to handle 5,000 tons of
nodules a day. Such calcula
tions do not, however, excite
any great enthusiasm among .
mining men. From the busi
ness point of view there are
still too many unknowns in
deep-sea mining."
CHARCOAL
STEAKS
TILL MIDNIGHT
CANDLE
ROOM
1 HOTEL
t A Medford
Open Daily
5:30 P.M. to Midnight
Sundays 4 P.M. Till 1 1 P.M.
REMOUNT
YOUR PRESENT
DIAMOND
Your Diamond
Is Forever But
Your Setting
Wears with tha
Passage of Time
Why Not Choose
A MODERN
SETTING
231 East Main
THEATER
INFORMATION SERVICE
CALL SP 3-7323
FOR FULL INFORMATION
ABOUT YOUR THEATERS
TWO SHOWS TONITE
7:00 and 9:20
WALT DISNEY
Swiss Family I
ROBINSON
JOHN MIUS DOROTHY McGUIKE
JAMES MacAKTHUR JANET MUNI0
v 1200
Ml