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                  <text>In 2003, the Lawrence Public Library partnered with the Dole Institute of Politics and Haskell University to capture the histories of Douglas County’s World War II veterans in the Lawrence Remembers the World War II Years Project. From 2005 to 2007, the Lawrence Public Library, the Watkins Museum of History, and the Kansas State Historical Society also embarked on a similar endeavor, the Kansas Veterans of World War II Oral History Project, which was funded by the Kansas State Legislature. This collection contains many of the video recordings and more information about the interviews conducted for these projects.</text>
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                <text>Walter Stitt Robinson, Jr. served as a Captain in the United States Army (82nd Airborne Division) from 1941 to 1945. Interviewed by Pattie Johnston on March 26, 2007, Robinson talked about his experiences during the Second World War. Robinson was born in North Carolina on August 28, 1917. He graduated from high school in 1935. He then received a bachelor’s degree from Davidson College in 1939 and a master’s degree in history from the University of Virginia in 1941. He was drafted into the Army in November 1941. He completed basic training at Camp Croft in Spartanburg, South Carolina. He went to Officer Candidate School at Fort Benning and worked as an instructor at Fort McClellan in Alabama. Robinson then went overseas to the European theater of war. He took part in the invasion of Southern France in 1944, the Battle of the Bulge, and the airborne crossing of the Rhine into Germany in 1945. He was discharged in 1945 and received the Bronze Star. Following the war, in 1950, Robinson received a PhD in history for the University of Virginia. He then taught history at the University of Kansas from 1950 until he retired in 1988. Robinson passed away on July 2, 2014.</text>
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                <text>To access the video recording of this oral history, go to: &lt;a href="https://archive.org/details/robinson-w.-stitt"&gt;https://archive.org/details/robinson-w.-stitt&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <text>The Watkins Museum of History also holds items related to this collection.</text>
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                <text>Other resources for interviews with World War II veterans are available through the Library of Congress' Veterans History Project: &lt;a href="https://www.loc.gov/vets/vets-home.html"&gt;https://www.loc.gov/vets/vets-home.htm&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <text>The original copy of this video is available through the Lawrence Public Library. The Watkins Museum of History and the Kansas State Historical Society also have interviews associated with this project, which was funded through a grant program passed by the Kansas State Legislature in 2005. Researchers are responsible for obtaining any necessary permissions for uses other than educational or scholarly research. Contact the Watkins Museum of History for additional information: &lt;a href="https://www.watkinsmuseum.org/"&gt;https://www.watkinsmuseum.org/&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <text>To access the video recording of this oral history, go to: &lt;a href="https://archive.org/details/american-legion-opinions-of-wwii-korea-and-vietnam-wwii-interview"&gt;https://archive.org/details/american-legion-opinions-of-wwii-korea-and-vietnam-wwii-interview&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <text>The original copy of this video is available through the Lawrence Public Library. The Watkins Museum of History and the Kansas State Historical Society also have interviews associated with this project, which was funded through a grant program passed by the Kansas State Legislature in 2005. Researchers are responsible for obtaining any necessary permissions for uses other than educational or scholarly research. Contact the Watkins Museum of History for additional information. &lt;a href="https://www.watkinsmuseum.org/"&gt;https://www.watkinsmuseum.org/&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                    <text>OSMA ROOM

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940.5378
MEN AND

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LAWRENCE PUBLIC LIBRARY
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LAWRENCE, KANSAS 66044

MEN and WOMEN in the ARMED FORCES
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Lawrence, Kansas

79-4709

�Barber, William Edward
Beerbower, Chester
Bleakley, Edward T.

Brecheisen, Calvin
Bremer, Glenn
Bromwell, W,alcolm J .
Bruner, Samuel B.
Canady, Paul A.
Chisholm, Andrew H.
Cooley, Oliver
Crowder, Fobert T.
Deay, Walter Dudley
Deel, Samuel

Denlinger, Grover
Dissinger, Ray S.
Dodderidge, James H.

Hubbard, Gaylord
Humphrey, Bernice
Hudson, Harold
Jolly, David

Jones, Jason
Kiefer, Deane W.
Knight, Lewis
Langrell, 0 . V.
Lindenberger, Gerald
Linley, Alfred

Siroky, U&gt;nald E.

Lobinger, Paul
Loid, Wayne E.
Louk, Max
Manion, Claude B.
Mansfield, Joe

Spitzer, Carl
Staples No rval
Steinmetz, Leo D.
Stoland, Lawrence I .
Stone, Thomas William
Swimley, Eugene B.
Taylor, Orin
Thomas , Edward L .
Thomas, Orval Dale
Thorne, Henry F .
Thurneau, Glenn Andrew
Treece, Robert
Trefz, Howard H.
Trovillion, Donald H.

Metz, John J .

U&gt;dds, Jack

Mitchele, Robert

Doty, Mary Elizabeth

Mull, Roy
Murphy, Albert J. P.

Eberhart, Raymond A.

El stan, Gerald W.
Ewing, Allan R.

Fowler, David Harriman
Gibler, Jack R.
Gilliland, Leslie

Goff , Roy

Musselman, John L.
McCoin, Olarles
McChee, Lee Roy
McKee, James
Noches, Ramon
Norwood, Rachel
Nixon, J . B.

Grant, Arthur DeWitt
Hail, James Herbert

O'Brien, James F.

Hall, Scott

Osbourn, Raphael P .

Harding, Orin
Hardy, Timothy
Haynes 'Robert

Owens, Virgil H.
Paxton, Otarles
Penner, John Elliott
Perkins·, Otis 0 .
Peterson, Leon A.

1

Henick, Lloyd
Houk, AI fred C.

Houk, Walter

Richardson, James C.
Richardson, Leo
Riederer, Lewis
Sanborn, Herbert J .
Schuler, George W.
Seufert, Fdward
Shannon, Charles
Showalter, Elmer W.
Sindt, Wayne

Pettyjohn, George 0 .

1

Unfred, Samuel L .
Warner, Fdwin R.
Way, William E.

Weidler, Ira E.
Wiley, William Gate
Williams, Earle F. Jr .
Wilson, Robert J .

Wingert, Merle
Woolf, Charles E.
Wul fkuhl e, Leo

We have endeavored to obtain the name of those from the
county who have been killed in action and regret any
exclusions .

Thanks to the Journal World of Lawrence, Kansas for
effort in helping compile the above list .

�•
TO THE
MEMORY OF THOSE
MEN AND WOMEN WHO
SO NOBLY GAVE THEIR LIVES
FOR THEIR COUNTRY, WE DEDICATE
THIS BOOK . . . WE BOW OUR
HEADS IN THEIR NEMORY
AND OFFER A SILENT
PRAYER THAT THEY
HAVE NOT DIED
IN VAIN

��MEN AND WOME

fuunZ)~~
IN THE ARMED FORCES
DURING WORLD WAR II

�We have made every effort to obtain
the pictures and names of all men
and women in the Armed Forces from
this County. We realize, however, that
our goal has not been attained and
we sincerely regret any exclusions of
names, as well as other errors, which
may have occurred.

�ABEL, WILLIAM S.
Cpl. WilliamS. Abel, son of Mrs . Blanch Brock,
husband of the former Pearl Vogler.
Enter-ed
the Army Medical Corps in 1942, training at
Ft. Lewis, Washington.
Served at _Australia,
New Guinea, and Manila.
Now on duty at Manila.
Holds Medical Citation.
ABELE LEON M.
1st Lt. Leon M. Abele
son of Mr. and Mrs.
Leon G. Abele. Entered Army Air Corps, May 18,
1942.
Trained at Midland, Texas and San Marcos, Texas.
Served in England.
Holds Distinguished Flying Cross, Air Meda 1 and three
clusters.
Now on Inactive duty.

ABELE, MIRIAM A .
Sgt. Miriam A. Abele, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Leon G. Abele. Entered WAC•s August, 1944.
Trained at Ft. Des Moines, Iowa and Coffeyville Army Air Field.
Now on dut y at Tampa,
Florida.
ADAMS, RICHARD P.
Pvt. Richadd P. Adams, son of Mrs. Otto A.
Adams.
Entered Army in 1943.
Trained at
Camp Claiborne, La. and Camp Berkeley, Texas.
Served in Scotland, England, France, Belgium,
Rolland and Germany.
Holds Combat In f. Badge
and European Theater Ribbon.
Now discharged.

ADRIANCE, CLARE J.
Clare J. Adriance, son of
Adriance.
Entered service
with the Navy (V-12) at
Received Medical Discharge

Mr.·and Mrs. W. J.
in 1943 and trained
Albuquerque, N. M.
in 1943.

ADRIANCE, KEITH W.
Ens. Keith W. Adriance, son of Mr. and Mrs. W.J.
Adria"ce.
Entered service in 1943.
Trained
with the Navy Air Corps at Liberty, Mo., ..ankton,
S.D., Ottumwa, Iowa, Iowa City, Pensacola,
and Corpus Christi.
Now on duty at Corpus
Christi, Texas.

ALEXANDER, DONALD P.
Sgt. Donald P. Alexander, son of Mr. and Mrs .
E. E. Alexander.
Entered Army, 1942. Trained
Now on duty at Ft.
at Ft. Warren, Wyoming.
Leavenworth.

ALEXANDER, EDWARD E.
S/Sgt Edward E. Alexander entered into the army
in 1940 at Ft. Riley.
He served in Hawaiian
Islands, New Guinea and the Philippines.
Holds 3 battle stars and good conduct metal.

ALEXANDER, EDWIN A .
Pfc. Edwin A. Alexander, son of Mr. and Mrs.
£. E. Alexander.
Entered Army, 1942.
Trained
at Camp Crowder, Mo., Camp Roberts, Calif.,
Miami, Fla.,'Ft. Benning, Ga. and McCall, N.C.
Served in England, France, Belgium, Holland
and Germany.
Now on duty at Berlin, Germany.

ALEXANDER, GEORGE H.
Pvt . George H. Alexander, son of J. B. Alexander
Entered service Aug . 27, 1945, with the 92nd
Infantry.
Now on duty at Camp Roberts, Calif.

�ALEXANDER, HAROLD E.
Cpl. Harold E. Alexander, son of Mr. and Mrs.
E. E. A 1 ex and e r .
Wi f e , for me r Vi r gin i a
Schooling. Entered Army Jan. 1943.
Trained at
Kearns Field, Utah and Wright Field, Ohio,
Discharged at Randolph Field, Texas.

ALEXANDER, JAMES
T/Sgt. James Alexander entered service
training with the Army at Ft. Rile.y.
in the Philippines and Pansy Island.

in 1940
Served

ALEXANDER, MARK J.
Lt. Col. Mark J. Alexander, son of Mr. and
Mrs . E. E. A 1 ex a n de r .
Wi f e , forme r Ma r y
Collins.
Entered Army, Jan. 1941.
Trained
at Camp Robinson, San Luis Obispo, Calif.,
Ft. Benning, Ga. ,and Ft. Bragg, N. C.
Served
in North Africa, Sicily, Italy, Fra nee, Belgium, Holland and Germany.
Holds Bronze Star,
Silver Star, Purple Heart, with cluster,
British Distinguished Service order, Presidential Citation, with cluster and Battlefield promotion . Now at Kennedy Gen. Hospital,
Memphis, Tenn.
ALFORD, FREDERICK J.
R. T. 1/c Frederick J. Alford, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Fred S. Alford, husband of the former Mary
Theis.
Entered service in 1942.
Trained with
the Navy at Great Lakes, Logan, Utah Treasure
Island, Calif.
Served in Trinadad for 22 mos.
Received his discharge in October 1945.

ALLEN, JOHN C.
Sgt. John C. Allen, son of Lydia Allen entered
service in June 1942.
Trained with the Army
Air Corps at Jefferson Barracks, Scott Field
Springfield, Mass. Nashville, Tenn. and Gulf
Port Miss.
Served at Brazil, Hawaii, Kwajalein
Marshall Islands, and Kiejo Korea.
Now on duty
at Korea.
Holds one battle star.
Has been in
Has been in Pacific 20 mos. and in S. A. 6 mos.
ALLEN, C. ROGER.JR.
Pfc. C . Roger Allen, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Allen. Entered Army, March 1943. Trained
at Ft. Leonard Wood and ASTP Colorado State
College.
Served iu Europe.
Holds Good
Conduct Ribbon.
Now in Japan.

ALLPHIN, ROBERT C.
Lt. Robert C. Allphin, son of Mr. and Mrs.
H. C. Allphin.
Wife, former Patricia Geyer.
Entered Army Jan. 1941.
Trained at Camp
Robinson, Ark., Texas, Spokane, Wash. and
Rapid City, S. C.
Served in England, France,
and Germany.
Holds Air Medal and Purple
Heart. Wounded in ActionFeb. 25, 1944, France.
Now on duty at Love Field, Dallas, Texas.
AL TENBERND, HOMER C.
Pfc. Homer C. ~ltenbernd, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Car 1 Altenbernd.
Entered Service in 1944 with
the Army.
Trained at Camp Wolters, Tex. Served
at Leyte and Pansy.
Now on duty at Korea.

AMYX, BILLY E.
Billy E. Amyx, son of Mr. and Mrs. S. M.
Amyx.
Entered Service June, 1945.
Trained
at Avalon, Calif.
Served in Atlantic and
Pacific Areas.
Discharged Aug. 1945.
AMYX, CARL B .
S;Sgt. Carl B. Amyx, son of Mr. and Mrs. S. M.
Amyx.
Wife, former Alice Clayton.
Entered
service Sept. 1944.
Trained at Ft. Bragg,
N.C.
Served in France, Germany, Czechoslovakia and now on duty in Germany.
Was
in Two Major Campaigns.

2

�AMYX, CHARLES M.
Lt. Com. Charles M. Amyx, son of Mr. and Mrs.
S . M. Amyx .
Wife, former Beatrice Hadedorn .
Entered Navy, July 1940.
Trained at Chicago,
Ill.
Served on Pearl Harbor.
Holds SW
Pacific Theatre Ribbon.
Now on duty at
Seattle, Wash.
AMYX , ROBERT L.
T; Sgt . Robert L . Amyx, son of Mr. and Mrs .
S . M. Amyx.
Wife , former Frances L . Deal .
Entered Army Nov . 1940.
Trained at Jefferson Barracks, Mo. March Field, Calif., Wash.,
Iowa, South Dakota and N .• Y.
Served in
Eng 1 and .
Ho 1 d s Pres ide n t i a 1 C i t a t ion .
Di s charged Sept . 1945.

ANDERSON, ARTHUR S.
Major Arthur S. Anderson M. C., son of Dr . and
Mrs . A. J. Anderson, husband of the former
Irma B . Long.
Entered service in 1940 with
the Army.
Served in France in World War I
St. Mihel, Argonne, Verdun, Aisue and Meuse
China and India.
Now on duty at Mitchel Hospital in California.

ANDERSON, CYRUS F.
MoM 1 / c Cyrus F. Anderson, son of Mrs. Jane
Anderson.
Wife, former Ruby Hollingsworth .
Entered Navy, Nov. 1942.
Trained at Camp
Peary, Va .
Served in New Hebrides, Admiralty Is. and Okinawa.
Discharged Oct. 1945 .
ANDERSON
DOUGLAS 0.
M; Sgt. Douglas 0. Anderson, son of Otha E.
Anderson.
Entered Air Corps, 1939.
Trained
at Ft. McDowell, Calif.
Served in Hawaii,
Midway, Samoa, New Caledonia, Australia and
Mariannas .
Received Oak Leaf Cluster.
Has
been Missing in Action since March 3, 1945.
ANDERSON, GARLAND DALE
Pfc. Garland Dale Anderson, son of Mr. and
Mrs . Frank E. Anderson.
Entered Army Dec•
1942.
Trained at Camp Claiborne and Camp
Livingston, La.
Served in Hawai ian Is., New
Guinea and Philippine Is.
Holds AsiaticPacific, American Theater and Philippine Liberation Ribbons, Good Conduct Medal, Combat
Inf. Badge and Three Bronze Stars.
Discharged Nov . 4, 1945.
ANDERSON, GLENN E.
Pfc. Glenn E. Anderson, son of Mr. and Mrs.
J. L. Anders on. Wife, former Beulah Grammer.
! n t e red Army Ma r c h , 1 9 4 2 •
T r a i ned a t F t •
Leonard Wood, Mo., Shreveport, La. and Camp
Breckenridge, Ky.
Served in France, Belgium and Germany.
Holds Purple Heart, Good
Conduct, European Campaign and Combat Inf.
Badge.
Wounded in Action March 1945, Germany.
Now at O'Reilly Gen. Hospital, Springfield,
Mo.
ANDERSON, PAUL J .
T/ 5 Paul J. Anderson, son of Mrs. Emma Anderson .
Entered Army Aug. 1943.
Trained at
Camp Beale, Calif., Camp Lathrop, Calif.
Columbus, Ohio and Camp Roberts, Calif. Served
in New Guinea.
Now on Biak Is land.
ANDERSON
RAYMOND L.
FC 2-c ~aymond L. Anderson, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Roy D. Anderson.
Wife, former Hazel K.
Lee.
Entered Navy January, 1942·
Trained at
Great Lakes, Ill., Norfolk, Va. and Washington
DC.
Engaged in 2 Major battles in ETO and
5 Major battles in Pacific Theater.
Received
discharge October 18, 1945 ·
ANDERSON, RUSSELL J.
Cpl. Russell J. Anderson, son of Mrs. Gertrude
Anderson.
Entered Army Oct., 1942·
Trained
at Ft. Riley, Ft. Knox and in Calif.
Served
in England, France, Belgium and Germany. Holds
2 Battle Stars. Good Conduct Ribbon and ETO
Ribbon.
3

�ARCHER, LEROY (Jimmy) W.
Coxwatn Leroy (Jimmy) W. Archer, son of Mrs.
Mattie Archer . l!:ntered Navy June, 1942· Train·
ed at Farragut, Idaho.
Wears Five Campaign
Stars from Saipan, Palau , Leyte, Lingayen Bay,
and Iwo Jima .
Returned to states in March
1945·
Now on way back to Pac i fic.
ARMSTRONG, RICHARD A .
Pvt. Richard A. Armstrong, son of Mr . and Mrs.
L. 0. Armstrong.
Entered service in 1945
(Enlisted in Army Air Corps Reserve in 1944)
Trained at Sheppard Field, Wichita Falls, Tex.
Now on Duty at Chanut e Field , Ill.

ARTMAN, EUGENE A .
T; 5 Cpl. Eugene A . Artman , son of 'Mrs. E. G.
L. Harbour.
Entered Army Sept . 1943·
Trained
at Camp Roberts, Calif.
Served on New Guinea
and Leyte.
Holds Purple Heart from wounds re·
ceived on Leyte Nov. 3, 1944·
Now in Japan.

ARVIN , JOHN A.
Capt. John A. Arvin, son of Mr . and Mrs. John
A. Arvin.
Wife, former Audrey E. Maiden.
En·
tered Air Corps, 1942 ·
Trained at Texas and
Santa Ana, Cali f.
Served in England.
Holds
DFC Air Medal .
Now discharged.

ATHERTON
RALPH M.
SF 1 / C Ralph M. Atherton, son of Mr . and Mrs.
G. H . Atherton.
Wife, former Helen Warner.
Entered Navy October, 1942·
Trained at San
Diego, San Francisco and Norfolk, Va.
Served
in British Isles and .France.
Discharged
October, 1945·
ATKINSON, RAYMOND A.
Sgt . Raymond A. Atkinson, son of Mr. Arthur
Atkinson, husband of the former Etna Hill.
Entered service in 1943 with ' the Army Engineers
Trained at Ft. Sill, Okla and CampCarson,Colo,
Served in Iran, France and Germany .
Holds
Good conduct medal and 2 major battle stars.
Received honorable discharge in Sept, 1945.

AUL, DAN R .
Sgt. Dan R. Aul, son oi Mr . and Mrs. C . P.
Aul.
Wife, former Dolores Grossenbacher.
Entered Army, Jan. 194~·
Trained at Fort
Warren, Y/yo . ana Ft. Ben)amin , Harrison, Ind.
Holds Good Conduct, Marksmanship and Finance
Medals .
Now at Ft . Dix, New Jersey.

AUSTILL
CECIL A .
T / Sgt . Cecil A. Austill, husband of the former
Edith Lee.
Entered the Air Corps in 1943.
Trained at Miami Beach, Scott Field, Tucson
Wendo ve r, . Utah, and Bickham Field, Hawaii.
Served in johnston islands, Kwajalein,Eniwetok,
Saipan, Guam, Tinian, Pelileu,Anguar , Philip·
pines, Okinawa .
Holds Air Medal with 4clusters
Distinguished Flying Cros-s and 7 battle stars.
Discharged Oct . 26, 194.S.
AUSTIN, ROBERT M·
Lt. Robert M. Austin, son of Mrs. Margaret
Woodson.
Wife, Helen Austin.
Entered Army
Dec . ; 1939·
Trained at Ft. Huachuca, Ariz.
and Ft. Benning, Ga.
Served in Africa, Italy,
Switzerland, France and Mexico.
Holds Bronze
Star, 3 Battle Stars, Pre-Pearl Harbor Ribbon
and American Defense.
Now at Ft. McClellan.
AVERY, ALFRED D.
Pfc. Alfred D. Avery, husband of the former
Elsie Smith.
Entered the Army in 1942 . Trained
at Camp Funston, Camp Ibas, Calif., Camp Polk.
Served in Scotland, England, France, Belgium,
Luxembourg, Netherlands, Germany, Czechoslovakia,
Holds Presidential Citation .
Dis·
charged Oct. 24, 1945.
4

�AVERY, MELVIN DALE
Pfc. Melvin Dale Avery, son of Mrs. J. K.
Buhrer, Larned, husband of the former Hazel
Davis.
Entered service in 1942 with Army
En~tineers.
Trained at Camp Roberts and Camp
Whtte, Oreg.
Served in France, Belgium, Holland, Germany.
Holds Group Citation and Good
conduct medal.
Now on duty in Vie.ma, Austria.
AVEY, IRVEN C.
Sgt. lrven C. Avey, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. 0.
Avey,
Entered Army Air Corps, [an., 1943·
Trained at Florida, Scott Field, I 1., Merced,
Calif. Ontario, Calif., Kerns Field, Utah,
Portland, Oregon, and Longview, Wash.
Holds
Good Conduct and Marksmanship Medals.
Now at
Longview, Washington.
BAHNMAIER, CLYDE, M.
M/Sgt. Clyde M. Bahnmaier, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Elmer Bah'nmaier.
Entered service in 1941
with the Air Corps then transferred to Army.
Trained at Shepard Field.
Served in India.
Now on duty at Calcutta, India.

BAHNMAIER, ELMER K.
S/Sgt. Elmer K. Bahnmaier, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Elmer Bahnmaier.
Entered the Air Corps in
1942.
Trained at Chanute Field, I 11.
Served
in Luzon, P. I., Okinawa, Japan.
Now on duty at
Tachinkawa A.A.F. Honshu, Japan.

BAILEY, DELBERT M.
MoM.M. 1/c Delbert M. Bailey, son of Mr. and
Mrs. A. R. Bailey.
Entered the Navy in 1941.
Trained at Great Lakes, Dearborn Mich and Norfolk, Va.
Served in North Africa, Sicily,
Italy, England, France, Hawaiii Wake, Japan.
Holds Navy and Marine Corps Meda •
Now on duty
in Pacific area.

BAILEY, KENNETH E.
F. Kenneth E. Bailey, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Bailey.
Entered Merchant Marines, Oct.,
1944·
Trained at Catalina Island, Calif.
Served in Hawaii, Marshall Is., Saipan, Fiji
Is., Iwo Jima, Guam, Balboa, andPanama Canal.

BAILEY, MARVIN J.
.
Pvt. Marvin J. Bailey, son of Mr. and Mrs. A.
R. Bailey.
£ntered the Army in 1945.
Trained
at Camp Hood, Texas.
Now on duty at Camp Hood.

BAKER, ALVIN R.
Capt. Alvin R. Baker, son of Alvin F. Baker.
Wife, former Eva Atherton.
Entered Air Corps
July, 1942·
Trained at Miami Beach, Fla.
Served in Ireland, England, France.
Now ~n
duty in England.

BAKER, DON H. JR.
Pfc. Don H. Baker, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs.
Don H. Baker, husband of the former Marie P.
Roby. Entered the Marines in 1942.
Trained ,.t
Purdue Univ and San Diego.
Served in South
Pacific, Guadalcanal. Solomons etc.
Discharged
Malaria, Jungle and Rheumatic fever.

BAKER, HARRY LEIGH
Lt. Col. .Harry Leigh Baker, son of Nr. and Mrs.
Alvin F. Baker, husband of the former Gerva
Archer.
Entered Air Corps in 1942.
Trained
at 0 T S, Miami Beach, Adjutant General 'sSchool
Ft. Washington.
Served at San Antonio Av.
Cadet Center, at Randolph Field, and Headquarters, AAF, Washington, D.C.
Now on terminal leave from Headquarters, Washington, D,C.

5

�BAKER, L. CHESTER
S 1/c L. Chester Baker, son of Mr. and Mrs.
J.;eo Baker.
Entered the navy in 1941.
Trained
at Great Lakes.
Served in the South Paci fie.
Now on duty at Training Aids Depot, Alameda,
Ca 1 if.
BAKER, WILFRED F.
G. M. 3/c Wilfred F. Baker, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Leo Baker.
Entered the navy in 1944.
Trained
at Great Lakes N. T. C. Shell Beach.
Served in
A f r i c a , It a 1 y , France •
Now on d u t y in South
PaCific.
BALDWIN, ROSE L.
SP (Q) 2/C Rose L. Baldwin, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Fred M. Baldwin.
Entered Navy Feb.,
1944·
Trained at Hunter College, New York.
Spent one year in Washington D. C.
Now o.n
duty at Pearl Harbor.
Holds Asiatic Pacific Ribbon, American Theater and Victory Ribbon.
BANGS, DELBERT M.
W.T. 2/c Delbert M. Bangs, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Delbert M. Bangs.
Wife, former Donna Jean
Maiden.
Entered Navy, July, 1942·
Tratned
at San Diego, Calif.
Served in South Pacific
Theater.
Holds 2 Battle Stars, Good Conduct,
American Theater and Asiatic Theater Ribbon.
Now is discharged.

BANKS, FRANK 0.
Pvt. Frank 0. Banks, son of Mr. and Mrs. Alex
Banks.
Wife, Former Harriet Schubert. Entered
Marines, April, 1944·
Trained at San Diego,
Calif. Served on Guam and Mare Island.
Now
on duty at Guam.

BARKER, MAURICE E.
1st Lt. Maurice E. Barker, son of Mr. and Mrs.
E. T. Barker, husband,of the former Leonora
Elkin.
Entered the Air Corps in 1943.
Trained
at Miami Beach, Florida.
Now on duty at Bov·
ingdon, Endland.

BARKLEY, CHARLES F.
Pvt. Cliar les F. Barkley, son of Mr. and Mrs.
H. S. Barkley.
Entered Army Sept., 1942·
Trained at Camp Adair, Oregon.
Now is discharged.

BARLOW, CARL F.
Lt. (jg) Carl F. Barlow, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Marion A. Barlow.
Entered Navy Air Corps in
1942.
Trained at Ft. Scott, Norfolk, Iowa
Pre-flight School Chicago, Florida and N. C.
Served at Larrboanga, Philippines.
Holds Presidential citation. Now on duty at North Caroli

BARLOW, THOMAS A.
1st Lt. Thomas A. Barlow, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Marion A. Barlow.
Entered Army in 1942. Trained at Sheppard Field, Ft. Sill, and. Camp Bowie.
Served in Wales, France, Germany and Austria.
Now on duty at Salzburg, Austria.

BARNES, GEORGE E .
T / S George E. Barnes, son
E. Barnes .
Entered Army
sent directly to Hawai i
serving.
Discharged Oct .,

6

of Mr . and Mrs •. J.
Sept. , 1942·
Was
where he has been
1945·

�BARNETT, EDWARD

s.

Cpl. EdwardS. Barnett, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Leo T. Barnett.
Entered the Army . in 1943.
Trained at Ft. Leavenworth, Ft. Riley, Ft Lewis.
Served in the European Theatre.
Now on duty at
Army Base, Boston.
BARNETT, HOWARD H.
Sgt. Howard H. Barnett, son of Mrs and Mrs.
Leo T. Barnett.
Entered the Army in 1942.
Trained at Ft. Monmouth, Camp Murphy.
Now on
duty at Signal Corps Depot, LaJolla, Calif.
BARNETT, KENNE111 M.
Lt. Kenneth M. Barnett, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Leo T. Barnett, husband of the former Bernice
Copeland.
Entered the navy in 1942.
Trained
at Tucson, and Chicago.
Served in Hawaii,
Marshall Islands.
Now on duty at Olathe, Kans.
BARNETT, WILLIAM P.
Radio Operator William P. Barnett, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Leo T. Barnett, husband of the former
Betty Jo Harrison.
Entered the Merchant Marine
in 1943. Trained by passing Federal Radio Examination at K. C.
Served in England, France,
Italy, North Africa, Wales, Mediterranean Area,
Atlantic, Pacific, Marshall Islands, Philippines, australia.
Now on duty in Atlantic.

BARRETT, ESTUS E.
Pfc. Estus E. Barrett, son of Mr. 11nd Mrs.
0. E . Barrett.
Entered Army in Sept, 1944.
Trained at Camp Joseph, Camp Robinson, Infantry.
Served in Hawaii, Marianas, Okinawa,
Philippines.
Now on duty at Mendora, Philippine Is.
BARRETT, RAYMOND J.
Pfc. Raymond J. Barrett, son of Mr . and Mrs.
0 . E. Barrett.
Wife, former Retha J. Fine.
Entered Army Dec. 1942.
Trained at Ft. Bliss,
Texas, 1st Cavalry.
Served in Australia, New
Guinea, Admiralty Is., Philippines.
Holds
Purple Heart, with c luster, Presidential Citation, in 4 major battles, made 2 beach heads.
Wounded 3 / 22/44, Admiralty Is., 3/8/45, Luzon.
Discharged Oct. 11, 1945.
BARRETT, W. VERNON
1st Lt. W. Vernon Barrett, son of Mr. and Mrs.
E. Ba r r e t t .
Wi f e , f o r me r C e c i 1 Bu t 1 e r .
Entered Army Air (Signal) Corps, 1942·
Trained
at Ft. Monmouth, N. J. and Cambridge, Mass.
Served in Australia, New Guinea and Philipp i nes.
Holds Unit Citations for 5 Major Battles and Silver Stars •. Now at Detroit, Mich.
BAR1LESON, RONALD 0.
Officers Stewart 1 / c Ronald 0. Bartleson, son
of Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Minor.
Entered Navy in
1942. Trained at Norfolk and San Diego.
Served
in Guadalcanal, Solomons, Pearl Harbor, Guam,
Philipfines, Saipan, Santa Cruz, Okinawa,
Marsha 1 Is., Gilbert Is . Holds Asiatic and
Pacific, American Theater, Philippine Liberation, Good Conduct Bar, Presidential Citation ,
3 invasion and 7 bronze stars . Received honorable discharge.
BARTZ, CLARENCE G.
Radar 3/ c, Clarence G. Bartz, son of Mr. and
Mrs . W. H . Bartz. Wife, former Laura Belle
Evans.
Entered Navy in 1944.
Trained at
Farragut, and Treasure Island.
Served in
Saipan, lwo Jime, Okinawa, Philippines, Japan.
Now on duty 1n Pacific.
BARTZ, RUTH E.
SK3 / c Ruth E . Bartz, parents, Mr. and Mrs .
Louis J . Bartz.
Entered Navy in 1943. Trained
a t New York and Mi 1 1 e d g e v i 11 e , Ga •
Se r ve d
at Washington D. C.
Discharged 1944.
7

�BATY, MARCIA S.
T/5 Marcia S. Baty, Daughter of. Mrs. Mary E.
Baty.
Entered Army (WAC) in 1944.
Trained
at Ft. Des Moines.
Holds Good Conduct Medal.
Discharged Aug. 9, .1945.
BAYLES, HUGH G.
Pfc. Hugh G. Bayles, son of Mr. and Mrs. E.
E. Bayles.
Entered Army 1944·
Trained at
Camp Ba.rkeley, Texas and O'Reilly General
Hospital, Springfield Mo.
Served on Hawaii,
Okinawa and Japan where he is now on duty.
BECK, PAUL S.
Pfc. PaulS. Beck, son of Mrs. Estelle M. Beck
husband of the former Viola Curry.
Entered
Army in July 1942.
Trained at Ft. Riley,
and Indiantown Gap, Penn.
Served in France,
Netherlands, Belgium, Germany, Scotland, England.
Holds Good Conduct Medal, Sharp Shoot·
er 's Medal and Four Battle Stars.
Now on duty
at Liege, Belgium.
BECK, ROBERT E.
Cpl. Robert E. Beck, son of Mrs. Estelle M.
Beck.
Wife, former Fanchon Barrett.
Entered
Army in Dec. 1~42.
Trained at Camp Phillips,
Salina, Nashvil \~, Camp ,..cCain, Miss.
Served
in Scotland, Eng and, Fr,ance, Belgium, Germany
Czechoslovakia.
Holds Good Conduct Medal,
Sharp Shooter's Mei:!·a -1,/ Five Battle Stars.
Now
on duty at Winterburg, Czech.

BECKER, EDMUND G.
W.O. J.G. Edmund G. Becker, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ed J. Becker, Seneca.
Wife, former Marie
Frances Hill.
Entered Parachute Troops in
1942.
Trained at Camp Wolters, Ft. Benning,
Ft. Bragg, N. C. Served in North Africa, Sicily
Italy, North Ireland, England, Normany, Holland,
France, Belgium, Germany.
Holds Six Battle
Stars, Bronze Arrow Head, Presidential Citation
Combat Inf. Badge.
Now on Inactive Status.
BEEBE, BILLY J.
Cpl. Billy J. Beebe, son of Evelyn McNamara.
Entered Army Nov., 1942·
Trained at New Orleans, La. and Ft. Wayne, Ind. Served in Scot·
land, England, Holland, France, Belgium and
Germany.
Now is discharged.

BEEBE, GLENN W.
S 1/c Glenn W. Beebe, son
Entered Navy June, 1943·
Idaho.
Servdd in China,
and Japan where he is now

of Evelyn McNamara.
Trained at Farragut,
Philippines, Hawaii
on duty.

BEEBE, ROLLIE G.
S 2/C Rollie G. Beebe, son of Evelyn McNamara.
Entered Navy, March, 1945·
Trained at Great
Lakes, Ill.
Served in Korea, China, Japan,
Hawaii and Philippines.

BEER, ORVEL E.
Sgt. Orvel E . Beer, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. A.
Beer.
Wife, former Luejutta Bush.
Entered
National Guards 1938, ' entered Paratroopers
1940.
Trained at Camp Robinson,
Ark. and
Camp Jordan, Fla.
Holds Silver Wings.
Dis·
charged Oct. 18, 1945.

BEERS, CLYDE W.
Pfc. Clyde W. Beers, son of Mr. anct Mrs. James
W. Beers.
Wife, former Carlene Richmiller.
Entered Army 1943.
Trained at Ft. Leavenworth.
Served in Germany.
Now on duty .i n Germany.

8

�BEERS, FRANCIS D.
Pf c. Francis D. Beers, son of Mr. W. A. and
Minnie E . Beers.
Wife, former Ruth J. Pieratt.
Entered Marine Air Coprs in 1943.
Trained at
San Diego, and attended A.M.M. School at Norman
Oklahoma.
Now on duty at Okinawa.

BEERY , BYRON A.
Pvt. Byron A. Beery, husband of the former
Evalyn Hannon.
Entered Army Oct,, 1942· Trained at Camp Roberts, Calif.
Received Medical
discharge Feb . 24, 1943·

BEGUELIN, LESLIE E.
S 1/ C (Y) Leslie E. Beguelin, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Harry W. Begue1in. Entered Navy Jan. 1945.
Trained at U. S.N.T . C. Yeoman School San Diego,
Calif.
Now on duty at P.S.C. St . Louis, Mo.

BEISEL, PAUL B .
Sgt. Paul B. Beisel, son of Mr . and Mrs. David
D. Beisel. Entered Army Air Corps Oct. 5, 1942.
Trained at Drew Field, Fla, Ltlngley Field, Va.
Now on duty at Langley Field, Va.

BELL, GORDON E.
Y 1; c Gordon E. Bell, son of Mr . and Mrs.
Floyd E. Bell.
Wife, former Donna Marcene
Akers , Entered Navy, October, 1940 ,
Trained
at Great Lakes, Ill., Toledo, Ohio and Lawrence , Ks .
Discharged August 1945·

BELLES, CHARLES L.
Sgt. Charles L. Belles, son of Mr . and Mrs.
C. 0. Belles.
Entered service with the Medical
Corps in 1942.
Trained at Camp Forest, Tenn . ,
Fort Custer, Mich., Brady, Texas, San Diego.
Served in England, France, Holland, Belgium,
Germany. Now on duty at Paris, France.

BELLINGER, JACK A.
Pfc. Jack A. Bellinger, son of Mrs. Mildred
C. Bellinger. Entered Army March, 1943· Trained at North Carolina, Atlanta, Ga. and Camp
Crowder, Mo .
Served overseas and now on Honolulu, Hawaii with Special Services.

BELLINGER, RICHARD DALE
Pvt . Richard .Dale Bellinger, son of Mrs. Mildred C. Bellinger.
Entered Army, June, 1945·
Now in training at Camp Roberts, California.

BELT, HAROLD F .
Pfc. Harold F. Belt, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
T. Belt .
Entered Army Oct. 12, 1943.
Trained
at Camp Lee, Va.
Served in Panama, Leyte,
Panay.
Now on duty at Korea.
BENSON, PAUL L.
Y 3 / c PaulL. Benson, son of Mr . and Mrs. F. 0.
Benson .
Entered Navy December 1942.
Trained
at University of Kans. (V-12), Great Lakes.
Served in New Guines, Admirality Is., Morotai,
Palau and Philippines.
Holds P.T.O. Ribbon (4
Batt l e Stars) Philippine Liberation Ribbon .
Now on duty at Ominato, Japan .
9

�BENSON, ROBERT W.
Cpl. Robert W. Bens.on, son of Mr. and Mrs.
F. 0. Benson.
Wife, former Alyce Marie Holcom.
Entered Army April 1944.
Trained at Camp
Fannin, Texas.
Served in England, France,
Belgium, Luxembourg, Germany.
Holds E.T.O.
Ribbon (4 Battle Stars), Combat Infantryman
Badge, Good Conduct Ribbon and Purple Heart.
Wounded Nov. 29, 1944, Germany.
Now on duty
at Camp Gruber, Oklahoma.
BERTSCHINGER, HAROLD W.
T;4 HaroldW. Bertschinger, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Wright Bertschinger.
Entered Infantry March,
194~·
Trained at Camp Blanding, Fla. and Camp
Rob1nson, Ark. Served' in Italy, France, G~rmany
and Austria.
Holds ETO Ribbon with 5 Battle
Stars, Victory Medal, Good Conduct Medal and
Presidential Citation.
Discharged Dec., 1945·
BEURMANN, LEWIS W.
Capt. Lewis W. Be .u rmann, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Louis A. Beurmann,
Wife, former Doris Pierce.
Entered Army Air Corps, Jan., 1942·
Trained
at Chandler, Ariz., Santa Ana, Calif., King
City, Calif.
Merced, Calif., Phoenix, Ariz.
and Casper, Wyo.
Served in New Guinea, Aus·
t ra lia and Philippine Is.
Now on Manila.

BICHELMEYER, BARBARA F.
Capt. Barbara F. Bichelmeyer, daughter of Mr.
George Bichelmeyer.
Entered Army Nurse Corps
Jan., 1942·
Trained at Ft. Leavenworth.
Now
on duty at San Antonio, Texas.

BICHELMEYER, GEORGE J.
S 1/c George J. Bichelmeyer, son of Mr. George
Bichelmeyer. Entered Navy, April, 1945· Train·
ed at Great Lakes, Ill.
Served in Philippines
Marshalls and Caroline Is.
Now at Shanghai,
China.

BIGGS, NORMAN J.
Sgt. Norman J. Biggs, son
Biggs. Entered Army Air
Trained at Lowry Field,
England.
Dischargtd Oct.

of Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy
Corps in Sept., 1942.
Colorado.
S·e rved in
27, 1945.

BIGGS , VERNON L.
Lt. Vernon L. Biggs, son of Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy
Biggs.
Entered the Marines March 1943. Trained
at Occidental College, L.A. Calif., Colo.
Univ. Boulder, Colo. Pi! rdue Univ. Ind., Quantico
Va.
Now on duty at Camp Pendleton, Calif

BIGGS, WmLAWRENCE
T/5 Wm. Lawrence Biggs, son of the late Mr. and
Mrs. William'Bi.s;gs.
Entered Army April 1942.
Trained at Ft. jacksonS. C., Ft. Riley, Kans.
Served overseas in five major battles in Pacific
Theater.
Now on duty at Hokkaido, Japan.

BLACK, CHARLES E.
Pvt. Charles E. Black, son of Mrs. Grant Smith.
Entered the Marines June 14, 1943.
Trained at
San Diego, Calif.
Served in 6 Campa iins i
Southwest pacific.
Now on duty at Ok1nawa.
BLACK, DON W.
Capt. Don W. Black, son of Mr. and Mrs. Earl
T. Black.
Wife, former Mavis Anderson.
En·
tered Army 1941·
Trained at Camp Wallace.
Camp Davis and Camp Hulen.
Ser·ved in Africa,
Italy and Salerno.
Holds American Defense,
ETO Ribbon, 3 Battle Stars, Bronze Arrowhead
f9r Salerno Landing and American Theater Rib·
bon.
Now at Camp Pickett awaiting overseas
orders.
10

�BLACK, FRANK D.
S 1/c Com 8 Frank D. Black, son of Mrs. Grant
Smith. Entered service August 12, 1943. Trained
at Farrag.ut, Idaho. Served in Southwest Paci fie
Now on duty at Pearl Harbor.
BLACK , GEORGE A .
Sgt. George A. Black, son of Mr. and Mrs. Earl
T. Black.
Entereq Army in 1942.
Trained at
Camp Barkley, Fitzsimmons Gen. Hospital, Camp
Phillips, O'Reilly Gen. Hospital.
Holds Meritorius Service Unit.
Now on duty at O'Reilly
Genera 1 Hospital.

BLAKELY CLYDE H.
Pvt. Clyde H. Blakely, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Harry H. Blakely.
Entered Army Air Corps,
March, 1945·
Trained at Sheppard Field, Texas
and Lowry Field Colo.
Now on duty at Manila.

BLEAKLEY, EDWARD T.
S 1/c Edward T. Bleakley, son of Mr. and Mrs.
W. T. Bleak;ley Jr.
Entered Navy August 25,
1944. Trai.ned at Great Lakes, Little Creek,
Va., Pearl Harbor Oahu, Hawaii.
Served in
South Ryukyu and Okinawa. Was posthumously
awarded the Purple Heart. Killed inAction
May 4, 1945, waters north of Okinawa.

BLEAKLEY, JOSEPH J.
Ens. Joseph J. Sleakley, son of Mrs. J. J.
Bleakley.
Wife, former Nancy Tee 1.
Entered
Navy Air Corps, Nov., 1942·
Trained at Pensacola, Fla.
Served on Okinawa.
Holds Ameri·
can Theater, Pacific-Asiatic Ribbon, Victory
Medal Recommended for DFC 4 Air Medals and
Navy Unit . Citation.
Now at San Diego, Calif.

BLEVINS, GEORGE A.
T; 5 George A. Blevins, son of Mrs. Alice Blev·
ins. Entered Army, April, 1942·
Trained at
Ft. Riley and East Coast.
Went overseas to
Europe Oct., 1944·
Returned to states April,
1945· Received C.O.D. July 24, 1945·

BLEVINS, LESLIE W.
Pvt. Leslie w. Blevins, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Wi 11 i am H. B 1 e vi n s •
Wi f e • f or me r E 1 e an or
Bunyan. Entered Army Air Forces 1945.
Trained
at Sheppard Field, Texas.
Holds Sharpshooters
Medal.
Now on duty at Denve ·r, Colorado.
BOND, ALVIN E. JR.
S.K.D. 3/c Alvin E. Bond, Jr., son of Nr. and
Mrs. Alvin E. Bond, Sr.
Entered Navy April
1943.
Trained at Farragut, Idaho, Madison,
Wisconsin.
Served in Pacific Islands.
Holds
American Theater Service Ribbon, Asiatic and
Pacific Area Service Ribbon with 5 Battle Stars.
Philippine Liberation Ribbon with 1 bronze star.
Now on duty at Hunters Point, Calif.

BOWEN, EMERY J.
Capt. Emery J. Bowen, son of Mrs. A.M. Bowen.
Wife, former Ruth Anderson.
Entered Corps of
Military Police.
Trained at Fort Custer, Mich.
Now on duty at Ft. Riley, Kansas.

BOWEN, RAYMOND E.
1st Lt. Raymond E. Bowen, son of John Bowen.
Entered Air Corps, Dec. 1940·
""Trained at
Hickan1 Field, Oahu, T. H. Served in Philippines, New Guinea, New Zealand, Hawaiian Is.
and Pacific Isles. Holds 3rd Cluster to Air
Medal. Discharged Oct., 1945·
11

�BOYDSTON, CHARLES F.
S/Sgt. Charles F. Boydston, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles R. Boydston.
Wife, former Esther
Grove.
Entered Air Corps Dec. 1940.
Trainej
at Tulsa, Okla, Washington D. C. Alexandri~,
La., Stockton, Calif.
Served at Africa, Lybia
Egypt,' Italy, France and India.
Holds 4 Battlt
Stars, Presidential Citation, Good Conduct
Ribbon.
Now has an Honorable Discharge.

J·

BOYDSTON, WILLIAM
Sgt. William J.
oydston, son of Mr. and Mrs,
C. R. Boydston, Wife, former Zelia V. Wilson,
Entered Air Corps July 24, 1942.
Trained at
Kearns, Utah.
Served at Hawaiian Islands. N01
on duty at Hawaii.
BRADLEY
JOHN FELDMAN
S 1/C Jonn Feldman Bradley, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Richard L. Bradley,
Entered Navy July,
1944·
Trained at Farragut, Idaho.
Served on
Guam, Saipan, Manila, Tokyo, Marshall Is.
and Philippines.
Now in Amphibious Comma~
Service and Transport in Pacific.

BRADLEY, PAUL C.
Stw. 1/c Paul C. Bradley, son of John 0. Brad•
ley.
Entered the Marines Jan. 3, 1944. Train~
at Avalon, Calif.
Served in South Pacific
Hawaiian Islands.

BRADLEY, VIRGIL J.
S 1/c Virgil J. Bradley, son of John 0. Brad•
ley.
Wife, Mae Bradley.
Entered Navy Dec. l3
1943.
Trained at Farragut, Idaho.
Served il
Leyte, Guam, Hawaii.
Now on duty at Gu am.
BRAY, DONALD H.
Pvt. Donald H. Bray, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. C
Bray.
Entered Army March 1945.
Trained al
Camp Fannin, Texas, Camp Rucker, Alabama.
Holds expert Infantryman Badge.
Now enrouta
to Pacific Theatre.

BRAY, ROBERT C.
Sgt. Robert C. Bray, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. C
Bray.
Entered Air Corps Sept. 1943.
Trainel
at Sheppard Field, Texas, Maxton, N.C., Malden
Mo., Long Beach, Calif.
Served at Indi a,
Burma, Chinii,
Holds Good Conduct, Asiat ic•
Pacific Air Medals.
Now on duty at Shanghai,
China.
BRAY, ROY L.
Cpl. Roy L. Bray, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. C
Bray.
Entered Army-Medics March 1943. Train!f
at Kearns, Utah, Fitzimmons Hospital, Camp
Grant, Ill., Camp Atterbury, Ind.
Served it
Holland, France, Belgium, Germany, England
Holds Good Conduct Ribbon, E . T.O.
Now on dutJ
at Soissons, France.

BREITHAUPT, CHARLES E.
Flight Officer Charles E. Breithaupt, son o
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Breithaupt.
Entered Air
Corps Oct. 5, 1942.
Trained at [effers oa
Barracks, Mo., Lincoln, Nebr., Kees er FieU
M is s . , San Ant on i o , Texas , Win f i e 1 d , Ks,,
LaJunta, Colo.
Discharged Oct. 13, 1945.
BREMER, GLENN A.
Lt. Glenn A. Bremer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frt
A. Bremer.
Wife, former Gertrude Story. E~
tered Army Air Corps Nov. 1, 1942.
Trained a
Santa Ana, Calif , Phoenix, Ariz., Rec'd Win~
at Mather Field, Sacramento, Calif .
Furth!
training at Rapid City, S. D. Served in Africa
England and Western Europe. Received Air Medal
Oak Leaf Cluster, Bronze Star, Purple Heart
Killed in Action over Cansberg, Germany May 11
1944.
12

�BREWSTER, ALBERT H. JR.
RM 3/ c Albert H. Brewster Jr., son of Mr. and
Mrs. Albert H. Brewster Sr.
Wife, former
Mildred E. Harmon.
Entered Navy Nov. 21, 1941.
Trained at San Diego, Calif., San Francisco,
Calif.
Served in New Zealand, Guadalcanal,
American Samoa.
Discharged April 7, 1944.
BRIZENDINE , CLIFTON 0.
Cpl. Clifton 0. Brizendine, son of Mrs. Mary
0. Brizendine.
Entered Army, Dec., 1940·
Trained at Ft. Riley, Ks. and Camp Polk , La.
Serv ed in Scotland, England, France, Luxembourg and Germany.
Holds Combat Inf. Badge,
3 Bat t 1 e S t a r s , Pres i d en t i a 1 C i t a t ion and
Good Conduct Medal. Prisoner of War Dec. 1944·
Now is discharged.
BRIZENDINE, MONDELL
TI S Mondell Brizendine, son of Mrs . Opal Brizend ine. Wife, former Geneva Davis.
Entered Army
Feb. 15, 1942.
Trained at Camp Wallace, Texas,
Camp Stewart, Ga., Orlando, Fla.
Served in
Australi a, New Guinea, Manila, Philippines.
Now on duty at Manila.
BROEKER, FRED E.
Sgt. Fred E. Broeker, son of Mr. and Mrs. J.
Fred Broeker .
Wife, former Ei'leen Johnson.
Entered Marine Corps May 2, 1941.
Trained at
San Diego, Ca 1 if.
Served at Ha wa i ian Is . ,
Fiji Is., New HeBrides, New Caledonia, Solomon
Is., New Zealand.
Holds Lresidential Citation,
and now has received his discharge.
BROERS , EZRAL R.
S /Sgt. Ezral R. Broers, son of Mr. and Mrs.
George J. Broers.
Entered Army Air Corps Sept.
1941.
Trained at Jefferson Barracks, Merced,
Calif.
Served in Bermuda.
Holds Good Conduct
Ribbon and Pre-Pearl Harbor Ribbon.
Now on
duty at El Centro, Calif.
BROERS, KERMIT E.
T/3 Kermit E. Broers, son of George J. Broers.
Wife, former Alma Baker.
Entered Service
Dec. 21, 1942.
Trained with the Army at Camp
Robinson, Ark.
Served at Hawaii , Philippines,
Japan.
Holds Asiatic-Pacific Ribbon. Two
Battle Stars, Ph i lippines Liberation Ribbon,
On e Bronze Star, Good Conduct Ribbon.
Discharged Oct. 21, 1945.
BROHAMMER, HAROLD J
T/ Sgt. Harold J. B~ohammer, son of Mr. and Mrs.
John Brohammer.
Entered National Guards 1939.
Mobilized 194!&gt;, and trained at Camp Robinson,
Camp Rucker, Ala., Camp Butner, N.C.
Served
in England, France, Luxembourg, and Germany.
Holds Bronze Star, Good Conduct Ribbon, Four
Battle Stars, and holds American Defense Service
Ribbon.
Discharged Oct. 12. 1945.
BROWN, DONALD A.
EL 3 / c Donald A. Brown, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Dorance G. Brown .
Entered Navy Feb. 1944.
Trained at Farragut, Idaho and Memphis, Tenn.
Served in Philippines.
Now on duty on Boat
Island in the Phtli pp ine s.

BROWN, JAMES P.
1st Lt. James P. Brown, son of Mr. and Mrs.
FrankL. Brown.
Wife, former Zita Ann Lowry.
Entered ft.rmy Air Force 1942.
Trained at Enid,
Oklahoma and San Antonio, Ft. Worth, Victoria, Texas.
Now on duty at Dayton, Ohio.
BROWN, JOY PEARL
Sgt. Joy Pearl Brown, son of Charles E. Brown.
Entered Army Air &lt;:orps, Dec., 1942·
Trained
at St. Petersburg, Fla. Sioux Falh, S. D. and
Kearns, Utah.
Served in Australia, Dutch New
Guinea and Philippines.
Has entertained with
his Ventriloquist Act and Magic in camps and
hospitals.
Now on Leyte, Philippines.
13

�BROWN, SIU.S C.
Lt. ·silas C. Brown, "on of Mr. and Mrs. Silas
-F. Brown.
Wife, former Helen Gomez.
Entered
Navy Feb. 1943.
Tra' ined at Princeton Univ.
Served in England, France, Ireland, Russia,
Italy, South America, Alaska, Wales, Scotland,
French Morocco, North Africa, Algeria, Sicily,
Corsica, Alaska.
Holds American Theatre Rib·
bon, Asiatic Pacific Theatre Ribbon, 2 Battle
Stars, Victory Meda 1--World War I I.
BROWN, W. GLEN
1st Sgt. W. Glen Brown, SOP of Fr.ed J. Brown.
Wife, Clara Brown .
Enter.:d Army Feb. 1941.
Trained at Camp Wallace, Camp Davis, Camp Haan.
Served at England, France, Germany, Holland,
Belgium
Holds Good Conduct Medal, Bronze
Star, 4 Battle Stars,
Now enroute home.
BRUBAKER, ALVIN G.
Av. Cadet Alvin G. Brubaker, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Lanty Brubaker.
Entered Naval Aviation
in Nov. 1943.
Trained at Maryville, Mo., V-12
Unit, NlA.S . Terminal Island, USNPFS St. Mary's
Calif., NAS Glenview .
Released to Inactive
Duty.
BRUBAKER, CLARK
Cpl. Clark Brubaker, son of Mrs. Brubaker of
Michigan Valley, Ks .
Entered Army July, 1941·
Trained at Ft. ~iley.
Served in India.
Holds
Good Conduct Medal.
Now on duty at Calcutta,
India.

BRUMFIELD, JAMES E.
S.C. 3/c James E· Brumf i eld, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Brumfield.
Wife, former Blanch K. Willis.
Entered Na·vy 1944.
Trained at Farragut, Idaho.
Now on duty at San Bruno, Calif.

BRUNE, CARL E.
S 2/c Carl E. Brune, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Brune.
Entered Navy in 1943.
Trained at Far·
ragut, Idaho .
Served in Japan, Philippines,
Hawaii.
aUCK, PERRY 0 . JR.
Pfc. Perry 0. Buck Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs.
Perry 0. Buck Sr.
Wife, former Alice Ann
Harmon. · Entered Marines June 1944. Trained at
San Diego, Camp Pendelton, Calif.
Served at
Pearl Harbor, Mauia, Roi Numur, Siapan, Tinian,
Iwo Jime.
Holds Pur~;~le Heart, Presidential
Citation, Asiatic-Pacific American Theater of
War, Major Battle Bronze Star •
Wounded March
3, 1944 on Iwo Jime.
Now at Great Lakes Naval
Ho~p i tal.
BUERMAN, EVERETT LEROY
Cpl. Everett LeRoy Buerman, son of Mr. S'nd Mrs.
Edward Buerman.
Wife, former Ruth G. Colma n .
Entered Army Air Corps Sept. 1942. Trained at
Kearns, Utah, Glendale, Calif., and Perri n
Field, Texas.
Now on duty at Chanute Field,
Ill.
aUMGARDNER, EDWARD S.
.
T;Sgt. EdwardS. Bumgardner, son of Dr. and
Mrs. Edward Bumgardner.
Entered Army Air
Forces Nov., 1942·
Trained at Miami Beach ,
Fla., Buckley Field, Colo., Indianapolis, Ind.
and Clovis, N. Mexico.
Holds Good Conduct
Medal and assi~nment to confidential mission
and secret duties.
Now at Santa Ana, Cal if.
BURCHETT, PAUL R.
T/5 Paul R. Burchett, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Burchett.
Entered Army, Aug., 1942·
Trained
at Seattle, Washington and Prince Rupert,
Canada.
Served in Canada and Alaska.
Holds
Asiatic and Pacific Ribbons, American Defense
Ribbon and Good Conduct Medal.
Discharged
Oct. 1 7, 1945·
14

�BURGESS ARDEN D.
F 2/C Arden D. Burges ,s, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Edwin T. Burgess.
Entered Navy, Nov., 1944·
Trained at Great Lakes, Ill.
Now on duty at
Honolulu.
BURGESS, EDWIN R.
T;Sgt. Edwin R. Burgess, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Edwin T. Burgess.
W·ife, former Constance
North.
Entered Army August 6 1 1'942·
Trai'ned
at Camp Roberts, Calif. I camp Stoneman, Calif.
Camp John T. Knight, Calif. and Ft. Lawton,
Washin~ton. Served in European-African Theater
and Astatic-Pacific Theater.
Holds Good Conduct Medal.
Now on duty at Calcutta, India.

BURGESS, ERVIN T .
Cox. Ervin T. Burgess, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ervin 0. Burgess.
Entered Navy Dec. 7, t943.
Trained at Farragut, Idaho.
Served in all
areas in Pacific on . a repair ship.
Now on duty
in Pacific.

BURGEaS, WILLIAM JAY
Pvt. Wd liam Jay Burgess, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Edwin T. Burgess.
Entered Air Corps, June,
1943· 'Trained at Miami Beach, Fla.
Discharged Aug. 18, 1943·

BURRIS, NORWIN J.
Cpl. Norwin J. Burris, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Orville E. Burris.
Wife, former Alwilna W.
Thiry. Entered Army June, 1943.
Trained at
Camp Callen, Ft. Bliss, Texas.
Served in
Pacific Theate· r.
Now on duty at Manila.

BURTON, VINCENT F.
CPO Vincent F. Burton, son of Mrs. Virginia
Hargett.
Wife, former E. Virginia Williams,
Entered Navy 1942.
Trained at Norfolk, Va.
Served in Bermuda.
Discharged Sept. 1945.

BUSCH, JESS L.
TIS Jess L. Busch, son of Henry Busch.
Wife,
former Vivian O'Harra.
Entered Army 1942.
Trained at Camp Phi 11 ips, Fort Benning, Camp
McCa.in, Miss.
Served in Scotland, England,
France, Germany, Belgium, Czechoslovakia.
Holds Presidential Citation, French Unit Citation, Good Conduct Ribbon, 4 Campaign Stars,
received dis~harge.
BUSSE I JAMES D.
Pfc. James D. Busse, son of Mrs. Edith Busse.
Wife, former Irene Larkins.
Entere.d Army in
1942. Trained at Ft. Riley.
Served in England,
Scotland, Germany and France.
Holds Good Conduct Ribbon.
Now on duty at Cherburg, France.

BUTLER, DOUGLAS J.
Sgt. Douglas J. Butler, son of Mr. and. Mrs.
C. Montgomery.
Entered Army Feb. 24, 1942.
Trained at Camp Crowder, Mo.,
Served at
Honolulu.
Holds Good Conduct Ribbon, Asiatic
Pacifi~ Ribbon.
Discharged at Camp Crowder,
Oct. 12, 1945.
BUZICK, PHILIP E.
1st Lt. Philip E. Buzick, son of Mrs. Phyllis
B'uzick.
Wife, former Joy Morrison.
Entered
Army March 1942.
Trained at Camp Davis, N. C.
Served in North Africa, Sardinia, Corsica,
France and Germany.
Holds Bronze Star Medal.
Discharged now on terminal leave.
15

�BURGESS ARDEN D.
F 2/C Arden D. Burges .s, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Edwin T. Burgess.
Enteted Navy, Nov., 1944·
Trained at Great Lakes, Ill.
Now on duty at
Honolulu.
BURGESS, EDWIN R.
TjSgt. Edwin R. Burgess, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Edwin T. Burgess.
W·ife, former Constance
North.
Entered Army August 6, 1942·
Trained
at Camp Roberts, Calif., Camp Stoneman, Calif.
Camp John T. Knight, Calif. and Ft. Lawton,
Washin\!ton. Served in European-African Theater
and As1atic-Pacific Theater.
Holds Good Conduct Medal.
Now on duty at Calcutta, India.

BURGESS, ERVIN T .
Cox. Ervin T. Burgess, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ervin 0. Burgess.
Entered Navy Dec. 7, 1943.
Trained at Farragut, Idaho.
Served in all
areas in Pacific on a reps ir ship.
Now on duty
in Paci fie.

BURGES.S 1 WILLIAM JAY
Pvt. Wllliam Jay Burgess, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Edwin T. Burgess.
Entered Air Corps, June,
1943· 'Trained at Miami Beach, Fla.
Discharged Aug. 18, 1943·

BVRRIS, NORWIN J.
Cpl. Norwin J. Burris, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Orville E. Burris.
Wife, former Alwilna W.
Thiry.
Entered Army June, 1943.
Trained !It
Camp Callen, Ft. Bliss, Texas.
Served ·1n
Pacific Theate' r.
Now on duty at Manila.

BURTON, VINCENT F.
CPO Vincent F. Burton, son of Mrs. Virginia
Hargett.
Wife, former E. Virginia Williams.
Entered Navy 1942.
Trained at Norfolk, Va.
Served in Bermuda.
Discharged Sept. 1945.

BUSCH, JESS L.
T/5 Jess L. Busch, son of Henry Busch.
Wife,
former Vivian O'Harra.
Entered Army 1942.
Trained at Camp Phillips, Fort Benning, Camp
McC~in, Miss.
Served in Scotland, England,
France, Germany, Belgium, Czechoslovakia.
Holds Presidential Citation, French Unit Citation, Good Conduct Ribbon, 4 Campaign Stars,
received disrharge.
BUSSE, JAMES D.
Pfc. James D. Busse, son of Mrs. Edith Busse.
Wife, former Irene Larkihs.
Entere.d Army in
1942. Trained at Ft. Riley.
Served in England,
Scotland, Germany and France.
Holds Good Conduct Ribbon.
Now on duty at Cherburg, France.

BUTLER, DOUGLAS J.
Sgt. Douglas J. Butler, son of Mr. and Mrs.
C. Montgomery.
Entered Army Feb. 24, 1942.
Trained at Camp Crowder, Mo.,
Served at
Honolulu.
Holds Good Conduct Ribbon, Asiatic
Pacifi&lt;= Ribbon.
Discharged at Camp Crowder,
Oct. 12, 1945.
BUZICK, PHILIP E.
1st Lt. Philip E. Buzick, son of Mrs. Phyllis
B'uzick.
Wife, former Joy Morrison.
Entered
Army March 1942.
Tr 'ained at Camp Davis, N. C.
Served in North Africa, Sardinia, Corsica,
France and Germany.
Holds Bronze Star Medal.
Discharged now on terminal leave.
15

�BYRN, JOHN B.
T/4 John B. Byrn, son of Mrs. D. Coen Byrn.
Wife, former Frances J. Mee.
Entered Army
Medical Corps March, 1942.
Tra'ined at Wil·
mington, California.
Served in India, France,
England, British Columbia, Australia, Tasmania.
Holds Asiatic Pacific and E.T.O. Area Ribbons,
1 Battle Star.
Now on duty at Ft. Dix, N.J.
BYRN, MARTHA B.
Lt. (ig) Martha B. Byrn, daughter of Mrs.
Grace Byrn.
Entered Navy Nurse Corps, March,
1943·
Trained at Great Lakes, Ill.
Now on
duty at Farragut, Idaho.
CAIN, BILLIE B .
R.M. 2/c Billie B. Cain, son of Mr. and Mrs.
William Cain.
Wife, former Betty Leighton,
Entered Navy (Submarine) July, 1940.
Trained
at Chicago, Ill. New London, Conn. Phila·
delphia, Penn.
Served at Pearl Harbor, Aus·
tralia, New Zealand, Panama Canal.
Now on
duty at Midway as Radio Watchman.
CANTWELL, DANIEL A. (CLIFTON)
R T/2 Daniel A. (Clifton) Cantwell, friend of
Mrs. J. S. Stover.
Entered Navy Feb. 1943.
Trained at Farragut, Idaho, San Diego, Calif.
Served in Pacific Is lands.
Now on duty at
Okinawa.
CARLOS , DON F.
Don F. Carlos, son of Mr, and Mrs. Don F.
Carlos.
Entered Navy July, 1943.
Trained at
Oberlin College, Ohio, Northwestern Univ.
Served in Hawaii, Solomons, Marianas, Carolines,
Admiralties, Philippines, Okinawa, Korea,
China.
Now on duty in Pacific.
CARTER, ELWIN R .
Pfc, Elwin R. Carter, son of Mr. and Mrs. N.
S. Carter.
Wife, former Virginia Hadl. Entered
Army August, 1944.
Trained at Camp Robinson,
Ft. Mead'!, Camp Kilmer.
Served in France,
Germany.
Holds Infantry Combat Badge, Good
Conduct Ribbon, Presidential Citation, E.T.O.
Ribbon with 3 Battle Stars.
Now on duty at
Camp Butner, N. C.
CATHCART, DONALD L.
Pfc. Donald L. Cathcart, son of Mr. and Mrs.
M. B. Cathcart.
Entered Army Oct., 1942·
Trained at Miami Beach, Fla. and Camp Crowder,
Mo.
Served in Australia, New Guinea, Nether·
lands, East Indies and Philippines.
Was en·
gaged in 4 Major Battles. Asiatic-Pacific Ser·
vice Medal, Philippine Liberation Ribbon with
1 Bronze Star, Good Conduct Medal and Bronze
Arrowhead.
Now is discharged.
CATO, PHIL ROSS
Pfc. Phil Ross Cato, son of Mr. and Mrs.Phil
Cato.
Entered Army June, 1942·
Served in
England, France, Holland and Germany.
Now on
duty at Heidleberg, Germany.
11

11

CAUGHRON, W. C.
PETE
S/S\!t. W. C. 11 Pete 11 Caughron, received his
tratning at Camp Robinson and Camp Rucker.
Transferred to Air Force Oct. 1943.
Served in
France, Belgium, Germany, Holland, Poland,
Russia, Iran, Egypt, Tripoli, and French
Morocco.
Holds D. F. C., Air Medal with 3
Bronze Oak Leaf Clusters, Good Conduct Medal,
Distinguished Unit Badge and American Defense
Service Ribbon.
Discharged Sept. 12, 1945.
CHANDLER, JOHN E.
Major John E. Chandler, son of Mr. and Mrs.
H. E. Chandler.
Wife, former Bertha White.
Entered Army June 1937.
Trained at Ft. Riley,
Camp Polk, La.
Served in Rhineland, Ardennes,
and Central Eirope.
Holds E.T.O . Ribbon with
3 Bronze Stars,American Defense Ribbon, Bronze
Star with Oak Leaf Cluster.
Now in Channels
of Separation.
16

�CHAPMAN, FORREST M.
Capt. Forrest M. Chapman, son of Mrs. Carrie
S. Chapman.
Wife, former Alice Hosford.
Entered Army, March, 1942·
Trained at Camp
Berkeley, Texas, Ft. Benning, Ga., Camp White,
Orej.lon and Camp Adair, Oregon.
Served in
Afr1ca and Italy.
Holds ETO Ribbon, Purple
Heart, Combat Inf. Badge, American Theater and
Victory Medal.
Wounded in Action June, 12,
1944, Italy.
Now on duty at Leavenworth, Ks.
CHARBONNEAU, ABRAHAM E.
Pvt. Abraham E. Charbonneau, son of Mr. and
Mrs. L. P. Charbonneau. Wife, former Wilma E.
Petersen.
Entered Army April, 1944·
Trained
at Camp Roberts, Calif, Camo Hood, Texas and
Ft. Sill, Okla.
Holds Good Conduct Medal.
Now is discharged.
CHEEK, VERN IE W.
B.M. 1/c Vernie W. Cheek, son of Mrs. L. M.
Reid.
Wife, former Margaret Dicker.
Entered
Seabees in the Navy Oct., 1943.
Trained at
Camp Peary, Va., Camp Roussean, Calif.
Served
in Hawaiian Islands.
Now on duty at Oahu,
Hawaii.
'
CHIRAFISI, VINCENT L.
S/Sgt. Vincent L. Chirafisi, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Chirafisi.
Entered Army July, 1943.
Trained at Camp Claiborne, La .. Served in Africa
and India.
Holds Bronze Service Star.
Now
on duty at Calcutta, India.
CHRISTIE, ELMER L.
Cpl. Elmer L. Christie, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ray Christie. Entered Army March, 1942· Trained
at Camp Cambell, Ky.
Served in North Africa,
Italy, Naples, Cassino, Anzio, Rome, Po Valley.
Holds Good Conduct Ribbon, 3 Battle Stars.
Now awaiting discharge.
CLARK, WILLIAM M. JR.
Pvt. William M. Clark, Jr., son of Mrs. William
M. Clark, Sr.
Wife, former Elizabeth Christensen.
Entered Army Medical Corps in 1942.
Trained at Camp Barkley, Longview, Texas,
Denver, Colo; Ft. Collins, Colo. Univ. of Utah,
Salt Lake City, Utah; Univ. of Chicago.
Now on
duty at Chicago, Illinois.
CLAY, GEORGE C.
SIC 1/c George C. Clay, son of Mr. and Mrs.
E. C. Clay.
Wife, former Adelaide Howard.
Entered Navy June, 1942·
Trained at Seabees
Base, Norfolk, Va.
Served in Hawaii, Elice
Is., Marshalls, and other South Pacific Is.
Holds American Theatre, Asiatic Pacific with
2 Bronze Stars; Good Conduct Ribbon.
Received
Honorable Discharge, Oct. 1945.
CLAY, HARRY W.
Chief Warrant Machinist, Harry W. Clay, son of
Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Clay.
Wife, former Alice
Hauck.
Entered Navy Feb., 1936.
Trained at
San Diego, Calif.
Served in Europe, Russia,
Africa, India, China, Japan, Philippines,
Australia, South America.
In every Major invasion.
Holds Navy Cross, European, Russian,
Asiatic Pacific; Good Conduct Ribbon,
American Defense and more unknown at present.
Now
on duty at Tokio, Japan.
CLAY, JAMES D.
Elec. Mate 2/c, James D. Clay, son of Mr. and
Mrs. E. C. Clay .
Wife, former Elaine Mayers.
Entered Navy May, 1942· Trained at Great Lakes,
Served in Europe; Africa; South America; South
Pacific; Philippines, North Pacific.
Holds
European, American, Asiatic, Pacific Good
Conduct Ribbon.
Received discharge Oct. 1945·
CLAY, ROBERT E.
S/Sgt Robert E. Clay, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. C.
Clay.
Entered Air Corps Sept., 1942·
Trained
at Kearns, Utah; Los Vegas, Nevada, El Paso,
Texas, Lowry Field, Denver, Colo.
Served in
Australia and New Guinea.
Holds Good Conduct
Ribbon; Air Medal with 2 Oak Leaf Clusters;
Asiatic-Pacific with 3 Bronze Stars;
Distinguished Unit Badge with 1 Oak Leaf Cluster.
Received discharge Oct. 8, 1945.

17

�CLOUGH, ROY L.
Pvt. Roy L. Clough, son of Mr. and Mrs. R. L.
Clough.
Entered Army June, 1945.
Trained at
Ft. Bragg, N.C. Now on duty at North Carolina .

ROBERT K.
CLUCHEY
F 1/c Robert K. Cluchey, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Cecil Cluchey.
Entered Navy, SeJt., 1943·
Trained at Farra.gut, Idaho.
Serve
more than
two years in Pacific Theater of War.
Now on
duty in Atlantic.

COBB, DONALD E.
Cpl. Donald E. Cobb, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Everett G. Cobb.
Entered Army May, 1943.
Trained at Camp Barkley, Camp Carson, Camp
Roberts, and Ft. Benning, Ga. Served in France,
Austria, Germany.
Holds E.T.O. Ribbon, ont
Battle Star, Combat Medic Badge.
Now on duty
at Angsberg, Germany.

COBB, EVERETT JR.
Pvt. Everett Cobb, Jr., son of Mr . and Mrs.
Everett G. Cobb.
Entered Army Nov., 1942.
Trained at Camp Maxey, Texas, and now has
received his Med1cal Discharge.

COBB, LYLE W.
Pfc. Lyle W. Cobb, son of Mr. and Mrs. Everett
G. Cobb.
Entered Army Dec., 1943.
Trained at
Camp Crowder, Mo.
Served in England, France,
Belgium, Germany.
Holds E.T.o. Ribbon, Four
Battle Stars, Purple Heart, Good Conduct Ribbon
Wounded in Action Dec. 26, 1944, Belgium.
Not
on duty at Paris, France.
COCHRUN, ARGEL D.
S/Sgt. Argel D. Cochrun, son of Mrs. Len a
Cochrun.
Wife, former Margaret Coffman.
En .
tered Army Dec., 1942. received basic trainin g
Camp Davis, N.c. Further training at Camp
Stewart, Ga.
Holds Good Conduct Medal, Mark·
manship medals in Carbine, Rifle and Machi m
Gun.
Received discharge Oct. 7, 1945.

\..'OE, WAYNE G.
Sgt. Wayne G. Coe, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. G.
Coe.
Wtfe, former Clara Rhodes.
Entered Air
Corps, Feb., 1942·
Trained at Lowry Field,
Colo.
Served in England, France and Belgium.
Holds 3 Battle Stars and ETO Ribbon.
COFER, HARRY H.
Pfc. Harry H. Cofer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Cofer.
Wife, forrner Ella Mae Eubanks.
En·
tered Army Sept . 1941·
Trained at Camp Ord,
Calif., Boise Barracks, Idaho, Geiger Field,
Wash., Ft . Douglas, Utah, Camp Bowie, Texas,
Sheppard Field·, Texas, Keesler Field, Miss.,
Amar i'llo Army Air Field, Texas, Drew Field,
Fla. and Orlando Air Base, Fla.
Discharged
Oct. 24, 1945·
COFER, HERMAN D.
Sgt. Herman D. Cofer, son of Mr. and Mr s .
Harry Cofer.
Wife, former Annette Jenkins .
Entered Army May, 1943·
Trained at Lawren ce
Univ., Washington D. C. and Camp Lewis. Served
in ~ngland, Normandy, France, Germany, Belgium
and Switzerland.
Holds One Battle Star.
Now
at Wm. Be'aumong Hospital, El Paso, Texas.
COFFMAN, CHARLEY L.
S 1/c Charley L. Coffman, son of Mr. R. s.
Coffman.
Wife, former Dorothy Jennings.
En·
tered Navy Dec. 1943·
Trained at Farragut,
Idaho, Treasure Island, Calif.
Served in
Admiralty Is., New Guinea, Philippines, Oki ~
awa, Saipan, · Pearl Harbor, was engaged in ·two
Major Battles, a ·nd now has been discharged.
18

�COFFMAN, LAWRENCE AMBROSE
S/Sgt. Lawrence Ambrose Coffman, son of Mr.
and Mrs. George Coffman.
Wife, former Edith
Miller.
Entered Air eorps April, 1942·
Trained at Ft. Leonard Wood, Mo., Camp Young, Calif.
Served in India, Australia, New Zealand, Egypt,
Libya, Italy and Southern France.
Holds Three
Battle Stars, Good Conduct Medal, European,
African, Middle East, and Asiatic Pacific Ribbons. Discharged Oct. 26, 1945·
COLE, DON B.
Lt. (l'g) Don B. Cole, son of Mr. and Mrs. o.
L. Co e.
Wife, former Ruth Shields.
Entered
Navy Air Corps August, 1942·
Trained.at St.
Mary's, Livermore, Calif., and Corpus Christi.
Now on duty at Wildwood, N. J .
COLE, MAX L.
Pfc, Max L. Cole, son of Mr. and Mrs. D. L.
Cole.
Wife, former Jane Dibert.
Entered
Army Intelligence October, 1943.
Trained at
Amarillo, Texas, A.S.T.U. at Univ. of Minn.
and Camp Ritchie, Md.
Served in England,
France and Germany.
Now on duty at Frankfurt,
Germany with E.T.O. Hdqs.
COLLINS, HENRY B.
Sgt. Henq• B. Collins, son of Mr. and Mrs.
W. I. Colltns.
Wife, former Pearl White.
Entered Army Nov., 1942·
Trained at Camp Phillips, Kansas, Camp McCain, Miss. and Nashville,
Tenn.
Engaged in 4 Major ·Battles in ETO.

COLLINS, ROBERT EUGENE
Pfc. Robert Eugene Collins, son of Mrs. M.G.
Robertson.
Entered Army March, 1942·
Trained
at Ft. Frances Warren, Wyoming , and Camp Stoneman, Calif.
Served in Iran.
Holds Good Conduct Ribbon.
Now on duty at Camp II Iran.

COLMAN, CLARE J .
1st Lt". Clare J. Colman, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Willis R. Colman.
Entered Army in 1942· Trained at Camp Wallace, Texas, Ft. Benning Ga . and
Camp Butner, N. C.
Served in France, Belgium,
Luxembourg, Germany and Austria.
·He wears the
ETO Ribbon, 2 Battle Stars and Combat Inf.
Badge.
Now on duty in Rouen, France.

COMFORT KENNETH JERRY
Kenneth Jerry Comfort, son of Mr. an.d Mrs.
H. Dl Comfort . .Entered U.S. Maritime Service
April, 1945·
Trained at Avalon, Catalina,
Calif.
Served in Marshall Is., Caroline, Is.,
Okinawa, Jokasuka , Japan.
Engaged in action
on Okinawa.
Now on duty at Japan.
CONBOY, WILLIAM A.
Sgt. William A . Conboy, son of Mr. and Mrs.
R. Pl Conboy.
Entered Marine Air Corps, 1943.
Trained at San Diego, Wright Jr . College Chicago
Naval Research Lab. Washington D.C., Cherry
Paint, N.c. Santa Barbara, Calif.
Now on
duty at Pearl Harbor as Radar Technician.
CONFER, MELVIN D.
Pfc. Melvin D. Confer, son of Mr. and Mrs.
S. A. Confer.
Wife, former Virginia Wilson.
Entered Army April 1944,
Trained at Ft. Bliss,
Texas.
Served in Germany, France, Austria,
Italy, Belgium, Africa.
Holds ·Presidential
Citation, Cluster, Three Battle Stars, Allied
Forces Medal, Overseas Medal, Good Conduct,
Gliders Medal.
Now on duty at Ft. Benning, Ga.

CONGER, JOHN L.
Pvt. John L. Conger, son of Agnes J. Conger
and Erie L. Conger, Wichita.
Entered Marines
April, 1944.
Tra.ined at Parris Island, s. c.;
Camp LeJeune, N.C.; Camp Pendleton, Calif.
Now on duty at Hawaiian Islands.
19

�CONNETT, JAMES E.
PhM 2 / c James E . Connett, son of Mr . and Mr
c. A. Connett.
Entered Navy May, 1943·
ed at Farragut, Idaho; and Oakland, Calif
Served in New Caledonia, France, Enimetok
Kwajalein, Admiralties, Saipan, Guam, Iwo Ji
and Okinawa .
The U.S.S. Solace ship wa s awa
ed the Navy Unit.
Now on duty on the u.s.
Solace.
CONNETT, JOHN C. A.
S/Sgt. John C. A. Connett, son of Mr. and
C. A. Connett .
Entered Army March, 194
Trained at Ft. Bliss, Texas, Staten Isla
N. Y . Camp Stewart, Ga., Camp Stoneman, Cal
Served in Australia, New Guinea, Philippi
Now on duty at Manils.
CONSTANT, KENNETH H .
Lt. Col. Kenneth H. Constant, son of Mrs.
Charles H . Constant.
Wife, former Lucille
Berry.
Entered Army August, 1942·
Trained
at Univ. of Kansas, Northwestern Univ. of
New York and Columbia Univ.
Now on duty in
Newark, New Jersey.
COOK, BRUCE E . .
S;Sgt. Bruce E. Cook, son of Mr. and Mrs. Will
Cook.
Wife, former Lucille Dyer.
Entered
Army Jan., 1941·
Trained at Ft. Ord, Calif.
and Camp Hood, Texas.
Served in England,
France, Germany, Belgium, Holland, Austria and
Checkoslovakia.
Holds 4 Battle Stars, Purple
Heart and Two Oak Leaf Clusters.
Now is dis·
charged.
Wounded in Action Dec. and March,
1944 and 1945 in Germany.
COOK, GAYLE E.
Pvt. Gayle E . Cook, son of Mr. and Mrs. Murlin
L. Cook.
Entered Army, 1945·
Trained at
Lincoln Univ., St . Agri. College, S. D . and
now at Camp Fannin, Texas.
Recommended for
Japanese Language School.
Holds Sharpshooters
Meda 1.

COOK, RICHARD L.
Capt. Richard L. Cook, son of Mr. and Mrs
Charles L. Cook.
Wife, former Louise A
Spalding.
Entered Army 1943.
Trained at
Robinson, Camp San Luisobispo , Calif. , Fo
Ord, Calif.
Served at Attau , Adak, Kiska
Amchitka, Hawaii, Kwajalein, Saipan, Iwo Jime
Okinawa, Guam.
Now on duty at Guam.

COOPER, VIRGIL E .
Pvt. Virgil E . Cooper, son of Mr . and Mrs .
E . R. Cooper.
Entered Army June, 1945.
Trai~
ed at Camp Robertson.
Now on duty at Camp
Robertson.

COREL, CHARLES WESLEY
A.M . M. 2 / C Charles Wesley Corel entered the
Naval Air Force as a Mechanic, Oct. 18. 1942·
Served for 2 years on the Gilbert and Marshall
Is.

COREL, EUGENE WILLIAM
Pfc . Eugene Williamcorel entered Marines Nov.
• 1943 and left for overseas Dec. 1943·
Served
on Guam and was with the floating reserve at
Iwo Jima.
CORREA, GERALD H.
S.M. 2/c Gerald H. Correa, son of Mr. and M
0 . H. Correa.
Entered Navy Dec . , 1942·
Tra
ed at Great Lakes, Brooklyn and Noroton Hei
Conn .
Served in Trinidad, Brazil, Argent
Kenya, Iran, India, Ceylon, Algeria, Newfou
land, Cuba.
Holds American European, Paci
Philippine Good Conduct.
Now on duty in Phi
ippines.
20

�CORY, RICHARD W.
Pfc. Richard W. Cory, son
Entered Air Corps, May,
Sheppard Field, Randolph
Field.
Discharged Nov. 5,

of Mrs. C. E. Cory.
1944·
Trained at
Field and Keesler
1945·

CORY, WARD E.
Capt. Ward E. Cory, son of Mrs. C. E. Cory.
Wife, former Dorothy P. O'Malley.
Entered
Air Corps, Feb., 1941·
Trained at Hicks Field,
Goodfellow Field and Barksdale Field.
Served
in Africa, India, S.A. Australia, Philippines,
Okinawa, Guam, Saipan and Japan.
Now on duty
at Wash. D. C., Air Transport Command.

COURTER, PAUL DAVID
1st Lt . Laul David Courter, son of Mr. and Mrs.
P. E. Courter.
Entered Air Transport Command
June, 1943.
Trained at Dayton, Ohio, New York,
N. y. Long Beach Calif.
Served in London,
England, Rome, Italy, Paris, France.
Now on
duty at Istres, France.

COX, CLAUDE R .
Sgt. Claude R. Cox, son of Mr. and Mrs. J . O .
Cox.
Wife, former Marie McPheeters.
Entered
Air Corps, 1943·
Trained at Kearns, Utah,
Chanute Field, Ill. and Chatham Field, Ga .
Discharged Oct 5, 1945·

COX, FLOYD H. JR.
Cpl. Floyd H. Cox Jr., son of Mrs. Mae Cox.
Enteeed Army Air Corps Oct., 1942 .
Trained at
Brooksfield, Texas, Gulsport, Miss, Liberal,
Kans, Chanute Field, Ill.
Kearns, Utah .
Left
for Overseas Oct 21, 1945·

COX JOSEPH J .
Cpl. Joseph J . Cox, son of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer
E . Cox.
Wife, former Flo renee Hammond.
Entered Army · Aug. 12, 1941·
Trained at Fort
Bragg, N. C. Camp Blanding, Fla., Camp Shelby,
Miss., Ft. Sill, Okla, Ft. Ord, Calif, Camp
Young, Calif, and Ft. Leonard Wood, Mo.Served
in England, France, Belgijm and Germany. Holds
American De-fense, Good Conduct. Engaged inETO
Campaigns.
Now discharged.

COX, ROBERT R.
F 1/ c Robert R. Cox, son of Mrs. Mae Cox. Entered Navy June, 1944·
Trained at San Diego.
Served at New Guinea, Leyte, Okinawa, and
Philippines. Now on duty on U.S.S. Point Cruz.

CRADY, HAROLD L.
S / S~t. Harold L. Crady, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Lou1s w. Crady.
Wife, former Helen Banks.
Entered Army May, 1943.
Trained at Camp Stoneman.
Served at New Guinea, Leyte, Philippines.
Now on duty at Leyte.

CRADY, LOUIS W. JR.
Pfc. Louis W. Crady, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs.
Louis w. Crady.
Wife, former Vivian Goodrich.
Entered Army July, 1944.
Trained at Camp
Roberts.
Served 1n Leyte, Mindanao, Phi 1 ippines, Japan.
Now on duty at Japan.
CRADY, TEDDY DALE
F 1/ c E.M . Teddy Dale Crady, son of Mr. and
Mrs . Dale Crady. Wife, former Mary Ann Peterson
Entered Navy March 1944.
Trained at Farragut,
Idaho , S hoe make r , Ca 1 i f •
S e r v e d i n Pea r 1
Harbor, Carolines, Guam, Philippines,Marianas,
Okinawa, China. Holds American Theatre, Asiatic
Pacific Area, Liberation of Philippines .
Now
on duty at Shanghai, China.
21

�CRAIG, ARNOLD J.
Pfc. Arnold J. Craig, son of Mr. and Mrs. L.~
Craig.
Wife, former Marjorie Cass.
Entered
Army .Nov., 1942·
Trained at Ft. Bragg, N.C.
and Ft. Sill, Okla.
Served in Iceland, Eng·
land, France, Luxembourg ·, Belgium, Germany and
Czechoslovakia.
Holds Silver Star and ETO
Ribbon.
Now discharged.
CRAIG, GERALD E.
Pvt. Gerald E. Craig, son of Mr. and Mrs. L.M.
Craig .
Wife, former Nealie Jardon.
Entered
Army April 19, 1945·
Trained at Ft. Lewis,
Wash.
Now at Ft. Beale, Calif.

CRANE, JAMES A.
Sgt. James A. Crane, son of Mrs. Jennie R.
Crane, and the late Clarence E. Crane.
En·
tered Air Corps Sept., 1943.
Trained at Jef·
ferson Barracks, Chanute Field, Salt Lake Ctty,
a n d H a r v a r d , Nebraska .
Served in Tin ian.
Holds 2 Battle Stars .
Now on duty at Tinian.
CRANE, ORVILLE F.
S/Sgt. Orville F. Crane, son of Mrs. Jennie R.
Crane and the late Clarence E. Crane.
En·
te red Air Corps March 1944.
Trained at Shep·
pard , Field, Lowry Field, A.A.F. Harvard, Nebr.
Served in Tinian, Saipan, Oahu,Gen. Hospital,
where he is now stationed. Wounded May 19,
1945, over Tinian.
Holds the Purple Heart.

CRAWFORD, WALTER I.
Sgt. Waller I. Crawford, son of Dr. and Mrs.
C. I. Crawford.
Entered Army Aug., 1942·
Trained at Camp 'Berkeley, Texas and Ft. Ben•
ning, Ga.
Served in Australia, New Zealand,
Arabia, Ethiopia and now is on duty at Cairo,
Egypt.

CREE, GLENN R.
Sgt. Glenn R. Cree, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ra
m on d T . C r e e •
Wi f e , f or me r G 1 ad y s We s ten.
Entered Air Corps June, 1942.
Trained al
Miami, Fla., Kansas City, Mo. Stinson Field,
Texas, Buckley Field, Colo, Kearns, Uta,
Served at Oran, Africa, Italy. Holds t
Presidential Citation, now has received
discharge.

CRIPE, DEWEY I.
Pfc. Dewey I. Cripe, son of Mr. and Mrs. I.
Cripe.
Entered Army Infantry August 1
Trained at Camp Fanning, Texas.
Ft. Geor
Maryland.
Served at England, France, Belgi
Germany.
Holds Good Conduct Ribbon.
Now
duty·at France.

CRISS, WILBUR M.
Cpl. T/5 Wilbur M. Criss, son of Gladys
Leaman.
Wife i for mer Wilma Turner.
Ente
Army Nov. · 9, 1942.
Trained at Camp Funst
Desert Training Center, Calif., Camp Po
La.
Served in England, France, Germany.
Ho
Bronze Star, Good Conduct, Eame Ribbon, Thr
Battle Stars.
Discharged Oct. 24, 194
CROOKS, OTIS V.
Sgt. Otis V . Crooks, son of Mattie Crooks
Wife, former Hazel Brown.
Entered servi
March 1943.
Trained at Stillwater, Okla.
Salt Lake City, Pyote, Texas.
Served in Ind'
Now enroute home .
CROWN, JOHN P .
Pfc. John P . Crown, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ernes
Crown.
Wife, former Irma Jeanne Shields. En
tered Army November, 1942·
Trained at Ca
Wallace, Texas, Camp Howze, Texas .
Served
France, Germany, Austria and Italy.
Holds
Ribbon with 3 Battle Stars.
Now at Camp Ca
bell, Kentucky.

22

�CRUM, JOHN P.
T/Cpl. John P. Crum, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse
C. Crum.
Wife, former Betty 1 Gibler.
Entered
Army Sept. 1942.
Trained at Camp Wallace,
Camp Davis, ·N.C.
Served at Africa, · Sicily,
Sardinia, Germany, Corsica, France,AlsaceLorraine, Austria.
Holds Good Conduct Medal,
Bronze Star, Eame Ribbon, Three Battle Stars.
Discharged Sept. 24, 1945.
CRUME!, DONALD E.
Sgt. Donald E. Crumet, husband of the former
Lenora Hardtarfer.
Entered Army Infantry
March, 1943.
Trained at Camp Blanding, Fla.,
Camp Robinson, Camp Rucker, Fort Meade, Camp
Kilmer, N. J.
Served in England, France·, Germany, Belgium, Czechoslovakia, Luxembourg.
Holds Good C.,onduct Ribbon, Combat Infantrf
Badge, E.T.O. Ribbon with 4 Stars, Presidentia
Citation.
Now is Disc ha r ge d.
CRUMET, EARL R.
S 1/c Earl R. Crumet, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Edward Crumet.
Wife, former Viola J. Elliott.
Entered Navy May, 1944. Trained at Gulfport,
Miss.
Served in Cuba, South America, New
Guinea, Admiralties, Philippine Is.
Now on
duty at Manila.
CUMMINGS, ROBERT L.
Capt. Robert L. Cummings, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Wm. J. Cummings.
Wife, former Lillian Strickland.
Entered Air Corps, 1941·
Trained at
West Coast.
Served on lwo Jima and I. E.
Shima. Engaged in 2 Major Battles in Pacific
Theater. Now on duty in Pacific Theater.
CUMMINGS WILLIAM J.
Col. Wifliam J. Cummings, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Wm. J. Cummings.
Wife, former Donna Dae
Cooper. Entered Air Corps, 1937•
Trained at
Randolph Field, Texas.
Served in Philippines,
Australia, New Guinea and ETO.
Holds DFC,
Silver Star and Air Medal.
Nom on duty in
USA.

DALTON CURTIS W.
Cpl. Curtis W. Dalton, son of Mr. W. B. Dalton.
Wife, former Cleda Haight.
Entered Army July,
1942· Trained at Camp Crowder, Mo.
Served 1n
New Guinea, Philippines and Japan.
Holds
Philippine Liberation Ribbon.
Now discharged.

DALTON, LORI NO D . •
Sgt. Loring D. Dalton, son of Mr. W. B. Dalton.
Wife, former Dorothy Young.
Entered Army
Oct., 1942·
Trained at Foster Field, Texas.
Holds Good Conduct Medal.
Now on duty at
Williams Field, Ariz.

DANIELS, ALVIN
S 2/c (SKT) Alvin Daniels, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Levi W. Daniels,
Entered Navy Feb., 1945.
Received basic training at San Diego, further
training at Harrisburg, Pa.
Now enroute to
Shanghai, China.

DANIELS, CARL R.
S;Sgt. Carl R. Daniels, son of Mr. and Mrs.
John Daniels.
Entered Air Corps, Dec., 1941·
Trained at Camp Roberts, Calif., Lowry Field,
Colo., Las Vegas, Nev. and Dyersherg, Tenn.
Accomplished 31 heavy Bomber Missions in ETO
Holds ETO Ribbon with 4 Bronze Stars, Air
Medal with 3 Oak Leaf Clusters and DFC. Now
discharged Sept. 1945·
DANIELS, CLARENCE
S 1/c Clarence Daniels, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Levi W. Daniels.
Entered Navy Aug., 1944.
Received basic training at Great Lakes, further
training at Fort Pierce, Fla., New Port R.I.
Now enroute to Japan.

23

�DANIELS, KENNETH E.
T;s Kenneth E . Daniels, son of Mr. and Mrs.
John Daniels.
Entered Army July, 1943· Train·
ed at Camp Haan, Calif., Camp Irwin, Calif.
and Ft. Bliss, Texas .
Served in England,
France, Belgium, Holland and Germany where he
is now on duty.
DANIELS, LEVI W.
S 1/c Levi W. Daniels, son of Mr.
Levi W. Daniels.
Wife, former Phyllis Sanf
Entered Coast Guard 1943.
Trained at Cur
Bay, Maryland.
Engaged in five Major Batt
in the Pacific Theater.
Now on duty on
L.S.T. 67.
DANIELS, LLOYD C.
Sgt. Lloyd C. Daniels, son
George Daniels.
Wife, former
Entered Air Corps Sept. 1943, reenlisted Oct.
1945.
Trained at Sheppard Field, Texas,
merField, Calif.
Holds Good Conduct Meda
Sharpshooter, Carbine.
Now on duty at Mur
Army Air Field, Calif.
DANIELS, ROSCOE N.
SjSgt. Roscoe N. Daniels, son of Mr. and Mrs.
John Daniels.
Wife, former Margaret Rivers.
Entered Army July, 1942 ·
Trained at Ca
Carson, Colo., Camp Roberts, Calif. and Ca
Butner, N. C.
Served in England, France
and Germany.
Now on duty in France.

DANTLEY, ARTHUR
S I S g t . A r t h u r Da n t 1 e y , s on o f Mr •
Lincoln Dantley.
Wife, former Willa E. Payt
Entered Aviation Engineers Sept., 1943 . Trai
at March Field, Calif., served in the Pacif
Hawaiian Is., Palau Is., and Marianas.
Ho
One Battle Star, Good Conduct Medal.
Now
duty at Guam.

DAVAULT, ELLSMERE M.
P.O . 3/c Ellsmere M. Davault, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Wesley Davault.
Wife, former Ada Spring.
Entered Navy April, 1944.
Trained at Far•
ragut, Idaho, attended diesel school at Ames,
Iowa.
Served in Pacific, Tokio, Japan, and
China.
Holds Silver Star and 2 bars to his
credit for heroism in Pacific Theater.
Now
on duty at Guam and China.
DAVAULT, WILBUR E.
T/Sgt. Wilbur E. Davault, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Wesley Davault.
Entered Army in Sprinl( of
1942·
Trained at Camp Grant, I l l . , Med1cal
School, Beaumont Gen. Hospital, Texas.
Served
in Pacific Theater . Holds Good Conduct Ribbon,
and Asiatic-Pacific Theater Ribbon with One
Battle Star.
Now on duty at Army Evacuation
Hospital, Southwest Pacific.
DAVENPORT, HARLEY A.
Pvt. Harley A· Davenport, son of Mr. and Mrs
Charlie A. Davenport.
Wife, former Mabe
Robinson.
Entered Air Corps March, 1944
Trained at Sheppard Field, Texas, Fresno
Calif., and now has received his discharge

DAVENPORT, WAYNE A.
Cpl. Wayne A. Davenport, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Charlie A. Davenport.
Entered Air Cor
April, 1944, trained at Sheppard Field, Texas
Lowry Field, Colo., Alamogordo, N. Mexico
Served in Tinian, Marianas, Japan, Iwo Jime
Tokio.
Holds Two Battle Stars.
Now on du
at Tinian.
DAVIS, ALFRED P.
Cpl. Alfred p, Davis, son of M~s. Kathr
Davis, entered Air Corps Jan., 1943.
Train
at Miami Beach, Boston, Niagara Falls, Kearns,
Utah.
Served in New Guinea, Admiralty Js.,
Halmahera, Leyte.
Holds Four . Battle Stars,
Good Conduct Medal.
Now on duty at Leyte.

24

�DAVIS, CHARLES S. JR.
1st Lt. ·charles s. Davis Jr., son of Mrs.
Charles Davis.
Wife, Belle Davis.
Entered
National Guards Dec., 1940.
Trained at Camp
Robinson, Ft. Benning, Ft. Forest, Tenn.
Fort Leonard Wood, Mo.
Served in Ireland,
Normandy, France,. Rhineland, Germany. Holds
Purple Heart and 3 Campaign Service Stars.
Wounded Aug . . 1944.
Now awaiting discharge.
DAVIS, CLIFFORD T.
S/Sgt. Clifford T. Davis,. son of Mr. and Mrs.
J.R. Davis.
Wife, former Josephine M. Votaw.
Entered Army Dec. 1940 .
Trained at Camp
Robinson, Camp Butner, N.C . Served in England,
France, Belgium, Luxembourg, Germany,
Hold~
Certificate of Merit, Good Conduct Medal,
ETO Ribbon, Five Campaign Stars.
Discharged
Aug . 10, 1945.
DAVIS EDWARD L.
1st it. Edward L. uavis, son of Mr. and Mrs.
W. W. Davis.
Wife, former Norma Sue Corson.
Entered Air Corps , Jan. , 1942·
Trained at Ft.
Leavenworth, Miami Beach, Fla . and Maxwell
Field, Ala.
Now on duty at Moody Field, Ga.

DAVIS, GLENN E .
Pvt .. Glenn E . Davis, son of Mr. and Mrs . C.L .
Davis , entered A r my March, 1945.
Trained at
Camp Maxey, Texas , Fort Warren, Wyo.
Now on
duty on Saipan.

DAVIS , HOWARD L.
Pvt. Howard L. Davis, son of Lucius L Davis.
Entered Army, 1943 ·
Trained at Camp Wolters ,
Texas. Served in North Africa and Italy. Holds
Purple Heart, 1 Battle Star, Combat Inf. Medal
and Good Conduct Ribbon .
Wounded Feb. , 1944
in Anzio, Italy .
Now dischar.ged.
DAVIS, JOHN L .
Pfc. John L. Davis, son of Mr. and Mrs. C . L .
Davis, entered Marines Nov., 1942.
Trained at
San Diego, Camp Elliott .
Served in Australia,
New Zealand, Tarawa, Saipan, Tinian, Hawaii.
Holds Presidential Citation, Asiatic-Pacific
Campaigns with Three Battle Stars, American
Theatre Campaign.
Wounded Aug., 1944, Tinian,
•nd is now discharged .
DAVIS , LEONARD W.
M/ Sgt. Leonard w. Davis, son of Mr. and Mrs.
J. R . Davis, e·ntered Army QMC Nov., 1942·
Trained at Camp Hale, Colo.
Served in Western
Canada.
Holds Good Conduct Medal. Now on duty
at Camp Glassboro, N; J.

DAVIS, ROY E.
SK 3/ c Roy E. Davis, son of Mr. and Mrs. J.R.
Davis.
Wife, former Maxine Cobb.
Entered
Navy April, 1944, trained· at Farragut, Idaho .
Served at Attu, Alaska.
Holds American Defense, Asratic Pacific Ribbon.
Now on duty
at Attu, Alaska.
DAVISON BILL L.
P f c • B i 1 1 L . Da vi s on , son o f M r • and M r s .
Leslie Davison.
Entered Army Air Corps, June,
1943·
Trained at Miami Beach, Fla. and Camp
Barclay, Texas.
Served in India, China and
Panama.
Holds Bronze Star and Good Conduct
Medals.
Now on duty at China.
DAVISON, ELVIN E.
Pfc. Elvin E. Davison ., son of Mr. and Mrs.
Leslie Davison.
Entered Marines, Jan., 1944·
Trained at San Diego and Camp Pendleton, Calif.
Served in Hawaiian Is., Saipah, Tinian, Maui
and Iwo Jima .
Holds Asiatic-Pacifi.c, American
Theater Ribbons, Presidential Citation and 3
Battle Stars. Wounded in Action Feb. 23, 1945.
and March 4, 1945 on Iwo Jima.
Now is discharged.

25

�DAVISON, FRANCES M.
Lt. Frances M. Davison, parents Mr. and Mrs.
John J. Davison. Entered service with Physical
Therapy, July, 1944.
Trained at Bushnell Gen.
Hospital, Utah, Nichols Gen . Hospital , Ky.
where she is now on duty .
DAVISON, JOHN J . JR.
Sgt. John J. Davison Jr., son of Mr . and Mrs.
John J. Davison, entered Army Air Corps July,
1943.
Trained at Jefferson Barracks, Santa
Ana, Denver, Kingman, Ariz., Avon Park, Fla.
Has served in England .
Now on duty at Tampa,
Fla.
DAVISON, LESLIE V.
S/Sgt. Leslie v. Davison, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Leslie Davison.
Wife, former Lenora Hamlet.
Entered Army Infantry 1940.
Trained at Lil!tle
Rock, San Luis Abispo, Camp ~cker, Camp
Butner, N. C. Served in England, France, Ger·
many, Holland, Belgium, Luxembourg.
Holds
Purple Heart with 2 Oak Leaf Clusters, Good
Conduct, Combat Inf. Badge 5 Battle Stars,
Pre -Pear 1 Harbor ,and ETO Ribbon. Now discharged
DAWES, GLENN CARLYLE
SjSgt. Glenn Carlyle Dawes, entered Army Air
Corps, Aug. 1943· Served in Rumania, Bulgaria,
Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Yqgoslavia,
Switzerland, Italy, Germany, Africa, S. Ameri·
ca and Puerto Rico.
Awarded ETO ribbon with
battle stars, Air Medal with two Oak-Leaf
clusters and a Unit Citation.
Was discharged
Oct. 14, 1945•
DAWES, RICHARD J.
SjSgt. Richard J. Dawes, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Glenn A. Dawes.
Wife, former Elinore virginia
Simmons. Entered Army Air Corps, 1942·
Trai~
ed at Camp Chaffee, Ark., Gulfport Field,
Miss, Keesler Field, Miss . , Moore Field,Texas,
Univ . of Mo., and Camp Van Dorn, Miss. Served
in France and Germany.
Holds Bronze Star,
Purple Heart and Citation.
Wounded Feb. 25,
1945 in Germany.
Now in hospital in W.Va.
DEAY, HOWARD W.
Howard W. Deay, son of Mr. Walter J. Deay.
Entered Merchant Marines, Sept . , 1945· Train·
ed at Alavon, Calif. and Seattle, Wash. where
he is now on duty.

DEAY, WALTER DUDlEY
Pfc. WaIter Dudley Deay, son of Mr. Walter J,
Deay.
Entered Army Feb., 1942·
'f.-rained at
Camp Howze, Texas and Camp Houston, Texas.
Served in Africa and Italy. Engaged in 3 Majru
Battles.
Awarded Silver Star and Bronze Star.
Killed in Action Oct. 14, 1944 in Northern
Italy.

DERMERITT, LESLIE A.
Pvt. Leslie A. Demeritt, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Leslie J• Demeritt, entered Marines Dec. 1944·
Trained at San Die~o and Camp Pendleton.
Served at Hawaii, Sa 1pan, Okinawa and Japan.
Holds Battle Star's and Sharpshooters Medal.
Now or. duty at Nagasaki, Japan.

DENEWILER, HARRY A. JR.
Lt. Harry A. Denewiler Jr., son of Mr. and
Mrs. Harry Denewiler.
Entered Air Corps
Oct., 1943 .
Trained at Childress, Texas
now on duty at Boca Raton Field, Florida.

DENEWILER , RICHARD D.
S 1/c Richard D. Denewiler, son of Mr . and
Mrs . Harry Denewiler, entered Navy Jan. 1945·
Trained at Great Lakes, I l l .
Served at
Okinawa where he is now on duty.
26

�DESKINS, RUSSELL R.
TjSgt. Russell R. Deskins, son of Roy and
llartha Deskins. Wife, for111.er Nadine Mattingly.
Entered Army Oct., 1941· Trained at Camp
Wallace, Texas.
Served on Marshall Is. and
Caroline Islands.
Now on duty at Okinawa.

DEVENEY, JOHN L.
1st Lt.
ohn L. Deveney, son of Mr. and Mrs.
John L. Deveney.
Entered Service 1943· Trained at Camp Claiborne, La. and New Orleans.
Served in England, France, Belgium, Holland,
Luxembourg, Germany, Austria and now inFrance.

DEWEESE, LESTER L.
Cpl. Lester L. DeWeese, son of Mr. and Mrs.
F. 11. DeWeese.
Wife, former Alice McCormick.
En t e red Army A i r Co r p s , 1 9 4 3 , t r a i ned a t
Amarillo, Texas, Bidaxi, Miss., Casper, Wyo.
Served in Italy, now on duty at Enid, Okla.

DICKEY, SAMUEL FRANKLIN
110 • .M. M. 3/c Samuel Franklin Dickey, son of
Mrs. Pearl Denny.
Wife, former Norma Way.
Entered Navy Sept, 1943. Trained at Farragut,
Richmond, Norfolk, Miami, Mobile.
Served
in Leyte, Luzon and Okinawa.
Now enroute
to United States.

DIETZ, LINAS E.
S/Sgt. Linas E. Dietz, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Rudolf Dietz.
Wife, former Thelma Mae Woodard.
Entered Air Corps Dec. 1940.
Trained
at Camp Robinson, Boise, Idaho, McChord Field,
Wash., Tampa Fla., Clovis, N.M. Walker Field,
Kansas.
Served in Trinidad, Dutch Guinea,.
British Gu i n e a , Sa i pan.
Ho 1 d s D. F. C. , Air
lledsl and 5 Oak Leaf Clusters, Asi -a ticPacific Theater, 3 Battle Stars, American
Theater, One Battle Star, now discharged.
DISSINGER, RAY S.
Cpl. Rays. Dissinger, son of David c. Diss in 11 e r , en t e red Army In fan t r y Apr i 1 , 1 9 4 2 •
Tra1ned at Camp Roberts, Calif.
Served in
Dutch Harbor, Amaknak, Alaska Is.
Received
Asiatic-Paci fie Theater Ribbon.
Killed in
Service Aug. 6, 1943, Dutch Harbor.
DOANE, EUGENE L.
1st Lt. Eugene L. Doane, son of the late Mrs.
Fred W. Doane.
Wife, former Doris Dowers.
Entered Army Dec., 1940, trained at Camp
Robinson, Fort Benning, Camp Blanding.
Served
in England, France, Germany.
Wounded in
Action July 13, 1944, France.
Received discharge Dec. 6, 1944·
DOANE, WILLIAM L.
Ens. William L. Doane, son of the late Mr. and
Mrs. F. W. Doane.
Entered Army in 1940, discharged April 30, 1941·
Entered Merchant
Marines in 1944·
Trained at Sheepshead Bay,
Long Island, Gallups Island andBoston Ha-rbor,
Served in England, France, Italy, North Africa,
Hawaii, Philippines and Guam. Now is discharged.
DOCKERY, RAYMOND T.
T/4 Raymond T. Dockery, husband of the former
Ethel Husten, entered Army Dec., 1943, as a
Medical Technician.
Trained at O'Reilly
Gen. Hospital, Springfield, Mo.
Served in
England, France and Germany.
Was enroute to
Pacific when w,ar ended. Holds One Combat Star.
~ceived Discharge August 28, 1945.
DODDER, CHESTER 0.
S/Sgt. Chester o. Dodder, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Cecil Roy Dodder.
Entered Arm:y Air Force
Feb., 1941, training at Sheppard F1eld, Texas,
Oklahoma City, Kansas City, Indianapolis.
Served in Italy.
Awarded Overseas Ribbons,
E1Q.
Now on duty in Italy.

27

�DODDERIDGE, JAMES H.
Lt. James H. Dodderidge, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Dodderidge.
Entered Army Infantry
July, 1942.
Trained at Fort Benning and
Camp Blanding.
Served in North Africa, Sicily.
Awarded Purple Heart, was killed , in action
July 18, 1943, Sicily.
DODSON, EDWARD W.
Edward w. Dodson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Dodson, entered Navy Feb., 1942·
Trained at
Great Lakes and served in Central· Pacific,
Marshall Is., Gilberts, and now is discharged.

DODSON, LESLIE R.
HA 1/c Leslie R.' Dodson, son of Mrs. Iva C.
Dodson.
Wife, former Orva Roshong, entered
Navy 1943.
Trained at Farragut, Idaho.
Now
on duty at Shoemaker, Calif.

DONNER, LOREN W.
F 1/c Loren w. Donner, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Erve DeLong.
Wife, former Helen Frances
Zwicky.
Entered Navy 1943, training at
Great Lakes, University of Kansas.
Served
in Philippines, Saipan, Japan, Okinawa, Caro·
lines.
Engaged in Six Major Battles.
Now
on duty at Japan.

DOOLITTLE, JOHN H.
1st Lt. Jonn H. Doolittle, son of Mrs. J.D.
Doolittle.
Wife, former Bette Ware.
Entered
Army Signal Corps-Radar, Oct. 26, 1942. Train·
ed at Harvard and M. I.T., Drew Field, Fla.
Served in England, Scotland, France, Belgium,
Holland and Germany.
Holds Four Battle Stars.
Now on duty in Germany.

DOUGAN, ARTHUR W.
M Sp. 2/c Arhhur w. Dougan, son of Mrs. Carrie
E. Dougan.
Wife, former Muriel Amerine.
En·
tered Navy Jan., 1943. Trained at Great Lakes,
Has served in Pacific aboard u.s.S. Enter·
p r i s e , w he r e he i s s e r vi n g a t i: h i s t i me,

DOWDELL, FRANK
P f c . F r a n k Dow de 11 , husband o f t he for mer
Barbara Harding.
Entered Army June, 1943.
Trained at Camp Carson, Colo.
Served in
Netherlands, East-Indies, New Guinea, Biak,
Philippines.
Now on duty at Philippines.

DOWDELL 1 RICHARD L.
Pfc. R1chard L. Dowdell, son of Aggie Dowdell.
Wife, former Edna E. Monroe.
Entered Air
Corps July, 1942·
Trained at Winterfield,
Calif.
Holds Sharpshooter Medal.
Now on
duty at San Francisco, Calif.

DOWDELL, VIRGIL
Sgt. Virgil Dowdell, entered Marines, 1942·
Trained in North Carolina. Served at Iwo Jime,
Hawaiian Is., where he is now on duty.

DOWNING
ELMER L.
Pfc. E~mer L. Downing, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Bett Downing.
Wife, former Iva Pearl Hasty.
En t e red Army Dec • , 1 9 4 3.
T r a in e d at Cam!
Callan, Calif. and Camp Haan, Calif. No1
at a POW Camp at Greenville, Miss.

28

�DRAKE, JOE C.
Sgt. Joe c. Drake, son of Mr. and Mts. Carl
Drake.
Entered Army Dec., 1940.
Trained at
Camp Robinson, Fort Ord, Camp San Luis Obispo.
Camp Rucker, Camp Butner.
Served in England,
France, Belgium, Luxembourg, - Germany.
Engaged in 5 Major Battles.
Discharged Oct. 45.
DRAKE, MAURICE T.
S g t . Ma u r i c e T. Drake , son o f Mr . and Mrs •
William A. Drake.
Wife, former Lois McClung.
Entered Army, March, 1943.
Trained at Ft.
Leonard Wood, Mo: and Camp Breckinridge, Ky.
Served in England, France, Belgium, Holland
and Germany.
Engaged in 4 Major Battles. Now
on duty at Camp Baltimore, France.
DREYER, CLOYD L.
Pfc. Cloyd L. Dreyer, son of Mr. J· H. Dreyer.
Wife, former Helen Deskin.
Entered Army
June, 1944.
Trained at Camp Blanding, Fort
Benning, Ga.
Engaged in Two · Battles.
Served
in Italy.
Now on duty at Camp Carson, Colo.
Holds Good Conduct Medal and Rifelman's Badge.
DUNHAM, FRED H.
Pfc. Fred H. Dunham, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred
J· Dunham.
Wife, former Lola Maxine Norris.
Entered Army Medic Corps, 1943·
Trained at
Camp Barkley, Texas, El Paso, texas. Served in
New Caledonia, Guadalcana 1, Bousanvi lle. Holds
Good Conduct Medal, One Battle Star.
Now on
duty at New Hebrides.

DUNLAP, DAVID E.
S/ Sgt. David E. Dunlap, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Oren D. Dunlap.
Wife, former June Young.
Entere!i Air Corps Dec. 1941.
Trained at
Scott Field, Sioux Falls, Chicago, Muroc,
Calif.
Now on duty at Hdq. Sqdn. China.

DUNLAP, FLOYD R.
Ph M 3/c Floyd R. Dunlap, son of Mr . and Mrs.
Oren D. Dunlap.
Entered Marines Oct., 1943.
Trained at Farragut, Seattle, Camp Pendl-eton.
Engaged in Three Okinawan Campaigns.
Now
on d u t y w i t h 1 s t Me d . Bn . , 1 s t Ma r i n e D i v .

DURR, WILLIAM A.
Pvt. William A. Durr, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Leon Durr.
Entered Mechanized Cavalry,
December, 1944·
Trained at Camp Forsythe,
Fort Riley.
Served at Oahu, Hawaii.
Now on
duty at New Caledonia.
OUVER, CECI L W.
T/5 Cecil w. Duver, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wm.
Duver,
Wife, former Mabel Flory.
Entered
Army Nov., 1942·
Trained at Camp VanDorn,
Miss., Patrick Henry, Va., Camp Anza, Calif.
Served in New Zealand, Australia, In·dia, Iran,
Irak, Palestine, Egypt, N. Africa.
Holds
Good Conduct, ETO, CBI, Expert Rifleman.
Discharged December 19, 1944.
DYER, JAMES C.
Sgt. James c. Dyer, son of Mr. and Mrs. James
Dyer.
Wife, former Rosemary Birdsonp;.
Entered Armf Dec., 1942.
Trained at Wash1ngton,
Camp Koh er, Calif.
Served in New Guinea,
Leyte, East Indies, Philippines, Japan.
First Con~oy to ente~ Tokio, where he 1s now.
DYER, THELMA L.
1st Lt. Thelma L. Dyer, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Walter L. Dyer.
Entered Army Nurse
Corps, March, 1944.
Trained at Camp Carson,
Camp Crowder, Camp Grant.
Served in England,
and France.
Now on duty at Camp Sibert, Ala.

29

�EBERHART, CHARLES N.
T/4 Charles N· Eberhart, son of Mr. and Mrs.
C. L. Eberhart.
Entered Army Nov., 1940.
Trained at Camp Robinson.
Engaged in Five
Major Battles in European Theater.
Discharged
Oct. 15, 1945.

EBERHART, NOAH E.
Pvt. Noah E. Eberhart, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Everett L. Eberhart.
Entered Army May, 1945.
Trained at Camp Livingston, La.
Now on duty
at Ft. Riley, Kansas.

EBERHART, NORMAN E.
S 2/C (CA) Norman E. Eberhart, son of M.r. and
Mrs. Harold E. Eberhart.
Entered Navy Air
Corps July, 1945.
Trained at Memphis , Tenn.,
and Norman, Oklahoma where he is now stationed.

EBERHART, RAYMOND A.
S / Sgt. Raymond A . Eberhart, son of Mr. and
Mrs. George Eberhart Sr.
Entered Army In·
fantry Nov., 1942.
Trained at Camp White,
Camp Adair .
Served in North Africa and Italy.
Wounded Sept., 1944; Killed in Act ion Oct. 3,
1944 near Florence, Italy.

EBERWEIN, ROBERT V.
So. M. 3/c Robert v. Eberwein, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles o. Eberwein.
Entered Navy Nov.,
1943.
Trained at Farragut, San Diego.
Served
in Hawaiian Is., Philippines, okinawa, Japan.
Holds Battle Star for Okinawa Campaign.
Now
on duty at West Coast.

ECKMAN, ALBERT WILLIAM
T/3 Albert William Eckman, son of Mrs. Jennie
Eckman, entered Army August 1942·
Trained at
Fort Lawton, Wash., spent 22 months in Alaska.
Now stationed at Fort Lawton.

ECKMAN, YUDON EDWARD
T/5 Yudon Edward Eckman, son of Mrs. Jennie
Eckman.
Wife, former Helen Zink. Entered Army
Nov., 1942.
Trained at Camp Roberts and Fort
Ord, further training at Ft. Leonard Wood.
Served in France, Germany an'd Belgium.
Holds
5 Battle Stars, Good Conduct Ribbon, Driver's
Ribbon.
Discharged Sept., 1945.
EDLER, JOE H.
Pfc. Joe ·H. Edler, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. A.
Edler.
Entered Army March, 1943.
Trained at
Ft. Leonard Wood, Camp Breckinridge, Ky.
Served in Wales, France, Holland, Germany,
Belgium,
Holds ETO Ribbon with 3 Battle
Stars.
Now on duty in France.

EDMONDSON, DONALD K.
Sgt. Donald K· Edmondson, son of Mr. and Mrs.
H. W. Edmondson.
Wife, former Elizabeth Ann
Bigsby. Enlisted in Army Air Corps Nov., 1942.
Holds Prsddential Citation.
Now enroute to
Pacific .

EDMONDSON, HARRY W. JR.
1st Lt. Harry W. Edmondson Jr., son of Mr. and
Mrs. H. W. Edmondson.
Wife, former Dorothy
LaVerne Blake,
Entered Army Aug;, 1941·
Trained at Ft. Bragg, transferred to Air
Corps.
Instructor B-25 at Turner Field Ga.
Now enroute to Pacific.
30

�ELKIN, OONALD J.
SK 2/c Donald J. Elkin, son of Mrs. W. F.
Elkin.
Wife, former Elizabeth Franklin.
Entered Navy Sept . , 1943, training at Newport,
~hode Island.
Now on duty at Cleveland, Ohio.
ELLIOTT, ARNOLD A.
Cpl. Arnold A. Elliott, son of Mrs. Tom G.
Elliott.
Entered Air Corps, Oct., 1942·
Trained at Sheppard Field, Texas.
Served in
Hawaiian Is.
Now on duty at Oahu, Hawaii.
ELLIOTT, HAROLD F.
S/Sgt. Harold F. Elliott, son of Mr. and Mrs.
c. J. Elliott. Entered Air Corps Dec. 1940,
was discharged · Feb., 1942. Returned to service
Sept. 1943, trained at Amarillo{ Texas, Lardes,
Texas, Muroc, Calif.
Served in Australia,
New Guinea, Philippines.
Holds Air Medal
with Two Clusters and Honorable Membership
of Caterpillar Club.
Discharged Oct., 1945.
ELROD, THEODORE W.
S/Sgt. Theodore w. Elrod, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Winfield Elrod.
Wife, former Alberta E.
Mathia.
Entered Air Corps Oct., 1942. Trained at Sheppard Field, Texas.
Served in England.
Holds Good Conduct Medal, 6 Bronze
Ba t t 1e S t a r s , P r e s i de n t i a 1 · C i t a t i on a n d 2
Oak Leaf Clusters.
Now is discharged.

ELSTON, GEORGE T.
Cpl. George T. Elston, son of Mr. and Mrs.
William Elston.
Wife, former Kathryn Haas.
Entered Service Dec., 1942.
Trained at Camp
Chaffee, Ark., Fort Sill, Okla.
Served in
England.
Received Good Conduct Medal, Two
Ba t t 1 e S t a r s •
He w a s d i s c ha r g e d i n 1 9 4 5 •
ELSTON GERALD W.
Pfc. Gerald W. Elston, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Harvey E 1st on.
Wi f e , for mer Peggy Dan i e 1 s •
Entered Arm{ April, 1943.
Trained at Camp
Blanding, Fa. Camp Robinson, Ark. and Camp
Rucker, Ala.
Served in England, France, Belgium, Ho. lland and Germany.
Awarded Purple
Heart.
Killed in Action on Nov. 25, 1944 in
Germany.
ELSTON.~

OTIS E.
Cpl. utis E. Elston, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Elston.
Entered Army Feb., 1942·
Trained
at Camp Howze, Texas and Camp Livingston, La.
Served in England, Scotland, France, Belgium,
Germany and Czechoslovakia where he is now on
duty.

ERWIN, LEE J.
S 1/c Lee J. Erwin, son of Mr. and Mrs. B. H.
Erwin.
Entered Navy July, 1943.
Trained at
Farragut, San Diego.
Has served as Armed
Guard on several ships.
Now on duty at San
Francisco, Calif.
ENYART, DUANE KEITH
S/Sgt. Duane Keith Enyart, son of Mr. and Mrs.
E. B. Enyart.
Wife, former Martha B. Caskey.
Entered Army Infantry April, 1943.
Trained
at Camp Blanding, Camp · Robinson, Camp Rucker.
Served in England, France, Belgium, Germany,
Austria, Switzerland.
Served in Two Major
Battles, has Expert Inf. Combat Badge, Good
Conduct, Bronze Star.
Now on duty with the
83rd Infantry, Army of Occupation.
ERWIN, OWEN F. (BILL)
Pfc. Owen F. (Bill) Erwin, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Erwin.
Wife, former Eileen Murphy.
Entered Army Dec., 1940.
Trained at Camp
Robinson, Ft. Lewis, Wash, Camp Polk.
Served
in European Theater where he was engaged in
Five Major Battles.
Holds the Purple Heart.
Wounded Sept., 1944 in Belgium and was discharged July 12, 1945.
31

�EVANS, CLEMENT C. (BOOTS)
Capt. Clement C. (Boots) Evans, son of Mr. anc
Mrs. K. C. Evans.
Wife, former Margartt
Wichers.
Entered Army Dec. 7, 1941.
Traintl
at Camp Robinson, Camp Orr, lns_tructor 11
Camp Hood, Texas.
Served in France, Germa ny,
Now on duty at Marseille, France.
EVANS, ELMO FOREST
S/Sgt. Elmo Forest Evans, son of Mr. and Mrs
0. H. Evans.
Entered Army Air Corps Aug,
1942.
Trained at Ft. Lewis, Keesler Field
Jefferson Barracks, San Bernardino.
Sern
in North Afliica and Italy where he is n01
stationed.
EVANS, JOHN C. (JACK)
S 1/c John C. (Jack) Evans, son of Mr. ani
Mrs. K. C. Evans.
Wife, former Helen Conrad.
Entered Coast Guard, July, 1942.
Trained st
Curtis Bay, Md., Ft. McHenry, Baltimore. En·
gaged in operating Patrol Boats along Coast.
Now on duty at Coast Guard Commissary h
Baltimore.
Holds Good Conduct Medal.
EVANS, PHILIP HENRY
Pfc. Philip Henry Evans, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Oliver Evans. Wife, former Mary Louise Deacon
Entered Army July, 1942.
Trained at Ft.
Lewis, Camp Shenan~o, Camp Reynolds, Ft. Jack1
son.
Has served 1n France.
Now on duty at
Camp Sibert, Ala.

EVANS, THOMAS A. JR.
Pvt. Thomas A. Evans Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas A. · Eva-ns.
Wife, 1 former Peggy Lo1
Clark.
Entered Army Feb., 1942.
Trained at
Camp McCain, Miss. Served at U. S. Los Aliwoa
N. Mexico.
Now on duty at Sandia Base, H
berquerque, N. Mexico.

EWING, ALLAN R.
1st Lt. Allan R. Ewing, son of Mr. and Mrs,
A. B. Ewing.
Wife, former Elizabeth J. Abels,
Entered Army June, 1942.
Trained at Ft.
Benning, Instructed at Camp Roberts and Adai r,
Served with Patton's Third Army in Franct.
Killed in Action Dec. 24, 1944 in Luxembourg.

EWING, EDWARD ETTORE
Sgt. Edward Ettore Ewing, son of Mr. and Mrs.
R. M. Ewing.
Wife, former Norma Anderson.
Entered Army July,
1942·
TrainedatCamp
Robinson, Ark.
Served in England, France,
Germany and Austria.
Holds Two Battle Star s,
ETO, Combat Inf., and Good Conduct Medals. N01
-on duty at Camp Fannin, Texas, awaiting dis·
charge.
EWING, JOHN E.
Pvt. John E. Ewing, son of Earl R. Ewing,
Entered Army Air Corps, Dec., 1943.
Trained
at Keesler Field, Miss., Kingman, Ariz., La1
Vegas, Nev., Denver, Colo. Now on duty at Las
Vegas, Nevada.
·

FALKENSTIEN, MAX G.
Sgt. Max G. Falkenstien, son of Mr. and Mrs.
E. L. Falkenstien.
Entered Army Air Cor ps,
April, 1943.
Trained at Greensboro, N. C. ,
Univ. -of Chicago, Ontario, Canada.
Has served
in Canada in Radar Training.
Holds Expe rt
Marksman Medal, Small Bore Rifle, Pistol,
Carbine.
Now on duty at Fresno, Calif.
FARLEY EBEN B.
·
Pfc. Eben B. Farley, son of Mrs. Mary B. Fa r·
ley.
Entered Army Air Corps, Oct., 1941·
Now on du ty
Trained at Keesler Field, Miss.
at Mt. Home Army Air Field.

32

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                    <text>FARLEY JAMES I.
Pfc. fames I. Farley, son of Mrs. Mary B. Farley,
Entered Army Air Force· , nee., 1942·
Trained at Keesler Field, Miss.
Now on duty
at Pinecastle Army Air Field, Fla.
FARLEY, VIRGINIA V.
TjS Vtrginia V. Farley, daughter of Mrs. Mary
B. Farley.
Entered WAC•s March, 1943·
Trained at Des Moines, Iowa.
Now at Camp Grand,

Ill.

FARRIER, FREDERIC K.
Cpl. FredericK. Farrier, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Farrier.
Entered Army Aug., 1942. Served
with Gen. Clark's Army in Tunisia, Naples,
Rome, Arno, Po Valley.
Holds Good Conduct
Medal, Silver Star, Eame Ribbons and Unit
Citations.
Discharged Oct., 1945.

FAUST, WILL lAM H.
M.M. 3/c William H. Faust, son of Harvey Faust.
Wife, former Pearl L. Henry.
Entered Navy,
May, 1943.
Trained at Farragut, Idaho, and
Dearborn, Mich.
Served with USS Alcar in
Pacific Theater.
Now on duty at Okinawa.

FEARING, ALBERT H.
Major Albert H. Fearing, son of Mrs. Laura
L. Fearing.
Wife, former Twila Shoemaker.
Entered Anti Aircraft Service April 1941.
Trained at Univ. of Kans., R.O.T.C. Res Com,
1925., Served Kans. Nat'l Guard, 1926-1931.
Holds American and Pre- Pearl Harbor Ribbons.
Relieved of Active Duty Oct., 1944.

FEARING, BASCOM C.
lst Lt. Bascom C. Fearing, son of Mrs. Laura
L. Fearing.
Entered Air Transport Command.
Aug., 1942.
Trained at OCS, Miami Beach.
Served in Africa, holds African, American and
Pacific Theatet Ribbons.
Now on duty in Alaska.

FEARING, FREDERICK N.
Cpl. Frederick N. Fearing, son of Mrs. Laura
Fearing.
Wife, Rosanna Fearing.
Entered
Infantry, 1940.
Trained at Camp Rob ins on.
Tenn. Maneuvers, California.
Served in Hawaii,
New Guinea, Philippine Is.
Holds Pacific and
American Theater Ribbons, 3 Battle Stars.
Received discharge Oct., 1945.
FEARING, OLIN K.
Capt. Olin K. Fearing, son of Mrs. L&gt;;~ura L.
Fearing.
Wife, Former Florence Stafford.
Entered Spec ia 1 Services
1942.
Served in
World War I.
Received Reserve Comm. in
Infantry 1929.
Now on duty at Camp Chaffee.

FELT, WILLIAM W.
Sgt. William W. Felt, son of Mrs. Frances E.
Felt.
Wife, former Hazel Metsker.
Entered
Army, 1942·
Trained at Camp Bowie, Texas,
Camp Sutton, N.C., Ft. Belvoir, Va. and Ft.
Bliss, Texas. Served in Australia, New Guinea,
Admiralty Is _, Philippine Is. and Japan. Holds
Asiatic-Pacific, with arrowhead and 4 Bronze
Stars, American Theater, Philippine Liberation
and Good Conduct Medal.
Now is discharged.
FENSTEMAKER, ALONZO
Sgt. Alonzo Fenstemaker, son of Mrs. May
Martin.
Wife, former Ma q~a ret Bailey.
Entered Army Jan., 1941.
Tratned at Camp Bowie,
Camp Blanding, Camp Edwards, Mass. Holds
Combat lnf. Badge, Purple Heart, 3 Bronze
Stars, Bronze Arrowhead.
Served in North
Africa, Sicily, Italy, France.
Wounded in
Action Dec. 8, 1943, Italy.
Discharged
August 12, 1945.
33

�FIELD, WILLIAM D.
T 1 4 Wi 11 i am D. Fie 1 d , s on of Mrs . Wm.
Kshle.
Entered Army Medical Corps, Nov.
Trained at Camp Grant, Rockford, Ill.,
Camp Plauche, La.
Served in Hawaii
Okinawa, where he is now on duty.

FIELDS, DENNIS, C.
Pvt. Dennis C. Fields,
son of Mr. and
Calvin Fields.
Entered Army Feb., I
Trained at F't, Bliss, Texas.
Now on duty
Camp Crowder, Mo.

FINDLEY, FRANKLIN F.
Sgt. Franklin F. Findley, son of Mr. and
W. R. Findley.
Entered Air Corps 1944.
ed at Las Vegas, Nevada.
Served in Eng
Holds Unit Citation.
Now on duty at T
Fla.

FINDLEY, JAMES G.
1st Lt. James G. Findley, son of Mr . and
W. R . Find 1 e y .
En t ere d Air Corps 1 9 4 2.
ed at Deming, New M·exico.
Served in Ita
Holds Air Medal and Unit Citation, no•
discharged.

FINDLEY, WILLIAM R.
1st Lt. William R. Findley, son of Mr6.
Mrs. VI. R. Findley.
Wife, former Violet
Entered Air Corps, 1941. Trained at
Field, Ala., Served in South Pacific,
canal.
Holds Unit Citation, Air Medal.
on duty at Okinawa.

FINK, JAKE K.
Pfc . Jake K. Fink,
Entered Army, 1942·
Trained at
Served in England and France.
worth Hospital, Leavenworth, Ks.

FIRNER, FRED L.
Sgt. Fred L. Firner, son of H . W.
Entered Army Feb., 1943·
Trained
Roberts, Calif, Stanford Univ. Camp Ko
Calif, Buckley Field, Colo. and Camp G
Okla.
Served in France, Germany, Austri
Luxembourg ,
Holds Good Conduct Meda I and
itorious Service Wreath. Now on duty inAust
FIRNER, HENRY W. JR.
G.M. 1 / c Henry W. Firner, Jr., son of Mr.
Mrs. H. W. Firner, Sr.
Wife, former Be
Ruth Martin.
Entered Coast Guard, Feb. 1
Trained at Manhattan Beach, N.Y., Curtis
Md. Served in Panama, Hawaii, Pacific,
6 Campaign Ribbons, 8 Battle StS'rs, Ar
Coast Guard Good Conduct Ribbons. Now is
charged.
FISHER, ALAN C.
T/4 Alan C. Fisher,
C
F i s he r .
En t e red Army 1 9 4 3 .
T r a i ned
Camp Robinson, Camp Maxey, Camp Carson.
in France, Belgium, Holland, Germany.
duty at Ca•mp San Luis ct&gt;ispo, Calif.
FISHER, ROSS W.
Pfc. Ross W. Fisher, son of Mr.
Harold C. Fisher.
Entere.d Air Corps, I
Trained at Jeffer_'s on ' Barracks, Manhattan,
Antonio, Sheppard Field, Sioux Falls Lar
Lowrey Field, Ft. Logan, Spokane, Me
Grand Island.
He is now on duty at
34

�FITZPATRICK, HAROLD LLOYD
Cpl. Harold Lloyd Fitzpatrick, son of Mr. and
Mrs . Lloyd Fitzpatrick.
Entered Marines Jan.,
!943 ·
Trained at San Diego and Oceanside,
Calif.
Served in lwo Jima.

FLEAGLE, PERRY T.
1st Lt. Perry T. Fleagle, son of Mr. and Mrs.
W. H. Fleagle.
Wife, former Marcia Malby .
Entered Air Corps, June, 1942 ·
Trained at
Duncan Field, Texas, Echeverria Field, Ariz.
and Thunderbird Field, Ariz.
Served in England and Germany where he is now stationed.
FLEAGLE, RALPH C.
P f c. Ra 1 ph C. F 1 e a g l. e , son o f Mr • and Mrs .
W. H. Fleagle. Entered Army Dec., 1940 . Trained at Camp Robinson, Ark. Served in Australia,
New Caledonia, Guadalcanal, New Zealand and
other Pac i fie Bases.
Holds President ia 1 Citationk Combat lnf. Badge and 4 Major Campaigns.
Now discharged.

FLETCHER, SAMUEL M.
Lt. Col. Samuel M. Fletcher, husband of the
former Evelyn White.
Entered Army 1935
Commissioned 2nd Lt . Engrs .' , K.U. Served .in
England, N. Africa, Sicily, and Italy.
Holds
Five Campaign Stars on ETO Ribbon, Medal of
Merit l s t Class from Czechoslovak ian Govt.
Now on duty at Rock Island Arsenal, I l l .

FLORANCE , CHARLES C.
Sgt. Charles C. '!"Iorance, son of Mrs. Aria
Florance.
Wife, former Irene Brieghaupt.
Entered Army March, 1944.
Trained at Camp
Lee, Va., San Francisco, Calif.
Served in
Philippines .
Holds Battle Stars, now on duty
at Yokahoma, Japan.

FLORANCE, PAUL L.
Cpl. PaulL. Florance, son of Mrs. Aria F.
Florance .
Entered Army March, 1942.
Trained
at Ft. Leonard Wood, Mo.
Served in England,
France, Germany, Belgium.
Holds Battle Stars,
now stationed in France.

FLORY, DONALD C .
Sgt . Donald C. Flory, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Wife, former Dorothy Jean Bache• D. Flory.
{ or.
Entered Air Corps No., 1942.
Trained
at Coffeyville, Kans., Dodge City. Now enroute
from Chanute Field to Madison, Wisconsin. Won
his wings and is an Air Mechanic.
FLORY, EARL R .
Lt. Earl R. Flory, son of Mr. and Mrs. J.D.
Flory .
Entered Infantry, Dec., 1940.
Trained
a t Camp Rob i n s on , A r k . , Ca 1 i for n i a , A 1 a . ,
North Carolina.
Served in England, France,
Belgium, Holland, Luxembourg, Prisoner of War
in Germany.
Received Bronze Star, Purple
Heart, Inf. Combat Badge, ETO Ribbon with
Fiv e S t a r s .
Re c e i v e d Ba t t 1 e f i e 1 d Co mm is s i on
from Sgt. to 2nd Lt. in Dec., 1944 in France.
FLORY, IRENE E.
Y. 1/c Irene E. Flory, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Fred C. Flory.
Entered SPARS July, 1943.
Trained at Palm Beach, Florida.
Now on duty
at Coast Guard Headquarters, Washington, D.C.

FLORY, MAURICE JERALD
Sgt. Maurice Jerald Flory, son of Mr. and Mrs.
W. 0. Flory.
Wife, former Leila King.
Entered Army Air Corps, July, 1942·
Trained at
Santa Ana, Calif, Phoenix, Ariz, Amarillo,
Texas, Las Vegas, Nev. and Ft. Meyers, Fla.
Now on duty at Buckley Field, Denver, Colo.
35

�FORBES, ROBERT J.
Sgt. Robert J. Forbes, son of Mr. Robert
Forbes.
Wife, former Veta Spence.
Ente
Army Oct., 1942.
Trained at Camp Adair,
Served on Leyte, Okinawa, Hawaiian Is.
Purple Heart, wounded in Action April 1.
on Okinawa.
Now on duty in Hawaiian Is.
FORD, LLOYD C.
Pfc. Lloyd C. Ford, son of Mr. and Mrs. Will
Ford.
Entered Army March, 1942·
Trained
Camp Cal•lan, Calif. and Ft . Ord, Calif. Se
on At tu and the Aleutian Is.
Holds Good
duct Medal, Pre-Pearl Harbor and Asiaticfie Ribbon with One Battle Star. Dischs
Oct. 11, 1945·
FORSYTHE, EDWARD W.
M/Sgt. Edward W. Forsythe, son of Mr. and
Edward S. Forsythe.
Wife, former Lucil
Schwarz.
Entered Air Corps, Dec., 194
Trained at St. Petersburg, Fla., Ft. Log
Colo., Alliance, Nebr., Ft. Wayne, I
Ser-ved in England, France.
Holds Citat
for Efficient Service and Good Conduct
Received discharge Sept ., 1945.
FOSTER~

CHESTER E.
1st. ::&gt;gt. Chester E. Foster, husband
former Pearl Litz.
Entered Nat•l Guard,
1941·
Trained at Camp Robinson, Ark.
Se
in Australia, New Zealand, New Caledon
Guadalcanal, Bora Bora Is., Pago Pago Is.
Panama Canal Zone.
Holds Purple Heart, Pr
dential Citation, Combat lnf. Badge,
Pacific Ribbon with 5 Battle Stars,aand
Ltar.
Wounded Dec, 23, 1942 on Guadal
Discharged Nov., 1944·

FOULKE, ROBERT J.
S 1/c Robert J. Foulke, husband of the fo
Frances Breithaupt.
Entered Navy Nov., I
Trained in Idaho, served in Iwo Jime, Gua
Marianas, Luzon, Philippines, Man1la.
Hoi
Presidential Citation.
Now located at
vallis, Oregon .
FOWLER, CHARLES R.
EM 2/c Charles R. Fowler, son of Mr. and
Joe Fowler.
Wife, former Arlette Gi
Entered Navy Jan., 1942·
Trained at
Lakes,
Detroit, Mich., Miami, Fla. and
Orleans, La .
Was on Sub Chaser reaching
and Casmul Isles.
Received a Medical
charge July 22. 1944·

FOWLER, DAVID HARRIMAN
EM 3/c David Harriman Fowler,
and Lillian Fowler.
Entered Navy 1943. T
ed at Farragut, Idaho. Served at Pearl Hs
Wake, Carolines, New Guinea, FiJi, G
South Pacific. Killed in Action July 13, I

FOWLER, WALTER H.
SF 2 / c Walter H. Fowler,
Lillian Fowler .
Wife, former Maxine
Entered Navy April, 1944. Trained at Farra
Idaho.

FOX, HOWARD B.
MaM 3/c Howard B. Fox, son of Mr. and
Maynard Fox.
Entered Navy June, 1943. Tra
at Farragut, Idaho.
Served in Maris
Palau Is., Philippines Is. China, For
Okinawa.
Crew was commended by Admiral
for their part in saving Canberra and Houst
Now aboard USS Kennebago.
FRAKER, GUY I .
Pfc. Guy I. Fraker, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Fraker.
Entered Army Nov., 1942·
Train
Camp Howze, Texas . Served in Africa and I
Holds Purple Heart, Good Conduct, ETO wi
Battle Stars.
Wounded Sept., 1944 in Ita
Now discharged.

36

�FRAME, JAMES H.
T1 5 James H. Frame , son of Mr • and Mrs . J . H.
Frame.
EntP.red Army in 1943·
Trained at Camp
Haan, Calif., Camp Howze, Texas and Camp Maxey,
Texas.
Served in England, France, Belgium,
~rmany and Bavaria.
Holds Good Conduct Medal
and was engaged in 3 Major Battles. • Now on
duty at Camp Butner, N. C.
FRAME, THOMAS HART
Thomas Hart Frame, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. H.
Frame.
Entered Merchant Marine, May, 1945 •
Trained at San Francisco, Calif.
Served on
Manila, Okinawa and Tokio.
FRAZIER, GEORGE R. JR.
S g t . Ge o r g e R. F r a z i e r , J r • , s o n o f Mr . .a nd
Mrs. George R. Frazier.
Entered Air Corps in
1943·
Trained at Jefferson Brks., Mo., Univ.
of Alabama, Tyndall Field, Fla. and Chatham
Field, Ga.
Served in Newfoundland, N. Africa,
Italy, Austria and England.
Holds Air Medal,
1 Bronze Battle Star and Purple Heart from
wounds received March 22, 1945 over Austria,
where he was a Prisoner of War.
Now in hospital in El Paso, Texas.
FREEMAN, GLEN E.
Cpl. Glen E. Freeman, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Elza Bond.
Wife, former Marian Votarv.
Entered Army Inf. June, 1940.
Trained at
Camp Robinson, Ark,
Served in Australia,
F i j i , So 1om on s , New Gu in e a , New He b r i s ,
Philippines.
Holds 3 Campaign Stars of S.W.
Pacific, Philippine Liberation Ribbon, Good
Conduct Ribbon.
Wounded Jan., 1943, Guadalcanal.
Discharged June 6, 1945.
FRENCH, RAYMOND K.
1st Sgt. Raymond K. French, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Joel S. French.
Entered Army, Aug., 1943·
Trained at Camp Gruber, Okla. Served in Italy.
Holds Purple Heart, Good Conduct and Combat
In f. Bad&amp;e·
Wounded in Italy Feb., 1945· Now
on duty ln Italy.
FROST, CLAYTON L.
T/5 Clayton L. Frost, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert M. Frost.
Wife, former Edith Mitchell.
Entered Air Corps, 1942.
Trained at St.
Petersburg, Fla., Memphis, and Spokane. Served
in New Guinea, Iwo Jime and Okinawa, where
he is now on duty.

FROST, DELMER G.
F 1/c Delmer G. Frost, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert M. Frost.
Entered Navy, 1943.
Trained
at Great Lakes, Chicago, Shoemaker, Portland.
Now on duty at Portland, Oregon.

FROST, JOHN M.
S 1/c John M. Frost, (AMM)(C.A. ), son of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert M. Frost.
Wife, former Jeanne
Sietz. Entered Navy, 1944. Tra~ned at Memphis,
Norman, Miami.
Now on duty at Miami.

FROST, ROBERT M .
T/ Sgt. Robert M. Frost, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Robe .rt M. Frost.
Wife, former Lorraine McIntosh,
Entered Air Corps, 1940.
Trained at
McCord Field, Wash., Pendleton, Ore.
Served
in Australia, New Guinea, Philippines.
Holds
Presidential Citation and Three Campaign Ribbons.
Now has an honorable discharge.
GALLUP, ALFRED F.
Capt. Alfred F. Gallup, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ra 1ph F. Ga 11 up.
Wi f e , f o r mer Wi n i fred Hi 11.
Entered Air Corps, Dec., 1941·
Trained at
Bonham, Texas, San Angelo, Texas, San Antonio,
Texas, Ontario, Calif., Laurel, Miss. Alex.,
La., and Syracuse, N. Y.
Served in ChinaBurma-India theater. Holds DFC, Air Medal with
2 Oak Leaf C 1 us t e r s , Three Bat t 1 e Stars ,
Asiatic-Pacific Theater Ribbon.
Now in USA.

37

�GARICH, EDWARD J. JR.
Capt . Edward J. Garich, Jr., son of Mrs.
Garich.
Wife, former Jeryn Ann Greene .
tered Air Corps, 1941·
Trained
Calif, Taft, Calif., Rosw e ll, N.M., Monroe,
La . Pensacola, Fla. and Keesler Fld., Miss.
Served in Hawaii, Australia, New Guinea, Phil ·
ippines and Okinawa.
Holds Si ·lver Star, Ai
Medal and 3 Clusters, S. Pacific Ribbon, Amer
can Theater, Philippine Liberation, Americ
Defense and Victory Ribbon. Now on Inact"'lve
GARICH, LEE F.
F . 0. Lee F. Garich, son of Mrs . E. J. Gar '
Wife, former Geraldine Ulm.
Entered Air Co
in 1942·
Trained at Del Monte, Cali f. a
Sedalia, Mo.
GARNER, EARL 0.
Pfc . Earl 0 . Garner,
Entered Army, Oct.,
Beale, Calif. and Camp Bowie, Texas.
Se
in England, France, Belgium, Germany and
land.
Holds 4 Battle Stars and Good Condu
Medal.
Has an Honorable Discharge.
GARNER, LLOYD P.
Sgt. Lloyd P . Garner,son of Mrs.
Entered Army Feb., . 1942·
Trained at Sheppa
Field, Texas and Camp Shelby, Miss .
Ser
in England, France, Belgium and Germany . Ho
Bronze Star, Good Conduct Medal and 5 Batt
Stars.
Has Honorable Discharge.

GARNER
RAYMOND R .
Cpl. Raymond R. Garner, son of Mrs.
Garner.
Entered Army June, 1942 ·
Camp Crowder, Mo., Hollywood, Fla. ·andCa
Shenks, N.Y.
Served in England, France,
gium and Germany.
Holds 5 Battle Stars a
Good Conduct Medal.
Now on duty in Southe
France .

GARRETT , CLYDE R .
T / Sgt. Clyde R. Garrett, son of Mrs. Ber
Garrett .
Entered Army Air Corps, March 19
Trained at Las Vegas, Nev., Gardner Fie
Ca lif., Geiger Field, Wash. Served in Engla
and was Prisoner in Austria.
Holds Air Meda
Discharge d in Sept., 1945.

GARRETT, FREDERICK W.
P v t . F r e de r i c k W. Ga r r e t t , s on o f Mr s . Be r
Garrett.
Wife, former Frances Foley.
Ente
Army March, 1945.
Trained at Camp Wolters
Texas and Ft. Benning Ga.
Now on duty at Ft.
Benning, Ga.

GASTON
LAMONT W.
Sgt . Lamont W. Gaston, son of Prof. and Mrs
E . Thayer Gaston.
Entered Army, Oct . ,
Trained at Camp Robinson, Ark. and Camp Howz
Texas.
Served in Philippines where he is
on duty .

GAUMER, ROBERT B.
T / 4 Robert B. Gaumer, son of Charles S. a
Lucie B. Gaumer.
Entered Cavalry, 1942
Trained at Camp Wolters, San Luis Obispo
Fort Riley and Ft. Bliss.
Served in Aus
tralia, New Guinea, Noomfer, Leyte, Luzo
Tokyo.
Holds Philippine Lib e ration Medal
2 Stars, Asiatic-Pacific Medal, 3 Stars
Bronze Spake for Landings, Good Conduct Medal.
D i s c ha r g e d Oc t . , 1 94 5.
GEORGE, DONALD F.
S 1 / c Donald F. George, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest W. George.
Entered Air Corps, July,
1944.
Trained at Washburn, Great Lakes, Fort
Pierce.
Now on duty at Pearl Harbor.

38

�GERARD, ALBERT H . . JR.
Pvt. Alb.ert H. Gerard J r . , son of A. H.
Gerard, wife, former Alta ' Elliott.
Entered ·
Cavalry, Dec., 1944.
Trained at Fort Riley,
Kansas.
Served on Luzon and Japan.
Now on
duty at Tokyo, Japan.
GERARD, DARWIN P.
Capt. Darwin P. Gerard, son of Mr. and Mrs.
A. H. Gerard.
Wife, former Laura Perkins.
Entered Army, Oct., · 1942.
Trained at Fort
Sill, Okla . , Pittsburg, Camp Gruber.
Served
in England, France, Germany, Holland and Be 1gium
Holds Bronze Star, Air Medal with One
C1us t e r , Five Camp a i g n Stars , Pres i cl en t i a 1
c;tation, Now on duty in Berlin, Germany.
GERSTENBERGER, CARROL C.
Pfc. Carrol C. Gerstenberger, son of Mr. and
Mrs. C. C. Gerstenberger.
Wife, former Evabelle Kindred.
Entered Army .Air Corps, April,
1944.
Trained at Buckley Field, Denver,
Frederick, Okla., Ft. Laughlin, Douglas School
Now stationed at Kearns, Utah.
GERSTENBERGER, DELBERT C.
1st Lt. Delbert C. Gerstenberger, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Chas . F. Gerstenberger.
Wife, former
Hazel Frazier.
Entered Army Air Corps, Feb.,
1943·
Trained at Jefferson Barracks, Mo.,
Be I o i t Co 1 1 e g e , Wi s c . , Santa An a , Ca 1 i f. , La Junta, Colo, and Hobbs, N.M.
Served in Italy,
where he was engaged in 4 Major Battles. Holds
Air Meda I and Cluster and 4 Bronze Battle
Stars . Now on Inactive Duty .

GII3!3S, GLEN R.
Cpl . Glen R. Gibbs, son of Mrs. Hattie Gibbs.
Wife, former Maxine McCord.
Entered Army
Dec., 1942.
Trained at Camp Chaffee, Ark.,
Served in France, Germany, now serving at
Man i Ia.

GIBBENS, CHESTER C. JR .
1s t L t . Ch e s t e r C , Gi b be n s , J r . , son o f Mr .
and Mrs . Clyde Gibbens.
Wif e , former Ruth
Grantl ey . Entered Army Air Corps , 1942· Trained ot Mia mi, Fla .
Served on Gu a m, where he is
now on d u t y .
Ho 1 d s A i r Me d a 1 w i t h 2 C 1 us t e r s ,
Asiatic-Pacific Ribbon and 2 Battle Stars.

GIBBENS, DENZEL R.
1st Lt . Denz e l R . Gibbens, son of Mr . and Mrs.
Clyde Gibb e ns
Wife, former Warren e Spaulding .
Ent e r e d Army Air Corps, 1942·
Trained at
!Iondo, Texas .
Served in New Guinea and Aust r a 1i a •
H o 1 d s A i r Me d a 1 w i t h 3 C 1 us t e r s ,
SW Pacific with 4 Battle Stars and Philippine
Liberation Ribbon .
GIBLER, IVAN T 1
T/ 3 Ivan T . Gtbler, son of Mr . and Mrs. Ivan
W Gibler .
Wif e , former Betty Stevens .
Entered Army Dec . , 1941· Trained at Camp Callan,
Calif . and Camp Davis, Calif.
Served on Aleutian Is . and Republic of Panama .
Holds Good
Conduct Medal, Asiatic-Pacific and American
Def e nse Ribbon.
Discharged Nov
19, 1945·
GIBLER, LESLIE R.
Sgt . Leslie R. Gibler, son of Mr. and Mrs .
Ivan W. Gibler.
Wife, former Moe I rene Young.
Entered Army July 6, 1942 ·
Trained at Camp
Swift, Texas .
Served in England, France, Holland, Belgium and Germany. Holds Purple Heart,
Good Conduct Meda 1, ETO Ribbon, Combat In f.
Bad g e a n d 3 Ba t t 1 e S t a r s .
Wo u n de d No v . 1 6th
in France .
Now in Army Reserve .
GIBLER, KENNETH P.
Pvt. Kenneth P. Gibler, son of Mr. and Mrs.
John L. Gibler.
Entered Army May 7, 1945.
Trained at Camp Hood, Texas, now on duty
somewhere in Pacific.

39

�GIBSON, CARL DEAN
S ; Sgt. Carl Dean Gibson, son of Mr. and
Carl A. Gibson.
Entered Army May, 1943·
ed at Camp Wolters, Texas, Camp Maxey,
Camp Swift, Texas, Ft. Dix, N.J. and
Ind.
Served in France, Belgium and Ge
where he is now stationed.
GIBSON, ROBERT DESMOND
Phm· 1 / C Robert Desmond Gibson, son of Mr.
Mrs. Carl A. Gibson. Entered Navy Sept.,
Trained at Great Lakes, then served in
for one year.
He was then returned to
and assigned to Pacific duty, where he s
in Borneo, Philippines, Okinawa, Shan
Formosa, and China.
Now is awaiting t
portation home.
GILLILAND, GLENN E.
T I 5 Glenn E . G i l l i 1 and , s on o f Mr . and
Charles B. Gilliland.
Entered Army Au
1942.
Trained at Camp Barkley, Texas.
in North Africa, Sicily, Czechoslovakia
land, France, Belgium, Germany.
Holds
Star, Purple Heart, Good Conduct, Br
Arrowhead, Presidential Citation and Clus
Wounded in Action March 8, 1945, Germa
Discharged October, 1945.
GILLILAND, LESLIE D.
F.O. Leslie D. Gilliland, son of Mr-s.
Hust 'e d.
Entered Air Corps, 1940·
Train
Williams Field, Ariz. and Greenville;s.
Served in Pacific.
Awarded Air Medal wi th
Oak Leaf Clusters and Sitver Star.
Missing in Action Jan. 18. 1941·
GILMAN, EDWARD I.
S ; Sgt. Edward I. Gilman, son of Mr. and
Ralph W. Gilman .
Entered Air Corps, Ap '
1942·
Trained at Ft. Logan, Calif, and
McClellan, Ala.
Served in India and Bu
Holds Asiatic Pacific Ribbon, One Bronze
American Theater and Victory Medal.
Now
charged.

GILMAN, HAROLD S.
Pvt. Harold S. Gilman, son of Mr. and
Ralph W. Gilman.
Wife, former Jeannette
mons.
Entered Army March, 1944·
Trained
Camp Robinson, Ark.
Now has a medical d
charge.

GILMAN, LAUREN C.
Lt. Lauren C. Gilman, son of Mr .
Ralph W. Gilman.
Entered Army, 1941·
at Camp Haan, Calif., Edgewood Arsenal,
Camp Grant, Ill. and Camp Devens, Mass.
stationed at Ft. Lewis, Wash.
GILMAN ROBERT L.
Capt. Robert L. Gilman, son of Mr. and
Ralph W. Gilman.
Wife, former Ruth Anna
Entered Marines, 1941· Trained at New Orl
Pensacola, Fla., Calif.,
Quantico, Va.
Served on New
stationed at Goleta, Calif.

GIMBLET, ERNEST C.
Pfc. Ernest C. Gimblet, son of Mr. and
Ralph E. Gimblet.
Entered Marines July, 1
Trained at Purdue Univ., South Carolina,
Vi r g in i a .
Re c e i v e d Two Ba t t 1 e S t a r s s e r v'
in South Pacific.
Now enroute to China f
Okinawa.
GI MBLET, GALE E.
Cpl. Gale E. Gimblet, son of Mr.
N. A. Gimblet.
Entered Army May, 1
Trained at Camp Callan and Ft. Bliss. Se
in England, France, Luxembourg, Austria
Germany.
Engaged in Three Major Battles.
with Army of Occupation in Germany.

40

�GIMBLET, JOHN H.
Pfc. John' H. Gimblet, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph E. Gimblet.
Entered Army May 17, 1943.
Trained at California.
Served in England,
France, Germany.
Received Five Battle Stars.
Now At Jackson, Miss., awaiting· discharge.
GIMBLET, NOAH A.
S/Sgt. Noah A. Gimblet, son of Mr. and Mrs.
N. A. Gimblet.
Wife, former Willa B. Dillon.
Entered Army Med. Corps, Dec., 1940.
Trained
at Camp Robinson, Camp Rucker, Camp Butner,
Southern Calif,
Served in England, France,
Luxembourg, Belgium, Holland, and Germany.
Engaged in Five Major Battles and holds Certificate of Merit.
Discharged Oct. 11, 1945.
GIMBLET, RALPH 0.
2nd Mate Ralph 0. Gimblet, son of Mr. an&lt;!
Mrs. Ralph E. Gimblet.
Entered Army May,
1943.
Trained at New York, Florida, and La.
Served in England and France.
Now enroute
to Germany.

GISH, CHARLES E. JR.
SM 2/C Charles E. Gish Jr., son of Charles and
Agnes Gish.
Wife, fo.rmer Eioeen Love. Entered
Navy, Jan., 1943·
Trained at Great Lakes.
Served in Japan, Philippines and over the
Pacific.
Engaged in Six Major Invasions.

GISH, REX A.
Lt. (ig) Rex A. Gish, son of M.r. and Mrs. A.A.
Gish.
'Wife, former Maurine Carpenter.
Entered Navy, 1942·
Trained at Bremerton, Wash.
Served in Aleutian Is., Hawaii, Fiji Is., New
Zealand, Tarawa, Maleolap, Kwajalein, Truk,
Saipan, Tinian and Guam.
Holds Asiatic-Pacific Ribbon with 4 Battle Stars. Now discharged.

}LASS, TRAVIS E.
Cpl. Travis E. Glass, son of Mr. and Mrs.
A. E. Glass.
Wife, former Bernece Bell.
Entered Army Air Corps, Sept., 1943.
Trained
at Buckley Field, Chanute Field.
Served in
Tinian.
Now on duty at Iwo Jime.

GLASSMIRE, S. HAVEN JR.
Lt. (jg) S. Haven Glassmire, Jr., son of Mrs.
Zoe Glassmire.
Wife, former Norma Br.aun,
Entered U. A. Maritime Jan., 1942.
Trained
at Hoffman Island, New York, St. Petersburg,
Fla. Served in Carribean Area, England, Africa
Indian Ocean, Arabia, Red Sea, Suez, Mediterranian.
Now enroute to Japan.

GORRILL, GALEN A.
Lt. Col. Galen A. Gorrill, son of Mr. and Mrs.
M.A. Gorrill.
Wife, former Mary Warren. Entered Army Dec., 1940·
Trained at Camp Robinson, Ark.
Served in Aleutian Is.
Holds PrePearl Harbor, American Defense and AsiaticPacific Ribbons.
Now on terminal leave.

GOFF, ROY E.
S/Sgt. Roy E. Goff, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy L .
Goff.
Wife, former Mildred Johanning. Entered
Army Air Corps, Oct., 1942. Trained at Keesler
Field; Harlingen, Texas; Tuscon, Ariz., and
Westover Field, Mass.
He was lost in flight
from Morrison Field, Fla., and Waller Field,
Trinidad, January 10, 1944.
GORDON, LEON E.
Pfc. Leon E. Gordon, son of Mr. and Mrs.
William E. Gordon. Entered Marines July, 1943.
Trained at San Diego.
Served in Marshall
Is., Hawaiian Is., and China, where he is now
stationed.
41

�GRAHAM, ROBERT R.
Ens. Robert R. Graham, son of Mr. and Mrs.
F. P. Graham.
Entered Navy, 1943.
Trained
at Washburn Univ., Columbia Univ. Naval Mine
Warfare School, Yorktown, Va.
Served on
Pellilieu, Guam, Okinawa, Japan.
Now on duty
in Pa c i f i c A r e a .
GRANDSTAFF, ClARENCE L.
Sgt. Clarence L. Grandstaff, son of Mrs. W. M.
Criss.
Wife, former Willa Cline.
Entered
. Army, 1941·
Trained at Camp Hood .
Served in
European Areas.
Received Honorable Discharge,
1945·

GRANDSTAFF, CLAUDE M.
S 1/C Claude M. Grandstaff, son of Mrs. W. M.
Criss.
Wife, former Miss Louise Harris. En·
tered Navy, May, 1943·
Trained at Farragut,
Idaho,
Served in South Paci fie Is. and Japan.
Now on duty at San Pedro. Calif.

GRANDSTAFF, MARVIN E.
Sgt. Marv1n E. Gradestaff, son of Mrs. W. M.
Criss. Wife, former Mary Shaw.
Entered Mar·
ines, Jan., 1942· Trained at San Diego, Calif.
Served in South Pacific Is.
Discharged Sept.,
1945·

GRANDSTAFF, MELVIN J.
Sgt. Melv1n J, Grandstaff, son of Mrs. Maude
Criss.
Wife, former Agnes Williamson.
En·
tered Marines, Jan., 1942·
Trained at San
Diego, Calif.
Served on South Pacific Is.
Holds Purple Heart for wounds received July,
1944 on Guam.
Discharged Oct. 1945·

GRANDSTAFF, MILDRED
Cpl. Mildred Grandstaff, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. W. M. Criss . • Entered Air Corps, May,
1944·
Trained at Ft. Des Moines, Iowa.
Not
on duty at Bolling Field, Wash. D. C.

GRANT, ARTHUR DEWITT
Sgt. Arthur DeWitt Grant, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Dabney Grant.
Entered Army Air Corps, Oct.,
1942·
Trained at Lincoln, Nebr., Burbank,
Calif, Las Vegas, Nevada and Ephrata Air Base,
Ephrata, Wash. where he was killed July, 1943·

GRANT, NAPOLEON
S 1/c Napoleon Grant, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Wash Ray.
Entered Navy Jan., 1943.
Trained
at Great Lakes and Portsmouth, Va.
Now oo
duty in Hawaii.

GRAY, HOWARD
S;Sgt, Howe rd Gray, son of Mr, and Mrs. R. Lee
Gray.
Entered Army, Oct,, 1940 .
Trained at
Camp Robinson, Bellows Field and Hickam Field,
Hawaii.
Served in Hawaii, Pearl Harbor, Mid·
way, Wake, Marshalls and Macon.
Holds Gool
Conduct, 4 Bronze Stars, 3 Battle Ribbons and
Bravery Commendations.
Wounded Dec. 7, 1941.
at Pearl Harbor.
GREEN, CECIL B.
S 1/c Cecil B. Green, son of Mr. and Mrs. B.A.
Green.
Wife, former Sara Undersood.
Entered
Navy, April, 1942·
Trained at Kansas City
and Olathe, Kansas.
Received Medical Dis·
c h a r g e De c • 1 8 , 1 9 4 3 •

42

�GREEN, FRANK R.
Sgt. Frank R. Green, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank
H. Green~ Wife, former Dorothy Schubert.
Entered Army July, 1942· Trained at Camp Roberts,
Calif, Camp Butner, N. C. and · Camp Pickett,
Va. Served in France, Belgium, ~ngland and
Germany.
Holds Bronze Star and Oak Leaf Cluster.
Now on duty at Berlin, Germany.
GREEN HAROLD 0.
Lt. Col. Harold 0. Green, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Nelson Green.
Wife, former Rosemary Allen.
Entered Air Corps, Jan., 1941·
Trained at
Camp Wallace, Texas, Camp Davis, N . C., Camp
Tyson, Wright Field and Tinker Field.
Now at
SPAAF, Lubbock, Texas.
GREEN, PATRICK D.
S;Sgt. Patrick D. Green, son of Mr. and Mrs.
B. A. Green.
&amp;tterdd ~ir Corps, March, 1943·
Trained at Clearwater, Fla., Amarillo, Texas
tnd Chanute Field, Ill.
Served in India and
Tinian. Holds Five Battle Stars and S. Pacific
Ribbon.
Wounded June 15, 1945·
Discharged
Oct. 19, 1945·

GREEN, RICHARD C.
S;Sgt. Richard C. Green, son . of Mr. and Mrs.
Nelson Green.
Wife, former Mabelle Parks.
Entered Army, Jan., 1943· Trained at Ft. Leavenworth, Ks.
Discharged Sept: 1945·

GREEN, ROBERT J.
P.O. 3/C Robert J. Green, son of Mr. and Mrs.
B. A. Green.
Entered Navy, Aug., 1943· Trained at Norman, Okla, Miami, Fla. and Beaufort,
S. C .
Served in Pearl Harbor and Japan where
he is now on duty.

GREEN, WILLIAM R. JR.
3/c Soundman Will1am R. Green, Jr., son of Mr.
and Mrs. W. R. Green.
Wife, former Venite
Paulson.
Entered Navy, Nov., 1943.
Trained
at Farrattut, Idaho, San Diego, San Pedro,
Then hostHtalized and sent to Glenwood Springs,
Colo. where he received a Medical discharge,
Dec. 23, 1944.

~EER,

MARY CAROLINE
Y 2/c Mary .Caroline Greer, Entered coast Guard,
Feb., 1943·
Trained at Hunter College, N.Y.
Palm Beach, Fla.
She was also stationedat San
Diegok San Pedro and Long Beach.
Received
discharge Aug. , 1945.

~IFFITH,

JAMES E .
Bll1/c James E. Griffith, son of Chas. C.
Griffith.
Wife, former Virginia Bryant.
Entered Navy May, 1942.
Trained at Great
Lakes, Norfolk, Solomon, Md.
Served in
Honolulu, Saipan, Guam, and Guadalcanal.
Holds Three Bronze Stars, One Honor Medal.
Discharged Oct. 16, 1945.

GROB, RALPH E.
Pfc. Ralph E. Grob, son of Mr. Ed Grob.
Entered Army, April, 1942·
Trained at Camp
Barkeley, Texas.
Served in France, Belgium,
Luxembourg, Germany and Czechoslovakia.
Holds
Good Conduct Ribbon.
Now discharged.

GROSDIDIER, BERNARD J.
Ph. II 3/c Bernard J. Grosdidier, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Grosdidier.
Entered Navy
llarch, 1943.
Trained at Great Lakes, I l l .
Served on Saipan, where he is now on duty.
43

�GROSDIDIER, HERBERT L.
Pfc. Herbert L. Grosdidier, son of Mr. and
btrs. Albert Grosdidier.
Entered Army July,
1941.
Trained at Camp Roberts, Calif.
Served
in Australia, New Guinea.
Holds Three Battle
Stars.
Discharged Oct. 9, 1945.
GROVER, ADNYN 0.
S 1/c Adnyn 0. Grover, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ira L. Grover. Entered Navy May, 1944. Trained
at Great Lakes, Ill.
Served on Pearl Harbor,
lwo _Time, Philippines, Okinawa, New Guinea,
Mar s fi a 11 Is . , Sa i pan .
Ho 1 d s S t a r s f o r Me j or
Invasions.
Now on duty at Japan.

GROVER, ARLAND L.
Q.M. 1/c Arland L. Grover, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ira L. Grover.
Wife, former Betty Hirst.
Entered Navy June, 1942.
Trained at Great
Lakes, Rhode Island, Miami, Corpus Christie,
South America for 16 mos.
Holds Good Conduct
Me d a 1 .
Now on d u t y a t San Pedro , Ca 1 i f,

GROVER, ARVID R.
Q.M. 1/c Arvid R. Grover, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ira L. Grover.
Entered Na ·vy, Jan., 1942.
Trained at Great Lakes.
Engaged in 3 Major
Battles and 7 Invasions in North Africa.
Has Three Battle Stars and Good Conduct Medal.
Discharged September 22, 1945.

GROVER, WALLACE EARL JR.
Pvt. Wallace Earl Grover Jr., son of Mr. and
Mrs. W. E. Grover. Entered Marines April, 1945.
Trained at Parris Island, Camp LeJeune.
Holds Expert Rifle Medal and Sharpshooter
Medal.
Now stationed at Camp Pendleton,
Ocean Side, Calif.

GROW, ARLETA E.
Pfc. Arleta E. Grow, daughter of Mrs. Je.ssie
M. Grimes.
Entered WAC, Feb., 1943. Trained
at Ft. Oglethorpe, Ga., has been at Camp
Langdon, N.H., Ft. H. G. Wright, N.Y. Ft. Dix,
N.J.
Received discharge Oct. 20, 1945.

GUENTHER, LAVERNE H.
EM 3/c LaVerne H. Gunenther, son of Mr. and
Mrs. George Bartz.
Wife, former Maxine
Daugherty.
Entered Navy June, 1944.
Trained
at Great Lakes.
Served at Admiralty Is.,
where is is now on duty.

GUNTERT, ROBERT H.
Sgt. Robert H. Guntert, grandson of Mrs. Wm.
Albert.
Wife, former Veneta Kump.
Entered
Army Air Corps April, 1942.
Trained at Shep·
pard Field, Kearns Field, Alamogordo, N. Mexict
Served in England. Holds Good Conduct, European
Theatre Ribbon with Six Bronze Stars.
Dis·
charged October 2, 1945.
GURTLER, CALVIN F.
Sgt. Calvin F. Gurtler, son of Mr . and Mrs.
Frank E. Gurtler.
Wife, former Laura Davis,
Entered Army Dec., 1942.
Trained at Camp
Robinson, Camp Forest and Camp Phillips.
Engaged in 4 Major Battles in European Theater.
Holds Bronze Star for Meritorious Service.
Now on duty at Ft. Sam Houston, Texas.
GURTLER, CLARENCE L.
S/Sgt. Clarence L. Gurtler, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Frank E. Gurtler.
Wife, former Margaret
Mason.
Entered Air Corps April, 1942. Trained
at Sheppard Field and Chanute Field.
Spent
two years as Link Trainer Ins t ru c tor at Ran·
dolph and Bryan Fields.
Now on duty at Camp
McCoy.

44

�GUTIERRZ, JULIAN C.
SIS g t . J u 1 i an C . Gut i e r r z , son o f P e t r o
Gutierrz.
En'tered Army April, 1942.
Trained
at Fort S i 1 1 , Ok 1 a .
Served in · Haw a i ian Is . ,
Philippines, Okinawa and Korea where he is now
on duty.

HACK, NORMAN H .
Cpl. Norman H. Hack, son of Mr. and Mrs.
H. W. Hack.
Entered Army March, 1943. Trained
at Camp Blanding, Camp Robinson.
Served in
Srance, Belgium, Holland, Germany.
Now on
duty at Bad Steben, Germany.

HADL , ALLAN E .
Pfc. Allan E. Hadl, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Hadl.
Wife, former Viola Mae Root.
Entered Army August, 1943.
Trained at Camp
Dodge.
M.P. and Guard in Iowa, Minn., and
00. Now on duty at P.O.W. Camp, Minn.

HADL, BOBBY L.
Pvt. Bobby L. Hadl, son of Mr. and Mrs. W.J.
Hadl.
Wife, former Betty Ann Skinner.
Entered Army May, 1945.
Trained at Camp Fannin,
where he is now stationed.

HADL, JES S 111 ,
Pvt. Jess W. Hadl, son of W. J. Hadl.
Wife,
former Judy McNish.
Entered Army Feb . • 1945
Trained at Fort Knox, and Fort Ord.
Now on
duty in Pacific.
0

HADL, LEROY 0.
Fireman 1/c LeRoy 0. Hadl, son of Mrs. Elsie
Hadl.
Entered Navy, Sept., 1943.
Trained
at Farragut, Idaho. Served at Mindora, Echelon,
Lingayen Gulf, Tinian, Saipan, Zamboanga,
Saga Saga, Jo lo Sodu, Ta rakan, Brunei Bay,
Hiri Balikpapan, Okinawa, and lwo Jime.
Now
on duty at Shanghai, China.
Holds Good Conduct Medal and Battle Stars.

HADL, LOREN E.
TIS Loren E. Hadl, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Hadl.
Entered Army July, 1942.
Trained
at Camp Lee, Va.
Served in North Africa,
Great Britian, France.
Now at Camp Carson,
for discharge.

HADL, OTIS W.
Sgt. Otis W. Hadl, son of W. J. Hadl.
Entered
Army Air Corps Oct., 1942.
Trained at Miami,
Amarillo, Salt Lake City.
Served in New
Guinea, Philippines and Japan where he is now
stationed.
Holds Good Conduct Medal.

HADL, MICHAEL GLENN
Cpl. Michael Glenn Hadl, son of Mrs. Bert
Jackson and Michael Hadl.
Entered Air Corps,
June, 1943·
Trained lit Buckley Field, Colo.,
Fresno, Calif. and San Antonio, Texas.
Now on
duty at Guam • .

HADLEY, LEO L.
Capt. Leo L. Hadley, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lee
Hadley.
Wife, former Shirley Kennedy.
Entered Army April, 1942.
Trained at Camp
Roberts, Ft. Benning, Camp Shields, Kelly
Field.
Now stationed at Greensboro, N.C.

45

�HAIL, JAMES HERBERT
Lt. James Herbert Hail, son of Mr. and Mrs
W. C. Hail.
Graduated from Kansas Uni
Served a year with Coast Artillery, then
tered Cadet School at Kelly Field, tran·
ferred to Mitchell Field, Long Island whe
he met his death in an airplane crash June I
1940.
HAIL, WILLIAM C.
Lt. William Cornelius Hail, son of Mr.
Mrs. W. C. Hail.
Wife, former Helen Ski
Entered Army March, 1942.
Trained at
Bowie and Fort Leonard Wood. OCS at Ft. Be
voir, Va. and Ft. Benning. Overseas, July, 1944
Now op duty at Amari, Japan.
HAILE, MARION C.
Capt. Marion C. Haile, son of Mr . and Mn
L. S. Haile.
Wife, former Reba Rodgers.
tered Air Corps Jan., 1942. Trained at Bakers·
field and King C1ty, Calif., Albuquerque, N.Y.
Served in Eng land, Ire land, Wales, Scotland
France, Belgium, Holland, Poland, Germany
Iceland, Alaska.
Holds DFC and Air Medal
Now on duty at Victorville, Calif.
HALL, A.E.
Pfc. A. E. Hall, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lou Hall
Entered Army November, 1944.
Trained at Cam:
Hood, Texas.
Overseas March, 1945.
Ser
in France and Germany where lie is now on duty

HALL, BERNARD H.
Lt. (j'g) MC USNR. Bernard H. Hall, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Lou Hall.
Entered Navy 1940. Trainel
at Univ. of Kansas, K.C. Mo., Shormaker,
Calif., Norfolk, Va. Now on duty on a USS UN

HALLMARK, ALVIN
Pvt. Alvin Hallmark, entered Army, Ap ri 1, 1941
Served i·
Trained at Camp Berkeley, Texas.
France. Spent 3 months in Hospital in England.
Returned to states Oct., 1944• Now in hospita,
at Springfield, Mo.

HAMILTON, GEORGE
Lt . (ig) George Hamilton, son of Mr. and Mrs.
W.O. Hamilton. Entered Navy, May, 1944· Train·
ed at Princton Univ. Princton, N. J.
Served
in Navy Department at Wash.
D. C. and was
Resident Inspector for Naval materials at
Elizabeth, N. J.

HAMMIG, ERWIN M. JR.
Sgt. Erwin M. Hammig Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs.
Erwin M. Hammig.
Entered Air corps, May,
1943·
Trained at Buckley Field, Colo., Lowry
Field, Colo., Laredo, Texas, March Fueld,
Muroc, Salians Air Base and Mather Field,
Calif.
Served on Hawaiian Islands.
Now on
duty at Santa An~, Calif.

HARBOUGH, FRANK S.
Sgt. FrankS. Harbough entered Army August,
1943, basic training at Camp Dodge.
Was on
duty at POW Camp in Wyo.
Further training at
Camp Ellis.
Fitzsimmons General Hospital,
Denver, Colo.
Serveddon Hospital Trains out
of Staten Island, N.Y. Discharged Sept., 1945.
HARDING, GEORGE A.
Cpl. George A. Harding, son of Clyde C. and
Catherine E. Harding.
Wife, former Sara Jane
McCleave.
Entered Army, April, 1943·
Trained
at Camp Crowde .r, Mo.
Engaged in 5 Major Bat·
tles in ETO.
Holds Presidential Citation.
Now on duty at Marseilles, France, enroute to
USA.

46

�HARD.ING, 0. EUGENE
1st Lt. 0. Eugene Harding, son of Mrs. Gladys
V. Holloway. Entered Army August, 1942. Trained
at Ft. Leonard Wood, Mo., OCS at Ft. Belvoir.
Ove r seas Apr i 1 , 1 9 4 4 .
Received Pre s ide n t i a 1
Citation.
Died April 21, 1945 on Saipan from
b~rns received
from a gasoline explosion.
AARDTARFER 1 LESLIE H.
Sgt. Leslle H. Hardtarfer, son of Mr. and Mrs.
G. H . H a r d t a r f e r .
En t e red Army A i r Co r p s ,
June, 1944.
Trained at Buck ley Field, Ft.
Myers, Pyote Air Field, Topeka Army Air Field.
Served on Saipan, and Guam where he is now on
duty.
Holds Air Meda 1.

AARMON, HERBERT P.
T/Sgt. Herbert P. Harmon, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Louis Harmon.
Entered Army Dec. 11,1941.
Trained at Keesler Field, Lockheed Aircraft,
Pendleton Field. ' Served 25 mos. overseas.
Holds Bronze Star, Good Conduct Medal, Four
Battle Stars, Oak Leaf Cluster, Pdesidential
Citation.
Discharged October, 1945

HARNAR, MYRTLE MADONNA
S;Sgt. Myrtle Madonna Harner, Daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. H. B. Harner.
Entered WAC•s, April,
1942·
Trained at Ft. Des Moines, Iowa, and
Commerce, Texas.
Stationed at San Antonio,
Texas and Flora, Miss.
Discharged at Ft.
Sheridan, Ill. June, 1945·

HARRELL, GEROLD W.
1st Sgt. Gerold W. Harrell, son of Mr. and
Mrs. W. R. Harrell.
Wife, former Estella
Be 11 e s .
En t ere d Army Aug . , ·1 94 2.
Tr a in e d a t
Ft. Lewis, Ft. Lawton, then sent to Alaska.
Served in France, Belgium, Luxembourg, Germany
where he is now on duty;
Holds Good Conduct
Ribbon and Three Battle Stars.

AARRELL, JOHN E.
Cpl. John E. Harrell, husband of former
Maxine Chapman.
Entered Army Dec., 1942.
Trained at Camp Callan and Camp Cook, Calif.
Served in Australia, New Guinea, Philippines,
Zamboanga, Mindanao.

HARRELL, OLIN D.
MoMM 3/c OL.in D. Harrell, son of Mr. and Mrs.
W. R. Harrell.
Entered Navy June,1944. Trained at Farragut, Idaho, Ames, Iowa, Norfolk,
Va.
Served in Pearl Harbor, Guam, Saipan,
Okinawa, Leyte.
Now taking supplies from the
Philippines to Japan.

AARRELL, ROBERT E.
Pvt. Robert E. Harrell, son of Mr. and Mrs.
W. R. Harrell.
Entered Army Sept., 1945.
TraiAed at Aberdeen Proving Grounds, Md.
Now en route ov e r sea s .

HARRELL, WARREN B.
T/4 Warren B. Harrell, husband of former Ruth
Mann.
Entered Paratroopers June, 1942.
Trained at Ft. Benning, Ga. Served in European
Theater.
Now on duty at Ft. Benning. Ga.

HARRIS, NEIL M.
S/Sgt. Neil M. Harris, son of Mr. and Mrs.
George W. Harris.
Wife, former Marion Dowers.
Entered Army Air Corps, June, 1942.
Trained
at Bowman Field, and Bear Field.
Served in
India, Burma, and China where he is now on duty.

47

�HARRIS, STANLEY W.
Pfc. Stanley W. Harris, son of Fred H. Harris.
Entered Army Air Corps Dec., 1943.
Trained at
A rna r i 1 1 o, Wash . State Co 1 1 e g e, Santa Ana,
Phoenix, Tuscon.
Now in U.S.A.

HARRISON, ALFRED L.
T/4 Alfred L ·. Harrison, son of Mrs. Theo,
Harrison.
Wife, former Maxie Elliott. En·
tered Air Corps, Dec., 1942.
Trained at
Ft. Belvoir, Va., Hammer Field, McCord Field.
Served in Burma, India, China.

HARRISON, GLENN A.
P.O. Glenn A. Herr ison, son of Mrs. Theo
Harrison.
Entered Navy Jan. 1, 1941.
Trainel
at Great Lakes.
Travelled World-wide on thr
S. S. Satterlee, Destroyer.
Has 14 Major
Batt 1 e Stars.

HARRISON, WILLIAM K.
S/Sgt. William K. Harrison son of Mrs. Theo.
Harrison.
Wife, former Ray Dean Vail.
En·
tered Army July, 1942.
Trained at Je f fer so~
Barracks, Camp Carson, Colo.
Served in Net
Guinea and Leyte where he is now on dcty.

HARTMAN, MARVIN R.
Sgt. Marvin R. Hartman, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Gus Hartman.
Entered Air Corps, April, 1943.
Trained at Madison, Wis. Truax Field, Chantltt
Field, and Miami, Fla.
Now on duty at Samar
Is. in Philippines.

HAVERTY
JUNIOR KEENE
S 1/C Junior Keene Haverty, son of Mr. ani
Mrs. A. A. Haverty.
Entered Navy, June 25,
1945·
Training at Great Lakes, Ill.

HAWORTH, DONALD D.
s;Sgt. Donald D. Haworth, son of Mr. and Mrs.
E. P. Haworth.
Wife, former Garnet Marie
Martin.
Entered Army, Dec., 1942·
Trained at
Camp Claiborne, La.
Discharged Sept., 1943·

HAYES, RUTHFORD W.
Cpl. Ruthford W. Hayes, son of Jacob Hayes,Sr.
Wife, former Elanora Lewis.
Entered Air
Corps, July, 1942.
Trained at Minter Field,
Ca 1i f.
Has Sharpshooter Meda 1.
Now on duty
at Lowry Field, Denver, Colo.

HAZLETT, EMERSON L.
S I S g t . Em e r s on L. H a z 1 e t t , s on o f Mr . and
Mrs. EE E. Hazlett.
Entered Army Air Corps
March, 1943..
Trained at Camp Robinson, Camp
Carson, Manhattan State College, Camp Leonard
Wood, San Luis Obispo, · and Ft. Meade.
Served
in England, France, Belgium, Germany, Austria.
Holds Purple Heart, Good Conduct Medal,
Infantryman's Combat Badge, ETO Ribbon Three
Battle Stars.
No'V at Camp Adair, Oregon.
HEARIN, JOSEPH N.
1st Lt. Joseph N. Hearin, son of Mr. and Mrs.
J. N. Hear in.
Wife, former Gloria Mae Hinton.
Entered Army Nov., 1942.
Trained at Camp
Callan, Camp Davis, Ft. Benning.
Served in
Philippine Js., Luzon, Okinawa, Japan.
Now
on duty at Sendai, Japan.

48

�HEGEMAN, LYLE H.
Cpl. Lyle H. Hegeman, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Lee H. Hegeman.
Wife, former Elaine Dillon.
Entered Medical Corps May, 1943..
Trained at
Ft. Sam Houston, overseas in Nov., 1943.
Served in Africa and India where he is now on
duty.
HEILMAN, HAROLD H.
Cpl. Harold H. Heilman, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Harvey H. Heilman.
Wife, former Fanny Belle
Fisher.
Entered Army Sept., 1943.
Trained at
Camp Crowder, Mo.
Holds Good Conduct Medal.
Discharged at Camp Crowder, . Oct. 17, 1945.

HElM, RAMOND F.
Pfc. Ramond F. Heim, son of Fred and Maidie
Heim.
Entered Air Corps, 1943.
Trained at
Sheppard Field, Wichita Falls, Texas.
Now
stationed at Luke Field, Arizona.

HEINE, OTIS L.
Y 3/c Otis L. Heine, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Otis C. Heine.
Entered Seabees, 1944. Trained
at Farragut, Idaho.
Served in South Paci fie.
~w on duty at Guam.

HEINRICH, LOUIS W.
Cpl. Louis W. Heinrich, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Heinrich.
Wife, former Mabel Had!.
Entered Army Dec., 1942.
Trained at Camp
McCain, Miss., Camp Pickett, Va.
Served in
Sicily, Italy, France,
Has Four Battle Stars,
and ETO Ribbon.
Now enroute to USA.

HEMMING, LYLE F.
Sgt. Lyle F. Hemming, son of Mrs. Bertha E.
Hemming.
Entered Army Oct., 1940.
Trained
at Camp Robinson, Fort Ord, Camp San Luis
Obispo, Cainp Rucker, Camp Butner.
Served in
England, France, Belgium, Holland, Germany.
Holds Good Conduct, American Defense, Five
Ba t t 1 e S t a r s , E . T . 0 . R i b b o n .
Di s c h a r g e d
October 14, 1945.

HEMPHILL, FRED E.
Sgt. Fred E- Hemphi 11, son of Harrison Hemphill.
Wife ., former Arletta L. Murray.
Entered Army Air Corps Oct., 1940.
Trained at
Ft. Leavenworth, McChord Field, Gowen Field,
Da v i s Mo n t h a n F i e 1 d , Smoke y Hi 1 1 A i r b a s e ,
Camp Ripley, Camp Barkley, Kelly Field, Camp
Kilmer.
Served in Scot land, England, Ireland,
France.
Holds Good Conduct, E.T.O. American
Defense.
Discharged October 11, 1945HEMPHILL, HERSCHEL W.
Sgt. Herschel w. Hemphill, son of Harrison
Hemphill.
Wife, former Anne Kelly.
Entered
Army Air Force Dec., 1942Trained at atlantic City, N. J.
and Camp Crowder, Mo.
Now on duty at Okinawa.

HENDERSON, CLARENCE L.
Sgt. Clarence L. Henderson, son of Mr. and Mrs.
J. T. Henderson. Wife, former Ruby L. Stone.
Entered Army August, 1942·
Trained at Kearns,
Utah and Los Angeles, Calif.
Served in England .
Holds Good Conduct, ETO Ribbon, 3 Battle Stars and Unit Citation.
Discharged Oct.,
1945.
HERREN, CLOYD G .
Pfc. Cloyd G. Herren, son of Mr. and Mrs.
H. H- Herren.
Wife, former Ethel Lowell.
Entered Army Feb., 19~4Trained at Camp
Fannin.
Served in England, France, Belgium.
Holds Two Bronze Stars. Now on duty in England.

49

�HERREN, HAROLD H.
CM 3/C Harold H. Herren, husband of the former
Betty Jo Farley.
Entered Navy, May, 1944
Traine
at Great Lakes, Ill.
Now on dutys l
Santa Rosa, Calif.
HERRIMAN, EVELYN E.
1 s t L t . Ev e 1 y n E. He r r i rna n , d aug h t e r o f Mr.
and Mr. Lloyd Webster.
Ent e r e d Army, 1943
Trained at Hot Springs and Camp Stoneman
Served in A us t ra 1 ia, New Guinea, and Leyle.
Holds Pres identia 1 Citation, Two Bronze ~Stars,
Meritorious S e rvice Arm Patch.
Now on dut y
at Ft. Sam Houston, Texas.
HERRIMAN, WALTER P .
Cpl. Walter p. Herriman, son of Mr . and Mrs.
Lloyd Webster.
Enter e d Army in 1 .943.
Trained
at Camp Rob e rts, Ft. Benning.
S e rved in England, Franc e , Germany.
Holds Purpl e Hearl ,
Good Conduct, Presidential Citation.
Wounded
July 5, 1944 in France.
Now on duty at Ho t
Sprin gs , Ark.

HERSCHELL, CHARLES J. JR .
T 1 5 Ch a r 1 e s J . He r s c h e 11 , J r . , s on o f Mr , and
Mrs. Charlie Herschel!.
Wife, former Lucy
L. Finch.
Entered Army Nov., 1943Trained
at Camp Roberts, Camp Bowie.
Served in Sou th
Pacific.
Now on duty at Hawaii.

HESS, ALBERT E.
S 1 / c Alb e rt E . Hess, son of Mr. and Mrs .
John w. He ss. Enter e d Navy July, 1943- Train·
e d at Fa r r a g u t , Ida h o .
S e r v e d in P e a r1 Ha r·
bo r , Ma r s h a 11 s , Gi 1 bert s , Marianas , Ok-inawa,
Philippines, Gua m and oth e r Pacific Is.
H o 1 d s F i v e Ba t t 1 e S t a r s .
Now on d u t y i '
Southwest Pacific.
HESS, CHESTER W.
Pvt. Chester W. Hess, son of Mr. a nd Mrs .
J· w. Hess.
Entered Army April, 1943.
Trai ned at Camp Maxey and Shrev e port, La.
Served
in Normandy, France, Rhineland, Ardennes,
and Central Europe.
Holds Good Conduct ,
Presidential Citation, Fiv e Battl e Stars.
Now on duty in Germany.

HESS, HENRY G.
Cpl. Henry G . Hess, son of Mr. and Mrs . c. H.
Hess.
Entered Army Oct . , 1942·
Trained al
Camp Roberts, Calif.
Served almost 2 years
in Alaska, and now has an honorable discharge.

HEY, WILLIAM JR.
1st Lt. William Hey Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs .
Will Hey.
Entered Marine Corps July, 1942.
Trained at• St. Mary's, Cali f., Pasco, Wash.,
Corpus Christi, Texas, Atlanta, Ga. Served in
Hawaiian Is., Marshall Is., Marianas, Gua m,
Carolines, Philippines, Solomons, Iwo Jime ,
Okinawa and Japan.
Holds Air Medal.
Now ot
duty in Pacific.

HICKMAN, KENNETH L.
Sgt. Kenneth L. Hickman, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Henry Hickman.
Entered Marines, June, 1943.
Trained at San Diego, Norman, Okfa.
Served
on Green Is., Guadaicanal and Samac Is · Has
American Theater, Asiatic and Pacific wit h
One Bronze Star, Philippine Liberation Ribbon.
Now on duty at Clinton, Okla.
HICKS, RAY F.
Cpl. Ray F. Hicks, son of Mr . and Mrs. Perry
Hicks.
Wife, former Norma Jean Winters
Entered Army, 1943Trained at Camp Roberts,
Ft. Benning.
Served in Italy, France, GerMany, Be 1 gium.
Ho Ids Good Conduct, ETO Ribbon, Bronze Star, Expert Riflemans Badge.

50

�HICKS, REX P.
Pvt. Rex P. Hicks, son of Mr. and Mrs. Perry
Hicks.
Wife, former Clara Jean Ruby.
Entered
Air Corps, March, 1943.
Trained at Maimi
Beach, Fla.
Now is discharged.

HIIDLESTON, DEWA YNE G.
FC 1/c Dewayne G. Hiddleston, son of Mrs.
Lewis Mole.
Entered Navy Jan., 1941Trained
at Great Lakes.
Served in Attau, Kiska,
Dutch Harbor, Makin, Kwajalein, Enewetok.
Discharged Sept. 10, 1945.

HILDEBRAND, GEORGE ROBERT
Pfc. George Robert Hildebrand, son of Mr. and
llrs. B. Hildebrand.
Entered Merchant Marines
Sept., 1942·
Trained at Camp Fannin, Texas.
llade 5 voyages: Aleutians, England, Scotland,
Italy and Cuba.
Now on duty at Leyte.

HILL, EVERETT G.
Pvt. Everett G. Hill, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Leo J· Hill.
Entered Army Air Corps Feb. 28,
1945Trained at Sheppard Field, and Lowry
Field shere he is now stationed.

HILL, HARRY W.
Lt. Harry W. Hill, son of Mrs. Fred H. Hill.
life, former Marguerite DeRoos.
Entered Army
Air Corps, May, 1942· TrainedatTulare, Calif.
Chico, Calif., Douglas, Ariz. Ephrata, Wash.
and Sioux City, Iowa.
Served in France, Holland and Germany.
Holds DFC, Air Meda 1 and 3
Oak Leaf Clusters, Four Battle Stars in ETO
and Unit Presidential Citation.
Discharged
llay 25, 1945·

HILL, HOWARD R.
Pfc. Howard R. Hill, son of w. c. Hill. Wife,
Former Marie E. Slusser.
Entered Army Dec.,
1942Trained at camp Cooke, Ft. Pierce and
Camp Pickett.
Served in England, France,
Belgium.
Engaged in Three Major Battles in
ETO. Now enroute to United States.

HILL, JOHN L.
S;Sgt. John L. H..ill, son of Mr. and Mrs.
William J. Hill Sr.
Wife, former Marjorie
Robinson.
Entered Nat ' l Guard June, 1940.
Trained at Camp Robinson, Ft. Ord, Camp
Rucker.
Served 1n North Africa, India, China.
Holds Asiatic, Pacific Ribbon with 4 Battle
Stars, National Defense and Good Conduct.N.ow
discharged.

HILL, WILLIAM J. JR.
S/Sgt. William J· Hill Jr., son of Mr. and
llrs. William H1ll.
Wife, former Nellie
Anderson.
Entered Army June, 1944·
Trained
at Camp Plauche, Camp Shelby.
Served in
Philippine Is., where he is now stationed.

HILL, WILLIAM R.
S 1/c William R. Hill, son of Mr . and Mrs.
Ray Hill.
Entered Navy Feb. 10, 1945. Trained
at San Diego.
Now on duty at Port Hueneme,
Calif.
HINKSON, BRYCE A.
S 1/c Bryce A. Hinkson, son of Mr. and Mrs .
Guy G. Hinkson.
Entered Navy in 1944- Trained
Served in Sarna r.
at Great Lakes and Chicago.
Now on duty at Tokyo Bay.
51

�HINSHAW, STEPHEN C.
Pvt. Stephen C. Hinshaw, son of Mr. and Mrs.
S. c. Hinshaw.
Entered Army March, 1943.
Trained at Camp Barclay, Camp Sam Houston,
Camp Stoneman, Bulkley, Ellis.
Served in
England, France, Germany.
Now on duty in
France and Germany.
HINSHAW, WALLACE B.
1st Lt. Waliace b. Hinshaw, son of Mr . and
Mrs. s. c. Hinshaw.
Wife, former Mary Eliza·
beth Love.
Entered Army May, 1943.
Trained
at Camp Davis, Camp Hahn, Ft. Benning, Camp
Wheeler, Ft. Meade, Camp Maxey, Ft. Roberts.
Served in Philippines, Okinawa, and Japan
where he is now on duty.
HIRD, CARL JR.
En s . Ca r 1 Hi r d J r . , s o n o f Mr . an d Mr s . Ca r I
Hird.
Wife, former Irene Hoover.
Ente(Oed
Navy May, 1943.
Trained at Farragut, Bain ·
bridge, Mo., Olathe, Ks., Univ. of Pa., Univ.
of Notre Dam e , Va.
Now awaiting assignment
on.Destroyer a t Norfolk, Virginia.

HIRD, MARVIN H.
1st Lt. Marvin H. Hird, son of Mr . and Mrs.
Homer Hird.
Entered Air Corps, July, 1942.
Trained at Hondo, San Antonio, ElllngtonField,
Texas and Victorville, Calif.
Now on duty at
Baker fie 1 d, Ca 1 i f.

HOBSON, JAMES H.
S 1/c James H. Hobson, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Jerold H. Hobson.
Entered Navy June, 1942.
trained at Great Lakes and Navy Armory . Served
in England, Africa, Gibraltar, Australia, has
melle one trip around the world.
Now on duty
at Brooklyn, N.Y.

HOBSON, KENNETH E.
Pfc. Kenneth E. Hobson, son of Mr. ancl Mr s.
Jerold H. Hobson.
Entered Army June, 1944.
Trained at Ft. Bliss, Texas, Camp Carson,
Colo., and Camp Gruber, Okla.
Served in
Germany, France, Belgium and England.
Now on
duty at w. A· T. s. in England.

HOBSON, STEPHEN E.
Pfc. Stephen E. Hobson, son of Mr. and Mrs.
D. s. Hobson.
Entered Army June, 1944. Train·
ed at Ft. Bliss, Camp Carson, Camp Gruber.
Served in European Theater.
Holds Combat Inf.
Badge, Purple Heart, Good Conduct, ETO with
One Star.
Wounded March, 1945, Germany.
Now in Convalescent Hospital, Camp Carson.

HODGE, CARL G.
Cpl. Carl G. Hodge, son of Mr. and Mrs. M.R.
Hodge.
Wife, former Mildred Goble.
Entered
Army April 2, 1942.
Trained at Camp Bowie,
Texas.
Received Medical Discharge after
18 months service.

HODGE, C. MURRAY
S 2/c c. Murray Hodge, son of Mr. and Mrs.
C. o. Hodge.
Entered Navy Oct. 23, 1944.
Traineo a t Farragut, Idaho.
Served in Philip·
pines.
Holds American Theater, Asiatic ·
Pacific, and Phi 1 ippine Liberation Ribbons.
Now on duty at Norfolk, Va.
HODGE, RAYMOND L .
AM 3/c Raymond L. Hodg e , son of Mr. and Mrs.
M. R .. Hodge.
Wife, former Dorothy Mull,
Entered Navy, Sept., 1942.
Trained at Great
Lakes .
Served in Aleut ian Js. for 16 mos.
H o 1 d s Good Con d u c t Ribbon .
Now s t at i o ned a t
Corpus Christi, Texas.

52

�HODGES, JAMES ORLAND
Pfc. James Orland Hodges, son of Mr. and Mrs.
James Hodges.
Wife, for . 'Qr Lucille Spalsbury.
Entered Army, 1944.
Tra•ned at Scott Field,
Camp Howsie, Ft. Meade.
Now serving in
Philippines.

HODGES, WALTER E.
SF 3/C Walter E. Hodges, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Hodges.
Wife, former Li 11 ie L. Welsh.
En t e red N a v y , Ma y , 1 9 4 4 .
T r a i n e d a t Camp
Wallace, Texas.
Served in Hawaii and Japan.
Now on duty at San Francisco, Calif.
HODGES, WARREN D.
Capt. Warren D. Hodges, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Alva T. Hodges.
Wife, former Kathleen Robson.
Entered Army, June, 1942.
Trained at Camp
Davis, Camp Haan, Ft. Benning, Camp Croft.
Served in France, Luxembourg, Holland, Belgium, Germany.
Holds ETO with 2 Battle Stars,
Bronze Star. Now stationed at Camp Breckenridge

HODSON, BILLYC.
Sgt. Billy C. Hodson, son of Mr. andMrs.
Clarence Hodson.
Entered Army June, 1942·
Trained at. Leavenworth, Ks •., Camp Roberts,
Camp Adair, Oregon.
Served in Germany, Belgium, France and England.
Holds ETO Ribbon
and Good Conduct, Two Battle Stars.
Now
enroute to USA.

HODSON, LAWRENCE V.
Pvt. Lawrence v. Hodson, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Hodson.
Entered Marine corps, Jan.,
10, 1945.
Trained at Parris Island and
Camp LeTeune.
Has Expert Rifleman's Badge.
Now on auty at Guam.
HOLCOM
THOMAS HOWARD
Cpl. Thomas Howard Holcom, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur E. Holcom.
Wife, former Betty Jeanne
Tanner.
Entered Army, 1942·
Trained at Camp
Wolters and Ft. Bragg, N. C. Served in Africa,
Italy, Sicily, Ireland, Scotland, England,
h l u , France, Belgium, Luxembourg, Holland,
Germany and Switzerland.
Holds Glider Badge,
ETO Ribbon with 7 Battle Stars., Go a:! Conduct
Medal and Presidential Citation.

HOLLADAY, JOHN E.
Cp 1. John E . H o 1 1 a d a y , son o f Mr . and Mr s .
John Holladay.
Entered Army June, 1942.
Trained at Ft. Sill, Camp Hood, Camp Polk.,
Served on Oahu Island.
Has Good Conduct
Ribbon.
Now on duty at Pearl Harbor. ·

HOLLISTER, JESSE W.
SjSgt. Jesse W. Hollister, son of Mrs. Irene
Hollister.
Entered Army, 1942·
Trained at
Sheppard Field, Texas, Victorville, Calif.,
Long Beach, Calif. Ft. Benning, Ga. and Miss.
Served in Mexico and Puerto Rico.
Now on a
Troop Carrier.

HOLLOWAY, GEORGE N.
Pfc. George N. Holloway, son of Mr. and Mrs.
J· c. Holloway.
Entered Marines June, 1943.
Trained at San Diego, Cal if.
Served in Hawaii
New Caledonia, Guadalcanal, Guam and Iwo Jime.
Has Presidential Citation, 2 Battle Stars and
Gold Star.
Wound .e d July, 1944, Guam and
Feb. 1945, Iwo Jime. Now at Veterans Hospital,
Wichita, Kansas.
HOLLOWAY, JESSE C. JR.
AOM 3/c Jesse c. Holloway Jr., son of Mr. and
Mrs. J· C. Holloway.
Entered Navy Sept., 1943·
Trained at Farragut, Idaho· , Norman, Okla.,
St. Louis, Mo.
Now on duty at Alameda, Calif.
53

�HOLYFIELD, JAMES B.
Mus. 2/c James B. Holyfield, son of Mr. and
Mrs. James Holyfield.
Wife, former Lawanda
Maddox.
Entered Coast Guard Dec. , 1942.
Trained at St. Augustine, Fla., St. Louis.
Discharged Sept. 10, 1945.
HOPKINS, ROBERT L.
Pvt. Robert L. Hopkins, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Alex Hopkins.
Entered Army June, 1944. Train·
ed at Camp Blanding.
Served in EtO, France,
Germany, Belgium, England, Brussels,
Now on
duty at Reims, France.

HORNBERGER
JULIUS
F 2 / c Julius Hornberger, son of Will Horn·
berg e r .
Wi f e , f or me r Ida z i esc h .
Entere d
Navy March, 1945.
Trained at Great Lakes,
now en r ou t e to Pa c i f i c .

HOSFORD, CLITUS B.
Lt. (ig) Clitus B. Hosford, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Clitus B. Hosford.
Wife, former Martha
Crow.
Entered Navy, Nov., 1943·
Trained at
San Diego, Tuscon, Ariz. and Raleigh, N.C.
Now on duty at Okinawa.

HOSKINSON, FRED H.
Pfc. Fred H. Hoskinson, son of Mr.
He r ve N . H o s k in s on .
Wi f e , f o r me r
Hammond.
Entered Army Oct., 1944.
at Camp Robertson, Ft . Mead e , Md.
in Philippines in Mindanao.
Now·
at Kure, Japan.

and Mrs.
Robe r t a
Trained
Served
on duty

HOUGH, WILLIAMSON T.
1st. Lt. Williamson T. Hough, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Ceci 1 T. Hough.
Entered Army October,
1942·
Trained at Camp Wallace, Ft. Benning,
Ga.
Served in Scotland, England, France,
Luxembourg, Belgium, Holland and Germany.
Holds Purple Heart, ETO Ribbon with Two Stars,
and Combat Inf. Badge.
Now at Camp Breckin·
ridge.

HOUK, ALFRED C.
Pfc. Alfred C. Houk, son of Frank w. Houk.
Entered Army August, 1942.
Trained at Ft.
B 1 is s , B a r s tow , Ca 1 i f , Richmond , VA. and
Ft. Devens, Mass.
Went to England Feb.,1944.
Killed in Action July 31. 1944 in France.

HOUK, GERALDINE MARIE
S 1/ c Geraldine Marie Houk, daughter of Mrs.
Mary Houk.
Entered WAVES Nov., 1945. Trained
at Hunter College, New York.
Now on duty at
Brown Field, Calif.

HOUK, HAROLD M.
Lt. Harolci M. Houk, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Geo. Houk Jr .
Entered Army Feb . , 1942.
Trained at Camp Callan, Calif., OCS at Camp
Davis, Ft. Sheridan, Camp Haan, Ft . Bliss.
Served in England, France, Germany, Austria.
Engaged in 3 Mai or Battles.
Now on duty at
Rheims, France.
HOUK, RALpH G .
Lt. Ralph G. Houk, son of Mr. and Mrs. Geo .
Houk, Jr.
Entered Army Feb., 1942·
Trained
at Ft. Leavenworth, Ft. Knox, Ft. Riley ,
Camp Polk, and Muroc, Calif.
Served in Scot ·
land, England, France, Belgium, Luxembourg,
Germany.
Received 4 or 5 Battle Stars,
Presidential Citation, Silver Star Award.
Now on duty at Nurembourg, Germany.

54

�HOUK, WALTER C. SR.
Pfc. Walter c. Houk, Sr., son of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Houk.
Wife, former Betty Sutton.
Entered Arml March, 1944.
Trained at Camp
Blanding, Fa.
Served in England, France,
Holland, Germany, and Belgium where he was
Killed in Action Feb. 21, 1945.
Was Awarded
Expert Infantryman's Badge.
HOUSE, ARVEL T.
Sgt. Arvel T. House, husband of Alice W.
House.
Entered Marines Nov., 1942.
Trained
at San Diego, Camp Elliot, and Camp Pendleton.
Served on New Caledonia, Guadalcanal and
Hawaiian Is. Now enroute to USA for discharge.

HOUSE, HARRY E.
S/Sgt. Harry E. House, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest E. House.
Entered Army Dec., 1940.
Trained at Camp Robinson, Ark.
Served in
Au s t r a 1 i a , N e w Ca 1 e d on i a , Gu a d a 1 c a n a 1 , F i j i
Is., Bouganville and Leyte.
Engaged in 4
Major Battles and has Navy Presidential
Citation.
Discharged May 30, 1945·
HOUSE, JAMES T.
Cpl. James T. House ·, son of Mrs. May House.
Entered Army June, 1940.
Trained at Camp
Robinson, Camp Rucker, Camp Butner.
Served
in England, France, Germany, Belgium, Holland,
Luxembourg.
Holds Good Conduct, American Defense, European Theater of Operations. wounded in Action Nov.
24, Ardennes, Belgium.

HOUSE, LLOYD A.
S/Sgt. Lloyd A. House, son of Mrs. May House.
Wife, former Doris Hatch.
Entered Army March,
1942·
Trained at Camp Blanding, Little Rock,
Camp Rucker.
Served in England, Germany,
France.
Holds Good Conduct, Bronze Star,
ETO Ribbon, Infantry Combat Badge.
Now on
duty at Nice, France.
HOUSE, STANLEY T.
T/5 Stanley T. House, son of Mr. and Mrs.
T. E. House.
Wife, former Agnes v. Spitzli.
En t e red Army Feb . . 1 9 4 3 .
T r a in e d at Camp
Howze, Camp Livingston, Camp San Luis Obispo.
Saw Combat in Germany received furlough in
1945, now stationed on Luzon near Manilla.

HOUT, ALLEN D.
Pfc. Allen D. Hout, son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
H. Hout.
Entered Army Oct., 1944.
Trained
at Camp Robinson, Ark.
Served in Philippines.
Holds Combat Infantryman's Badge.
Now enroute to Japan.

HOWARD, HAROLD
TIS Harold Howard, son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter
How a r d S r .
Wi f e , f o r me r Ruby Had 1 .
En t e r e d
Infantry, Nov., 1942.
Trained at Camp White,
Camp Adair, Ft. Benning.
Served in Africa
and was in 3 Ma j or Ba t t 1 e s in It a 1 ian Campa i g n .
Discharged October 25, 1945.

HOWARD
JACK J.
Cpl. fac"k J. Roward, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Howard.
Wife, former Cleo Arleta Wilson. Entered Army Nov., 1942·
Trained at Camp Phillips, Ks.
Served in England, France and Germany.
Now on duty at ETO.

HOWE, CHARLES D.
Cpl. Charles D. Howe, son of Mrs. Luet .ta E.
Howe.
Entered Army Dec., 1942.
Trained at
Camp Claiborne, La.
Served in England, France,
Belgium.
Holds Good Conduct Medal and ETO.
Now on duty in Belgium.

55

�HOWE, FRANK T.
Pfc . Frank T. Howe, son of Mrs. Luetta E.
Howe .
Wi f e, for mer Want a Mae T r i v it t .
En·
tered Nat •1 Guards Jan . , 1941.
Trained at
Camp Robinson, Ft. Ord. Camp Sibert, Palm
Beach, Vancouver and Presidio of San Francisco ,
Calif., where he is now stationed.

HOWE, JAMES A.
Pvt. James A ; Howe, son of Mrs. Luetta E.
Howe.
Entered Army June, 1945·
Trained at
Camp Ellis, Ill. and Pasco, Wash. where he is
now stationed.

HOWE, ROSS E.
T / 5 Ross E. Howe, son of Mrs. Luetta Howe.
Wife, former Helen Weckworth.
Entered Army
April, 1943.
Trained at Atlantic City, Camp
Sibert, Jefferson Barracks.
Served in New
Guinea, Philippines, and Okinawa where he is
now serving.
Holds Good Conduct Medal and
ETO Ribbon.
HUBBARD, MYRON E.
Cpl. Myron E. Hubbard, son of Mr. and Mrs.
c. A· Hubbard. Wife, former Marie Botts. En·
t e r e d ,A r my N o v . , 1 9 4 3 .
T r a i n e d a t Camp
Barkley, Texas.
Now stationed at Baltimore,
Maryland.

HUBBEL , RALPH G.
Cpl. Ralph G. Hubbel, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Rapph Hubbel.
Entered Army Air Corps Feb.,
1944.
Trained at Keesler ,Field,
Truax Field,
Chanute Field and Boca Raton, \ Fla.
Served
on Sa ipan and Guam where he is now stationed.

HUDSON, WILLIAM S.
T/ 4 W1lliam s. Hudson, son of Mrs. Elva Wise.
Wife, former Eva L· Baysinger.
Entered Army
Aug., 1940.
Trained at Ft. Leavenworth, Camp
_Campbell; Camp Chaffee; Ft. Washington; and
Ft. Knox.
Served in Scotland, England, France ,
Germany, Austria.
Holds 2 Battle Stars.
Discharged Nov. 1, 1945.

HULS, DONALDS.
Lt. (ig) DonaldS. Huls, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Spencer Hul s.
Wife, former Frances E. Ware.
Entered Navy, Jan., 1943·
Trained at Quonset
Point, R. I.
Served in Guadalcanal, Guam,
Saipan, Leyte, Okinawa and Philippines.
Now
at Olathe Naval Base.
HULTEEN, A. GEORGE
S / Sgt. A . George Hulteen, son of Arthur L·
Hu 1 t e en .
Wi f e , f o r me r A 1 be r t a Commons .
En·
terec:l Army Postal Service, Sept. , 1942.
Trained at Camp Wolters, Texas;Desert Training
Center, Calif.
Served in North Africa and
India.
Holds European African, Asiatic,
Pacific Campaigns, Good Conduct Medal.
Dis·
charged Oc t . 2 1 , 1 9 4 5 .

HUMPHREY, BERNICE F .
1st Lt. Bernice F. Humphrey, son of Captain
George F. Humphrey.
Entered Army, June, 1937·
Trained at Kansas Univ., CCC in Kansas and Ft.
Bragg, N. C.
Served on Philippine Is . , WB!
captured when Corregidor fell to Japs. Awarded
Purple Heart.
Killed in Action Oct. 24, 1944·

HUNDLEY, EDWIN D.
Sgt. Edwin D. Hundley, son of Mr. and Mrs.
0 . E. Hundley.
Entered Army Air Corps, 1944·
Trained at Sioux Falls, S.D.; Yuma, Ariz.;
Tonopah, Nevada, now on duty at Greensboro,
North Car o 1 ina.

56

�HUNDLEY JOHN B.
T/5 John B· Hundley, husband of Virginia Lee
Bauman.
Entered Signal Corps, June, 1942.
Trained at Camp Beale, Camp Crowaer; Pittsburg, Pa.
Served in Pacific Theatre for 32
months.
Now on duty at Colorado Springs.
HUNDLEY, OVERTON E. JR.
S/Sgt. Overton E. Hundley Jr., son of Mr. and
Mrs. 0. E. Hundley.
Entered Marines, 1943.
Trained at San Diego, Chicago, Cherry Point.
Served in South Pacific.
Holds Presidential
Citation.
Now on duty at Okinawa.

HUNN, HARRY L.
Sgt. Harry L. Hunn, son of Mary A. Roberts.
Entered Marines Aug., 1943·
Trained at San
Diego, Calif., Norman, Okla. and Cherry Point,
N.C.
Served on Hawaii, Marshall Is. and
Guam, where he is now on duty.
HUNN, HERMAN C. JR.
W;O Herman c. Hunn, Jr., son of Mary A. Roberts.
Wife, former Carol Maxine Caine.
Entered
Army Air Corps, 1939·
Trained at March Field,
San Francisco, Calif. and Philippines. Served
in Philippines, Australia, Java and England.
Holds Presidential Citation ~ibbon with 3 Oak
Leaf Glu ste rs and Good Conduct Medal.
Now at
Salt Lake City, Utah.

HUNT, IRA E.
Y 2/c Ira E. Hunt, son of D. E. Hunt.
Wife,
former Lora Lee York.
Entered Navy 1942.
Trained at Fairfax Field, Mo.
Served in
Argentina, Newfoundland, Ireland, Bermuda,
Cuba, Panama Canal Zone, Philippines.
Holds
American European, African and Pacific Theaters
of War Aboard U.S.S. Core. Discharged Sept.45.
HUNZICKER, ALBERT E.
T;s Albert E. Hunzicker, son of Mrs. Delsie
Hunzicker.
Wife, former Oliveward Ford.
Entered Army Jan., 1941· Trained at Ft. Riley,
Ks., Louisiana Maneuvers, California Desert
Training. and Schools at Ft. Knox, Ky. Engaged in 3 Major Battles in ETO.
Holds Good
Conduct Medal, Pre-Pearl Harbor and ETO Ribbon with three Battle Stars.
Discharged Oct.
1945·

HURLEY, EARL R.
Pvt. Earl R. Hurley, son of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar
Hurley.
Wife' , former Winifred L· Moses.
Entered Army Sept., 1943.
Trained at Camp
Robe r t s , Ca 1 i f .
Se r v e d i n Af r i c a , I t a 1 y ,
France and Germany.
Holds Four Battle Stars
and Three Campaign Ribbons.
Now on duty at
Marseille, France.
HURST, THOMAS C.
Capt. Thomas C. Hurst, son of Mr. and Mrs. H.L.
Hurst.
Wife, former Margery Dalton.
Entered
Army Medical Corps, July, 1942· Trained at Ft.
Riley, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn. and Ft.
Dix, N. J.
Now on duty at Ft. Jay, New York.

HUTCHINS, LAWRENCE, R.
Pfc, Lawrence
R. Hutchins, husband of Ruth
Breithaupt.
Entered Army April, 1944.
Trained at Camp Hood, Ft. George Meade.
Served
in England, Germany and France, where he is
now on 'duty.
Holds Good Conduct Ribbon.
ICE, ROY C.
T/4 Roy C. Ice, son of Mr. Calvin H. Ice and
Mrs. W1ni fred Gub ey.
Wife, former Mary Silvers.
Entered Army March, 1943·
Trained at
Camp Polk, La.
Served in Scotland, England,
France, Belgium, Holland and Germany.
Holds
EAME Campaign Medal, 5 Bronze Stars, Victory
Medal, American Campaign Medal and Good Conduct Medal.
Now is discharged.

57

�ICE, WILLIAM A.
Sgt. William A. Ice, son of Mr. and Mrs. Mar·
tin F. Ice.
Entered Air Corps, Aug., 1942·
TrainedatCamp Kerns, UtahandOakland, Calif.
S t a t ion ed at Co f f e yv i 11 e A i r Fie 1 d , for 16
months.
Now at Midland, Texas.

ILES, RAYMOND L.
CM l;c Raymond L. Iles, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Cha s. Il es.
Wife, former Frances Bock over.
En t e r e d N a v y J u 1 y , 1 9 4 2 .
T r a in e d a t Camp
Bradford, Va.
Serv ed in Asiatic Pacific
Theater.
Discharged Oct. 23, 1945·
INGLE, CHARLES W.
Pfc. Charles w. Ingle, son of Mr, and Mrs.
Grant w. Ingle.
Wife, former Dorothy A.
Johnson.
Entered Army June, 1942.
Trained at
Camp Pickett, Camp Blanding, Camp Forrest,
Camp Phillips, Camp Miles Standish.
Engaged
in invasion of France.
Holds European African
Theatre Ribbon, Purple Heart, Good Conduct,
Combat Infantryman's Badge, One Bronze Star.
Wounded in Action June, 1944 in France.
Dis·
charged January 20, 1945.
IRELAND, E. M. (IRISH)
c.Sp.A.( Irish) E.M. Ireland, son of William
Ireland.
Wife, former Berneice Holyfield.
Entered Navy, Jan., 1943.
Trained at Nor·
folk, Va. and Farragut, Idaho.
Now on duty
at San Diego. Ca 1 if.

JACKSON, MERLE L.
S ;Sgt. Merle L. Jackson, son of Mrs. Leon M.
Jackson.
EnteredArmyAir Corps, Oct., 1942.
Trained at Miami Beach, Fla. and Moody Field,
Ga.
Now on duty at San Juan, Porto Rico.

JACKSON
THOMAS R. JR.
Sgt. Thomas R . Jackson Jr., son of Thomas R.
Jackson Sr.
Wife, former Mary Anne DowdelL
Entered Army, 1943 .
Trained at Camp Swift,
Texas.
Served in Hawaii, pileau, and Tinian,
where he is now on duty.
Holds Two Battle
Stars.

JACOB, HALLIE I.
1st Lt. Hallie I. Jacob, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. A. M· Jacob.
Entered Army Nurse Corps,
Jan., 1944 .
Trained at Camp Carson, and 0'
Reilly General Hospital.
Went overseas Nov.,
1944 and has been stationed at Guam.
Sh e
holds one battle Star.

JACOBS, ARTHUR RAYMOND
S/ Sgt . Arthur Raymond Jacobs, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Watts.
Wife, former Reta Wilson.
Entered Army Aug ., 1943.
Trained at Camp
Adair and Ft. Leonard Wood, Mo.
Served in
France and Germany.
Holds Good Conduct Rib·
bon, ETO, 3 Battle Stars, Combat Inf. Badge.
Now on duty at Camp Butner, N. c.

JACOBSON, ARVID D.
Capt. Arvid D. Jacobson , entered Army Sept.,
1942.
Trained at Camp Crowder, Mo. OCS at
Ft. Monmouth, N. J., Photography inN. Y.,
Assigned toOffice Chief Signal Officer, Wa
Department, Washington, DC.
JAIMES, FRANK
s ; Sgt. Frank Jaimes, son of Joe Jaimes.
Wife
Elizabeth Ruth Beryl Murray.
Entered Ai
Corps Aug., 1942·
Trained at Sheppard Field
Sioux Fa 1 1 s , Ft . My e r s , Wa 11 a Wa 1 1 a , Wash
Served in England, Germany, France, Belgi
Holland, Norway.
Holds Air Medal and 3 Branz
Oak Leaf Clusters, DFC, Presidential Citation.
Now is discharged.

58

�JAIMES, JOE P.
Pfc. Joe p, Jaimes, son of Joe Jaimes.
Ent e red Ma r i n e s Au g . , 1 9 4 3 .
T r a in e d a t San
Diego.
Served in Marshalls, Okinawa, Palau,
Marianas, Russell, Hawaii, Japan, Guam.
Now
on duty at Japan.
JAMESON, EARL D.
2nd Lt. Earl D· Jameson, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Jameson.
Entered Air Corps, March, 1943.
Trained at San Antonio, Corsicana, Texas;
Frederick, Okla and Boise, Idaho.
Overseas
in June 1944, shot down over Austria in Sept.
POW until April, 1945·
Holds Air Medal.
Now
at Separation Center at San Antonio, Texas.

JAMESON, HOWARD M.
2nd Lt. Howard M. Jameson, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Jameson.
Entered Air Corps, 1939.
Trained at Hickam Field, Honolulu Hawaii.
Ser .ved
in Battle of Pearl Harbor and Midway.
Holds
Sil-ver Star.
Now at Pueblo, Colo. ·

JAMESON, LLOYD H.
T/5 Lloyd H. Jameson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Jameson.
Entered Army March 1943. Trained
at Camp Abbot, Oregon; Amarillo, Texas; Missouli, Mont.; LaJunta, Colo.
Served in Office
Hdq. at Ft . Wa r r en, Wyo. where he is s t i 11 on
duty.

JAMES, ROGER F.
Sgt. Roger F. James, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
H. James.
Entered Army, March, 1943·
Trained
at tamp Callan, Calif. and Camp Campbell, Ky.
Served in France, Germany, England and Scotland.
Holds Bronze Star and Purple Heart.
Wounded in Action March 14, 1944 in France.
Now on duty in Germany.

JARDON, BOURKE J.
M/ Sgt. Bourke J. Jardon, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Frank c. Jardon.
Entered Army, 1941·
Trained
at Camp Roberts, Ft. Lewis, and Camp Forrest.
Served in Normandy, France, Rhineland, Ardennes, Central Europe.
Holds Good Conduct
Medal and America!' Defense Ribbon.
Now discharged.

JELLA, HERBERT JACK
PO EM 3/c Herbert Jack Jella, son of Mrs.
Viq~inia
Jella.
Entered Navy Summer, 1943.
Tra1ned at Farra1?;Ut, St
Louis and Newport
News.
Served in Hawaii, Cuba and Japan where
he is now on duty.

JENNINGS, ARCHIE W.
BM 2/ c Archie w. Jennings, son of Mr. and Mrs.
C. I. Jennings.
Entered Navy Dec. 11. 1941.
Trained at San Diego.
Served in south Pacific
and Aleutian Is. Has Bronze Star.
Now on duty
in Ph i 1 i p p i n e s .

JENNINGS, JOHN E.
Cpl. John E. Jennings, son of Mr. and Mrs.
C. E· Jennings.
Wife, former Elsie Prowbridge.
Entered Army Dec., 1940.
Trained at
Camp Rob i n s on , Ark .
S e r v e d in A 1 e u t ian I s .
Holds Bronze Star.
Discharged Sept. 3, 1945.
JENNINGS
WILL lAM J.
Cpl. william J. Jennings, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Pilon.
Entered Air Corps, March, 1943.
Trained at Sheppard Field, Texas; Boise, Idaho
and Sa 1 t Lake C i t y.
Served in It a 1 y.
Ho 1 d s
2Battle Stars andGoodConduct Ribbon.
Now
on duty at Eglinfield, Fla.

59

�JENSEN,
S l;c
A:ndrew
1942·
Now on

THOMAS R.
Thomas R. Jensen, son of Mr. and Mrs.
0. ,Jensen.
Entered Coast Guard, July,
Trained at Alameda, Cal if and Honolulu.
duty at Paris, Tenn.

JENSEN, EARL C.
CMM Earl C. Jensen, son of Maruis Jensen. Wife,
former Virgin.ia B. Milks.
Entered Navy Nov.,
1929 to Nov., 1933·
Reentered Sept., 1942·
Trained at San Diego, Calif.
Served in Panama
Ca·nal Zone and Honolulu T. H. Now is discharged.

JOHANNING, ELMER R.
Sgt. Elmer R. Johanning, son of Mr. Otto L.
Johanning .
En t e red Army A i r Corps Apr i 1,
1942.
Trained at Sheppard Field, Santa
Monic a , Fresno , Mu roc and Glenda 1 e , Ca 1 i f.,
Everett, Wash., Ontario, Calif, Indianapolis,
Ind.
Now on duty at ElPaso, Texas.

JOHANNING, HELEN K.
2nd Lt. Helen K. Johanning, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. w. H· Johanning.
Entered Army Nurse
Corps, June, 1942.
Trained at Ft. Logan and
Sheppard Field.
Discharged November, 1944.

JOHNSON, ARTHUR T.
2nd Lt. Arthur T. Johnson, entered Army in
1940·
Served in European Theater. Discharged
at Leavenworth, Ks., Oct., 1945·

JOHNSON, EDMOND L.
1st Sgt. Edmond L· Johnson, son of Mr. and
Mrs. L. E. Johnson.
Wife, former Esther Ruth
Hack .
En t e r e d Army J u 1 y , 1 9 4 2 .
T r a in e d at
Camp Crowder and Midland Radio School, K.C. Mo.
Served in Iceland, England, _France, Belgium.
Holds Good Conduct Medal, Citation for Meri·
to ri ou s pe r f o r rna nc e o f Mi 1 i t a r y Duty.
Now on
duty at Eupen, Belgium.

JOHNSON, GROVER D.
Pfc. Grover D. Johnson, son of Mrs. Emma D.
ohnson.
Wife, former Pearl Gardner.
Entered
rmy March, 1941.
Trained at Camp Flint, and
Album, Calif,
Served in Alaska, Hawaii,
Marshalls, and Philippines.
Holds Asiatic·
P a c i f i c Ribbon , 2 Ba t t 1 e Stars , Arne r i can
Theater, Purple Heart, Philippine Liberation,
One Battle Star and Combat Inf. Badge. Wounded
Feb., 1943, Kwajalein, and Oct., 1945, Leyte.
Discharged July 20, 1945.

l

JOHNSON, KENNETH 0.
Sgt. Kenneth 0. Johnson, son of Mr. and M"·
Oscar Johnson.
:l':"ntered Air Corps Aug., 1942.
Trained at Kearns, Utah; Sioux Falls, s . D.
Madison, Wise. and Kelly Fie.ld, Texas.
Served
25 months in Canada.
Now at Sheppard Field.

JOHNSON, LEWIS E.
Ph M 3/c Lewis E. Johnson, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Fred w. Johnson.
Entered Navy Oct., !944.
Trained at Great Lakes and Farragut.
Nowon
duty at Great Lakes.
JOHNSON, RAYMOND A.
Pfc. Raymond A. Johnson, son of Mrs. Lillit
Johnson.
Entered Marines, June, 1943. Train·
ed at San niego, Calif.
Served in Pacific
Theater, Bouganville, New Caledonia, Guam
New Hebrides, Guadalcanal.
Holds 2 Battlt
Stars and the purple Heart.
Wounded July,
1944, on Guam.
Now at San Pedro, Calif.

60

�JOHNSON, ROLLAND N.
pfc. Rolland N. Johnson, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Burt F. Johnson.
Entered Army . June, 1942.
Trained at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo.
Served in
Africa, Italy, Yugoslavia.
Holds EAME-Four
Ba t t 1 e S t a r s .
D i s c h a r g e d 0 c t . 21 , 1 9 4 5 .
JOHNSTON
ROY L.
S;Sgt. Roy L. Johnston, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Johnston. Entered Army Feb., 1942· Trained at Camp Livingston, La. and Camp Howze,
Texas.
Served in Geqpany, and now on duty
in Manila.
Has Three Battle Stars.
JOJOLA, JOHNNIE
TjSgt. Johnnie Jojola, son of Mr. and Mrs.
John F. J o j o 1 a •
En t e red Army , J u 1 y , 1 9 41 •
Trained at Camp Wolters, Texas, Ft. Leonard
Wood, Mo, Ft. Benning, Georgia and Ft. Bragg,
N. C. Served inN. Africa, Sicily, Italy, N.
Ireland, Scotland, England, France, Holland,
Belgium, Luxembourg and Germany.
Holds Bronze
Star, Purple Heart, Combat In f. Badge, Unit
Citation, Good Conduct and ETO with 5 Battle
Stars.
Wo~nded Sept., 1943 in Italy and Oct.
1944 in Holland.
Now is discharged.
JOLLY, DAVID G.
F /0 Da v i d G. J o 1 1 y , son o f Mrs . F. G. J o 11 y .
Entered Army Air Corps in 1941.
Trained at
Pendleton, Ore.; McCord, Wash.; Visalia,
Minter, Calif. and MAAF, Marfa, Texas. Served
in Australia, New Guinea, Netherlands, East
Indies, Philippines and Luzon where he was
killed in action Feb. 19, 1945.
Awarded Air
Medal, 4 Oak Leaf Clusters and Purple Heart.
JONES
ELGIE G.
1st Lt. Elgie G. Jones, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Jones.
Wife, former Allis M. Terrell.
Entere
Army, Aug., 1942·
Trained at Ft. Warren, Wyo., Camp Lee, Va., Camp Normoyle, San
Antonio, Texas, Camp McCoy, Wise. Camp Tyson,
Tenn.
Engaged in 5 Major Battles in the ETO.
Holds Bronze Star and Presidential Citation.
Now on duty in Germany.
JONES, FRANK E. JR.
1st Lt. Frank E. Jones, Jr., son of Mr. and
Mrs. Frank E. Jones.
Wife, former Hazel
Spught.
Entered Infantry, 1940 and later
transferred to Air Corps.
Trained at Ft.
Benning, Marfa, Texas, Walla Walla, Wash.
Served in England, Belgium, Holland, Germany,
Switzerland, Italy, Corsica, Sardinia, Africa,
Spain, and France.
Holds Air Medal.
Now enroute to USA.
JONES, HI RAM 7P.
Maj. Hiram P. Jones, son of Dr. and Mrs. H. T.
Jones.
Wife, former Frances C. Foulkes.
Entered Medical Corps, July, 1942·
Trained at
Ft. Geo. Meade, Md. Served in Africa and Italy.
Holds Meritorious Ribbon and 4 Battle Stars.
Now on Inactive Duty.
JONES, J. F.
S ljc J. F. Jones, son of Mr. and Mrs. R. J.
Jones.
Wife, former Ruth E. Jones.
Entered
Navy,· Feb., 1944·
Trained at Il'arragut, Idaho.
Served in Pearl Harbor, Philippines, Okinawa,
lwo lima, China, Yokohama and Tokyo.
Holds
Purp e Heart, 10 Major Battles inS. Pacific.
Wounded July, 1944. Titian. Now at Olathe, Ks.
JONES, JOHN H.
Sgt. John H. Jones, son of Mr. and Mrs. J·
Houston Turner.
Entered Army Air Corps July,
1943.
Trained at.Buckley Field, Lowry Field
and Sioux Falls, S.D. Served in South Pacific.
Holds Presidential Citation and Battle Stars.
Now on duty at Guam.
JONES, NORMAN D.
1st Sgt. Norman D. Jones, son of Mrs. Cyrus
A. Jones.
Wife, former Victoryetta Dawes.
Entered Army Dec., 1940.
Trained at Camp
Robinson.
Served in Aleutians, France and
Germany.
Holds 3 Campaign ·Stars, Good Conduct
MEidal, Expert Infantryman's Badge.
Discharged
June 27, 1945.
61

�JONES, OGDEN S. JR.
Pfc. Ogden s. Jones Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ogden s. Jones.
Entered Army July, 1943.
Trained nt Camp Campbell and Camp Fannin.
Served in Fra nee, Germany and Czechoslovakia.
Holds Presidential Citation, Bronze Star and
Three Ba t t 1 e S t a r s .
Now a t We s t Point , N. Y,
JONES, WALTER R.
S;Sgt. Walter R. Jones, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Frank E. Jones. Wife, former Irene Dziekonski.
Entered Army, June, 1940.
Trained at Camp
Robinson, Ark., Camp S~n Luis Obispo, Calif.,
Camp Rucker, Ala. and Camp Butner, N.C. Served
in England, France, Luxembourg, Belgium, Hol·
land and Germany.
Holds Purple Heart, Ameri·
can Theater, American Defense and ETO Ribbon,
Good Conduct, Bronze Star and Victory Ribbon.
Now on duty at Ft. Hancock, N.J. (Re-enlisted)
JORDAN, W. FRED
Lt. Col. W. Fred Jordan, veteran of World War
I. entered World War II with Army in 1942.
Trained at Aberdeen Proving Ground, Md., Ft.
Knox, Ky., Wash. D. C.
Served in England,
France, Belgium, Holland, Germany, Iceland,
Newfoundland, Pearl Harbor, Johnston Is.,
Kwajalein, Guam, Philippines, Leyte, Luzon,
Cebu, Mindanao and Mindora.
Holds Legion ol
Merit, Purple Heart with 2 Oak Leaf Clusters.
Philippine Liberation Medal, Campaign Ribbons.
Now on duty with War Dept., Wash. D. C.
JUNE, RAYMOND G.
Cpl. Raymond G. June, son of Mrs. Nellie June.
Entered Air Corps, 1943.
Trained at Kearns,
Utah.
Served in England, engaged in 6 Major
Ba t t 1e s •
Now i s d i s c h a r g e d .
KAMPSCHROEDER, ELMER F.
Cpl. Elmer F. Kampschroeder, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Kampschroeder.
Wife, former Jla
Mae Gravitt .
Entered Air Corps , Apr i 1, 1942.
Trained at Ft. Warren, Wyo. Served in Hawaiian
Is.
Holds Good Conduct Medal, Asiatic Pacific
Meda 1 and Driver's Medal.
Now is discharged,
KAMPSCHROEDER, HERBERT
Pfc. Herbert Kampschroeder, son of Mr. and Mrs.
E r n e s t Kamps c h roe de r .
Wi f e , f o r me r Ma r j or ie
Hadl.
Entered Air Corps Sept., 1942.
Trained
at Glendale, Calif., and Greenville, Miss.
Now stationed at Pyote, Texas.

KAMPSCHROEDER, ROLLAND
M.M. 2/c Rolland Kampschroeder, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Ernest Kampschroeder.
Entered Navy
J u 1 y , 1 9 4 2 . T r a in e d a t G r e a t Lake s . Served
1n New Caledonia, New Hebrides, Fiji Is. S.i.
P a c i f i c , G i 1 be r t Is . , Ma r s h a 1 1 s , New Guinea
and Tokyo Bay.
Engaged in 7 Major Battles.
Now on duty in S.W. Pacific.
KAPELLE, GILBERT F.
Pfc. Gilbert F. Kapelle, son of Fred W. Kapelle,
Wife, former Hazel Hobson.
Entered Army March,
1944.
Trained at Camp Bowie, TexdS·
Served
in France and Germany.
Engaged in Two Major
Battles.
Now stationed at Camp Knight, Calif,

KASBERGER, JOHNNIE C.
1st Sgt. Johnnie C. Kasberger, son of Mr. and
Mrs. John ·M. Kasberger.
Wife, former Nadene
McKinney.
Entered Nat'l Guards, Dec., 1940.
Trained at Camp Robinson and Ft. Ord.
Served
in Guadalcanal, Bouganville, and Philippines.
Holds Good Conduct, American Defense and
Philippine Service Medals and Presidential
Citation.
Discharged August 26, 1945.
KAULL, GEORGE M.
Shipfitter 1/c George M. Kaull,
Ka u 1 1 .
Wi f e , f o r mer R u t h R . P
tered Navy, 1943.
Trained at
Served in Pacific Is lands. Now
Tinian.

62

son of J.G.
i e rce .
En·
Camp Perry.
on duty at

�KEENE, KENNETH W.
1st Lt. Kenneth W. Keene, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Har ·r y W. Keene.
Entered Army March, 1943.
Trained at Camp Davis, N.C. and ROTC at Kans.·
Univ.
Served in Philippines, Leyte, Ryukrus
Is., and Okinawa where he is now on duty.

KEENE, WALLACE R.
1st Lt. Wallace R. Keene, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Keene.
Entered Army Air Corps, March,
1943.
Trained at Wash. Univ., Seattle, Wash.
and Univ. of Calif.
Served in Algiers, Africa.
Now on duty at Morocco, Africa.

KELLER, WILLIAM R.
Pvt. William R. Keller, son of 0. R. Keller.
Entered Army Tan., 1945.
Trained at Camp
Fannin, Texas. Served in Pearl Harbor, Marshall
Is. and Philippines. Holds Expert Infantryman's
Badge.
Now on duty at Manila:

KELSEY, CHARLES R.
Pfc, Charles R. Kelsey, son of Mrs. 0. E.
Anderson.
Entered Army Nov., 1942.
Trained
at Camp Shelby and Camp Pickett.
Served in
New Guinea, Netherlands East Indies and Philippines, where he is now on duty.
Holds Good
Conduct Medal, Bronze Star.

KENNEDY, BERNARD R.
Sgt. Bernard R. Kennedy, son of Mr. and Mrs.
John R. Kennedy.
Wife, former Bernice Faye
Goff.
Entered Army, March, 1943.
Trained at
Ft. Leonard Wood, Mo.
Served in Scotland,
England, France, Germany, Luxembourg, Belgium.
Holds Bronze Star, Purple Heart, Good Conduct,
Four Campaign Stars, Presidential Citation
and Cluster.
Wounded Jan. 10, 1945.
Discharged Oct. 31. 1945.
KENNEDY , FLOYD E.
Sgt. Floyd E. Kennedy, son of Mrs. Lizzie H.
Kennedy .
En t e red A i r Cor p s , Apr i 1 , 1 9 4 2 .
Trained at Flint, Michigan.
Served in Iran
and Abadan Air Base.
Holds Good Conduct and
AP Me c h a n i c Me d a I s .
Now a t K e e s 1 e r F i e I d .
KENNEDY , FRANC IS MAX
Capt. Francis Max Kennedy, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Orrin 0. Kennedy.
Wife, former Elizabeth
Cowie.
Entered Coast Artillery, Feb., 1942.
Trained at Ft. Monroe, Va.
Served in Panama,
Ecuador, Peru and the Galapagos Is.
Discharged September 29, 1945.
KENNEDY, JOSEPH D.
S/Sgt. Joseph D. Kennedy, son of Mr. and Mr".
John R. Kennedy.
Entered Air Corps, Dec.,
1943.
Trained at Amarillo, Texas., Tempe,
Ariz,, Yuma, Ariz,, Lincoln, Nebr. and Sioux
City Iowa.
Served in England, Scotland,
Belgium, France, Germany, Luxembourg, Holland,
and Denmark.
Holds Air Medal, 4 Oak Leaf
Clusters, Good Conduct, 3 Major Battles in
ETO and Unit Citation.
Now unassigned.
KENNEDY, MAX D.
Lt. Max D. Kennedy, son of Mr. and Mrs. John
R. Kennedy.
Entered Air Corps, 1942.
Tratned
at San Antonio, Ft. Worth, Sherman and Eagle
Pass and Waycross, Ga.
Served in Alaska and
Aleutians.
Discharged Sept. 20, 1945.
KENNEDY, RICHARD M.
Sgt. Richard M. Kennedy, son of Mr.. and Mrs.
John R. Kennedy.
Entered Army, Nov., 1942.
Trained at Camp Funston, had Desert Maneuvers
in Calif. and La.
Served in England, France,
Luxembourg, Belgium, Holland, Germany and
Czechoslovakia.
Holds Bronze Star, Purple
Heart, Good Conduct and 3 Battle Stars. Wounded
Jan. 2, 1945, Belgium.
Discharged Oct., 1945.

63

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                    <text>KENNEDY, THEODORE A.
Lt. Com. Theodore A. Kennedy, son of Dr. A. R.
Kennedy.
Wife, former Grace Carter.
Entered
Navy, July, 1942· Trained at San Diego, Calif.
Served in Japan, Philippines and Saipan.
N~
is at Sea.
KENT, GENE 0.
Pfc. Gene 0. Kent, son of Mrs. Hattie C. Kent.
Wife, former Ethel Patterson.
Entered Army
May, 1944.
Trained at Ft. Knox, Ky and Camp
Bowie, Texas.
Served in France, Belgiumand
Germany.
Holds PU:rple Heart and Bronze Star.
Now on duty at Camp Cooke, Calif.

KENT, ORLAN V.
Pfc. Ohlan V. Kent, son of Mrs. Hattie C. Kent.
Entered Army March, 1941.
Trained at Camp
Bowie, Camp Shelby, Camp Livingston, Camp
Pickett.
Served in New Guinea, Netherland East
Indies, Philippines.
Engaged in Four Major
H o 1 d s Pre s ide n t i a 1 C i t a t ion . No•
B a t t 1e s .
enroute to USA.
KEOUGH, EARL W.
T/Sgt. Earl W. Keough, son of Mrs. Rosa Keough.
Entered Army Aug., 1942.
Trained at Camp
Swift, Camp Polk, Houston and Needles, Calif.
Served in ETO. Has Good Conduct Medal, Two
Battle Stars and One Bronze Star.
Now on duty
at Fort Lawton, Wash.

KEPLINGER, ARLON E.
Cpl. Arlon E. Keplinger, son of Mr. and Mrs.
R. B. Keplinger.
Wife, former Beulah Leuf.
Entered Air Corps, Nov., 1942.
Trainedat
Sheppard Field.
Holds Good Conduct. Medal and
Wings.
Now stationed at Frederick, Okla.

KERNS, CLARENCE E.
Rd. M. 3/c Clarence E. Kerns, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Edwin Kerns.
Wife, former Lorene Zimmer·
man.
Entered Navy, March, 1944.
Trained at
Farragut, Point Lorna and San Francisco.
Served
on Okinawa, Guam and South Pacific.
Now on
duty at Wakeyama, Japan.

KERNS, JACK
Jack Kerns, son of Mr. and Mrs. J.W. Kerns.
Wife, former Lucille R. Price.
Entered Marines
Dec., 1941.
Trained at San Diego.
Served in
New Zealand, New Hebrides, Guadalcanal, Vella
Lavella, and New Georgia.
HoldsAsiatic Pacific
American Theatre and Good Conduct Ribbons.
Now discharged.
KERNS, RALPH W.
Sgt. Ralph W. Kerns, son of Mr. and Mrs. J.W.
Kerns.
Entered Army, 1942.
Trained at Camp
Edwards and Camp Pickett.
Served in France,
England, Belgium and Germany.
Now on duty at
Camp Lucky Strike, France.

KERR, DEAN D.
Pvt. Dean D. Kerr, son of Mr. and Mrs. D.E.
Kerr.
Entered Army Air Corps, 1944.
Trained
at Keesler Field and Scott Field.
Served in
Continental Service .
Holds American Theater
Medal, Victory Medal and Metorious Service.
Now is disch&amp;rged.
KIEFER, DEANE W.
2nd Lt. Deane W. Kiefer, son of Mrs. Martha V.
Kiefer.
Entered Air Corps, Feb., 1943. Train·
eclat Jefferson Barracks, Ft. Worth, St. Louis,
San Antonio, Coffeyville, Pampa, Texas, Lib·
eral, Ks., Walla Walla, Wash.
Served in Eng·
land.
Killed in Action over Germany, Jan. 14,
1945·

64

�KILLINGER, ERNEST G.
Pfc. Ernest G. Killinger, son of Mrs. Clemma
Killinger.
Wife, former Odie M. Pur vis.
Entered Army', Nov., 1942.
Trained at Camp Maxey,
Camp Swift, Ft. Sill and Ft. Dix.
Served in
France, Holland and Germany.
Holds Good Conduct Medal, Marksmanship Medal and Two Gold
Battle Stars.
Now on duty at Med. Cl. Station
Camp, Philadelphia, Pa.
KILPATRICK, EDWIN L.
TI 5 Ed w i n L . K i 1 p a t r i c k , h u s b an d o f f or me r
Entered Army, 1943.
Trained at
Ruth E. King.
Camp Robinson, ,Ark., Arizona,and Camp Phillips.
Engaged in 4 Major Campaigns.
Now discharged.

KINCHALOE, MARVIN G.
Cpl. Marvin G. Kinchaloe, son of Mrs. Lonnie
Trovillion.
Wife, former Mary Dooley.
Entered
Marines, Dec., 1942.
Trained at San Diego.
Served in Asiatic Pacific Area.
Now on duty
on U. S . S . Gene r a 1 Stu a r t He i n t z e 1 rna n .

KING, ALICE JEAN
SK 3/c Alice Jean King, daughter of Mrs. Letty
K. Cutler.
Entered WAVES, Sept., 1943. Trained
at Hunter College, N.Y., Washington, D. C.
Bunker Hill, Indiana and is now at Great Lakes.

KING, BOB J.
Cpl. Bob J. King, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ivan R .
King.
Entered Marines, March, 1943.
Trained
at San Diego, Calif., Texas A. &amp; M., Camp
Kearney, Calif.
Served in Marshall and Gilbert
Is.
Holds Sharpshooter, Bayonet, Rifle, Good
Conduct, Two Battle Stars, Pacific Theater
and Presidential Citation.
Now at Camp Pendleton, Ca 1i f.

KING, HAROLD H.
Cpl. Harold H. King, son of Cad King.
Wife,
former Sally Owen.
Entered Army June, 1942.
Trained at.Bucyrus, Ohio.
Served in North
Africa, Italy, France and Philippines.
Has
Good Conduct Ribbon.
Now in U.S.

KLOPFENSTEIN LARRY W.
Pfc. Larry W. Klopfenstein, son of Mrs. Laura
Klopfenstein. Entered Army, Feb., 1943· Trained at Camp Hulen, Texas.
Served in England,
France, Ge' rmany and Belgium.
Now on duty at
LaHarve, France.

~OPFENSTEIN,

LUTHER E.
Lt. Luther E. Klopfenstein, son of Mrs. Laura
KI o p fens t e in.
Wi f e , former De 1 ores Ba 1 e y.
Entered Army Sept., 1942·
Trained at Sheppard Field, Texas and Lowry Field, Colo,
Was
Instructor at Yale .Univ., New Haven, Conn.
and in Calif.
Now at Karakusa, India.

KLUG,

JULIUS A.
Julius A. Klug,
Wtfe, former Gertrude
Dec., 1942·
Trained
Served in Philippine
Now on duty a t Man i 1 a
S~t.

son of Mr. G. J. Klug.
K. Woods.
Entered Army
at Ft. Omaha, Nebraska.
Is.
Holds Bronze Star.
,

KNOTT, MAURICE H.
1st Lt. Maurice H. Knott, son of Mrs. Alda
DeWitt.
Wife, former Alma V. Votaw.
Entered
Army, June, 1940.
Trained at Camp Robinson.
Served in England, France, Holland, Luxembourg.
and Germany.
Holds Silver Star, Purple Heart,
ETO Ribbon, 5 Battle Stars, Good Conduct,
American Defense.
Wounded Jan. 17, 1945.
Now is discharged.
65

�KNOX, CARL S.
Capt. Carl S. Knox, son of Rev. C. J. Knox.
Wife, former Dorothy Resch.
Entered Air Corps
Jan., 1942.
Trained at Miami Beach in OCS.
Served in North African Campaigns, Sardina,
Corsica, France and Germany.
Holds Bronze
Star Medal.
KNOX, WILLIAM F.
Chaplain Capt. William F. Knox, son of Rev.
C. J . Knox.
Wife, former Margaret Hays . En·
tered Army Air Corps, June, 1943 .
Trained at
Chaplain School, Harvard Univ.
Now on duty at
Andrews Field, Maryland.

KOEHLER, GEORGE W.
T / 5 George W. Koehler, son of Mrs . Dottelle
Koehler.
Entered Army Aug., 1944·
Trained
at Camp Fannin, Texas.
Served in Germany.
Holds Presidential Citation.
Now on duty at
Hohe Tanne, Germany.

KOEHLER
HILDA M.
T/5 Hilda M. Koehler, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Koehler. Entered Army Sept., 1943. Trained
at Daytona Beach, Fla. and Edgewood Arsenal,
Md.
Discharged July, 1945.

KOEHLER, PEARL A.
Pearl A. Koehler, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wm.
A. Koehler. Entered SPARS, March, 1944. Trained
at Palm Beach, Fla., and Norfolk, Va.
Nowon
duty at Ketickan, Alaska.

KOLACNY, CHAS. S. JR.
Pvt. Chas. S. Kolacny, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Chas. S. Kolacny. Entered Marines, Jan. 1944·
Trained at San Diego, Calif. and Camp Pendle·
ton, Calif.
Serbed in Saipan and Okinawa.
Now on duty at Nagasaki, Japan.

KOLSKY, HARWOOD G.
Sgt. Harwood G. Kolsky, son of Mr. and Mrs.
George Kolsky.
Wife, former Miss Frances
Geraldine Cilek.
Entered Army Feb., 1943.
Trained at Ft. Monmouth, N.J., Camp Crowder,
Mo., Camp Reynolds, Pa. and Camp Beal, Calif.
Served in Hawaii and Marianas .
Now a Crypto·
grapher on Tinian Island.
KRAMER, ELMER W.
RM 1/c Elmer W. Kramer, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Wm. Kramer.
Wife, former Naomi Lee Stevens.
Entered Navy, Dec., 1942·
Trained at Great
Lakes, Ill., Univ. of Chicago and Bainbridge
Is. Wash.
Served on Pearl Harbor, Eniwetok,
Kwajaleim, Roi, Majuro, Alaska and the Aleu·
tians.
Holds Asiatic-Pacific with 3 Stars,
Good Conduct Medal, E10, American and Victory
Ribbons.
Now at Newport, R. I.

KRING, JAMES M.
1st Lt. James M. Kring, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Milton Kring.
Wife, former Lorene Bryant. En·
tered Army Oct., 1941.
Trained at Ft. Warre~
Wyo., Camp Davis, N.C. and Camp Haan, Calif.
Served in Australia, New Guinea and Philippines
where he is serving now.
KRULL, HAROLD E.
Cpl. Harold E. Krull, son of Mr. and Mrs. Will
Krull.
Wife, former Mary Frances Haas.
En·
tered service, Jan., 1943·
Trained at Kelly
Field, Arledge Field, Concho Field in Texas,
Buckley Field and Lowry Field, Colo.
Holds
Unit Citation~ Phi 1 ippine Liberation, Good
Conduct and Asiatic Pacific Campaign Ribbons.
Now stationed at Ft. McKinley on Luzon.

66

�KRUM, EDWARD L.
Capt. Edward L . Krum, son of Mr. and Mrs.
J e ss e J . Krum.
Wif e , former Lula Marie Beach.
Enter e d Army Air Forces March, 1942.
Trained
at Colorado Springs and Okla. City
Served in
Oahu, Kwajalein, Saipan, Okinawa:
Holds Air
Medal with Two Bronze Clusters, As1atic Pacific
Ribbon with 3 Battle Stars.
Now awaiting discharg e at Ft. Logan, Colo.
KRUM, JOHN C .
Lt.
ohn c. Krum, son of Mr. and Mrs . C.C.
Kr urn .
En t e red Navy 0 c t . , 1 9 4 2 .
T r a in e d a t
Littl e Cr e ek, Va.; Ft. Pierce, Fla.
Served in
North Africa, Italy, Ireland, Scotland, New
Caledonia, Carolinas, Solomon, Marshalls, Admiralties, lwo Jim e , Hawaii, Saipan, Guam,
Philippines, New Guinea, Japan and China. Holds
Four Campaign Ribbons and 7 Battle
Stars.
Now on duty in Pacific Area.
KRUM, WILLIAM W.
1st Lt. William W. Krum , son of Mr. and Mrs.
C. C . Krum.
Enter.ed Army 1943 .
Trained at
Camp Davis, N.C . and Ft . Benning, Ga.
Served
in Hawaii and Sa ipan where he is now on duty.
KUESTER, HERMAN C .
Pfc. Herman C . Kuest e r, son of Mrs .John Bowman.
Wife, former Paula Beaver.
Entered Army Sept.,
1943.
Trained at Camp Wolters, Texas and Van
Dorn Mississippi.
Served in Scotland, France,
and Eng land.
Holds ETO Ribbon, Good Conduct,
Expert Infantryman's Badge and One Battle Star.
Now is discharged.
·

LADUKE
ALFRED M.
Tj3 Aifred M. LaDuke, husband of the former
Ruth Grossman.
Entered Army March, 1944·
Trained at Cam!? Robinson, Ark., Camp Polk,
La. and Camp Swtft, Texas.
Served in France,
Germany and New Guinea.
Holds Expert Marksmanship, Good Conduct, Asiatic-Pacific and
ETO Ribbons.
Now on duty in Philippines.
LANDIS, ARMIN V.
Lt.(jg) Armin V. Landis, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Virgil Landis.
Entered Navy, June, 1943.
Trained at Notre Dame; Raleigh, N.C'. and Flint,
Mich.
Served in Philippines, Borneo, New
Guinea.
Holds Four Battle Stars.
Now on duty
at San Francisco, Calif.

LANDRITH, GARLAND S. JR.
2nd Lt . Garland.. S. Landrith, Jr., son of Mr.
and Mrs. G. S. Landrith.
Entered Army in
1942·
Trained at K. ·u. and graduated as an
Engineer from West Point.
Further training
at Ft. Be !voir, Va.
Now on duty at Namur,
Be 1 g i u m.

LARSON, RUSSELL F.
B.M. 1/c Russell F. Larson, son of Mrs. Karen
Larson.
Entered Navy, June, 1943.
Trained at
Camp Perry, Va; Endicott, R. I.; Gulf Port,
Miss. and Port Hueneme, Calif.
Served at Pearl
Harbor.
Now on duty at Japan.

LATHROM, CLOVIS E.
ASN Clovis E. Lathrom, entered Army, July,
1942· Trained at Camp Barke ley, . Texas, Camp
Butner, N. C. and Ft. Ord, Calif.
Served
in b a t t 1 e a t At t u Is •
Re c e i v e d Honor a b 1 e
discharge Nov. 16. 1943·
LATHROM, NOBLE A. SR.
Pfc. Noble A. Lathrom, Sr., son of Mr. and Mrs.
A. E. Lathrom.
Wife, former Wilma Keene . . Entered Army Sept., 1944.
Trained at Camp Hood,
Texas.
Served in Hawaii, Marianas, Okinawa,
and Korea, where he is now on duty.
Holds
Sharpshooter Medal and Purple Heart.
Wounded
july, 1945 on Okinawa.

67

�LAUGHLIN, DALTON E.
S~t. Dalton E. Laughlin, son of Fred E. Laughlin.
Entered Army in 1940 .
Trained at Camp
Robinson, Ark. and San Luis Obispo, Calif.
Served in England, France, Luxembourg, Bel·
gium and Germany.
Holds Bronze Star .
Now is
discharged.
LAUGHLIN, HOMER E.
T I S Homer E. Laughlin, son of the late Mr. and
Mrs. A. C. Laughlin.
Entered Army Dec., 1941.
Trained at Camp Callan, Calif.
Served in Oahu,
and Hawaii.
Holds Good Conduct, Asiatic·
Pacific Ribbons and Driver's Meda l.
Discharged
Oct . 1 8, 1 94 5.

LAUGHLIN, JOHN F.
Pfc . John F. Laughlin, son of Mr. and Mrs.
John Laughlin.
Entered Army March, 1942.
Trained at Camp Rob er ts, Calif.
S erved in
France, Belgium, Holland, Luxembour g and Ger·
ma n y .
H o 1 d s 5 Ba t t 1 e S t a r s , Good Con d u c t and
Certificate of Me rit.
Disch a rged Oct., 1945.

LAUGHLIN, KERMIT J.
Pfc. Kermit J· Laughlin, son of Mr. and Mrs.
John Laughlin.
Wif e , former Jennie Stevens
Entered Army April, 1944.
Trained a t Ft .
Custer, Mich. and Ca mp Robinson.
Now on duty
a t Ft. Brag, N.C.

LAUGHLIN,
SK. 1/c
J o h n La
Trained
ved in

PAUL K.
PaulK . Laughlin, son of Mr. and Mrs.
ugh 1i n .
En t e r e d N a vJ De c . , 1 9 42.
at Great Lakes and Tole o, Ohio.
Ser·
Hawaii where h e is now stationed.

LAUGHLIN, ROBERT H.
S~t. Robert H. Laughlin, son of Fred E. Laughl1n.
Entered Army Air Corps, 1942·
Trained
at Sheppard Field, Texas.
Served in India
and China.
Now is discharged.

LAUGHLIN, ROY C.
TjSgt. Roy C. Laughlin, son of Fred E . Laughlin.
Entered Army, 1940.
Trained at Ft.
Knox, Camp Chaffee, Ark. and Calif.
Served
in England, France, Luxembourg, Belgium and
Germany.
Holds Silver Star and Purple Heart.
Wounded in Brest, France.
Now is discharged.

LAUGHLIN, WAYNE C.
Pb· . Wayne C. Laughlin, son of Fred E. Laugh·
1in .
En t e red Navy Dec • , 1 9 41 •
T r a i ned at
Charleston, S . C. and San Pedro, Calif. Served
on Pearl Harbor.
Now is discharged.

LAWSON, LELAND A.
Cox. Leland A. Lawson, son of Mrs. Crilla Snot.
Wife, former Arlene Westerhouse.
Entered Nw
June, 1942.
Trained at Fairfax andOlathe,Ks'
Served on Tinian for 17 months.
Holds Go o
Conduct and Asiatic Pacific-American Theatu
Ribbons.
Discharged Oct . 25, 1945·
LAWSON
MURRAY E.
Ch. P{O. Murray E. Lawson, son of Mrs. Crille
Snow.
Wife, former Rose E . Nichols.
Entered
Navy, 1940 .
Trained at Great Lakes. Served
o n Au s t r a 1 i a , Ch i n a , Haw a i i , Ma r i a n a s , Car·
olines and Solomons .
Now at Olathe Air Base.

68

�LAWSON, ROY (BOB) A.
QM 1/C Roy (Bob) A. Lawson, son of Mrs. Crilla
Snow.
Wife, former Jean Clarridge.
Entered
Navy Jan . , 1 9 4 3 .
T r a i ned a t G r e a t La k e s .
Served in New Guinea, Gilbe' rts, Marshalls,
Yarianas, Palau, Philippines, Iwo Jime, Okinawa and Japanese homeland.
Holds AmericanPacific-Asiatic Ribbon-12 Stars and Philippine Liberation-2 Stars.
Discharged Oct. 1945·
LEARNED, ALBERT S.
1st Lt. Albert S. Learned, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert E. Learned, Sr.
Wife, former
~~e LaGrone.
Entered Army Air Corps, May,
1942·
Trained at Tulare, Calif., Merced,
Calif. and Williams Field, Ariz.
Served in
England.
Holds Air Medal and 7 Clusters,
DFC and 1 Cluster, Three Major Battles in
Ero and Presidential Citation.
Discharged
Nov. 2. 1945·
LEARNED, GEORGE R.
tst Lt. George R. Learned, sonofMr. and Mrs.
Robert E. Learned, Sr. Entered Army Air Corps
~y. 1942·
Trained at Houston, Texas, Childress, Texas and Barksdale Field, La.
Served
in England, France and Germany.
Holds Air
lledal, 6 Major Battles in ETO and Presidential
Citation and 1 Cluster. Discharged Nov. 1945·
LEARNED
ROBERT E. JR.
S 1/c Robert E. Learned, Jr., son of Mr. and
!Irs. Robert E. Learn&gt;d, Sr.
Entered Navy,
Dec., 1942·
Trained at Liberty, Mo., Lawrence, Ks., Iowa City, Iowa, Great Lakes,
Ill., New Orleans, and Calif. Served on Pearl
Harbor, Oahu, Okinawa and Ie Shima.
Holds
Asiatic-Pacific, Good Conduct, American Ribbons, 4 Major Battles and Unit Citation.
Now
on duty at Ie Shima.
LEDERER , GLEN E.
1st Lt. Glen E. Lederer, son of E. N. Lederer.
Wife, former Georgia Caskey.
Entered Army,
July, 1941·
Trained at Camp Roberts, Camp
Hood and Ft. Jackson.
Served in England,
France, Germany and Austria.
Holds Two Battle Stars, Bronze Star and Oak Leaf Cluster.
Now on duty in Germany.
LEE, RAYMOND H.
1st Sgt. Raymond H· Lee, son of Mrs. Mary K.
Lee.
Entered Army, June, 1942·
Trained at
Camp Robinson and Camp Livingston.
Served
in England, France, Belgium and Germany.
Now
on duty at Normandy.
·
LEFFERD, GLENN R.
Sgt. Glenn R. Lefferd, son of Mr. Russell
Lefferd,
Wife, former Gl~dys Scott.
Entered
Army, Dec., 1941·
Trained at Little Rock,
Ark. San Luis Obispo, Camp Rucker, Ala. and
Camp Butner, N. C. where he is now on duty.

LEFFERD, WILLIAM S. JR.
Pfc. Williams. Lefferd, Jr., son of Mrs.
Nannie Lefferd.
Entered Air Corps April, 1943·
T r a i ned a t Ke a r n s , U t a h; L i nco 1 n , Neb r . ;
Nia gar a Fa 11 s, N.Y. ; Thomas vi 11 e, Ga. ; Gu 1 fport, Miss.; and Greensboro, N· c. where he
is now stationed.
Holds Good Conduct Ribbon.

LEFMANN, DEL BERT E.
Pvt. Delbert E. Lefmann, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Jake Lefmann. Entered Army, July, 1945. Trained
at Ft. Sill, Okla., where he is now stationed.
Holds Expert Rifleman's Badge.

LEFMANN, DELMAR L.
CM Delmar L. Lefmann, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jake
Lefmann.
Entered Merchant Marine, Jan., 1943·
Trained at Sheepshead Bay.
Served in Europe,
West Indies and Hawaiian Is.
Holds Atlantic
and Pacific Ribbons.
Now in Pacific.

69

�I

LEFMANN, HAROLD M.
S/Sgt. Harold M. Lefmann, son of Mr. and Mrs
Jake Lefmann.
Entered Army Oct., 1942. Trained
at Ft. Leavenworth, Ft. Riley and Camp Rucker
Served in Hawaiian Is.
Holds Good Conduct and
Pacific Ribbons.
Now on duty at Japan.
LEROY, FAUNT D.
1st Sgt.FFaunt D. LeRoy, son of Mrs. E. c.
Clay.
Entered Army Med. Corps Aug., 1942.
Trained at Camp Robinson.
Served in New Cale·
donia, Fiji, Bouganville, Solomons, Philippines
a· nd Japan where he is now on duty.
Holds
Asiatic, Pacific, and Philippine Liberatioo
Ribbons .
Five Bronze Stars, Good Conduct Medal
and Unit Citation.

LESCH, JOSEPH H.
Pfc. Joseph H. Lesch, son of Mr. and Mrs. J.f.
Lesch.
Wife, former Mary Axline.
Entered Arm!
March, 1944.
Trained at Camp Bowie, Texas.
Served in England, France, Belgium, Hollan
and Germany.
Holds Good Conduct Meda 1 and Two
Battle Stars.
Now on duty in Germany.

LESUER, NELSON M. JR
Pfc. Nelson M. LeSeur, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs
Nelson M. LeSuer.
Entered Marines, Jan., 1943·
Trained at Camp Elliot and San Diego.
Serveri
in Australia, New Britain, Pelilieu, Okinawa,
and China, where he is now on duty.
Hal
Four Battle Stars.

LINDENBERGER, GERALD LEONARD
Pfc. Gerald Leonard Lindenber .ger, son of Mrs
H. R. Lindenberger.
Entered Army June, 1943.
T r a in e d a t F t • Mc C 1 e 1 1 an and F t . Me ad e , Md.
Served in Africa, Italy and Fra nee where he
was k i 11 e d i n act ion Aug • 3 0 , 1 9 4 4.
He was
awarded the Purple Heart posthumously.

LINDENBERGER, KENNETH EDWIN
SK 1/c Kenneth Edwin Linden berger, son of Mrs
H. R. Lindenberger.
Entered Navy, Jan., 1942
Was a s s i g ned t o U. S . S . P a . a n d s a i 1 e d for
Hawaii April, 1942 ·
Served 41 months overseas
in Aleutians, Guadalcanal and Munda. NO!
with V-12 Unit at Doand's College, Crete, Nebr.

LINDQUIST, ELMER G.
Pvt. Elmer Q. Lindquist, son of Mr . and Mrs.
G.E.E. Lindquist. Entered Army in 1944 . Trained
at Camp Fannin, Texas; Camp VanDorn, Miss.
and Camp Breckenridge, Ky.
Now is discharged.

LOID, WAYNE E.
Pfc. Wayne E. Loid, son of the late Mr. Chas.
E . Lo id .
En t e r e d Army , 1 9 4 3 .
Trained at
Camp Roberts, Ca"iif.
Served in New Zealand,
and Philippines.
Awarded Purple Heart . Wounde&lt;'
in Action March, 1945, Luzon.
Killed in Actio
May 3, 1945, Luzon.

LONG, THOMAS I.
Sgt. Thomas J, Long, son of Mr. and Mrs. H.f.
Lon g .
Wi f e , for me r Rose rna r y Rea z in .
En t ere
Air Transport Command, Sept., 1942·
Traine
at Camp Luna, N. Mexico.
Served at Churchill
Manitoba, Canada; Goose Bay, Labrador. Dis·
charged Oct. 24, 1945.
LOVE, CHARLES JR.
Ens. Charles Love Jr . , son of Mr . and Mrs. Cha&lt;
Love.
Entered Navy October, 1942 .
Traine
at Philadelphia, Pa. and Notre Dame.
Serve
in South Pacific, Iwo Jime, Okinawa .
Now··
duty in South Pacific.
70

�LOVE, DELL A.
Lt. Dell A. Love, son of Mr. and Mrs. H.W. Love.
Wife, former Nadine Hunt.
Entered Air Force,
Feb., 1942,
Trained at Texas, Louisiana, Miss.
Alabama and Florida. Served in England, Africa,
Libya and Egypt.
Holds DFC; Air Medal with 3
Oak Leaf Clusters, ETO with 3 Battle Stars.
Now is discharged.
LOVE, GRANT E.
S / Sgt. Grant E. Love, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ray Love Wife, former Ruth French.
Entered
Army Aug., 1942·
Trained at Camp Roberts,
Camp White and Desert Maneuvers, Calif.
Served
in England, France, Belgium, Holland, Germatc¥
and Austria.
Holds Five Battle Stars .

LOVE, LEE L.
Pfc. Lee L. Love, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Love.
Wife, former Maxine Studebaker.
Entered Army
Nov., 1942·
Trained at Camp Shelby, Miss. and
Camp Pickett, Va.
Served in New Guinea and
East Indies. Holds Paci fie Ribbon, Three Bronze
Stars, Combat Inf. Badge and Bronze Arrowhead.

LUTZ, VERNON J .
FC 1/ c Vernon J. Lutz, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Lutz.
Enterea Navy June, 1943.
Trained at
Farragut, Idaho, San Francisco and San Diego,
Ca 1 i f.
Served in Pa c i f i c The a t e r , eng a g e d in
Seven Major Battles.
Now on Okinawa awaiting
reassignment.

LYNCH, HOWARD E.
Sgt. How,.rd E. Lynch, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Albert P. Lynch.
Entered Army Air Forces,
Feb., 1943.
Trained at St. Petersb·urg, Fla~:
Chanute Field, Ill; Pendleton, Ore. and Desert
Center, Calif.
Served in Hawa11, Palau Is.
and Okinawa.
Now on duty in Korea.

LYON, ALFRED W.
Sgt. Alfred w. Lyon, son of Mrs. John Lyon.
Entered Army April, 1942 ·
Trained at Camp
Roberts, Calif.
Served in Bermuda, Hawaii,
Guam, Leyte, Kerma Retter and Okinawa.
Holds
Combat Inf. Badge, Bronze Star, Philippine
Liberation Ribbon with 1 Bronze Star.
Wounded
Jan. 11. 1945, Leyte.
Discharged Oct., 1945.

MACKIE, JOSEPH M.
S 21 c Jose ph M . Mack i e , s on o f Mr s • I r en e
Hollister.
Entered Navy, 1943·
Trained at
San Die~o, Calif.
Engaged in !j Major Invasions 1n Pacific Area.
Hokls Silver Star,
Asiatic Ribbon and Citation from Admiral Nimitz.

MACKIE, WILLIAM R.
C a p t • Wi 1 1 i a m R • Ma c k i e , s o n o f F 1 o r a E •
Mackie. Entered Air Corps, March 1942· Trained at Camp Bowie, Texas. Now on duty in South
Paci f ci .

MAICHEL, WILLARD L.
QM 3/c Willard L. Maichel, grandson of Mr. and
Mrs . Claude Williams.
Entered Navy June, 1943.
Trained at San Diego, San Pedro and Las Almeda .
S e r v e d on Pe a r 1 Ha r b or , Ma r s h a 1 1 s , Ca r o 1 in e s ,
Wake Is. and south Pacific.
Now in U.S.A.

MAIDEN, CLINTON E.
2nd Lt. Clinton E. Maiden, son of Mrs. H . E.
Maiden.
Wife, former Willie M. Maxwell.
Entered Air Corps, 1943·
Trained at Santa Ana,
Calif. and Roswell, New Mexico. Now on duty
at Gulfport, Miss.
71

�I

MAl DEN, ELMER E.
1st Lt. Elmer E. Maiden, son of Mrs. H. E.
Maiden.
Wife, former Jeanne M. Puronnet.
Entered Air Corps, March, 1943·
Trained at
· Texas and Oklahoma.
Served in Ireland, Iceland, England and France.
Holds DFC and Air
Medal.
Now discharged.
MALONE, .TACK W.
T;4 Jack W. Malone, son of Walter Malone.
Wife, former Betty Lou Ridlon.
Entered Army,
1940·
Trained at Camp Robinson, Ark.
Served
in Australia, New Guinea, New Hebrides, Fiji
Is., New Caledonia, Sol anon Is . and Philippines.
Holds Asiatic-Pacific Medal, Philippine Liberation, American Defense, Good Conduct and 3 Bronze Sta.rs.
Discharged June, 6,
1945·
MALONEY, OWEN W.
1st Lt. Owen w. Maloney, son of Mr. and Mrs.
0. W. Maloney.
Entered Army Air corps Sept.,
1942·
Trained at Univ. of Chicago; Baer Field;
Miami , F 1 a . ; A 1b ion, Mi c h . ; San An toni o; El·
1 i n g t on F i e 1 d; To nap a h F i e 1 d a nd Ha mi 1 t on Fie I d.
Served in Italy, Hungary, Czechoslovakia,
Austria, Germany and France.
Holds DFC, Air
Medal and Cluster; Presidential Citation with
Cluster and4Battle Stars. Discharged Nov.l945MANESS
HAROLD L.
Sgt. Harold L. Maness, son of Mr. and Mrs. J·B·
Ma n e s s .
Wi f e , f o r m e r Wi 1 ma H u n t e r .
En t e red
Army MP July, 1942·
Trained at Ft. Riley and
Ft. Custer .
Now on duty at Portland, Oregon.

MANESS, MELVIN C.
Sgt. Melvin c. Maness, son of Mr. and Mrs. J.B.
Maness.
Entered Army June, 1943Tra-ined at
Miami, Fla.
Now serving in India.
MANN, BERNERD C.
1st Lt. Bernerd c. Mann, son of Mr. and Mrs.
c. J· Mann. Wife, former Dorothy Pegg. En·
t e r e d Army A i r Corps Jan . , 1 9 4 1 . T r a in ed at
Sheppard Field, Texas.
Served in Bismark,
Archipelago, New Guinea, solomons, Western
Pacific, Philippines and Luzon.
Holds Presi·
dential Citation, American Defense, philippine
Liberation with Combat Star, Asiatic Pacific
Ribbon and 5 Battle Stars.
NOw on duty at
Peterson Field, colorado Spring, colo.

MANN, RAYMOND KEITH
Pfc. Raymond Keith Mann, son o 'f Mr. and Mrs.
c. J· Mann. Wife, former Delores Yazza. En·
tered Army March, 1942· Trained at Camp Wheeler.
Served in England, France, Belgium, Germany and
Holland.
Holds Combat Inf. Badge, Group Ci·
tation and others.
Now at Vienna, Austria.
MARCKLEY, WILBUR R.
1st Sgt. Wilbur R. Marckley, son of Robert R.
and Lois S. Marckley. Entered Army Jan, 1942·
Trained at Ft. Warren, Wyo, San Antonio, Texas
Ft. Jackson, S. C. and Ft. Dix, N. J. Served
3 Years in England and France.
Holds ho
Bronze Stars and Good Conduct.
No-;v en route
to USA.

MARSHALL, JOHN A.
MOMM 3/c John A· Marshall, son of Mr. and Mrs.
William Marshall. Wife, former Genevieve
Raines.
Entered Navy Sept., 1943.
Trained at
Farragut; Great Lakes; Richmond and Norfolk.
Served in Philippines, Okinawa, Marianas, Guam,
Solomons, New Hebrides, Hawaiian Is. and Japan
where he is now on duty.
MARTIN, CHARLES G.
CRM Charles G. Martin, husband of the former
Dorothy Hulce.
Entered Navy, 1940.
Trained at
San Diego.
Served on Pearl Harbor, Marshalls,
G i 1 b e r t s , Ca r o 1 in e s .- T a r a w a , Sa i p a n , Qk i na wa
and Japan.
Holds Good conduct Ribbon.
Now
aboard u. s.s. New Kent.

72

�MARTIN, DALE S.
RM 2(c DaleS. Martin, son of Mrs. MaryS.
ldart1n.
Wife, former Dorothy L. Kaiser.
Entered Navy, Sept., 1942· Stationed at Olathe,
Ks., Dallas, Texas, San Luis Obispo, Calif.,
and Ottumwa, Iowa.
Served on Japan and Okinawa.
Now on duty on USS Santa Fe.

MARTIN , JOHN t/.
Lt. (jg) John w. Martin, son of Mrs. Ruth
Martin.
Entered Naval Air Corps, Aug., 1942 ·
Trained at St. Mary's, Calif.; Corpus Christi,
Texas and Jacksonville, Fla.
Served at Cuba
in Guantanamo Bay.
Now at Jacksonville, Fla.

MARTINEZ, MARIO MUNOS
Pvt . Mario Munos Martinez, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Cristobal Martinez.
Wife, former Bernice Colly.
Entered Army April , 1944 .
Trained .. t Camp
Bea l e, Calif.
Now on duty on Leyte.

MASON, HORACE M.
Lt. Horace M. Mason, son of Mrs . H. M. Mason.
Trained at Great Lakes
Entered Navy, 1942·
and Harvard.
Served in All Main South Pacific
Now on duty
and Korea .
Holds One Battle Star.
in Pa cific .

MASON , JAMES G.
A/S James G . Mason, son of Mrs . H. M· Mas on .
Training at Doane
Ent e red Navy V5 in 1945.
College and Notre Dame.

MASON , JOHN D.
Sgt . John D. Mason, son of Mrs. H. M. Mason.
Entered Air Corps in 1943.
Trained at Miami
Beach; Ft . Jackson and Charleston, s. C. Served
in France, Belgium, Germany, Czechoslovakia
and Austria, where he is now on duty.
Holds
Infantry Combat Ribbon and Rifleman's Medal.

MASON, MAX E.
Lt. Max E. Ma s on , son of Mrs • Be r t ha E. Ma son .
Wife, former Joan Dillstrom.
Entered Coast
Guard Nov., 1940.
Train~d at curtis Bay, Md.
Received dis· charge, later was put in MP's
and Served 18 mos in Greenland. Relieved there,
joined Merchant Marines and trained at Alameda,
Calif.
Now .on duty in pacific.

MASON, ROBERT E .
1st Lt. Robert E· Mason, son of Mrs. H. M.
Mason.
Wife, former Jean Marie Conger. Entered
Army August, 1941·
Trained at Sheppard Field,
Texas and OCS at Duke Univ, N· c.
Served in
Scot land, England, France, Halla nd, Bel glum
and Germany.
Enga ·ged in 2 Major Battles in
ETO.
Now at Tooele Ordnance Depot, Utah.

MATHIA, DELBERT E .
1st Sgt. Delbert E. Mathia, son of Mrs. Henry
Trained ·at
Mathia.
Entered Army, Dec., 1941.
Served in
El Paso, Texas and Camp Meade, Md.
at
Manila.
Philippines and Luzon.
Now on duty

MATHIA, EDWARD W.
Ch. p.o . 1/c Edward w. Mathia, son of Mrs.
Henry Mathia. Entered Navy, Dec., 1941 · Trained
at New Orleans.
Served as Coast Guard at New
York Harbor.
Discharged Sept., 1945.

73

�MATHIA, HOMER LAVERN
Cpl. Homer Lavern Mathia, son of Mrs. Hen"
Mathia.
Wife, former Frances Rogers.
Entereo
Marines August, 1942·
Trained at San Diego,
Calif.
Served on Saipan and Bouganville
Wounded during 2 Battles on Saipan.
Discharget
Jan., 1945.
MAXWELL, KENNETH D.
Pfc. Kenneth D. Maxwell, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Edw. w. Maxwell.
Entered Army July, 1943·
Trained at Camp Wallace, Texas and Ft. Ord,
Calif.
Served in New Caledonia, New Guinea
Mindora, Leyte, Mindanao. Holds Asiatic Pacifi,·
Ribbon and Philippine Liberation, 3 Stars
Now on duty at Mindanao, Philippine Is.
MAY, DONALD L.
Pfc. Donald L. May, son of Mr. and Mrs. E.H.
May. Entered Army Air Force /une, 1943. Trained
at Miami, Fla. and Camp Barkey, Texas. Served
in North Africa, India, Guam and Okinawa where
lte is now on duty.
Has Good Conduct MedaL

MAYHUGH, CLARENCE H.
Cpl. Clarence H. Mayhugh, son of Mr. and Mrs.
W. H. Mayhugh.
Entered Army March, 1942.
Trained at Camp Roberts. Served in New Britain,
Hawaiian Is., Guadalcana 1 and philippine Js.
Holds Asiatic-Pacific Ribbons, Philippine
Liberation, 3 Battle Stars and Good Conduct
Medal.
Discharged JuLy, 1945·

MAYHUGH, FRANK J.
Cpl. Frank J. Mayhugh, son of Mr. and Mrs. u.
Mayhugh.
Entered Army Feb., 1945.
Trained at
Camp Roberts, Calif.
Holds Rifleman's Medal
Now serving on Okinawa.

MAYHUGH, LEONARD M.
S;Sgt. Leonard M. Mayhugh, son of Mrs. Helen
Mayhugh.
Entered Army, July, 1943· Trained
at Camp Callan, Camp Haan, Calif. and Ft.
Bliss, Texas,
Served in European Area. Holds
Good Conduct Medal and others.
Now at Camp
Pomona, Calif.

MCCAIN, LAWRENCE G.
Pvt. Law renee G. McCain, son of Mrs. George
Mus i c k.
En t e red Ai r Co r p s , 1 9 4 5.
Trained at
Sheppard Field, Texas and Lowry Field, Denver.
Now attending R.C.T. School.

MCCALL, HARRY W.
Harry w. McCall, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry B.
McCall.
Entered Maritime Service Sept., 194J,
S e r v e d i n A f r i c a , S i c i 1 y , Me d i t e r r a n ian Se~
and Red Sea to Bombay, India.
Now in Officer's
School at New London, Conn.

MCCALL, TOM W.
Sgt. Tom W. McCall, son of Mr. and Mrs. J.S.
McCall.
Wife, former Una Perry.
Entered Army
Sept., 1942.
Trained at Ft. Bliss, Texas.
Holds Good conduct Ribbon.
Now is discharged.
MCCALLA, WESLEY G.
Pfc. Wesley G. McCalla, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Leonard McCalla.
Wife, former Mary E. McKenna
Entered Army, 1943.
Trained at Camp Blanding,
Fla.; Camp Cod ford, En~ land; and First Army
Signal School, Spa, Belg1um. Served in England,
France, Belgium, Germany and Czechoslovakia,
Holds Three Campaign Stars, Combat Infantry
Badge, Bronze Star Medal.
Now is discharged.

74

�MCCANLES, JOSEPH
Lt. Joseph M. McCanles
son of Mrs . J· c.
McCanles.
Entered Navy Jan., 1942.
Trained
at Quonset Point, R. I.
Went overseas in
spring of 1942.
Engaged in Three Major Battles.
Received honorable discharge in ·Nov . , 1943.
MCCLANAHAN , LESTER F.
Cox. Lester F . McClanahan, son of Mr . and Mrs.
Rollo Jeffri e s.
Enter e d Navy, Feb. , 1944.
Trained at Farragut, Idaho; Tacoma, Wash.;
Pacific Beach, Wa sh. and Portland Oregon.
S er ved on L e yt e , Luzon, Saipan and Okinawa.
Mow aboard u.s . s . Algol.
·
MCCLEERY, DOUGLAS D.
T; 5 Douglas D . McCleery, son of Mr . and Mrs.
R. R . McCleery.
Wi fe, former Evelyn L . Hamilton .
Entered Army, ·June, 1942·
Trained at
Ft. Warren, Wyo.
Served in England, France,
Luxembourg, Holland and Germany.
Holds Good
Conduct, Marksmanship and ETO Ribbons and 5
Battle Stars.
Now discharged.
MCCLURE, BRUCE W.
Cpl. Bruce w. McClur e , son of Mr . and Mrs.
Ray E. McClure .
Entered Marines, Dec . , 1942 ·
Trained at Camp Gill e spie and Camp Pendleton,
Ca lif.
S e rved in Pacific Is , and Japan .
Holds
Exp e rt Rifleman's B a dg e ., Parachute Wings,
Bronze Star and Unit Citation. Now on duty at
Sas e bo, Japan .

MCCLURE, EARL ' E .
Sgt. Earl E. McClure, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ray E. McClure.
Entered Marines, June, 1938·
Trained . at San Diego, Calif. Served in Alaska
and Pacific Is. Holds Expert Rifle and Pistol
Medals.
Now on duty at Saipan.

MCCLURE, LAUREN K.
S/ Sgt. Lauren K· McClure, son of Mr . and Mrs.
Ray McClure .
Wife, former Betty L. Davison.
Ent e red Army June, 1942 .
Trained at Camp
Crowder, Camp Livingston, Camp Claiborne and
with Bell Telephone, Ohio.
Served in North
Africa, Italy and Luzon.
Holds N. AfricanEuropean Theatre arid 3 Battle Stars.
Now on
duty in Japan .
MCCLURE, MERLE E .
Cpl. Merle E· McClure, son of Mr. and Mrs .•
Ray E. McClure. Entered Army July, 1943.Trained
at Camp Haan and Ft . Bliss .
Served in France,
Belgmum and Germany where he is now on duty.
Holds Expert Rifleman's Badge and 4 Battle Stars.

MCCONNI!:LL, DONALD H.
lst L&lt;• Donald H. McConnell, son of Mr. and
Mrs . Howard McConnell. Wife, former Bertie G.
Ross . Entered Air Corps Nov., 1942· Trained at
Jefferson Barracks; Wash . Univ. at St . Louis;
San Antonio; Okla. Ci"ty; Garden City; Victoria,
Texas. Served in Intaly, completing 35 missions.
Holds Air Medal, 3 Oak Leaf Clusters, ETO
with Five Bronze Stars.
Now discharge.

MCELHINNY 1 IRVIN E.
S~t . Irv1n E. McElhinny, son of J.G. McElhinny.
Wife, former Maxine Van Pelt.
Entered Army Air
Forces, Dec., 1942·
Trained at Clearwater,
Fla., Chanute Field, Ill, and Pyote, Texas in
Navigation School as an Instructor.
Discharged
October 9, 1 94 5.
MCFERREN, KENNETH REA
T/ Sgt. Kenneth Rea McFerren, son of Geo. and
Elizabeth McFerren.
Entered Army Air Force,
Feb., 1942· · Trained at Sheppard Field , Texas .
Served in Australia, Paupa, New Guinea, Luzon
and Philippines.
Holds AAF Tech. Badge, Good
Conduct Medal, Presidential CitationandPacific
Area Badge with 5 Battle Stars.
Discharged
May 21. 1945·

75

�MCGEE, NATHAN G.
S/Sgt. Nathan G. McGee, son of Nathan B. McGee.
Wife, former Freda Mae Baker.
Entered Army,
Nov., 1940.
Trained at Camp Robinson and Camp
Rucker.
Served in England, France, Belgium,
Luxembourg, Holland, Germany,
Holds Bronze
Star, American-European Theatre, Good Conduct
and Infantry Combat Ribbons.
Now discharged.
MCGEE, THOMAS S.
T;Sgt. Thomas S. McGee, son of Nathan B. Me·
Gee. Wife, former Virginia L. Austill. Enter·
ed Army Nov., 1942.
Trained at Camp White,
Ore. and Camp Adair, Ore.
Served in North
Africa and Italy.
Holds American and ETO
lnf. Combat Badge, Good Conduct Medal and 3
Battle Stars.
Now discharged.
MCGINNIS, PAUL 0.
F.O. Paul o. McGinnis, son of Mr. and Mrs.
o. A. McGinnis. Wife, former Marian Wahoviak.
Entered Air Corps, Nov., 1939.
Trained at
Chanute Field, I l l . ; McChord Field, Wash.;
Fresno AAF; Pacific Theater, Hamilton Field;
Santa Ma r i a , Cali f. ; Mi 11 Va 11 e y , Ca 1 i f. ; March
Field, Calif.; Los Angeles, Cali f.; ·Pecos, Texas.
Based in England, 5 mos.
Now at Monroe, La.
MCKEE
JAMES M.
Pfc James M. McKee, son of Mr. and Mrs. Rolland H. McKee.
Entered Army March, 1942·
Trained at Camp Berkeley, Louisiana, and Camp
Dix, N.J.
Holds Purple Heart and Combat
Inf, Badge.
Wounded June, 1944 at Normandie
Drive. Died in O•Reilly Gen. Hospital, Spring·
f i e 1 d , Mo . Dec • 1 9 , 19 44.
MCKINNEY~

MERLE M.
and Mrs. Fred
McKinney.
Wife, former Marjory M. White. En·
tered Army Dec., 1942·
Trained at Camp Clai·
borne, La. and Camp Howze, Texas.
Served in
France, Germany, Austria and Italy.
Holds
Combat Infantry Badge and Purple Heart. Wounded
Jan., 1945, France.
Now discharged.

TIS Merle M. McKinney, son of Mr.

MCKINNEY, ROBERT J.
M/Sgt. Robert J. McKinney, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Fred J. McKinney.
Entered Air Corps, Dec.,
1940.
Trained at Camp Robinson and Gowen Field.
Served in England, France and Aleutians.
Holds
Six Battle Stars . and Presidential Citation.
nischa rged Oct. 17, 1945.

MCKONE, SAMUEL A.
Mai. Ord. ASF. Samuel A· McKone, son of John
and Eleanor McKone.
Wife, former May Richard·
son.
Entered Nat •1 'Guard, July, 1910 .
Entered
-'rmy April, 1942·
Served at Ft. Riley, Ft.
Leonard wood, Camp Phi 11 ips and Camp Crowder.
Holds Distinguished Pistol Shot, Rifleman,
Marksmanship Instructor. Grad. C&amp;GS School and
Or.dnance Field Service School.
Now retired.
MCMAHON, TOM E.
RT 3/C Tom E. McMahon, son of J. V. McMahon.
Entered Navy, July, 1944•
Trained at Great
Lakes, I l l . , Del Monte, Calif. and Treasure
.Isladd, Calif.
Now on duty at Saseba, Japan.

MCMILLEN, DONALD F.
Sgt. Donald F. McMillen, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Jack McMillen.
Wife, former Lucile Robertson.
tntered Army Dec' ., 1942.
Trained at Camp
Harrahan, ·and Camp Shelby.
Served in Alaska
for 14 mos.
Holds American citation and Good
Conduct Medal.
Now on duty at Manila.
MCMILLEN, EUGENE S.
1st Lt. Eugene s. McMillen, son oi Mr. and Mrs.
E.E. McMillen.
Wife, former June Gaines.
Entered Infantry Dec., 1940.
Trained at Camp
Robinson; Western Defense Command; Ft. Benning
and Camp Shelby.
served in Normandie, Franc•
and England.
Holds Infantry Combat and Nor·
mandie Campaign Star.
Disc~ar~ed Nov., 1941.

76

�t.CNEIL, HAROLD N.
Pvt. Harold N. McNeil, son of Mrs. Susie McNeiL
Wife, former Nora Herren.
Entered Army March,
1944·
Trai.ned at Camp Bowie.
Served in En(!;land, France, Belgium and Germany.
Engaged 1n
Two Major Battles and has one Bronze Star.
Now is discharged.
MCNISH, VICTOR D.
S/Sgt. Victor D. McNish, son of Mr. and Mrs.
John McNish.
Wife, former Frances Gerle.
Entered Army Aug., 1940.
Trained at Ft. Miley
and Ft. Benning.
Served in Australia, Fiji
Is. and New Zealand.
Holds Three Battle Stars,
ETO Ribbon and Asiatic Theatre Ribbon.
Discharg.ed July 4, 1945.

MCPHEETERS, EVERETT E.
Capt; Everett E. McPheeters, son of Mr. and
Mrs. L
E. McPheeters.
Wife, former Mary
Pitman.
Entered Army, Dec., 1940·
Trained
•t Camp Robinson, Ark., Ft. Ord, Camp San
Luis Obispo and March Field, Calif.
Now on
juty at Camp Pickett, Va •

.IIERRIOTT
HELEN E.
Pvt. Helen E. Merriott, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. D. E. Merriott.
Entered Marines, Jan.,
1945·
Trained at Camp Lejeune, N. C.
Now at
Parris Island, S. C.

MESSENHIMER, KENNETH E.
1st Sgt. Kenneth E· Messenhimer, son of Mrs.
Mary White.
Entered Army May, 1942·
Trained
at Ft. Leonard wood, Mo. and Ft. Ord, Calif.
Served in Southwest Pacific. Holds Good Conduct
Medal and Unit Citation.
Now on duty at
Honolulu.

MESSER, DONALD EUGENE
G.M. 1/c Donald Eugene Messer, son of Mr. and
Mrs. James A. Messer.
Entered Navy Oct., 1942·
Trained at Great Lakes and San Diego.
Served
on Pearl Harbor, Samoa, Brisbane, Australia,
New Guinea, Eniwetok, Guam, Saipan, Balboa,
Colon, Panama.
Now on duty at Staten Island,
New York.

MESSER, · HAROLD WARREN
S 1/c Harold Warren Messer, son of Mr. and Mrs.
James A· Messer.
Entered Navy May, 194 ·5.
Trained at Great Lakes; Treasure Island and
Shoemaker, Calif.
Now somewhere in Japan.

MESSER, JAMES ERNEST
Cpl. James Ernest Messer, son of Mr. and Mrs.
James A. Messer.
Wife, former Ruth McNally.
Entered Army Jan., 1944.
Trained at Ft. Riley,
and spent entire enlistment training troops at
Ft. Riley.
Discharged Sept. 1. 1945·

METTNER, JOHN R.
1st Lt. John R. Mettner, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Carl w. Mettner.
Wife, former Helen Golden.
Entered Army, 1940.
Trained at Camp Robinson,
Ft. Ord, Ft. Sill and Ft. Meade.
Now on
terminal leave.
MEUFFELS, WALTER A.
T;5 Walter A. Meuffels, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Chris Meuffels.
Wife, former Marian L. Vausbinder.
Entered Army April, 1942·
Trained
at Camp Barkeley, Texas, Yuma, Ariz. Ft. Bragg,
N.C. and Atlantic Beach Fla.
Served in England, France, Holland, Bel_gium and Germany.
Holds ETO Medal, Good Conduct and 2 Battle
Stars.
Discharged Oct., 1945·

77

�MIESSE, MAX W.
Lt. Max W. Miesse, son of W. B. Miesse. Wife,
former Margaret Ogden. Entered Marines, July,
1940·
Trained at Camp Elliott, Calif. Served
in Hawaii, New Zealand, Tarawa, Saipan and
Okinawa.
Holds Unit Citation, Pre-Pearl Har·
bor Ribbon with Star and Asiatic-Pacific Ri~
bon with 2 Stars. Wounded Aug., 1944, Saipan.
Now on duty at Camp Pendleton, Calif.
MILBURN, JESS 0.
Cpl. Jess 0.- Milburn, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Earnest Milburn.
Wife, former Cle ta Bradley.
Entered Army Air Corps, 1942.
Trained at Luke
Field, Ariz.
Served in Australia, New Guinea,
Leyte.
Now on duty at Manila .

MILLER, CECIL E.
P f c. Ce c i 1 E. Miller, son of Mrs . Ne 11 i e Miller.
Wife, former Geraldine Patterson.
Entered Army
Aug., 1943.
Trained at Camp Gruber, Okla.
Served in England, Belgium, France, Germany and
Czechoslovakia.
Holds Good Conduct Medal,
ETO Ribbon and Good Marksmanship Medal.
Now
somewhere in the European Theater.
MILLER, LLOYD I.
C p 1. L 1 o y d I . Mi 11 e r , son of Ch r is Mi II e r.
Wife, former Bettie Dicker.
Entered Air Corps
Nov., 1943.
Trained at Sheppard Field, Coe
cot-lege, Santa Ana, Eagle Field, Truax Field,
Chanute Field and Boca Raton Field.
Now on
duty at Truax Field, Wisconsin.

MILLER PHARON D.
Pfc Pharon D. Miller, son of W. 0. Miller.
Wife, former Betty Burgess.
Entered Army,
March, 1942· Trained at Camp Barkeley, Texas.
Served in England, France and Germany.
Holds
Combat Badge, Oak Leaf Cluster and Purple
Heart, f a wounds received June, 1944 and
December, 1944·
Has Medical Discharge.

MILLER, ROBERT M.
Cpl. Robert M. Miller, son of Mr. and ·Mrs.
Martin Miller.
Wife, former Doris Swaimack.
Entered Army, 1941.
Trained at Camp Douglas,
Utah.
Served in Aleutians.
Now is discharged.

MILLER, WOODROW W.
Lt. (Jg) Woodrow W. Miller, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Martin Miller.
Wife, former Louise
Creveling. Entered Navy, April, 1944· Trained
at Great Lakes, Ill., Ft. Schuyler, N.Y. and
Cambridge, Mass. Se' rved on Pearl Harbor where
he is now on duty.

MISKIMEN, CHESTER A.
Sgt. Chester A. Miskimen, son of Mr. and Mrs.
H. H. Miskimen,
Wife, former Lillian Mauser.
Entered Army Air Corps, 1941·
Trained at
Jefferson,Barracks.
Now on duty at Mit·
chell Field, N. Y.

MlSKIMEN, HOWARD H.
Sgt. Howard H.- Miskimen, son of Mr. and Mrs .
H. H. Miskimen.
Entered Army, 1942·
Trained
at Camp Hood and Camp Bowie, Texas.
Served
in England, France, Germany and Belgium. Holds
4 Combat Stars and Purple Heart from wounds
received in France, Oct., 1944.
Now on duty
in Fra nee.
MITCHELL, CHARLES R.
S/Sgt .. Charles R· ·Mitchell, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Bert Mitchell.
wife, former L-enore Hill . En ·
tered Army, 1941·
Trained at Ft . Bliss and
Camp Davis.
Served · in Fiji Is., New Guinea anrl
Philippines. where he is now located.

78

�MITCHELL, DANIEL A.
Sgt. Daniel A. Mitchell, son of Mrs. Cordelia Mitchell.
Entered Army, 1942·
Trained
at Camp Crowder, Mo.
Served in Algeria,
France, Naples, Rome, Arno, France and Rhineland.
Holds Good Conduct, EAME Ribbon and
Marksmanship Medal.
Discharged ·oct., 1945·
MITCHELL, DEAN WADE
1st Sgt. Dean Wade Mitchell, son of J.D. Mitchell.
Entered Army, 1940.
Trained at Camp
Robinson, Ark. and Ft. Douglas, Utah.
Served
in Guadalcanal, New Caledonia, Luzon and Japan,
Holds Good Conduct Ribbon, Arne rica n Defense
Ribbon and some battle stars.
Now on duty at
Senda i, .Japan.
MITCHELL, MATTHEW H.
Sgt. Matthew H. Mitchell, son of Mrs. Orrill
Mitchell. Wife, former Myrtle Jacobs.
Entered
Air Corps, Oct., 1942· Trained at Lake Charles
La., Chanute Field, Ill. and Alamogordo, N, M.
Served in England.
Holds 6 Battle Stars and
Presidential citation with Cluster, Discharged
Oct., 1945.
MITCHELL, THOMAS H.
Cpl. Thomas H. Mitchell, son of Mrs. Cordelia
Mitchell:
Entered Army Dec;, 1942.
Trained
at Camp Van Doran, Miss.
Served in China, India, Burma Theater.
Holds Group Citation and
Good Conduct Medal.

MOHLER, ALBERT L.
Cpl. Albert L. Mohler, son of Mr. and Mrs.
John Mohler.
Ente. red Army Air Corps, June,
1943.
Trained at Lincoln, Nebr., Urbana, Ill.
and Camp Luna, N· M.
Served in New Guinea,
Australia, Dutch East Indies and now is in
Atsugi, Japan.

MOHLER, CLARENCE E.
S 1 / c Clarence E· Mohler, son of Mr. and Mrs.
John Mohler .
Entered Coast Guard May, 1942.
Trained at Brooklyn, New' York.
Served in
Sou t h P a c i f i c , A f.r i c a a n d Be r mud a .
Now on
duty at Brooklyn, New York.

MOHLER, JACK B.
P.0.3 / c class Jack B . Mohler, son of Mr. and
Mrs. John Mohler of Eudora.
Wife, former Jean
Quinlan.
Ent.ered Navy July, 1943.
Trained '!t
farragut; Idaho and .Urbana, I l l .
Served 1n
England, France, Panama, Pearl Harbor, Marshall
Is., Guam and Okinawa.
Now on duty in Japan.

MOLE, ALBERT L.
Capt. Albert L. Mole, son of Lewis E. Mole.
Entered Infantry Aug., 1939.
Trained at Camp
Robinson and Ft. Benning.
Served in France,
Belgium, Holland and Germany.
Holds Bronze
Medal and Laurel Leaf and Infantryman's Badge.
Now on duty in France.

MOLE, FRANCES
Sgt. Frances Mole, daughter of Mr. Lewis Mole.
Entered Marines May, 1943.
LTrained at Hunter
College, Norman, Okla: and Santa Barbara, Calif,
Discharged Sept., 1945.

MONROE,,RAYMOND H.
SKM 1/c Raymond H· Monroe, son of Walter
Trained at
Monroe.
Entered Navy Sept., 1943.
Bainbridge, Md.
Now serving in Hawaiian Is.

79

�MOORF, CHARLES E.
Sgt. Charles E. Moore, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Entered Army April, 1942·
M' ilton Moore.
Trained at Ft. Sill and Ft. Bragg.
Here·
ceived his Honorable Discharge Sept., 1944·

MOORE, EARL E.
Sgt. Earl E. Moore, son of Mr. and Mrs. Milton
Moore.
Entered Army Feb. , 1943.
Trained at
Ft. McClellan and Camp Hood.
He is now on
duty somewhere in the Pacific.

MOORE, MILTON MAURICE
AMM 2/c Milton Maurice Moore, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Milton Moore.
Entered Navy Dec., 1943.
Trained at Great Lakes, Memphis, Tenn. and
Olathe Air Base.
Now at Pensacola, Fla.

MOORE, HAROLD CHESTER
Capt. Jlarold Chester Moore, son of Mrs. Anna
Moore.
Entered Army Air Corps, May, 1941.
Trained at Ontario, Calif., Scott Field, Ill.,
Duncan Field, San Antonio, Randolph Field, New·
port Ark., Hartford, Conn. and Moultrie, Ga.
Now on duty at Tokyo, Japan.

MOORE, WILLIAM R.
Sgt. William R· Moore, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Milton Moore.
Entered Army, 1942.
Trained
at Camp Shelby, Miss., Arizona and Calif,
Served in England, Holland, Luxembourg, France
and Pearl Harbor.
Now at Ft. Logan, Colo,

MOORMAN, BERNARD C.
Pfc. Bernard c. Moorman, son of Mr. and Mrs.
w. P. Moorman. Entered Army Sept., 1944.
Trained at Camp Fannin, Texas.
Served in
Philippines and Japan, where he is now on duty.
Holds Sharpshooter's Medal.

MOORMAN, EDWARD W.
Capt. Edward w. Moorman, son of Mr. and Mrs.
w. P. Moorman. Entered Air Corps, June, 1942·
Trained at Wright Field, Dayton, Oh1o.
Served
in Hawaii.

MOORMAN, GEORGE W.
T/5 George w. Moorman, son of Mr. and Mrs.
w. p. Moorman. Wife, former Lois McGee. En·
t e r e d A r my 19 4 2 .
Tr a in e d a t F t . Be 1 v o i r , Va .
and Camp Shelby, Miss.
Served in Aleutian Is.
Now on duty at Chabua, India.

MOLL, ROY W. JR.
S;Sgt. Roy Yr. Moll Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs.
Roy W. Moll.
Wife, former Pauline Reese. En·
tered Army Air Corps, Aug., 1941.
Trained at
Scott Field, I l l . , Chicago,, I l l . New Haven,
Conn., Biloxi, Miss. and Reno, Nev., Served
in Sezgoan, Indi-a.
Holds Air Medal and 2 Bat·
tle Stars.
Now in India andCChina.
MORANVILLE, EDWIN J.
Pvt. Edwin J. Moranville, son of Mrs. Florence
Fearing.
Entered Army Air Corps, July, 1942.
Trained at Miami Beach, Fla.
Stationed at
Daniels Field, Ga. and Birmingham, Ala. Holds
One Year Service Medal and Good Conduct Medal.

eo

�MORLEY, HAROLD A.
Pvt. Harold A. Morley, son of Mr. an·d Mrs.
Walter Morley.
Wife, former Lela Votaw.
Ent'ered Army Feb., 1945. Trained at Camp Roberts,
Calif,
Served in Philippines and Japan.
Now
on duty in Japan.
MORRISS, MELVIN A ILEN
S 1 /c Melvin Allen Morriss, son of Mr. and Mrs.
A. R. Morriss.
En .tered Navy, Nov., 1943.
Trained at Farragut, Idaho.
Served in Colon,
Casablanca, French Morocco, Manus Islands New
Guinea, Mindinao Sea, Philippine Is., Luzon,
Ulithi, lwo Ji'ma, Okinawa, Guatemala, Surigao
Straits, Negros, Panay, Mindora, Pearl Harbor,
Panama Canal and others.
Holds 4 Ribbons and
4 Stars .
Now on duty in Pacific.
MORRISS
MERLE T.
S 1/c Merle J, ftlorriss, son of Mr. and Mrs. A.
R. Morriss.
Entered Coast Guard, Dec., 1942.
Trained at Brooklyn, N. Y.
Served in Casablanca, French Morocco, Gibraltar,Puerto Rico,
Philippine Is., Borneo, Okinawa, Korea, and
China where he is now stationed. Holds 7 Major
Engagements.
MORTENSON, HARRY E.
Cpl. Harry E. Mortenson, son of Albert Mortenson.
Entered Army July, 1943.
Trained at Ft. Knox,
Ky. and Los Angeles, Calif. · Served in England,
France and Germany.
Holds Purple Heart and
and Battle Stars.
Wounded Feb. 24, 1945,
Germany.
Now on duty at Cardiff, Wales.
MOSES, KENNETH V.
Lt.(sg) Kenneth V . Moses, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Wife, former Monreve Stewart.
Entered Navy
Sept., 1941
Trijined at Northwestern Univ.,
Chicago. ' Served in South America, Africa,
England, Iceland and ETO.
Now on duty at
Norfolk, Va.

MOSSLANDER, DALE W.
Av. Ord. 2/c Dale W. Mosslander, son of Mrs.
J. W. Mosslander.
Entered Navy Feb., 1942.
Trained at Farragut; San Bruno, and Port
Hueneme, Calif.
Served in Australia, Guadalcanal, Solomons, Admiralties, Marshalls, Philippines and Okinawa.
Holds Two Campaign Ribbons
and 5 Ba t t I e S t a r s .
Now a t G rea t La k e s , I 11.

MULDROW, LAWRENCE L.
Pfc. Lawrence L. Muldrow, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Harry D. Muldrow.
Wife, former Zelma L. Thomas.
Entered Army, Oct., 1942. Trained at Camp
Stoneman, Calif., Camp John T. Knight, Calif.
and Camp Rucker, Ala.
Served in England and
France, where he is now on duty.
MULL, ARTHUR R.
Pvt. Arthur R. Mull, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. C.
Mull.
Wife, former Wanda Sweet.
Entered
Marines, Dec., 1941. Trained at San Diego.
Served in Guadalcanal, Bouganville and Solomon
Is. Holds 2 Unit Citations and 4 Commendations.
Discharged Sept. 28, 1945.
MULL, ROY F.
Pfc. Roy F. Mull, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. C.
Mull.
Wife, former Dorothy Woodward.
Entered
Army June, 1944.
Trained at Camp Hood, Texas.
Served in England, France and Germany.· Was awarded In£. Combat Badge and Purple Heart.
Killed in Action March 17, 1945, Germany.
MULLEN, JAMES P.
T;Sgt. James P. Mullen, son of John E. Mullen.
Wife, former Helen Irene Mathia.
Entered Army
1943.
Trained at Camp Blanding, Fla.
Served
in England, France, Luxembourg, Belgium and
Germany.
Holds Bronze Star and Cluster, Purple Heart and Cluster, 4 Campaign Stars, Good
Conduct Medal and Combat lnf. Badge.
Now discharged.
81

�MURPHY, ALBERT J. P.
Cpl. Albert J. P. Murphy, son of Mr. and Mrs.
James E. Murphy.
Entered Army Air Corps July,
1942.
Trained at Texas, Kansas, Utah, Wash.
and San Francisco.
Served in New Guinea. Was
awarded Citation of Honor.
Killed in Action
June 15, 1944 in New Guinea.
MURPHYj JIM G.
CPhM
im G. Murphy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank
S. Murphy.
Wife, former Burrie Dalton.
En·
tered Navy, Medical Corps, June, 1942.
Train·
ed at Great Lakes, Ill. Served in New Zealand,
New Caledonia, New Hebrides, Solomon Is., New
Guinea, Fiji Is., Samoas and Hawaii.
Holds
American Theatre, Asiatic Pacific and Good
Conduct Medals.
Discharged Oct., 1945.
MURPHY JOHN W. A.
S/Sgt. John W. A. Murphy, son of Mr. and Mrs.
William Murphy.
Wife, former Margie Kerns.
Entered Army Air Corps, 1942.
Trained at
Daehart, Texas, Bilox, Miss. and McCook, Nebr.
Served in South Pacific and Tinian, where he is
now on duty.

MURRAY, MILLARD E.
Bw.M 2/c Millard E. Murray, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Melvin M. Murray. Entered Navy, 1942.
Trained
a t G rea t Lakes , I 11. S e r v e d in At 1 anti c and
Paci fie, Bahama Is., French Morocco, Ireland,
Hawaii, Marshalls, Solomons, Guam, Iwo Jime
and Saipan where he is now on duty.

MUSSELMAN, JOHN L. JR.
Pfc. John L. Musselman, Jr., Nephew of Mr. and
Mrs. Eugene Brune.
Entered Infantry, 1942.
Trained at Ft. Leonard Wood, Mo.; Camp Phil·
lips, Ks. and Iowa University.!
Served in
France where he was killed in action Nov. 15,
1944.

MUSSELMAN, MILLARD M.
1st Lt. Millard M. Musselman, nephew of Mr. and
Mrs. Eugene Brune.
Entered Army Air Corps
June, 1943.
Trained at King_man, Ariz. and
San Antonio, Texas.
Served 1n Ital •y.
Dis·
c ha r ge d Sept . 1 7, 1 945.

MUZZY, MARION F.
Pfc. Marion F. Muzzy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank
R. Muzzy.
Wife, former Helyn L. Claymore. En·
tered Army, Dec., 1940.
Trained at Camp Rob·
inson, Ark.
Served in Australia, New Cale·
donie, Guadalcanal and Fiji.
Holds American
Defense and American Theatre Ribbon, Victory
Medal, Navy and Marine Pres. Citation, Inf.
Combat Badge.
Asiatic Pacific Ribbon with I
Bronze Star.
Now discharged.
MUZZY
WILLARD M.
1st Sgt. Willara M. Muzzy, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Muzzy.
Wife, former Thelma Orr.
En·
tered Army Dec., 1940.
Trained at Camp Rob·
inson, Ark.
Served in England, Normandy
France, Belgium, Holland, Luxembourg and Ger·
many.
Holds Purple Heart and Good Conduct.
Wounded July 17, 1944 at St Lo, France.
NASON, JAMES WM. JR.
.
RM 3/c James Wm. Nason, Jr., son of Mr. and
Mrs. James Wm. Nason. Entered Navy, May, 1943·
Trained at Great Lakes, Northwestern Univ.,
Evanston, I l l . , Camp Bradford, Va. and Navy
Pier, Chicago, Ill.
Served in Hawaii, Guam,
Okinawa and Japan.
Now in South Pacific,
NASON, RALPH F.
Pfc. Ralph F. Nason, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. W.
Nason.
Entered Army Dec., 1944.
Trained at
Camp Fannin, Camp Meade and Camp Maxey.
Served
in Hawaii, Okinawa and Korea where he is now
on duty.

82

�NEALE, JUSTICE R .
Lt. Co1. Justice R. Neale, son ' of Mrs. Justice
Neale.
W1fe, former Joyce R. Wilson.
Entered
Army April, 1941.
Trained at Ft. Bliss and
Camp Maxey.
Served in England, . France, Germany and Belgium.
Holds Silver Star, Bronze
Star and Purple Heart.
Wounded Dec.
1944,
in Battle of Bulge.
Now discharged.

NELSON, ARTHUR H.
Ens. Arthur H. Nelson, son of Mr. and Mrs. C.
F. Nelson.
Entered Navy, 1944.
Trained at
Boston, Mass.
Now at Atlantic City.

NELSON, CARL STANLEY
S;Sgt. Carl Stanley Nelson, son of Mr. and Mrs.
C. F. Nelson.
Entered Marines, 1943.
Trained
at San Diego, Chicago, Grove City, Pa., Corpus Christi, Texas.
Served in Marshall Is.
Okinawa.
Now on duty at Japan.

NELSON, ELIZABETH M.
Elizabeth M. Nelson, daughter of Mrs •. GraceS.
Nelson.
Entered u.S. Nurses Cadet Corps Feb.,
1944. Trained at St. Lukes,School, Kansas City,
Mo., where she is still in training.

NELSON, FRANCES LYNN
lst Lt. Frances Lynn Nelson, entered Marines
March, 1943.
Trained at Sough Hadley, Mass.
Stationed at Cherry Point, N. C., Camp LeJeune,
N. C. and San Diego, Calif.
Now relieved from
active duty.

NELSON, RAYMOND THAYER
S 2/c Raymond Thayer Nelson, entered Navy,
March, 1945.
Trained at Great Lakes, Ill.
Went overseas, June, 1945·
Now o'o duty at
Philippine Is.

NELSON, ROBERT M.
Robert M. Nelson, son of Mrs. Grace S. Nelson.
Entered Merchant Marine, July, 1944.
Trained
at San Mateo, Calif.
Served in Philippines,
New Guinea and India.
Now enroute to USA,

NETZER, ERWIN J.
Pfc. Er.win J. Netzer, son of Mr. and Mrs. E.J.
Netzer. Entered Air Corps, March, 1943. Trained
at Camp Crowder, Mo and Ft. Logan, Colo. Served
in England.
Received Merit'brious 'service Unit
Insignia.
Now on duty at Wiesbaden, Germany.

NEUSTIFTER, ROBERT E.
Pfc. Rilbert E. Neustifter, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Albert H. Neustifter. Entered Army April, 1943.
Trained at Ft. Brag~, N. c. and Ft. George
Meade, Md.
Served 1n England, France, and
Germany.
Holds 8 Battle Stars.
Now on duty
at Wiesbaden, Germany.
NEWMAN, GEORGE V.
RDM 3/c George V. Newman, son of Mrs. Annie E.
Newman.
Entered Navy Feb., 1942.
Trained at
Great Lakes.
Served in Marshalls, Truk, New
Guinea, Carolines, Marianas, Formosa, Philippines, Okinawa and Tokyo Bay. Holds American,
Asiatic-Pacific Theater of War, 8 Bronze Stars
and Philippine Liberation with 2 Bronze Stars.
Now stationed at San Pedro, Calif.

83

�•
NEWMAN, JOHN F.
Cpl . John F. Newman, son of Mrs. Annie E.
Newman.
Wife, former Esther Faye Miskimen.
Entered Air Co .r ps Nov., 1943. Trained at
Amarillo, Texas, Calif. and Ohio.
Nowat
Chanute Field, Ill.

NEWMAN, WILLIAM E.
St. 3/c William E. Newman, son of Mr. V. M.
Newman.
Wife, former Ella Thompson.
Entered
Navy Aug., 1943.
Trained at Bainbridge, Md.
Served in South Pacific. Now on duty in Philip·
pines.

NICHOLS, JOHN L.
Pfc. John L. Nichols, son of Mrs. Phyllis
Nichols.
Wife, former Lorraine McCall. En ·
te·red Army April, 1942.
T.rained at Ft. Sill,
and Ft. Jackson.
Served in Iceland, England,
France, Belgium, Holland and Germany.
Now on
duty at Marseilles, France.

NIEBRUGGE, KARL F.
Sgt. Karl F. Niebrugge, son of Mrs. Bertha
N i e b rug g,.. Wife , for mer Hyacinth Bur k rna n.
En·
tered Air Corps, June, 1942.
Trained at Miami
B~ach, Lincoln, Nebr. and Burbank, Calif. ~1~
Good Conduct Medal.
Now at Or lando, Fla.

NOLL, FORREST L.
Capt
Forrest L. Noll, son of Mrs. Forrest L.
Noll.
Entered Army
June 1942.
Trained at
Scott Field, Ill.
Served overseas in North
Africa and Italian Campaigns.
Now on duty at
Keesler Field, Miss.

NOLL, LEWIS H.
A;S Lewis H. Noll, sonofMrs. Forrest L. Noll.
Entered Navy, Oct., 1944.
Trained at Memphis,
Tenn. and Ft. Worth, Texas.
At present is
with V-12 Unit, Tuland Univ., New Orleans, La.

NORMAN
STANLEY B.
Cpl. Stanley B. Norman, son of Mrs. Nellie
Norman.
Wife, former Edythe Louise Leslie.
Entered Army (Medics), Dec., 1942. Trained at
Camp Chaffee, ArkandCamp Campbell, Ky. Served
in France and Germany.
Engaged in Two Major
Battles.
Holds Good Conduct Medal. Received
discharge Sept. 27, 1945·
NORRIS, CLYDE W.
S{Sgt. Clyde W, Norris, son of Mrs. Myrtle
C ark.
Wife, former Betty Traxler.
Entered
Army, Nov., 1942.
Trained at Camp Funston,
Camp Polk, La. and Desert Training in Calif.
Served inFrance, England, Austria, Luxembourg,
Belgium and Germany.
Holds Bronze Star, Cer·
tificate of Merit Citation, Combat lnf. Badge
and 3 Battle Stars.
Now on duty in Germany.

NORRIS, NORMAN A.
Sgt. Norman A. Norris, son of Mr. and Mrs.
James Norris.
Wife, former Magdelene Bledaw.
Entered Army July, 1942.
Trained at Sheppard
Field, Rautoul Field, I l l . ; Jefferson Bar·
racks, Mo. and Ft. Lauton, Wash.
Servedin
Aleutians and Alaska.
Holds Good Conduct Medal
and 2 Battle Stars.
Discharged Oct., 1945.
NORTH, JOHN D.
QM 2/c John D. North, son of Mrs. John North.
Entered Navy, May, 1942.
Trained at Great
Lakes, Norfolk, Va. and Boston, Mass. Served
in France, Italy, Guadalcanal, Solomon Is.,
Luzon, Okinawa and all Is. in Pacific.
Now
on duty on Okinawa.

84

�NUFFER, DONALD E.
T/Sgt. Donald E. Nuffer, son of Mr. and Mrs.
L.A. Nuffer.
Wife, former Leona Maxine Howard.
Entered Army Inf., Dec., 1940.
Trained at Camp
Roberts, Camp Haan, Camp Robinson, San Luis
Obispo and Camp Butner, N.C.
S~rved at Normandy, France, Rhineland, Ardennes and Central
Europe.
Holds ETO with 5 Battle Stars, PrePearl Harbor Ribbon and Combat Inf. Badge.
Discharged Oct. 14, 1945.
NUNEMAKER, EUGENE W.
Sgt. Eugene W. Nunemaker, son of H. C. Nunemaker.
Entered Air Corps Aug., 1942.
Trained
at Las Vegas, Nev., Lowry Field, Colo. and
Roswell, N. M.
Served in Africa, Italy and
Greece.
Holds 9 Battle Stars and Presidential
Citation.
Discharged Oct. 19, 1945.
NUNEMAKER , HERBERT C.
S/Sgt. Herbert C. Nunemaker, son of H. C. Nunemaker, Sr., Entered Army Nov., 1942.
Trained
at Camp Claiborne, La.; Camp Howze, Texas and
Port Lavaca, Texas.
Served in France, Germany
and Austria.
Holds 2 Battle Stars.
Reports
to Camp Bowie, Texas, Nov. 1, 1945.
NUSBAUM
WELLMAN E.
Capt. Wellman E. Nusbaum, son of Mrs, H. M.
Nusbaum.
Entered C. A. C. Ja ·n . 1942.
Trained
at Harvard Univ.,CampEdwards, Mass., Orlando,
Fla. and Eglin Field, Fla.
Now on duty at
Orlando Army Air Base as Radar Officer.

OAKES , HENRY F.
Pfc. Henry F. Oakes, son of Mr., and Mrs. Charles
Oakes.
Entered Nat'l Guards 1940.
Trained at
Camp Robinson, Ft. Ord, San Luis Obispo and
Camp Rucker.
Discharged, 1942.

OAKES, WILBUR E.
Cpl. Wilbur E. Oakes, · son of Charles F. Oakes.
Entered 13ls t Engrs. March, 1942.
Trained at
Camp Shelby!,:: Miss .
Served in Pacific Theater,
Solomons, Guadalcanal, Philippines and Luzon.
Holds Good Conduct and Philippine Liberation
Medal with 1 Bronze Star.
Wounded in Action
Aug., 1944 on Luzon.
Discharged Oct. 18, 1945.

O'BRYON CHARLES EDWARD
T;5 Charles Edward O•Bryon, son of Dr. and
Mrs. C. F. O'Bryon.
Wife, former Genevieve
Lawua.
Entered Army, Jan. _, 1945.
Basic at
Camp Lee, Va. and now at Camp Detrick, Md.

O'BRYON, HERBERT JUSTIN
S;Sgt. Herbert Justin O•Bryon, son of Dr. and
Mrs. C. F. O•Bryon.
Entered Army, June, 1943.
Trained at Camp Roberts, Tempe, Ariz., Yuma,
Ariz. and Muroc Calif, Served on Hawaiian Is.,
Palau Is. and Okinawa.
Now on duty at Japan.

OCAMB, JAMES C.
Sgt. James c. Ocamb, son of Mr. and Mrs. James
H. Ocamb. Entered Army Air Corps, 1940. Trained
at Little Rock, Ark. and San Francisco, Calif.
Served in England, and shot down over Italy.

OGLE , DUANE E.
Duane E. Ogle, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ogle.
Entered Merchant Marine, May, 1945.·
Trained at
San Francisco, Calif.
Served in Manila.
Now
on duty at Tokyo Bay, Japan.
85

�OGLE, ORAN W.
Pvt. Oran W. Ogle, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. 1.
Ogle.
Entered Army June, 1944.
Trained at
Ft. Bliss; Colo. Springs; Camp Gruber, Okla.;
Camp Maxey; Pine Bluff, Ark. and Now at Camp
Miles Standish, Mass.
OPPERMAN
KERMIT E.
SjSgt. Kermit E. Opperman, son of Mr. W. A.
Opperman.
Entered Army, June, 1942.
Trained
at Edgewood,Arsenal. Md.
Served in England,
France, Belgium, Holland and Germany. En·
gaged in 3 Major Battles.
Discharged Nov. 3,
1945.

OSMOND, LAWRENCE R.
Sgt, Lawrence R. Osmond, S&lt;On of Mr. and Nrs.
L. Osmond.
Wife, former Lee Krebs.
Entered
Air Corps, May, 1944.
Trained at Buckley
Field, Colo., Lincoln, Nebr. Delhart, Texu
and Harvard, Nebr.
Served in Hawaii, Guam,
Saipan and Tinian.
Now on duty at Guam.

OTT, EMERSON J.
Sgt. Emerson J. Ott,. son of Mr. John Ott, Jr.
Wife, former Flora Markley.
Entered Army,
1942. Trained at Camp Claiborne and Camp Howze.
Served in France, Germany and Austria.
Holds
ETO Ribbon with 3 Battle Stars, Good Conduct
Me da 1 , Bronze S t a r s .
Now a t J e f f e r s on Ba r racks .

OVERTON, ROBERT B.
T;s Robert B. Overton, son of Mrs. BulaT.
Overton.
Entered Army, Sept. 1943.
Trained
at Ft. Leonard Wood, Mo. and Camp Roberta,
Calif.
Served in England,~. France, Belgiumb
and Germany.
Holds Good ~..;onduct Medal, ET
with 2 Battle Stars and Victory Medal.
Now on
du~y at Furth, Germany.
OVERTON, D. WILLIAM.
Lt. (jg) D. William Overton, son of Mrs. Bula
T. Overton.
Wife, former Inez Rice.
Entered
Navy, Jan., 1944.
Trained at Univ. of Ariz.
Harvard Univ., Miami Beach, Fla. and San Pedro,
Calif,
Served in Hawaiian Is. North and South
P a c if i c •
Ho 1 d s As i at i c-Pa c i f i c The ate r and
Victory Medal.
Now in P~cific Area.

OWEN, FRANK S.
Sgt. FrankS. Owen, son of Mrs. Ethel Owen.
Wife, former Mildred Johnson,
Entered Marines,
Sept., 1943.
Trained at San Diego.
Served at
Pearl Harbor, Guam and North China.
Holds
Marksmanship. Medal and Good Conduct Ribbon.
Now on duty at T Stinga Tao.

OWENS, MARION D.
Pfc. Mlrion D. Owens, son of Mr. and Mrs. Miles
Owens.
Entered Army July, 1943.
Trainedat
Camp Adair, Camp San Luis Obispo and Camp
Beale, Served in Hawaii, Pelelieu, Angaur,
New Caledonia and Guadalcanal.
Now on duty at
Le yt e.

OWENS, RALPH F.
Sgt. Ralph F· Owens, entered Army Signal Corps
Dec.' 1942·
Trained at Atlantic City, N.
Camp Crowder, Mo., Camp Pinedale, Cali.,
Drew Field, Fla . , Ft. Meyers, Fla., Las Vegas,
Nev. and Maxwell Field, Ala.
Has 225 hrs.
of flying.
Holds Sharpshooters Medal and
Good Conduct Medal.
Has flown over Cuba.

I··

OWENS, VIRGIL H.
Pfc. Virgil H. Owens, son of Mr. Harve Owens
and Mrs. Edna Hull.
Wife, former Madeline
Connett.
Entered Marines May, 1944.
Trained
at San Di'ego and Oceanside, Calif.
Went over·
seas, Oct., 1944.
Killed in Action, June 9,
1945 at Okinawa.

86

�OWENS, WAYNE S.
1 s t L t . Wa y n e S . Owe n s , son o f Sa n t Owe n s ..
Wife, former Ruth Garrett.
Entered Air Transport Command March, 1943.
Trained at Memphis,
Tenn.
Served in India.
Holds Air Medal, DFC
and Presidential Citation.
Now on duty at
Kurma tola, India.
PAIR, DOYLE Q.
Sgt. Doyle Q. Pair, son of Mr. and Mrs. R. V.
AleX"ander.
Entered Army March, 1943.
Trained
at Camp Haan; Camp Maxey; Camp Roberts; Camp
McCain and Camp Shelby.
Served in England,
France, Belgium, Poland, Czechoslovakia and
Germany.
Holds Good Conduct, Ri f1 eman' s Meda 1
and 2 Battle Stars.
Now at Camp Miles Standish, Mass.

PARDEE, FRED E.
Pvt. Fred E. Pardee, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Pardee.
Entered Army April, 1945. Trained at
Camp Fannin, Texas.

PARDEE, ROBERT M.
S/Sgt. Robert M. Pardee, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Pardee. Entered Army July, 1942. Trained
at Sious Falls, S.D. and Muroc Air Field.
Served at Hawaiian Is. and South Pacific, now is
discharged.

PARKER, CLAUDE EUGENE
S 1/c Claude Eugene Parker, son of Mr. and Mrs.
A. S. Murphy. Entered Navy June, 1940. Trained
at Great Lakes, Ill.
Served in Philippines,
Australia, and Java on the USS Houston.
Holds
Presidential Citation and was POW for 3~ yrs.
Now at St. Albans Naval Hospital, Long Island,
New York.
PARSONS, LEROY S.
Pfc. LeRoy S. Parsons, son of Mr. and Mrs.
W. S. Parsons.
Entered Army May, 1943. Trained
at Camp Roberts, Calif.; Camp Gruber, Okla. and
Ft. Benning, Ga.
Served in England, France,
Holland, Belgium, Germany and Austria.
Holds
3 Battle Stars and 2 Presidential Citations.
Now on duty in France.

PARSONS, WALTER N.
Sgt. Walter N. Parsons, son of Mr. and Mrs.
W. S. Parsons.
Entered Air Corps Jan., 1943.
Trained at Atlandic City, N.J., Omaha, Nebr.,
Camp Pinedale, Calif. and Greensboro, N. C.
Served in India, China and Burma.
Holds Air
Medal with 3 Oak Leaf Clusters and DFC.
Now
enroute to USA.

PATCHEN, HAROLD E.
Pvt. Harold E. Patchen, son
T. W. Patchen.
Wife, former
Entered Army March, 1945.
Maxey and Ft. Warren.
Now

of Mr. and Mrs.
Mer lene Ridgway.
Trained at Camp
at Ft. Jackson.

PATCHEN, TOMMY E.
Cpl. Tommy E. Patchen, son of Mr. and Mrs.
T. W. Patchen.
Wife, former Maxine M. Flory.
Entered Army March, 1943.
Trained at Camp
Haan, Camp Roberts, Camp Carson, Colo, Camp
Butner and Shreveport, La.
Served in England,
France, Germany and Austria.
Wounded in Action
June, 1945, France.
Now on duty in France.
PATTERSON, RICHARD H.
Pfc. Richard H. Patterson, son of Mr. and Mrs.
M. J. Patterson.
Wife, former Muriel Rodgers.
Entered Marines, 1943.
Trained at Arlington,
Texas, Monticello, Ark., Parris Is., S.C.
Camp Lejeune, N. c. and Quantico, Va.
Now at
Corpus Christi, Texas.

87

�PATTON, RICHARD L.
Richard L. Patton, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. D.
Patton.
Wife, .former Margie Prater.
Entered
Army Air Corps, 1941.
Trained at Lowry Field.
Served in Australia, New Guinea and Bismark Sea.
Holds Air Medal, DFC, Silver Star and Presi·
dential Citation.
Discharged Sept., 1945.
PAULSON, IVAN J .
. Ch P. 0. Ivan J. Paulson, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Paulson.
Wife, former Dorothy Wilson,
Entered Navy, Dec., 1940·
Trained at Great
Lakes and Dearborn, Mich. Served in Australia,
India, New Caledonia, Guadalcanal, Gilbert
Is., Rabaul, Solomons., Tarawa, lwo Jima and
many others. Holds Good Conduct Meda 1, Ameri·
can Defense, Asiatic-Pacific and American
Theater Campaigns, 1 Silver and 4 Bronze Bat ·
tle Stars.
Now on duty in Pacific.
PEACOCK, DELLA B.
Lt. Della B. Peacock, daughter of Mrs. Della
Entered WAC's Apri 1, 1943. Trained
G. Peacock .
at · Des Moines, Iowa and Battle Creek, Mich.
Now on duty at Waco, Texas in Medica 1 Dept.
PENCE, KENNETH, E.
Sgt. Kenneth E. Pence, son of Mr, and Mrs.
Ev e rett D. Pence.
Entered Air Corps Aug, 1942.
Trained at Barkley, Texas .
Served in North
Africa ar.d Italy .
Holds European, African and
Middl e East Ribbons, Good Conduct and Bronze
Star .
Now is discharged.

PENDLETON, ALBERT B.
Cpl. Albert B. Pendleton, son of Mr. and Mrs.
W. H. Pendleton.
Entered Army Air Corps, July,
1943. Trained at Amarillo, Texas; Biloxi, Miss;
Willow Run, Mich.; Avon Park, Ft. Meyers, Fla.;
Kingman, Ariz.; Chanute Field, Ill. and Salina,
Ks.
Now stationed at Harvard, Nebr.

PENDLETON, WILLIAM B.
Lt. William B. Pendleton, son of Mr. and Mrs.
W. H . Pendleton.
Entered Army, June, 1942.
Trained at Camp Lee, Camp Edwards, CampJohnson,
Ca mp Rue k e r , Camp Crowder, Ft . Be 1 voir and Aber·
d ee n Proving Grounds.
Served in New Guinea,
Moluccas, Is., Borneo and Philippines where he
is no w on duty.

PENFOLD, CLAUDE H.
S; Sgt. Claude H . Penfold, son of Mrs. L.S. Pen·
fold.
Entered Air Corps, Nov., 1942.
Trained
a t Ke e s 1 e r Fie 1 d , Bards d a 1 e Fie 1 d , Harding
Field and Columbia Air Base.
Served in ETO,
En g 1 a n d , A f r i c a , Sa r d i n i a , Co r s i c a , It a 1 y , Ok in·
awa and Philippines.
Holds 7 Battle Stars, 2
Presidential Citations Good Conduct and American
Defense.
Discharged. Oct. 24, 1945.
PENFOLD, FRANCIS C.
Pfc. Francis· C. Penfold, son of Mrs. L . W. Pen·
fold.
Entered Army Jan., 1943.
Trained at Ft.
McClelland, Ft. Meade, Camp McCoy and A . P. Hill.
Served in England, France, Belgium, Holland and
Germany .
Holds 5 Battle Stars, Good Conduct
and Combat Infantry Badge.
Discharged Oct. 7,
194 5.
.
.
PENNINGTON, RONALD L.
Pfc. Ronald L. Pennington, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Paul W. Pennington.
Wife, former Dorothy Pope.
Entered Army Sept., 1944 .
Trained . at Camp Hood,
Texas.
Served in Philippines and Korea. Hold;
Expert Marksmanship Medal.
Now at Korea.
PENNY, JOHN ERNEST
.
S 1 / c . John Ernest Penny, son of Mrs. Florence
Penny.
Entered Service Nov., 1943·
Trained
at Farragut, Idaho and Treasure Island, Calif.
Served in Aleutian Is., later served in south·
west Pacific, Okinawa.
Now on duty off Coast
of Japan.

88

�PENNY JUNIUS M.
T;s junius M. Penny, son of Mr. and Mrs. M.
N. Penny.
Wife, former Mary Lou Nelson.
Entered Army, June, 1944· Trained at Camp
Barke ley, Texas, O•Rei lly Gen. Hosp., Springfield, Mo. and Ft. Jackson, S. C. Now serving
in Dacca, India.
PENNY, PAUL B.
S 1/c Paul B. Penny, son of Mr. and Mrs. M.
N. Penny.
Entered Navy, Nov., 1943·
Tra-ined
at Farragut, Idaho.
Served in Atlantic and
Pacific.
Now on carrier in Pacific.
PEPPERCORN, GEORGE E.
T/4 George E. Peppercorn, son of George J. Peppercorn.
Wife, former Mary Martin.
Entered
Army Nov., 1943.
Trained at Camp Crowder, Mo.
and Camp Polk, La. Served on New Guinea, Leyte,
Luzon and now on Manila.
Holds Rifle Medal,
Good Conduct Medal, Bronze Star and AsiaticPacific Service Ribbon.
PERKINS, CARL C. JR.
Lt. Carl C. Perkins, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs.
Carl C. Perkins.
Wife, former Lois Wheeler.
Entered Air Corps, Aug., 1943.
Trained at
Keesler Field, Univ. of Pittsburg and Maxwell
Field.
Further training at Carlstrom Field,
Fla., Cochran Field, Ga. and Craig Field, Ala.,
where he is now stationed.

PERKINS, DELBERT' E.
1st Lt. Delbert E. Perkins, son of Mrs. D. W.
Perkins.
Wife, former Virginia Nell Carter.
Entered Army, Oct., 1942·
Trained at Camp
Wallace, Texas, Ft. Benning, Ga. and Camp
Gruber, Okla.
Served in France, Luxembourg,
Germany and now serving in Austria.
PERKINS, OTIS 0.
Capt. Otis 0 .. Perkins, son of Mr. and Mrs. Otis
Perkins.
Entered Air Corps, 1939.
Trained at
Ft. Crockett, Ft. Barry and Hawaiian Air Fields.
Served in Hawaii, New Guinea, Philippines, Okinawa, Saipa·n, Marshalls and lwo Jime.
Awarded
7 Battle Stars and 3 Citations.
Wounded on
Le;vte and killed in action April 29, 1945 on
Oktnawa.
PERKINS, PAUL W.
AMY 1/C Paul W. Perkins, son of David S. and
Elsie W. Perkins.
Wife, former Eleanor L.
Fields.
Entered Navy, Sept., 1941·
Trained
at Kansas City, Kansas and Hutchinson, Ks.
Served in Marianas and Bonin Is.
Holds Good
Conduct Medal and 4 Campaign Bars. Discharged
Oct. 19, 1945·
PERRY, ELDON N ..
GM 3/c Eldon N. Perry, son of Newton T. Perry.
Wife, former Marjorie Rowland.
Entered Navy,
May, 1944.
Trained at Great Lakes and Gulfport, Miss.
Served in Africa, Egypt, Iran,
India and Italy.
Holds American, EuropeanAfrican and Asiatic Ribbons.
Now on duty at
Shoemaker, Calif.
PERRY, WILLIAM N.
SK 3/C William N. Perry, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Noble Perryl
Wife, former Lucille .Tewell
Winfrey.
Entered Navy, Aug., 1943·
Trained
at Great Lakes.
Now on duty at Treasure Is.,
Cali f.
PETERSON LEON A.
TjSgt. Leon A. Peterson, son of Mrs. Mary
Barnhart. Entered Army Air Corps. Aug., 1942·
Trained at Sheppard Field, Texas.
Served in
England, Germany and Luxembourg.
Awarded Air
Medal with 3 Clusters, ETO, 1 bronze Star,
DFC, Defense Ribbon, Citation, 3 Good Conduct
Medals and Purple Heart.
Killed in Action
Aug. 12, 1944 on mission over Germany.

89

�PETREE, BEN
L t • ( J g ) Be n P e t r e e , h u s b a n d o f the f o r mer
Rachel Ragle.
Entered Army early in 1942·
Trained at Camp Edison, N . J., Ft. Monmouth,
N. J. and Camp Murphy, Fla.
Commissioned in
Navy, Jan., 1944·
Stationed at Ft . Schuyler,
N. Y., radar training at Maine, Boston and
Washington, D.C.
Stationed at Pearl Harbor,
and now Man i 1 a.

1·

PFANTZ, GEORGE
T;Sgt. George
• Pfantz, son of Mr. and Mrs.
William Pfantz.
Wife, former Virgie Paulson.
Entered Army, March, 1943.
Trained at Ft.
Leonard Wood, Mo. and Camp Breckenridge, Ky.
Served in England, ScotlandJ.. Wales, Belgium,
France and Germany.
Holds rour Battle Staq
and his Battalion was awarded the Coat ofArms.
Now on duty in Fra nee.
PICKENS, JOHN E.
Cpl. John E. Pickens, son of Mr. George Pickens
and Mrs. E. G. Allen.
Wife, former Mildred
Schapley . Enter'ed Marines, March, 1943. Train·
ed at San Diego, Camp Elliott, Camp Gillesfie
and Camp Pendleton.
Served on Bouganvil e,
Hawaii, lwo Jima and New Caledonia.
Now on
duty at Japan.
PICKETT, ROBERT W.
MM 2/c Robert W. Pickett, son of Mrs. H. E.
Pickett.
Wife, former Betty Rose Ragan. En·
tered Navy Sept., 1943.
Trained at Farragut,
Idaho and Dearborn, Mich.
Served on Secret
Communications.
Now at Washington, D. c.

PIN£, PHILLIP A.
Pvt. Phillip A. Pine, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur C. Pine.
Wife, former Daisey McCormick.
Entered Air Corps, 1945.
Trained at Sheppar d
Field and Lowry Field. Received shipping orders
Oct . 12, 1 94 5.

PINE, RALPH E.
T / 4 Ralph E. Pine, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph E . Pine. Entered Army May, 1943. Trained
at Camp Robinson, Camp Bowie and A.S.T.P. at
M.U.
Holds Pacific Ribbon and Good Conduct
Meda 1.
Now serving in Hawaiian Islands .

PINE, RICHARD R.
CRM Richard R. Pine, son of Mr. and Mrs . Wilbur
C. Pine.
Entered Navy, Dec., 1941.
Trained at
San Diego.
Served in Ell is Is., Marshalls and
Pt. Barrow, Alaska.
Now is discharged .

PIPPERT, EARL M.
Pfc. Earl M. Pippert, son of Mr. and Mrs . C.W.
Pi p p e r t •
Wi f e , f o r me r He 1 e n Ba k e r .
En t e red
Army Dec., 1943.
Trained at Camp Shelby, Miss.
S e r v e d in Eng 1 and, Fr a n ce , Be 1 g i u m and Germany.
Now on duty at Frankfort, Germany.

PIPPERT, MILTON M.
Pfc. M1lton M. Pippert, son of Mrs. Carol Des·
kins and Pfc. Earl M. Pippert.
Entered Army
Feb., 1944 .
Trained at Camp Rob e rts, Calif,
and Camp Butner, N. C.
Served in England,
France, and Germany.
Now on duty at Le Havr e ,
France.

PLATH, ERNEST C .
Ens. Ernest C. Plath, son of Harry W. Plath.
Wife , former Opal Jayne Richardson .
Ent e r ed
Navy, June, 1944 .
Trained at Camp Mc Donoug h
S e r v e d i n P a c i f i c The ate r.
a n d Mia m i , ·F 1 a .
Now on duty in Japanese Harbors.

90

�PONTIUS, ERNEST A.
S/Sgt. Ernest A. Pon'tius, son of Mrs. Arthur
C. Pontius. Wife, former Bertha Jane Trowbridge.
Entered Signal Corps, Dec., 1943.
Trained at
Camp Docige, Iowa and Camp Crowder, Mo.
Now is
discharged.
PONTIUS, VAUGHN (Chick) W.
SjSgt. Vaughn (Chick) W. Pontius, son of Mrs.
Frank Rowland.
Wife, former Hazel Archer.
En t e red Army In f . ; Nov . , 1 9 4 3.
T r a in e d at
Camp Wolters, Texas. Served in England, France,
Luxembourg ·;Germany and Scotland.
Holds Silver Star, Purple Heart, Unit Citation and 4
Campaign Stars.
Wounded in Action July, 1944
and later spent 3 months in hospital for Combat Fatigue.
Now at Paris, France.

PONTIUS, HERMAN IV.
Lt. Col. Herman W. Pontius, son of Mrs. Arthur
C. Pontius.
Wife, former Jennie Grace Smith.
Entered. Coast Art i 1 1 e r y, Feb . , 1 9 41.
Trained
at Camp Davis, Camp Wallace, Camp Bliss, Camp
Plauche and Univ. of Cincinnati,
Served in
New Guinea, Philippines and Japan, where he is
now stationed.
POTTER
BERYL .T •
Pvt. Beryl J. "Potter, son of Mr. and Mrs. C.C.
Potter.
Entered Marines, Jan., 1943. Trained
at San Diego, Calif. and Camp Pendleton, Calif.
Served on Iwo Jima.
Was wounded Feb., 1945,
and sent to lstates and hospitalized at Oakland and Great Lakes Hospitals.
Is now at
Hastings, Nebr.
Holds 1 Battle Star and PurP 1 e Heart.
POTTER, KENNETH L.
Cpl. Kenneth L. Potter, son of Mr. and Mrs.
C. C. Potter.
Wife, former Beatrice Crumet.
Entered Army, Nov., 1942.
Trained at CRTC and
Ft. Riley, Ks.
Later enlisted as a Paratrooper and trained at Ft. Benning, Ga.
Served in
Pacific Area.
Holds Inf.
Good Conduct Medal
and Three Battle Stars. Now has a Medical Discharge.
PRINGLE, CHARLES F.
Pfc. Charles F. Pringle, son of Mr. and Mrs.
W. K. Pringle.
Entered Army In f., Feb., 1943.
Trained in Calif., Fla., and Virginia.
Served
in England, France, Germany. and Austria. Holds
Victory Ribbon, Good Conduct Medal and EAME
Theater Ribbon
Now discharged.
PROVOST, LOUIS
SjSgt. Louis Provost, son of Art A. Provost.
Wife, fqrmer Irene Archer •. Entered Army·, 1940.
Trained at Camp Robinson, Ft. Ord, Camp San
Luis Obispo and Camp Rucker.
Served in England, France, Belgium, Holland and Germany.
Holds Purple Heart, Bronze Star, 4 Bronze Campaign Stars, Good Conduct, American Defense
AAmerican Theater and ETO Ribbons.
Wounded
Nov. 18, 1944.
Discharged May, 1945.
PURVIS
FRED CALVIN
Pfc. Fred Calvin Purvis, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Fred R. Purvis. Entered Army, May, 1943. Trained at Camp Roberts, Ft •. Benning and Camp Rucker. Served in Hawaii, where he is now on duty.
Holds Rifleman's Medal.
PUTNAM, CHARLES E.
B? 2/c Charles E. Putnam, entered Navy, March,
1 9 3 9 . T r a in e d a t G r e a t La k e s .
Se r ve d
i n
Atlantic and Pacific.
Holds 3 Battle Stars,
Pre-Pearl Harbor Ribbon, Purple Heart and 1
Cluster.
Wounded on USS Miss. and in 1945,
in South Pacific.
Now at Navy Hospital, San
Diego, Calif.
QUAKENBUSH, ROGER L.
T/Sgt. Roger L. Quakenbush, son of Mr. and Mrs.
W. H. Quakenbush.
Entered Army Dec., 1940.
Trained at Camp Robinson, Ark. and in Calif.
Served in England, France, Holland and Germany.
Holds Bronze Star, Good Conduct, 5 Battle Stars
and American Defense Ribbon.
Now is discharged.
91

�RABER, PAUL H.
Cpl. Paul H. Raber, son of Mr. and Mrs. Morris
H. Raber .
Wife, former Margaret Mason. En·
tered Army Air Corps, 1941.
Trained at Jef·
ferson Barracks, Mo.
Served in Trinidad Is.
and West Indies.
Ho Ids Good Conduct Medal.
Now at Ft. Leavenworth for discharge.
RAGLE, DAN D. M.
Ens. Dan D. M. Ragle, son of Esther Ragle.
Entered Navy, Nov., 1943.
Trained at Doane
College, Asbury Park, N. J., Cornell Univ. and
Mare Island.
Served in Pacific Is. Pearl Har·
bor and Okinawa.
Now on duty on USS Chester
in Pacific.

RAKE, WILBUR D.
S/Sgt. Wilbur D. Rake, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Harry D. Rake.
Entered Army Air Corps, Jan.,
1942.
Trained at Sheppard Field, Gowan Field
and McCook, Nebr .
Now on duty at Guam.
RANDALL, HUGH A.
Cpl. Hugh A. Randall, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ivan
0.· Randall.
Wife, former Blossom Ewing. En·
tered Army, April, 1944.
Trained at Camp Fan·
nin, Texas.
Served in Scotland, England,
France, Germany, Belgium and Luxembourg. Holds
Purple Heart, Combat Inf. Badge, Victory Medal
Good Conduct Medal and Three Battle Stars.
Wounded Dec., 1944 in Franc e. Discharged
Nov. 11, 19451
RANKIN, CHARLES C.
Capt. Charles C. Rankin, son of Mrs. Paul C.
Rank in. Entered Army Signa 1 Corps, Aug., 1941 .
Trained at Ft. Monmouth, Ft. Lewis, Camp Swift,
Ft. Sam Houston and Ft. Custer. Served in Eng·
land.L Belgium, France, Netherlands, Germany
~~;nd L:zechos lovakia.
Now on duty at Germany.
RANSDELL, GAYLORD D.
Pfc. Gaylord D. Ransdell, son of Mr : and Mrs.
D. T. Ransdell.
Wife, former Georgia May. ,En·
tered Army Sept., 1943 .
Trained at Camp Gru·
her, Okla. and Camp Claiborne, La.
Nowat
Fort Custer, Mich.

RAYBOURN
RAYMOND A.
s;Sgt. ~aymond A. Raybourn, son of Mr. Thomas
B. Raybourn.
Wife, former Coleen Lewallen.
Entered Air Corps, Aug., 1939.
Trained at
Post Field, Okla. Camp Davis, N. C ·, , Marshall
Field, Ks. and Scott Field, Ill.
Served 6
months in Fenny, India.
Holds Good Conduct
Medal, American Defense, A.P. Service Ribbon
and One Bronze Star.
Discharged, Oct., 1945.
READ, LATHROP B. JR.
Lt. Col. Lathrop B. Read Jr., son of Mr. and
Mrs. L. B. Read.
Entered MP Corps, 1942.
Trained at Ft. Oglethorpe, Ga. and Camp Custer,
Mich.
Served in England, France, Belgium,
Holland and Germany.
Holds Bronze Star, Four
Battle Stars from World War I, Purple Heart and
5 Battle Stars from World War II.
Wounded in
England July, 1944.
Now in USA.

REDDING, DONALD R.
Sgt. Donald R. Redding, son of Mr. and Mrs.
E . H. Redding.
Wife, former Bessie Finley.
Entered Air Corps, Nov., 1942.
Trained at
Lowry Field, Colo.
Now on duty at Scott Field.
REED, JAMES D.
F. 0. James D. Reed, son of Mr. and Mrs. James
A. Reea.
Wife, former Dorothy Pike.
Ente.red
Army Air Corps, 1943.
Trained at St. Peters·
burg, Fla.; Camp Crowder, Mo.; Spearfish, S.D.;
Santa Ana, Calif.; Stockton Field, Calif.;
Kingman, Ariz. and Lincoln, Nebr., where he is
now stationed.
92

�REED, ROBERT LAWSON
Robert Lawson Reed, son of Mr . and Mrs . Albert
Reed.
Entered Army Dec . , 1943.
Trained at
Florida.
Served in Belgium, Holland, Germany
and Franc e where he is now on duty.
Holds the
Purple Heart and Oak Leaf Cluster.
Wounded
Jan . 1, 1945 in Germany.
REED, WILLIAM E.
Pvt . William E . Reed, son of Mr. William E .
Reed .
Wife, former Emma Lee Richardson .
Ent e red Army June, 1944.
Trained at Ft. Leonard
Wood, Mo .
Discharged Oct. 5, 1945 .
REBER, KARL H .
Ka r 1 H. Reber, son of Mrs.
Laura H. Reber.
Wife, former Mary Jane Hubbard .
Entered Army,
Jan., 1937·
Trained at Camp Robinson, Ark .
Ft. Crook, Nebr . , Ft. Ord, Calif., Camp Rucker, Ala., Camp Butner, N . C.
Served in England, France and Germany.
Holds Good Conduct,
American Defense , ETO with Five Stars, Purple
Heart, One Cluster, Bronze Star and Combat
Inf. Badge.
Discharged Aug., 1945·

REUSCH, FRANK B.
T/ 5 Frank B. Reusch, son of Mrs. Sophia Reusch.
Wife, former Viola Jackson. Entered Army Sept . ,
1943.
Trained at Ft . Riley and Camp Maxey .
Served in England, France, Belgium, Luxembourg
and Germany .
Engaged in 3 Major Battles .
Now at Ft. Leavenworth, Ks.

REUSCH, HAROLD H.
Sgt. Harold H . Reusch, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Reusch. Entered Army Dec., 1942. Trained
at Camp Chaffee, Ft. Sill.
Served in England,
France, and Germany.
Holds Two Bronze Stars,
ETO, Good Conduct, Group Citation and Markmansship Medal.
Now at Columbus, Ohio.

REUSCH, WESLEY A.
Pfc. Wesley A. Reusch, son of Mrs. Sophia
Reusch.
Wife, former Elnora McMurry.
Entered
Army Sept., 1944·
Trained at Camp Roberts,
Calif.
Served in Philippines, Korea, Japan
where he is now on duty .

REYNOLDS, CLIFFORD E.
Sgt. Cli i ford E. Reynolds, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Reynolds.
Entered Army May, 1943.
Trained at Camp Davis, N.C., Baltimore, Md.
and Ft. Monroe, Va.
Now on duty at Honolulu.

RHODES, ROBERT H.
Sgt. Robert H. Rhodes, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Rhodes.
Wife, former Edith M. Guist.
Entered Army Dec., 19-42 .
Trained at Camp McCoy and Camp Hood.
Served in England, France,
Belgium, Luxembourg and Germany.
Holds Bronze
Star, Good Conduct and 4 Battle Stars.
Now
enroute to USA.

RICE, ELLSWORTH A.
Pfc. Ellsworth A. Rice, sonofMr. and Mrs. Fred
H. Rice.
Wife, former Geneveive Landon.
Entered Army Aug., 1944.
Trained at Ff. Leonard
Wood, Mo.
and Camp Maxey.
Served in France,
England and German~.
Now on duty in France.
RICE, LAWRENCE D.
MM 2/c Lawrence D. Rice, husband of the former
Dorothy Tobler.
Entered Seabees Sept., 1943.
Trained at Camp Perry and Camp Endicott. Served
in Ireland, Scotland, England, France, Hawaiian
Is., Marshalls, Carolines and Okinawa.
Holds
3 Battle Stars.
Now on duty at Okinawa.
93

�RICE, RICHARD G.
T/4 Richard G. Rice, son of W. H. Rice. En·
tered Army, 1938.
Trained at Ft. Riley, Camp
Rob ins on, Ft. Leonard Wood and Camp Lee. Served
in New Zealand, ~us tra lia, India, Iran, Egypt,
Ho 1 d s ETO , Mid d 1 e East and
A f r i c a a nd I t a 1 y .
Good Con--1uct.
RICHARDSON, ALVIN C.
Sgt. Alvin, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Richard·
son.
Wife, former Lucille Traynor.
Entered
Army
Feb., 1943. Trained at Camp Howze, Texas
and At exa ndr ia, La. Served in England, France,
Germany, Luxembourg and Belgium.
Holds 5 Bat·
tle Stars.
Discharged Oct. 8, 1945.

RICHARDSON, ASA R.
Sgt. Asa R. Richardson, son of Mr. and Mrs.
E. A. Richardson.
Wife, former Virga Barnes.
Entered Service, 1943. Trained at Camp Crowder,
Mo. and Camp Santa Anita, Calif.
Now on duty
at Manila.

RICHARDSON, CLARENCE A.
T/3 Clarence A. Richardson, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Richardson.
Wife ·, former Phyllis
Greenwell.
Entered Army Feb. 1942.
Trained at
Camp Polk, La.
Served in England, France,
Belgium, Luxembourg, Czechoslovakia and Germany.
Now on duty at Munich, Germany.

RICHARDSON, DELBERT C.
Pfc. Delbert C. Richardson, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Crissie Richardson.
Wife, former Clara Mae
Cole. Entered Army Air Corps, May, 1944. Train·
ed at Buckley Field, Colo., San Antonio, Texas,
Dodge City Air Field, Liberal Air Field and
Randolph Field.
Holds Sharpshooter Medal and
Good Conduct Medal.
Now on duty in Texas.

RICHARDSON, JOHN G.
S / Sgt. John G. Richardson, son of Arthur .C.
Richardson.
Wife, former Doris Mitchell. En·
tered Army Aug., 1942.
Trained at Ft. Ben·
j ami n Ha r r i s on , I nd .
Ho 1 d s 4 Ba t t 1 e Stars.
Now on duty at Kassel, Germany.

RICHARDSON, ROBERT A.
Pfc. Robert A. Richardson, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Richardson.
Wife, former Helen Parker.
Entered Army June, 1944.
T.-ained at Camp
Blanding, Fla.
Served in Fra nee, Eng land and
Belgium.
Holds Purple Heart for wounds re·
c'eived Jan. 5, 1945 in Belgium.
Now at 0'
Reilly,Hospital, Springfield, Mo.
RICHARDSON, ROBERT E.
Capt. Robert E. Richardson, son of Mr. and
Mrs. E. A· Richardson.
Wife, former Frances
I r wi n .
En t e r e d N a t ' 1 Gu a r d , J a n . , 1940.
Trained at Camp Robinson.
Served in Germany.
Holds Bronze Star, Silver Star and Purple
Heart.
Now awaiting discharge.

RIDGWAY, HUGH M.
Pvt. Hugh M· Ridgway, son of Mr. and Mrs. H·B·
Ridgway.
Wife, former Maxine House.
Entered
Air Corps, March, 1945· Trained at Amarillo,
Texas and Sheppard Field, Texas.
Now on duty
in Pacific Theater.
·
RIGDON, JONATHAN M.
Col. Jonathan M. Rigdon, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Rigdon.
Wife, former Alice Godsey.
Entered MCUSA, 1928.
Trained at K. U., Ft.
Leavenworth, Washington D. C. and Carlyle, Pa.
Served -in Panama, New Guinea, Biak and Philip·. pines.
Now on duty at Manila.
94

�RIGGS, CHAS. N. JR.
Cox. Chas. N. Riggs, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs.
Chas. N· Riggs, Sr.
Wife, former Norma Owens.
Entered Navy, Sept., 1942.
Trained at Corpus
Christi, Texas.
Served in s.w. Pacific and
aow at Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.
RIGGS, RICHARD L.
Cpl. Richard L. Riggs, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Russel R· Riggs.
Entered Army Aug., 1942·
Trained at Camp Roberts, Camp Butner, Camp
Pickett and Ft. Royal, Va.
Served in Germany.
Holds Expert Rifleman's Badge, Good Conduct,
ETO Ribbon and 3 Bat"tle Stars.

RILEY, JOHN L.
C S John L. Riley, son of John E. Riley.
Wife, former Pauline Ikenberry.
Entered Maritime Service, July, 1943.
Trained at Brooklyn,
New York.
Served in New Guinea, New Britain
and Philippines.
Holds Presidential Citation.
Engaged in LeyteandLuzonCampaigns.
Now is
disc ha r g e d .

RISLEY, HEYWARD G.
Pvt. Heyward G. Risleyi . son of Mrs. Grant R.
Risley.
Wife, former A berta Bailey.
Entered
Air Corps, July, 1945.
Trained at Sheppard
Field, Texas.
Now stationed at Camp Pinedale,
Ca 1i f.

RISSMAN, JAMES F.
S~t. James F. Rissman, son of Mrs. Verna Grinell.
W1fe, former Lois A. Thurber.
Entered Army,
April, 1942.
Trained at Ft. Sill, Okla., Ft.
Meade, Md. and Camp McCoy, Wise.
Served in
England, France, Belgium, Luxembourg and Germany.
Holds 3 Battle Stars and Good Conduct
Medal.
Discharged Oct., 1945.

ROBB, WENDELL E.
Robb, son of Mr. and Mrs.
1AETM 3/C Wende 11 E.
J· E. Robb.
Wife, former Betty Baysinger.
Entered Navy, Oct., 1944·
Trained at Great
Lakes, Michigan City, Stillwater and Corpus
Christi, Texas, shere he is now.

ROBERTS, IV AN
T/Sgt Ivan Roberts, son of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer
Roberts.
Entered Army Jan., 1941.
Trained
at Camp Robinson, Ark.
Served in England and
France.
Holds Three Battle Stars and Combat
In fan t r y Badge •

ROBERTS, LEON V.
Sgt. Leon V. Roberts, son of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer
Roberts.
Entered .Army, Jan., 1941·
Trained
at Camp Robinson, Ark. and Ft. Benning, Ga.
Served in New Guinea and two years in Philippines.
Now on duty at Corregidor.

ROBERTSON, FREDERICK W.
SjSgt. Frederick W. Robertson, son of Mrs.
Agnes L. Brown. Wife, former Margaret Shields.
Entered Army, Dec.
1942·
Trained at Camp
Wolters, Texas and Vancouver Barracks, Wash.
Discharged August 21, 1943.

ROBINSON, EDGAR L.
Lt. Edgar L. Robinson, son of G. E. Robinson.
Wi f e , f o rm e r Jean Ru s s e 11.
En t e red Navy Me dical Corps, July, 1942.
Trained at Naval
Hospital, Charleston, s. c.
Served in Normandy and Iwo Jime . . Now on duty on Guam .
95

�ROBINSON, EDWARD H.
S/Sgt. Edward H· Robison, son of Mr. and Mrs.
E. w. Robison.
Wife, former Verna Lo11ise
Belles.
Entered Nat'l Guard Nov. , 1940.
Trained at Camp Robinson, Ft. Ord, San Luis
Obispo, Camp Rucker, Camp Butner and Camp
Kilmer.
Served in England, Scotland, France,
Belgium, Luxembourg, Holland and German.y.
Engaged in 5 Major Battles. Discharged Aug. 6,
1945·
ROBINSON, lOEL A.
Pfc. Joe
A· Robinson, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Joel A· Robinson, Sr.
Entered Army Dec.,
1943.
Trained at Ft. Lewis, Was h .
Served in
England, France and Germany.
Holds ETO Rib·
bon, 3 Battle Stars and Purple Heart for
wounds received in Germany, March 2, 1945·
Now on duty at Marseille, France.
ROEBUCK, HAROLD CHRISTY
Pfc. Harold Christy Roebuck, grandson of Mr .
and Mrs. George w. Strahan.
Wife, former
Mildred Kerr.
Entered Nat'l. Guard, 1940.
Trained at Camp Robinson, Ft . Ord, Camp
Rucker, St . Marys, Calif. and Long Beach.
Served in England, F r ance , Belgium and Germanr ·
H o 1 d s P r e s i d e n t i a 1 C i t a t i on , F i v e Ba t t e
Stars, Good Conduct and Purple Heart from
wounds received Oct., 1944, 1n France .
Now
discharged .
ROGERS, WORTHY RAY
MoMM 3/c Worthy Ray Rogers, son of Mr. and Mrs .
Ray Rogers.
Wife, former Ina B. Tobler. En·
tered Navy, Nov., 1943.
Trained at Farragut,
Idaho .
Now a boa rd the USS Glynn.

ROLL, LEONARD D.
Ens. Leonard D. Roll, son of Mr . and Mrs.
Charley w. Roll.
Entered Navy, 1944.
Trained
at Blattsburg, N.Y., Norfolk, Va.
Served in
Pearl Harbor, Manila and Tokyo. Now in Pacific.

ROMERO, RAMON E.
SK 2/c Ramon E. Romero, son of Mrs. J. Romero.
Entered Navy, Dec., 1941. Trained at San Diego,
Calif.
Served in Paci£ic Area, New Zealand,
Australia, North Africa, Panama and Cuba. Holds
Asiatic-Pacific-American and ETO Ribbons and
4 Battle Stars.
Now stationed in USA.

ROMINE, DAVID R.
Pfc. David R. Romine, son of w. P. Romine.
Entered Army March, 1942·
Trained at Ft.
Bliss, Texas.
Served in France, Belgium,
Holland and Germany.
Holds Good Conduct,
ETO and American Theater Ribbons.
Discharged
October 17, 1945·
ROOD, CLARENCE E.
M/ Sgt. Clarence E· Rood, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Bert w. Rood.
Wife, former Dora Raley.
En·
tered Air Corps, April, 1942·
Trained at
Sheppard Field, Kelly Field, Stinso.n Field,
Lincoln, Nebr. and Detroit, Mich.
Served in
Marshalls, Marianas and Ryukyu.
Holds Two
Battle Stars.
Now on duty on Okinawa.

ROSE, CLIFFORD E.
Clifford E. RoseW entered Service Oct., 1942·
Trained at Camp
allace
Texas, Camp Haan and
Long Beach, Calif.
Sailed from San Francisco
and served on Leyte.
He is still in service.

ROSE, ROBERT E .
BM 1 / c Robert E· Rose, son of Mr . and Mrs .
Albert A · Rose .
Entered Coast Guard, Dec.,
1943·
Trained at Baltimore, Md .
Served in
England, Germany, Italy, Pearl Harbor, France
an d Spa in.
Now on duty at Okinawa .

96

�ROTHBERGER, LEO M.
BM 1/c Leo M. Rothberger, son of Mrs. Katherine
Rothberger. Wife, former Arlene Mary Kraybill.
Entered Navy, Sept., 1941.
Trained at Great
Lakes. Served in Ireland, Scotland, Australia,
New Zealand and S. Pacific. Holds ETO, Asiatic
with 4 Bronze Stars, Good Conduct and Pre-Pearl
Harbor Medal.
Discharged Sept., 1945.
ROTHWELL, GLENN F.
Pfc. Glenn F. Rothwell, son of Mr. and \Irs.
Thurman Rothwell.
Wife, former Fern L. Lefferd.
Entered Army Selt., 1943.
Trained at
Camp Gruber, Okla.
Served in Italy.
Holds
Bronze Star, Purple H&lt;!art, Good Conduct and
2 Battle Stars.
Wounded May 22, 1944, Italy.
Now o n d u t y a t Na p 1 e s , It a 1 y .

ROWLAND, WILLIAM H.
T/4 William H. Rowland, son of Mr. and Mrs .
Leroy Rowland.
Entered Army, 1942.
Trained
at Calif., Miss. and Wisconsin.
Served in
England, France, Holland and Germany.
En ..
gaged in Two Battles.
Now on duty in Austria.

RUSSELL, BERDEAN R.
Pfc. Berdean R. Russell, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Oscar Russell.
Entered Army July, 1942.
Trained at Camp Carson, Colo.
Served in North
Agrica and Italy.
Holds ETO Ribbon.
Now
on duty in Italy.

RUSSELL, CARL E.
M/Sg t. CarlE , Russell, son of Mrs. Nettie
Russell.
Wife, former Betty Woodward.
Entered Army Air Force, · Aug., 1942.
Trained at
Sh ep pard Field, Texas, Burbank, Calif. and
Glendale, Calif,
Served in Dutch New Guinea,
Phili.ppines, Ryukyu and Iwo Jime.
Holds 2
Battle Stars.
Now enroute to Japan.

RUSSELL, GERALD W.
S/Sg t. Gerald w. Russell, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Oscar Russe~l.
Entered Army June, 1942.
Trained at Ft. Belvoir and Greenvi1le Army Air
Base.
Served in Africa, Italy and France.
H61ds ETO and Good Conduct Ribbons.
Now on
duty in France.

RUSSELL, NED M.
Capt. Ned M. Russell, son of Mr. and Mrs.
F. o. Russell.
Wife, former Jean Wiley,
Entered Army Nov., 1942.
Trained at Fort Wash.,
near Wash. D.C.
Was located at Ft. Leavenworth and Ft. Collins, Colo. Now at Ft. Riley.

SALISBURY, ADAM A.
STM 2/c Adam A. Salisbury, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Adam N. Salisbury.
Entered Navy, March, 1944.
Trained at Bainsbridge, .Md.
Served on Hawaii,
Guam and Marshall Is.
Now on duty on Okinawa.

SAMPLE, HAROLD F.
T; Sgt. Harold F · Sample, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Floyd Sample.
Entered Army Air Corps, Oct.,
1942.
Trained at /efferson Barracks, Chanute
Field, Truax, Fie d; New Orleans and Little
Falls, Minn.
Served in En.gt'and, Fra.nce and
Germany.
Now at Munich, Germany.
SANBORN, HERBERT J.
Pfc . Herbert J· Sanborn, son of the late John
Ryan Sanborn.
Entered Nat'l Guard Dec., 1940.
Trained at Camp Robinson ind on West Coast.
Served in Normandy, where he was wounded
July 10, 1944.
Killed in Act ion July 13,
1944 in England .

97

�SCHAAKE, CARL L.
Pvt. CarlL. Schaake, son of Mr. and Mrs.
A. c. Schaake .
Entered Marines, March, 1945·
· Trained at Parris Island, Camp LeJeune and San
Diego .
Served at Pearl Harbor and Panama.
Now aboard USS Enterprise.
SCHAFFERT, WENDELL W.
Cpl. Wendell w. Schaffert, son Qf Mr. and Mrs.
F. w. Schaffert.
Entered Air Corps, 1944.
Trained at Amarillo, Texas, Denver, Colo.,
Las Vegas, Nev. and yucca, Aria.
Now at Ft.
Sheriden, Ill.

SCHELBAR, JOE
Sgt. Joe Schelbar, son of Mr. and Mrs. Emil
Schelbar . . Wife, former Ruth Parsons.
Entered Army Dec . , 1942·
Trained at Camp
Chaffee and Camp Campbell.
Served in France,
and Germany.
Holds 2 Battle Stars.
Now at
Augsburg, Germany.

SCHLEIFER, GORDON L.
Pvt. Gordon L . Schleifer, son of Mr . and Mrs.
Lloyd Schleifer.
Wife, former Alice Price.
Entered Air Corps, March, 1945·
Trained at
Shefpard Field, Chanute Field and now Truax
Fie d, Wise.

SCHNIDER, DONALD E.
T;Sgt. Donald E. Schnider, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Schnider. Entered Air Corps, •July, 1944·
Trained at Camp Wallace, Texas. Served in Ero.
Holds Good Conduct and ETO Ribbon. Now on duty
in England.

SCHNIDER HOWARD A.
s;Sgt. Howard A. Schnider, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Schnider.
Entered Army, Dec., 1940.
Trained at Camp Robinson, Ark. and Ft. Leonard
Wood, Mo .
Served in Hawaii, New Guinea and
Philippines.
Holds Pre-Pearl Harbor Ribbon,
Good Conduct, Asiatic-Pacific Area, Philip·
pine Campaign and 3 Battle Stars. Now discharged

SCHNIDER
MELVIN E.
Sgt. Meivin E. Schnider, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Schnider.
Entered Army, June, 1942·
Trained at Camp Pickett, Va. and Camp Bland·
ing, Fla.
Served in England and France. Holds
2 Battle Stars, Purple Heart, Good Conduct and
ETO Ribbon. Wounded June 22• 1943 at Normandy.
Now discharged.

SCHOLFIELD ORA W.
Sp(G)2/C bra W. Scholfield, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Ora H. Scholfield.
Entered Navy, Aug.,
1942·
Trained at Athens, Ga. and Great Lakes,
Ill.
Served in U. S. only.
Now on duty at
Pensacola, Fla.

SCHOPPER, DOLORES H.
Dolores H· Schopper, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
John H. Schopper.
Entered Cadet Nurse Corps,
October, 1943
Training at St .. Margarets
Hospital, Kansas City, Kansas.

SCHOPPER, GEORGE F .
Ph M 2 / c George F . Schopper, son of Mr. and
Mrs. John H. Schopper.
Entered Navy, March,
1943 .
Trained at Farragut, Id a ho , Bremert on ,
Wash. and Oceanside, Calif. Now on dut y a t
Hawaii.

98

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                    <text>SCHOPPER, MARCELLA M.
Marcella M. Schopper, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
John H. Schopper.
Entered Cadet Nurse Corps
Oct., 1943· Training at St. Margarets Hospital
Kansas C i t y , Ka n sa s .

SCHRADER, RICHARD
Pfc. Richard Scharder, son of Mr. and Mrs.
E. E. Schrader.
Entered Army Oct., 1942·
Trained at Lake Charles, La., Keesler Field,
Miss. and Davis-Monthan Field, Ariz., where he
is now employed.
Received Good Conduct Medal.

SCHULER, GEORGE W.
Pfc. George W. Schuler, son of Mrs. Mabe 1 M. V.
Schuler .
Entered Army, May, 1944·
Trained
at Camp Hood, Texas, Ft. Benning, Ga. and Ft.
Geo. Meade, Md.
Killed in Action, January 18,
1945 in Luxembourg.

SCHUTZ, KENNETH L.
Pvt. Kenneth L. Schutz, son of Mrs. Goldie
Schutz Tnnop .
Entered Army June, 194 4 . Trained
at Ft. Riley, Kansas.
Now on duty at philippine Is 1 and s .

SCHWARTZ, MELVIN L.
Pfc . Melvin L. Schwartz, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ivan Schwartz.
Entered Army May, 1943.
Trained at Camp Abbot, Ore.; Univ. of Idaho;
Camp Roberts, Calif.; Ft. Benning, Ga. and
Camp Breckenridge, Ky.
Served in
England,
France, Belgium, Holland, Luxembourg and
Germany.
Holds 3 Battle Sta~s and French
Citation.

SEDORE, ROBERT N.
Sp(W) 1 / C RobertoN. Sedore, son of Mr. and Mrs.
G. E. Sedore. Entered Navr, Oct., 1942· Trained at Olathe, Kans. and Wi liamsburg, Va. Holds
Good Conduct and other medals.
Now on duty at
Boston, Mass.

SEIWALD, CARL H .
Cpl. Carl H· Seiwald, son of Mrs. Alma Seiwald.
Entered Nat •1 Guard Jan., 1941.
Trained at
Camp · Robinson, Ft. Bennin~ and Detroit, Mich.
Served in New Guinea, Admiralties and Philippines.
Holds Three Bro ·n ze Stars.
Now enroute
to USA for discharge.

SEIWALD, HERBERT M.
GM 3 / c Herbert M. Seiwald, son 'of Mrs. Alma
Seiwald .
Entered Navy, Jan . , 1943.
Trained
at Great Lakes, Ill.
Served in Africa and
I ta 1y .
H o 1 d s T h r e e Ba t t 1 e S t a r s .
Wound e d
Jan. 22, 1944·
Now at Norfolk, Va .

SEIWALD, JAMES A .
S.C. 2 / c James A. Seiwald, sonofMrs. Alma
Seiwald.
Entered Navy, Aug., 1943.
Trained
at Farragut, Idaho.
Served in Hawaii, Pearl
Harbor and Marshalls.
Now on duty at Okinawa.

SELZER, DONALD W.
Pfc. Donald W. Selzer, son of Paul H. Selzer.
Wife, former Jane Banta.
Entered Army, 1943·
Trained at Fitzsimons Gen. Hospital, YaleUniv .
Univ. of Kansas.
Now on duty at Univ. of Ks.
Hospital, Kansas City, Kansas.

99

�SHAW, CLIFFORD L.
S/Sgt. Clifford L. Shaw, son of Mr. and Mrs .
Wife, former Thea Chapman.
En·
.Ed. Shaw.
tered Army Air Corps July, 1942.
Trained at
Miami Beach, Fla. and Ft. Bragg, N.C.
Served
in North Africa and Italy.
Holds Good Conduct
Medal and One Battle Star.
Now at Caserta.,
Italy.
SHENEMAN, RALPH L .
1st Lt. Ralph L. Sheneman, son of McKinley
Sheneman.
Entered Army, March, 1943- Trained
at Camp Davis, N. C. Was in ROTC at Univ. of
Kansas for 3~ years.
Served in Hawaii and lwo
.lima.
Now on duty at Iwo Jima as Military
Police.
SHERLOCK, EARNEST P.
WT 2/ c Earnest p, Sherlock, sonofMr. and Mrs.
Fred Sherlock.
Wife, former
arcena Vitt.
Entered Navy, Feb., 1942·
Trained at Great
Lakes, I l l . ; New London, Conn.; Portsmouth,
N. H. and Dearborn, Mich.
Served in South
Pacific
Discharged Sept. 2, 1945.

SHIELDS, FLOYD L.
Sgt . Floyd L. Shields, son of Mr. and Mrs. A.
E. Shields.
Wife, former Virginia Dailey.
Entered Air Corps, Oct., 1942·
Trained at
Midland, Texas, Lowry Field, Colo., Las Vegas,
Nev. and Amarillo, Texas.
Holds American T.
Ribbon, Good Conduct . Medal and Victor.y Medal.
Discharged Dec. 6, 1945·

SHIELDS
OLIVER 0.
Pfc. Ofiver 0. Shields, son of Mr. and Mrs. T.
0 , Shields.
Wife, former Vivian White.
Entered Army Air Corps, Nov., 1942·
Trained at
Sheppard Field, Texas and Greenville, S.C.
Stationed at Truax Field, Wise. and now at
Chanute Field, Ill

SHIRK, ARTHUR L.
.
F 2/c Arthur L. Shirk, son of Mr. and Mrs .
Fred Shirk.
Wife, former Natine Harris.
Entered Navy March, 1944·
Trained at Farra~ut,
Idaho.
Served in Panama, Pearl Harbor, Salpan
and Okinawa.
N·ow in Tokyo Bay.

SHOOK, EARL E.
Sgt. Earl E. Shook, son of Mr. and Mrs. L . G.
McGee.
Wife, former Betty Holcom.
Entered
Army, Sept., 1942·
Trained at Camp Roberts,
Calif.
Served 'in England, Wales, France, Belgium, Holland, Luxembourg and Germany.
Holds
Good Conduct and Five Battle Stars.
Now is
discharged.
SHORE, SCHILLER F.
Major Schiller F. Shore, son of Mr. and Mrs.
B. B. Shore.
Wife, former Dorothy White.
Entered Nat'l Guard, Dec., 1940.
Trained at
Camp Robinson and Ft. Benning.
Served in
India, China and Burma.
Holds Two Campaign
Stars and Commendation Chinese Gov't.
Now
in USA.

SHRIMPLIN, FRANK E.
S 2/C Frank E. Shrimplin, son of Mr. and Mrs.
George Shrimplin.
Entered Navy, Aug., 1945·
Trained at San Diego and Shoemaker, Calif.
Served in Japan. Now on duty in Pacific Ocean.

SHRIMPLIN, HOWARD I.
BW Howard I. Shrimplin, son of Mr. and Mrs .
George 3hrimplin,
Wife, former Bernice Robinson.
Entered Merchant Marine, Dec., 1942·
Trained at Hoffman Is., New York.
Served in
Pacific, Atlantic and Mediterranean Areas.
Now on duty in Atlantic Area.
100

�SHRIMPLIN, MARION G.
P f c . Ma r ion G. S h r imp 1 in , son o f Mrs . J e s s i e
Hulce.
Entered Army Air Corps, 1943.
Trained
at Atlantic City, N.J.; New York City. and
Jefferson Barracks, Mo.
Served in New Guinea,
New Caledonia, Guadalcanal, Bi.ok, Okinawa
and Japan, where he is now on duty.
SHULTZ, GUY R.
Pfc. Guy R· Shultz, son of Mr. and Mrs. Guy
I. Shultz.
Wife, former Donna Lee Thompson.
Entered Marines, Sept., 1942.
Trained at
San Diego and Camp Pendleton. Served on
Marshalls, Saipan and Marianas.
Holds Purple
Heart and Pres ide nt ia 1 Citation.
Wounded on
Saipan, June 17, 1944. Discharged April, 1945.

SILKEY 1 DON
Don Stlkey, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Silkey.
Entered Merchant Marines, Jan., 1945·
Trained
at Avalon, Calif.
Served in Pacific Is. on
Supply Ship.
Now aboard troopship to Japan.

SIMPSON, HAROLD
S 1/c Harold Simpson, son of Mrs. Lulu Simpson.
Wife, former Helen Mae Walker.
Entered Navy
Sept., 1943·
Trained at Great Lakes, I l l .
Served in Hawaii.
Discharged Oct. 19, 1943.

SIMS, GLENN D.
S/Sgt. Glenn D. Sims, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ethan A. Sims.
Wife, former Grayce M. Poppen.
Entered Air · Corps Nov., 1942·
Trained at
Fresno, Calif.; Laredo, Texas; Ft. Myers,
Fla.; and was Instructor at Laredo, Texas.
Served in England, Belgium and France.
Holds
Air Medal, ETO.Ribbon, 6 Stars, Gunners Wings
and Good Conduct Ribbon,. Discharged Oct., 1945.
SIMS, JAMES G.
Pfc. James G. Sims, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ethan
A. Sims.
Wife, former Leora Mae Mixer.
Entered Army Dec., 1940.
Trained at Camp
Robinson, Ft. Ord, Calif.; Alabama and Tenn.
Served inEngland, France, Luxembourg, Holland,
Germany.and Netherlands.
Holds Purple Heart,
ETO, 5 Stars, Pre-Pearl Harbor Medal, Inf.
Badge and Good Conduct Ribbon.
Wounded at St.
Lo, July 15, 1944. Discharged Oct., 1945.

SIROKY, DONALD E.
Pfc. Donald E. s:iroky, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Lloyd Siroky.
Entered Marines, Jan., 1944·
Trained at San Diego, Calif.
Served on Guadalcanal and Okinawa.
Wounded in Action May 9,
1945 on Okinawa and died May 15. 1945·
SKAGGS, ROBERT M.
Sgt. Robert M. Skaggs, son of Mr. and Mrs.
C. A. Skaggs.
Entered Marines Aug., 1943.
Trained at San Diego. Served on New Hebrides,
Guadalcanal and Admiralties.
Holds American
and Pacific Theater Ribbons, Pre•idential
Citation.
Now at Cherry Point, N· c.
SKINNER, DARYEL A.
Pfc. Daryel A· Skinner, son of l\lr. and Mrs.
L. A. Guffin.
Wife, for'mer Hazel Sevier.
Entered Army Dec., 1940.
Trained at Camp
Robinson, West Coast, Alabama and N. Carolina.
Served in Normandy, France, Rhine land, Ardennes
and Central Europe.
Holds Combat Inf. Badge,
Good Conduct, American Defense Ribbon and 5
Bronze Stars.
Discharged Aug. 1, 1945.
SKINNER, FRANCIS J.
Cpl. Francis J. Skinner, son of Mr._ and Mrs.
Roslan Skinner.
Wife, former Barbara Born.
Entered Army Nov., 1'943·
Trained a·t Ft. Knox
and Ft. Ord.
Served in South and Southwest
Pacific.
Holds China Sea Ribbon, Pacific
Ribbon, Arrowhead Pin and Two Battle Stars.
Now on duty at Iwo Jime.
101

�SMITH, CARROLL L.
M/Sgt. Carroll L. Smith, son of Verne and Mary
Smith.
Entered Army Feb., 1942.
Trained at
Ft. Harrison, Indianapolis, Ind.
Served in
Germany, FrancP and Belgium.
Now on duty at
Stuttgart, c;., rmany.

SMITH, DAVID 0.
Cpl. David 0. Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. Sam
Smith.
Wife, former Frances Bichelmeyer. Entered Army, May, 1945·
Training at Camp Hood,
Texas.

SMITH ELGAR J . JR.
Cpl. Elgar J· Smith, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs.
Elgar Smith.
Wife, lormer Marjorie Vogler.
Entered Air Corps, Sept., 1942.
Trained at
Calif.; Carlsbad and Albuquerque.
Served in
Africa and Italy.
Holds 2 Battle Stars and
Metorious Service plaque.
Now at Naples, Italy
SMITH, GEORGE B.
Lt. Col. George B.
Marjorie Austin.
Trained at Kansas
Desert Training,
France, Belgium
Heart for wounds
English Channel.
England.

Smith, husband of the former
Entered Army Aug., 1942.
Univ. Ft. Houston, Texas and
Calif.
Served in England,
and Germany.
Holds Purple
received Dec. 28, 1944 in
Now at American Univ. in

SMITH, GLENN M.
Cpl. Glenn M. Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. Elgar
Smith.
Entered Army Sept., 1941.
Trained at
Ft. Leonard Wood, Mo; San Luis Obispo and Camp
Shelby.
Served in Solomons, Bismark, Archipelego and Luzon.
Holds American, Asiatic
and Pacific Ribbons andPhilippine Liberation
Ribbon with 1 Bronze Star.
Now discharged.
SMITH
JAMES A.
T;S james A. Smith, son of Mrs. Dixie Smith.
Wife, former Aida W. Hanson. Entered Army
March, 1944·
Trained at Camp Barkeley, Texas.
Served in Alaska as a pharmacist in Station
Hospital. Awarded Good Conduct Medal and Asiatic-Pacific Ribbon.
Discharged Sept., 1945·

SMITH, JAMES B.
Sgt. James B. Smith, son of /ay W. and Grace
L. Smith.
Entered Army, Apri , 1942·
Train~
at Camp Sutton, N. C.
Served inN. Africa.
Discharged May, 1943·

SMITH, LAWRENCE D.
AMM 2 / C Lawrence D. Smith, son of Mrs. Dan
Smith.
Wife, former Norma Wheeler.
Entered
Navy April, 1942·
Trained at Fairfax; Olathe;
Grand Junction, Colo. and Jacksonville, Fla.
Served in Aleutains, Cuba, Bahama Is. and
Alaska.
Now on duty at Attu.

SMITH, LEO K.
Sgt. Leo K· Smith, son of Mrs. Dan Smith.
Entered Army, Dec., 1942.
Trained at Leavenworth, Atlantic City, Chillicothe and Tinker
Field, Okla.
Served in Australia, New Guinea,
Biak, Philippines, Japan and Okinawa where he
is now on duty.
Hofds Bronze Star.
SMITH, LLOYD H.
S ! SGt. Ll.oyd H. Smith, son of Verne and Mary
Smith.
Entered Army Medical Corps Aug., 1942·
Trained at Ft. Dodge, Iowa and Billings Hospital, Indiana.
Served on Philippine Is. and
now on duty on Manila.
102

�SMITH, MARION R.
Lt. Marion R· Smith, -son of Verne and Mary
Smith,
Wife, former Violet Stuart.
Entered
Army.Med. Corps June, 1942.
Tra-ined at Camp
Barkley, Texas, and now at Denver, Colo.

SMITH, MORGAN W.
Cpl. Morgan w. Smith, son of Verne and Mary
Smith.
Wife, former Ruth Clifford.
Entered
Army Medical corps April, 1944·
Trained at
Camp Barkley, Texas and now at Camp Crowder.

SNEEGAS, BYRON C .
Cpl. Byron c. Sneegas, son of Mr. and Mrs.
W. B. Sneegas.
Entered Army Dec., 1940.
Trained at Camp Robinson.
Served in England,
France, Luxembourg, Belgium, Holland and Germany.
Holds Good Conduct, 5 Bronze Stars,
Pre-Pearl Harbor Ribbon, European and American
Theater Ribbon.
Wounded, Jan. 25. 1945,France.
Now discharged.

SNEEGAS, ELDON C.
Lt. (jg) Eldon c. sneegas, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Carl E. Sneegas.
Wife, former Mary Lou Elliot .
Entered Navy Oct., 1943·
Trained at
Prairie State, New York City.
Engaged in 6
Major Battles in Pacific Area.
Now serving
aboard USS Alabama.

SNEEGAS, OWEN E.
EM 1/c Owen E · Snee gas, so.n of Mr. and Mrs.
Carl E. Sneegas. Wife, former Rose Lee Raymond.
Entered Navy, April, 1942·
Trained at San
Diego and Miami, Fla ..
Served in Africa,
Italy and Sicily.
Discharged July 17, 1945.

SNEEGAS, ROBERT M.
Pfc. Robert M· Sneegas, son of Mr. and Mrs.
w. B· Sneegas. Wife, former Betty Lou Tranbarger.
Entered Marine Corps, Sept., 19431
Trained at San Diego.
Served in Alaska,
New Zealand, Kodiak, Dutch Harbor, Adak, Attu
Is.
Holds Asiatic Pacific, American Theater
Ribbons.
Now stationed at San Diego.

SNOW, CHARLES R.
S;Sgt. Charles R. Snow, son of Mr. and Mrs .
Charles Snow.
Wife, former Margaret L. Hammig.
Entered Army Medical Corps, Aug., 1942 ·
Trained at Ft. Bragg, N. C. and Indianapolis,
Indiana.
Served in England, Fr -ance, Holland
and Germany.
Engaged in 5 Major Battles in
ETO.
Awarded Meritorious Service Unit Plaque.
Now discharged.
SNYDER GLENN E.
T/ 4 Glenn E. Snyder, son of Sim Snyder.
Entered Army Oct., 1942·
Trained at Yuma, Ariz.
and El Paso, Texas.
Served in Aus.tralia, New
Guinea, philippines and Japan. Holds Good Conduct ·, Asiatic, philippine Liberation Ribbon,
3 Stars.
Now on Wakayama, Japan.

SNYDER, RALPH W.
Sgt. Ralph w. Snyder, son of Sim Snyder.
Entered Air corps, Oct., 1942· Trained at Laredo,
Texas and Great Bend, Kansas, where he is now
stationed .

SOMMER, MARTIN D.
Pvt. Martin D. Sommer, son of Mrs. Ethel V.
Sommer.
Entered Army, June, 1945· Trained at
Camp Crowder, Mo. learning teletype, until
Oct., 1945·
He was transferred to Ft. Leavenworth as typist, in Separation Center.
103

�SOMMER , PAUL C.
S/Sgt. Paul c. Sommer, son of Mr. and Mrs.
John Sommer.
Wife, former Christine Selzer.
Entered Army Sept., 1943.
Trained at Camp
Lee, Va., West Chester, Pa. and New York City.
Served in England and France.
Holds ETO and
Good Conduct Ribbon with 2 Battle Stars.
Now
enroute to USA for discharge.
SPALSBURY CLARK S.
S/Sgt. clarkS· Spalsbury, son of Mr. and Mrs.
R. L. Spalsbury.
Wife, former Elsabeth James.
Entered Air Corps, 1942·
Trained at Lawrence,
Ks., Springfield, Mo., Kirksville, I Mo.,Shep·
pard Field, Texas, phoenix, Ariz. and Colo.
Springs.
Served on Saipan, where he is now
on duty.
Holds Three Bronze Stars and Good
Conduct Medal.
SPALSBURY, LAWRENCE M~
S/Sgt. Lawrence M.
palsbury, son of Mr. and
Mr s . R . L . Spa 1 s b u y.
En t e r e d A r my , 1 9 4 2 .
Trained at Ft. Warren, Ft. r.(ead·e I and Camf
Crowder.
Served in New Caledon1a, Guadalcana,
New Georgia, Bouganville, Philippines and Japan.
Now on duty at Saipan.

r

SPALSBURY, WILLIAM ADELBERT
Pvt. William Adelbert Spalsbury, son of Mrs.
and Mrs. R. L. Spalsbury.
Entered Army, 1944.
Trained at Camp Robinson.
Now at Camp Shanka,
New York.

SPENCER
LLOYD L.
Pfc. Lloyd L. Spencer, son of H. I. Spencer.
Entered Army Air Corps, March, 1942·
Trained
at Ft. Bliss, Texas.
Served in Scotland, Eng·
land, France, Belgium, Holland and Germany.
Holds Four Battle Stars and Good Conduct Medal.
Now on duty at Luxembourg.
SPITZER, CARL
Pfc. Carl Spitzer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Glen
Spitzer.
Entered Army, June, l942·
Trained
at Ft. Leonard Wood, Mo. and Ft. Bragg, N. C.
Served in Africa, Sicily, Scotland, England
and France.
Awarded 2 Purple Hearts &amp; one
Certificate of Commendation. Wounded in Action
Aug. 11, 1943. Sicily.
Killed in Action June
29, 1944, France.

SPOONER PARIS F.
F 1/c Paris F. Spooner, son of P. J. and Anna
M. Spooner.
Entered Navy, July, 1943· Trained
at Farragut, Idaho, Norfolk, Va. and New Orleans.
Served in ETO.
Holds 2 Battle Stars.
Now on duty at Great Lakes, Ill.

SPRING, NORMAN DEE
S 2/C R.M. Norman Dee Spring, son of Mrs. E.
M. Davault.
Entered Navy, Nov., 1944· Trained
at Great Lakes and Univ. of Wise.
Served in
Pacific Area, Samar, Leyte, Philippines and
Okinawa.
Now on duty at Okinawa.

SPRINGER, VERNON C. (RUSTY)
1st Lt. Vernon C. (Rusty) Springer entered
Army, Nov., 1942·
Trained at Camp Phillips,
Ks., Tennessee ManeuversandCamp McCain, Miss.
Served in France, Germany, Czechoslovakia and
Rhineland.
Holds 4 Campaign Ribbons, 2 Stars
andBBronz e; Star.
STANCLIFT, RAYMOND E.
P 2/C Raymond E. Stanclift, sonofMr. and
Mrs. EarlL. Stanclift.
Wife, former Virginia
Michael.
Entered Na'vy, Dec., 1942·
Trained
at ·G reat Lakes, Ill.
Served on Tonga Tabu Is.
New Hebrides, Samoa, Admiralties, New Guinea
and Panama Canal. Holds Good Conduct, American
Defense, Asiatic-Pacific, and Victory Medal.
Now is discharged.
104

�STANLEY, ROGER E. JR.,
Pfc . Roger E. Stanley, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs.
Roger E. Stanley
Entered Army, Oct., 1943·
Trained at Camp Wolters, Texas.
Served 16
months in ETO.
Holds 5 Battle Stars. Wounded
June 17, 1944 at Normandy.
Discharged Oct.,
1945·
Holds Good Conduct and Purple Heart.
STANNARD, FRANK K.
Pfc. Frank K. Stannard, son of Mrs. Geo. A.
Stannard.
Entered Army, June, 1944·
Trained
at Camp Berkeley, O'Reilly Gen . Hospital, Mo.,
Camp Crowder and Camp Beale, Calif.
Served
on Luzon, Leyte, Cebu and Japan.
Now on duty
at Tokyo, Japan.
STARKEY
GEO . 0.
C. Y. Geo. 0. Starkey, son of Mr. and Mrs. G.
W. Starkey.
Wife, former Harriette Nilles.
Entered Navy, 1917 and 1942·
Trained at Great
Lakes, Ill., in 1917 and Univ. of Ks. in 1942·
S e r v e tl i n Haw a i ian I s . , Ma r s ha l l I s . a n d Ma r ianas.
Now is discharged.

SIARK EY. JACK E.
RT 1/C
ack E. Starkey, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Geo. 0. Starkey.
Entered Navy, 1942· Trained
at Great Lakes, Ill., Okla A. &amp; M. and Corpus
Christi, Texas.
Served in Admiralties, East
Indies, Schouten Is., New Guinea, Philippines,
Okinawa, China and Korea. Holds Unit Citation.
Now on duty at Shanghai, China.

STAVROS, PAUL J.
SKT 2/C Paul J. Stavros, son of Mr. and Mrs .
John Stavros. Entered Navy, Jan., l944· Trained at Farragut, Idaho.
Served in Australia
and Admiralties.
Holds Group Citation.
Now
on duty in Philippines.
STEFFEN, CLIFFORD VERNE
S.S.M. (L) 3/C Clifford Verne Steffin, husband
of the former Alvena L. Bond.
Entered Navy,
May, 1944·
Trained at Farragut, Idaho, San
Francisco, Calif.
Served in Hawaiian Is.,
Marshall Is., Marianas, Volcano Is., Solomons,
New Hebrides, Carolines, Ryukyu Is. and Yokohama, Japan.
lwo Jima and Okinawa. Holds Asiatic-Pacific and American Ribbons Two Bronze
Stars and Philippine Liberation Ribbon.
STEFFEN, RICHARD 0.
S;Sgt. Richard 0. Steff'n, son of Mis. Gertie
Steffen.
Entered Army Air Corps, Oct., 1942.
Trained at Midland, Texas.
Holds Good Conduct
Medal.
Now on duty at Greenwood, Miss.
STEVENS, JAMES W.
F.O. James W. Stevens, son of Mr. and Mrs.
W. F. Stevens.
Entered Army Air Corps, Oct.,
1943.
Trained at Sheppard Field, Texas, Foster Field, Texas, Harlingen Fld., San Antonio,
Hondo and San Marco, Texas.
Carlsbad, N. M.,
Victorvill, Calif.
Now stationed at Bakersfield, Calif.

STEVENS, RICHARD R.
SjSgt. Richard R. Stevens, grandson of Mr. and
Mrs. W. C. Stevens.
Wife, former Elizabeth
Peck.
Entered Army Inf. Dec., 1940.
Trained
at Camp Robinson, Arkansas.
Served in Australia, New Caledonia, Guadalcanal
Fiji Is.,
Bouganville and Leyte.
Holds A-P Ribbon, 4
Battle Stars, Inf. Combat, Philippine Liberation, 1 star, American Defense and Good Conduct Medal.
Now at Hot Springs, Ark.
STEVENS, WILLIAM N. (BILLY)
S;Sgt. William (Billy) N. Stevens, son of Mr.
and Mrs. William Stevens.
Entered Army, Oct.,
1942.
Trained at Camp Adair, Ore. and Ft.
Lewis, Wash.
Served on Philippines, Leyte and
Okinawa.
Holds Purple Heart, Bronze Star, Oak
Leaf Cluster, lnf. Combat Badge and A-P and
American Ribbons.
Now on duty at Philippines
105

�STEVENSON, DALE L.
Pvt. Dale L •. Stevenson,sson of Mr. and Mrs.
L. A. Stevenson.
Entered Air Corps, June,
1944.
Trained at Sheppard Fld. Texas, Scott
Fld. Ill., Kingman Fld. Ariz, and Amarillo ·,
Texas.
Now to report to Langley Field, Va.
·sTEWART, GECRGE W.
Pfc. George W. Stewart, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Stewart. Entered Army, Jan., 1943. Traine d a t Camp Da vi s , N . C •
S e r v e d on F i j i Is • ,
Guadalcanal, Bouganville, Leyte, Luzon and
is now stationed at Cebu in Philippines.
STEWART, JOHN B.
1st Lt . John B. Stewart, son of C. C. Stewart.
Wife, former Virginia Belle Covington.
Entered Air Corps, March, 1942. Trained at Kelly
Field, Randolph Field, Ellington Field and
Avon Field, Fla .
Served in Africa, Sardinias
and Italy.
Holds Purple Heart and Air Medals
for 36 missions.
Wounded Jan., 1944 in Italy.
Discharged July, 19451
·
STOEBENER, OSCAR W.
Pfc , Oscar W. Stoebener, son of Mr, John Stoebener.
Entered Army lnf., Feb., 1942. Trained
at Camp Wolters, and Mineral Wells, Texas .
Served in Hawaii, Australia , New Guinea, Philippines and Dutch East Indies.
Holds AsiaticPacific Ribbons, Philippine Liberation, One
Bronze Star, Comber lnf. Badge, 2 Bronze Stars
and Good Conduct Meda 1.
Discharged May, 1945.

STOHS

GILBERT J.

Tj5 Gilbert J ,

Stohs, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Julius E, Stohs.
Entered Army, Alril, 1943.
Trained at Ft. Knox, Ky.
Served in England,
France, Belgium, Germany and Luxembourg.
En gaged in 5 Major Battles.
Now on duty at
Czechoslovakia.

STOLAND, BETTY J.
Lt. Kjg) Betty J, Stoland, daughter of Mrs.
Mark Bridges.
Entered WAVES, June, 1943.
Trained at Smith College, Mass.
Has been in
War Bond Office of Navy at Washington, D.C.
Now in Office at Pensacola, Fla.

STOLAND, LAWRENCE I.
2nd Lt. Lawrence I. Stoland, son of Ole 0. and
Murel Stoland. Wife, former Betty J. Bridges.
Entered Army Air Corps, Feb. , 1941. Trained
at GlendaleandMoffet Field, Calif. Luke Fld.,
Ariz,, Portland, Ore. and Tumwater, Wash. Flew
to Alaska in 1942.
Killed in Action July, 22,
1942, in Aleutian Is.
STOLAND, ROBERT 0 .
1st Lt. Robert 0. Stoland, son of Ole 0. and·
Murel Stoland.
Entered Army Air Corps, July,
1942·
Trained at San Antonio , Texas, Garden
City, Ks., Eagle Pass, Texas and Randolph Fld.,
Texas.
Taught basic flying at Garden City,
and Independence, Ks . ,
Further training at
Liberal, Ks., Victorville, Calif. and Roswell,
N. M.
Discharged Oct. 17, 1945·
STONE, CHARLES W.
Pfc . Charles W Stone, son of Mr. and Mrs. J,
B. Stone.
Entered Army, 1943·
Trained at Ft.
Rilei, Ks.
Served in Solomons, Philippines
and Japan.
Holds Bronze Arrowhead, AsiaticPacific Medal , Philippine Liberation Ribbon,
1 Bronze Star, Victory Medal and Good Conduct
Medal.
STONE, FlAVIA
Pvt. Flavia Stone, daughter, of Mr. and Mrs.
Ross Stone.
Entered Marine Corps Reserve,
March, 1943·
Trained at Chicago, Ill. Camp
LaJuene, N. C. and now at Cherry Point, N. C.
106

�STONE, JOHN WM.
Sgt. John Wm. Stone, son of Mr. and Mrs. J.
M. Stone.
Wife, former Ann Turner.
Entered
Army, June, 1941.
Trained at Ft. Harrison,
Ind. and Camp Shelby, Miss.
Served in France,
Germany and Austria.
Now enroute to U.S.A.
STONE, LEROY E.
Sgt. Leroy E. Stone, son of Mr. and Mrs. M.F.
Stone.
Wtfe, former Louise Beecroft.
Entered
Army, Sept., 1943.
Trained at Ft. Leonard
Wood, Mo. and Camp Sutton, N. C. Served in
Wales, England, France, Holland, Belgium and
Germany.
Holds Unit Citation. Now on duty
at Antwerp, Belgium.
STONE, MAXINE J.
SK 3/c Maxine J. Stone, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Ross Stone.
Entered SPARS, Nov., 1944.
Trai'ned at Brooklyn, N. Y., New London, Conn.
and Palm Beach, Fla.
Now stationed at New
London, Conn.

STONE, RAY L.
Sgt. Ray L. Stone, son of Mr. and Mrs. M. F.
Stone.
Entered Army, Nov., 1941.
Trained at
Camp Roberts, Ca li f., Ft. McArthur and Ft.
Benning, Ga.
Served in England, France, Austria, Italy, Belgium and Germany.
Wounded in
Action Dec. 21, 1944, Bastogne. Now on duty at
LaHavre, France.
·

STONE, THOMAS, WILLIAM
1st Lt. Thomas N:illiam Stone, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Ross Stone.
Wife, former Katherine Marie
Hall.
Entered Marines, March, 1942·
Trained
at St. Mary's, Calif., Pasco, Wash., Corpus
Christi, Texas, jacksonville, Fla., Cherry
Point, N. C., Ho lywood, Fla. and Newport,
Ar¥;.
Served in Hawaii and Marshall Is. Killed
in Action Feb. 6, 1945 in Caroline Is.
STONEBACK, DEAN H.
Sgt. Dean H. Stoneback,
son of Mr . .and Mrs.
H. H. Stoneback. Entered Arml Air Corps, Oct.,
1943.
Trained at Denver, Coo., Keesler. Fld.,
Miss. Tyndal Fld., Fla. Willow Run, Mich.,
Charleston, S.C., Boise,
ldahoandFrisco.
Served in Manila, Ie Shima and Tokyo.
Now on
duty near Tokyo.

STONEBACK, RAY G.
Capt. Ray G. Stoneback, son of Mr. and Mrs.
H. H. Stoneback.
Entered Army,Dec,.1941.
Trained at Ft. Warren, Wyo., Camp Cook, Calif.
Served in India, China.
Holds Bronze Star.
Now assigned to Tenth Air Force in China.

STORES , HAROLD W.
TjSgt. Harold W. Stores, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Wallace Stores. Wife, former Mary Evelyn Standing.
Entered Army, June, 1943.
Trained at
Camp Lee, Va.
Served in England and France.
Nowat LeHarve, France, awaiting transportation
to USA.

STOUGH, CHARLES D. JR.
Lt (jg) Charles D. 'Stough, Jr., son of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles D. Stough. Wife, former Mary
Jule Shipman. Entered Navy, June, 1942. Train ·
ed at Jacksonville and Pensacola, Fla.
Served
14 months in Hawaii.
Now at Miami, Fla.

STOUT DONALD E.
1st Lt. Donald E. Stout, son of Mr. and Mrs.
W. H. Stout.
Wife, former Margery Olson.
Entered Army Air Corps, May, 19 42· Trained ·at
Ft. Sumner, New Mexico.
Instructor at Carlsbad, ~ew Mexico.
Now at Tampa, Fla.
107

�STRONG, CARL E.
Cpl. Carl E. Strong, son of Mrs. Marion Strong .
"W ·ife, former Thelma Erwin .
Entered Army,
Sept., 1943·
Trained at Camp Dodge, Iowa .
Holds Good Conduct Medal and Machine Gun Medal.
Discharged Aug., 1945.
STUCKY, RICHARD R.
T/ 5 Richard · R . Stucky, son of Mr. and Mrs . R.R.
Stucky.
Entered Army, Nov., 1942 .
Train e d
at Camp Callan, Calif., Ft . Bliss , Texas, Camp
Maxey, Texas and Camp Gruber, Okla. Holds Good
Conduct Medal and several Marksmanship Medals .
Discharged Oct. 28, 1945. Holds Vi ctory Medal.

STUCKY, ROBERT BRUCE
Y 2 / c Robert B. Stucky , son of Mr . and Mrs.
R. R . Stucky.
Entered Navy, Sept., 1943.
Trained at Farragut, Idaho.
Then assigned to
Cable Division of Censorship, Wash. D. C. Left
states Feb., 1945, for Manila, where hetook
pictures of the Yamashita trial. Now is in
Tokyo in Naval Counter-Intelligence.
STUART, GEORGE F .
Cpl. George F. Stuar-t, son of Mr. and Mrs . 0.
C. Stuart.
En t ered Army, Jan., 1942·
Trained
at Jefferson Barracks , Mo. Richmond, Va. and
Bangor, Maine.
Served in India and Burma . Now
at Ledo Road.

STULTZ
FREEMAN W.
Cpl. Freeman W. Stultz,
sonofMr. and Mrs.
Dean Stultz.
Wife, form erDorothy Mayhugh.
Entered Army, Dec., 1942. Trained at Camp
Bowie, Texas and Camp Hood, Texas .
Discharged
Aug. 5, 1943.

STUMBO
FRED L.
Pfc. Fred L. Stumbo, son of Mr. and Mrs. E.L.
Stumbo.
Entered Army, 1942·
Trained at Ft.
Knox, Ky. and Camp Campbell, Ky.
Served in
England, France, Belgium, Luxembourg, Holland
and Germany.
Wounded Dec., 1944, Hurtgen Forest.
Discharged Aug. 5, f945·

STURDY
HUGH R.
Pfc . Hugh R. Sturdy, son of Mr. and Mrs. George
F . Sturdy.
Entered Army, Oct., 1942.
Trained
at Camp White, Ore. Yakima, Wash. and Camp
Adair, Ore.
Now stationed at Camp Standish,
Mass.

SULZEN CHARLES J.
Cpl. Charles J. Sulzen, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Theo. Sulzen.
Wife, former Bertha Goff.
Entered Army, Oct., 1941.
Trained at Camp Wallace, Texas, Camp Tyson, Tenn., Camp Davis,
N. C., Camp Swift, Texas and Camp Kilmer, N.J .
Served in Austria and France.
Holds 1 Battle
Star, ETO Ribbon and Pre - Pearl Harbor ribbon .
Now on duty at Camp Boston, France.
SURLES
ROBERT L .
F.O. Robert L. Surles, son of Mrs. Roy Lange.
Wife, former Bette M. Cain.
Entered Army Air
Corps, July, 1942.
Trained at Santa Ana,
Calif.
Discharged Oct. 8, 1945.

SUTHERLAND, HOWARD L. JR .
Lt. Howard L. Sutherland, Jr., entered Army,
Oct. 16, 1942. Basic training at Camp Wallace,
Texas.
OCSatMiami, Fla., Curtis-Wright, N . Y.
and Roscrans Field at St . Joseph, Mo . as Maintenance Engineering Officer in MAT.
108

�SUTTON
IRVIN J.
Cpl. irvin J. Sutton. son of Mr. and Mrs . Harry
Sutton.
Entered Marines, Feb., 1943.
Trained
at San Diego and College Station, Texas. Served
on Hawaii, Okinawa and now at Yokohoma, Japan.
SUTOR, KEITH W.
T; Sgt. Keith W. Sutor, son of Mr. and Mrs. W.
R. Sutor .
Wife, former Betty Campbell.
Entered Army Air Corps, 1943.
Trained at Tyndall Field, Fla., Lowry Fld . , Colo., Salt
Lake, Utah, Tuscon
Ariz . and Casper, Wyo .
Served in Iceland, Scotland, Ireland, England
and France.
Holds Purple Heart, Air Medal,
ETO Ribbon with Battle Star, Presidential and
Unit Citation. Wounded Jan., 1944, France.
Now is discharged.
SUTOR REVERE H.
Cpl. Revere H. Sutor, sm of Mr. and Mrs. W.
R . Sutor.
Wife, former Winifred E. Grover .
Entered Army , 1943 .
Trained at Camp Funston,
Ks., Camp Polk,. La. and Camp Fargo, England.
Served in Scot land, Englarn:l, France, Luxembourg,
Belgium, Holland, Germany, Czechoslovakia and
Hungary.
Holds Good Conduct, American and ETO
Ribbons, 4 Battle Stars and Presidential Citation.
Now discharged.
SWAIN, ROSCOE M.
Ph M 1/c Roscoe M. Swain, son of Mr. and Mrs.
R
C. Swain .
Wife, former Margie Calvert.
Entered Navy, April, 1942·
Trained at Great
Lakes, Ill. and San Diego, Calif.
Served at
Base Hospital on Hawaiian Is.
Now on Saipan.

TALlEY, LEONARD M.
T j Sgt. Leonard M. Talley, son of Mrs. Helen
Price.
Entered Army, Dec., 1941.
Trained at
Camp Robinson, Ark. Served in England, France,
Belgium, Luxembourg, Holland and Germany.
Holds Good Conduct, ETO and American Defense
Ribbons .
Now discharged.

TANNER, ANDY J. JR .
ARM 2 / c Andy J. Tanner, Jr., son of Mr. and
Mrs. A. J. Tanner.
Wife, former Vivian A.
Lefferd.
Entered Navy, Jan., 1942.
Trained
at San Diego, Calif., Jacksonville, Fla and
Miami, Fla.
Served in Pacific Theater. Holds
Good Conduct and Battle Ribbons.
Now enroute
to USA.

TAYLOR, BEUFORD R.
S 2/c Beuford R. Taylor, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Elmer E. Taylor.
Wife, former Ruby Shick. Entered Navy, March, 1944. Trained at San Diego,
Calif.
Served on Guam, Saipan and Tinian. Now
on duty at Hawaii.

TAYLOR
CHARLES BENJAMIN jR·
Pvt. Charles Benj am1n Ta y or, Jr., son of Mr.
and Mrs. Chas. B. Taylor.
Entered Marines,
March, 1945.
Trained at Parris Is., S. C.,
Camp LeJeune, N. C. and San Diego, Calif. Now
on duty at Kodiak, Alaska.

TAYLOR, REUBEN A.
1st Sgt. Reuben A. Taylor, son of Mr. and Mrs.
John W. Taylor.
Entered Air Corps, Nov., 1942
Trained at March Field, Calif.
Served on Fiji
Is., New Caledonia, Australia, New Guinea and
Philippines.
Holds Good Conduct AsiaticPacific and New Guinea Campaign Ribbons, and
Philippine Liberation Medal .
Now discharged .
TAYLOR, WALLACE HOWARD
Ph M 1/c Wallace Howard Taylor, son of Mr. and
Mrs. James S. Taylor.
Wife, former Maudie
Stephen.
Entered Navy, Nov., 1942.
Trained
at San Diego, Calif.
Now on duty at Philippines.
·
109

�TENNYSON, GEORGE E.
F 1/c George E. Tennyson, son of Mrs. Lucille
Tennyson.
Entered Navy, Jan., 1944.
Trained
at Farragut, Idaho and Wahpeton, N. D.
Served
on Guadalcanal, Admiralties, Ulithia and Paci·
fie Theater.
Now on duty at Philippines.
TERRY, ELLISWORTH ALBERT
T;Sgt. Ellisworth Albert Terry, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Wm. Terry.
Entered Army, Feb., 1942·
Trained at Ft. Belvoir, Va. Indiantown Gap,
Pa. and Boston, Mass.
Served on New Guinea ..
where he is now on duty.

TERRY, S. MARVIN
1st Lt. S. Marvin Terry, son of Mrs, Elizabeth
Terry.
Wife, former Dorothy Brown. Entered
Army Air Corps, Sept., 1942.
Trained at El·
lington Fld., Texas and Big Spring, Texas. Holds
Air Medal with 4 Clusters and 5 Battle Stars
To ETO Ribbon.
Discharged June, 1945.
THOMAS, EDWARD L.
Pfc Edward L. Thomas, son of R. A. Thomas.
Wife, former Adelia H. Miller.
Entered Army
with Nat '1 Guard.
Trained at Camp Robinson,
Ark.
Served in England and France.
Awarded
Purple Heart.
Killed Aug. 9, in France.

THOMAS
FRANCIS R.
Cpl. Francis R. Thomas, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Isaac C. Thomas.
Wife, Elaine Lindholm.
Entered Army, March, 1943.
Trained at Ft. Wood,
Mo. and Camp Breckenridge, Ky.
Served in Ger·
many, Belgium and France.
Engaged in 4 Major
Battles.
Now enroute to USA.

THOMAS, ORVAL DALE
T;5 Orval Dale Thomas, son of 0. D. Thomas.
Wife, former Norma Hicks.
Entered Army, Aug.,
1943.
Trained at Camp Beal, Camp Knight, Camp
Roberts, Camp Callan and San Luis Obispo, Calif.
Served in Hawaiian Is., Marshall Is. and Philippines.
Killed in Action Oct., 1944, Leyte.

THOMPSON, RICHARD C.
M 2/c Richard C. Thompson, son of Mrs. Grace
Wunderlich.
Entered Navy, Nov., 1942. Trained
at Great Lakes, Ill.
Served in Bermuda.
Now
on duty at Norfolk, Va.

THURBER, FORREST H.
Sgt. Forrest H. Thurber, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Geo. Thurber.
Wife, former Helen M. Coffman.
Entered Air Corps, Feb., 1943. Trained at St.
Petersburg, Fla., Lowry Fld., Colo, and Aloma·
gardo, N. Mexico.
Served in Oran, Africa,
Guam and Saipan.
Holds Five Battle Stars and
Unit Citation.
Now on duty at Saipan.
TILLOTSON, GROVER M.
Cpo. Grover N. Tillotson, son of Mr. and Mrs.
G. M. Tillotson.
Entered Army, April, 1939.
Trained at Camp Robinson, Ft. Ord, Irvine Park,
Calif., Camp Rucker, Ala. and Camp Butner, N.C.
Served in England, France and Germany. Awarded
Good Conduct, Pre-Pearl Harbor, ETO, Purple
Heart, Oak Leaf Cluster, 3 Battle Stars and
Presidential Citation.
Wounded twice at St.
Lo, France in July, 1944. Discharged. Killed
in Highway accident Aug. 18, 1945·
TINGLE NELSON E.
Cpl. Nels on E. Tingle, son of Mrs. Viola M.
Tingle.
Entered Army, May, 1944.
Trained atBelvoir, Va. and Ft. Lewis, Wash.
Now on duty
at Okinawa.
110

�TOBLER, DONALD E.
S 1/c Donald E. Tobler, son of Mr. and Mrs.
J. S. Tobler.
Wife, former Betty Umholtz. Entered Navl, Dec., 1942· Trained at Great Lakes,
Ill. and
os Angeles, Cal'i f.
Served in Hawaiian Is., Australia, New Guinea, aouganville,
Guam, Philippines, Marshalls and Carol1nes.
Engaged in 3 Majot" Battles.
Now · at San Francisco, Ca 1 i f.
TODD, ELDON R.
1st Lt. Eldon R. Todd, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Edgar R. Todd.
Entered Army Air Corps, Oct.,
1942.
Trained at Jefferson Barracks, Mo., Mt.
Pleasant, Ia., Santa Ana, Calif. Marana, Ariz.
and Marva, Texas.
Served in Italy.
Holds
ETO, Air Medal, Purple Heart, DFC, Unit Citation, Pres. Citation and Good Conduct.
Wounded Jan., . 1944 in Germany. Now at Dalhart, Texas.
TODD, JACK E.
Sgt. Jack E. Todd, son of Mr. and Mrs. Karl M.
Todd.
Entered Army, Dec., 1940•
Trained at
Camp Robinson, Ark. Served in England, France,
Germany and Belgium.
Holds Purple Heart, ETO,
with 5 Battle Stars, Pre-Pearl Harbor Ribbon.
Good Conduct Meda 1, Combat Inf. Badge and
Bronze Star.
Wounded July, 1944 at St. Lo,
Fra nee.
TODD, JAMES A.
F 2/c James A. Todd, son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Nelson.
Wife, former Opal Andress.
Entered Navy, Jan., 1944·
Trained at Farragut,
Idaho.
Served in Southwest Pacific.
Discharged Nov. 10, 1944.
TODD, KARL S.
Pfc. Karl S. Todd, son of Mr. and Mrs. Karl M.
Todd.
Entered Army, Dec., 1940.
Trained at
Camp Robinson, Ark.
Served in France, Germany, England, Luxembourg, Belgium and Holland.
Holds ETO with 5 Battle Stars, Pre-Pearl Harbor, Good Conduct Medal and Combat Inf. Badge.
TOPPING, JAMES R.
Pvt. James R. Topping, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles R. Topping.
Entered Army Air Corps,
Oct., 1943.
Trained at Keesler Fld., Miss.,
Sheppard Field, Texas and Scott Field, Ill.
Holds Expert Rifleman, Carbine, Pistol Medals.
Now at Keesler Fielq, Miss.

TRABANT, CAR LYLE E.
Lt. Carlyle E. Trabant, son of Rev. and Mrs.
George L. Trabant. Wife, former Lauretta Gerstenberger.
Entered Navy, Oct., 1940.
Trained
at Annapolis, Md.
Served in West Indies, S.
America, Aleutians, Hawaiian Is., Phoenix Is.,
Marshall Is., Marianas Is., Okinawa and Japan.
Now on t e rmi na 1 1 eave •
TRAPP, LEONARD F.
Pfc. Leonard F. Trapp, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Leonard J. Trapp.
Entered Army, July, 1943.
Trained at Camp Wallace, Texas, Camp Claiborne,
La. and Shreveport, La.
Served in England,
France, Holland, Belgium and Germany.
Holds
Certificate of Merit and Good Conduct Medal.
Now at Dijon, France waiting for transportation
to U. S. A.
TRAXLER, JOHN H.
1st Lt.
ohn H. Traxler, son of Mr. and Mrs.
R. C. Traxler.
Entered Nat '1 Guard, May,
1940.
Trained at Camp Robinson, Ark., OCS at
Camp Hood, Texas.
Served in Hawaii and Palau
Is.
Now on way to U.S.A.

TRAYLOR, JOYCE R.
QM 3/c Joyce R. Traylor, son of Mrs. P. 0
Davis.
Wife, former Margaret Wolf.
Entered
Navy, April 8, 1944·
Trained at Great Lakes,
Ill.
Served in New Guinea, Borneo, Philippines and Okinawa.
111

�TRAYNOR, WAYNE B.
Cpl. Wayne B. Traynor, son of Mr. and Mrs.
~arney L.
Traynor.
Wife, former Charline
Starliper.
Entered Army, July, 1943.
Trained at Camp Haan, Calif. and Ft. gliss, Texas.
Served in England, France, Belgium, Holland
and Germany, where he is now stationed. Holds
5 Battle Stars.
TREFF
FRANCIS L.
CCM Francis L. Treff, husband of the former
Sara Silvene.
Entered Navy, 1942.
Trained
at Norfolk, Va .
Served in Newfoundland.
Now
has honorable discharge.

TREFZ, HOWARD H.
Sgt. Howard H. Trefz, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ge ·o .
F. Trefz.
Entered Army , Aug., 1942·
Trained
at Ft. Benjamin Harrison, Ind.
Served in New
Caledonia, Guadalcanal and Fiji Is.
Died
Sept. 1943, by natural causes on Fiji Is.

TREFZ, WILLIAM ROBERT.
Pfc . William Robert Trefz, son of Mr. and Mrs .
G. F. Trefz. Entered Army, March~ 1943. Trained at Sheppard Field, Texas and Sa~ Antonio,
Texas.
Served in Alaska and Aleutians.
Now
on duty at Attu.

TRIPP, MURRAY P.
T / 4 Murray P . Tripp, son of Mr. and Mrs. R.P.
Tripp.
Entered Army, March, 1942·
Trained at
Ft. Ord, Calif., Camp White, Ore. and Springfield, Mo.
Served on New Guinea and the Philippines.
Holds Asiatic-Pacific Ribbon with 3
stars, Philippine Liberation, with 2 stars,
Meritorious Unit Plaque and Good Conduct Ribbon.
Now on duty at Ft. Warren, Wyo.

TROVILLION, DONALD K .
Pfc. Donald K. Trovillion, son of Lonnie Trovillion.
Entered Army, March, 1943·
Trained
at Ft. Leonard Wood, Mo.
Served in AsiaticPacific area.
Awarded Purple Heart and 5 Campsi gn Stars.
Wounded June, 1944, New Guinea.
Killed in Action Jan. 18, 1945 on Luzon.

TROWBRIDGE, GEORGE ELMER
S 1/c George Elmer Trowbridge, son of Mr. and
Mrs. W. H. Trowbridg_e.
Wife, former Nadine
Carpenter.
Entered Navy, May, 1944·
Trained
at Great Lakes.
Now serving in Philippines.

TRYON
CHARLES E.
T/4 Charles E. Tryon, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ed.
A. Tryon.
Entered Army, Nov., 1942·
Trained
at Camp Beale, Calif. Ft. Ord, Calif. and Ft.
Knox, Ky.
Served on Hawaii, Saipan, Tinian,
Philippines and Okinawa.
Holds Good Conduct
Medal and Unit Citation. Now on duty at Luzon.

TUGGLE, KENNETH R.
Sg t, Kenneth R. Tuggle, son of Mr. and Mrs.
J. A. Tuggle.
Wife, former Marzelle McClure.
Entered Army, Nov., 1942. Trained at Ft. Wood,
Mo.
Served in France and Germany.
Holds 1
Battle Star.
Now on duty in Germany.

TURNER, ALBERT I .
Sgt . Albert I. Turner, son of Mr. and Mrs. H.
A. Turner.
Wife, former .Velma Vance.
Entered
Air Corps, Nov., 1942 · Trained at Coffeyville,
Ks. and Biloxi, Miss.
Served in Italy.
Holds
5 Battle Stars and Unit Citation.
Now on duty
at Dalhart, Texas.
112

�nJRNER GLENN E.
T;3 Gienn E. Turner, son of Mr. and Mrs. Guy
D. Turner.
Entered Army, March, 1942. Trained
at Ft. Ord, Calif. and Camp White, Ore. Served
in New Guinea, Admiralty Is. Philippines and
Japan.
Holds American, Asiatic-Pac1fic with
4 stars, Victory Medal, GoodConduct Medal,
Philippine Liberation, 2 stars and Bronze
Arrowhead.
Now discharged.
nJTTLE, HAROLD J.
T/Sgt. Harold J. Tuttle, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Geo. Tuttle.
Entered Army, 1940.
Trained at
Hawaiian Is .
Served at Pearl Harbor, New
Guinea, Dutch Netherlands and Central Pacific.
Holds 3 Battle Stars, Good Conduct, AsiaticPacific and Pre-Pearl Harbor Ribbons.
Discharged June, 1945.
TYER, STANLEY W.
Cpl. Stanley W. Tyer, son of Mr. and Mrs. W.L.
Tyer.
Entered Army, March, 1942.
Trained at
Ft. Bliss, Texas.
Served in Australia and New
Guinea.
Received Presidential Citation and
Purple Heart.
Wounded in New Guinea, 1944.
Now discharged.
TYLER, MARSHALL S .
Pfc. Marshall S. Tyler, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Frank A. Tyler.
Wife, former Margaret E.
Tyler.
Entered Army, January, 1944.
Trained
at Camp Claiborne, La.
Now on duty at Marseille, France.

UNDERWOOD, WILLIAM M.
Pvt. William M. Underwood, son of Mr. and Mrs.
A. M. Uncle rwood.
Wife, former Maryanne J.
Neale.
Entered Air Corps, Aug., 1943.
Trained at San Marcos Air Field and Scott Field.
Now on duty at Camo Pinedale, Calif.

UTTINGER, JAMES RICHARD.
MoMM 3/c
ames Richard Uttinger, son of Mr.
and Mrs . . H. Uttinger.
Wife, former Betty
Busse.
Entered Navy, Feb., 1942.
Trained at
Farragut, Idaho.
Served in American and Pacific Theater.
Holds 7 Battle Stars and 5 Campaign Ribbons.
Now in Tokyo Harbor.

VANDEVENTER, RAYMOND
S 1/c Raymond Vandeventer, son of Matilda J.
Parks.
Wife, former Allene Elizabeth Smith.
Entered Navy, March, 1943.
Trained at San
Diego, Cali 'f.
Served on UJ.S.S. Bell.
Holds
One Silver Star, 2 Bronze Stars . and Pacific,
Asiatic, Philippine and American Theater Ribbons.
Now enroute to USA.

VAN KEUREN, D. E.
Sgt. D. E. VanKeuren, son of Mr. and Mrs. G.
P. Van Keuren.
Wife, former Helen S. Spence.
Entered Army_, Nov., 1942·
Trained at St.
Petersburg~ Fla. and Jefferson Barracks, Mo.
Secved in Pacific Area.
Holds Good Conduct
Medal.
Now on duty at Korea.

VAUGHN, WILLIAM D.
S;Sgt. William D. Vaughn, son of Mr. and Mrs.
W. W. Vaughn. Entered Army, Jan., 1943· Trained at Camp Wal ~ce, Texas.
Served in Noumea,
New Caledonia and Pacific Area.
Holds Good
Conduct Medal.
Now on duty at New Caledonia.
VIESSELMAN, BURT WM.
AM 3/C Burt Wm. Viesselman, son of Professor
and Mrs. P. W. Viesselman. Entered Navy, Sept.
1943·
Trained at Lakehurst, N. J. and Richmond, Fla.
Served at Pearl Harbor, New Hebrides and Samoa.
Now on duty at Samoa.
113

�VIESSELMAN, MARK UTLEY
Ens. Mark Utley Viesselman, son of Professor
and Mrs. P. W. Viesselman.
Wife, former Clara
Katherine Smithmeyer. Entered Navy, May, 1944·
Trained at Princeton Univ., Fla. and Newport,
R. I.
Served at Pearl Harbor, Guam, Saipan,
Philippines, Okinawa, Sasebo and others.
Now
aboard U.s.s. Shelby, in Pacific Area.
VITT, DALE E.
F 2/C Dale E. Vitt, son of Mr. and Mrs. Emery
Vitt.
Entered Navy, April, 1945·
Trained at
Great Lakes and San Bruno, Calif.
Now on duty
in Pacific Area.

VOTAW, JOSEPH G.
Pfc. Joseph G. Votaw, son of Mr. and Mrs
George J. Votaw.
Entered Army, July, 1942·
Trained at Camp Hood, Texas.
Served in England, Holland, Belgium, Germany, Normandy,
and France.
Holds Purple Heart with Cluster
and 3 European Campaign Ribbons.
Wounded June
25, 1944 and Dec. 1944·
Now at Paris, France.

VOTAW, LESLIE W.
S 1/C Leslie W. Votaw, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Milo Votaw.
Entered Navy, May, 1944·
Trained
at Great Lakes, Ill., Corpus Christi, Texas
and Norfolk, Va.
Now on duty in Pacific Area.

VOTAW, VICTOR D.
Sgt. Victor D. Votaw, son of Mr. and Mrs.
George J. Votaw.
Entered Air Corps, Sept.,
1943·
~rained at Keesler Field, Miss.
Served
at New Guinea, Luzon, Okinawa and Japan.
Now
on duty at Honshu Is., Japan.

VOTH, RUDOLF D.
1st Lt. Rudolf D. Voth, son of Mr. and Mrs.
P. R. Voth.
Wife, former tvelyn L. Eustace.
Entered. Air Corps, May, 1940.. Trained at Moffett Field, Calif., Chanute Field, Ill. and
Miami Beach, Fla.
Served in Africa and Middle
East.
Holds Unit Citation.
Now discharged.

WALKER CLARENCE R.
Cpl. Cla renee R. Walker, son of Mr. John B.
Walker. Wife, former F·rances Wortman. Entered
Army, Feb., 1942·
Tralned at Camp Berkeley,
Texas. Served in Iceland, England and Germany.
Holds Purple Heart for wounds received Nov.,
1944 in Germany.

WALKER, GEORGE DAN
SF 3/C George . Dan Walker, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles H. Walker. Wife, former Juanita Black.
Entered Navy CB's, April, 1943·
Trained at
Williamsburg, Va. and Davisville, R. I. Served
in South Pacific.
Now on duty at Okinawa.
WALKER, MARION E.
P.O. 3/c Marion E. Walker, son of Mrs. John
Dreyer.
Wife, former Doris Mae Wilson.
Entered Navy, Oct., 1942· Trained at Davisville,
R. I. Served at Pearl Harbor, Philippines and
North and South Paci fie.
Holds Good Conduct
Medal and 3 Service Stars.
Now on duty at
Davisville, R. I.
WALKER MARSHALL M.
Pfc. Marshall M. Walker, son of Mrs. J. H.
Dreyer.
Entered Army, Jan., 1940·
Trained at
Camp Robinson, Ark., Ft. Ord, Calif. and Camp
Pickett, Va.
Served in England, France and
Luxembourg.
Holds Purple Heart, Good Conduct
Medal, 3 Major Battle Stars and Unit Citation.
Wounded Jan. 24• 1945 at Luxembourg.
Now
d i s c ha r g e d •
114

�WALKER, NAMON D.
Cpl. Namon D. Walker, son of Mrs. Blanche
Htnes.
Entered Army, Aug., 1942·
Trained at
Ft. McClellan, Ala. and Camp Cla.iborne, La.
Served in England and France.
Engaged in 3
. Major Battles.
Now at Ft. Ord, Calif.

WALKER, THEODORE LEO
ST 3/C Theodore Leo Walker, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Theodore Hamilton.
Entered Air Corps, June,
1943·
Trained at Norman, Okla. and San Bruno,
Calif. Now on duty in South Pacific.

WALTER, MELVIN M.
S 2/C Melvin M.Walter, son of Mrs. Kelly
Keeton.
Entered Navy, March, 1945·
Trained
at Great Lakes, Ill.
Served in Philippine
Area.
Now aboard U.S.S. Henrico.

WALTERS, FRANK A.
1st Lt. Frank A. Walters, son of Mrs. F.F.
Walters. Entered Army, April, 1942·
Trained
at Ft. Sill, Okla. Served in ·N. Africa, Sicily
and Italy.
Now on duty at Florence, Italy.

WALTON, HAROLD C.
Capt. Harold c. Walton, husband of the former
Adelia Lamb.
Entered Army, ·1940. Trained at
Camp Rucker, Ala. and Camp BUtner, N.C. Served
in England, France, Belgium, Luxembourg, Holland and Germany.
Holds ETO with 5 Stars and
Bronze Star with Cluster.
Now on· duty at Camp
Breckenridge, Ky .
WARD, OWEN F.
T/4 Owen F. Ward
son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
E. Ward.
Wife, /ormer Lois Penfold.
Entered
Army, March, 1942·
Trained at Camp Callan,
Calif., Camp Davis, N. C., Camp Murphy, Fla.,
Camp Stewart, Ga. Orlando, Fla., Camp Gordon.,
Ga. and Ft. Benning, Ga.
Holds Good Conduct
Medal. Discharged Oct., 1945·

WARE, GEORGE ROBERT
Cpl. George Robert Ware, son of Mr. and Mrs.
George S. Ware.
Entered Army Ned. Corps, May,
1943·
Trained at Camp Berkeley, Texa.s and
O•Reilly Gen. Hospital.
Served in England,
F 'r ance, Belgium and Germany.
Holds Two Battle
Stars and ETO Ribbon.
Now at Camp Campbell.

WARE, LLOYD L. JR.
Capt. Lloyd L. "Ware, Jr., son of Lloyd L. Ware,
Sr.
Wife, former Lexey Burchfield.
Entered
Air Corps, 1942· Trained at Randolph and Kelly
Fields.
Served in Africa and Italy.
Holds
Caribbean and ETO Ribbons with 3 Stars.
Now
on Reserv.e Status.

WARREN, WILLIAM C
T;5 William C. Warren, son of Mrs. Ella C.
Warren.
Entered Army, June, 1942· Trained at
Camp Lee, Va. and Camp Shelby, Miss.
Served
inN. Africa, Oran, Algiers, Tunis, Italy,
Nafles, Cassino, Ro111e, Florence and Milan.
Ho ds ETO with 4 Bronze Stars. Now discharged.

WASHINGTON, ELROY
Cpl. Elroy Washington, son of Mrs. Belle Johnson.
Entered Army, Nov., 1942·
Trained at
Camp Stoneman, Calif. and Camp Knight, Calif.
Served in India, China, Burma and Ledo Road.
Now enroute to U S A.
115

�WATKINS, LEROY E.
QM 1 / C Leroy E. Watkins, son of G. W. Watkins
and Mrs. Hazel Wilson.
Wife, former Madeline
McCaffrey.
Entered Navy, 1940.
Trained at
Great Lakes, Ill .
Served in India, Africa,
Italy, Australia, New Zealand, Japanaand Dutch
East Indies.
Holds American Defense, 1 star,
Asiatic-Pacific ,;s_stars, ETO, 2 stars, Philippine Liberation, 1 star and Good Conduct.
Now
aboard U. S.S. Astoria.
WATSON, WILLIAM B.
S 2 / c William B. Watson, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Davis Watson. Entered Navy , Nov., 1943· Trained at Hutchinson Air Base, Washburn Univ . and
Great Lakes, Ill.
Served on Pearl Harbor and
now on way to Okinawa.
WAY , WILLIAM E.
Pfc. William E. Way,
son of Mr . and Mrs .
William W. Way.
Entered Army Inf. July, 1943·
Trained at Ft. McClellan, Ala.
Served in England, Ireland, France, Belgium and Germany.
Awarded Purple Heart for wounds received June,
12, 1944, France.
Killed in Action Dec. 18,
1944 in Belgium.
WEBERt ORVILLE E.
1st
t. Orville E. Weber, son of Mr . and Mrs.
August D. Dahlene.
Wife, former Edith Hill.
Entered Air Corps, 1940·
Trained at Camp Rob inson, Ark . and OCS at Ft . Benning, Ga.
Now
stationed at Midland, Texas.

WEBSTER, BILLY R.
Pvt. Btlly R. Webster, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert L. Webster.
Entered Army, . June, 1945·
Trained at Camp Fanhin, Texas .
Now has Honorable Discharge.

WEEKS, MARION R.
T; s Marion R. Weeks, son of Mr . and Mrs. A.F .
Weeks.
Entered Army, Oct., 1941·
Trained at
Camp Walolace, Texas, Camp Davis, N. C. and
Mare Is.
Served on Oahu Is., Hawaii, Leyte
and Okinawa.
Discharged Oct., 1945·

WEIDENSAUL, WILLIAM E.
ART 1 1 c Wi 11 i am E. We ide n sa u 1 , son o f Rev •
Charles F. and Mary H. Weidensaul.
Entered
Navy, March, 1943· Trained at Farragut, Idaho,
Chicago, Ill., Lo~an, Utah, Corpus Christi,
Texas and Gainesvtlle, Ga.
Served on Pearl
Harbor, Hawaii and Okinawa.
Holds 1 Battle
Star.
Now on duty at Yonabaru, Okinawa .

WEIDLER, IRA .T.
F.O. Ira J• Weidler, son of Etta M. Weidler.
Wife, former Suzanne M. Williams.
Entered
Air Corps, Aug., 1941·
Trained at Chanute
Field. Instructor at Wichita Falls, Texas.
Graduated at Stockton, Calif.
Served in New
Guinea.
Awarded Air Medal and Unit Citation.
Killed in Action N w. 25, 1943 on New Guinea.
WEIDMAN, GILBERT E .
CY Gilbert E. Weidman, son of Mrs. Ella McCoy .
Wife, former Lorraine Fields.
Entered Navy,
1940·
Trained at Great Lakes, Ill. Stationed
at Jacksonville, Fla. and San Diego, Calif.
Served on Admiralty Is. and Philippines. Holds
Philippine Campaign Ribbon.
Now on duty on
Sarna r.
WEIDMAN, HAROLD E.
Pfc. Harold E. Weidman, son of Mrs . Ella McCoy .
Wife, former 1.\.rie Dagoe.
Ent11red Army, Apr . ,
1943·
Trained at Camp Dodge, Iowa .
Now on
duty at Leavenworth, Kansas.
116

�WEIDMAN, JAMES MATTHEW
C. Ph M. James Matthew Weidman, son of Mrs.
Ella McCoy.
Wife, former Mary Lou Lohman. Entered Navy, July 1936, served 4 yrs . Reentered
Feb., 1942·
Trained at Great Lakes, Ill. and
Sa n Diego, Calif.
Served on Pearl Harbor and
New Caledonia .
Now at Seal Beach, Calif.
WEIXELDORFER,
ERNEST L.
Cpl. Ernest L. Weixeldorfer, son of Mr. and
Mrs. John Weixeldorfer.
Entered Army, March ,
1944·
Trained at Camp Hood, Texas and Ft.
Sill, Okla.
Served on Hawaii, Okinawa and
now on duty 3 t Korea.

WELSH, HOMER T.
Cpl. Homer T . Welsh, son of Mr. and Mrs. Alonzo
E. Welsh.
Entered Army, Nov., 1943·
Trained
at Camp Callan. Served on New Caledonia, Guadalcanal, New Georgia Is . , Bouganville, New
Britton and Luzon.
Holds 2 Campaign Stars,
Bronze Arrow-Head, Philippine Liberation, SW
Pacific and Good Conduct Medals.
Now on duty
at Manila.
WESTGATE, ELLSWORTH A.
S 1 / c Ellsworth A. Westgate, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Donald P . Westgate.
Entered Navy, Aug.,
1943·
Trained at Farragut, Idaho. Served
a round New Guinea.
Wounded Sept., 1944 in
New Guinea.
Discharged April 6, 1945·

WETZEL, DONALD R.
Capt. Donald R. Wetzel, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Geo. T. Wetzel.
Wife, former Beverly A . Hamilton.
Entered Air Corps, July, 1942·
Trained at Scott Field and Yale Univ.
Stationed at
Gowen Field, Idaho.
Now on duty at Okinawa.

WHITE, FRANCIS E.
T ; 4 Francis E. White, son of Mrs. Sarah C.
White.
Entered Army, Aug . , 1942·
Trained
at Prince Rupert, Canada.
Holds Asiatic-Pacific and American Ribbons and Good Conduct
Medal.
Discharged Oct. 30, 1945·

WHITMAN WALTER M.
Pfc. Walter M. Whitman, son of Mrs. Delia
Whitman.
Wife, former Mildred Burgess.
Entered Army Med. Corps, Jan . , 1942·
Trained at
Camp Berkeley, Ft. Bliss, Camp Polk, Camp Carson, Camp Roberts, Ft. Ord and Camp Rucker.
Served in England, Frane, Belgium, Holland and
Germany.
Holds Good Conduct Medal and ETO
with 2 stars.
Now on duty in Germany.
WIGGINS, IVAN E.
Pfc. Ivan E. Wiggins, son of Mr. and Mrs. Otis
Wiggins.
Entered Army, Dec., 1944·
Trained
at Camp Robinson, Ark.
Served in Philippines
and Korea.
Now on duty at Korea.

WIGGINS, RAY 0.
Pfc. Ray 0. Wiggins, son of Mr- . and Mrs. Otis
Wiggins.
Wife, former Betty Hallenbeck.
Entered Army, Feb., 1942·
Trained at Ft . Lewis,
Wash. and Ft. Leavenworth, Ks.
Served in Germany and now on duty in France.

WILEY, LAUREN W.
Cpl. Lauren W. Wiley, son of Mr. and Mrs. Sam
Wiley.
Entered Marines, July, 194~·
Trained
at San Diego, Calif., also was 1nstructor
at San Die~o.
Served on Saipan .
Now on duty
at Nagasak1, Japan.
117

�WILEY, LYMAN T . .
T/S Lyman T. Wiley, son of S. D. Wiley.
Wife,
former Bryona C. Pence.
Entered Army, Mar~h,
1943·
Trained at Camp Polk, La., Princeton,
N. J., Camp Carson, Colo., Ft. Riley, Ks. and
Denver, Colo,
Served on Okinawa, Guam and
Hawaii.
Holds A-P with 1 Battle Star, Purple
Heart, Good Conduct Medal and Combat Medical
Badge.
Wounded June 6o 1945, Okinawa.
Now on
duty at Ft. Sam Houston.
WILEY, WILLI AM GALE
TjSgt. William pale Wiley, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Sam Wiley.
Entered Army, June, 1942· Trained
at Camp Swift, Texas, Calif. , Ariz., Indiantown Gap, Pa. and Camp Ritchi.,, Md.
Served
in England, France, G.,rmany, Belgium and Holland.
Awarded Combat Inf, Badge, Good Conduct
Medal, ETO, Purple Heart (2) and Silver Star.
K i 1 1 e d i n A c t i on Ma r c h 3 , 1 9 4 S i n Ge r ma n y .
WILKS, CHESTER A.
Cpl. Chester A. Wilks, son of Mr. and Mrs.
William H. Wilks.
Wife, former Mary Tyler.
Entered Army, Feb., 1942·
Trained at Ft. Warren, Wyo., Camp Swift, Texas, Shreveport, La.,
Ft. Leonard Wood, Mo., San Luis Obispo, Calif.
and Camp Cooke, Calif.
Served in ETO.
Now on
duty at Japan.
WILKS, LOUIS G.
MOMM 3/c Louis G. Wilks, son of Mr. and Mrs.
W. H. Wilks.
Wife, former Hazel Arthur.
Entered N:avy, April, 1944·
Trained at Farragut,
Idaho, Gulfport, Miss. and Detroit, Mich.
Served in Admiralty Is. • New Guinea, Leyte,
Samar and Schouten I s . Now stationed at
Manacani.
WILLIAMS CLEO C.
QM 3/C Cleo C. Williams, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Stephen E. Bierema.
Wife, former Marcella
Sterling.
Entered Navy, April, 1944·
Trained
at Farragut, Idaho and Gulfport, Miss.
Served
in New Foundland, Panama and Alaska.
Now discharged.
WILLIAMS, ELDEN E.
1st Lt. Elden E. Williams, son of Mr. and Mrs.
E. E. Williams. Wife, former Virginia Van Lieu.
Entered Army Air Corps, Nov., 1942·
Trained
at Santa Ana , Ca 1 if. , King City and Taft,
Calif. Luke Fld., Ariz., Way Cross, Ga., De
lUdder, La. and Meridian Miss.
Served in En~­
land, France, Belgium and Germany.
Holds Au
Medal and Oak Leaf Clusters and Unit Citation.
Now on duty at Pari~, France.
WILLIAMS, PHILLIP G.
Cpl. Phillip G. Williams, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Loren M. Williams.
Entered Infantry, June,
1942·
Trained at Camp Maxey, Texas.
Served
in England, France, Luxembourg, Germany and
Belgium.
Holds Good Conduct, ETO, Combat Inf.
Badge and 3 Battle Stars.
Now discharged.
WILLIAMS, REX E.
Pfc. Rex E. Williams, son of Mr. and Mrs.
George Williams.
Entered Army, Oc 't., 1942·
Trained at Amarillo, Texas, Clovis, N. M. and
Sioux Falls, S. D.
Served on Manila, Philippines and now at Yokohama, Japan.

WILLIAMS, ROBERT .M.
Col. Robert M. Williams, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Loren M. Williams. Wife, former ·Earlene Lewis.
Entered Army, Jan., 1943· Trained at Ft. Riley,
Ks. Holds Good Conduct Medal and Expert Rifleman's Badge.
Now stationed at Jefferson Brks.
WILLMAN, ROBERT ERNEST
Pfc. Robert Ernest Willman, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Fred G. Willman.
Entered Army, March, 1943·
Trained at Camp Haan, Camp Irwin, Camp McCain,
Miss. and Ft. Meade, Md.
Served in England,
France, Belgium and Germany.
Holds Purple
Heart, Good Conduct, ETO with 4 Bronze stars
and Combat Inf. Badge.
Wounded Nov. 22. 1944•
in Germany.
Now on duty in Germany.
118

�WILSON, CURTIS 0 . .
WT 1/C Curtis 0. Wilson, son of Mr. and Mrs.
C • E. Wi 1 s on .
En t e r e d N a v y , S e p t . , 1 9 4 1 .
Trained at Great Lakes and Dearborn.
Served
in Paci fie Area.
Now on duty aboard Hospital
Ship qBountiful. n

WILSON, GEORGE D.
Pvt. Geor\!e D. Wilson, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Willard Wtlson ..
Entered Army, June, 1942·
Trained at Camp Pi eke t t, Va. and Camp Blanding,
Fla. Discharged Feb. 10, 1943·

WILSON HENRY P.
Sgt. Henry P. Wilson, husband of former Lorene
Hunn. Entered Nat•l Guard, 1925• entered Army
Dec., 1941·
Trained at Camp Robinson, Ark.
Stationed on West Coast and Alabama.
Received
Medical Discharge, Sept., 1943·

WILSON, JOHN W.
Pvt. John W. Wilson, son of Mr, and Mrs. C. E.
Wilson.
Entered Army, March, 1945·
Trained
at Camp Fannin, Texas.
Now on way to Pacific
Area.

WILSON ROBERT J.
Pvt. Robert J. Wilson, son of Jay and Edith
Wilson. Wife, former Juanita Harman.
Entered
Army Info, May, 1944·
Served in England,
France and Germany.
Awarded Purple Heart.
Killed in Action Dec. 18~ 1944, in Germany.

WILSON ROBERT M.
1st LL Robert M. Wilson, husband of Alice
Evelyn Wilson.
Entered Army, 1942·
Trained
at Camp Swift, Texas, Ft. Sill, Okla., Camp
Roberts, Calif., Camp Beale, Ft. Knox, Camp
Bowie and Ft. Monmouth, N. J. Served in France,
Belgium, Luxembourg and Germany.
Holds Bronze
Star and Certificate of Merit. Now at Ft. Sill,
Okla.

WILSON WILEY C.
Pvt. Wiley C. Wilson, sonofMr. and Mrs.
Clarence E. Wilson. Entered Army, 1945· Trained at Camp Fannin, Texas· , Ft. Riley, Ks. and
Camp Adair, Oregon.
Now on duty at Kores.
WILSON WILLIAM R.
Pfc. iilliam R. Wilson, husband of the former
Virginia Perkins.
Entered Army, March, 1943·
Trained at Ft. Leonard Wood, Mo. and Camp
Breckenridge, Ky.
Served in England, France,
Holland, Belgium and GermanJ.
Holds Purple
Heart, Good Conduct Medal an 5 Battle Stars.
Now at Camp Carson, Colo. Hospital.
Wounded
March 25, 1945, Germany.

WINGERT; LEO
Pfc. Leo Wingert, entered Army, Sept., 1943·
Served in England, France, Belgtum, Luxembourg,
Austria, Czeckoslovakia and Germany. Awarded
Purple Heart, Unit Citation and ETO with 3
Battle Stars. Wounded Jan. 1, 1945·

WINGERT, MERLE
Pfc. Merle Wingert, son of J. A. Wingert. Entered Army, Dec., 1942· Served in North Africa
and Italy.
Killed in Action Sept. 18, 1944,
in Northern Italy.
119

�WINTER, MILTON SHIPMAN JR .
J&gt;fc. Milton Shipman Winter, Jr., son of Mr. and
Mrs. M. S. Winter.
Entered Army, 1943· Trained at Camp Fannin, Texas La. State College,
Camp Maxey, Texas.
Served in England, Belgium and Germany.
Holds Purple Heart from
wounds received March, 1945, Germany. Discharged Sept. 14, 1945 WINTERS, HARRY X . JR.,
AMM 2/c Harry X. Winters, Jr., son of Harry X.
Winters, Sr.
Wife, former Mary A. Clough.
Entered Navy, 1942·
Trained at Fairfax Fld . ,
K. C. Ks. and Glenview, Ill.
Now on duty at
Oahu, Hawaii.

WISE, BERNARD W.
Pvt. Bernard W. Wise, son of Mr. and Mrs. L.B.
Wise,
Wife, former Hazel Houk.
Entered Army,
July, 1945·
Training at Camp Wolters, Texas .
Holds Sharpshooter's Medal.

WOLFE, VINCENT L.
Pfc. Vincent L. Wolfe, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wm.
Wolfe.
Wife, former Pearl Koehler.
Entered
Army, Feb., 1943·
Trained at Camp Callan,
Calif. Camp Hulen, Texas, Camp Maxey, Texas
and Camp Haan, Calif.
Served on Hawaii, Guam,
Philippines and Salipan Is. Holds Purple Heart.
Now on duty at Okinawa.

WOOD, ELDON E.
1st Lt. Eldon E. Wood, son of Mr. and Mrs. L.
W. Titterington.
Entered Air Corps, Feb.,
1943·
Trained at Jefferson Brks, Mo., Santa
Ana, Calif., Kingman, Ariz., Victorville,
Calif. and March Fld., Calif.
Served on New
Guinea, Philippines and Okinawa.
Holds Air
Medal, 2 Clusters, A-P with 8 Stars and Philippines Liberation with One Star.
Now discharged.
WOODWARD, DONALD W.
Cpl. Donald W. Woodward, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Woodward.
Entered Army, Aug., 1940 ·
Trained at Ft. Scott.
Served in Panama Canal
Zone, Philippines and New Guinea.
Holds PrePearl Harbor, Philippine Liberation, American
Defense, Caribbean TO and Asiatic-Pacific Ribbons.
Discharged Aug., 1945·
WOODWARD, HOWARD E.
Lt. Howard E. Woodward, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Woodward.
Wife, former Nary Springer.
Entered Army, Dec., 1940·
Trained at Camp
Robinson, Ark., OCS at Ft. Benning, Ga. Served
in Africa and Italy.
Hm Hs Purple Heart for
wounds received June 1. near Rome.
Now on
duty in Italy.
WOOLF
CHARLES E.
Lt. Charles E. Woolf, son of Mrs. Leona Woolf.
Wife, former Margaret Stout.
Entered Army Air
Corps, Dec., 1942·
Commissioned at Coral
Gables, Fla.
Ser.ved in England.
Awarded Air
Medal and Purple Heart.
Killed in Action July
21, 1944, Germany. Awarded ETO Ribbon.

WOOLF, WAYNE W.
Capt. Wayne W. Woolf, son of Mrs. Leona Woolf.
Entered Arm'/ Air Corps, Dec., 1941·
Commissioned at Mtssion, Texas.
Served in England,
France, Belgium and Germany.
Holds Air Medal
with 15 Clusters and DFC .
Now discharged. Also
holds ETO with 5 stars.
WORLEY CHARLES R.
Cpl. Charles R . Worley, son of Mrs . Dora Worley.
Entered Air Corps, May, 1944·
Trained
at Sheppard Fld., Texas, LasVegas, Nev.,
Madison, Wise., Truax Fld., I l l. and Boca
Raton , Fla., where he is now attending Radar
School.
120

�WORLEY, ELLWYN L.
Cpl. Ellwyn L. Worley, son of Mr. and Mrs. C.
W. Worley. Wife, former Mardella Walker. Entered Army, May, 1943·
Trained at Camp Berkeley, Texas and Camp Carson, Colo.
Served in
France, Belgium, Holland and Germany.
Holds
Unit Citation and Purple Heart.
Wounded Dec.,
1944, Germany.
Now at O•Reilly Gen. Hospital.
WORLEY, PAUL H.
P.O. 1/c-Paul H. - Worley, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles W. Worley.
Entered Merchant Marines,
Jan., 1945·
Trained at Avalon, Catalina Is.,
Calif. Served in Hawaii, Philippines. Now on
duty in South Pacific.
WRAY, HAROLD M.
2nd Lt. Harold M. Wray, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Floyd H. Wray.
Entered Army Air Corps, Marc·h ,
1 9 4 2.
T r a in e d a t J e f f e r son Ba r racks , Mo • ,
Atlantic City, N. J., Georgetown Univ. and
Greensboro, N. C.
Served in Italy and Trinidad. Now on Reserve list.
WRA Y, JOHN L.
2nd Lt. John L. Wray, son of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
H. Wray.
Entered Army Air Corps, Oct., 1942•
Trained at Coffeyville, Ks., Lowry Fld., Colo.
Keesler Fld., Miss. and Robins Fld. Ga. Preflight at St. Cloud, Minn., Santa Ana, Calif.
Las Vegas, Nev. and Roswell, N. M.
Later was
stationed at San Marcos, Texas and Lincoln,
Nebr. Now on Reserve list.

WRAY, PAUL F·
S;Sgt. Paul F. Wray~ son of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
K. Wray. Wife, former Mildred Smith. Entered
Army Air Corps, March, 1942·
Trained at Sheppard Fld., Texas, Harding Fld., La. and Bartow
Fld., Fla. Now on duty at Hickam Fld., Hawaii.

YOUNG, EDWIN S.
Capt. Edwin S. Young, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest W. Young.
Entered Army, 1940· Trained
at Camp Robinson, Ark., Camp Polk, La. and Ft.
Knox, Ky.
Holds American Theater Ribbon.
Now
discharged.

YOUNG, ROBERT G.
Major Robert G. Young, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest W. Young. Wife, former Juanita Johnson.
Entered Army Med. Corps, June, 194~·
Trained
at Ft. SamHoustonandCamp McCoy, Wuc. Served
in Ireland, Wales, France, Belgium, Germany
and Czechoslovakia.
Holds Bronze Medal.
Now
stationed at Camp Swift, Texas.
·

YOUNGBERG, IRVIN E.
Lt. (jg) Irvin E. Youngberg, ente·red Navy,
Dec., 1943· Trained at Tuscon, Ariz. and Ft.
Schuyler, N. Y.
Served in Mediterranean Area.
Holds 1 Battle Star. Now on Okinawa.

ZEIDLER, ELDEN A.C
Pfc. Elden A.C. Zeidler, son of Rev. R. J. and
Lillian H. Zeidler.
Entered Air Corps, July,
1941· Trained at Camp Wolters and Camp BOwi·e,
Texas.
Served in New Caledonia, Guadalcanal,
New Guinea, and Luzon. Holds A-P Medal, American Defense Medal, New Guinea and Luzon Campaign. Now discharged.
ZEISENIS, ARNO G.
Lt. Arno G. Zeisenis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gus
Zeisenis,
Wife, former Arleene Galbraith.
Entered Navy, July, 1943· Trained in New York
and Wash. D. C.
Now stationed at Naval Ordnance Plant, Shumaker, Ark.
121

�ZIESCH ARTHUR
Pvt. Arthur Ziesch, son of Julius Ziesch. &amp;ttered Air Corps, March, 1943·
Trained at Atlantic Cit{' New Jersey, Drew Field, Fla. and
Hunter Fie d, Ga. Now is discharged.

ZIESCB, ERNEST
SjSgt. Ernest Ziesch, son of Julius Ziesch.
Entered Air Corps, Jan., 1942•
Trained at
Sheppard Field, Texas, Chanute Field, Ill.
Served 29 months overseas in India, China and
Burma. Bolds Unit Citation.
Discharged.

ZIESCH HAROLD B.
A.S. Harold B. Ziesch, son of Julius Ziesch.
Entered Navy, Aug., 1943· Trained at Farragut,
Idaho, Ft. Worth, Texas.
Now has Honorable
Discharge.

ZILLNER, GEORGE F.
SjSgt. George F. Zillner, son of Joseph Zillner.
Wife, former Cecelia Gast.
Entered Air
Corps, Sept., 1l'41·
Trained at Chanute Fld.
Served in Paciftc Area.
Holds Good Conduct,
American Defense and Asiatic-Pacific Ribbons.
Discharged July, 1945·

ZILLNER, ROBERT L.
S/Sgt. ~obert L. Zillner, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph Zillner. Wife, former Marie Van Walleghem. Entered Air Corps, Oct., 1940· Trained
at Chanute, Field, Ill.
Served in Asiatic and
Pacific Areas.
Holds A-P, American Defense
Good Conduct and 3 Battle Stars. Discharged.

ZIMMERMAN, JOE A.
T;Sgt. Joe A. Zimmerman, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ed Zimmerman. Entered Army, Oct., 1942· Trained at Ft. Meade, Md.
Served in North Africa
and Italy, where he is now on duty.

ZOOK, FRANKLIN A.
Cpl. Franklin A. Zook, son of Mrs. A. D. Zook.
Wife, former Barbara Pierce. Entered Air
Corps, Nov., 1942·
Trained at Sheppard Fld.,
Texas, Lowry Fld., Colo. Bryan, Texas, Albuquerque, N. M., Camp Maxey, Texas and Chanute
Field, Ill.
Served in Australia and India.
Holds C.B.I. Theatre with 1 Battle Star. Discharged Oct. 26• 1945·

ROLL, CHARLES L.
Pvt. Charles L. Roll, sonofMr. and Mra. Charley W. Roll. Entered Army, June, 1945· Trained at Ft. McClellan, Ala. and Ft. Benning, Ga.
Served inGermany and France. Hcrlds Bronze Star
and others. Now on duty in Germany.

122

�ABELS, JOHN H.
Private John H. Abels, entered Army Inf.,
July 6, 1942.
Trained at Camp Roberts and
Ft. Meade, Md.
Reeeived Honorable Discharge
at Cam_p . Livingston, La.
Holds Expert Rifleman's Hedge.

ALLEN
HAROLD K.
1st Lt. Harold K. Allen, son of Mrs. Nellie
Allen.
Wife, former Aliere Witherup.
Entered
Army June 1943.
Trained at Camp Davis and
Aberdeen, Maryland.
Served in England and
Scotland.
Holds ETO Ribbon with 4 battle
stars and Purple Heart.
Now at Camp Cooke,
Ca 1 if.

ALLEN, MARVIN B.
Caft. Marvin B. Allen, son of Mrs. Nellie
Al en.
Entered Army Sept. 1940.
Trained at
Ft. Monroe, Va. Brooklyn, N.Y. and Ft. Bragg,
N. C. Served in Islands in Pacific.
Holds
Asiatic-Pacific Medal with two bronze stars
and American Defense Service Medal.
Now on
duty at Atomic Bomb Lab. Los Alamos, N. M.

BUNCE, CHESTER L.
Cpl. Chester L; Bunce, son of Mary E. and
Frank M. Bunce.
Entere·d Army, May, 1942·
Trained at Camp Rucker, Ala.
Served on Phil·
ippines.
Now on duty at Honshu, Japan.

HOVERSTOCK, GEORGE H.
Y 2/C George H. Hoverstock, son of Mrs. Estelle
Hoverstock.
Wife, former Arleen Congdon. Entered Navy, Oct., 1942· Trained at Olathe, Ks.
Fairfax Airfort, K. C. Ks. Stationed at San
Pedro, Cali • Discharged from Long Beach Haspi tal Dec. 30, 1944·

INYARD, EARL
T/4 Earl Inyard, entered Army Air Corps.
Sept . 12 , 1 9 4 2 •
T r a i ned a t Camp Pined a 1 e ,
Received discharge April 23, 1943·
Was
recently killed in highway accident.

POWELL, LYLE S.
A;S LyleS. Powell, Jr., son of Dr. and Mrs.
Lyle S. Powell.
Wife, former Ellen Boyd.
Entered Navy, Jan., 1944.
Trained at Univ. of
Penn.
Served in U. S. A.

POWELL
ROBERT W.
Pvt. kobert W. Powell, son of Dr. and Mrs.
LyleS. Powell. Entered Army, May, 1944.Trained at Camp Carson, Colo. and Atlanta, Ga.
Served in England, France and Germany where he
is now servit~g•

SCHWEGLER, RAYMOND A.
Major Raymond A. Schwegler, son of Dean and
Mrs. R. A. Schwegler.
Wife, former Al.l.ce
Wilson.
Entered Army Medical Corps, 1942•
Now on duty at Brooke Gen. Hospital at Ft.
Sam Houston, Texas.
123

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SCHUBERT
07/14/10

LAWRENCE PUBLIC LIBRARY
LAWRENCE, KANSAS

��INDEX
SCHUBERT MORTUARY BOOK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct., 14, 1924)

1

A

ABDELAL, Alfred G.
7
ADLERS (ADLER), Infant of Albert
5g
ALDRICH, Arthur Mark ---------103
ALLEN, Joseph R.
133
ALLISON, Benjamin F.
42
ALLISON, Roena Columbus {Mrs.·)
274
ALSOP, James
246
ANDERSON, Bert
299
ANDERSON, Irene V.
271
ANDERSON, Mary Ann
272
ANDERSON, P. J.
295
ANDREW, Wm.
127
ANDREWS, Della {Mrs.)
283
ASffi~ORTH, Lewis Richard
16
B

BAECKER, Philip
BAECKER (BECKER)-,~L-au_r_a-r.{M~lr-s-.~)----BAGELMANN, Johanna (Mrs.)
BAGLMAN (BAGHNAN), Albert - - - BAILEY, Robert - - - - - - - - BAKER, Nichalous - - - - - - - - - - BALES, Jame:5 ~ c.
BARKER, Barbara(?) Mrs. Jake)
BARTZ, Lucile Marian - - - - - - - BARTZ, Mary (Mrs.)
BECKER (BAECKER), Catherine (Mrs)
BEETZ, Mildred Louise - - - - - - BELK, Wm. (Mrs.)
BLECHL, Frank Sr.
BLECHEL, (mother of Frank)
BOND, (Mrs.)
BOWEN, Issac
BOWERS, Deloris Ilene
BRADSHAW, Irene Marie
BRAUNOCK, (Lee)
BRAZIL, Mary Clementine
BRECHEISEN,
BREITHAUPT, Salome {Mrs.)
BROERS, Roy Harold
BUCHANAN, J. E.
BURNELL, Stephen Anthony

c

14
196
79
107

28~

153
33

276
91
285
23
282
147

g6

17~

136
38
214
62
225
2
210

145
54

295

211

CAULK, Clarence Nathen - - - - - - 101
CHENOWETH, May - - - - - - - - - 11
CLINE, Nancy M.
44
CLINE, Richard Z • . J,(. ;: ;I.; .;:;n=-f.; ;.;,;an;. ; .t.; :;. .:_)- - - - - 49
CONNER, Charles H. ------------ 74
COOPER, Agnes M.
141
COOPER, Ezekiel Loenard
128
COOPER, Norma
1g7 .
COLLINS, Roy
139
COPENHAVEN, Amos {son of)
104
GRUMBINE, Alice Flora
175
CRUY,RINE, Clementine (Mrs. )
60
CRUNP (CRUMP), Geo. E.
9~
CURLETT, Vera
3

-

�2
D
DAVIDSON, Ollie Ann (Mrs.)
DAVIS, Milton
DEAY, Hattie Arlene
DECK, Benedict
DECK, Fred
DIXON, David
DOBSON, Rev.
DURR, Alfred Frederick Martin
DURST, (Mrs.)
DUTTON, Mrs. Hale
E
EDELBROCK, Cleva
EDER, Albert
EDER, Geo •
EDER, Joseph
EGGERS, Anna
EHLERS, Elmer Richard
EHLERS, Mildred Lucile
EHLERS, Raymond
ELDERS,
ELLIOT, Theresa (Mrs.)
EVERLY, Chas. F.
EWING, Mrs.
EWING, Bunce
E\'/ING, Grace Edith
F
FAITH, Harry Eugene
FINLEY, Marshall
FISCHER, Margurette
FORTNER, Mathew J.
FREEMAN, Sarah B. (Mrs.)
FREISCHMAN (FRICHMAN), Mitchell
FORD, Wm. Harvey
G
GABRIEL, August H.
GABRIEL, Louisa Mary
GARVER,
GATE.'/OOD, Albert
GATEWOOD, Allen
GIERTZ, John Fred
GLASER, Caroline
GORDON, (Infants of C .A.)
GOTTSTEIN, John
GREGG, Jennie (Miss)
GREGG, Simpson
GRIFFIN, Emma S.
GRIFFIN, Tressa Deay (Mrs.)
GUENTHER, Aug
GUENTHER, Harry
H
HADL, Alois
HADLE, Fred
HADLE (HOEDL), Goldie
HAMMER, Elizabeth Wilhelmena
HAJI,'!MERT, Mrs. John
HAMMER, John Gottlieb
HAMMIG, Anna Matilda (Mrs.)

84
95
277
13 2
166
261
191
247
14~

161
~~

198
16 5
275
11 7
57
52
123
229
239
199
176
16~

232
131
270
253
156
218
64
50

96
106
202
18
2~4

186
292
28
263
235
260
142
174
125
245
39
114
109
~9

251

H~2

19

�H (cont.)
HARBAUGH, John W.
HARBAUGH, Mr~. Peter
HARBAUGH, Thomas
HARDIN, Hy
HARRIS, Maxine Rose
HARRIS, Peter
HARRIS, Sylvia
HARRIS, Wm. G.
HARVEY, Flossie
HASTINGS, Joe
HATCHER, Sarah (Sallie)
HAUSMAN, Margurette (Mrs.)
HAUSEMAN, George J. (Sr. )
HAVERTY, Bertha Marie (Mrs.)
HAVERTY, Minnie (Mrs.)
HAYES, William Philip
HENSLEY, Harry H.
HERZ, Joseph
HICKS, Elmer W. (Mrs.)
HICKS, Eugene Hughes
HILL, Sarahr J. M. (Mrs.
HOBBS, El v:ij!a (Mrs.)
HOBBS, Les1ie
HOEDL, Katie
HOEDL, Thresa (Mrs.)
HO'IlSMON, Eliza (r.Irs.
HULBERT, Esther (Mrs.)
HUNTER, Amanda G.
HUNTZINGER, Mary Katherine (Mrs.)
HUNZICKER, Anna Barbara
HUNZICKER, Daniel
J

JOHNSON, (Mtts.)
JOHNSON,Anna Jane (Mrs.)
JOHNSON , Ephram

40
97
70
160
220
6~

219
278
51

297
256

249
15

2~6

81

69

105
65
146
111

61

92

36
99

87
27

47
1

35
80
21

289
124

164

K

KAEGI, John
KANZIG, Jacob
KARGI, Elisabeth Katherine
KILCOIN, Patrick Francis
KING, Frank
KINDRED, Flora Canary
KIRKMAN, (Infant of Geo .)
KOCH, Gottlieb
KOEHLER, Geo. Aug~
KOERNER, MaryS. (Mrs.}
KONMEIER, Freida M. (Mrs.
KRAUS, Alfred Seymour
KRAUS, Pauline G. (Mrs.
KURTZ, Louis John

212
76

300
26

120
242

281
216
169
269

173
243
34
31

L

LAUGHLIN, Edna Catherine
LAUGHLIN, Radie Viola
LAUGHLIN, son of F.C.
LAvlSON, Paul
LEE, Marion
LEE, Rebecca {Mrs.)
LEE, Wallace McCoin

82

205
208

172
184

93

13

3

�L (cont.)
LEFMANN, Clarence - - . - - - - - - - - - - LEPPER, Ivlarie (Ivlrs.
L~NIS, Nellie M a y - - - - - - - - - - - - - LD/IS, Orlantta - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - LEWIS, Roy ..----=-----------LINDLE~, Albert G.
LINDLEY, Eve ret
LOVELACE, Nernian

4
167

262

119
48
1 26
21 5
13 5

153

M

f~DL,

Antonia (Mrs.)
MADL, Frederick
Y~RLEY, Ruby~------------------MARLEY, Wilfred
MARTIN, (Mrs. )
MARTIN, Elsie
MAUL, Reinhard Henry
MAY, Carolina Amelia {Mrs.)
MEHL, Ernest J.
MEINKE, Charlotte (Mrs.)
MEYErt, Levi
MILBURN, Nancy
MOELLER, Eva
MOHLER, Hester Ann
MONGOI'-ffiRY, Anna Mary {Mrs.)
MONROE, Andrew
MONROE, Winnie Lewis (Mrs.)
MOON, Barbara Ellen
MURPHY, (Mrs.)
MUSICH, Ephriam
MUSICK, Mary Ellen (Mrs.)
MYER, Aug.
MYER, Henry W.
Me
McBRIDE, Sarah L.
McCABEIE, I~elissa
McCARTHY, Vina (Mrs.
McMILLER, Hester (Miss

5
129
213
203
130
259
29
90
197

227
75
257
20
266

46
226
183
234
200
10

2eo

152
121
11 3
293
66
190

N

NEIS, Peter Sr.
NEUSTIFTER, Chas. Albert
NEUSTIFTER, Francis Marguerite
NEUSTIFTER, Joseph - - - - - - - - - - - - NOLKEHPER, Mary Eliza - - - - - - - NOWLIN, Hiram - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 0
ORME, Dorcas (Mrs.}
OTT, Dorathy Elizabeth
OTT, Mrs • E.

22
206

PAGE, Henry
PARKER, Charles
PASr,'iARK, Mrs. Amos
PATRICK, Mary D. (I-1rs
PEARSON, Enoch S.
PERRY, Amelia
PIERSON,

290
279

p

55

17

265
1 57
241
112
1 43

25g
12
100
63
137

�R

REED, Louis
REPSTINE, Hattie (Iv1rs. Ruben)
REYNOLDS, Morris Ivan
RICHARDS, Oscar Grinman
RICHARDS, Sophia D.
RILEY, Carrie Olive {Mrs.) _ . _
RILEY, Chas
ROBINSON, Robert
ROBINSON, W.H. (Dr.)
ROE, Amelia Emma
ROGERS Harold
RUSH, James F.
RUSSELL, Francis E. {Mrs.)
RUSSELL, (Infant of Fred)

193
180

SCHEHRER, Stephen
SCHELLACK, Dr. Alvin
SCHEUERLE, Wm
SCHLEIFER, (Mrs.)
SCHMIDT, Agnes Philomena
SCHNEIDER, Rebecca (Mrs.)
SCHOENHOFER, Clarence F.
SCHUBERT, Wm
SCHUBERT, (Mrs. Wm)
SCHULZ, Dora thy E.
SCHUMACKER, Gesine
SCHURICHT, (Chas Mrs
SCHURLE, Minnie (Mrs.
SEITZ, Geo. Jr.
SELZER, (Mrs.)
SIETZ, Theo.
SIMMERS, Tracy {Mrs.)
SISCOE, Mrs. C.
SONNENMOSER, Pauline
SPENCER, Chas • C.
SPRINGER, Johnathan
STADLER, Lucilla L.
STANLEY, Delbert Leverne
STANLEY, Sam
STEVICK, Helen Marguerite
STEVTART, James Chas (Iv1rs.)
STRAWTHER, Joseph
STREIKER, Lester Geo.

140
77
244

s

144

72
231

g

188
255

170

250

296
226
192
189

221
37
59

194
223
2~7
1 18

6
1 51
233
236
195

294
4
150

165
264

41

67
85
291

138
9

134
222

T

TERRELL, Clark
THOREN, Geo.
TODD, Solon Jerome
TRAUNER, Anna (Mrs.
TROBEIDGE, (Infant)
TROUT, Richard (Pvt)

108

VALE, Geo. W.
VAIL, John Edwin
VAN HAYATT, Henrietta H.(Mrs)
VORE, Wm H.

163
115
94

v

162

204

24

248

237

45

5

�w
WALKER, Sarah Elizabeth {Mrs)
i.VALTON, Ben
WALTON, George
WARREN, Edward C.
\•lARREN, Mary Sidney Jane
WARREN, Thos
WATSON, Elizabeth (Mrs.)
WEAVER, Geo. E.
WEIL, Nicholas
'.lESTERHAUS, Chas.
WESTON, Joshua
WHITE, Carl French
vlHITE, James
WHITE, May Etta (Mrs)
WICHMANN, Herbert
WICIDF.ANN, Marie {Mrs. )
WILLIAMS, Sadie
WILSON, Christina (Mrs.)
WILSON, Kenneth
TfliLSON' E .E.
WILSON, Roy
WORTON, Geldien
WRIGHT,

z

ZIEGLER, Arthur James
ZIEGLER, Mathew
ZIESENIS, Caroli_n_e-..,.,(M=-r-s-."~"'")---_-_-_-------ZIESENIS, Johanna (Mrs)
ZU.1MERLI,
-----------

6
25
207

53
149

30
122
102
273
73

32

252
209

83
110
159
1 58
171
56

43
268
1 77

230
201

71

224

240
154

254

�; ~--"

SCHUBERT HGRTUARY -BOCK
No.

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date De c em6c: v I I /'l/2...

Jo/

&gt;

NAME OF DECEASED d/s Altl!INJ?d

G:

) /tuV7ER

Charge to
Other Information

Order given by ____
,, ___?_
·---------------How secured --"O
:;..;e
.......,c..._..;;;.:2~7------...c~.h;.;.."'~
c &lt;..._

W-n

Date of Funeral V,~~--c..~...;/~3_---:;./~?....,jl:....;2.....;;=.__
I .t;£ m,- IJNfi; of Eu4ro-

Place of Death

Funeral Services at

7-te

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman
Physician

hon?e_.
~/11

I

5n~t:.de......;

Rev
Pr

Vann o y

Number of Burial Certicate

.2~ L/'nwood

Cause of Death J3v- ; 7J.,!s Pe ceo;..ss::c
Date of Death Pee. 11
Date of Birth

&amp;6

(""' ........ :11 ....

/V:'L

tuo.r-

7

v

2.

/ 33

~

Occupation --~~~o~~~s~·e~hd~~f~~~-----------Single or Married

tu ~- cloc.J
Religion

Aged

7i

Pres

/ tJ months __9_ days

year:s

Body to be shipped
Styl of Grave Vault

Lot or Grave No.

-----Sec

No.

1
2

34 _ _ _ _ _ __

5

6-------

&gt;

! luNT EK

�SCHUBERT MORTUARY -BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date ,Pee

No.

NAME oF DECEAsED

41&amp;t;)l

C/EmFNT/N£

PRAziL

o-'t.
Eo ~.v. Be,q:z.Jl_ -~- D/JN Blf'.4.? i L

Other Information

.,.,

Order given by---'-' ----------------How secured
Date of Funeral Pee 1.5
Place of Death

zJ.i.

,f F 0 doro...

l:rr/ ~

Blue_

I!J!!zhodi.sr ChtAr-c.b

Time of Funeral Service

d

1 /(.:L

177; 5 E

Funeral Services at

---------

/""e I J m~ n

Physician
Number of Burial Certicate

----

Cause of Death ____.;.._.;.._______,;.____
Date of Death

Pe. c..

lf'JL

/ :L

Date of Birth Oc/q6 er-

~~

Single or Married w ~·c/o w

?b

Body to be

I'?Jb

J;~ crse c.u/ £'= ~

Occupation

Aged

/7/ :Z..

h\ei"l-.ey-

Charge to

Clergyman

/f

years

I

Religion

months ..2/

~hipped

Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

QE/lt

Lot or Grave No.

I

c e.

IY\

Sec No.
1

2

3
4
5
6

days

�SCHUBERT MORTUARY-BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, _1924)
}Date Dec

No. _ _

vc--/?11

NAME OF DECEASED

Order given by __1 -_ _ _ _ _/_,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _
How secured
Date of Funeral J;?ecembe. r

Funeral Services at

2

o

Cow.v/7

1'7I :2...

)

&amp;p/;jL
clu-rrc/;
,
.;'L ? ./7J

Clergyman
Physic ian

122c e n n

,·

ny/; J-f.
~.2.. g'1

Number of Burial Certicate

Date of Death l?e-c l7 /11'Date of Birth

/O a.rTJ .

--------------------

Occupation ---~A0~u~Y~s~~~--------------Single or Married
Religion -----Aged

I fS

years ---~months _____ days

Body to be shipped ---------------Styl of Grave Vault - - - - - - - Interment at

Socrfi S&gt; 'Je.....

Lot or Grave No.

/?!3._.

Other Information

~o

C/rv

Time of Funeral Service

8'

CuRi.ET/

Charge to _ ....G""-=£,;;...;o;;;....._--'-8~~..:.o/?w....;.;:/t?-'------

Place of Death /(qn5

1

-----Sec

No.

1

2---------

3

4-------5 _ _ _ _ __

6 _ _ _ _ __

o£

Geo

PhlR /rJ

�SCHUBERT MORTUARY -BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date_kcember- ..26 / 912-

No. _ _

NAME OF DECEASEDw ·, f.1/k.s:
M'11c V
c_o.:..-..:.,-f,:--_.;..:.:.:...=.,.o/
.__S
_
/) T u

Charge to

1/rJ!Y!ER 5 _ _ _ __
_....~:::;..;_:....=::;..

S /m m £ f(S

s

Other Information
Order given by ---''-------'-'---------How secured
Date of Funeral ....flc___,.e'""'c~_.2.._7____....1.....7...;./._'___
.2.
Place of Death .1... ~

5ot....1h ~a.st ,')

M ·,

Funeral Services at Caf/;o/c_.

Rev

tcAmp

Chur-cb

--------------

d? a m

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman

EAdoro...

+--

St"mmeY'S

Physician
Nuwber of Burial Certicate

-----

Cause of Death

-----------------------------------

Date of Death Pe c...

.:L'f

Date of B i r t h - - - - - - - - - - Occupation -~J.?~
o w~s~e~UY~/·~~~e-~-----------Single or Married

/J1taY' r

Ie

J.

Religion c"'~t)o/; c....

Aged _____ years ______.m onths

days

Body to be shipped --------------Styl of Grave Vault -----------Interment o.t

Ca Th o ;;·c_

Cem .

Lot or Grave No. ______Sec No.
1
2

3
4 -------------

5 ------------6 -------------

�SCHUBERT HCRTUARY-BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date flecember ..29 19 ;,:t_

No.

4/rs. /JtV T CJ Illiff

NAME OF DECEASED

Charge to

;:-IfED

/f)/} J)L

/J1 A .J) l

Order given by_''____,. ._ _ _ _ __
How secured
Date of Funeral :J:Je c...
Place of Death

3 o I '1 I :2--r-o-

C a 7"ht:?~ -c__.

Time- of Funeral Service

/C Cc

Clergyman

~v

Physician

/J. 5 C he 1/a cK

f77 .

/~rnp

----

Number of Burial Certicate

.J?;/q f?on of' the...

Date of Death I}e_ c_
Date of Birth

m e -the r

Eudo
-----------------

Funeral Services at

Cause of Death

Other Information

/9

:2 '1

hea-.i- :Dror s;
1 ..2..-

~ n e.~-~--------------

Occupation _..;..;J!t~~-u....;5;....;~;;..;..;.w_;,_.;.~_.;e..-;;;;;...._ _ _ _ __
Single or Married

tu;~w
Religion

C4~ o~ ~

Aged _ _ years _ _...;months _ _ _ days
Body to be shipped
Styl of Grave Vault

Int~rment at

--------------

Ccttkal&gt;c

Lot or Grave No.

Ce:n?.

- - -·Sec

No.

1

2--------

34 _ _ _ _ _ __

5-------

6-------

"'f

;::::t e

ol

IYJ a. d L

�.. '

SCHUBERT NGRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
')}Date J ao u on·I v ~ '-! I?J3

No. _ _

GESINE

NAME OF DECEASED

Ceo

Charge to

5CI/U/J1-4CKER

1&lt;/JEGi
Other Information

Order given by __~ . _ _ _,_~_ _ _ _ __
How secured

J9 n u a. r

Date of Funeral

-2.- b

v

)

Euc/oY'o....

m/:E co-F

Place of Death3&amp;

Funeral Services at Lu1heYan
Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman

Rc-v

II a . rn.

l. t'/Etu

J D.

Physician

church

Je~

Number of Burial Certicate

c2. 0

Cause of Death

ht&gt;mNrhCJ.ie.. (CerebraL)

Date of Death

Ya n .:'2 Lj
cZ9

Date of Birth ):;. n

/lows c

Occupation

Single or Married
Aged

/7

years

o. m.

3

/ g Lf 5

hi,c_

t&lt;..

w/·Jow
II

Religion :2 wrhe r-an

months

.2.5

days

Body to be shipped
Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

/UAr-()._

Lot or Grave No.

Cem.
Sec No.
1 If/'('. H 5 c h v. n'\ a.. k" e. '("'
2 m rs ~ S c\, y., rn"'- ke.y-

3

4-------

5------6-------

�SCHUBERT MORTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No. _ _

/liF/?EP (;

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

J

I!Jrs

T

Jan

:L9

Other Information

1?/.3

9,' 3

Time of Funeral Service

EJ

C/ . n--7 .

Cause of Death
Date of Death
Date of Birth

an y/n o....
Ianuo..v-y

3% I

pe c/o ri s
.:2'-/

1913

--------------------

Ptfy-s~ · c

Occupation

(Iweh)

I!VEI/.

Number of Burial Certicate

Single or Married

g tJ

0

v

Physician

Aged

ij/1c/e-

Ca fhtJ/; ·'&lt; chuych

Clergyman

/a

'r\

------=--:--~­
Religion

C4~o / · ~

years _ __.;months _ _ _ days

Body to be shipped

----------

Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

13o.. K~y-

C t? .fto!· c.

Lot or Grave No.

1713

EL h1

~~~~~--~~~--

Funeral Services at

:L9

//8])ELAL

Order given by _ _
' -----~/_ _ __
How secured
Date of Funeral

Jan

VL T

C em .

- - -Sec

No.

1

2--------

34 _ _ _ _ _ __

5-------6---------

o-F /?lrs .

:J.J.

£1 M

�SCHUBERT MCRTUARY -BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No. 3 o'if

lflrs CARR.lE

NAME OF DECEASED
w:~e...

{)LJVE

I

I

Order given by __''---~-·-----­
How secured

Feb

.:2..b

~~-~~-------

5&amp; m ~ N .£

Place of Death

Eu do ro...
J
;
4-i 111wooc/
at /lletJ.,ocl'/sT Cl7urcJ...

.

Funeral Servl.ces

Clergyman

-*

Physician

Pr:

5c h n

V.

e ;

.J. Q.. l

----

tP/euri~s

Cause of Death SepT;·c.

Date of Birth

cle. -r-

ec:.,

Number of Burial Certicate

Date of Death

o)

.:L P /11.

Time of Funeral Service

•
h 6 :Z Lj- / 1/3
f2h

/ff%£

/.:L

Occupation _ __,;,..,O;..;;;t:~;..;.tt;.,:;S;..:.e;;;;.:U./=-:;/.-:.fc_e...=-----Single or Married
Aged

.2. 7

years

$ a r- r- i e

cl

Religion _ __

0

months

/~

days

Body to be shipped - - - - - - - - -

Styl of Grave Vault - - - - - - Interment at

..l.;N w oocl

Lot or Grave No.

.:L 5

RiLEy

o~

Charge to __....;
3 ..,.\.;....'"""12:....:.---~~~;L~E+v_ _ _ __

Date of Funeral

;.:e-b

Cw .
Sec No.
1

2

34 _ _ _ _ _ __

5------6-------

Other Information

�SCHUBERT NCRTUARY-BOCK
{Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date
No. 3 0 9'
NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

/!!(s

C1/!JS.

MIYlES

re-b

~7

1913

STEWART

E. U./ KB/IIA S
Other Information

Order given by _ _ _._'- - - - - - How secured
Date of Funeral .:..;!Yl~fi..:...;R~c;.;..h:........:_.....~I_'4:...;J...;:;3;___ _
Place of Death ~F;...;vr.J~o-~..r..:;:;o....;;::....,_---"J.....;:-&lt;..:=::a.:..:.n.:..;s;;...__ _
Funeral Services at }-/otAsc:.,

~-=~------

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman

Rev.

C:Z.. /?/?7.

L aEtU

Physician
Number of Burial Certicate

Date of Death

Fe. b

Date of Birth

rune. 2

.2 7

----

/9 !3
I 873

Occupation Rowse w/ !'e...
Single or Married Ina r r i e
Aged

31

years

'if

c/

Religion _____

months

2. 0

days

Body to be shipped
Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

Eudora..

Lot or Grave No.

Cc&gt;rn.
Sec No.
1
2

3
4

5-------

6 _______

I

;__.,

�SCHUBERT 11GRTUARY . BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date

No. _ _

/!Jarch 5 / Y/.3

f,pJI ~I /-l /Yl /lJtl S lc;l

NAME OF DECEASED

dlrs . E ,41us lc 1-1
given by 5 ,4/(1 Tb P D

Charge to

Order
How secured

Other Information

r&gt;t!'/?

C/'fsH

Sy

(.7

--~~--~~----------

£latch 2

Date of Funeral

/!3.-

Place of Death

I f/3

Sou'fh .,{ Euchro....

!??(

Funeral Services at .&amp;~~~tt..;;;;s.-e.,....__________
.£. r::'/'?'?

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman

Keu.

Physician

..:J?r

!/ern i e--

LauE

$C he.!/a.-c..!.&lt;

,4.

Number of Burial Certicate

:Dt O.be.l-i.s:

Cause of Death
Date of Death

----

/1J0 y-c.h

I~ /3

L-f

/88'3

Date of Birth
F~tmex:

Occupation

Single or Married 'n7V- Y' r- ; e.
Aged

.21

years

Religion _ __

----months ----

Body to be shipped
Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

J

days

-----------------

PE/7y
I

-------Cern .

Lot or Grave No. ____ sec No.
1

2 - -·- - - - - - -

3 ---------

4------5---------

6--------

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�SCHUBERT 1/IGRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No. _ _

NAME OF DECEASED

-J.D.

Charge to

d/1-lI V

Other Information

Physician

I 713

~w&gt;E

~~~-------

Time of Funeral Service

Ve r

cizup{ev-

!f m i ~"'t/, o-F E0 db ro...

Funeral Services at

Clergyman

n -~

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L ov £

\/ATEs

I

Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death

----

~b.sr... c:t j 0 n o'f.
56ecKcauscel f,Y qeergf"t' on

Date of Death ,nii~CH
Date of Birth

t

how e. \s

19'13

Ocr 13 / t?'1.:t...

Sea.~ sT v ~ 5 s

Occupation

Single or Married _S_i_TJ+7-·--~ -:---:---Religion -----Aged c2. tJ

years

f-

months

2-3

days

Body to be shipped
Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

VE/lY

Lot or Grave No.

/7'/3

CJIEJVOU/cr/-1

/lliJ/fCH J

Place of Death S

)

C )-/E/11;2 wETI-J

Order given by _ _'_'_ _ _"_ _ _ __
How secured
Date of Funeral

L!/1/fe-h

I

Cem .
Sec No.
1
2

3

4------5------6-------

o-f:

J D. C H£NoW f;T 11

�SCHUBERT NCRTUARY -BOCK
(Dec. 11, 19·1 2- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date /fie:{ '(C b I 5 Fl13

No. _ _

/IJrs.

NAME OF DECEASED

Charge to

1-/. f

/(}Ar&lt;V
:J) PATR 1-C K.
r .

P/1 TB/c ;&lt;

Other Information

1
/ "'- - - - - - ' ___

Order given by _
How secured . .o;C;;.:;;e.....5~h'---------Date of Funeral I!J~v- c. h l 7
Place of Death

I 9 13

)_in wood

Ks

Funeral Services at /lle/ht:&gt;c:lsr Church
Time of Funeral Service

__ ___
.:2 ..:...-....;...;....;...
? /n

Rev Gr- ee.n e_.
Yr. Wo.. r-; nj

Clergyman
Physician

Y"

Number of Burial Certicate

----

Cause of Death Ccnq~s1lon ~f Lunqs
r
J
Date of Death #larch IS l&lt;f/3
Date of Birth

Januo-r-J
/ICJu-5-ew/~~

Occupation

Single or Married
Aged

7t

c23 18'37

@r-r- i e. J

Religion _ _ __

I
months
years -----'

:L:l..

days

Body to be shipped - - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

/1?1 Co.r-meL

Lot or Grave No.

Li11woool

Cern .

Sec No.
1

2

3

4------5

6 _ _ _ _ __

�SCHUBERT 110RTUARY . BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date /lt:7rch ~o 1913

No. _ _

mr;_CoiN LEE

&amp;/AJ..L4CE.

NAME OF DECEASED

Charge to _...;;;Y:;;..._;.r-..;....__.:;;;:;.J...;_
. ~G-..::...;.....-:L;:;..:E;:;..:E=----Order given by _ _'_'_ _ _
/'----How secured

ll?a vch c-2... I

Date of Funeral
Place of Death

I '113

.1::-f:t c/o ro..... J&lt;a/ls.

Funeral Services at ~Vesoft? Ceme.fa. yy
,

:Z. P /17

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman

L.E

Physician

LEE

Number of Burial Certicate

Sco.Yie..'l

Cause of Death
Date of Death

mra rc..b

Date of Birth

IJv£?r; I

S
---Fe_ye..r

~0

:l. l?

Occupation ----------------------Single or Married
Aged

.:3

years

-----=--=---=--Religion _ __
I c:J

months oZ ?'

days

Body to be shipped - - - - - - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at Pesoro

CerTJ.

Lot or Grave No. _ _ _Sec No.
1
2

3 - -·- - - - 4 _ _ _ _ _ __

5 _ _ _ _ __
6 _ _ _ _ __

Other Information
Son of

'D,... . .J. G-. lEE

�SCHUBERT 11GRTUARY. BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
/Joy-iL 3
1?13
}Date _/-;_.r_ _ _ _ _ __
No. _ _

P/!iL /p .BIJEL /{£I(

NAME OF DECEASED

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/Jlrs. /?

Order given by
How secured

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'/7

C

I

Date of Funeral _#p.,.i/
)

6

Other Information

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_ _~..._.-~-'-'er;;,"n 7
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IYI 3

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------------Funeral Services at /l/et)oclsr ChuYch
Place of Death

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman

:Z: 30 ?m

Fe /~P?~n

ReV

Physician

£

Number of Burial Certicate

Cause of Death lle6\Yt fa;lu're.. .,._ o/Y'opsy
I

Date of Death

.4er-i J :L

Date of Birth

/)pr-;L
;

1?13

/.2...

1835

Occupation __
l?&lt;_c:_0_,_·r_e_cf
__f-_o.._v-_rn_e._v-_ __
Single or Married

Jno..r-y i e.&amp;

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Aged

76

years

Body to be shipped
Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

II

months

~o

days

---------------------

Eudora--

Cern

Lot or Grave No. _ _ _Sec No.
1

2--------

3

4-------5------6-------

BAECKER.

�SCHUBERT MORTUARY-BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date /)pr-i I I

No. _ _

;

Charge to

-f.

C-EaRGE

NAME OF DECEASED

CEo

J!Au&gt;EIYJ4fl/

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1
How secured
a"I cq 5 0
Date of Funeral

t£eri /

Place of Death

g 4"

/~/3

9

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/77/

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;ather of GEo. +- Penr-y
I
(J;~~~.,..e;t sp~,,)

Time of Funeral Service

he/oro-

( TJ-.e..

Clergyman

____

.:Z.:

.....;;;;;:;.....;;..,;;...
30

p

Physician
Number of Burial Certic&amp;~e
Cause of Death 1/cdvulo.vDate of Death

4pr- ;J

6

Date of Birth

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3

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~

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1 '1! 3

IY35

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Religion ------

Aged

?7

years

?

months __.3
___ days

Body to be shipped

---------------Styl of Grave Vault
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/-lowsem/1N ·

/

Funeral Services at Evt:~nta.l/co.l
Cj,l-irch
J

Occupation

19 !3

Ce/??.

Lot or Grave No. _______sec No •
1
2

3

' 4--------5

6--------

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c~o .

fl8lAS€rTifHI

Sr.J

�v /b

SCHUBERT MGRTUARY .BOCK
No.

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

:316

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

.J

JuNE

Date of Funeral

Other Information

3....

J.i~vwoocl

1(/3

Ks.

Funeral Services at hPme of G. PREvo
/t/ a. rn .

Time of Funeral Service

Rev. -J: :B I)RK£R

Physician

:2..7

Number of Burial Certicate

Cause of Death osTet? Co..,.cinomo.. oi SlernlAl'r\
Date of Death
Date of Birth
Occupation

..Ju n~

..Jtt

J

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;

I 9/3

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Lf 2

1913

£ . BLEV/3 N 5

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Clergyman

I

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EO.
PI'? E V o
How secured
J E . BLEliEAIS
chc.c.K

Place of Death

J:ne..

years

f-

months

/

5'

days

Body to be shipped - - - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault

---------no ':;'-.(e..-)

C

1
Interment .;:;;a:.;:;t__,;,:/fl~.-----------...;;--/~"'~f"
/
Lot or Grave No. _____Sec No.
1
2

3-------

4-------5-------6--------

�Fl
/

SCHUBERT HCRTUARY -BCCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date

No. _ _

J L-&lt;ne. /Lf

J&lt;l/3

NAME OF DECEASED
Other Information

Order given by _ //_ _ _ _ _//_ _ _ __
How secured
Date of Funeral

.J

L{ Y\

Place of Death )~ns

e...

1

t

I[' I

C;ry

Co us/ n o f

3

1/?o

Funeral Services at LAibo (/'-&lt;

C!uu-ch

Date of Death """]!,_/,.f,_n;...:...:.e.,;;;__.;...l;:;.;;~;;;;;;.._--.5-a_._Y!)-"'-._
Date of Birth

----------------L~boy-e.r

Occupation ~ck ; Y\l

hll&lt;.{s s:.

Single or Married
Aged c3 5

Religion _ _ __

years _ _-.:months

days

Body to be shipped - - - - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault - - - - - - Interment at

Ca~ol/ e­

Lot or Grave No.• __,;..___sec No •
1
2

3
45 _ _ _ _ __

6

Ch"#s: !f/Etl ST/c[CI?

�SCHUBERT 11GRTUARY -BOCK
No.

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

S/8'

Charge to /J'Jr 5

/'

$et-

/ r

~~--------------------~

I/15.

June... :L y
E

/-/cus e.

--~~~--------

.:L P /17

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman
Physician
Numb~r

17/3

u do ro...

Funeral Services at

Reu 5'm/rh
.S. G. )_e. e-

of Burial Certicate

/&lt;(C.

K

II
----

Cause of Death f?7eurnon i o..Date of Death

June

2.. 7

---~--~----------

Date of Birth NoVEmBER
Occupation

J

I 8'-'-1 1

L tt bore. r

Single or Married

/??a n-ied

Religion _ __

Aged

63

years

7

Body to be shipped
Styl of Grave Vault

months .:L t

Lot or Grave No.

days

------------------------

Interment at Soul-h S/~

C o_
Other Information

Order given by _ _,_. - - - - - - - - How secured

Place of Death

cZ 7 /1/3

/JLBERT GArEwoa:D

NAME OF DECEASED

Date of Funeral

June.

Cem_
Sec No.
1
2

3-------4-------5------6-------

�SCHUBERT MCRTUARY -BCCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No. _ _

NAME OF DECEASED
Cha rge t o

JL-&lt;Ij

.:2..5

/?13

/-/A;tVA -/tl//Ti"LD/l i.//J/J1/J?i G-

I!Jr-s.

/1?;

'1'7 --~/......;..;.'n
~/1_
/11 _ _
G-_ _ __
--'-CL..L-,;..-

Other Information

//

Order given by 11
How secured
----------Date of Funeral

JU (/ v

:2.. 7

1'1 I 3

51:£ m/k.5 oor-!h
Services at lfler/Joc/;si Chur-ch

Place of Death
Funeral

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman

/c:J :Yo

a

171

Rev. //. /l. ;::-e//J??an

J. G.

Physician

4./!. ;::'c:.ih/cr

Ec..Ke.....

l...EE

Ed

Number of Burial Certicate p:-/..:z_.
Cause of Death Uremic..
Date of Death

Ju IJ

Date of Birth

June.

Occupation

Aged 1/0

Po/ 5 ,::;ninJ

ot.S 17/.3

..2..b

/.?73

&amp;a. rr/cd

Rel~i-g~i-on--~~~/ha~st-

c2.£

years ______,;months

Body to be shipped

Intenuent at

-------

Euclor-o.-

Lot or Grave No.

days

---------

Styl of Grave Vault

Cen?.
Sec No.
1
2

3

B/1/fT.C

s;:. /o e-v e '&lt;"S

L~.&lt;.i'he..,....

A;?u5etut"J'e....

Single or Married

~)ower.s

4------5
6-------

�SCHUBERT NCRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No. _ _

EVA

NAME OF DECEASED

/YltJEL.L £R

"" - - - - - Order given by __/._'- - -

How secured

Date of Funeral

A'uq

:J..J_

Other Information

at#(jil~-r
7

1713

--'

{/La The.

Place of Death

J&lt;(qns4. s

Funeral Services at J/quse of

Physician

C:

A/em:c..

c2 J:?/?1.

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman

Rev. Sle./nh/';ne; -r-

PL.

LaThv-op
;

CoY"o

ner

Number of Burial Certicate Sub
Cause of Death
Date of Death

I

5wlc/ele 6y Rev&lt;&gt;/.ver

.sh(&gt;T

d u!J

/a

head

19

/3

Date of Birth

------------------1/pusew/f'c...-

Occupation

Single or Married
Aged

fl. i

Jllarr- i ed
Religion -------

years ____months _____ days

--------------Styl of Grave Vault
Body to be shipped

-------

Interment at

1?13

IVE .#lI C s r-.

C/145.

Charge to

du!J :Zo

Ett dor-a..

Lot or Grave No. ~_?0

Cern
Sec No.
1

2-------3--------

4-------65------_ _ _ _ __

of'

Lhas. .!VEmic

Sr-.

�.;L I

SCHUBERT 1Jf0RTUARY . BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No. _ _

.dug

25

/913

J/tt!V.z i c K E R

-:D/J /1/ IE L

NA14E OF DECEASED

t/

Charge to .J/qniel !ltt/V'z/cKER EsTC?Te..Other Information

Ordersecured
given by -....
Jq...........
hn....___ _
" _ _ _ _ __
How

.4LAj

Date of Funeral
Place of Death

:2..7

/913

~17s.

Euc/ora_

Funeral Services at Germa.n IJ?.E ChV~Ych

II ct. m.

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman

Jill . hldrnar;

Physician

W II

f?o6in.sCJn

Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death

Sea/le. Peb/I/IY
)

Date of Death

4uJ

Date of Birth

Seer

Occupation

----

/?;C

.2 .5 I 9 I 3

I

I

57&amp;/?e..

J&gt;.:l-7

/

~qSO.I/

J//krriec/

Single or Married

Religion
Aged

$3

years

/I

months

.Z 5

/?k7iool-sr
days

Body to be shipped - - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at Et~-c/oro...
Lot or Grave No.

CeO? .

Sec No.
1
2

3-------4 _ _ _ _ _ __

5------6-------

-

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                    <text>SCHUBERT 1iTCRTUARY . BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No. _ _

'1?c!£-R

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

r /?EJ)

Order given
How secured

by_"'_'~'

Date of Funeral

IVEIS

AIEl 5
Other Information

___"'_
' _ _ _ _ __

SepTember
v

.2_

;::_;!ley-

ICJ 13

Funeral Services at Evanqe//co.
J ChuYch
,
Time of Funeral Service

/,. 3o ?. /7?.

Clergyman

C F. /(/t"phc:n-dr

Physician

..J. G.

Lee_.

15

Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death Ce'rc::tn·-o-..\

llu§

Nemov-'rho..'je...

31

1913

Date of Birth 1-::.-e_ Ia Y"IA~~J :LS
Occupation

Re... \ . Fo..Y'

Single or Married
Aged

8 J__, years

"YYl

I

831

e. -v-

bJ , dok.le_r _,__~
Religion Pro tes'ta.'t'\1-

6

months

---

days

Body to be shipped - - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault - - - - - - Interment at

Eudora_

Lot or Grave No.

1913

Sr.

Place of Death / m/ .£4:s/ ~-;:.EUdora._

Date of Death

4'1Jqs-;-- 3 I

Cem.
Sec No.

,
32-------_ _ _ _ __
4 _ _ _ _ _ __

65------_ _ _ _ __

o

f

/'![E P

/(/E J 5

�SCHUBERT MORTUARY -BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date

No. _ _

Charge to

CIJ rh'Ef?IIVE

/tlrs.

NAME OF DECEASED

Se,e!
/1
p-

/7/3

23EC /('ER

AJ.BE!?T P BEcKER

Order given by _"_ _,,___/_/_ _ _ __
How secured

Sep/
/ '1
p

Date of Funeral

Other Information
,~v,:f'e.

C'

F

/lL BERT?.

/7'/3

Place of Death W~o c/b/ne.

~.

Funeral Services at Ger-mctn $. E ChtAY"ch

:L P.//l

Time of Funeral Service

~ldmqn

Clergyman

1/.

Physician

k/. B. /os /E/?

Number of Burial Certicate /7/-.2./ ,c
J;;xic maTeri o./

Date of Death

Sep"/ /6

-

;

J3

abs~-rbed F-rom

~.bsr;.,_.cTed b ot.&lt;..Je/

-----------Occupation ___A_~_
~u_s~~
~U/~~~·F&lt;-~--------------Date of Birth

Single or Married
Aged

53 years

.#7ar;- i e

o/

Religion ef~/~o~sr-

---~months

Body to be shipped

ra

______ days

EucloY'o-.. fr-o~n LuooJh;ne_.

Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

E u d oro..

Lot or Grave No.

Ce.m .

Sec No.
1

2

3

4------5 _ _ _ _ __
6
-------

an

BECJ(ER

�SCHUBERT MORTUARY -BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date tJc/CJber 8

No. _ _

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

$r.s. /4#/Y/l · /RALIIVER

C R E I tv E R

)-/E!{!(l/J IV

Order given by lllrs

Other Information

/Jl!l.RV /{055

;Lf ;L"a

£ 4m e. Co~&lt;dc/ be.

Ter~C\Ce ST I(C /flo.

Date of Funeral OcT, /t:J 1713
Place of Death

/J?,p/Jer -i n-lav,;

Eqo/a ra-- Kt:tns

Ca Tho(/c. Church
Time of Funeral .Service
'f 3r::J
Clergyman ;::; r)er
Erie 5 bey-5
Physician
J G. Lee_,
Funeral Services at

Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death Cere. bra- L
Date of Death Oe-! g
Date of Birth

)8
----

Hem 9 r-r- ha-..j v

1913

---------------------

Occupation ;/qusetvi f e.
Single or Married
Aged

7lf

Body to be

-----=-._-.,---Religion _ __

---- days
shipped
-----------------

years

months

---~

Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

Ca lhc;/)c

Lot or Grave No.

/Cf/ 3

Cem.
Sec No.
1

2--------

34 _ _ _ _ _ __

65------_ _ _ _ _ __

/ e /1 N NE15

.-t )/e·on&amp;. n ~RE iNE~

�SCHUBERT MCRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date

No. _ _

_~._
,

Place of Death

Other Information

_ _ _ _ _A_~ _ _ __

Oc/ober

Date of Funeral

13

wt"£~

f' So(.(th ~- we&gt;.sJt7FEucfbro-...
~-~------

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman

J

D

Physician

/-/.

Jones

)_ e vi

£/by

/? /1.

/

/77 iLl 5
Corone.r

I 9

Number of Burial Certicate

bv
7

Cause of Death Suicide
Date of Death

OcT

Date of Birth

&amp;ar-ch

/c::J

h4nq/nc;
I

v

/?/3

1%71

..2 3

//owse cu,·fe.

Single or Married

»?cr ·o --/ecl

Religion _ __

Aged

f:L

years

6

months

/7

days

----------Styl of Grave Vault

Body to be shipped

Interment at

Evtdoro...

o-f ~!f/JIVX W/JLYER

/7'1..3

Funeral Services at ~47~

Occupation

/9/3

W/l j_ /{EIf

/'"/f411/ K

Order given by
How secured

1/

#/rs. ~48/Jf/ ·E i. t Zrt/3E/JJ W/lJ.){E.R

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

Oc.JC;.ber-

Cen?. ·

Lot or Grave No • .:2 3 ;;_ Sec No.

f

1

2

3

4-------5

6 _ _ _ _ __

)

l;t)ooDA 1~ D

~

):. I owe..- s

C WilL/{£/?

�SCHUBERT MORTUARY -BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date ;1/t? vembc:. r- I /913

No. _ _

~T J?lc f( CI?/JIVC

NAME OF DECEASED

;s

;,;i.Ca;#

Charge to _.:..;./J/._'E_LJ._I..;;;.E;.__..;_Rt;..;.tJ...;;;~;..;;.~.....;..X'_S..;;...'tJ.;;...'A/
_ _ __
Other Information
-fade r

2.. ~ m /· ~rth ,p-f' Eu/or-o...

Funeral Services at CA;r/ltJ~/C Cj/11/f'C//
Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman

W,

II.

9' a.m.

#?oi7~Y

l?;;binst:Jn

.:LcJ

Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death

Seni )e.., :I/ /t::t

Date of Death 11/o V
Date of Birth

/

r-r-hoe.0-.

7 30 a.m.

1'113

---------------------

Occupation --~~~a~Y.....;..~~e.....;..r_______________
Single or Married

J.vl ~cue r

Religion _ __

Aged _ _ years _ _ _months _ __ days
Body to be shipped - - - - - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault - - - - - - - - - - Interment at

CCIT/;o/; ·c__

RoberSOh

-------------------------

&amp;ther ~r/e sbeJ

Physician

A/e/// e

1913

Date of Funeral Jf/tJJ/ctnber 3
Place of Death

or

Cel77.

Lot or Grave No. _ _ _Sec No.
1
2

3--------4 _ _ _ _ _ __
5------6--------

�/ £,- ·

SCHUBERT MORTUARY -BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date @Yem6r::r

No. _ _

NAME OF DECEASED J/rs . Ei./.:z/1
Charge to

J!

l-/owS/J'1tJ/I/

Jlow s /YJoN'

11/

Other Information

Order given by_'_(--:---/-'-----How secured
c~$ H

Mt:~:tfer of-

7

Date of Funeral A/tJYember

L /;vwoo cl

Place of Death

Funeral Services at J/.Mse..

4 South L/Nwoool

Time of Funeral Service

:Z /-?/?1.

Clergyman

.P t:t /ne /5

Physician

J

tv. Wo...r r- i n :J
3:2....

Number of Burial Certicate

Po. r- a_ I ~

Cause of Death

Date of Death Nov.

5

sis

Sep I

Single or Married

b7

5

/9J3

I '8LJC

lhc.

s; Je.

._;_

ffictse..~o/ Fe.

Occupation

Aged

J

/913
(t..n-;1ier-&gt; .,.-;-

Date of Birth

years

W/~cu

Religion _ __

---·months

Body to be shipped /f411.5 Cil"y
&gt;

Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

6 1913

days
.4/o.

-------

rC)r-esr //;'!/ /( C ,///cJ. Cem

Lot or Grave No.

- - -Sec

No.

1
2

3------4------5
6-------

.#.k/. l~tu51Y7oN

�SCHUBERT 11J:GRTUARY -BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date /J/t?Y. :2_3

No.

NAME OF DECEASED

RE!tVH F'\RD

HE"Iv'RV

/ 7/3

lf1Avtl-

/

Charge to
Order given by
How secured
Date of Funeral

Other Information

R.

/YJ vs

J\/o ve m

IY'I A !..-\ L

;2.5

be r

Place of Death -~~;...-c....:;..f..;;.d.;....o;...;....r.;;.o--.;..__ _ _ __
Funeral Services at

j_ 0lhcv-a., Chv.v-c:.h

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman

D.., ..J Cr

Physician

Number of Burial

Date of Death

Lee.-

Certicat~

----

Nov :2.3

------~---------

Date of Birth Ocrobe_r-

[

I 85/

Occupation ___S_e~0~\~o..;;.w;___ _ _ _ _ ____
Single or Married

»Ja.yv-- i e

J
Religion -------

Aged

r;~

I

years

months

/5

Body to be shipped
Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

£

Lot or Grave No.

t{

ci(:J Y' 0...
/ 55

Cern.

Sec No.
1

2
3
4

5
6

days

�v
SCHUBERT NCRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date

/YtJJ/ ~L/

/7'/3

No.
NAME OF DECEASED /tl!J~y 5/.D!VEy J/IA/E W/lf?!fEN
I

J

Charge to --'-/}...;.h.;...;t?
;...5~._.:;.W..;.......'A_If.:..;.lf.:..:E:;;.:tV~----

Other Information

Order given by_'_'__,_,_____________
How secured
hv
Chs.c:,.K
;
Date of Funeral !Vo vembc.y- 2.. 5"

Linwood

Place of Death

~~~~~--------

Funeral Services at

/!letAoc/;s/ C./;urch

Time of Funeral Service

,;2/30

---~.;:;;......

____

r/.ocve-rs -

Clergyman

J.

Physician

w~-.v-·,

LU.

ng
:53

Number of Burial Ceri..icate

Cause of Deat\1 Jun-JtJr qbdomfno.l Co.viTj
Date of Death
Date of Birth

!Vt?V .,:!..If'

-~--~~--------

Oe.cern ber 2 3 / ?77

Occupation --~~-~-u-5~e.~4&lt;~/~·r,-~=--------Single or Married /J1a rr/ e. cf
Religion - - - - Aged i/5

years

II

1 __ days
months _ _

Body to be shipped - - - - - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

/- / /1//A./oool

Cem.

Lot or Grave No. ____Sec.No.
1
2

3

4------5
6-------

r:?

5/evens

"/J;ar.d E. 5 re v~ n s

So ·

�I

SCHUBERT MORTUARY -BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
__.
}Date -J?~n 3

No. _ _

Kuerz

jt)uis

E5/aTe..

Other Information
?

/{ujfcz_

/lEN!( V

Order given by
How secured

.-ft:?j'je¥- of Louis ~ y- Jlenry

-------------------- . . ld
7

..,.....

Date of Funeral

tLc:&lt; n

Place of Death

3

/

/?7/

{S~o

a

ro

I 1I3 _

be.\

J9J'f

/

EasT

Funeral Services at _.../:...;.~..;;.a...;..~..;,_.;;e..;;:;.;..________
.:2. ~/JJ.

Time of Funeral Servic-e
Clergyman
Physician
Number of

Bur~al

Certicate

----

Cause of Death Pneumoai~

Jo. n

Date of Death

3

Date of Birth Pee

h

Occupation

r

Single or Married
Aged

~7

7

q

-r 3':..o

P/?'1

/F:lb&gt;

me r-

/J2c?t r r i e. d

Religion _ __

2 b

years _ _,_.;months

days

Body to be shipped - - - - - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault - - - - - - Interment at

El1. do v-o-...

Lot or Grave No.

'1 I 'I

/. CJU is ~IItV )(tl/f T z

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

I

Ce.m.
Sec No.
1

2--------

3

4------5------6-------

�SCHUBERT !JICRTUARY . BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No. _ _

C!/IJ5

NAME OF DECEASED

Order given by __1_
How secured

'Is.LO.

n

8

J~ 13

IV [ .o-f

I?? i

Son

Time of Funeral Service

Euclo ro...

------

Clergyman

..T. ~ . lee

Number uf Burial Certicate
Cause of Death 5uicid~

----

t.vifh

r0

zov-

Date of Death ~t-tA-;.;;..;..,;Y'l..._.:;:;.5_ _ _ _ _ __

Occupation

-----------------

-""'"6....;o.;;.;.Y-..YY'I.:..;...;...e.-.-r..___ _ _ _ _ __

Single or Married

:m a.v-r- ; e J.
Religion _ __

Aged _ _ year5 _ _....;months _ _ _ days
Body to be shipped

---------------Styl of Grave Vault
-------

Interment at

~----------------

Lot or Grave No.

- - -Sec

of

;/ciVRV
7

k/£5/E,f')//JUS

ViJLf
("",;nc.,··-0 - - - - - - - - - - -

Funeral Services at

Date of Birth

/9/tj

Other Information
____
" "- - - - -

Place of Death .:1 ~

Physician

5'

WE 5 T:EI? JIA US

1

Date of Funeral

Jan

No.

1

2---------

3

4--------5--------

6 -----------

�SCHUBERT HCRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No. _ _

;soSEPH

Charge to

C.

JA/n£5

NAME OF DECEASED

BALES

Other Information

/(

Order given by --------------------How secured
Date of Funeral _.E____;e;...;b~....;~;;..._________
Place of Death Pro.r',e_

Cen'\re..,

Funeral Services at Fr ·, en Js

Ch\AY"c.b

Time of Funeral Service--~)~)~~~-~~~·--Clergyman

~;umber

~-~- WooP11R.P

of Burial Certicate

Cause of Death En/q . . 9 emen1:
Date of Death Fe. b 7

----

of heo.. . . !-

~~~~-----------

Date of Birth

OcTcz bee

&amp;r

Occupation

?

I F35

Fo..ymer-

Single or Married ___
/J?__;...----;:::-- ~--,--Religion _ __
Aged

7 9'

3

years

months

.2_

Y'

days

Body to be shipped - - - - - - - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault - - - - - - - - - Interment at

Pr-o..

Lo~ or Grave No.

Y

I e..

/717'

BAL£5

,,

Physician

/Cb 7

Cehlr e.

- - -Sec

Ct&gt;rn .

No.

1

32-------_ _ _ _ __
4 ----------

65 ---------_ _ _ _ __

�SCHUBERT NCRTUARY -BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date
No.
NAME OF

!Zu

DECEASED

.Jo HAI

Charge to

f3;uti#£

/.(lfA ?1 s

/!Jt?. r-

Place of Death

rt

J

Othe~

w/-f"C

Jlll L(

mi tV£

t~F Eudo~a.­

Funeral Services at Lu-rAc:.r- t1t.. Y\ Cb t-J..rc J,
Time of Funeral Service -"-J__.;../?_41._._ _
Clergyman

/?e v.

Physician

G

Loe t,u

/Yl. ~nc/e rso h

Number of Burial Certicate ? .P/sTJft ~
Cause of Death chrt:Jni c.. Brt/hC hi 115
Date of Death

£e/?

:2.6

Date of Birth

/!Ja. r-

7

Occupation

!91'1

/9

~ 2"

!le((sc. tL-// f'e-.

Single or Married $ar-rie

d

(.{tie Yt41?

Religion k

Aged

~S

years

II

months

/ J?

days

Body to be shipped - - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault
I::terment at

514t~o/rc/-H-! G-~lion

EwdoV"o....

:L/

111~

C, KRAus

Order given by __/'_ _ _
-r _ _ _ _ __
How secured
Date of Funeral

rc /:;

C.c.k??-

Lot or Grave No. ____S.ec No.
1
2

34 _ _ _ _ _ __
5

6-------

Information

cf JOJ./N KRAL15

�t::Ys SCHUBERT NCRTUARY .BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No. _ _

NAME OF DECEASED

Charge to $rs

)11rs. lfll!!fV Mc!IE!?!NE
)

Other Information

l?&amp;der of /llrs.

Date of Funeral /!J#ffC/1 /0 (;?/f/

Kans.

Ewc:lora-

Funeral Services at !llethoolsf: Chto~ch
~lt:J;:;....;..::3::.....;;_~---­

Clergyman
Physician

M /1 '/fqbt.l?5on

----

Number of Burial Certicate

Cause of D e a t h - - - - - - - - - - - Date of Death /Jlar-c h .8"
Date of Birth c/cfe;pe

Single or Married
Aged

g3

/9 !If

r- .:5

/?3t.7

1/rr qsel&lt;/; I'G

Occupation

----=~-=--Religion _ __
5

years

months

5

days

Body to be shipped-------------Styl of Grave Vault - - - - - - - Interment at

..DE// V

Lot or Grave No.

/11~

!!1iL BURN

,4//4/IIC V

Time of Funeral Service

?

/(qNT ;ziNG-ER

I

Order given by ____,_,_________/_,______
How secured

Place of Death

#/av-

I

---Sec

No.

1

2---------

3
4 ----------

5-------6--------

A/AA-"CY
d1iLBURI'{
I

�SCHUBERT 1IIGRTUARY . BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date /1!/l;f

No. _ _

i. E5i./E ~885
S /-J/fl L w. LE ?PEl:(

IY

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

1

Other Information

Order given by
How secured
----------Date of Funeral /J1ar

father of SAtrlL Y.J. LEF?ER

IV-71

.:2.:!._

Pla c e of Death ---:E::..::;uL.lda~..:.r..;;;o..-;.;;:;.. _ _ _ __
Funeral Services at fit&amp;e. tJO Jl'laln
~

Time of Funeral Service

.sr

P. /1?.

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death

----

-----------19 If'

Date of Death /!Jarch Jg'

/1!/ly 17'
/8'38'
k I &amp; Y!?? e.x·

Date of Birth
Occupation

~--~~--~---~--

Single or Married __._//...;...;....----=-- ~.,..--Religion _ __
Aged

75

year5

I0

months

7'

days

Body to be shipped - - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault - - - - - - Interment at

Ce~n.

fuclor6-&lt;

Lot or Grave No. _ _ _ sec No. _ _
1

2--------

3

4-------5------6-------

�SCHUBERT HGRTUARY -BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date 1/l;;!fC!I :!.. 5

No. _ _

IJC/J/ES

NAME OF DECEASED

S'C /J /YJ IPI

lr'/JsBE!fC-ER

/J?;/(E

Charge to /!Jrs

;.?1/ii.-CJME!VA

Other Information

Order given by _____''-----------~----How secured

l

/?/r5 ~/.("e. /&lt;{q s be yj~ r- ·

Date of Funeral /ttfaz// .:2. 7
Place of Death ~ /1orlh

".p Euo/oY"a....
Cc:;/ho;;·G Ciurch

Funeral Services at

/ cJ a.

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman

Fa The r

Physician

£U; ru

FY.; e s

Yn .

b .e.- 'r- j

S w dIe._..,_

r- n

Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of

---Death
--------------------

Date of Death

JJ2a cc b

Date of Birth

Ja 11

Occupation

Yg

years

2

I Cf If

!lofe/ ;'r, C01{·F PalacG

, -h

57 n

rh

/ ?7 ~

I

Single or Married
Aged

:LL/

.:Z.!

J";;y-£/g dv

q.

_;

Religion _ __

3

months

days

Body to be shipped --------------Styl of Grave Vault - - - - - - - Interment at {q(h~·k
Lot or Grave No.

/ y/ f"

C em.
Sec No.
1
2

34 _ _ _ _ _ __
65------_ _ _ _ _ __

�SCHUBERT HGRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date
No.

-Isso... C. BowEN

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

S. /J1. BowEN

Order given by __'·-=-~------How secured
Co..sb
Date of Funeral

Other Information
~afhe r-

/17av-c.b 30 /9 Ji..f

Place of Death

)__in IA.)oo

J

k.s

Funeral Services at ....hf..._o;;...u_s;_e.=------Time of Funeral Service .3.... ·.3'0

em

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate

----

Cause of Death J.~cKed Boc..vel
Date of Death /7lo.v- .2...9
Date of Birth
Occupation

July

%T

/91'f

/8'!&lt;J

:2.5

,.C.:;{ v- rn e r

Single or Married h/ oltJ t-V e vReligion _ __
Aged

4lar :Z 1 ! ?If

;f '1-

years

Body to be shipped
Styl of Grave Vault

f?

months

days

--------------c eez.

Interment at .ll'/1/tut/'Od
Lot or Grave No.

f

Sec No.
1

2---------

3

4-------65--------------

o-f:

5 /11. B

D WE /II

�SCHUBERT MCRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date

No. _ _

.h}Pri I

13

/9/'/

NAME OF DECEASED

/l j_ 0 is

Charge to

Jillol,

Jr.

Other Information

,.

Order given by ----~-'---------------­
How secured
Date of Funeral

,4_or i I

'f

I

;

fa tier

Place of Death _..E...-.-.u.....~---~--r..:::;;;o.....;.;;;;___________
Funeral Services at

Cadle Churc.h

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman

h t/, e 'r

/tJ

Cl, In,

Fr-e /.s be rj

.;J. G; L e. e_

Physician

Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of DeathOrfJo..n;c.
Date of Death

Apr/!

Date of Birth Pee.

----

hetJc..rr dlseo..se..
/f/f

/,:?__

/?'37

-25'

• Occupation _ __._1:::.....a...,Y;...;I??---.........
e._.,......_ _ _ _ _ __
Single or Married 0/ctc.v e. r
Religion _ __
-:--~-

Aged

26

years

3

Body to be shipped
Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

17

months

days

------------------------

C afitJ~ ,c

Cem,

Lot or Grave No. _ _ _S,ec No.
1

2

3

4-------5-------6-------

~ f'

/l}.tJ!,S

///(])L

j ~'"·

�SCHUBERT HORTUARY.BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date

No. _ _

Order given b y - - " - - - / /_ _ _ _ __
How secured
Date of Funeral /Jpri I

br()TJt'Y af t#,15. /f;8BAUGI/

Place of Death _._/._/.....
&gt;7..;..u.--.o....,o.....cl
________
Funeral Services at

!J1edool:sr durch

Time of Funeral Service

2 /?/??.

~ranl~s

Yr.

.Lee.

?It?

Number of Burial Certicate

Cause of Death UllCer-- of ~/yc:. vDate of Death

dfo?ri I

~/

IVY

Date of Birth - - - - - - - - - Occupation ckr!( in
Single or Married
Aged

'/ 7

Me

/l7o..v..,.\ (:.

d

s/o,..~

Religion _ __

years _ _....:months _ _ _ days

Body to be shipped - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault - - - - - - Interment at

/f/~

Other Information

/9/7(

;l.:L

•

Physician

;

Jfh!V /J/lR 8/ltiGI/

NAME OF DECEASED

Clergyman

/lpril 21

&amp;T S/ol/7e 't

Cem.

(

Lot or Grave No. _ _ _Sec No.
1

2

3 --·----4 -------

5

6-------

�SCHUBERT NORTUARY.BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date ~v. -2?

No. _ _
NAME OF

J'tJ IIA//l T f//-1 IV

DECEASED

Charge to

_./1~=---·....:S~,P~R~ilv'~G:-=E::...:I;...:~----

Order given by __,_,___/_"_ _ _ _ __
How secured

Ajzr-

Date of Funeral
Place of Death

L

Other Information
ft:~de 'C of

1'1 /.Z:

30

~&lt;'\ v~nt..•.n,.,."th

Co.

-f/?7./ A/.

of

kc&lt;·

Et-tckYo.....

Funeral Services at - - - - - - - Time of Funeral Service

-------

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate

----

Cause of Deathc:2rJ4nic hc&lt;Arr c:lc:cca.se. r "3'!-"'"J
Date of Death

/ler 2?
}

IfF!

Date of Birth ..J?ece.;-nbe:.r !5
Occupation

!?e. r

~a)'")?? L

/8'3.:&lt;_

y-

Single or Married Ju/c/c,c.ue r
Religion -----Aged

'1I

7

years

/3

months

Body to be shipped ,4ryC/;//e.

days

$t?.

&gt;

Styl of Grave Vault - - - - - - Interment at dfa;ryC/;/k

CeJ?? .

&gt;

Lot or Grave No.

/? /;/

Sec No.
1

2--------

3

4------5
6-------

//. ~P r i h( e..r-

�SCHUBERT 11CRTUARY- BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date
No.
NA!&gt;1E OF DECEASED

k/!'!l

Charge to

pE#JAmiN F

/l!.L iS o II/
Other Information

£by ..3 1'1/L/
I
Death .Jlf mi /1/. W of L/)'7tvoocl

Date of Funeral

Funeral Services at /Jlcth~sTChttrch

.:L

Time of Funeral Service

P /?1.

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of DeathCanCC'r of
Date of Death ~e&lt;; v I

----

bla.dcle r-

;r1/f

Date of Birth t?c;,(;ber- ~ 1

!reT

Occupation

Single or Married
Aged

7f

years

I g 3'1

Fa &gt;rYn er
/7laYY'i c: d

Religion _ __

b

L

months

days

Body to be shipped - - - - - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault ------------Interment at

.:1..

/-li.L15otV

Order given by ___
''-----~-----------How secured

Place of

&amp;.v
I

N Sidney

CeH?.

Lot or Grave No. _ _ _sec No.
1
2 --·-----

3

4-------5-------6--------

�SCHUBERT 1JIGRTUARY . BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date ~v
I

No.

NAME OF DECEASED

Order given by
How secured

Jcs/pf-1 WiLSON

#y

Date of Funeral

Other Information

,tY.

Wesler.i-?o.tAse..

5~n of $r5 Jos//l)/ WILSON

19/~

4/o. y b

---+,~~--~~------

Place of Death ;L m; 111 ~ of
Funeral Services at

hok Y~

----------------

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of

---Death
---------------------

Date of Death

No. y 7

Date of Birth

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(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date
No.
NA!.m OF DECEASED .

J.

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I

-----------------------

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Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman
Physician

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Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death Cttncer

of breCA.s't-

Date of Death /JJc:~.y :LQ

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Place of Death I holf Ml Mrlh of L/!Jwoo

years

v

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Date of Funeral /J1~y

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7

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1
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�SCHUBERT HCRTUARY . BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date

No.

Vo 8E
B C. /J1 j rc!IELL

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Other Information

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Ev

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9

Number of Burial Certicate

Cause of Death Cancer of )o.r1e., i n"tes[i ·r;e..
Date of Death

June_

2.... /9/Z:

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-23,
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71

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5

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1
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65 _ _ _ _ __

�SCHUBERT HCRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date ~ne.. c2../

No.

NAME OF DECEASED

A 1/NA IJJ/JRY /J1oJVG o41ERY

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Clergyman
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Number of Burial Certicate

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Cause of Death /u/;erct1/osrs of JefTlu)'lf!
Date of Death

J:tn e.

Date of Birth

OctO be.v-

~()

171'1
/'6'

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.zo

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171'(-

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�SCHUBERT 11CRTUARY . BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No.

NAME OF DECEASED

Date of Funeral JU11~

:2 s&gt;

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;

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----

--------------------

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I

years

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/6

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�SCHUBERT 1ftGRTUARY- BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No.

NAME OF DECEASED
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Number of Burial Certicate

----

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Date of Death

fu It

Date of Birth

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(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
~
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Cause of Death

Cholc;.ro.._

Date of Death 4 i-f§.
Date of Birth

F

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SCHUBERT MGRTUARY -BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912 - Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date #t~q 30
No.

Jr/:!.- !/IJ!fYE V r0RD
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NAME OF DECEASED
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Order given by _____"__________
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/&lt; _ _ _ _ __ _

Date of Funeral

/nfanl Son

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I

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/.3

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--

1

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45 ----------_ _ _ _ __

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�SCHUBERT MCRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

See(
23 / ?; y
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No.

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NAME OF DECEASED

/ //l/{VEV
7

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/

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Date of Funeral
Place of Death

E. /!/!/ 77/ o/t/y
7

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Clergyman
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Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death f?tlmtJna~ry
)

Date of Death
Date of Birth

//

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S ep/ ~I !?/Y:.
'

-------------

Occupation - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Single or Married
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/6

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years _ _ _m.onths _ _ _ days

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-------

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Lot or Grave No.

Cem

Sec No.
1
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34 _ _ _ _ _ __

-_
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�SCHUBERT 11CRTUARY . BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

5ep T 2 7 17/Y
I

No.
NAME oF DECEASED
Charge to

/ll;LOifE.D L.uc iLE

:rb!I!V r

E 1/LE/?5

£/ILEI?S

Other Information

Order given by __,,_ _ _ _ _ _ __
How secured
0

Date of Funeral

dr~&lt;'?/r~r
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Sep/ 30
;

Place of Death ./{{ so~lh

Funeral Services at Lvanrelico.l Chtrrc/;
Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman
Physician

~

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MY. Ceo. SChYenK'
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Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death
Date of Death
Date of Birth

----

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'
'
.$'"'e;eL
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Z

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Lot or Grave No.

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3 _ _ _ _ __

4 _ _ _ _ __
5 _ _ _ _ __
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                    <text>5.3't-- '

SCHUBERT MCRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912 · - Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date

No. _ _

Ceor5e

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

WA'LJ??;V

/!. H1lRYE7 Y

/)j_ F.

Order given by ___'_'_______/_,________
How secured
Date of Funeral CcJ;;.ber

/;?/~

/3

.L:-0doro.....

Place of Death

Funeral Services at B~fi}/is
r
,

Church

..::Z , 30 P/??

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman
Physician

Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death
Date of Death

Occupation

----

--------------------

OcTo6e.r- /I d

Date of Birth ..Dec

Rer

Single or Married

/2?~5

_2 5

,h;r-f77e r

kJ/clocuec/

~~-

Religion _ __

Aged

years

9'

/6

months

days

Body to be shipped - - - - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault

----------

Interment at 5CJ~tis,-/e_
Lot or Grave No.

t1;/o.ber- /I 17/Y

Ce~.

Sec No.
1
2

3-------4------5--------6-------

Other Information

�SCHUBERT MORTUARY -BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date

No.

Ro7V

NAME OF DECEASED

Cct?.

Charge to

.

[3/(tJEifS
Other Information
Soa

/),~ -r- /.L/ _/h

[/v/
-/
~~~--~----------

Place of Death SimmNJ5 &amp;se/il ./c;wr-t&gt;nce_

'

Funeral Services at Ge'f'ma Yl /Yl. £ . Church
Time of Funeral Service

__ :J _
;-:? 177.

_....;...;..._...

..;;;;__

Clergyman

II .11. h lei1771?1 n

Physician

/leYw;n

T

Date of Death
Date of Birth

/~

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IF'

Single or Married

Siru:;/e,
Religion

r

/

5

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Occupation

Aged

__

Sttdle"r

Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death

I

years

Body to be shipped
Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

months

c2

7'

methodis I
days

---------------Cemt&gt;I?T l/a(41r

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Lot or Grave No.

/.3 /f/Y

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c.hccK
Date o f Funera l

aI

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No.

1
2

3------4------5
6-------

of Ceo.

8RtJERS

�SCHUBERT 11GRTUARY -BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date Cct:-2.0

/9/:C

No.
NAME OF DECEASED

F!?l!tVC/s - 41#/fGUERifE

,AIL !3ERT 11/E"ttSTI FTEB

Charge to

Other Information

1
'-----------------

Order given by ____
How secured

t/c. / . L:t,• 1&lt;7/ f

Date of Funeral
Place of Death

Eu z/oy-o- ~ns

C;;wYch
Time of Funeral Service 9 a. 1?7.
Clergyman /?e v. /11. h/es berJ
Physician
/ / S: C:t:Av-dne rFuneral Services at UJX'oijC

IS

Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death

-------------------

Date of Death

O'c loPe r- c2..0

Date of Birth

_Vt..;;;;c;._T_
.

/f/Y

_-.J.i___/_'f_/....;;3_

Occupation ------------------------Single or Married S/n)i
Aged

/

yea~s

_ __.;months

/6

days

Body to be shipped ----------------Styl of Grave Vault ------------Interment at

Ca rho!/'=&lt;

Lot or Grave No.

- - -Sec

/VEUsT/FTER

No.

1

2---------

3
4 ------------

5 -----------6 ----------

�v
SCHUBERT NCRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date t/c J;J.er c2.../f' 17'/9'

No.
NAME OF

4/rs. C///f/5T;/v/l

DECEASED

Charge to

W;L5tJN

C WIL 50!1/
,,

Order given by
How secured

Other Information

//

c(;\ ~h

Date of Funeral vel o25 ?
Place of Death

jf/7'

L/./?t-Uood

Funeral Services at ~~~c~u=s~~=-------­
Time of Funeral Service

/ ~$.

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death

cJio/ o.ye. -r &lt;jenera L deb i I~· (]

Date of Death uGr
Date of Birth

----

:ru.JJ

.2i

/?It
/ J&gt;..Z.Z

,;;2_0

Occupation ,i,use. 4..//Fr;.
Single or Married ~/~~
Aged

f5 7 years

3

Body to be shipped

Religion _ __

months

f'

days

----------------------

Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at &amp;T
Lot or Grave No.

------SJ·/ /lo/

- - -Sec

No.

1
2

3 _ _ _ _ __
4 _ _ _ _ _ __

5------6-------

b

.

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SCHUBERT 1/ICRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No.

vc/

.:Z7 /f?/Y

NA11.E OF DECEASED EL/?JE~ /?/ci/#R.P E~/LERS

Joll/1/ E#LERS

Charge to

Other Information

1/

Order given by ----"----------------How secured
· /'?/~

Date of Funeral Oc.T .3c/

Place of Death Eudbra_ /we
, 5!;. Soult tU.
,..2__ ~ #1.

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman

.:...@.L..:e;...;v.;,..;.·__::~::.....::.e.;;..t/·;__.:;;S;...:;.h.::.....:....r~e.:....:.n:..::::R'l.......l,__,.,_

Physician
~b

Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Deathi.ne, n ;!&gt;on
Date of Death ?leT

(.('')

f:.oll or..u:rz? Thaco /, '/:· .s

...29.zf

Date of Birth Febr-uav-v

'

/3

17/Y

Occupation ____
~n~~h~~~v~~.______________
Single or Married
Aged _ _ years

Religion _ __
g'

months

/b

days

Body to be shipped ----------------Styl of Grave Vault ------------Interment at

Euc/or--o..,

Lot or Grave No.

...1 i

(&lt;;/??.

Sec No. -~~1 m;JJ.,eo/ .Lt-(c ile.
2 E/m c: r !f, chco·-0/

3
4 ------------

5--------6---------

�SCHUBERT NGRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date ~//

/.2__

/ 7/"('

No.
NAME OF DECEASED

Jhfqa/ scm

of. /Jlber-T /l DLERS

/IiBERT 4PLER

Charge to

ho S

~(qt., ...-;)

Other Information
1

Order given by ______
How secured

'---------------

I f/'1

Date of Funeral 11-0 V Jc:L

~~----------------

Place of Death 2-§. m ; 5owlh of

Euclo r-~

Funeral Services at
Time of Funeral

---------------Service
-------

Clergyman
Physician

Ec/w. T ;q.nc//e. Ton

Number of Burial Certica.~e
Cause of Death
Date of Death

/7

5/7//bt?rl'?

--~----------------

/2 /9/;/

/YtJV

/:L

Date of Birth 11/tJ !/

Fl/'7

Occupation ---------------------Single or Married
Aged

5TII/

)?o ra

--------=~:--Religion _ __

years _ _...;months

Body to be shipped

----------------

Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

days

----------

i)E/l Y
I

Lot or Grave No. _ _ _sec No.
1

2

3
45 ----------_ _ _ _ __

6 _ _ _ _ __

�SCHUBERT MORTUARY-BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

A/c v

If?

If Jt

No.

CEo.

Charge to

~C#;t/E/PER

/!Jrs. /?EBECCIJ

NAME OF DECEASED

£Chi&amp;&lt;;E&gt;DEJ?
Other Information

Order given by ___
How secured

k _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _

.:$" /n//a ls

Rc he c..ca..

Date of Funeral ~~~~~v~~-~~--~/~;?,~Y~ZL---Place of Death _A1._~~x~e.~n~T-~~~a~cc~---~~4~4~~~---­
Funeral Services at Ger-man /l! E.

y./30

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman

/! /1

Chuvc6
a.

0.

Fe I /1'77~ r;

Physician
C~rticate

Number of Burial

Sec y-os/s

Cause of Death ..4r-Jey;·s
Date of Death

/101/ I?

Date of Birth

---------------------

/? /7"

//o wse w; ·£e.

Occupation

Single or Married

W/c/t;uJ
Religion

Aged

Z.:L

years

#?t=&gt;dccl/:s T

months

Body to be shipped

days

;C ~c/o r~

Styl of Grave Vault ------------Interment at

£u~ra.

Lot or Grave No.

Ce~??.

- - -Sec

C

No.

1
2

3
4 -----------5
6 ------------

W

w~ ;t!en al-Dvc

�SCHUBERT 1ftGRTUARY . BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date -Dec

No.

NA1v1E oF DECEASED

/ Z:.

1/lrs CL Elf!ENTJNE CRum R iJ.IE
Other Information

Order given by ---~ ---------~-------­
How secured

/5

Date of Funeral :DEC

/

7/~

Place of Death t:/satu"'-fo;??;~

~as

Funeral Services at hie11ds

C.hurch

/l:otJ

Time of Funeral Service

J P

Clergyman

~*r o£

-4/Yl

/)1; . J/s

Physician
Number of Burial Certicate /56

,;n ;am;

A tJ RJ't"c. In corne~nTenc.'J'
..Pe c.. 1 / / 91'/-

Cause of Death
Date of Death
Date of Birth

---------------------

Occupation JnnJa.le.-

al ;lc,s/":t;. /

Single or Married ------~ ~~Religion _ __
Aged

/?

years _ __.;months _ __ days

Body to be shipped ----------------Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

-----------

;/e 5&gt;pe

Lo~ or Grave No.

C

y-

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Sec No.
1
2 ----------

3

4------5------6-------

$5 4v
4#7/:&gt;kl'"
/

�SCHUBERT 11CRTUARY . BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No.

/lr5:

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

0!1Si.E5

J /11.

S/l!(f/11

/V5

Et:.rdora....

Funeral Services at ~~~~~P7~~---------­
Time of Funeral Service

//a.

n?.

Clergyman
Physician
Numb~r

/{/ / / /(q.6;ns~n

of Burial Certicate

Cause of Death
Date of Death

I
----

l-6ro.ly s/s
fan .::L /9/S

Date of Birth c/c/ober .3_.!::( /Y?0

k«s e.- tv/ f'e.-

Occupation

Single or Married
Aged

7 Lf

1%9rricc/

Religion _ __

~ months a2.- 'l

years

Body to be shipped

days

-----------------

Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

Eu c/o rCL-

Lot or Grave No.

/915

/l. )///L

Janwary f

Place of Death

:L

MLi.

Order given by ~--h~-------~-------How secured
~qs6
Date of Funeral

Jan

Ce.~??.

----Sec

No.

1
2

3
4 ---------5

6--------

Other Information

,

�SCHUBERT MCRTUARY-BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date

No.

~

dan

It?

/?1.5

1/?E!VE /!1,4/f!E .81?/l.DS)//JW
B L3. !3/f/J fJ 5 !I /-J W

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

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~ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _
How secured

--- n
tJo.

Date of Funeral

J? 15

I :L

/0

£udoro.,

Place of Death

5/

Funeral Services at

Pau/

/t4//s

/?7 am.

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman
Physician

Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death

/e Tanqs

~~~~~---------

Date of Death

Jan

Date of Birth

/11c;t )Lf
t?/

Occupation

Single or Married
Aged

/

----

9

/7'/5

/7'/3

.2 5

/7 t?/?JG
..;;;;;5_/,;..:;o+q.;...
· ----::-- "":"'--:---J
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7

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months

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/ ~

days

A:S.

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-----------5Z: ~u I A:i

Lot or Grave No.

_ _ _sec No.

1
2

3 ---------4 ------------5 -----------6 -----------

Other Information

�SCHUBERT 11CRTUARY . BOCK

No.

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date ~ern

J6Y

./1-I?R Y
r.ERR y

,///J1E l. ;/1

NAME OF DECEASED

J)Av i D

Charge to

Other Information

Order given by ____''-----------------

How secured

J'j-

/f/5

E u c/o Y"O-Funeral Services at fop7Js t C'hwrch
I
Place of Death

----~~~~~-------

;l ~#?

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman
Physician

~

Number of Burial Certicate

Cause of Death ChYt:'n; c .lbto-s1/I('q/ I'Jeph,..,t/s
;
Date of Death

J: n.

13 15

J :;_

Date of Birth -~~--._-~~~--..1/ec..
1Zt g'
;/qusec:v~ · .f'e_

Occupation

Single or Married
Aged

1?/qO'' ;'r:;

years

Body to be shipped
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Interment at

StJtdt

/

c/

.

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months

//

days

----------------------

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Lot or Grave No. _ _ _sec No.
1

2

3

J't /.5

)

"

Date of Funeral Tune.

12

4-------5-------6-------

�No.

SCHUBERT 1ITCRTUARY- BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)}Date c.Januo.yl ell /?/.5

NAME OF DECEASED

Ai!C!IEJ.L /'jf/c!l//l/JN' ~~E!5C!/f1/l/V

Charge to

PASSo/./
/,

Order given by ____''----------------How secured

Jan

Date of Funeral

Place of Death /3i l~xy
7
Funeral Services at

/ '1/5

.:2. '1

~s.:sU/
.

Ume 7a r-7 y

Time of Funeral Service

1

/5

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Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate RmtJval ~
Cause of Death /lcqle.- Pn/monarv
r:;2c/e/?7a_
;
Date of Death

-?;17

c26 /c;/5

Date of Birth --------------------Occupation --------------------------Single or Married --------~- ~~---­
Religion ------____;
Aged 5c::J years
months ______ days

____

Styl of Grave Vault
Interment ~a~t--~~~£_w______________C~e~~ej-ery
Lot or Grave No.

-------Sec

No.

1

2---------

3

4------5-------6-------

Other Information

�"

SCHUBERT 1/IGRTUARY -BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date kbrucn·v 5

No. _ _

7

Joseph

NAME OF DECEASED

7/rE.P

Charge to

!-/£Kz

'
/?JtJ L L.

Other Information

Order given by ___'_'_______
How secured

i j _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _

Date of Funeral

hb 6

/7'/5

hdra. AS 8 Shc:C!-T
Services at Cad;/c C;{qrch

Place of Death
Funeral

Time ' of Funeral Service
Clergyman
Physician

'

9~50

Number of Burial Certicate

Date of Birth d?r-i I

(p.

&amp;b

years.

5!i

IVS

/c?.:t8'

-2. '1

bi»e I

Single or Married
Aged

#-- ...5

--------------------

Date of Death &amp;6rL1CfYY
;

Occupation

ct . /77.

Rc v. E.reis b 1.1 rq
J
J. C-.

Cause of Death

/??'.q

Ke..,

w/cr:b?&lt;./e c/..,........,.---

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f

months

_.;;.6_

days

Body to be shipped ----------------Styl of Grave Vault ------------Interment at

1?/S

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Ce/?7.

Lot or Grave No. _ _ _Sec No.
1

2 ---·------

3
4 ----------

5---------

6 ----------

�SCHUBERT 11GRTUARY . BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date
No.
J

-Juna.. s (r?) f)llLE

Charge to

Other Information

Order given by --~~---------~-------­
How secured

h.6

Date of Funeral

/.3

/f/5

5L ~5e:..oh
m?l.
v
Services at ~me 4L &amp;aYic Urilrc

Place of Death

Time of Funeral Service

/ / a .. 1?7.

Clergyman
Physician

e(

Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death Ccn-c i
Date of Death
Date of Birth

?J-f Skn?ctch

noi77CL

~e b II

11/5

---------------------

Occupation ------------------------Single or Married
Aged

if/

I .!L / '1/5

~5. V;A/-4 _ /J~t/I'Rr)!y

NAME OF DECEASED

Funeral

/Cb

---------=-~~Religion _ __

years

Body to be shipped hDm

months

days

sr Jo~eeh mo.

Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

J-/4JE

Lot or Grave No. _ _ _Sec No.
1
2 - - -·- - - - -

3 -----------4 ---------5 ----------

6---------

�SCHUBERT NCRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

Ub

No.

W-=::

5/AJJLER
Other Information

Order given by ___,_·_________,,________
How secured
Date of Funeral

Ee6 r-uar- v

u;;.fe o-f W~

:2 I /915

/

Place of Death

XaasCIS CiT¥ mo

Funeral Services at Coopey

'

Time of Funeral Service

hon?e_

~/?1

J

-=---~-

Re//. "//mph so IV

Clergyman
Physician

Number of Burial Certicate

......_?___

Cause of Death f?te r) p&amp;~ ra I Con vu Is /c;/?s
Date of Death
Date of Birth

&amp; b
1
&lt;.J

an u a

Single or Married
Aged

:51

/9

/Tf;ws e.

Occupation

Body to be shipped

/'l/5

r-y

2

7 /'115

Rel-:-ig-i:-o-n-4/~e/-4o

c:/
f ro;??

2 :2....

months

~51

/s T

days

~-'75 C&gt;r~ /?/o

'

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Sec No.

I

3
4 -----------

5

«I

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1 L0c ;1/c;.. L. S/adle r
2

6-------X

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n

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Lot or Grave Ne.

.

as? - v e

~rri e:J

years

Interment at

/ 7/ 5

$;-5 Luc/)LA .L. S/A])LER

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to (f.,c, )

:20

STAPlER

�SCHUBERT NCRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No. _ _

fl 7£R

NAME OF DECEASED

5/!.41.

Charge to

$arch 5 IY/5

/-MRJf/s

J/~1?/?}s
Other Information

Order given b y - - - - - - - - - How secured
--:4

$arc/; Y~ /7/5

Date of Funeral
Place of Death

broiler of.

~IJS C~, ~/

//am.

Time of Funeral Service

.&amp;v,

Clergyman

77/om/ls

/ / ZAI(! JN'5Kf

Physician

8'

Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death

/Z/mc:?/7a v-y
J;;.berct(hs/s
;

Date of Death ___;,42~C?:...:.r....:;c;;;:..A;...;._---~.7'_"-/"'-?/.;....;'5;:___
Date of Birth

~/!J~a;.;.r..;;;;c~/;.;___7"--....:/.;....;Z;;;....;;.5....:Z~

Occupation - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Single or Married
Aged

57

Body to be

years

----=""!'-'-~Religion _ __
/I

shipped~rc...,

months ..2 'I

%.C l?'k.

days

..A/7&gt;c£- )'-' t'o ,..-,..-for h

Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

.South sicle.

Lot or Grave No.

Cem

Sec No.
1

2--------

34 _ _ _ _ __

5------6-------

s.;n;.

/ian- is

�SCHUBERT NORTUARY.BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date
No.

.

NAME OF DECEASED

J

Charge to

Other Information

Order given by ___,_. _____,/____________
How secured

5 Ojz

Date of Funeral forch .:L51""h

/hrih

_,f-

Euclortll.

Funeral Services at Vermi !!/on ~115~.5

------

Clergyman
Physician

__

Number of Burial Certicate ....;....;;;,_
/:?
Cause of Death
Date of Death

1JICLberi '..5

41a

Y"C..

h ..t. 3

Date of Birth Feb ;zr-4

1?/S
/f/:JCJ

ra 'rn-·n::. r

Occupation

Single or Married ~/.?~
;
Aged

/5

I

years

Religion _ __

months

b

days

Body to be shipped 1i"' t/ernl/'/1/o.n ~~.s
Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

Cem

1/c&gt;y-;ni 1//on

Lot or Grave No.

/7/.5

r/I;L ;'p //AyES
I

W. !/AYES
I

Time of Funeral Service

23

.

j{//LL!/1/Yl

Place of Death 5 ~

$arch

---Sec

No.

1

2-------3

4------5 _ _ _ _ __

6 _ _ _ _ __

o--F

J

j,()

#'ct. yC: 5

�SCHUBERT HCRTUARY.BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date .#!arch ..?c:J / ?/..5

No.

"/)/0/11/JS )//! f?/3!)UG:Ii

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

C. /l1.

f/AI?BAUG-1/

,!;·.muC?tJd

/~nsa.s
Other Information

Order given by _,,_ _ _/ ~-----How secured
Date of Funeral /l1arcl7 :3o
Place of Death

?ieek
&gt;

7

/f/5

d'411sa.s
j1
~1

_../

.J.il'j'&lt;JcJO

Funeral Services at #'/eyqc:f'/ .sfC!zttr-ch
Time of Funeral Service

i:tt:~l:)(!&gt;r o-f C //( kr/Jau9~

J

am.

/t:l

Clergyman
Physician

~£? ~~ ~~rn

Number of Burial Certicate /.20
Cause of Death

tJU a,re.

Date of Death ~rch
Date of Birth

-r;;,eeKO-

-+--- .P/·5 a b ; );

,t'77f,

J7

/ //5

-----------------------

Occupation -------------------------Single or Married Jvi~w e r
Religion _ __
Aged

ZR'

year5 _ _....;months _ _ _ days

Body to be shipped£

.LJnk/CJod

Styl of Grave Vault - - - - - - - - - -

I

.S:.Idne.y

Lot or Grave No.

- - -Sec

Interment at g

No.

1

2--------

34 _ _ _ _ _ __

5------6-------

�SCHUBERT MORTUARY -BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No. _ _

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

,{~?1/f

C/Jh'.lfL£5

::MMES

Other Information
5tY1

Date of Funeral

//kcch

Place of Death

Eu~ra....

KoYTh. m.,;n sT - - - - - - - - - - - -

t:Jn

Clergyman
Physician

9
----

Number of Burial Certicate

Cause of Death);; zes;;~a I _:L;.,c:/~e
sroo
)

&amp;arch ·

30

Date of Birth Tfal'??fa y- v
I

.:26' r-4- , 15

Occupation - - - - - - - - - - - - - Single or Married ~//,??~~
;

Religion _ __

months

_f'----

days

Body to be shipped ---------------Styl of Grave Vault - - - - - - - -

Z/ £

Lo~ or Grave No.

..:Z/£ GLER

k,.ps

Time of Funeral Service

:Z

of C/arl~s

31 -aT /?(5

Funeral Services athme

Interment at -

/ (Is

.ZIEGLER

fr_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _'_Y_ _ _ __

Aged _ _ years

3 I

ZIEGLER

Order given by ____
How secured

Date of Death

$rch

Ceqz

C-L Elf

- - -Sec

No.

1
2

3------4------5
6-------

�SCHUBERT 11IGRTUARY. BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

./;:JY/L

If- /Cfl5

No.
NAME OF DECEASED

GRiN IY\A N' f?j cHARD s

0 sCAR.

C/1/ls . .t: RicHARDS

Charge to

Other Information

Order given by --------------------How secured
Date of Funeral

AI ori /

,!tf

Place of Death E uc:lor-~ J41'7st:A.s
Funeral Services at /!t:;me on C S/reeT

c!:L

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman

~//J.

f&amp;'f1'&gt;1eni Col

'

Physician

/~

Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death

Pcu1 Re.ber
Richcu·d E r-wi r/

Date of Death

-------------------4er-j/ £j£../;

Date of Birth

JAN

J

;L

1

/336

Occupation _____
J_a_w~~r~e~r______________
Single or Married
Aged

71

years

MC?JT)

3

~d

Religion _ __

months

.2..:&lt;_

days

Body to be shipped
Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

Et1~ra

Lot or Grave No. :2..3()

Cem.
Sec No.

~

1
2

3

4------5
6-------

)6 ° 0

�SCHUBERT HGRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date
No.
N~~

j

.:!. ~

/'l/5

OF DECEASED

Charge to

$/JR.7V

$r 5

//.

8/?EC/1E is E IV

Other Information
:f11Jkr af /1!;-s. /Yl/-!Ry
A.
;

Order given by _______'' _________/_/____
How secured

B.tf'ECI-/E i SEA/

~B;+iZ:;..ct~t.....;./___;;:2_;;.F_!:-_:4_'"""'1;...~"""'~.::::'S;__

Date of Funeral

Place of Death --~~~~.....;y~~~o~r~~~--------

Ewdo Yo-.. C.hu-r c h

Funeral Services at

Time of Funeral Service

/ /' /77

_..;.......;;....,__;...

____

Clergyman

-JG Lee:

Physician

Number of Burial Cer'\.icate
Cause of Death

//

--------------------

I :2.6 ff
Date of Birth fleceezber /f
Occupation /fe /. bY m e r--

Date of Death

,

/Iori

/6'-Z{,

Single or Married ;o/,:{v ri ed
Religion 7/LB/f!GA/
Aged

/lpy; I

8 &amp;'

1

years

months

/£

days

Body to be shipped _7,;~__C_~~~-r~f_i~~-!ai_~~~5Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

-------Clear- tie !o/
Ce111.

Lot or Grave No.

- - -Sec

No.

1
2

3
4 ----------

5
6 ----------

�SCHUBERT liJ:GRTUARY .BOCK
{Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date
No.

/1 8. C {)Ill IVE K

Other Information

Order given by --------------------How secured

--#Vi7 y 19

Date of Funeral

+atbe&lt;r o~ A 13. WN NER

/V5

Place of Death f~ m; Sott/l wcsr
Funeral Services at Aleeze df d8. CoNNER

..:2 /?/??.

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman

Rev B .Johnson

Physician

J. C-. Lee../~

Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death

Rena.. J ~c:till-1 r&lt;=:. dw::. ~ reTenT/o n
a f ?fr/ne dye ;p en/ar,c;rd _?r~sr..-e;\re....

Date of Death

.!??Av
17 1'1 15'
;

Date of Birth .Decembe.v-

:2._{,

/?!"32

Occupation ---~--~-Y_n?~~~r_______________
Single or Married

w;c/;we"
Religion ?YCJTesTc;n

Aged

8 :Z., year:s

.L/

.:2. /

months

days

Body to be shipped ----------------Styl of Grave Vault

--------

Interment at L-vr~ ro...
Lot or Grave No.

Cem.
Sec No.
1

2

3

4--------5
6------5

I

C)//J RLE5 fl . C{)Ill;VE R

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

;?lA'v 17 lf/5

r

�SCHUBERT MORTUARY -BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No.

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

/llrs

LEVI

/llEyER
;

d'UBLE 11/;1LL

)/1//Jck/7 IVcbrask'o..

Order given by ____~'--~--"---------How secured _____._C.._.a....s"""'h""---------

Other Information

1

./3r"#ey .,-f

Da t e of Funeral _.:ft-'u.._n.....__.e:;.......-3"----:../_.?...;..!_5_ __

Fa I I

Place of Death

Funeral Services at

Leo. -P

/ll;'nden

Time of Funeral Service

Aleb.

-------

Clergyman
Physician

-J/1.

__2)&amp;1 v is

Co 'r19r7 e r

)3

Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death

/-/anq/.n c;
./

Date of Death

J

/77 t:t; v ..2 7

Date of Birth --------------------Occupation

--~~-4~Y.~~~'~'---------------

Single or Married ----~ ~~Religion _ __
Aged

6g

&amp;~v ..tf /9'/5

years _ _....;months _ _ _ days

Body to be shipped --------------Styl of Grave Vault - - - - - - - - Interment at

~--------------------Lot or Grave No. _ _ _sec No.

1
2

3--------

4--------5------6
_ _ _ _ _ __

//7;-5

#JC?b!e..

/VALL

�SCHUBERT MCRTUARY.BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912 - Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date ~v
7

No.

..3/ /f/5

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

/111'5

Order given by _______,_·__________·_·__
How secured

Jl-1 n &lt;;.

Date of Funeral

o

Place of Death

I

Funeral Services at Cey-man

(AI)_, e)

/1l.£ Church

//a. ~ .

Clergyman

Xev. Jl !l Fe/elman

Physician

JT[ 0ood o....,J.

~;umber

);ft5be~ n ~ "£ $/s C/j1-?1S7/Ar/l

I&lt;? 15

.5ou 'th eas I

Time of Funeral Service

Other Information

of Burial Certicate

/

i

Cause of Death chroniC Beonche ?aeL.-tm.onio....
Date of Death

$a v

Date of Birth

,Tulv

&gt;

3~

)

/7/5

1.2.. /?7/b'

FaY f7l e r

Occupation

Single or Married

mo. rr i e of
Religion

Aged

fg

year5

/0

/ 5"

months

4%t4Zoolsrdays

Body to be shipped
Styl of Grave Vault
Intermer:t at

Eudoro..

Lot or Grave No.

Ccm .

Sec No.
1

2---------

3
4 ------------

5 -----------6 ------------

�SCHUBERT 110RTUARY . BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No. _ _

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

@5.

Other Information

hwsbaac/ -:;{

17'- /915

J0Jv
3~

Funeral Services at

SouTh wesr

kkrhev4n Church
.2.. ~//1.

Time- of Funeral Service

/"r-eel S/oev-J&lt;e. rJt! 1/ J?ob,·nson

Clergyman
Physician

;//llft/E/
r/f'ED

/~

Number of Burial Certicate

Loujs

Cause of Death - - - - - - - - - Date of Death
Date of Birth

Ju/v

/.:2-

IY/5

JC--t I v

.2..

I ? 39

~~~/~~~~~~--

-~~;+-~-~-~--

.S {.. (

Occupation

v

jl e &lt;? 12

Single or Married Mc:::rrr- ;'e
Aged

''7£

d

~-:---

Religion _ __

years _ ___;months

days

Body to be shipped - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault - - - - - - I::terment at

Euc/o ro.._

Lot or Grave No.

/&lt;'!I S

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Date of Funeral

1

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Sec No.

--

1

2--------

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�SCHUBERT MCRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date
No. _ _

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JL-1 I7v .:;_;

Date of Funeral
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Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death&amp;&amp;? Y I
Date of Death
Date of Birth
Occupation

J0 /v
7

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;

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/9 / &lt;l/5
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63

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C e 1?1 .
Sec No.
1

2--------

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�SCHUBERT !JICRTUARY-BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No. _ __

ANNA

NA1&gt;1E OF DECEASED

.J:oruv

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BARBARA

5 er!

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Order given by
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----------Date of Funeral

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Place of Death

Colonv

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Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman

_;;;;....;;;.......
:2...:'30

)/A. reId rna. r.

Physician
Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death

Cancer o~

Date of Death

Sep/
13
;

Date of Birth

C- ey-

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fo..c.c:.!915'

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___

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�SCHUBERT MORTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No. _ _

NAME OF DECEASED

.5epf"
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,

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W~ HAVE~TV
7

Date of Funeral _.S~t;~P..:..-;-_.._I.._Z'___.I;....;Z~'/-=5;;.._~(w_~~tte,)
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Time of Funeral Service

9 a

rn .

Clergyman
Physician

;z

Number of Burial Certicate

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Cause of Death lko.-rl6ulu r-e.
Date of Death
Date of Birth

SeI12 / ; 6,&gt;
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-

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Lot or Grave No. _ _ _Sec No.
1
2 --·-----

3 --------4 ----------

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6 ~-------

..

�SCHUBERT MCRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date Oc/

No. _ _

EP!v'A cI}171ER JYE l.IJ L! C-!1j_;tV
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How secured

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J

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Date of Funeral Oc/ /3

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Clergyman

Rev-

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Physician

____

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Number of Burial Certicate

-----

Date of Death CJcT

/;?/5

Date of Birth

/:f..

Scyet=

/ f?/.3

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Occupation
Single or Married
Religion
Aged

.2-

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/8"

days

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~v~r~

Lot or Grave No.

C:&gt;t

Sec No.
1

32-------_______
4 ----------

5 ----------

6--------

�SCHUBERT 1liCRTUARY- BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date Oct 16

No. _ _

.J"AIYl fS YJ 1--l ·~ T E

NAME OF DECEASED

JO IJN

Charge to

'vii Jj i IE

Order given by ___,_
· _______''---------How secured
Date of Funeral C?cl

-f'arher-

I j IS

I9

Place of Death __,.;;;;Et......;;..vt..:...J;:;:;.;...:;;o_'r'~Q-..~-------Funeral Services at . f/;""7v'-l,,._,
..
---------Time of Funeral Service

------

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death

----

-------------------

Date of Death _,O._c=--T_. . . .:I.....;b.___. .l. . . .?_l_5
. __
Date of Birth

---------------------

Occupation - - - - - - - - - - - - - Single or Married
~-=--Religion _ __

------=--

Aged g .3

years

months

---~

Body to be shipped

------

days

----------------

Styl of Grave Vault

-------------

Interment at

~---------------

Lot or Grave No.

/715

- - -Sec

No.

1
2

3 -----------

4 ---------5

6--------

Other Information
of JbiJ N W Ji iT£

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                    <text>SCHUBERT NCRTUARY-BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date JJec

No. _ _
NAME OF

DECEASED

/Its.

1

I? 15

0LL iE _/JNiv' .ZJAVipsotl

Charge to _.,....0::;..:;YI..:...V;..:.i.:::P-'.A~~..:...v:...:.i.:::D~5::...;;tJ;..;.N_ _ __
Order given by __"________
How secured
#

Pe c..

Date of Funeral
Place of Death

Other Information
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

3 v-o/

J!;£ norlh o-F hclo Y'£A.

Funeral Services at

/llet6oo/·5f:CI7ttYch

Time of Funeral Service

II

am.

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death

----

Date of Death

------------------»e.G I 1915

Date of Birth

feb. c:2.5

I F7t

Occupation --~6~~~~~~~~~tv~;k~~~-----------Single or Married ~/?&amp;......._t::?_r_r_--=-- -:---:--Religion _ __
Aged

3/

years

9

months

days

Body to be shipped ---------------Styl of Grave Vault -----------Interment at ) iowaocl
Lo~ or Grave No.

Ct&gt;M.
Se~ No.

1
2

3--------4 -----------

5

6---------

�SCHUBERT MCRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date
No.

:DELBERT L.E !/ERNE

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

RAY/J10/'ID
STA!VLEI V
;

,1/tJv

I

/'l/5

~----~------------

Place of Death 5-%, S. E. of Eucloro...
Funeral Services at

1-/o;ne.-

~~~~--------

I/

Time of Funeral Service

c?o.

m.

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate
~ STh

Cause of Death

Date of Death Oc \
Date of Birth

ern

3 I

----

i u_

/9/5

Se.pr
, l. 4- 17!5

Occupation - - - - - - - - - - - - - Single or Married ------:-- ~~Religion _ __
Aged _ _ years _ __.;months

_7.:.---_

days

Body to be shipped ---------------Styl of Grave Vault
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-------

Jlesee-r

Lot or Grave No.

Cem.

;

Sec No.
1
2

3

!?IS

STANLEy
'
Other Information

Order given by --~'-'~--------~-----How secured
C t:~.5h
Date of Funeral

Ocl J I

4------65------_____~-

�SCHUBERT MCRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date
No.
NAME OF DECEASED

r/?/JNK BlEC/1 L-

rlfll N K

Charge to

J?ec.

Other Information

-father- of he1nK 8/ech/

'7 /9/5

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Time of Funeral Service

Physician

C)uYch

/c? a .m .

/ather Schne/cl-{/er
J G- )__e. e...

Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death
Date of Death

----

--------------. :Dec
5
/715

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. _.;..h..;;...::A~Yrn;.;..;..;;e..;;;..;.v-_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
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Aged

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/915

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Place of Death ~Et.;...;-u;.:.;:;...c/c....;;o;_r...;."'-..;,__ _ _ __

Clergyman

/

Sr

Order given by _ _' ' - - - - - / " ' - - - How secured
Date of Funeral

Yec.

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Cem.

Lot or Grave No. _ _ _Sec No.
1
2

3 _ _ _ _ __
4 _ _ _ _ _ __

5

6-------

�7

SCHUBERT MORTUARY-BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No. _ _

~/J8.:..;r;...;;.s..:....__;7h...;,l/.~/f....:...;'E~S;._A..;..__~//c~a;..;;;;7£;;..:;JJ_'L_ _ _ __

NW.E OF DECEASED

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Date of Funeral Pee
Place of Death

Other Information

/-l.

3 khn

Order given by
How secured

41tts£R

w/£~ o-f

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--~~~~~---------

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)

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a . J??.

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certi~ate
Cause of Death Or-~r"·,.,; eDate of Death :De G

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1-ko.Yt olseo..se__.
-9..?C /7./11.

J- b

Date of Birth ...A~u+q___,.;f?;;...__~l.;;;..g~~-'-1--J

&amp;vts-ek//-,re-

Occupation

Single or Married

_41
______ _ ,___
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Aged

71

years

/f

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Body to be shippedt'o;fqns

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days

$t;

Styl of Grave Vault -----------Interment at

5Z: flcn--; ys

Lo~ or Grave No.

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- - -Sec

Ct&gt;m.

No.

1
2

3---------

4-------5------6-------

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�SCHUBERT HORTUARY -BOCK
(Dec·. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date

No. _ _

CLEVA

NAME OF DECEASED

£DEL BRocK

.J0!-IN £.0EL BRae K

Charge to

Other Information

G~6. THoREN

Order given by
How secured

5o/? of ..J;/;n £de /broc k

Date of Funeral _Jc;...;;;..o.....;.n....;.__q_;__----:/_&lt;i.:.....;,.,./.:;:;.b _ _

Newlon

Place of Death

/{o.ns.

Funeral Services at E/Jy /ll. E.

'

~

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman

/I? 5 L 61//ns

Physician

Jno, L .

Ciurc h

/? /17.

C.Yoves

b - .:2..5

Number of Burial Certicate

Cause of Death S;e-r·c..e~?-? i o... tollow ~ r.t /Onc,-/t f;:s-

..:Jan 5
AuJusr

Date of Death
Date of Birth
Occupation

0

Single or Married
Aged .:2~ years

---r

rn

1716
10

18'73

e. v-

s ,· ny~

Religion _ __

months

£5

days

Body to be shipped - - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault - - - - - - Interment at

______
/ 916 _

T

-uan b

....;....

hclor-o---

Lot or Grave No. _ _ _Sec No.
1

2--------

3

4------5------6-------

�SCHUBERT MCRTUARY .BOCK

_______

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
y}Date _;;_
"U 0. n
No.
NAME OF DECEASED /llrs. El/.)!:A/3Er!l
Charge to

C!!l?/sr

1!/Jiili0£8
Other Information

;l;;n

)!?efJ~r (7f CJJ~is/ !Iamme r

/?16

I 3

~~~~-~~------

Place of Death £'~

5 ott rh wolof

he/oro...

Funeral Services at 5I. Pauls EvCAnrelr"co. L
Time of Funeral Service

:L? /11.

Clergyman
Physician

o2. 6

Number of Burial Certicate

Cause of Death t'?lr-C.inomo... of sTo.mach
Date of Death

Jan

10

1?/6

Date of Birth

:DeG

/0

/J'Jfi-

d ctsec:u;):e..

Occupation

Single or Married
Aged

gI

t,u;c/ou/

years

I

Religion _ __

months _ _ _ days

Body to be shipped
Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

Euo/c;ro...

Lot or Grave No.

!9/b

k/ !LI!ELhlENA )-/Airl!YJER

Order given by - - - - - - - - - - - - - How secured
Date of Funeral

II

Cc:t!J...

Sec No.
1

2--------

3

4 --.-------

5------6-------

�SCHUBERT !ftCRTUARY . BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date

No. _ _

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

.,.

.

/Jlr.s

{4/frJl;#;f

AIYl EL iA

Other Information

Order given by __r'--------How secured

)?'idlit'r- i n-LAw of -

_J:
____c;~.--n--IA..-o..;...v-Y+--;__g__J...;..9_I_b_

Place of Death -=£:..~u~~:...::o~r-~o..-.;;:.__ _ _ __

Time of Funeral Service

/ll E ChuYch

------

Clergyman

J C

Physician
Nuw~er

Lee~

of Burial Certicate

Cause of Death Cere h r-o..l !/em o ;- Y he?. 7e..Date of Death
Date of Birth

;kh

/9/b

15

----------~------JtA I v 7 I 83 'f

----,~~---~----

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Occupation

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Aged

g;

years

~

Religion _ __

months

%

days

Body to be shipped - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault - - - - - - Interment .:.t

hdo

Lo~ or Grave No.

Ce/?1

rtA.

Sec No.

5

I

/1

Funeral Services at Cer-m~ a

I

y

If) /J

@Gusr I! FIE!ILER

Date of Funeral

,.--

-van

--

1

-_
--_32_
__-_

4---------

65------_ _ _ _ _ __

�SCHUBERT 1/IGRTUARY -BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No. _ _

£/?£]) C. 23/JRTZ
,,

Order given by
How secured
Date of Funeral
Place of Death

&amp;6 :2_,
3 /7?/

Time of Funeral Service

0 W.

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17/b

sw
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.:2. ?.,.??

Z E!DLER

.J." C-.

Physician

Other Information

"'

Funeral Services at Cerman /ll E

Clergyman

Lee..
~

Number of Burial Certicate

Cause of Death Cancer- of oift
·c. /lleYV~
I
Date of Death
Date of Birth

Jan

3 I

lf/6

..;Jc;_a_n~_i"-----I-7._'1_:L..;;.....__

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if

/ f/6

L uc/LE /11ili?! Aiv' BAR.Tz

NAME OF DECEASED
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~n 3 I

years _ __.;months

:L 7

days

Body to be shipped - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault

-------

at
=------------Lot or Grave No. _ _ _Sec No.
Int~rment

1

32-------_ _ _ _ __

4 _ _ _ _ __

65-------_ _ _ _ __

E&amp;ZJC. 8/lffTZ.

�SCHUBERT MORTUARY-BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14,

6 /v iro.. (Gr ishCA.mJ

No.

NAl.fE OF DECEASED

.$rs £-l: l/;'f111J ffi885

--=C..,~...;;,r/;..;.:/1.~'5...;...__.b
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How secured

Date of Funeral ~e 6
Place of Death

Other Information

~dr of- Cfoc;s. //of-i-5

6 /7/6

....;h;...-_u..;...olv;.....;;.o..;...r..;...~~-----

Funeral Services at _.,Af?-...,;;..~;._P?....;e...---._ _ __
Time of Funeral Service

------

Clergyman
Physician
~

Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death
Date of Death
Date of Birth
Occupation

--------------

hb 3 /916
fu lv
~ 8" I 8' 3
;

F

~vsec.v/ /'e:_,

Single or Married Uh-c/{;r-vc:cl
Religion _ __
Aged

77 year~

6

months

5

days

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=-----------------Lot or Grave No. _ _ _Sec No.
Interment at

1

2-------3-------

4--------

65------_ _ _ _ _ __

�SCHUBERT MORTUARY -BOCK

/]i .b e{

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924~Date
No. _ _

~ /?E!JECCA LEE
Charge to _---iiiW~_p--_-__:;;L;.__e_;e.-;._______

NAME OF DECEASED

Other Information
Order given by __'· -----------------How secured

#'lo!7d().y Feb 7 I 9 I 6

Date of Funeral

~~~0~cl~o~r_;~~----------­

Place of Death

Eo. eri 5\ Ch l/1 rch

Funeral Services at

:z. ~ 3 0 P. /?1 .

Time of Funeral Service

W.

Clergyman
Physician

~o..c.. K 56h

w.

H.

W.

M/ier- of.

Kob·lhSoh

Number of Burial Certicate .p:=- b
Cause of Death
Date of Death

cl

t)l

01.9~

------~--=----------

Feb

.5

Date of Birth i3or-n

/a

1?/6

S la.v~Y''-'
&gt;

Occupation
Single or Married
Aged

?6

Religion _ __

years _ _-:months

days

Body to be shipped ---------------Styl of Grave Vault - - - - - - Interment at

Eudor-a._

Lot or Grave No.

C em.

Sec No.
1
2

3

4-------5
6--------

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�SCHUBERT NGRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date ~Y'

No. _ _

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

$5.

Order given by ____~~~
- ~~,~· -----------How secured
Ct9&gt;).J

Place of Death

/lla r

I .3

Jt:L;.

Funeral Services at

Other Information
5/~~Y'-td·-k.V

/ [//

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CC'/We-19 r r
j

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman

/t:/ -' 1.5

.....,&amp;;~e..;;..CJ_._ ...SJ~c.:....h~r~e;;;..:n~J&lt;..l..-_ _

Physician
Number of Burial Certicate

Date of

-----

mar
T
--------------------Birth
---------------------

Date of Death

/tJ

Occupation ---------------------------Single or Married
----=Religion _ __
Aged

7.2.-

years _ _ _months

...2.6 days

Body to be shipped ----------------Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

------------

Eudoro......

Lot or Grave No.

/ '7/6

)/EAI/1!ETTA II J/A!V JI/JyATT

:Pr. 'f?o /3J!VSO!v'

Date of Funeral

/3

CeM.

- - -Sec

No.

1
2

3 _ _ _ _ __
4 -----------

5------6--------

c£

�SCHUBERT !JIGRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912 - Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No. _ _

/IJiLl?J)/

NAME OF DECEASED

~6r

Charge to

Place of Death

$ar- .2.3

Other Information

/ Cj"/6

~~
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Date of Death

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------------------------

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v

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Date of Funeral

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2

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(Dec • 11 , 191 2 - 0 c t • 14 , 1 92 4 )
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Date of Funeral

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Clergyman

,.J. G. Lee_-

Physician

Number of Burial Certicate

Date of Death

//pr.

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Date of Birth

4pr

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�SCHUBERT 11CRTUARY -BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
/J
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)Date ~/~-!"Fe
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NAME OF DECEASED

/J,-5,

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=a~t

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------Sec

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�SCHUBERT NGRTUARY.BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912 - Oct. 14, 1924)
/1
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NAME OF DECEASED

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Date of Birth

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1
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5o/7 t)f ~5 ~mes Cr-CAnp
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(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date _ $,av3
I

No.

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NAME OF DECEASED

1/oEZJL

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Date of Funeral
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34 _ _ _ _ _ __
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�SCHUBERT MCRTUARY.BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date

No.

NAME OF DECEASED
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---------------------

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7

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79

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�SCHUBERT 1liCRTUARY- BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
n1
}Date //&amp;Y 15 lf/.b
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No.

NAME OF DECEASED

J

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----------

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-----Sec

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1
2

3

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�SCHUBERT !JIGRTUARY-BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
~
}Date 1-krae I

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If/ 5
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June.- 5

~~~~------------

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Number of Burial

c~rticate

--------

Cause of Death Ca/lcc r- oj: j_,·rer
Date of Death

.J;ae,

Date of Birth

---------------------

I

/9/6

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-------

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1
2

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�SCHUBERT HCRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

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---------

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~----~=-~---------

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/lJa Y K 11./. /-J ld'ri c h

�SCHUBERT !JIGRTUARY-BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date -June.. .28", 19/b

No.

NAME OF DECEASED

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Date of Birth

/3

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----------------------

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---------=~~---­
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-------months

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Body to be shipped ----------------Styl of Grave Vault
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----------

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�SCHUBERT MCRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No.

E c9 Smlrd

Order given by ___~'-----------------How secured

J7

Date of Funeral -0't-tlv
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Place of Death

!V6

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--~---------------

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Time of Funeral Service

/]/eb.

--------

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate

----

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S'v- I7v

Date of Death
Date of Birth

B-R.

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5

---------------------

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_________________

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1

2--------

3

4--------5
6---------

Other Information

�SCHUBERT NGRTUARY-BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

Ju! v / 6

11/6

I

No.
LcJt~isA

NAME OF DECEASED

/J1/-JRy

G-ABRIEL

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Information
w&gt;-fe of C!/ll5 CABRiEL
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How secured

1_1 _ _ _ _ _ _ _F_'_ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___

-J;_. I y J8

Date of Funeral

I

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Place of Death

Funeral Services at 1.-uThero. n Church
Time of Funeral Service

_______
/? /J1.
:3

..;...___

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate

-----

Cause of Death Cancer 6~ szp/7Jach
Date of Death

~ lv lb

Date of Birth

/J1Av

Occupation

7

;

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I 8

77'-

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I

months

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days

Body to be shipped
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Et-roforO-

Lot or Grave No.

Cem.

Sec No.
1
2 - -·- - - - -

3
4
65

----------------------------_ _ _ _ __

�SCHUBERT MCRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924~Date ---~---_?
_____/_7._/._6
No.

{_p.. 1e. f/ vcn)

NAME OF DECEASED

ALBEI?T -BAGLI'Y7111v' (.f){BAG-f/NAN)

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Order given by --------------------How secured
Date of Funeral
Place of Death

-------------------~I pe.Ko.._

Funeral Services at L£.~f)ey-an CA?t'rch
~ ;?/1(

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman
Physician

Number of Burial Certicate

----Cause of Death
-------------------Date of Death
--------------------Date of Birth
--------------------Occupation ------------------------Single or Married -------=-- ~~Religion _ __
Aged _ _ years

___

.......__

months _ _ _ days

Body to be shipped ----------------Styl of Grave Vault ------------Interment at

~----------------------

Lot or Grave No.

- - -Sec

No.

1
2

3
4 ------------

65 _ _ _ _ ___

Other Information

�SCHUBERT 1~CRTUARY . BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date
No.

/llr&gt;

/71£

SoLON JERomE TcJZXD

NAME oF DECEASED
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Order given by --------------------How secured
Date of Funeral

~ ) y :L3

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/9 I 6

)

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Services at ;tleliodlsf" C}uYc6

Place of Death
Funeral

Time of Funeral Service

_:t : 3{)

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate

----

fir/ 177ono.. r ; y /uber cq/os/s
-r.b lv .;L! 19 lb
~~~~~~~--~~~-~Tun e. 12' ;gyf

Cause of Death
Date of Death
Date of Birth
Occupation

----~~~o~r~lt~e~~----------

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Religion _ __
Aged

:2 I

I

years

Body to be shipped

months

..3

days

--------------

Styl of Grave Vault
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------------FU~ ra.
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Lot or Grave No.

Sec No.

2

3
4 -------------

65 ------------_ _ _ _ __

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�SCHUBERT MCRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
d
/ &lt;:?//
}Date .-.........._...,./....__
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NAME oF DECEASED

CoLD;£ !/APL£

#?A"RV 11/!JJLE

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)

Order given by - - - - - - - - - - - - - How secured
Date of Funeral --------------------

Other Information

k~/e r of
~

(;__,•.s.T 4&lt;/lm~ {P"'

Place of Death --------------------Funeral ' services at

----------------

Time of Funeral Service

------

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death
Date of Death

----

-------------------

---------------------

Date of Birth --------------------Occupation - - - - - - - - - - - - - Single or Married
Religion ____
Aged _ _

year~

_____;months _ _ _ days

Body to be shipped ----------------Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

~-----------

Lot or Grave No.

----Sec

No.

1

2--------

3

4-------5-------6--------

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./llfR V /IApL£

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�SCHUBERT MORTUARY -BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No.

/!lt"5

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

Ars. EL

t?/ A v E11/1

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c23

W H -,T E

I

LEwis (EWING-)

Order given by ____._·______
a _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _
How secured
Date of Funeral Awq :2.-5

Other Information
I

c?fr5.

I 1/6

d.- L'£w;s(Ewi!Vc;.)

~-J~~--------------

Eu doro._

Place of Death

Funeral Services at !3(/..pfi·:s! ChuYch
~d. Co /(A..-,";

Time of Funeral Service

j}/J/T;E

Clergyman
Physician

If?

Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death

&amp;i

~/?ercCA!os/s

Date of Death

Aug

23 /916

Date of Birth

A'.or
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Aged

:ZCl

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Occupation

year~

Body to be shipped

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Religion _ __

/!-

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days

---------

Soutlz.s/ cle

Lot or Grave No.

7

months

-----------------

Styl of Grave Vault

17/b'

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Sec No.
1
2

34 _ _ _ _ _ __
5

6-------

5j?CA-r 1-&lt; s

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No.

SCHUBERT MCRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

EuG-ENE

1-!uc-f/Es

3{)

1916

£. W. 1//cKs
Other Information

Date of Funeral _/1.~u~qr~:5~1___________
../

A'S

Place of Death l. /n.:votJd
Funeral Services at

/fi;qs~

--~~~--------

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate ------~~~u~q~~~o___________
../

Date of Death

dvG-

HICKs

Order given by __,_,____~_-_____________
How secured

Cause of Death

s

A 0q
27 &gt;J, 1?/0
J

Date of Birth --------------------• Occupation ------------------------Single or Married ------~ ..,._.,...-Religion ____
Aged ___ years

----·months

3

days

Body to be shipped ----------------Styl of Grave Vault ------------Interment at }.;(Vwocp
Lot or Grave No.

Cem.
Sec No.
1
2 ---·-----

3

4--------65-------_ _ _ _ __

�SCHUBERT 11GRTUARY. BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

See/ 6
I

No.
NAME OF DECEASED

.2/tJ;fA!IIV .EL!ZAB£1)/ OTr
;

CEO OTT Jr

Charge to

Other Information

Order given by ______' ~------------How secured
C. e.. s h
1

A,-~rJ/er-of
;

Date of Funeral _S~e~p~~~~Z~---------­

Eu do ro- /:vp

Place of Death

I

CEo OTT Sr-. llouse

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:L P !l7.

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman

J. J-). Jb blt.J..-S

Physician

\;{).

C. /J7 E CCJnneLL
;t~

Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death
Date of Death

C ron; c..

G-o.sTr-i

Lf /915

July

Occupation

aT hom~

Aged

I

r's

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SeptI

Date of Birth

Single or

/

Married-----~

_ __
Religion _ __

years

~

months

,:;__

days

Body to be shipped ----------------Styl of Grave Vault - - - - - - - - Interment at

1~/b

Eu do

ro.....

Lot or Grave No. _ _ _ Sec No. ____
1

2--------

34 _ _ _ _ _ __

5-------6--------

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SCHUBERT NCRTUARY.BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No.

.

19/6

Other Information
h/lc of· /V. //J~B!?IPE

Date of Funeral --=S,~~""if-;z""'I:;...._"-1-'-~._.....;/_.:Y,_;./_;.b'_ _
Place of Death

__...3~.;...1??..-''-.__
s;;..;;.o.;..u::..;../)...;.,.j?f;,_.._____

Funeral Services at Respe,
Ch0rch
;
Time of Funeral Service

~:uo ~/17

Clergyman
Physician
~/

Number of Burial Certicate

LunJ

Cause of Death Cance_y- 6f
Date of Death SepT
I

Date of Birth

I I 1916

---------------------

Occupation ~-------------------­
Single or Married

f

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-~;11'--.~/)1-~_.!3~/f'""";.::::;;P_l::..;....-_ _ __

Order given by ----------------How secured

Aged 5

;

SARAH L. 4f/3RfDE

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

5epr

-------~ -=--~-

Religion _ __

years ,_____months

Body to be shipped

---------------

Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

--- days

---------

~spe
r
;

Lot or Grave No.

- - -Sec

No.

1
2

3------4------5------6-------

j

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                    <text>SCHUBERT NCRTUARY-BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No.

VCL 7 /f/b

LifE[) ///lDLE
5TE?JIEN JI/?PLE

NA1v1E OF DECEASED
Charge to

Other Information
Order given by --------------------How secured

5o/7 a f 57E?i//IV /-/APl.£

Date of Funeral ...:~~c.;;..:.Z:_7;...._..._/...;.~-~-~--­

_.:;Et~u..;...:::;.;c.lt....:;c;_;r.....;o-~-------Funeral Services at Catkol/c Church
Pla c e of Death

9: 3t}

Time of Funeral Service

01. n?.

Clergyman
Physician

:T G. Lee-

Number of Burial Certicate

..2-2._

luberc?t/osls

Cause of Deathft:/qonc:n-v
I

Date of Death _....,c2;..._,:;;;;C;...:.l_..;;...5~/_7.~/,-.:b;;;..._ __
Date of Birth

Serr

/c?S7

,;2_)

Bo.. r- be r--

Occupation

Single or Married .....;..../77_.---~ "'!"'""'"".,.--Religion Cct lhol·c_
Aged

;!._ 7 years _ _ _months

/

5I-

days

Body to be shipped - - - - - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault ------------Interment at

LaTh ol / c

Lot or Grave No.

CC'm
Sec No.
1

2 ----------

3 ---------4 -----------

5 ----------

6--------

�SCHUBERT NCRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. i4, 1924}
}Date

No.

NAME OF DECEASED

1?/£

Jail/I/ £Pwi N' V--41L

/()(.

Charge to

Ocr c2JI

/ll:.CLELLIIIV

Other Information

Order given by _____' ·--~----"-------How secured
co.. s ""'
Date of Funeral CJGI

..t.. 5

~~~--------------

Place of Death

:z 11

Funeral Services at

of-

CA..H'st-

l-/Nwood

~~!~aS.

6

Time of Funeral Service

;0~
/J?or t~A

Clergyman
Physician

ff E, VA-¥ /Vo 7v

AINn&lt;:.-

;/~

Number of Burial Certicate

vc/ 2. 3 jtj/b
Date of Birth lluq · .:&lt;o I.F5/I
J
Occupation
lfcT /0. '~"' n1 e. r

IV/Ime

~/75.

Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at ~n5
Lot or Grave No.

C / T~
7

Sec No.
1
2

3
4
5
6

JOJ.JN

-

/-11.1?

EDN;rV V /11 L

:Z.o

, f r14Th.:..,.. -

1&gt;7 o i
IVAT j

Single or Married w ~· ~t..ue .,..- '"'!"'"""-,.----Religion ------Aged 7:5 years :t. months :3'
days

;r: c

y B c.o k .

18 'f 1

sex- m c'- le.

Date of Death

Body to be shipped

'r

.PI"c" o{ ;B;,..)l, -/Yl i ddfe.lc. ,..,v a ), ; 0
PA!F

Cause of Death /-l J?.eop/e
, X/v

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SCHUBERT l,fCRTUARY- BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No. _ _
NM~

/I!VNA

OF DECEASED

Place of Death

z:

,#lofh~r of ##JuS WE5/ER 11/it!S

1?/6

4/ova...

~~~~~-----------

Funeral Services at ffiw-&gt;e

A /Jt5

Time of Funeral Service

/ () cT. m.

CUl/o(

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate

----

Cause of Death

IZ-e0 1'77017/

CL-

Date of Death

11/t? t/

.2 I

/ 'l/6

Date of Birth

JZe c..

1

I g ..:2....7

liPusc w1 {e.:

Occupation

Single or Married W 1 c/o VJ
Religion _ __
Aged

II

years_

months

~0 days

Body to be shipped ----------------Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

lfl£

Other Information

Order given by-~----~~''------------How secured
(4?1/
tU'JV .,2

:L/

EG-GERS

Charge to tf'/JJ~5 WESTE/f/-1//«5

Date of Funeral

1/!Jv

----------

DE/J V
/

Lot or Grave No. _ _ _Sec No.
1
2

3------4------5------6-------

�I

t--

SCHUBERT NGRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date _Pee. ~:L

No.

/-JL8ERT SCHU LZ

Order given by --------------------How secured

S E of

Place of Death It?

Funeral Services at

EucloYo-

Cer !1lE {//til({!/ or
/3C ~.4?

Time of Funeral Service

Et:t]?o/?/l

t/. 1-v: Je;d/e ,_

Physician
Number of Burial Certicate

---//eu r a I Jo._

Cause of Death

Date of Death .J)e c.

1'1 /6

.,.2,;2

---

Date of Birth Jwne. I ?

Single or Married
Aged

g'5

/.Y3 /

1/q t~s e tv/ f e...,

Occupation

year~

u;/c;;?J
_5-

Religion _ __

s

months

days

Body to be shipped
Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

&amp;m.

fu do ro..

Lot or Grave No.

i?/b

Other Information
ll@dr:-r of ;/l!JEI(/ SCJ-J UL2.

Date of Funeral 7JEC .:lb Jf/6

Clergyman

/I 8'

/IJ..s: flcz BAI.~V £, .SC )./ U L z_

NA1.rE OF DECEASED
Charge to

. PI

Sec No.
1
2

3 -----------4-------5
6 ----------

I

�SCHUBERT MCRTUARY -BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date .Pe e

No.

/J1rs

)

/VELL/£

lfbBERSOA/

Order given by ''-_____,.__________~_____
How secured

Other Information

cfiu~~re~--

Date of Funeral -~--~-n~3~--~~~~/~Z_______
Place of Death 5tJ 7 wesT/2"0 d:C .mo.
Funeral Services at

Carhol/c Ckrclz

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman

7-'30

u . /??.

h?!k'er Schm/ cKLer:

Physician
Number vf Burial Certicate

----

Cause of Death .L ~bo.r Reum 0 o;0--

Body to be shipped
Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

-----------------------

C arho[·e-

Lot or Grave No.

/(/6

_A/ELL IE $4y LEw/s

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

2.~

Ewcloro-. Ce/?7~

Sec No.
1
2

3--------

4-------65---------------

;&gt;

of

.

/)Jjrs 11/EL'L IE fibLJE-RSo/1/

�SCHUBERT HCRTUARY.BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
T/J. J /
}Date ~/uv

No.

7 /&amp;IV)( . )(/;v G

NAME OF DECEASED

Jos £PH X/(v'G-

Charge to

Other Information

Order given by _____··---------------How secured

fq/j~r

Date of Funeral ....Jfl
. . . . ..:..::.AI_ _ _3____!.;...;71._7.._____
Place of Death

~~--~~ct~o._r~o_~---------­

Funeral Services at

Cc! Ba.e1:sr Cht~r-ch
~:30 ~~

Time of Funeral Service

/fev.

Clergyman

7ho/7?tA5.

J C

Physician

Lc~

!;llmber of Burial Certicate

----

Cause of Death /JzeqJ?7tJtzio.._
Date of Death

-rJ/.;N I

Date of Birth

#t;y
// j%35'
I

;frr

Occupation

!9 17

~ r-mer

Single or Married-----~~-=--Religion _ __
Aged

.L.£_

years

2

oZ 0

months

days

Body to be shipped - - - - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault
Intermer:t at

-----------

Eudor0--

Lot or Grave No.

/917

Cem.

Sec No.
1

2---------

3

4 -----------65 ----------

----------

of

�..t---"'

SCHUBERT !JIGRTUARY -BOCK
{Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
--r.::IJA/
}Date vllrv

.LJ

I

I&lt;J!?

No.

$-;V R7 y

NAME OF DECEASED

W t?'{vER

A/.. /11/-} /J17 VFR

Charge to

Other Information

Order given by ___,,________'_/________
How secured
Date of Funeral

JAN

J

17!7

7

Eu clo ro-...

Place of Death

Funeral Services at _l.t..tihe; YC\

n

Time of Funeral Service c2: 3()

hc:c/

Clergyman

C),urch

P //?.

5/oe rKer

I G-. L c:. e_

Physician

Number of Burial Certicate

-----

Date of Death _-X;;...:/-J;...;...;...N:;..._.....'t'--..t..J..!...'l.:....J7'-----

7

Date of Birth _./!J,~'/l~"""Y_T~_I_B'....;.-f....::7
__
Occupation

!?r::T Cement:

Single or Married
Aged

.?UorKer

J?1a r r i e j ~-:----

Religion _ __

years _ g_....:months

__o_

days

Body to be shipped - - - - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault - - - - - - -

I~terment

at

Cem~

Ettclo Yo...

Lot or Grave No.

Sec No. _ _
1

2--------

3-------4------5------6-------

I2 I

�SCHUBERT 11IORTUARY . BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No.

NAME OF DECEASED

~

uan

..2 '3

/ 71/

m~ s, W/JRREN

Charge to
Other Information
Ordersecured
given by --------------------How
Date of Funeral
Place of Death

----------------------------------------

Funeral Services at ---------------Time of Funeral Service ------------Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate -------Cause of Death -------------------Date of Death --------------------Date of Birth

---------------------

Occupation --------------------------Single or Married --------~- ~~---­
Religion ------Aged _____ yea~s ______m.onths ______ days
Body to be shipped ----------------Styl of Grave Vault ------------Interment at

~------------------------

Lot or Grave No.

-------Sec

No.

1
2

3 _________
4 ----------

5---------

6 -------------

�SCHUBERT NCRTUARY -BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date .J a.~~. 3 /

No.

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

-.TcHI\/

RA YIY\ 0;1/.D
£IlL c R 5

E!iL£ R s

Ordersecured
given by --------------------How

.J"o..

Date of Funeral
Place of Death

Other Information
J o HN E 1-!L£/&lt;. 5

Yl 3\

~~~~------------

Kan 5 C\5 c i r V t mo.
I

Funeral Services at

Ev~ncte[cg /

Chto-ch

/

Time of Funeral Service

__ // a . m .

,_,;,_:,_...;.~..:...;...--

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate

----

Cause of Death ------------------Date of Death -------------------Date of Birth --------------------Occupation -------------------Single or Married
Religion - - - Aged _____ years
months _ _ _ days
----~-

__

-.;

Body to be shipped ----------------Styl of Grave Vault
C em.

Interment at E n dovO\.._
Lot or Grave No.

/ CJ 17

Sec No.
1

2--------

3

4-------5------6-------

�SCHUBERT MORTUARY-BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date ~eb

No.

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

Order given by ----~~~---"-------How secured
C g,s h

5/5kY

Date of Funeral ~JS~e~b~~~~~---------­
//es f?e

Y
~~~,~~-----------

Funeral Services at ~J0~o~~~s~~~-------Time of Funeral Service

AI

Clergyman

/~

A(

B/IL£5

Physician
Number of Burial Certicate

----.,

Cause of Death •tS-+P~o~p~/~e~~~~~--------­
Date of Death

Feb

/0

1717

Date of Birth

J//N

/:Z

/'235

Occupation ------------------------Single or Married Widow
Religion ____
Aged Y.2.

-2I

years ___....;months

Body to be shipped So../e

V7'l

days

Ohio

Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

Wt' non o...

Lot or Grave No.

/9!?

Jflr5 41Y!V!l MNE .J0HN5tJI1/

V;f B. S kiATSoA/

Place of Death

/{)

Ccm_

----Sec

No.

1
2

3--------4 ------------

5 ---------6 ----------

Other Information
of' Yy; 8. S WllT50N

�SCHUBERT !1CRTUARY . BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No.
NM~

OF DECEASED

AuG-:

dlr.5

/Jl~R\L

Charge to

7

Order given by
How secured

Feb

/I

19!?

C-IAE-NTJ-iER

C.u £N T JdER
//

I;

Date of Funeral

&amp;.6

Place of Death

!::Icc\'"- -P / c I cl

Other Information

hu5~417J of

IL'i 7

/ 3

Funeral Services at£itdor-o.. c'varzyc{co.l Ch!AYC'n!__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Time of Funeral Service

:2.- P. .Ill.

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate

----

Cause of Death !«.be rcnlos&gt;s LunqS
/

Date of Death

Ub

-

II J 9!7

Date of Birth Jul?e,

f

/c?b'f

Occupat~on --~/5~a~.t~m~e~r~--------------- Single or Married
Aged

i Z

)/?a. Y r; e

J ----

Religion _ __

years _%
__months _..2.
__ days

Body to be shipped --------------Styl of Grave Vault -----------Interment at

Euda-r~

Lot or Grave No.

Cerr;_
Sec No.
1
2 --·-----

34 _______

5------6-------

�SCHUBERT HCRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date /C6

No.

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

~r5

Ko y

LEW 1 S"

----~~~----~~-----------------

#!LL/E

l?tJ.13Er? Sr:JN

Order given by -----"------------~---­
How secured

h6

Date of Funeral

Other Information
C r-andso_..,

/7/7

1 5

~~--~~----~~--

Place of Death 'll7 Lancls CtJurr Y.C ~.
Funeral Services at

A0usE

~--------------

Time of Funeral Service

---------

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate

--------

Cause of Death 5p;na I /lJenn; r / -fi·s
~
'
Date of Death

reb //

~--~---------------

Date of Birth

---------------------

Occupation -------------------------Single or Married
Religion ------Aged ~
years . ______months _____ days
Body to be shipped ----------------Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at Ca#'t? / c.
Lo~

or Grave No.

I I

CC"nJ.

Sec No.
1
2

3

4-------5
6-------

~f

_A1,,.

11/E/LIE J?osE/f'&gt;.CJIV

�SCHUBERT MORTUARY -BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date

No.

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

.

-

l. E

/llli.DREU/

Other Information

Order given by ___1_'_ _ _ _ _ _
// _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _
How secured

h6 /f
Pr"'C\ y-;

Place of Death

Time of Funeral Service

~v5~4nd

/Z/Z

Cenfrs:J

5:--&lt;

Funeral Services at ;-riends

Church

_2 ~/}/.

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate

----

Cause of _Death .4a"T"G lhcum~uzjoDate of Death

hb

II

1~17

Date of Birth /fuq /.3 /~~7
J
Occupation
~a 'r mer
Single or Married ?Z?art;~o/
Religion _ __
Aged

67

years

II

"""lfl~.e::'--....:;.A_~..;_;V~!?:...;;..E~tu...;;.._ _ _ _ _ __

dJ'rs W,._, /J;vDI?EW

Date of Funeral

ftb

5

months

c2c?

days

Body to be shipped - - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault

------------

Interment ~a~t~~~a~~~~~-------~C~e~-~~Lot or Grave No. _ _ _Sec No.
1
2

3 _ _ _ _ __
4 _ _ _ _ __
65 _ _ _ _ __

of'

�SCHUBERT MCRTUARY . BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date

d/
///4/f

No.
NAME OF DECEASED

Charge to

/$5

Ez E K ;E L ·

Order given by _''------/'____________/_/_
How secured

Other Information

htobe~nc/ ~f

Date of Funeral ___
&amp;......._a__r-_2..
______/~._/
.........
7_
Place of Death

--~~~u.~~~o~y~o-~--------

Funeral Services at

~h7e.-

~~~~--------

~~~

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman

~om.£?5cJl7
I

6; Yc/on

C J Kvan
7

Physician

g

Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death

C'ere..brco

J

Date of Death -~
..........
~a....r_'-1_....,./fl-._'/'"""7____
Date of Birth

__;;;.J1..;.;.,;;.;..;.N'_"-7_;..../.;;..3~3"'""'Z:..- __

Occupation --~~~e~U/.~~~~~e~y_____________
Single or Married
Aged

g[)

years

~r r ; e.. J

Religion _ __

/

months

,2 fL

days

Body to be shipped ----------------Styl of Grave Vault -----------Interment at

£~ ro._

Lot or Grave No.

Cern .
Sec No.
1
2

3

/ 7'/ 7

ltJE!VARP CL:V.PER

$. Cvo?E~

/ICkES

I

4--------5
6--------

�SCHUBERT NCRTUARY-BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
41
}Date //Ia r

~/(EDE!fic-1(

NAME OF DECEASED

/Jlr.5

Charge to

/ f/7

dJVTo#i.ti

/J/!_pJ.

4J!{J)L

Order given by ~
How secured
---------Date of Funeral ~ r-

3

Other Information

hwsbanc/ of

1917

--~~~~-~~---

Place of Death

CqfioJ/~ durch

/t?

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman

h"der

a . 1?7.

S'chh7,-cK'Ier-

..;[ G

Physician

of £udo ~""'­

tfm/· 5 tu.

Funeral Services at

L c:. e...

(?

Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death Cere b rc.. \

J-)

L tn otr

Date of Death

/1/o.y-

Date of Birth

/ll AV I/ /o3'7

h

Occupation

/
YtrJ

I

h 9.j&lt;2-

1917

e. ' r

/lJo.. rr I e J

Single or Married

Religion _ __

Aged

I

-~---......;.._...:.-

No.

7?

'1

year~

Body to be shipped

days

-------

Ca tho/;"G

Lot or Grave No.

2.CJ

---------------

Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

months

c('/?7.

Sec No.
1
2

3-------4 _ _ _ _ _ __

5------6-------

�SCHUBERT 1J1GRTUARY- BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date - - - - - - - -

No.

NM{E OF DECEASED

Charge to --------------------------Order given by -----------------How secured

Other Information

(;nJq e.JJ, IY\r~.. )

Date of Funeral --------~-------Place of Death --------------------Funeral Services at --------------Time of Funeral Service ---------Clergyman

A/o

Physician

_p4 fe

Number of Burial Certicate --------

t:&gt;h

0

rJ

t' r

j? r-ece eJ.

Date of Death --------------------Date of Birth --------------------Occupation --------------------------Single or Married
Aged _____

-

year~

---------=~~---­
Religion -------

___

months _____ days

__..;

Body to be shipped ----------------Styl of Grave Vault -----------Interment
_______________________
~a~t

Lot or Grave No. _______sec No •
1

2

3
4 ------------

5

6 -----------

,- ""' '1 po..'i-e__

$4R I 1 ?//
/

Cause of Death --------------------

in.fo

�SCHUBERT r~TCRTUARY. BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
41
}Date /7/#/f -2... 8"
No.

"'-..Z&lt;J

~lf!?V
)

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

-JO 1-1 tv'

EtrGE/VE

r/11!!1

R. Fit i T 1-J

Other Information

Order given by ___,,___________
" _______
How secured
Date of Funeral

//t?.r cZ? /11?

Place of Death

3 /?7 tues/

Funeral Services atC&amp;t]4rYv
{8aK
;

J/i/)
&gt;

I I a. P7.

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman

.J. G- ..

Physician
Number of Burial

Lee_

Certi~ate

----

Cause of Death .STo..r-vc...l"; on on
Date of Death
Date of Birth

a.&lt;:..l. of. in)

o-f' ~r0.fica.l

·$!A ::Ltr"
--------------------v-

Feb 17

/~17

Occupation ------------------------Single or Married

------=--:--:--Religion _ __
I

Aged _ _ years

months

/cj

days

Body to be shipped ----------------Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

VA'I:#;//

Lot or Grave No.

c25

Sec No.

-I -

1
2 ----------

3

4--------5------6--------

food

�SCHUBERT 11TGRTUARY . BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924~Date

A:Y

/C)

/f l?

~·'---------

No.

BE!V'EJJ;c r

NAME OF DECEASED

.7JEcl(

Charge to
Other Information

Order given by __,_,_ _,/_________
How secured
Date of Funeral
Place of Death

,.,/r /L/ 1'1/7
Euafor-o.....

~~~~-~~-----

---~~----------

Funeral Services at CarftJ/6

~'30

Time of Funeral Service

5ChJ77/c/s/e r

Clergyman
Physician

Cittr-ch

;t/T

ckl7es

Coroner

Number of Burial Certicate

----

Cause of Death .lllttrckr- 2:2. C q/;bev /[DeCK son
Date of Death ~~~.t~/.~~-----------Date of Birth

---------------------

Occupation ------------------------Single or Married----~-=--~Religion _ __
Aged

_b_&amp;'_

years

----

months

days

Body to be shipped
Styl

---------------of Grave Vault

Interment at

-----------

Catho//c

Lot or Grave No.

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(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
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(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
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(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
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(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date
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(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
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(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
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�SCHUBERT NCRTUARY.BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

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(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
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(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No.

NAME OF DECEASED

Order given by --------------------How secured
Date of Funeral

--------------------

Place of Death --------------------Funeral Services at ---------------Time of Funeral Service -----------Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate

----

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Other Information

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                    <text>SCHUBERT NCRTUARY-BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date ---------------

No.

NAME OF DECEASED

/J!rs. EL/IlER UJ /licKS

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Other Information
Order given by --------------------How secured

/J/t7

Date of Funeral
Place of Death

----------------------------------------

Funeral Services at

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate

----

Cause of Death -------------------Date of Death
Date of

--------------------Birth
---------------------

Occupation - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Single or Married
Religion _ _ __
Aged ____ years

-----months

days

Body to be shipped ---------------Styl of Grave Vault - - - - - - - - Interment at

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Lot or Grave No.

-----Sec

No.

1
2

3

4--------5
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SCHUBERT 11CRTUARY -BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
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No.

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NAME OF DECEASED

Order
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Place of Death

-----------------

-------------------

Funeral Services at

Time of Funeral Service

------

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Bu.rial Certicate

----

Cause of Death -------------------Date of Death
Date of

--------------------Birth
---------------------

Occupation ---------------------Single or Married --------~
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Other Information

�SCHUBERT 11TGRTUARY . BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date
No.
NAME OF DECEASED

D

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Date of Funeral

----------------------------------------

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----------------

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Date of

--------------------Death
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---------------------

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6 ----------

Other Information
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�SCHUBERT MORTUARY -BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912 - Oct. 14, 1924~Date

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Date of Funeral
Place of Death

----------------------------------------

Funeral Services at

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--------

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(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
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NAME OF DECEASED

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-------

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Body to be shipped ------------Styl of Grave Vault
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(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
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Date of Funeral

------------------Death
-------------------

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---------------

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Clergyman
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Number of Burial Certicate
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Date of Death
Date of

--------

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--------------------Birth
---------------------

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(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924}
}Date

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Place of Death
Funeral Services at
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--------

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Number of Burial Certicate
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-----------------------

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Date of Funeral
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(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924~Date /!J/!,.f

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(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924~Date /ll/llf' ~
No.

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)

Time of Funeral Service /0

Ceo.

Clergyman

~.

m.

SI-IRENK

,F. C. CAYE

Physician

Number of Burial Certicate -------

.P/6the1/:S

Cause of Death
Date of Death

,?/,41'(

..2.7

17/8'

~--~--~----~-----

Date of Birth --------------------Occupation ----------------------------------Single or Married --------~ ~..--Religion ____
Aged

50

years

__

months _ _ _ days

_.;

Body to be shipped
Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

Eur;/~..-&lt;'-

Lot or Grave No.

/(/?

Lt:JVELIJCE

Ordersecured
given by --------------------How
Date of Funeral

9

C't&gt;m.
Sec No.
1

32------_______

4--------

5 ---------6 ----------

-' .

�SCHUBERT !ilCRTUARY . BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

-

No.

/IJA!JIEJ.f/ .J. r~!f11VER

NAME OF DECEASED

/11-rs.

Charge to

_/7/J_,,p-....
_____
_
I
/?/$""

h~rAIE~

i.tALA

Other Information
Order given by --------------------How secured
Date of Funeral

Aer

I

Place of Death Zlvz~K~
Funeral Services at

rI r

I

S. fC: ~¥iTa/

Be:teT'J·sr Ch~trc-h

Time of Funeral Service

//a.m.

Clergyman

J. P

Physician

Fr~ei'Y?&lt;71n

Number of Burial Certicate

-----

Cause of Death i..t:Jb"'r ~cumenjoDate of Death

/11ar .2.. 9

Date of Birth

-------------------bn Trc:ll in

17/g'

4-r-re.,.

Occupation

Single or Married -------~

____

Rel~i-gi-=-o-n--

Aged

Jf5

year~

months

----~

-----

days

Body to be shipped - - - - - - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

-----------

Eu a{; ra

Lot or Grave No.

7/t:J

Ct-PJ.

Sec No.

3

1

2---------

3 ----------4 ----------

5 -----------6 ------------

�SCHUBERT MGRTUARY .BOCK
{Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No.

6/e'r 7

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge t o - - - - - - - - - - - - Order given by .J;Sl/11/ WESTCJA/
How secured
Date of Funeral ~~~~~r--7~----------Place of Death /IZ~~tY sh1 / /

~'ch.

Funeral Services at hi(."'ne/s- ~aric Ct"~t,.c..
Time of Funeral Service

/ / 01.

171.

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate

----

Cause of Death CA..,.Ci n~mlllf.. ~f
Date of Death
Date of Birth

AlP~

'

..S7/elr7At:.J.,

..3 /1/4"

C/cT 8'

/8'~'1

Occupation -~~-~~Y~n?~e~r_____________
Single or Married tv/ ci"IA./
Religion _ __
Aged

9'3

years

S

months .2. 5

days

Body to be shipped ----------------Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at .F?"'Yie..
Lot or Grave No.

Ce'n\"Y'e.

- - -Sec

Cem.

No.

1

2--------

3

4-------5------6-------

Other Information

�SCHUBERT 1ftGRTUARY . BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924~Date
No. _ _
NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

//

.4/r.s IJ1!M'JE
C

/rlfC/i#l/l!VA/

Date of Funeral -"~JJ~u~nu.c..c-.li,:?=-:b;;..._____
Place of Death -Ef~u..::;;~.;..;";_r-;...tJ.-;;.__ _ _ __
Funeral Services at .Lulhe)'"D.n
Time of Funeral Service .3 r.:',#?.
t""

.;r. G-. Lee..,

Physician

Number of Burial Certicate - - - Cause of Death Child hiYt h

~J::....:::.:.u.:...n:.:.e.-.....::t.~'i-----­
Date of Birth tfkr I '9 I S76

Date of Death

l·iu~se &amp;Vi+~

Occupation

Single or Married /lla"rr-ied
Aged

fc:L

years

.:3

Religion _ __

months

5

days

Body to be shipped - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault - - - - - - Interment at

Eu~Yt)..

Lo't or Grave No.

?
191

Other Information

Order given b y - - " - - - - - - - - How secured

heel STtJe.rK e

~'I

lv!CJ/4/$,1/

,.

Clergyman

J'uNE

c~m.
Sec No. _ _
1

32-------_ _ _ _ __

4------65------_ _ _ _ __

�v /
SCHUBERT IITGRTUARY . BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date
No.

C

//

WIC/1&amp;.19/VA/

Order given by ----~-------h--------­
How secured

J(dne-

Date of Funeral

Other Information

$on ~-1-

.:2.. 6

Euc:l'o ~o....

Place of Death

Funeral Services at ~tfthe-ra o
Time of Funeral Service

J /?'/J1.

Clergyman
Physician

-----

Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death

S/j'//.6o r n

Date of Death JUne
Date of Birth

..:2 'I 171&amp;"'

June ~ 'i J?l [?'

Occupation ------------------------Single or Married

------=-~-:---Religion _ __

.ST/LL BoRN"

Aged _ _ years _ __.;months _ _ _ days
Body to be shipped - - - - - - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

---------

/in:/~ r~

Lot or Grave No.

JCJ IF

/(E.If BEI?r lf//CH#/~N/1/

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

June. :2. LJ

Ce&gt;m.
Sec No.
1
2

3-------4 _ _ _ _ _ __

5------6-------

/-/.C.

JVt'c!l#lAN/V

�SCHUBERT 11IGRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912 - Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No.

-r
vulv 7
I

/f/?

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to _ _E:__;;;,f;;;;.L.;;;..£...;..;.,.V_...;:C::...::L;.../1~1?...:....;_K=---Other Information
Ordersecured
given by --------------------How

~ly 7

Date of Funeral

--~~;~------------

/411s C/t"v
&gt;

Place of Death

Funeral Services at

$p

~r)~ots,-

Time of Funeral Service

___

~ f?~

-~...;..___,.;.

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate

----

Cause of Death qcv/c: c//a.lat:'on of lea-,/
Date of Death
Date of Birth

;;;;11e .3o

------~~-----------

---------------------

Occupation ------------------------Single or Married ----~ -~Religion _ __
Aged

.3~

years

months

----~

Body to be shipped
Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

-----

---------------------------

~~-~IJ s;'cle.

Lot or Grave No.

days

Cem.

- - -Sec

No.

1
2

3

4-------5------6--------

�SCHUBERT MGRTUARY.BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
/J
;'/
)Date ~~J~-----'-/tU t; /,
/?/c?

No.

NAME OF DECEASED

$rs

)//!I.E :JJuT!ON

Charge to --------------------------Order given by ----------------How secured
Date of Funeral
Place of Death

-----------------

Funeral Services at

Time of Funeral Service

-------------

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate

------Cause of Death
-------------------Date of Death
--------------------Date of Birth --------------------Occupation --------------------------Single or Married --------~- ~~---­
Religion ------Aged _____ years ______.months ______ days
Body to be shipped ----------------Styl of Grave Vault

-------------

Interment at

~------------------------

Lot or Grave No. _______sec No.
1
2

3

4--------5
6--------

Other Information

�SCHUBERT MORTUARY-BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
) Date

No.

~//~u~ct-...:....1_/_7~_'?
J

Cl/!J?K

NAME OF DECEASED

Charge to

TERRELL

S!7J?fJH C. l£RRELL

$rs

Order given by _____1_'_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,_~_ __ _
How secured
Date of Funeral

dtq /6

Place of Death Eu~ra..

...t-1'

7wp
&gt;

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman

Other Information

h~~tstanclof St:Arah C Te rr-~1/

lf/S

Funeral Services at C.erman

S. E.

.#?.E.

~~A7.
------

0 tu. ZeiJ!ev- - .J".8.T J3o.\~.s.
~ G: Le~

Physician

Number vf Burial Certicate
Cause of Death JkrmoY"ho.Jc.

---Kidneyv-- Blo.dde.r

fr-om

Date of Death -..:A;...;..:;.:.ry~.:...l.~-i________
/853

Date of Birth Julv 5
7

Occupation --~~-a-r~m~e~r~--------------

Aged

/~

6o

years

__
I

Religion _ __
months

....;

_..;...9_

days

Body to be shipped ----------------Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

---------

Eucf()'f'&lt;A-

Lot or Grave No.

Cern.
Sec No.
1

2

3--------4 ------------5
6 ----------

�&lt;-- I
SCHUBERT 11CRTUARY . BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date Se~l
v

No.

Ceo. W.

NAME OF DECEASED

Ordersecured
given by --------------------How
I

)fj!?

Kal? s

EP..!/

Place of Death

Funeral Services at ----------------Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman
Physician
~;lllilber

------

{) W. ZEI.OLER

!I J

/JJ/IJ)isoA/ Coroney-

of Burial Certicate

Cause of Death
Date of Death
Date of Birth

----

G-u YJ Shot

5 t;PL

I

t.yooJ

I 918'

---------------------

Occupation -----------------------Single or Married 4/q.rri e-d
Religion _____
Aged 5:L years

b

months

___,;:;;;.._...;

-.:...f_

days

Body to be shipped
Styl of Grave Vault
Intermer.-t at
Lot or Grave No.

---Sec

51

19/t?

VliL£

Charge to --------------------------

Date of Funeral .£eo/ 3

I

No.

1

2--------

3

4--------

5------6--------

Other Information

�SCHUBERT 11TCRTUARY . BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No.

NAME OF DECEASED

£ ,PJ!J?/!IY)

Charge to $r..5.

H E!?A/EL

Order given by --~~~------------How secured
Cash

~&amp;2~'-~----~------------­
Place of Death --~--u~~~~~~~o-~----------­
Funeral Services at /le;IJot:lsl C'httrch

__ ;2.:_____
_
3()
.-.....;..

Clergyman

.J G

Le~

;?t

Number of Burial Certicate

Cause of Death {eye bro- L }-j c mmorAcxqeDate of Death
Date of Birth

'

Oc..-/ .3

--~-----------------

---------------------

Occupation --~L___
a_b_o_r_~_v___________~--Single or Married
Aged

3 b

years

--------=~-:.---Religion _ __

---·months

_ _ _ days

Body to be shipped ---------------Styl of Grave Vault

--------

Ir.terment at Eu~ro-.
Lot or Grave No.

/O/o///0

Other Information
.Pro. of #lrs . /IE~IVE L

Date of Funeral

Physician

c{

..J011NSIJ!V

~~----~--~~=--------

Time of Funeral Service

cJc L

Cetn .

Sec No.
1
2

34 ---_-_
_-_
_-_
_
65---------

----------

�SCHUBERT MGRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No.

NAME OF DECEASED

--------

CEo £PER

Charge to
Other Information
Order given by -------------------How secured
Date of Funeral -----------------Place of Death ------------------Funeral Services at

----------------

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman

&amp;v

------

Sclzmi ckLe r

Physician
Number of Burial Certicate

----

Cause of Death Lo~..,. $ : y.mgn/o.._.

Date of Death Ocl ...? .,..c/ 19/g'
Date of Birth -------------------Occupation --~--~_la/._,e__
r _______________
Single or Married _S_
;n~;t~~~~;;;;._~ ~~~
Religion CqCAo;/C.
Aged

years _ _-.:months _ _ _ days

Body to be shipped ----------------Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

~----------------------

Lot or Grave No.

----Sec

No.

1
2

3
4 ------------5 ------------6 ------------

�-::__ 766 ;
SCHUBERT MGRTUARY-BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date - - - - - - - -

No. _ _

NAME OF DECEASED

r-/-(E]) J)£Ck,

~~~~~~-~----------

Other Information
Order given by--------------How secured
Date of Funeral

------------Shermo.:n

Place of Death Camp
;

Funeral Services at __;h...;..;;;.o.;.;.m~e-~---Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman

(/.

------

W. L e/dler

Physician
Number of Burial Certicate ------Cause of Death foonclzio.) f:teumon/6.._
Date of Death

0

c.r /t;
/

1718'

----------------Occupation ----~-o~l~c.t=-/·=e~r______________

Date of Birth

Single or Married S) n 9/.e.r
Religion _ __
Aged .:2cJ

years _ __.;months _ __ days

Body to be shipped - - - - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault -----------Interment at

~--------------------

Lot or Grave No.

-----Sec

No.

--

1

2--------

3
4 ----------

65-------_______

�SCHUBERT MORTUARY -BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No.

NAME OF DECEASED

--------

C///I(E/1-''CE _ LEr/17/1/V/'/

/li!Gt15 T L E;::'/11/lA/A/

Charge to

Other Information
Ordersecured
given by ----------------How
Date of Funeral ---------------Place of Death C.am 12 /'"tti'YS 70 IV
f

Funeral Services at

home-

--~~~-------

Time of Funeral Service

/0

o i:: loc.K

Clergyman

#o ~le

r"i e..

d'r...1J..

Oc. 'J

Number of Burial Certicate

----

Cause of Death Lobo. y- Pnev. mon ·~ o-

Date of Death ------------------

deo.rJ,
da.)e__ o.,..,

o cl

Date of Birth --------------------Occupation

-------~o_I~J~~~-e~~~-----------

Single or Married __s_,_;.....n.....,9...../ .....
~---=- . . .---..
Religion ~e;,to~sr-

2A.

fh,:s

c:l'a 7e or1 r~ceecl·,,"l _?o.7 e_

Physician

Aged

on

year:s

___

months ____ days

__;

Body to be shipped -------------Styl of Grave Vault ------------Interment at

~----------------------

Lot or Grave No. ____sec No.
1
2 -----------

3
4
5
6

---------------------------------------

/() 19 I ?f
/

~o}fow ) nc, f""'i
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J91f!

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�~

SCHUBERT 1/IGRTUARY-BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date ---------------

No.

NAME OF DECEASED

.JluNC £

//lr5.

Charge to

£

W//1/G-

~Ewi.s

Other Information
d(' J:;·r5t' tff;;m:. Co.._lc/ be.

Order given by
How secured

:BRUCE

Date of Funeral
Place of Death
Funeral Services at
Time of Funeral Service

Physician
Number of Burial Certicate

----

Lobo.r fiie£-(ffJoniCJ-Date of Death c/cr 17/ 17/JY
Cause of Death

Date of Birth

---------------------

Occupation ___:&gt;_o_lr~~~/~·e~v-_ _________
Single or Married

-----=-Religion

_ __

Aged _ _ years _____m_onths _ _ _ days
Body to be shipped ---------------Styl of Grave Vault

------------

Interment at

~----------------------

Lot or Grave No. _ _ _Sec No.

1
2 ---~----

3
4 ------------

5 -----------6 ----------

/66 -;,

�SCHUBERT NGRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No.

Charge to - - - - - - - - - - - - Order given by Wilb/:tm ~E/Ii'ER
How secured
Date of Funeral Oc /
Place of Death

/6 /1/5'

--------------

Funeral Services at Ceme..""te. ~'""V
7

Time of Funeral Service

/t:J c:Jt/ocl(

/?e 1/. S TOe r ;..(e r
J: &amp;. Le.~

Clergyman
Physician

Number of Burial Certicate

----

Cause of Death /Jteui??on[o....Date of Death

c?c/ /~ / 1/S'

Date of Birth

--------------------

Occupation -----------------------Single or Married -----=-- ~:--Religion _ __
Aged

2

years _ __;months

days

Body to be shipped
Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at
Lot or Grave No.

- - -Sec

No.

1

2--------

3

4--------5

6 -----------

--------

Other Information

�SCHUBERT 1/fGRTUARY . BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No.

Oc/ /'?' /f/o

NAlv!E OF DECEASED

Charge to
Other Information
Order given by --------------------How secured
Date of Funeral
Place of

-------------------Death
---------------------

Funeral Services at ~~~---------)6/??e.
Time of Funeral Service

---------

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death

!J!Joc/

----

/b/so17/nq
.../

Date of Death

Oc/ /b

/V 8'

Date of Birth

---------------------

Occupation ------------------------------Single or Married .!?Jar-r /c::c/
Religion _ __
Aged

7~

years ____;months _ __ days

Body to be shipped ----------------Styl of Grave Vault

----------

Interment at

~-----------------

Lot or Grave No. _ _ _ sec No. ___
1

2--------

3

4-------5-------6---------

APPS

VR)
:;

�t----17I '·
SCHUBERT !JICRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date
No.

c?c/ c2 I

;o;e&gt;/to

S/lJJIE WiLLI/-Jms

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

~J.//1./

Order given by
How secured
Date of Funeral
Place of Death

Other Information
'vUiLLJ/1/115

--------------------

Eu~ ro-

A';?ns.

Funeral Services at __._h;....e;=m~e....:.--______
Time of Funeral Service ,2/3CJ ~ /J'1.
Clergyman

CJ. tv. Zeidler-

J. &amp;.

Physician

L e e....

----

Number of Burial Certicate

Cause of Death f;z.f/uc;nzoDate of Death ·CJc/ :Zo

/Y/J&gt;'

Date of Birth --------------------Occupation 4Cf-Se?V/f'e_.
Single or Married //la rY"I e
Aged

3f

JReligion

_ __

years _ _....;months _ _ _ days

Body to be shipped ----------------Styl of Grave Vault ------------Interment at

~----------------------

Lot or Grave No.

- - -Sec

No.

1
2

3 -----------4 -----------5
6 ------------

�SCHUBERT NGRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date Oc/ .2. 3

No. _ _

r);uL

NAME OF DECEASED

S

Charge to

.

19!8

LAW SON'

?E/1/z £R

LAW St?;t/
Other Information

Order given by -------------------How secured
Date of Funeral

o~ I

~b

7/'

I 9I 8'

Place of Death .Le"'veniA..Jor'th For\
Funeral Services at

-..1.,;/-!t...::;.o..;..m..;...;;;;.e.,_ _ _ _ _ __

Time of Funeral Service

/~ o . ~.

Physician
Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death
Date Qf Death
Date of Birth

----

Pneuff1on; o-

OcT .2.. I I'll?'

--------------------

5o/c/;·e r

Occupation

Single or Married 5 /nq/~
/

c!l I

Religion _ __

years _ _ _months _ __ days

Body to be shipped - - - - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault
Interment

w~ o-

tJc( 5 ~c... b ~_;_;1Ch.,o-- b ~ CA S ~ J

Clergyman

Aged

-r /a:i:-

=a~t

----------

_________________

Lot or Grave No. _ _ _ Sec No. ___
1
2 __

3--------4 ---------5--------6 ----------

�v //

SCHUBERT NCRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date OcT :L

No. _ _

/Irs

NAME OF DECEASED

/!{EtP/{ /(!

LJ

/71~

1-io!V'mE;"c-R

Charge to _ __;41-...;.._r_.__
/s2...;;;o...;.M.;,..;'/J1;..;...;....;E;;...-....;.IE._I?-=----

Other Information

Order given by ------------------How secured
Date of Funeral
Place of Death

Dcr

I?! f?

2..5

--------------------

Funeral Services at ~~.V.~o....;.n?~~~--------Time of Funeral Service

wa.s w.,..·,1-\en

/ ;0/.7,7

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Buria1

Certi~ate

----

Cause of Death ~et.-1m~aioDate of Death 0/c

r

.2

3

I ?If?

Date of Birth --------------------Occupation h0ctseU/c'[e..Single or Married l??c:? Y r/e: c/
Religion _ __
~.,.---

Aged

*'

year5 _ _....;months

Body to be shipped fifiJ!IIK/;'_v C.

days
/!Jt:J,

Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at
Lot or Grave No. _ _ _Sec No.
1

2--------

3 ----------

4-------5-------6--------

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�SCHUBERT NGRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No.

/l/rs

NAME oF DECEASED

1/r£55/l PEily CRirrlfv

£ucr£AI£

Charge to

I

C/?lff"!N

Order given by
How secured
---------Date of Funeral
Place of Death

...5 ~ rn

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Horne,

___.;.....:....;;.___;_.:::;__

Time of Funeral Service

:2,

~ UJ. .Z e ic/lev-

Physician

C B. /J1 i )/e r

Number of Burial Certicate

Date of Death
Date of Birth

uhfc:_ o~

.5oufh

____

Clergyman

Cause of Death

Other Information

lflov ~'I ~

Funeral Services at

f? fl.

----

-----------------/Vo
:zo
V

-~~~~---------

--------------------

1/qwsew/fe....

Occupation

Single or Married $a rrie..d
Religion _ __
Aged

years _ _ _months _ __ days

Body to be shipped
Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

#t:Jy 20 / 1/F'

------~-------

------------

ZJEAI Y

Lot or Grave No. ____ sec. No.
1

32-------_ _ _ _ __

4-------5 _ _ _ _ __
6--------

�~175 ' •

SCHUBERT 11GRTUARY -BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date _;?c c 2__

No.

_4j /c£ /Jo!?ll

NAME OF DECEASED

C~UmB//11£

4/A'y /-J/J?BLER

Charge to

'
Order given by --------------------How secured

Date of Funeral

.Pe c.

Other Information

.:2_

~~=-~~----------

b

Place of Death

S casT

#7/

Funeral Services at

/-l'es pe. r
;

~ f?/?7

Time of Funeral Service

/I J.' J3a. I e.s

Clergyman
Physician

Number of Burial Certicate

-----

Cause of Death 4r:uf:e. ;Ve.dtib's
;
Date of Death
Date of Birth
Occupation

__,;..j#~'&amp;~Va:;......3;;;;.....;0
_ _ _ _ __

!Ju[j, 8, I 8"73

J }s5f #~use-

Me.ee.,...
&gt;

Single or Married S1ag/e..
T

Aged

4'.5

year:s

3

Religion _ __

months :2__L

days

Body to be shipped - - - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at &amp;s~e_yLot or Grave No.

"

/ 9J~

Cem.
Sec No.
1

2---------

3
4 ------------

65 -----------

----------

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                    <text>SCHUBERT 11CRTUARY. BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date ..Pee I J

No.

..;.J.fl~t5;;.,..._ _ _--=ct;;__W._'I_.N_G-_ _ _ __

NAME OF DECEASED

Charge to -------------------------------Order given by
Jl?s Jof!(IIS()It/
How secured

:De c. J:L
Place of Death Be 1/ memori o..\ tlosp;To:L
v
Funeral Services at /-J.!YJ.£. Church
Time of Funeral Service ::2. :50
~-----------Date of Funeral

Clergyman
Physician
Nuwoer of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death

----

--------------------

Date of Death -:Pee- JO

--~--~~-----------

Date of Birth

---------------------

Occupation - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Single or Married
Aged

33

-----=-~-:--Religion _ __

years ._ _-.;months _ _ _ days

Body to be shipped

----------------

Styl of Grave Vault

-------------

Interment ::1t

~-------------------------------

Lot or Grave No.

J 918"

Lf 5 I

Sec No.
1
2

3 -----------4 --------------5 ----------------

6 ----------------

Other Information

�SCHUBERT 11CRTUARY . BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date
No.

K

NAME OF DECEASED

I

Charge to

W i L So II/

ov

wiLsol(

Order given by !1/r.s: 0. E. rbwELL
How secured ----~c~~~s~h__________

Pe c

Other Information
Son of

-=-=~~~----------

Ce.n&lt;~{/; r v

Funeral Services at

7

S-'..3'0
---------

Time of Funeral Service

V. tu.

2

e i dIe r

Physician
Number of Burial Certicate

----

Cause of Death P;ze.VfmrPn/o.-

27e

Date of Death
Date of Birth

c..

I0

---------------------

Occupation - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Single or Married
Aged ____ years

------=-Religion - - - - -

-----

months _ _ _ days

Body to be shipped ----------------Styl of Grave Vault

Int~;:-ment at
Lot or Grave

/l'lt.s. .J. S. 8 /s /1 0 P F

I I 3 'I OJ!io

I ..:L

Place of Death tulnf/"e!d A'S. S/ctTe. :Ins.

Clergyman

/918"

~~~~--~~~~-----------------

VfJf\1

Date of Funeral

..Pe c. I I

£c/c;ro...
No. 7? Sec

C. em.
No.

1

2

3

4------5------6--------

�v i
SCHUBERT NGRTUARY -BOCK
{Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No.

Jan

8'

NAME OF DECEASED

E!f'A!VK 13LEC!IEL

Charge to

Order given by --------------------How secured

Other Information
mdrhe r- of: /";fi91VK J3LEC H£L

Date of Funeral

-------------------Death
---------------------

Place of

Funeral Services at

Time of Funeral Service

-------

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate

----

Cause of Death

--------------------------------------Birth
---------------------

Date of Death
Date of

Occupation ----------------------Single or Married
Religion -----Aged ___ years --~months _____ days

---------=--

Body to be shipped ----------------Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

~--------------------

Lot or Grave No. _____Sec No.
1
2

3
45 · - - - - -_______

6 _ _ _ _ __

�SCHUBERT NGRTUARY .BCCK
(Dec. 11, 1g12- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No.

/!Irs. RV! BEN

NAME OF DECEASED

--------

REi-JSDN£

Charge to
Other Information
Order given by -----------------How secured
Date of Funeral

--------------Place of Death $/LWaJKe.e.. tu/s .
Funeral Services at ~me of'
Time of Funeral Service

£

____

_____
,!: 30

/:bell

;;....;;;..

Clergyman
Physician

.Pa.ie. on r,,e...~% ~
F&lt;:.b :Lo 1'11 ~

Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death

.I

------------------Pneumoi?io-

Date of Death

1-tJba.y-

Date of Birth

-------------------

Occupation ----------------------Single or Married
Religion -----Aged ___ years
months
days

-------

Body to be shipped

--------------Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at Evt do ro-..
Lot or Grave No.

Cem.

Sec No.
1
2

3
4 -----------

5
6

----------

�SCHUBERT 11TCRTUARY . BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date ;:e~z ..2tJ

No.

.J0 f/11/

NA1.ffi OF DECEASED

GoTTLiEB IIAIY\M E: R

Lo~ z.

..J

Charge to

Other Information

Order given by ___,_· ___.,______________
How secured
Date of Funeral

Feb 1_2_.

~~~~~----------

Place of Death ~~~u-d~o~t~O-~----------Funeral Services at ~A0~~~~~e:~-------­
Time of Funeral Service

~ : 3o

~;;:;...;....:;:;..;:;;..

____

Clergyman

C. B . m; 1' c:. r

Physician

Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death

Loba...r

Date of Death

Fe h

Date of Birth

----

Pne.v.mon i ex..
2.0 I~\'\

---------------------

Occupation ---------------------Single or Married
Religion -----Aged

7 ff

years

7

months

/3

days

Body to be shipped
Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

Euclor-o...

Lot or Grave No.

I? 19

Cern.

Sec No.
1
2

3

4 _ _ _ _ __

5
6 -------------

�SCHUBERT NGRTUARY .BOCK
{Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date

No.

$rs W/A/11/;F

NAME OF DECEASED

C

5usi£

Charge to

i.Etuis

/e b .:2. I

I 91'1

,1/JoNRoE

Wof3TON

Other Information
Order given by -------------------How secured
Date of Funeral Feb :z..5t/,
Place of Death

--~6[~u~~~o~~~O-~---------

Funeral Services at Co/or~J /llerhoclst Chttrc---.a..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Time of Funeral Service

r:L :3 tJ P/1'7
U

Clergyman

C.. 'rt a. v- q e s :

Cho.s . /~o..-rve.y l Co.vTh 0 s . J 0 H. M s (J 1\1 I c. 0. v-

Physician
Number of Burial Certicate - - - -

Pa.r-a.. I 1 sis

Cause of Death
Date of Death
Date of Birth

Feb :2.

J

Fe6

J 9' I?

I g'5£

Occupation --~~~a~u~~ncl~~re~s~s~-------Single or Married
Aged

nJ er

P7ary-o/cc:Jl

Religion _ __

years . ___~months _ _ _ days

Body to be shipped ----------------Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

----------

EudoY'o.....

Lot or Grave No.

- - -Sec

No.

1

2--------

3

4------5------6--------

�SCHUBERT MGRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No.

hb

:2/,

1717

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to _..;../)l..;..;...;...r.5=-----"----/"-Order given by -------------------How secured
Date of Funeral

£c: b

Place of Death

r{{;us

Funeral Services at

2£ 1'1 !9
Ct'z/

8apr/.s t=Church

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman

'

..2. : 3o '

.Tt::tc.l&lt; son

Physician
Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death

~e

Date of Death
Date of Birth

Burn r

----

70 Pe.o..th

,b :2_ 3

---------------------

Occupation ------------------------Single or Married .fiav-ri e. d
Religion _ __
Aged _ _ years ___ ___;months _ _ _ days
Body to be shipped ---------------Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

Ewdo to..

Lot or Grave No.

Cc&gt;l?l.

Sec No.
1

2---------

3

4------5------6 -------.--

Other Information

�SCHUBERT HGRTUARY-BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No.

&amp;uL1ivE

NAME OF DECEASED

Other Information

Order given by --------------------How secured
Date of Funeral

I1J ar 7

------~------------

/(q»s

Place of Death

Funeral Services at

Cit;v

wth'elf'c... Church

cJ a.m.

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman
Physician

__......
If......__B..__._
. ....C. . .u.:...;.Y
. .......fi...:..l·s"""____7_.t._r___Tr-oos r

Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death l.C) b~ r
Date of Death
Date of Birth

-----

;::J,e. u YJ?t7n ia..

$a r '-t I

'1 I 9

--------------------

. Occupation ------------------------Single or Married
Aged

3

years

------=--:--~Religion _ __

-----months

_ _ _ days

Body to be shipped - - - - - - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault ------------Interment at

Cqt)o/; G

Lo~ or Grave No.

b 1'117'

StJNtVE!/dzos£;:{

M 55

/IJ /l R I y

Charge to

JIL~r

(C:Pl .

Sec No.
1

2---------

3 ------------

4---------

5 ---------6 ----------

Kc

m

0.

�SCHUBERT MCRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

dJ
//(ar

/

No.
NAME OF DECEASED

1

Charge to _ _ _.....JI--:'1"-Y_,;G~I-·E...:...B......To...;Z."'--Order given by --------------------How secured
Date of Funeral

/!Jo. 'r 9

/917

Place of Death --~~~~~~~~_S_ou~t_h~-----Funeral Services at _.t&amp;~~~l.n~~~------­
Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman
Physician

~
----------

/"Yed SU?&amp;:. r- J&lt;'e.,..
J. C. L e. e.,

Number of Burial Certicate

----

Cause of Death J..oho.v- Fn&lt;;,(1mon; a-..
Date of Death

@o.. r- b

I

9/9

Date of Birth __/11..__o..-~&gt;X-----/_..8._g_:;.__ _
Occupation ------------------------Single or Married --------~ ~:--Religion _ __
Aged

_J_b_

years .........---:months _ _ _ days

Body to be shipped ---------------Styl of Grave Vault ------------Interment at

Ewct Yo...

Lot or Grave No.

Ccm
Sec No.
1
2

3-------4 ------------

5 -----------6 -----------

Other Information

�SCHUBERT HCRTUARY .BOCK
{Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date - - - - - - - -

No.

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to
Other Information
Order given by _____
''--------How secured
Date of Funeral ---------------Place of Death ?7St1w~ /c; m /e..
Funeral Services at

/lie Theel s r

Time of Funeral Service

/tJ a

h'7

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate -------Cause of Death STv-aoj u1C11i(;n
Date of Death -------------------Date of Birth --------------------Occupation -------------------------Single or Married --------~- ~~---­
Religion ------___;
Aged ____ years
months ____ days

___

Body to be shipped --------------Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

~---------------------

Lot or Grave No.

-------Sec

No.

1

2--------

3

4-------5-------6--------

!8?c....--·.

�0-

SCHUBERT NGRTUARY-BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date - - - - - - - -

No.

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to ----=£~]);__J:(~/L;;.;E;;,.,Y.____ _ __

Other Information

Order given by - - - - - - - - - - - - How secured
Date of Funeral - - - - - - - - - - Place of Death I ml w !fs of- LiNwood

·y~TN.:.trne. ~s

i ve.

Yl

i

r'"l

~--~i~n~J~e~~~~~~~~-

Funeral Services at t',.fuL I{ /ltJm£
Time of Funeral Service --~jL~~--17~----

1/a fe... ~ n ~a? (!..

Physician

1/aa A(oy
;

fi..Je

Number of Burial Certicate -------Cause of Death

_____________

~JS~l~u

Date of Death ----------------Date of Birth ------------------Occupation ------------------------Single or Married
)_

f" b

47ar 7 /919

Clergyman

Aged

/

years

---------=~~--­
Religion ------6

months ______ days

Body to be shipped -------------Styl of Grave Vault -------------Interment
________________________
~a~t

Lot or Grave No. ______Sec No.
1

2--------

34 _ _ _ _ ___
5
6

/9-Z

(he~r dated ,Po.'je.)
AP-r-

I()

;C,

19

)

�SCHUBERT MCRTUARY .BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date - - - - - - - -

No.

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge t o - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Other Information

Order given by ~~~/?.~~~j?~~f(,~u~s~s~E~L~L~-­
How secured
Date of Funeral -------------------Place of Death 61: 177/ S E
Funeral Services at J-lr!LF Re.si~nce..Time of Funeral Service __...../(~,P,;...;;./??.__....____

_t}4fe on

Clergyman
Physician

L"Qst./a.tecl;£/t:lfe

/ll/lq' 7

C B. #/;lLer-

Number of Burial
Cause of Death

Pate.

Certica~e

-------

S,T;// bor-n

Date of Death --------------------Date of Birth --------------------Occupation - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Single or Married
----~R~eligion ______
Aged _ _ year:s _ _....;months _ _ _ days
Body to be shipped ----------------Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at 1-/A'L E
Lot or Grave No.
1
2

3

4--------65------________

oN

11-ul

(;g t)

1'/1'1

dqte:d ?acre...(J9:..)

IJ. ~If/ L /0 !9/'f

�SCHUBERT 1ftGRTUARY . BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date - - - - - - - -

No.

NA!.ffi OF DECEASED

$;55

J/EsTE~- /YJ~/V) iLL £K

!IJ~ MiLLER

Charge to
C/145.
Order given by ___
How secured

Other Information

ft_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _

Date of Funeral

-------------

Place of Death ~L~~~·N~~~o~o~ol~--------Funeral Services at

#I

.2 :3o

Time of Funeral Service

pdf fe on

--__;;;~---

5 /y.c /e s lfl

Clergyman

Pai~ o..

Number of Burial Certicate

-----

Date of Death ---------------Date of Birth -------------------Occupation -----------------------

I5

years

------=~~---Religion _____

__

months

days

_.;

Body to be shipped -------------Styl of Grave Vault ----------Interment at

&amp;£ Sl'dne v

Lot or Grave No.

Cc:IY!

/

-----Sec

nr,..l

(t S'6)

oL•.teJ po.l(.. (JCf.i)
)JPI?i L

Cause of Death .J~... ~1e_ o-F- h~o...Yl

Single or Married

date)f?a'! e.

/17/IR ~ J'=tt~

J/,9N 11/o7v

Physician

Aged

I. as T

No.

1

2

3

4--------5

6--------

/0/

11 I

9

�SCHUBERT MORTUARY -BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date - - - - - - - -

No.

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge t o - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Other Information

Order given by --~~~r5~-~2)~o~t?~S~a#~--­
How secured
Date of Funeral ------------------Place of Death
£u~ Y&lt;?--

--~~-~-----------

Funeral Services at

A rqer;Tt'ne_.
..J

Time of Funeral Service

------

:At-~ ~17 LasT clc, fee/ ~~Je. {~b)

Clergyman

41/T/f 7/ J '111

C B /17;LLER

Physician

Number of Burial Certicate

----

Cause of Death 7H6eYct.-1lo.sls
Date of Death -----------------Date of Birth

---------------------

Occupation (OicFrecl
Single or Married
Aged 31

Prea.cher

----=-~~Religion _ __

years _ ___;months

days

Body to be shipped
Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at
Lot or Grave No. _ _ _ Sec No.
1

2--------

3

4------5------6-------

�SCHUBERT HCRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date
No.

/llrs

NAME OF DECEASED

/"/?llNCis

/.lpr,

/~

I?!?

£. RussELL

Charge to --~F....:../f...:...;;;;;.E...;;.P_~R~u..::;;s::::..S=E....:;;L;..;L~-

Other Information

Order given by --~----------------How secured ____.;;C~h:..;;~~c-..::K....__ _ _ __
Date of Funeral

/!.v.,. ,,. . .

10

~ #7/

Place of Death

rh

~~,~-------------

8

Funeral Services at

SE

cp· i c:.

Cen /e. r /JJ(5' rh:..s::::'dS::Zdt:...L;_..·s~/
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

.3 /?/11.
Ba..les

Time of Funeral Service

,4 J

Clergyman

acc~wnr /?;.~) .b; CleeK
h'rsl Ala ll 8/11./K
of oLa-rhe_

Physician
Number of Burial Certicate

----

Cause of Death fZey-puro..) Per ·,~on~r,. s
J

Date of Death

,4p
, r

~ rh

Date of Birth

.A'e r- I I

rh

Occupation

'
---~~~~~~u.~s~e~U/~~~-~~~~----------

Single or Married
Aged j!_ f

I 3"1 'I

_,#.__;....,.._ _--=- ..,..__,_--

Religion _ __

II

years_

months

.2.. Z

days

Body to be shipped - - - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault ------------Interment at

//a IC'..

{'e/?l.

~~~----------------~

Lot or Grave No.

- - -Sec

No.

1

2

3 -----------4 ------------

5 -----------6 -----------

�1~3
SCHUBERT 11CRTUARY . BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
/l
j-"7
}Date ....;....:..,.;.------"-/-/ p r
1
J &lt;JI?

No.
NM~

OF DECEASED
W/JJ..TEK' gEEP

Charge to

Other Information

Order given by _____
How secured

i j_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _

Date of Funeral

A1~~

J7

--~,~------------

Place of Death A.letv ; VovK'
Funeral Services at }_;J?wooc/ 41el-4oc£'sr
Time of Funeral Service

_t

~~

Clergyman
Physician
NumbE:l' of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death h/1 J rtJnz
Date of Death
Date of Birth

E l evcd'-t!'J STruc~ re.

-----------------------------------

Occupation --------------------------Single or Married
Aged 2

~

---------=~~--­
Religion -------

years ______;months _____

Body to be shipped

days

------------

Styl of Grave Vault

--------

Interment at

=-------------------------

Lot or Grave No.

-------Sec

No.

1
2

3

4------5
6-------

�SCHUBERT NGRTUARY-BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date ~Y 9
)

No.

Ci/J!?EIICE £

NAME oF DECEASED

17'/'7

Sc 1-/CJcJIJiorER

~/?lllv'K 5CHOEI'r'/I;J~ER

Charge to

Other Information
Order given by------~---------/.-~-----­
How secured
Date of Funeral

~~v
/orh
)
3 ~

Place of Death

Funeral Services at

/VIi

Nor /h

Carho!Jc.. Church

Time of Funeral Service

/Co. m.

ScHm/ci&lt;L£R

Clergyman

/!E. Van

Physician

No y

Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death ,4p ~lep77'G
~

~,4) y

Date of Death
Date of Birth

----

'

g

0

4uq
.2/. / g9 5
J
&gt;

Occupation --------------------Single or Married ----,_..... ~~Religion _ __
Aged

:2 3

years -

8

months

I

7

days

Body to be shipped ----------------Styl of Grave Vault - - - - - - - - - Inte~snt at

Carko//c.,

Lot or Grave No.

Cel?l.
Sec No.
1

2--------

34 _ _ _ _ _ __

5--------6--------

�/95
SCHUBERT MCRTUARY -BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No.

/lfr.s.

NA!..ffi OF DECEASED

-Jo!-1!1/

Charge to

-

/1/lv
/£ /11?
I

SELZER

5ELz£R
Other Information

Order given by---·- ·----------------How secured
Date of Funeral

/1/l y I 6 (__./;

Place of Death

9

G·n ola)i•Js

)

Sour/;

/J1

Funeral Services at Clec:trf/eld

.3 /?/J1

Time of Funeral Service

C E. P/a !:;.

Clergjrman

J

/. /11.

Physician

Reed

Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death
Date of Death
Date of Birth

t:)/ d

----

h'qe_
_)

~~Y
/~ ~
;

--------------------

Occupation ------------------------Single or Married ------:.-- -.,--Religion _ __
Aged

89

years -

1

months

2 I

days

Body to be shipped
Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at
Lot or Grave No.

- - -Sec

No.

1

2

3 ----------

4---------

5-------

6 ----------

5ELz. E IS

/llo rJIE!5.)

I

�/~

SCHUBERT 11GRTUARY . BOCK
{Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No.

NAME OF DECEASED

Other Information
C/1/lS 8/JECI(E/? her husbaJ?d

Order given by--~-'------~----------­
How secured
Date of Funeral

-------------------

Place of Death Simmons

/los.,t:?il"o.
i.
,

$ez:Ao/st-

Funeral Services at

Time of Funeral Service

Church

-------

Clergyman

Sudler

Physician

Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death GALL

----

,4cule- ~ue-rra.l/ 115

srt:JN£5

Date of Death

/J2o. v

.:L5 -r::.h

Date of Birth

Oc I

~7

I

/'68~

/rf;:usetvi Fe..

Occupation

Single or Married 4/ayrie:.d
Aged :Jb

years -

h

Religion _ __

months

:2 ?

days

Body to be shipped ---------------Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at
Lo~

-------

£uc/c;'ro....

or Grave No.

11/f?

/llrs l.AuRii BAECKER

C/lf!S B/iECKER

Charge to

A?aI y c2.6

Cem.
Sec No.
1

2--------

3

4------5------6-------

�SCHUBERT HCRTUARY-BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date

No.

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

J

£/?!VEST

Order given by //Jr.s. S c he.llac/(
How secured
Cash

%a11s

Place of Death

1719

Funeral Services at

C/ry

#Jo

»

C e me I.; 'r y
;

Time of Funeral Service --~?t~J?~,_/.1.?.
__.___
Clergyman

Fr-ed

Physician

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Ec/;nonrlson

Number of Burial Certicate
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Date of Birth

----

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3
4

5

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(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No.

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NAME OF DECEASED

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Charge to
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--~c~~-s~h---------

Date of Funeral
Place of Death

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Time of Funeral Service

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(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
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Number of Burial Certicate
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Date of Death

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�SCHUBERT 11GRTUARY -BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date - - - - - - - -

No.

NAME OF DECEASED
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Funeral Services at ---------------Time of Funeral Service

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--------

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�SCHUBERT 11CRTUARY . BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

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(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
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SCHUBERT HGRTUARY -BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
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----

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---------------------------------------Birth
---------------------

Date of Death
Date of

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-----=-~.,..--Religion _ __

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---

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Date of Funeral
Place of Death

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�SCHUBERT NCRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date
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ALBERT NEt!SD.FTER

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Date of Funeral

/919

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Clergyman

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1
2

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4--------5

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Other Information

�Lc2_ o 7

SCHUBERT NGRTUARY-BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No.

BEN

NAME OF DECEASED
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Other Information

Se4T
v

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Funeral Services at llo.c/(c.uo rth Res
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;2_

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Clergyman
Physician
'

Number 0f Burial Certicate
Ol d

----

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Date of Death
Date of Birth

5 cor
I

13

---------------------

Occupation ------------------------Single or Married
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-------=--

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Body to be shipped ----------------Styl of Grave Vault ------------Interment at .5'cPvr f;{ S 1d'c:..
Lot or Grave No. _ _ _Sec No.
1

2---------

3

4 -----------

5 ----------6 ----------

·.

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                    <text>SCHUBERT 1ftCRTUARY . BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date SepT

No. _ _

"

.2r{ /919

NAME OF DECEASED

Charge to --~£...;...
. ...;;;C~-~L_.4..;...U__;;;..G~fi~L.;...JAI..;...__ _
Order given by---'' -------~ --------­
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Other Information
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5 e-el :Z 2!

Date of Funeral

Place of Death /JndeYson's 1/o:&gt;,p;la I

.luwrence.-

Funeral Services at _.t0_7~~-~-=~~------­
0
Time · of Funeral Service ,;L/?(!7. S(-j rwf o-.;

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r;umber of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death
Date of Death
Date of Birth

----

------------------S epf: ;t5 rh
;

---------------------

Occupation -----------------------Single or Married
Religion _ __
Aged

3

years ___ ___,;months _ __ days

Body to be shipped ----------------Styl of Grave Vault
Intermer.t at

--------

Eudo ro--

Lot or Grave No.

C e/?7.
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--

1

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4 _ _ _ _ _ __

65------_ _ _ _ __

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�SCHUBERT MCRTUARY -BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date Lf/t?v 5

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Date of Death /1/o v
Date of Birth
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----

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I~terment =a~t~~~a~/e=-----~C~e~~~-­
Lot or Grave No. _ _ _Sec No.
1

2--------

34 _ _ _ _ _ __

5------6--------

�SCHUBERT MORTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date
No.

I Y/ f

_BJ(ECI/E I S£11

NA1JIE OF DECEASED

W I?

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Other Information

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Physician

on

Number of Burial Certicate

----

Cause of Death O.,tpencf·c / T&amp;t s
Date of Death
Date of

;v0 v. S::,

--------------------Birth
---------------------

Occupation ------------------------Single or Married -----~ ~.,---Religion _ __
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Body to be shipped ----------------Styl of Grave Vault ------------Interment at

=-----------------------

Lot or Grave No.

- - -Sec

No.

1
2

3
4 ------------5
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(Dec. 11, 1912 - Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date
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'

Hy /J1/lTI-/ iA
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How secured

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Number of Burial Certicate

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Date of Birth

due;- "' / %5/

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---------

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Lot or Grave No.

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S/E~!/EN A!v'II-JoNy BuR.NELL

NAME oF DECEASED
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'

Sec No.
1

32--------_ _ _ _ __
4 -----------5-------6
_ _ _ _ __

Other Information

�.SCHUBERT 11CRTUARY- BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

A/c V

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19 1'1

No.

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~~~~~~~-----------------

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Number of Burial Certicate

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years_

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II

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I

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Date of Birth

Other Information
tu::::.:'.:....J::::..e

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Date of Death

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NAME OF DECEASED

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Lot or Grave No. _ _ _Sec No.
1

32--------_ _ _ _ __
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�SCHUBERT HGRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date
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Clergyman
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Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death ~Fiarni/;r-y
;
Date of Death

------f?heC-tmo.f/ sYTJ

D ec /0

--~--------

-----------...4'/ Sch&amp;o/

Date of Birth
Occupation

Single or Married ------~ __...,--Religion _ __
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years _ _....;months _ _ _ days

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-----------------------

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Lot or Grave No.

Pee /() / 9'19

Ct'/:??.

Sec No.
1

2--------

3

4-------5------6-------

Other Information

�SCHUBERT HGRTUARY .BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
~
}Date .J/ec

No. _ _

J)ELtJ!?is ILEIIE

NAME oF DECEAsED

CI-1/-JS

Charge to

BowERs

Br:JuJER5
Other Information

//

Order given by
How secured
----------

/&lt;711

Date of Funeral

Yec

Place of Death

j_ INwood

/8

=-~------~~----

----~-------

CemeT~ YY
;

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7

----

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I

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flee.

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7 17/7'

/

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-----

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S

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I

Sec No.
1
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�SCHUBERT 11CRTUARY.BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924~Date
No. _ _
NM~

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Date of Death
Date of Birth

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1
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Other Information

�SCHUBERT HGRTUARY .BOCK

{Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date

No.

1

/JlN /9

;9.:t..o

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

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Other Information

1/

Order given by ____''----------------How secured
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17-ZO

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Number of Burial Certicate

----

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=------------------------______Sec No.

Lot or Grave No.

1
2

3
4

5
6

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�.:!../7
SCHUBERT HCRTUARY . BOCK

BJ"'..,K

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date ;[fl!v' .:2.8

No.

/!Jys.

NAME OF DECEASED

t/"-Z

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Time of Funeral Service

_....;..;;;...;::;;....;;....._
2:3~

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I sLiwGJ. W. WARRiwc;...

Clergyman
Physician

Number of Burial Certicate

Date of Death

vld /leE
-JAil/ :&lt;.~

Date of Birth

_fiA wE

Cause of Death

y

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�SCHUBERT MCRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date ;-EB

No.

I

/ f2c:J

5 ; y L V I A /IARR /s
:Du CrLAS IYJ. !1/JRRjs

NAME OF DECEASED
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Date of Funeral
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.:L

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Date of Death

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1

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Other Information

�SCHUBERT MCRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No. _ _

NAl.ffi OF DECEASED
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Date of Funeral

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----

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---------------------

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�SCHUBERT 111GRTUARY -BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

reB

0

/

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No.

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NAME OF DECEASED

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Date of Death
Date of Birth

----

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----~~-------------

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�SCHUBERT HCRTUARY.BOCK
No.

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date rEB :2. if

--

srJ?EJKER

LEST£R- G-EcJ

NAME OF DECEASED

I 9'2o

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Order given by_'·--=--~~~-----How secured
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Date of Funeral
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rE13 2 Lf 1920

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Clergyman
Physician

C 8. /11/JL.ER

Number of Burial Certicate

----

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Date of Death
Date of Birth

FEB 23
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(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924~Date $;:;!(
No.
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OF DECEASED

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Date of Death
Date of Birth

----

-------------------

-----------------------------------------

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1
2

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4 ---------65---------

---------

Other Information

�SCHUBERT 11CRTUARY . BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date ~/1~ 23
No.

172o

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to - - - - - - - - - - - - Order given by --~~~------------­
How secured ---~c~-~~s~h~--------Date of Funeral

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Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death

Date of Birth

CJn.,rch

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Date of Death

Y')

----

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/l1o. Y ..2 3

---------------------

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Lot or Grave No.

Cem.
Sec No.
1
2

3

4--------

65 _ _ _ _ _ __

Other Information

�2 "2.:'3 ~
,t_..;-

SCHUBERT MORTUARY -BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date /!l,t:;r&lt;. 2..6

No. _ _

1 92. 0

_B/f./)I) IVOC K

NAME OF DECEASED

LEE .BifAL1NOCK

Charge to

Other Information
Order given b y - - - - - - - - - How secured

/J7/JR 2 7

Date of Funeral

j_ /Nwood

Place of Death

Funeral Services at Bo..p1isT

Ciurch

;;z :30

Time· of Funeral Service
Clergyman
Physician

1/. E

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Nov

Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death
Date of Death
Date of Birth

----

--------------/J1/J !\ :Z 6

-------------------

Occupation ------------------------Single or Married
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Religion _ __
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----------

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1

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�SCHUBERT MCRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No. _ _

Charge to - - - - - - - - - - - - Order given by --------------------How secured

# .?/f

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----~--~---------

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Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death
Date of Death
Date of Birth

----

-----------------r.1~/\ ~

-~~~~-----------

---------------------

Occupation -----------------------Single or Married

-------=Rel-:-i-gi':-o_n______

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19.:Zo

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NAME OF DECEASED

Date of Funeral

4 p!&lt;:

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No.

1
2

3
4 ----------

5--------6--------

Other Information

�SCHUBERT NCRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
/Jor.?
}Date /7 F /\

No. _ _

4lrs C#/J!?LtJTTE
J'cJ ;/IV' /flE /N K E

NAME OF DECEASED
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------------Place of Death
------------Funeral Services at !-lousE
Date of Funeral

11/EAJ/E~

--------

Clergyman

:2.

?m.

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Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death

-----

------------------------

Date of Death __
/l"""e--_~
__9________
Date of Birth

----------------

Occupation -----------------------Single or Married
Religion _ __

------

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/

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How secured
----------

Time of Funeral Service

9

--------

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Lot or Grave No. _ _ _Sec No.
1

2-------3-------

4------5------6-------

Other Information

�SCHUBERT 11CRTUARY -BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date 4HG- 2

No. _ _

J/;IYlEs -;::

NAME oF DEcEAsED

/lJI?S J/lmEs

Charge to

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Cause of Death
Date of Death
Date of Birth

----

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---~~,~----------

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/fl20

--------------------

Occupation ---~---~_Y_W~~e_r_______________
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h

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/3

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Sec No.
1

2--------

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9 1 92~

4--------65-------------

Other Information

�SCHUBERT MCRTUARY -BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No.

--------

ELPERS

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

Order given by --~~-~-------How secured
Ctts#
Date of Funeral
Place of Death

-----------------L /,.y WPo.P

Funeral Services at

~E~#op;5r C/,1u~cl.!

Time of Funeral Service

------

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate

----

Cause of Death

----------------------------------Date of Birth

Date of Death

--------------------

Occupation ----------------------Single or Married
Religion - - - - Aged ____ years
months
days

-------

Body to be shipped ---------------Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

~----------------------

Lot or Grave No. ______Sec No.
1

2

3

4-------5

6

Other Information

�SCHUBERT 1JICRTUARY -BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924~Date
No. _ _

C-£LPI£1'1

NAME OF DECEASED

JEsSIE

Charge to

PuG-

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Other Information

Order given by --------------------How secured
S~p/

Date of Funeral

I

j

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Place of Death

Funeral Services at &amp;usE
Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman
Physician

.2

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--------------------

Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of

Date of Death

Date of Birth

/?uc;.. 3/

~~~---------------

---------------------

Occupation ------------------------Single or Married----=-~~-Religion _____
Aged

years

/0

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/

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days

Body to be shipped ----------------Styl of Grave Vault
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-----------

E t1 PoR -4

Lot or Grave No.

CE/IJ.
Sec No.
1

2---------

3 ----------4 -----------

5 -----------6 -----------

�.23/1/

SCHUBERT MGRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No.

So~JI/A.

NAME OF DECEASED

P

R;c/-/.4R.P5

C. F. /f'/c !/-4I?J?S

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Time of Funeral . Service

..2.

P.m.

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C. 8. 47 ///e r

Physician

Number of Burial Certicate

----

Cause of Death Cc/\v-Ce.nol?')"'- of
Date of Death

UttAtrl.-15

I 7 20

CJcr :Z. 7

Date of Birth - - - - - - - - - -

/ -/ouse ?V/ '[e_

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Aged

z;z_

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----------

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Lot or Grave No.

Oc/ 27 1?2o

CE#?.

Sec No.
1
2

3 -----------

4 _ _ _ _ __
5 -----------6 -----------

Other Information

�SCHUBERT MORTUARY-BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924~Date

/Y~V

5' /tJ2..o

No.

Ew;ivG-

C-1?/lCE EP/TJI

NAME oF DECEASED
Charge to

Other Information
Order given by -----------------------How secured

7 172tJ
Eucloro...

Date of Funeral ,1]/o V
Place of Death

Funeral Services at

/-lome.,

~..::;;..___,;;:;....._

Time of Funeral Service

__________

2:30

Clergyman

C B /?7//iER

Physician

Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death
Date of Death

----

JUberculos/s &lt;Pf iun9s
.5

/1.1) v

--~------------------------

Date of B i r t h - - - - - - - - - - - - - Occupation - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Single or Married -----------~ ~-=---Religion _ __
Aged

25

years

/I)

months

/6

days

Body to be shipped ---------------Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at s~ulh

---------S/JJE

Lot or Grave No. _ _ _Sec No.
1
2

3-------4-------5
6 ________

�SCHUBERT !ftGRTUARY . BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No. _ _

/ll;'fS. /!/;#/VIE

NAME oF DECEASED

.J/?KE

Charge to

5C!/UI{'L£
Other Information

/? 20

11/o V /0

Place of Death JoJ/NSol/ Ca. /: /(t;C fl

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Time of Funeral Service

2 ? /J

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death..z;,Te~rnaL

Date of Birth

----

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7 I 9' 2

!Vo v

Date of Death

}.,.o...., fo.ll

in Cello...v-

0

-------------------

Occupa~ion ------------------------Single or Married tLJ;- ~cu
Aged

ZZ

years

I

Religion _ __

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/5

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Body to be shipped - - - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault - - - - - - - Interment at

h

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I f :Z ()

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How secured
Date of Funeral

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C.c-/?1

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Sec No.
1
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3
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-_
-_
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___
65--------_ _ _ _ __

�--

------------------============================~= -23~ 7"

?---'

SCHUBERT MCRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date # cJV

No. _ _

El.LE!v'

BARBARA

NAME oF DECEASED

MooN'

Charge to -~r:.-=L.::..:o::...,,.t-Y.=.IJ_...:.../11~0..::::.0..:.:AI~-Order given by --E-~/1..;..;R~L---:W;.:;......;I-!~;~
· T.-=:E;;.. . .__
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Date of Funeral
Place of Death

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Clergyman

5 . 1/.

..(McKSOII/

77/tJS S. {;-REER

Physician

Number of Burial

Certica~e

Cause of Death

CtJ.rd,·o...,.,

Date of Death

/!/~ J/

Date of Birth
Occupation

----

J)ilt:\~on

/0

~~~~~---------

-------------------

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Church

/c:? a./77.

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---------

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;

Lot or Grave No. _ _ _ sec No. _ _
1
2

3 --·----4 -------

5--------6--------

Other Information

�SCHUBERT 1/IGRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date

No. _ _

#J; S5

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

-JEII/A/lE

A/t? V

I

/9 2.0

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J?oBr GREGGOther Information

Order given by --------------------How secured
Date of Funeral

;Va J/ L.f

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/9 20

~----~----~------

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m;

AI w.

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~~~~-------

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Time of Funeral Service

/-ls//n 9

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-./

Physician

J. J

Wo.ry- i "'j

Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death U R1/!'Jt.C
Date of Death

----

rb/soNIN G;-

!Vo V I
---------------------

Date of Birth----------------Occupation ~A..:.I.:;;;.~..:..:u.;;;s..;;e.;.;.K
..:....;;;,e~e.&amp;;;.e..:;e;;;..;v-_ _ _ _ __
Single or Married
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months

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Body to be shipped ----------------Styl of Grave Vault - - - - - - - Interment at @-:-/1/t:J
Lot or Grave No. _ _ _Sec No.
1
2

3 _ _ _ _ __

4-------5------6-------

BRo.

�V 236

SCHUBERT MCRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)

,A/cu

LL

JDate __
v_v--...;.F
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No.

NAME OF DECEASED
~

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Date of Funeral
Place of Death

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Co/C/

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EvPIVGEI.IC/l.l

Time of Funeral Service

/t:i

Other Information

t!S~~~T~~:: ' JR. )

Cl!u,rc/1

(A. m .

;T. Jlu S//ER

Clergyman
Physician

Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death ShtJT
Date of Death

----

-kr ~~ce.

/~ Cok, ~~

---------------------

Date of Birth --------------------Occupation ------------------------Single or Married ----~ -:---=--Religion _ __
Aged

l/5

years _ ___;months _ _ _ days

Body to be shipped

-----------------

Styl of Grave Vault

---------

Interment at CiE/l!f r/ELP
Lot or Grave No. _ _ _Sec No.
1
2

3-------

4-------5------6--------

;;

�~ 37

SCHUBERT MCRTUARY -BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924~Date A/tJV

oto

/ ?.:Za

No.

J?T J?;cJ!/Jf?P

NAME OF DECEASED

/tlrs.

Charge to

w~

/@tiT

BowERS

Ordersecured
given by --------------------How

I f2 0

Date of Funeral

;t/t) V 2 I

Place of Death

;C;fA11VC~

Funeral Services at /lle~otl:sr
Time of Funeral Service

h~lf !fro

L;ivwo&amp;p

;2!3CJ P/71.

Clergyman
Physician
Numbe1· of Burial Certicate

----

Cause of Death @Lvu / us of asc~ndt""j
Date of Death

~ lv ..Zb

Co/on

1718'

/

Date of Birth

---------------------

Occupation - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Single or Married -------~
Rel-=-i-gi~o-n-____
Aged 2

f

years

months

--~

Body to be shipped
Styl of Grave Vault

---------------------------

Interment at /JJT S/c/nev
I

Lot or Grave No.

---- days

.L 1 lv?Vt!7oy

Sec No.
1
2

3 -------------

4--------65--------_ _ _ _ __

Other Information
/J'Jrs w~ BowERS

�oZ .:5 Cf
SCHUBERT 11GRTUARY . BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)

}Date

No. _ _
NA1.m OF DECEASED

~2.~ 7

J3)tl!I')J&lt;:

JAN I

19~

/IJ/?5 /1/E/?E5/1

Charge to _ _..:...7i..;...h't;....;CJ;....'/J1.~19~5::;..._=E=-=L=-L..;_;!

=-r__

o;;...
.

Other Information
Order given b y - - - - - - - - - How secured
Date of Funeral

J/JN 3

~~~~-------

Place of Death ~s~~~

/~IVS~S

Funeral Services at /'4/E/V.PS
Time of Funeral Service

C!-hRCI/

:2. /-? /I'J.

Clergyman
Physician

-'

Number of Burial Certicate

----

Cause of Death Pnet..1}?'7on/oDate of Death

-J/:;N

J

sr

Date of Birth - - - - - - - - - Occupation - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Single or Married-----=--~~Religion _ __
Aged _ _ years _ __.;months _ __ days
Body to be shipped - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault
Interl":~nt

---------

at

~---------------

Lot or Grave No. _ _ _ sec No. _ _
1

2--------

3

4--------5-------6--------

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                    <text>SCHUBERT MORTUARY -BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924~Date
No. _ _

/!Jr.5. C/JI?oLiA!E

NAME oF DECEASED

;?Jr. C-u S

Date of Funeral

.

. *

21£5£N I 5

..JA rv :20

--------~~-------

Place of Death EtAdor~
Funeral Services at

Ko.nso..s

Ca tho//c Chur-ch

Time of Funeral Service

/tJ A.m.

Clergyman

c

Physician

B. -JO/!tVSON

Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death
Date of Death
Date of Birth
Occupation

----

------------------J/-1 N g
J

----~---------------

---------------------

/-#use tu/f'e_

Single or Married

//7?'1 r r- i e d

Religion _ __

Aged _ _ years _ _ _months _ __ days
Body to be shipped ----------------Styl of Grave Vault

--------

Interment at

~---------------------

Lot or Grave No.

- - -Sec

)~ /?:?_

3

z lESE!VIs

Charge to - - - - - - - - - - - - Order given by
How secured

.JIJ1t1

No.

1

2--------

3--------4 ----------

5--------

6-------

Other Information

�SCHUBERT MORTUARY -BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912 - Oct. 14, 1924~Date JflN
No.

d2rs. .DoRC/lS

NAME OF DECEASED

0/fh\ E:

Charge to - - - - - - - - - - - - Order given by /11rsHow secured
Date of Funeral

/? ,T AupERSo/v'

.JA II/

:J/

-~~~~----------

Place of Death L. t";zwood JiA«sA5
Funeral Services at t!Ze /ho~st: Cfn,.v-ch
Time of Funeral Service - - - - - - Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate ______
Cause of Death

Pne y 11 ow /a.-

Date of Death _.:;J).:....;.//.;..:
. ..v~:L=.;1______
Date of B i r t h - - - - - - - - - - - -

h&amp;yse w,--f e...

Occupation

Single or Married ----~- ~~-­
Religion -----Aged

9?

years

__

months

____;

days

Body to be shipped
Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at
Lot or Grave No.

-----Sec

21 / 923

No.

1
2

34 _ _ _ _ __

65------_ _ _ _ __

Other Information

�SCHUBERT MCRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924}
)Date

No.

~f (Jf? A

NA!.ffi OF DECEASED

CJ9;VA B
.

v /{i tVD RED

J

Charge t o - - - - - - - - - - - - Order given by --------------------How secured
Date of Funeral ~h~e~b~~~-----------­
Place of Death

La.. Juni-a-

Col.

Funeral Services at /1l~r.4o~st L~ttrch
Time of Funeral Service

3 _/-)41

-~_....;;._.;...

___

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate - - - Cause of Death -------------------Date of Death --------------------Date of Birth --------------------Occupation - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

177c::-n-·rie d
Religion _ __

Single or Married

Aged _ _ years _ _ _.months _ _ _ days
Body to be shipped

7ti /udo r~

Styl of Grave Vault

-------

Interment at

=-------------

Lot or Grave No.

Sec No.
-4

2

3
4
5
6

Other Information

�SCHUBERT MCRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924}
}Date

No. _ _

A L F RE j)

NAl.ffi OF DECEASED

SEv;nouB
;

Charge to - - - - - - - - - - - - -

r

C

Order given by
How secured
Date of Funeral

--'-f}...;e;......;;;;.b_9'------£

Place of Death

Rlc.J..lllRP5

u

c1 or- a...

Funeral Services at ~JI~~~n?~e~-------­

c2 /? /77.
fr1.v: C/1/}s :P/-J vis

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman

-JO /-1 N So Jl.l

Physician

Lf

~

Number of Burial Certicate

C ev-e. 6v-a..l Th

Cause of Death

rom bosis

Date of Death ---'O__;;,;e;.__b~Z-----Date of Birth

!1J /l v

30

/

;

8'.

L

Oc cu pat ion __S_Tc...;.o....:c;:;;..;..K.~-__,;;b;...:u~y....e._'f~----Single or Married

#l?{}'rie

d
Religion /1c/le.

Aged

I!

years _ _,_..;months

days

Body to be shipped
Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at
Lot or Grave No.

- - -Sec

No.

1

2--------

3

4------65------_ _ _ _ _ __

Ee b 7

KRAUS
Other Information

�SCHUBERT HCRTUARY -BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date
No.

-J/7 coB

£ C 1-\ LAB LE

.Jitco B

Order given by
How secured

15

/7.23

W~ 5CHEUERLE

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

/eb

Other Information

SCI-IV. R L E

£e b I 7

I ?:2.3

Date of Funeral

;

Place of Death

Eudo yo....

Funeral Services at

~

Sr /);uLsELI~t!VCELici1=1..-----------~

Time of Funeral Service

f?P?

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate

a,w

Cause of Death Brt.JnC~o
Date of Death

h; h I 5

Date of Birth

£2/ll Y :z..:z_,

Single or Married

5 fj

((JOn/a_

1(7 .:t 3
I36 3

~ . . 5' ole/; c. r

Occupation

Aged

----

/.u/~cue r- ~~-

year$

Religion _ __

g

months

.:2 3

days

Body to be shipped - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

.L'u de,

Lo~ or Grave No.

-------

CE/ll.

Y'o....

Sec No.
1

2--------

3

4------65 - - - - - - -------

....

�SCHUBERT HGRTUARY . BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No. _ _

/-/;;88l V . (; U £¥71/E;Cf
/1/1I?RIv C.uEIVT!-/E R

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

/Irs

Order given by -=S~&amp;~m..!.r-_A~V;...;;'E;.._;_J=s--How secured
cC:Z-5 'i
Date of Funeral '"""Ee--l;;;;..::=b~/...:;;8;...._..;../""""f....;.:t..__;;,:;3;....__
Place of Death

___;;£~.:;..:vr....:;~~o.:...r!..::q...:ar..-_ _ __

Funeral Services at S f /};tfi 5 h/lNG
Time of Funeral Servi~e

c1..: 30 P /J1

1-?c v 1-lus}(EJ?

Clergyman
Physician

Number of Burial Certicate _ _ __
Cause of Death Se.of/ ·c..,

,

Date of Death

hb

!J?voco.yd;"r;3
"-7

/ .7.2 3

/5

Occupation _...:h;.....::;..?\~Y..:.YY7:..J...::.e::...:....r_ _ _ _ _ __
Single or Married
Aged

c2 /f

year~ .

/17 a

Y

r- ,· e

c/ ~.,..---

Religion _ __

~ months

£

days

Body to be shipped - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault - - - - - Interment at

Eqo/o r ~

Lot or Grave No.

C E#/
Sec No.

--

1
2 _ _ _ _ _ __

3 _ _ _ _ __
4 _ _ _ _ __

5 _ _ _ _ __

6 _ _ _ _ __

h6

/5

Other Information

�SCHUBERT MORTUARY -BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No.

1/v
~?J
7
h b

/7 -2.. 3

-2. t)

m{)
Funeral Services at /lJ E C/!t!RCII
Place of Dea:th

){C.

;2 ~~

Time of Funeral Service

C E P/Jvis

Clergyman
Physician

Number of Burial Certicate

----

Cause of Death .#eeen c/ ·c ,· ;/s
Date of Death
Date of Birth

FE B.

Jf

z

/?..2. 3

------------

Single or Married
Aged

;

EL ec f-r ,·c ;; ·on

Occupation

years

----R eligion
months

----- days
-----------

Styl of Grave Vault

-------

E uJtJ v-(A..

Lot or Grave No.

---

----~

Body to be shipped

Interment at

/9.2.3

/JitJI(EIV

Order given by
''
/fl 0 IfEN
How secured
-----=-..:...:...:::::..:....:..:=...:..:...._ _
Date of Funeral

.2 0

-J/JmE 5 ./Ji SoP

NA1.ffi OF DECEASED
Charge to

/C b

CEff!

s ec No.
1------2-------3

4------65------_ _ _ _ __

Other Information

�SCHUBERT 11GRTUARY . BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912 - Oct. 14, 1924~Date

rEB /?

No. _ _
NAME OF DECEASED

Charge to

~l.~/?E.iJ ;:-/fEPERic!.{ /Jl/li?Tl/V -:'D1ARR

A'uGusrA :DURR

Order given by
How secured

Other Information

OTTo Pu RB

Date of Funeral - - - - - - - - - Place of Death - - - - - - - - - -

sr

Funeral Services at

PAuL CH0'£CII

Time of Funeral Service -2 P.m. reb ..2/- j3
Clergyman
Physician

l?e v II!/lAcK
C B -J:JI!¥SOJV

Number of Burial Certicate _ _ __
Cause of Death t!f,vo

c. o.. v- d; Tt'.s

Date of Death - - - - - - - - - Date of Birth - - - - - - - - - Occupation --'£...:~;.;..;..Y.;...rn__,;;;;e:...r'--------Single or Married maY r /e
Aged

53

/ .2 3
9

years

5

d

Religion _ __

months

g

days

Body to be shipped - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault - - - - - - Interment .;:;:a.;;.t_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Lot or Grave No. _ _ _Sec No.
1
2 _ _ _ _ __

3
-_
-_
-_
-4 _
___
65------_ _ _ _ __

�SCHUBERT HGRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date ~v

No.

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to
Order given by --------------------How secured
Date of Funeral
Place of Death

----------------------------------------

Funeral Services at

----------------

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of

---Death
--------------------

Date of Death
Date of

--------------------Birth
---------------------

Occupation -----------------------Single or Married
--------:-Religion ______
Aged _ _ years _. ____months

days

Body to be shipped ----------------Styl of Grave Vault -----------Interment at

=-------------------Lot or Grave No.
Sec No.
----

1

2

3
4

5
6

Other Information
;,fa &gt;J
ii'IFArtT)

�SCHUBERT MORTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No. _ _

@A';f&lt;?( U RE IT E

/lk5

NAME OF DECEASED

!!v

Date of Funeral

d;ot

'

7

:DEc l{wA

Other Information

------------------I

'1 ty

Place of Death

lt2

.2. 3

rio r-a...

&amp;~f 6

fb

So'-&lt;

Funeral Services at W'/!R HELP

C/lttRc!l

..2. ;0m.

Time of Funeral Service

don /feeT:

/)JJtPLF i.oTz

Clergyman
Physician

//. E

!A/ells 1//lle_

A/.4vLoR
&gt;

Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death

.#er 7

Date of Birth

Se,pl 17

Occupation

0

9I

17.2.. 3

!Y~/

________________

--~24-&amp;~c~/~o(

Single or Married
Aged

-----

-------------------

Date of Death

w/·c/ou./

6

year:s

Body to be shipped

Religion _ __

months

.;?(;)

days

-----------------

Styl of Grave Vault

--------CEI!l

Interment at CiEA!f/)EI..P
Lot or Grave No. _ _ _sec No.
1

2

3 ----------

/9.2.3

}//JUS /Yl A A/

Charge to - - - - - - - - - - - - Order given by
How secured

8p/?

4-------5------6-------

$ .

�SCHUBERT NCRTUARY-BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date /l?/f 30

No.

4 /Y} EL J/1 E/1111} A R cJE
-J:?;r;Es £ Ro£

/9.2.3

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

Order given by -------------------How secured

/!J/lV I

Date of Funeral

!&amp;/77e ,:&gt;-f
(

!?.:1. 3

I

Other Information

!/eme.

Time of Funeral Service

of:

Jr /?()£

..2.: :3 o P/71

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial

Cer~icate

Cause of Death Oy= 9~ n i c.,
Date of Death
Date of Birth

4eR.

29

}

A/o v

----

J/Ecus r

.:Pis EAse:

l&lt;f :2.3

.23

/7£0

QC CU pat iOn -""'d..;..;Y,:.:;;,t!?..::.;&lt;A..;;;.5.:...L'..IQW"""I~
· r;_e:...:&lt;:..-..-----

Single or Married
Aged

~~

-----=--:---:--Religion _ __

years

5

months

_£
__

days

Body to be shipped --------------Styl of Grave Vault

-------'CE/?1

Interment at Eu.PoRI}
Lot or Grave No.

Sec No.
1

2

3------5 _ _ _ _ __
4------6 _ _ _ _ __

Cou

AmE-J..ia El?mm/i RoE

Place of Death l.awrrace. /llc-mnia. L !loselicd
;
Funeral Services at

deceo.serJ

;of

b&lt;?.,)
·

�SCHUBERT 11CRTUARY . BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date ~J/,f
1.5
)

No.

NAME OF DECEASED

#Jrs

J:1JIAI )//!41/J?ERT

Charge to - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Other Information

Order given by - - - - - - - - - - - How secured
Date of Funeral ...;.4-:,~.,e~r~l;...,5~-.:;../..:.9..:::.2=3;....___
Place of Death

a del G!low.s //.!Jme.

Funeral Services at

S/ P/Jtt!-5 C/lvRc/1

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman

/JJANJ//111"/I..V

,2:30Pm.

&amp;v. T/;ecJ . !lt?uK

Physician
Number of Burial Certicate

----

Cause of Death - - - - - - - - - Date of D e a t h - - - - - - - - - - Date of B i r t h - - - - - - - - - - Occupation - - - - - - - - - - - - Single or Married

----~R-eligion

_ __

Aged _ _ years _ _ _months _ _ _ days
Body to be shipped - - - - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault
Interment

;;;;a~t

4

--------------------

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Lot or Grave No. _ _ _sec . No.
1

2--------

3------4------5------6-------

�SCHUBERT l!ICRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date df.~v £

No. _ _

/ 9:t3

JosJ/?1/t - U/ESTo/1/

NAME OF DECEASED

C/1,45. /lt?!I.41ES

Charge to

Other Information

/ •

Ordersecured
given by --------------------How
Date of Funeral $/Jy

6

--~~~--------------

--.h
. .u.......,d
. ....o........r--..o.....____________
Funeral Services at /1J E C/lvt?cl/
Time of Funeral Servic-e Y /?/??
Place of Death

Clergyman
Physician
Number vf Burial Certicate

----

Cause of Death Cave/ 1'7CN77a.. af
Date of Death

/1/lv
::L
&gt;

Bladder

/9..2. 3

Date of Birth --------------------Occupation ------------------------Single or Married
Religion _ __
Aged _ _ year5 _ _-:months _ _ _ days
Body to be shipped
Styl of Grave Vault

--------------------------

Interment at

~---------------

Lot or Grave No. _ _ _Sec No.
1

2

3
45 - -_
--_-_
_-_
_6 ----------

�SCHUBERT 110RTUARY . BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date

No.

NAME OF DECEASED

Place of Death

4?/!y /:L
I

---------------------

Funeral Services at
Time of Funeral

/~

19-23

Other Information

Order given by --------------------How secured
Date of Funeral

I

41/llfGU!fETTE £/sellER

E L. ;::is!IER

Charge to

&amp;4v

---------------Service
--------

Clergyman
Physician
Nl.llilber of Burial Certicate

---Cause of Death
-------------------Date of Death
--------------------Date of Birth
---------------------

Occupation ----------------------Single or Married
Religion _ ___
Aged _ _ years _ _ _.months

days

Body to be shipped ----------------Styl of Grave Vault

----------

Intermer-: at

~----------------

Lot or Grave No. _ _ _sec No.
1
2

3

4-------65-------_ _ _ _ _ __

�SCHUBERT IITGRTUARY . BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No.

6

NAME OF DECEASED

j/Yl/J1ERL

J?l..4 V 1..5

~~~;~~----------

Funeral Services at /k Thod/5t C'Jur-ch
Time of Funeral Service

..:2 /JtJ

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate

----

Cause of Death ~~~~~y.~~~~~v~s~i~5_________
Date of Death /!!4r II
?

/7'..23

--------------------

Occupation - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Single or Married ------;::-- ~~Religion _ __
Aged

79

years _ __;months _ _ _ days

Body to be shipped ---------------Styl of Grave Vault
I:-.terment at j..;#tUood
Lo~

or Grave No.

"

Other Information

Place of Death LINwood .:2Jf west:

Date of Birth

/1.23

I

Order given by _ _.::;8;;;.....:;£;-'-!f'-r"------How secured
Date of Funeral

/3

ZI/()/YIEBLJ

l3Eif'T z

Charge to

$ij

CE//1

Sec No.
1

2--------

34 _ _ _ _ _ __

5------6-------

�SCHUBERT 11GRTUARY . BOCK

No.

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date ~y

l?obt:

P/JJ/i 5

Order given by ~-'-'~---/-~----------­
How secured
L)v diaq r/·oa.s
Date of Funeral

/17/9 v

Place of Death

~o &gt;:

/9.2 3

I?

7

Funeral Services at

.?$! v rn

B4 au·sr
)

C.4urch

Time of Funeral Service 2 3 tJ ~n?
Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate

----

Cause of Death -------------------Date of Death -------------------Date of Birth --------------------Occupation ------------------------Single or Married

1?23

/?o8~7?r -f?OBiNSo(V' \~)

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

15

------=~-:---Religion _ __

Aged _ _ years ---:months _ _ _ days
Body to be shipped - - - - - - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault - - - - - - - - Interment =a~t__________________
Lot or Grave No. _ _ _sec No.
1

2--------

3

4------5
6---------

Othe~

Information

�SCHUBERT MCRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date
No.
N~4E

4/.4v 2g
I

19..2:3

S/JiiiJ/1 . 1//lTCh'Etf

OF DECEASED

Charge to _ _C;;;;...,h""""~..;_'/l_5_"""'-ffi"""'"~.:....:;l(.......;;C~/J""-.,;9'E-=--~8.~....-.-.
Order given by
How secured

_7:.:-..:...l-l.~tJ~S__,..._Ja:;:;..,CJ)-/~1//;..;S;..;O;..;.N..=-­

IV 3

Date of Funeral ..#/A'v
3/
1

Eudaro-

Place of Death

1/lezhocb:ST {colo red) ____________

Funeral Services at

_t: 3'L?

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman
Physician

Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death
Date of Death

----

-----------------:2 7
/?2 3

$.4 v

~~r,~~--~~~~-

/8/g

Date of Birth Se.JOI .3tJ

~~,~----~--~~---

Occupation

&amp;vsetur':fG

Single or Married -------~
Rel-=-i-gi":"'"o_n_ _ __
Aged

f

'I

years

5

months

-Z ?

days

Body to be shipped
Styl of Grave

Other Information

------------Vault
------if#l

Interment at £"ifDot?/l
Lo~ or Grave No.

Sec No.
1
2

3 _______

4 _ _ _ _ _ __

65------_ _ _ _ _ __

�SCHUBERT MCRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date $/lv

No. _ _

I

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

/J1/lBtARN

/

J11 K E

--~~~----------------

Order given b y - - - - - - - - - How secured
Date of Funeral

.J;ne.

Funeral Services at

1'1.2 3

JikMoclsT Church

Time of Funeral Service

_____

~e?~~
: 3~0

t:/vE e,e

Clergyman
Physician

I

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Place of Death

C L3. .JO!/A!So/\1

Number of Burial Certicate

-----

Cause of D e a t h - - - - - - - - - Date of Death

Na;v .:l9

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Date of B i r t h - - - - - - - - - - Occupation - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Single or Married
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Aged _ _ years _ _ _months _ _ _ days
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I

;2.9 / 9,23

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Sec No.

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34 _ _ _ _ __
5 _ _ _ _ __

6 _ _ _ _ __

Other Information

�SCHUBERT 110RTUARY. BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No.

/J/11(}5

Place of Death

...:Jt.1 n e.. 5
.2hz. Nor't-h of EtA dO YO~~~~~~--------

Funeral Services at

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Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate - - - Cause of Death Cancey- o-F

5Tol?7ach

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Single or Married
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---·months

_ _ _ days

Body to be shipped ----------------Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at VV!K
Lot or Grave No.

/7..23

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Order given by ___
" _______'_'__________
How secured
Date of Funeral

L(

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Sec No.
1

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Other Information

�SCHUBERT NCRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date JuNE .:Z 6

No.
NAME OF

DECEASED

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Cas6 7

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Place of Death 8elhcthv
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Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman
Physician

Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death
Date of Death

----

-------------------X a e. ..2 5

Date of Birth ~ne...

.Ls-

Occupation ------------------------Single or Married -----~ ~-:--Religion _ __
Sit//

Aged

bor~

years

months

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Body to be shipped - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault
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----------

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Sec No.
1

2

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�SCHUBERT !ftGRTUARY- BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date
No.

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I

7

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J. W .

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..P/ 0- be. //..s

Date of Death

hIIv

Date of Birth

June .30

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years

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---months

days

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-------

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~~~~-----~---

Lot or Grave No. _ _ _sec No.
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2 _ _ _ _ __

3------4-------s
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�. SCHUBERT 11GRTUARY -BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924~Date ~~~«~~~/____
l_f_2_5

No.

NAME OF DECEASED

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Other Information

Order given by --------------------How secured

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------------------------

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Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death
Date of Death
Date of Birth

L tiES

-----

--~~-------------?1 G-. I
.2. 3

/l

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19

--------------------

Occupation ------------------------Single or Married ____
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it'O

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Body to be shipped ---------------Styl of Grave Vault

-------------

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Sec No.
1

2 --·------

34 _ _ _ _ ___

65 ----------_ _ _ _ __

�c26JL
SCHUBERT IilGRTUARY -BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
~
)Date /iUG- .:t.
No.
NAME OF DECEASED

$rs.

LEPPE/?

Other Information

Order given by __
How secured

Place of Death

/Ju C- I?
EndoYo...

Funeral Services at

- ..2.. 3
Kans.

JllezitJc/sl chqrch
..2: 3 0 /?/??.

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman
Physician

----

Number of Burial Certicate

Cause of Death Wrc;nomo... o-f
Date of Death

L&amp;rzys

.#u&amp; /zt

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Date of Birth - - - - - - - - - Occupation

/lcw.se ui Pe...
4

Single or Married ///brried
Aged

18'

years

9

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months

/

-2:...

days

Body to be shipped - - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault - - - - - - - - - Interment at

~--------------------

Lot or Grave No.

19:2.. 3

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1
_'- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Date of Funeral

f

~--~--~~~~--~~~------

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No.

1
2 _ _ _ _ __

34 _______

65 ---------_ _ _ _ ___

�-263

SCHUBERT MGRTUARY -BOCK

t/

(Dec. 11, 1912 - Oct. 14, 1924lnate
No.

NAME OF DECEASED

Order given by
How secured

I

Date of Funeral

/1t1 G-

.2.6

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/?oC{t~

JZ=

1

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Funeral Services at

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:2. f-/ ffJ

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate

----

of- 5/off?vr. c h

Cause of Death c~ YC laomCJ....
Date of Death
Date of Birth

/!qr;... c2 71' I 'l 2. 3
;:::Eo /7 /757

£a r

Occupation

Single or Married
Aged

66

years

Y'YJ

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£

J

"'!'-""~-

Religion _ __

months

days

Body to be shipped;; be. btule.d PE/-Jl CFmc-rtt:=R/
Styl of Grave Vault - - - - - - Intennent at
Lot or Grave

/f.2.3

Other Information

------------

Eucloyo...._

Place of Death

,:2.5

C- tJ7TS / E;Jv

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7 ~
No.
Sec No.
--(

1

32-------_ _ _ _ __
4 _ _ _ _ __
5 _ _ _ _ __
6 _ _ _ _ __

�SCHUBERT 11CRTUARY . BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No. _ _

$rs C

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C/1/lS

NAME OF DECEASED

C

Other Information

/9..Z 3

I2

Place of Death J_ ;4fwao cl

/G&amp;e1:.s/
Ch~rch
v
,1. ~Rl

Time of Funeral Service

?enl7rn9Ta/J

Clergyman

}

Physician
Number of Burial

Certi~ate

----

Date of Death

R Ya?vs/s
Sc;,el ? /;l,2 3

Date of Birth

//U(£-

Cause of Death

/laze!

Occupation

Iff

lt?i! 7

/EEPER

Single or Married ----~ ~.,.--Religion _ __
Aged

Zb

years

__

months

....;

.2 I

days

Body to be shipped - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault - - - - - Interment at

/JJ/ 5'idl1e v

Lot or Grave No.

17':23

S.r'EIVCER

5 ep
/
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0
1

Sf?E;vC£1?

Order given by _ _'~-----'-'_ __
How secured
Date of Funeral

Sepf
;

L!!VtutJod

7
Sec No. _ _

1
2 _ _ _ _ __

3 _ _ _ _ __
4 _ _ _ _ __
5 _ _ _ _ __
6 _ _ _ _ __

�SCHUBERT NGRTUARY .BOCK
{Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No.

//Z4Rv
EL/z/-1
I

NAME oF DECEAsED

C#/15

Charge to

Sepf:/:3 IV3
I

;1/CJLKEmPER

LtJ/1/GER
Other Information

Order given by --------------------How secured
Date of Funeral

Sez;;/

Place of Death

~etfo...,

I

3

I

-23

Funeral Services at ~J?~r~~~v~~~------Time of Funeral Service af12 v- a,-..,.. r

i vo. L o-f lro. -~ ,..,

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate

----

Cause of Death -------------------Date of Death --------------------Date of Birth --------------------Occupation ------------------------Single or Married
----~R-eligion _ __
Aged _ _ years

----=months

Body to be shipped

fron?

_ _ _ days

ZO,ecKa.. /o EZ..c/oro._

Styl of Grave Vault - - - - - - Interment
______________
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- - -Sec

No.

1
2 ----------

3

4--------5---------

6 -----------

�SCHUBERT NCRTUARY . BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924~Date

I

No.

Charge to

!?Jr. dLl

E¥

/llrJ Ill. E R

Order given by ____,_~--------~-~------How secured

5eL?T
I

Date of Funeral

/8'

..23

Place of Death .-.&amp;#~~_3.._,ff__
E:'""""if'...:.-_ _ _ __
Funeral Services at

---------

Time of Funeral Service

"i? /?//1.

Clergyman

c

Physician

B.

..J/;d!VSON

Number of Burial Certicate

-----

Cause of Death /l1vDCo..rd/Tt:S
&gt;

Date of Death

-------------------Date of Birth
-------------------Occupation //ouse q,;; fe...
Single or Married $c:i Y" r;

g0

/f?.-2
3

!/EslER .4!VN /J1o!//._El~

NAME OF DECEASED

Aged

Sc:p"/ / 6

years

5

c:c/

Religion _ __

months

7

days

Body to be shipped - - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault

----------

Interment at

~----------------------

Lot or Grave No. _ _ _,Sec No.
1
2 ----------

3 ----------4 ----------6

5------------------

Other Information

�-26 7L- ,
SCHUBERT HCRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No.

Se.t:?l
-Z. 7
I

/9..2.3

A/AIVC v JAIV£ W/lLKER

NAME OF DECEASED

I

Charge to _....;L~._.;.E....:..·......?U=.:::::o..~.oo::.,j:D~/l'-'B........,D~--

Other Information

Order given by -------------------How secured
Date of Funeral

Se~T C:Z.?

Reca rd "'(/? Ks L,-(.('e.,. /IJ/111/C.7\J
bt&lt; T inJey, sq :v,:; NBN~Y

I

Place of Death t?n f'a rm aC //espc:
r
;
Funeral Services at

~ ~/.??

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman
Physician
Nmuuer of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death
Date of Death
Date of Birth
Occupation

-------------------

---,.----------------Seet:
-Z.5
;

S'f

/?3'?

£-e..
----=~-:---Religion _ __

&amp;vtse.

Single or Married
Aged

----

0,11.

years _ _-:months

c2.__

days

Body to be shipped
Styl of Grave Vault
Interment :..t
Lot or Grave No. _ _ _sec No.
1
2

34 _ _ _ _ _ __

5------6--------

�SCHUBERT MGRTUARY .BOCK

(n~c.

No.

NAME OF DECEASED

11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date OcT

£.

/ 923

E w ,-L So II/

~~~~--~--~----------------

Charge to
Other Information
Order given by --------------------How secured·
Date of Funeral

--------------------

Place of Death

7Cj,oe/(o...

K;;Ns;qs

Funeral Services at
Time of Funeral Service

----------

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate

----Cause of Death
-------------------Date of Death
--------------------Date of Birth
--------------------Occupation

lJqn

Ke v-

----~~----~~-----------

Single or Married m

"rr- i

~~

Religion ------Aged _____ years

-------months ---- days

Body to be shipped To

F(;/, do ro--

Styl of Grave Vault
Interment

KlfNS.

----------at
=-----------------------

Lot or Grave No. _______sec No •
1

2

3
4

5
6

�SCHUBERT NGRTUARY -BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date CJc./

No. _ __

/J1 r s. /JJIJ 1&lt;:. v S

NAME OF DECEASED

/{o E 8

I

!'1.:2.3

If/ E 1\

/

Other Information
Order given by --------------------How secured
Date of Funeral

Oc\ 3

Place of Death hoi"!'\ e...
Funeral Services at

JCj ;2..3

No"1n

ei

.£tAd oro-

----------------

Time of Funeral Service

e:2 P /JJ

Clergyman

C. E .

Physician

To 1-hJ soN'

Number of Burial Certicate ------Cause of Death

ctCV\l'e__

Di I 1:\1- "'"'

'OY)

oi-

1--\

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Date of Death ---------------Date of B i r t h - - - - - - - - - - Occupation - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Single or Married /l/'G". v- e &amp;.
Religion _ _ __
'f"" \

Aged

Lf9

years

g

months

5

days

Body to be shipped
Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at
Lot or Grave No. ____Sec No.
1
2

3------4-------5-------6-------

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                    <text>SCHUBERT !ITGRTUARY. BOCK

{Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date

No.

/l0v .5

1'1..23

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to - - - - - - - - - - - - Order given by - - - - - - - - - - - - How secured
Date of Funeral
Place of Death

7
Eudo rek.
A0v

.2.3

Funeral Services at /lle/hocl·£T Cjurch
Time of Funeral Service /JT .2 ·'3 o P m.
Clergyman

c. B

Physician

-xlOfl/t/soN

Number of Burial Certicate

----

Cause of Death Cqnct'v- o-f'

Colan

Date of Death
Date of Birth

----------------------------------------

Occupation ------------------------Single or Married
Aged

75

years

-------=-~~Religion _ __

__

months _ _ _ days

.....;

Body to be shipped --------------Styl of Grave Vault
Intc!'ment at

~-------------------

Lot or Grave No.

- - -Sec

No.

1

2--------

3

4-------5------6--------

Other Information

�SCHUBERT 11GRTUARY . BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date ~//

No.

/'1~3

f.i?E!VE . V d;z/.27£=/'-?SOtV

NAME OF DECEASED

Es !9 Te...

Charge to

Y

Order given by ~5
How secured

Other Information

$c8/(l.PE

Date of Funeral ...M~O..::;.V-...:/~I:.___.f-/.L..9...:..2=3Place of Death

cJI?

taYm

Lj;nr"/c-;,

.1%/oy/h

Funeral Services at ~~~~~h?~.e&lt;~------­
~ne

~ ~/?7

Time of Funeral Service

Ji e..

Cha. 'rCf e

/lltJvlnr Vc:~.v..l'\- lo

Clergyman

£ud aro...

Physician
Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death ftdmono..rv
I

40 V

Date of Death
Date of Birth

----

T~Abev-cofusis

9

-13

---------------------

Occupation ---------------------------Single or Married /?let n- I c:... J
Religion _ __
Aged

&amp;?f

years

-

months

..2 5"

days

Body to be shipped ----------------Styl of Grave Vault

-------------

Interment at

=--------------------Lot or Grave No.
Sec No.
---

1

2--------

3

4 -----------

5 -----------6 ----------

s

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�SCHUBERT HGRTUARY -BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No.

L

If.2. 3

I

Charge to

Other Information

Order given by --------------------How secured
Date of Funeral
Place of Death

.111/ V

II

- ..2 3

~~----~----~~--

L /1// tuoo d

Funeral Services at

Hthol:sr chttrch

Time of Funeral Service

;2 ~~

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate

----

Cause of Death -------------------Date of Death --------------------Date of Birth --------------------Occupation ------------------------Single or Married -----=-- -.,.--Religion _ __

2?7

0

/17 /l R V /lv AI I)IV]) E RSO f1/

NAME OF DECEASED

Aged

Mv

years --~months

..2. 3

days

Body to be shipped
Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at
Lot or Grave No.

- - -Sec

No.

1

2--------

3
4 ----------

5---------

6 ----------

�SCHUBERT !JIGRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No.

E

CEo.

NAME OF DECEASED

t#v ?

//.2. 3

k/E/?f/ER

Charge to
Other Information
Order given by --------------------How secured
Date of Funeral -------------------Place of Death Of} r~ Ym South t:)f £/A. do ro-._
Funeral Services at -------------Time of Funeral Service ------------Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate -------Cause of Death ~1J~R~i~&amp;~~~~.s~~&amp;?~i~s~£~~~5~F­
Da t e of Death --'-Mc....:o::;_.;..,v__9'--__-__;;;.,2=3_ _
Date of Birth --------------------Occupation
hYm e ySingle or Married --------~- ~~---­
Religion ------Aged

57

years ______
? months --~/___ days

Body to be shipped
Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at
Lot or Grave No.

-------Sec

No.

1
2

3------4 _ _ _ _ __
5 _ _ _ _ __
6 _ _ _ _ __

�SCHUBERT 11IGRTUARY .BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924~Date

/J0y

No. _ _

NAME OF DECEASED /Irs

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Charge to - - - - - - - - - - - -

;2{)

/ f..2

3

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Other Information

Order given b y - - - - - - - - - How secured
Date of Funeral _M...;.t1_t/___,;;;2.;;.._!____
-=...
.:23~
Place of Death o;z fc.Y.n-7 Lfm;6=.s Easi af i./Aiwoo

t?ledoclcsT C~ttrc.i?

Funeral Services at

Time of Funeral Service

-------------

-2:30 /?/lJ..

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate

/j/ephri
!';5
,

Cause of Death Chron/c
Date of Death
Date of Birth

J/ot/ 2..0
Ju fv 1/
I

---/9..23

I gq;L

Occupation
Single or Married
Religion
Aged

3' I

years

r

months

f

days

Body to be shipped - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault - - - - - - Interment

=a~t

____________________

Lot or Grave No.

- - -Sec

No.

1
2 -----------

3 ------------

4---------

5 ----------6 ----------

�SCHUBERT l1GRTUARY . BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date lf/ay

No. _ _

~SEPI/ E.DER

NAME OF DECEASED

Charge to -------------------------Order given by --------------------How secured

Pe c.. 3

Date of Funeral

~~~--------------

Place of Death --------------------Funeral Services at / t:? /l.//7.
Time of Funeral Service - - - - - - -

!?ev Reich

Clergyman
Physician
Number of

B~rial

Certicate

Cause of Death £rob a bfy
Date of Death

----

:;{;f/

c ;JCI..L dr-owYI;"'j

/1/t:J t/ ..3 0

Date of Birth --------------------Occupation - - - - - - - - - - - - - Single or
Aged

51

Married----~~-:---

Religion _ __

years _ __.;months

days

Body to be shipped
Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at
Lot or Grave No.

3o lf,23

- - -Sec

No.

1

2---------

3
4 ------------5 ------------6 -------------

Other Information

�SCHUBERT 1JICRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
-~
}Date .J/C'C

No.

31

/?23

NAME OF DECEASED

Charge to
Order given by -:JO!I/1/!Vi E
How secured

//v L!tJES

Other Information

1#- d el\ 9; v~ s

Date of Funeral
Place of

-------------------Death
---------------------

Funeral Services at

Time of Funeral Service

---------

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial
Cause of

Certica~e

---Death
---------------------

Date of Death

Date of Birth

-----------------------------------------

Occupation ------------------------------------Single or Married
Religion _ __

-------=--

Aged _ _ years

-----months -----

days

Body to be shipped ----------------Styl of Grave Vault
Interment

----------

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________________________

Lot or Grave No. ____sec No.
1
2

3

4-------65-------_ _ _ _ __

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of

�SCHUBERT 11GRTUARY . BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14,

No. . I

1924~Date _.J!ot:...:./J...:..W;..;._...;../_-..:.../~f,.t: ;. . ;: ;. r-f(

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NAME OF DECEASED

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J/;IV

Date of Funeral
Place of Death

---------------------

Funeral Services at

/lo/77~

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Clergyman

&amp;

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C 8. Jo/1/1/So/1/

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Number of Burial Cdrticate
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Date of Death
Date of Birth

----

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-----------------------------------------

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------=-~~Religion _ __

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days

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Interment at

~-----------------

Lot or Grave No.

- - -Sec

No.

1
2 ----------

3
4 ----------

5

6---------

I

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Other Information

�C:Z??"
No.

SCHUBERT !ilGRTUARY . BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

:2-

Charge to -------------------------Ordersecured
given by --------------------How

Place of Death

--------------------

lf&amp;rsas C/tj M/Ys:

Funeral Services at

----------------

Time of Funeral Service

//am

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate _ _ __
Cause of Death -------------------Date of Death --------------------Date of Birth ---------------------

Occupat~on ---------------------Single or Married
Aged

Z?

years

-------~

Rel""""i-gi,_o_n_Li__oead-;

months

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Date of Funeral

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No.

1

2---------

3-------4-------65-------________

Other Information

�--~-

SCHUBERT 1JICRTUARY -BOCK

No.

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date JilN ..2 I

3 -

NAME OF DECEASED

C/1/l;:(i.ES

;0,4/f')(E I?

--~~~~--~~~~~~-------

Other Information
Order given by --------------------How secured
Date of Funeral ___;;-J;..;...Yl..:...;IV..:;._;;;;;;;..;...t.:z_..;;_~I...!.Y'...:..2.;;;:;..L£'_
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Time of Funeral Service

------

Clergyman

c

Physician

8.

,l?z;;tv.5011/

Number of Burial Certicate - - - -

Date of Death---------------Date of Birth----------------Occupation - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Single or Married ------~ -....--Religion _ __
Aged

3

years _

7

months

b

days

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1

2--------

3-------4 _ _ _ _ _ __
5------6--------

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No • .

SCHUBERT MORTUARY -BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

i

/lltiSicK

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)

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NAME OF DECEASED
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---------

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Lot or Grave No. _ _ _Sec No.
1

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,

�No. ·

SCHUBERT 1!TCRTUARY. BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

5

.J/;A/ :t 7 / 7..2fL

NAME OF DECEASED

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Date of Funeral __JG_~-~---2~?

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Number of Burial Certicate
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0

Date of Death
Date of Birth

e

------

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-----------------------------------------

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--------~Religion ------Aged _____ years ------=months few days
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--------

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1
2

3
4
5
6

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�No.

SCHUBERT HGRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date £EL3 I .5

b

NA1.ffi OF DECEASED

4/iLDJfEJ)

Louis£ BEErz

Charge t o - - - - - - - - - - - - Order given by
How secured
---------------------

Place of Death

---------------------

Funeral Services at

---------------Service
-------

Time of Funeral
Clergyman

c

Physician

8. ;ICy;A/5 () ;t/

Number of Burial Certicate
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Date of Death
Date of Birth

----

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----Sec

Other Information

h-~ s r 11,'?lr;. C,:;~ld he.

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65------_ _ _ _ __

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SCHUBERT MORTUARY -BOCK
No • .

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924}
}Date

?

NAME OF DECEASED

/!Jr s :£)E L )_ /1

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Date of Funeral ....A'---.,;e~6-..:..l...:f'________-.;;;..2~Y
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..2.. P. /17.

Clergyman
Physician
Numb6.L' of Burial Certicate - - - Cause of Death 13'ronch/o.. I Aeqmon/o.......
Date of Death

5 b

17

- ..2.. 7'

Date of Birth --------------------Occupation ------------------------Single or Married ------~ __..,...-Religion _ __
Aged

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/~

days

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~----------------------

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- - -Sec

17

41VDREW.5

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No.

1

2
3 ------------45 ------------_______

6 ------------

Other Information

-...;:::~---

-

�SCHUBERT MORTUARY -BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924fnate
No.

,//LLEA/

NAME OF DECEASED

hB 27

CfiTEUJCJCJP

Charge to
Other Information
Order given by --------------------How secured
Date of Funeral $.4'/fCI/ I
Place of Death

SoqTq

Funeral Services at ~

£clero.tP. m. Bcyz/t"s/ Chun'd.L.-----------

Time of Funeral Service

--------

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of

---Death
--------------------

Date of Death

Date of Birth
Occupation

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~~~~~-----------

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Single or Married
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years _ __.;months _ _ _ days

Body to be shipped ---------------Styl of Grave Vault ------------

Inte:rrn~nt at §oq th Eudo 'rCL.
Lot or Grave No. _ _ _sec No.
1
2

3 _ _ _ _ __
4 ----------5 -----------

6---------

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SCHUBERT !JICRTUARY . BOCK

No.

t.'

(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

L

/ll;;I?C/1 /f

/9~y:

41J?s. 4741?l v B48TZ

NAME OF DECEASED

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--11~rc

Date of Funeral

Place of Death 4Tht:;tzzC&lt;

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14

-

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_______________________

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Clergyman

C. 8

Physician

Ja/I.A/S 0 ;t/

Number of Burial Certicate - - - - Cause of Death
Date of Death
Date of Birth
Occupation

tlcqre o/"!a zq L/on o-F heo.r/
4/.t91'fC 1/

/

i

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-------------

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Lot or Grave No.

lfm,
Sec No.
1
2 _ _ _ _ __

3 ________

4 _ _ _ _ __
5 _______

6-~----

�SCHUBERT MCRTUARY . BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

. / () •
No. _
_

/1/fs. BL.~I(jf//} /!JARJE

NAME OF DECEASED
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7

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, L

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_______

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Clergyman

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----

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Date of Death ~lf'C#YI

/?.ZL/

Date of Birth - - - - - - - - - Occupation - - - - - - - - - - - - Single or Married
Aged

/7

years

-----=-~~Religion _ __
J'

months ~0 UJ days

Body to be shipped - - - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault ------------------Interment

=a~t

_______________

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/(A' YE/PTV

YE/r/1/.F

Date of Funeral

lll!Jifcll .3/ /9o1f/

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No.

1

2-------3--------4 _ _ _ _ _ __

5------6-------

Other Information
1

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No.

SCHUBERT MORTUARY -BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date

-!I

w/71

~rs

NAME OF DECEASED

v--

/-J;zr;· L

/..2_ J9:zy

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Other Information

Order given by -----------------How secured

/f

Date of Funeral

&amp;/f/L.

Place of Death

L:tcl'orO-

Funeral Services at

.5'alem EkonQeLicaL
Ch VJt-t- ..!....r-"""'c..L.JbL-----------r

.:2; 30 r-:' /Y}

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman

Rev. Schuer--man

Physician B~chTe I

¥-

-J0f!!vso/l/

Number of Burial Certicate

----

Cause of Death /J1yo
r:o..v- o/; l"c's
&gt;
Date of Death

/!pr-i L

12

-

17..2 t

Date of Birth --------------------Occupation I/Ovse«;/[e.,
Single or Married
Aged

~?

years

-----=-~-:--Religion _ __

__

months _ _ _ days

__;

Body to be shipped ----------------Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at ·

~---------------

Lot or Grave No.

Sec No.

.
2

3
4
5
6

�No.

SCHUBERT HCRTUARY-BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912 - Oct. 14, 1924)
j/
}Date /lpf?i L o

-;..2.

"

J?oBEifT _

NAME OF DECEASED

Charge t o - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Other Information

Ordersecured
given by ---------------How
Date of Funeral
Place of

------------------Death
-------------------

Funeral Services at

~S/-?~Jf
,

Time of Funeral Service cf2 --'30

P/l'?.

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death
Date of Death
Date of Birth

----

-------------------

-----------------------------------------

Occupation ---~--------------Single or Married
Religion
Aged

years

months

days

Body toY.'~5e shipped lo fttcloya. K/lJV.s
Styl of Grave Vault

---------

Interment at

=----------------Sec No.

Lot or Grave No.

---

1

2

3
-_
-_
-_
-4 _
___
5
6 -----------

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No.

SCHUBERT HCRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
/J
)Date /7~/{;L

/3' ·

/7/~s

NAME OF DECEASED

;c,;;?

~

/fc2 ~

.Jai!!VSON

--~~------~~~~~~------------

~~~]?

Charge to

Other Information
Order given by----------------How secured

#&amp;L. 17 - 19.2..'1

Date of Funeral
Place of Death

L/au__,;oad /:#A/s.

Funeral Services at

..:2::30 /?,?'!.

Time of Funeral Service ---------Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death

----

---------------/5

Date of Death //pri
, /

Date of Birth--------------Occupation ----------------------Single or Married
Aged

e/3

------=-~~Religion _ __

years _ _ _m.onths _ _ _ days

Body to be shipped - - - - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault -------------Interment at

=----------------------

Lot or Grave No.

---Sec

No.

1
2 _ _ _ _ ____

3 ---------------4 ------------

5---------

6 ---------------

�e27o -~

No.

SCHUBERT MGRTUARY . BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
~
}Date .Jtt!VE :2 9

;y ·

/IE#!? y P/Jc-E
7
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I 1.21

NAME OF DECEASED
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lr

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Date of Funeral
Place of Death

~If~~;-

Funeral Services at

$rs

L?~A!)?

~~S~A(

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman

~f

//A /J?.

C/?I?R jSOIV

Physician
Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death

----

-------------------

------------Date of Birth
--------------Date of Death

Occupation - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Single or Married
-------~
Religion _ __
Aged ___ years _ _ _months ____ days
Body to be shipped --------------Styl of Grave Vault - - - - - - - - Interment at

//E5;q.Eif

Lot or Grave No. _ _ _Sec No.
1

2 _ _ _ _ __

3-------4 _ _ _ _ _ __
65------_ _ _ _ __

Other Information

�SCHUBERT MCRTUARY -BOCK

(Dec. 11, 1912 - Oct. 14, 1924~Date
No.

/.5 -

J'vAIE

.2. ~ /~..27'~

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to -------------------------Order given by
How secured

~u I y

Date of Funeral
Place of Death

2..

I

---------------------

Funeral Services at /-/es~er
v

/-? /l7.
C-AR If isotV

Time of Funeral Service

/1/r.s

Clergyman

C B

Physician

_2

~/VSO!V

Number of Burial Certicate

----

Cause of Death /J1ye7 C.:::\ -rq(; t:/s
)

Date of Death

-rTu ne.

..2 8'

Date of Birth --------------------Occupation --~~~~r~m~~~r________________
Single or Married------=-~~Religion _ __
Aged

.21_

years ____months _ _ _ days

Body to be shipped ---------------Styl of Grave Vault - - - - - - - - - Interment at

~-------------

Lot or Grave No.

- - -Sec

No.

1

2--------

3
4 ------------5 -------------

6--------

Other Information

�No.

SCHUBERT MCRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date

lb

Charge to CEo /-1 LONG- tlnde "ta !(; nt c 0

)(/INS

Order given by·_
· ___1'__r_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ____
How secured
1

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Date of Funeral

\y

Place of Death /(/J#S/15
Funeral Services at

C&gt;lv
;

&lt;

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------------

5 C h el.-1 r

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..2 i

.20 &gt;'

CLE/1/f{iELP

Time of Funeral Service

Yr&gt;

~n

Physician
Number of Burial Certicate

----

Cause of Death

---------------------------------------Birth
---------------------

Date of Death
Date of

Occupation ------------------------Single or Married
Aged

Ztl

------=-~:--Religion _ __

years _ _....;months _ _ _ days

Body to be shipped - - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

------------

CLE/llf/-iEL.P

Lot or Grave No.

..2.0

Clll?oLiN£ . Gi/lsER

NAME OF DECEASED

Clergyman

,-

vu/yI

- - -Sec

No.

1
2 -----------

3

4 ------------

5 -----------6 ------------

c / fy

~-

Other Information

�No.

SCHUBERT 11GRTUARY . BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
~
}Date :r.Ju

17

Order given by _ _~·-----"--­
How secured
Date of Funeral -~.;..__~\y.,__.2._3
_ _1_1..;;..:L_._f_
Place of Death _..;E:~u~~.;....;o:;..r:..,_;;;_o.-.;.....__ _ __

_

Funeral Services at

~

____

l?/.77

_.;..__;...;_

Tim~ o£ Funeral Service /7lerho d/sl C..4wrch
Physician

;T;/f/fE/1/CE

CB

.;/;;!11/SQ/V
~/....:/~-

Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death /l1yo 'Cardi o, I
'

Date of Death

.,s-V\ I y

.2.1

Date of Birth

Ju I v

.2. :2.....

I

Occupation - - - - - - - - - - - - - Single or Married ----~ .........,.._Religion _ __
Aged

70

17.:Zf

I!J5 (f)BEJ£

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Clergyman

:L/

/J!EL/.ss,4 /~1-CCABEIE

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to

lv
;

years

II

2 7'

months

days

Body to be shipped -------------Styl of Grave Vault

--------

Interment at t/AK 1-h// CEIJ1E7/l/?t

LAkJRE/1/CL:::

)

Lot or Grave No. _ _ _sec No.
1
2 _ _ _ _ __

3--------

4------5------6-------

Other Information

�No.

SCHUBERT NGRTUARY-BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

Jo ·

.JU lv
7

.2 'I

t:J

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NAME OF DECEASED

.5'!ETZ..

..J/JKE SrRoBEL

Charge to

Order given by """&amp;~;;....;.r.s;..........;5;;....;..T._E;_W._'A~R:....;T
__
How secured
Date of Funeral

~I y ..2. t

Place of Death

£u c:/o

.2. tf

I

Y'

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Funeral Services at 5-an'tei/.Ca.
I Church
;

..2 ?/??

Time of Funeral Service
Clergyman

S C he

Physician

C B.

u r ;-n~

"'?

....Tof!PVsoiV

Number of Burial Certicate
Cause of Death Chr-on/c

Occupation

J(ixic..

,1/(ephr-/f/s
,

~ fy
2 ?L
I

Date of Death
Date of Birth

----

0//1\/

.27

/8'/6

~T ;=;,rmey-

Single or Married

----=Religion

_ __

Aged _ _ years _ __;months _ __ days
Body to be shipped ---------------Styl of Grave Vault
Interment at

/?e e

Lot or Grave No.

d L ~ )19 RT l ~)

- - -Sec

No.

1

2

3

4------5------6-------

Other Information
l. ,sT5

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�SCHUBERT NGRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
~nr}Date L:t..1'' r.r

No. ·· /?

/?-J /J/1/PE!fSO!V'

NAME OF DECEASED

dJ4!f V P

Charge to

.A'#VEI?S0/1/

j

Other Information

Order given by --------------------How secured

/luG-. /

Date of Funeral

-..27'

Place of Death ..J.;/v?Voo d
Funeral Services at

A1J/t/s.

-------..2.

Time of Funeral Service

~/??.

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial

Cer~icate

Cause of Death

.4'U G- £

Date of Death

~~~;-

Date of Birth

---IVY
/tP~;?

I

--------------------

Occupation ------------------------Single or Married -------~ ~:--Religion _ __
Aged _ _ years _ _ _.months _ _ _ days
Body to be shipped

-----------

Styl of Grave Vault

------------

Interment at

~----------------------

Lot or Grave No. _ _ _Sec No.
1

2

3 _ _ _ _ ___
4 -------------

5 ------------6 -----------

�SCHUBERT 1/ICRTUARY -BOCK
( De c • 1 1 , 1 9 1 2 - 0 C t • 1 4 ,

/In r.-_ c-"
}Date //.?tc.r ~

192 4 )

No. hr2/) -

/'1..2 L/

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to --------------------------

Other Information

Order given by --------------------How secured
Date of Funeral

/Ju C- 5

~~~-=------------

Place of Death ....lil-. :. ~.:. :. 1 1~:.,.;:5-; . .;./l. ;. . ; ; . 5_.; ; .C. ;,./. :. '7!y
,1" '_ __
Funeral Services at _ /z{{"5e'ER
Time of Funeral Service /

?Y /!.#/.

Clergyman
Physician
Number of Burial Certicate

---Cause of Death
-------------------Date of Death
--------------------Date of Birth
---------------------

Occupation -------------------------Single or Married :;'/nz/e'
Religion _ __
Aged

If

year5

months

Body to be shipped To- E?tc/aro..

days

fr-o,..,., K C

Styl of Grave Vault ------------Interment at

~----------------------

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---Sec

No.

1

2

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4 -----------5 -----------6 -------------

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SCHUBERT HGRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date @~ ~I

/929'

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge t o - - - - - - - - - - - - Ordersecured
given by -------------------How
Date of Funeral -'I/~11..:.:G-~.-t=.:;£;:;...._~/~7:-=';2:....f~­
Place of Death ~~--~u~~~o~r~~~--------­
Funeral Services at
Time of Funeral

---------------Service
------

Clergyman
Physician

C: .B.

JC/1/VS{)A/

/fL

Number vf Burial Certicate
Cause of Death 4 Sph vx i
;

}

a

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Date of Death -'-d~u~f-.;;...::2.....;..1_ _-..;;.~--.~.t__
Date of B i r t h - - - - - - - - - - Occupation

~c/(sfl?/71!

Single or Married
Aged

If J7

-----=-...--...---Religion _ __

years _____.months _ _ _ days

Body to be shipped ---------------Styl of Grave Vault - - - - - - - Interment at /op?e~
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or Grave No.

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Sec No.
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Other Information
·"

�SCHUBERT HCRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

No.

Sr:f?-j 13' /92-f

NAME OF DECEASED
Charge to - - - - - - - - - - - -

Other Information

Order given by --------------------How secured

Place of Death

- .2 i

Set! J5

Date of Funeral

-------------------

Funeral Services at ....h"""~....:;;o-..'/?7~e-;;__ _ _ __
Time of Funeral Service #T :l P /17.
Clergyman
Physician

~

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Cause of Death

S ep/
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----

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Date of Death

-------------------Date of Birth
-------------------Occupation
h
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months

days

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------------

at (PE/1 Y CE/J?Eifi?,Y)
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34 _ _ _ _ ___

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------

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SCHUBERT HGRTUARY .BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
}Date

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OF DECEASED

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Physician
Number of Burial Certicate

----

Cause of Death - - - - - - - - - Date of Death
Date of Birth
Occupation

-------------------------------&amp;rPr?er

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----=~~Religion _ __

Aged ___ years _ _ _months _ _ _ days
Body to be shipped
Styl of Grave Vault

------------

--------

I!:terment at ffE!VO
Lot or Grave No. _ _ _Sec No.
1
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Other Information

�No.

;2

SCHUBERT NORTUARY -BOCK
(Dec. 11, 1912- Oct. 14, 1924)
)Date

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Charge to - - - - - - - - - - - -

CJcr I b - -tt
Place of Death Eudt,ro.- ~IVS,
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Time-of Funeral Service
Clergyman

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Physician

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Number of Burial Certicate

----

Cause of Deathin/est;n~l -.rnToxt'cq'j- 1' o..,_,

I /.Z: / &lt;7.:Z 9'
:I:JEc 8' /?1/ I

Date of Death Oc

Occupation

/~ctsc:..c.ur'f'e_.

Single or Married
Aged

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years

tu/dow
/0

Religion _ __

b

months

days

Body to be shipped - - - - - - - - - - - - Styl of Grave Vault ....::,~""--~~-cJpm qu/
Interment at Eu~ro..
Lot or Grave No.

/91y

Other Information

C:EtJ J{"/JRG:i

Date of Funeral

Date of Birth

/r

EL/sr;BEr/1 Mr/IEIP!#E 1&lt;(/;I?G-i

NAME oF DECEASED

Order given by
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���</text>
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                  <text>This collection includes the mortuary records of funeral homes Schubert Mortuary and Funk Mortuary in Lawrence (Kan.). The records span 1912 to 1924.</text>
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Date of Funeral ..&amp;.A~uUolv:........a:6=..5~1ur..:..l3..::.-_ _ _.t.=.;..:.-~..3-li::;O-'-e..c.lll1
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Last place of residence /t!atiner~nof J(ans.
How long resident of this state---~~:_ ___
Husband' 5 Name
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Grave or Lot No. --------Sec.
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-------------------------

Age:

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Months ____ Days.

Color &amp;a lea 1'7

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R!?.

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single, married, widow, widower $arl";ecl
Birthplace ~~~~~x..:..i~c-o~---------------------­
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How long resident of this state

tk/1s

Husband's Name
Father's Name

-----------------------------

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Date of Funeral
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Grave or Lot No. -----------Sec.
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~Years ~Months

______ Days.

Occupation aT school
single, married, widow, widower
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S/nyle...

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I

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-------------------------------------------

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Jv:CRTUARY BCCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
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Date of Death

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Color

Occupation .#'l~?;s/e,.,

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of residence 1JtA ldu.n'n

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Kans
How long resident of thi~s~st~a~t~e~--/F~v~Y~~~-Husband's Name

'

--------------------------

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---------------------------------------------------

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Mother's Name

Country of Birth

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�T.D. FUNK
KCRTUARY BGOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Page

5

FUNERAL of

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Sep

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--------------------------

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~·DRTUARY

BOOK (Aug,. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)

Page _$__
FUKER.AL of

Ray

Wi I L; am lfc /(nor-

Date of Funeral 12cl /If /113
Date of Death
Place of Death

9:.Jo //m

Other Information:

Oct" I 3 /11.3
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Place of Funeral

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Date of Burial

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~·:CRTUARY

Page

BGOK (Aug. 25, 1913 -Sept. 6, 1916)

_!L

FUNERAL of

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Date of Death

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BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913 -Sept. 6, 1916)

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Date of Death

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~·:CRTUARY BGCK

(Aug. 25, 1913 - SeJ:-t. 6, 1916)

Page _lj_
FUKERAL of

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Grave or Lot No.
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Page .1:6:_
FUKERAL of

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-------------------------

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--------

Paid on Account by:
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~·:CRTUARY

BGGK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

I.::?

Page

FUKERAL of

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Date of Funeral

Other Information:

?7,;/ J; /7?'.3

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;

Color k;h/ /e..

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Birthplace ----------------------------------------Last place of residence ---~---------------­
How long resident of this state - - - - Husband' 3 Name
Father's Name

---------------------------------------

Country of Birth ----------------------------Mother's Name

---------------------------------------------------------------

Country of Birth
Physic ian

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�T.D. FUNK
lt:CRTUARY BCCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Page

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FUKERAL of

[t'b·~

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C.eYma n
//~

Date of Funeral ,&amp;-pv ? !V3
Date of Death

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Color

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Occupation

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~~~--------------------------­

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Country of Birth -------------------------Mother's Name---------------------------Country of Birth -------------------------Physician

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-------------------------------

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--------

Paid on Account by:

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�T.D. FUNK

~·:CRTUARY BGOK

(Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

Page Q_

4/;5 ;1/g~r ~~a. rq, ,·n (colo ret!)
Other
.,1::Jo ,..&amp;?/?'/
Date of Funeral A0v /2- I..V.3
Date of Death
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Grave or Lot No. --------Sec.
Location of Grave

-------------------------

Age: ~Years ~ Months ~ Days.
Color

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Occupation - - - - - - - -

single, married, widow, widower 4'1/~~
Birthplace -----------------------------Last place of residence C4t&lt;tt(Jc &amp;ezc...
How long resident of this state -------------

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Mother's Name

----------------------------

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�T.D. FUNK
MCRTUARY BOOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

Lf_
FU~ERAL of CJ~r-ei7Ce S/etvar·r
Pag:e

Date of Funeral

.:7/ec.

Date of Death

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Place of Funeral

Other Information:

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Location of Grave

-------------------------

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------

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?&lt;:CRTUARY BCOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

Page

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FUl\ERAL of

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Date of Funeral

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Place of Funeral

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---------------------

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Paid on Account by:

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�T.D. FUNK

~·:CRTUARY BGCK

Page

(Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)

.iL_

FUKERAL of

Jlhs

~

/

Vee. ;25 J?/3&gt;

Date of Funeral

/2?ec.

Date of Death
Place of Death

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Color

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single , married, widow, widower .I!Jtr ric:

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Husband'3 Name

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Father's Name

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Country of Birth

-~~~~~----------------

Mother's Name

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Country of Birth
Physician
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Cause of Death

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J?e e d

�T.D. FUNK
1\':CRTUARY BGOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Page

J!l_

FUKERAL of

Cao. Jo.me s
II

Date of Funeral J)e c.
Date of Death

.-72.e C:.

Place of Death

/~:3~ /J;1l.

30 JCf I '3

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Grave or Lot No.
Location of Grave

Jif

Sec.

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---~---------

Age: ~Years ____ Months ~ Days.

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Birthplace --~~------------------------­
Last place of residence 11
How long resident of thi-s--st~a-t~e---£~9~v.-rs
_____
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Husband's Name
Father's Name

--------------------------.A/.2J 5 . .{41..f't e. (Ska,or-e)

Country of Birth ~~~~~/____________________
Mother's Name---------------------------Country of Birth ------------------------Physician ---~~_r._.~~~/.~q"'~·r___________________

Ordered by ------------------------Charge to -------------------------Sexton /fee)

Paid on Account by:

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~ ~.

�T.D. FUNK

l~·:CRTUARY

BCCK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)

Pafe ..20
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Date of Funeral
Date of Death

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f ff /-l)a.-.

Place of Death

h '
tA./

~ o. me s

/Vf"

1/:'!1

Grave or Lot No. -----------Sec.
Location of Grave

/I

------------------------------------

Age: .Ud/_ Years ~.,.n
Color Wlzi fe...

Months _Days.

Occupation ----------------

single, married, widow, widower - - - - Birthplace

f/ff

Ci !c&amp;r

sr

Last place of residence "'' "
How long resident of thi_s__
s~ta-t~e---------------Hus band' s Name
Father's Name

~mes W Pavies

Country of Birth ~:z?~~o~u~9~~~~~s~-----------------

Sa..v-a..h. .4//en
Birth No. les Creo..L ..Jlri7/4a

Mother' s Name
Country of
Physician

Chambers

Cause of Death

~.5.~17~~~o~1k~a~t~n._

______________________

Ordered by -----------·----------------------Charge to -----------------------------------Sexton

-------

Paid on Account by:

_J

{JJ

llv;.s

&amp;5~

�T.D. FUNK
1\':CRTUA.RY BCOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

Page

d.L_

FUNERAL of

/!Js

Ella., !laud ~nK
...J/;&amp; .;2.5 /Vi
~:3of?/7l

Date of Funeral

Jn,y

Date of Death

5 :3o nm

e:£ :3

//()6 VT

Place of Death

sr

Other Information:

/71'1

.Jcuurence. ~ns,

Place of Funeral _____'_\_________'t________' _
' __
Clergyman

_...:;:W~o;;,..;..,.lf"------------

Date of Burial _Ja~.~..n&amp;..,..;;;;c:t;;:;.:.5:::;._...l..,j9;,;,1-~:Lf_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

OaK /-1 ·~ l \ Ce mciarv la.wye:nc~ ~ns.
No.
F'6
Sec.
Z'

1:lhere Interred

I

Grave or Lot
Location of Grave

-------------

Age: ~ Years ___ Months ____ Days.
Color

j()/;;'/e.-

Occupation

tl/ ~o/7/e.

single, married, widow, widower Y/varce/
Birthplace

geca.Tur

11/s.

Last place of residence //tJ6 Y7 ST.
How long resident of this state eZ vrs
&gt;

E. /'"

Husband's Name

;qnK

:2/avjd Pkl7/(

Father's Name

Country of Birth

~~~e~n;,;,~~-----------------

Mother's Name
Country of Birth ---------------------Physician

9- CJza~r~ bet$

S

Cause of Death

--------------------------

Ordered by ------------------------Charge to --------------------------Sexton

=3e d

Paid on Account by:

�T.D. FUNK

J~:CRTUARY

BGOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

Pag:e ~
FUNERAL of

Cor-Je/io.-JitN

Date of Funeral
Date of Death

J;. h

Erown

:2. Cf

:Z?

7tJ I ~

Place of Death

/!olden

Place of Funeral

Other Information:

/9 l't

6

;2:..3a P/J'J
A .m .

Conn ST

ma-

Clergyman --------------------------------Date of Burial
~Cf 19 It(

:Jan

vlhere Interred

f/efden

!7lo.

Grave or Lot No. --------Sec.
Location of Grave
Age: ~ Years ~Months ____ Days.
Color

toh&gt;t-~

Occupation - - - - - - - -

single, married, widow, widower
Birthplace

fi/ebras K"-'

Last place of residence ,.Lttvye/lcG
How long resident of this state

/"rernc/s

Husband's Name

~s:

/vr
/

§Brown

{(L?IV...:.a-)

II

Father's Name

Country of Birth ------------------------Mother's Name

r/oteace. lllav
AJr/w;n
/

Country of Birth

~~~d.~~~-------------------

Phys ic ian ....;II/~~
· C~.__._??I,&amp;,J.,__c....C"
. . b...,a~n.....,e_l.
..
....'l_____

Ordered by
Charge to
Sexton

Paid on Account by:

_p

W//.Son

J!Jrs ffiowa

�T.D. FUNK
MCRTUARY BGOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

Page

..23

FUKERAL of

/(leo

/lJtJr r.1S

&amp;6 .:L
.,b n .3/

Date of Funeral
Date of Death

/-9'~1

Place of Death

5:c;o /7111

c!a 11 m,.n

..

'Rev.

Yo we II

!1/ ; V .s7.'"
//

/I

Place of Funeral

Other Information:

1711(

------------------------------------1/?we./I

Clergyman

h£,

Date of Burial

..2..

IV'i

vlhere Interred __._.a:;,.:;,_..;.../,.;,...~.;,.../h~!f_ _ _ _ _ _ __
Grave or Lot No.
Location of Grave
Age:

77

Sec.

----------------------------------

~g Years ~Months ~ Days.

Color hh;./~

Occupation tfkqsew1£e......

single, married, widow, widower

Jt/arried

I///aai.s

Birthplace

Last place of residence /.f/~1
How long resident of this state

£ UztKST
?1=4

;

vr.

Husband's Name
Father's Name

·- ;;m

$~rue//

~~~e~~~~n~-------------------­
&amp;artba_. Hs!Zewa/:t:

Country of Birth
Mother' s Name

Country of Birth
Physician

--~z5?~~~t2~t2~------------------­

1/ L Jo,;e S

Cause of Death

13ze u mon; a-.

Ordered by --~~~~~~~·~u=~t~~~8~a~--------------­
Charge to -----------------------------------Sexton ~ee.c:f

Paid on Account by:

.IJ/r5 L.

UJ.

Cr e. e &amp;e.-

�T .D. FUNK
MCRTUARY BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

Pag:e

ft

FU!\ERAL of

-:Bernie e. frene- f s /e y

Date of Funeral
Date of Death
Place of Death

&amp;b !.:5 Jf{l'/
/?J.'tJo/1/11 .
&amp;b 1.3,•
/.2:tJ() #//'/
,.:? h f .:8r i ~e Sf.'

Place of Funeral

Other Information:

//

II

---------------------------------

Clergyman --------------------------------------------Date of Burial h/:; 1:5 /?If
\'lh ere Interred --""'d-'a;;;._...J(~j/;....._1....;..h....
'! ___________________

II

Grave or Lot No. ______ Sec.
Location of Grave

-----------------------------------

Age: ~Years _____ Months _____ Days.
Color

it;,/;/~

Occupation

at

SCbotJ/

single, married, widow, widower------Birthplace

&amp;// /ee~t:

ks
:Jlrif,.e.

Last place of residence .:2£ f
How long resident of this state

;

Z~rs

ST.

/

Husband's Name

Msky

Father's Name

fsle,v

Country of Birth ---~~~~~~s~·-------------------------

j_; zz.y

Mother' s Name

L sley

--~~a~n5~-------------------------­
J?u~ /pj

Country of Birth
Physician

I

Cause of Death
Ordered by

-::B'uraeJ t{'cct"cl:atq/

/9 /...

.Se

frJ

Charge to ----------------------------------------Sexton

------------

Paid on Account by:

�.............- - - -- - - - -- - - - -

------

T .D. FUNK
Iv:CRTUARY BCOK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)
Page

,25

FUKERAL of

:J;rnes 13. Jle/mic K
&amp;b
£e b

Date of Funeral

/3 If!'(

~:3o;t?/l'l

Date of Death

If /'11i

1/ P/?7

Place of Funeral
Clergyman

C:

5tJ

Place of Death

Other Information:

5o/oist .'olson

~/JCt/C !(
/I

/(

--------------------------------

---~k/~o~l_f:~---------------------

Date of Burial

-----------------------------------

...

1'/here Interred __.t2"""-"&lt;..a:..:.K...._.....
ki~
· JI _ _ _ _ __
Grave or Lot No.
Location of Grave
Age:
Color

/73

Sec.

-----------------------

&amp;(5 Years /~ Months ~ Days.

i&lt;!hl/e..

Occupation

g

hrme r

single, married, widow, widower ~~rriea/
Birthplace

hJ 1//r 'f /nr'&amp;

Last place of residence 5o C: 1-hacocL¥
How long resident of this state 9 ~Husband's Name
Father's Name

------------------------------------Cornel/ias ~/m/ck

Country of Birth C&lt;!?'rtnqn v

~~~~~~---------------

Mother's Name

L.

Country of Birth
Physician

C:ct:Aho.m

W.. VI rr;·a;~

M~~h

Cr-c6ercaf !lemo trhafet
C. A. 2/la r is

Cause of Death
Ordered by

Charge to ------------------------------------------Sexton ~e..J

Paid on Account by:

C r: $ar;5

�T.D. FUNK
MCRTUARY BOCK (Aug. 25, 1913 -Sept. 6, 1916)
Page

of£

FUNERAL of

t?/r.&gt;.

h6.

Date of Funeral

&amp;.6

Date of Death

Place of Funeral
Clergyman

I?

/,

/ t2'3Q t1../11

jfj/f!

£:'

/b

/..2 :z '1

Place of Death

!1Je. t1ffe Js

Lou i 50-

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30

p

Other Information:
5oloi-:.f!
/J7r-~

5Ta!..\-5"9=e r-

s/.

/,

SJ4u [J.e r

Date of Burial
\llhere Interred

~0~-"""'d..:..~"'-;'~//___--....,;(-~~~·
~)
----------------------------------------

Grave or Lot No. l-%-1-./? Sec.
Location of Grave

-------------------------------

Age: ~Years

~ Months ~Days.

Color - - - - - Occupation - - - - - - single, married, widow, widower-----------Birthplace

/JJ/ntzcsa-f o-

Last place of residence .Ldwrc17c c::.- ~.s:
How long resident of this state
1~ vrs
&gt;

--~;f(~.~~~·-------------------

Husband's Name

Father's Name -~~~·--~~~~~,~v___________________
Country of Birth ---------------------------Mother's Name

-------------------------------------

Country of Birth -------------------------------------Physician __']?-L...::l1;L-~J~"~J,~o.:..t.b_
· -------Cause of Death

-----------------------------------

Ordered by ----------------------------------Charge to ---------------------------------------Sexton /f?r:-e J

Paid on Account by:

1/..J

PJeu[f.e/s _

�T.D. FUNK

~·:CRTUARY

Page

BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)

:27

FUNERAL of

&amp; b ;2. .:3 19 1'--f
Feb :2/ /?l'f

Other Information:

Date of Funeral
Date of Death

/5oo i.e arne d ave.

Place of Death
Place of Funeral
Clergyman

"-.:Jft~t!?O:;...__ _/._"_ _ _ _'_'_ __

s~nz;fh

Date of Burial

Eel&gt;

..:2.:3

1?11'

~r2~a..~...K.~....--"'4~~""-6'-IJ------No. I J 715 Sec. ----'f
____

vlhere Interred

Grave or Lot
Location of Grave -------------------Age: ~ Years ~Months ~9 Days.
Color

:BlacK

Occupation

a/ bome.a

single; married, widow, widower a?a~rie"
Birthplace !t:twrence.

}(qas.

Last place of residence }500 Leo....,.ned !lve...
How long resident of this state .:v- 3 -.2..1
Husband' s Name
Father's Name

Jab n £ G t-1 i I e s ( G; I~ s)
A. R. me ;1/u rr

Country of Birth
Mother's Name

111/SSi s s i f212i

tfrfen C/as/e,~eTer,

Country of Birth han/ffo t1
Physician

/IT

Cause of Death

Jones

JeJ

Cunshefwoqn/zhro~ ~o..r'T (Suicide)

Ordered by
Charge to
Sexton

v-

/)ht '()

-------

Paid on Account by:

.J"a.cK Guiles

�T.D. FUNK

~·ICRTUARY BOCK

(Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

Page c28"
FUKERAL of

C/emb. -:8. /Jmbfer-

h b .:2 b /9/f .:;':tJo P/l7.
Date of Death £/; .2f !Vi
Cj,'.Jt) P
Place of Death ~ Z/ /l)a/tu,fsT A&lt; Law reneePlace of Funeral i{Jl Chttrch ;Y .Ja.

Other Information:

Date of Funeral

Clergyman

/esfer-mt:~n

Date of Burial

/"eb

vlhere Interred

&amp;'&gt;ek

Grave or Lot No.
Location of Grave
Age:

,:2. b

/..9'/f
A/,

bo ve-

/LJZ

Sec.

5

--~-------

~Years ~Months ~~

Color

L.

Days •
..2'1 yrs.

Occupation &amp;t;j.:~d hrmcr

/Vbile..

single, married, widow, widower h//t!)werBirthplace

23'e/moaf

C§. Qht"o

Last place of residence c27! Walh~AT Si.
How long resident of this state
?a9rs
Husband' 5 Name
Father's Name

--------------------------John

Country of Birth
Mother's Name
Country of Birth
Physician

C. .417Jb/er-

__...L!.. . ,. __·r-_,'fil-";-·n'-'-·o.________

1-- tt vic a_

5/a ha..r-.

:lle/l??{)nt- C~. o.J{·tJ

~ff~~h
1

Cause of Death· --'"'c'"');~r...:.:o•n"'-'-/~c..-----------Ordered by
Charge to - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Sexton

-------

Paid on Account by:

�T.D. FUNK
MCRTUARY BCGK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)
Page :t:l_

S:v I ve sle

FUKERAL of

Date of Funeral
Date of Death

IJ. ~·.sJey

r-

$arch
&amp;6 :l. 'ff

cc2

/~a.m.

/7'/.Y

Other Information:

/.!2:c~ P/7!

/7/:f

~~7 &amp;afqc'(v SL

Place of Death
Place of Funeral

/(

------------------------

Clergyman ------------------------------Date of Burial h b .:L /9'/L/
\'lhere Interred

"""t2~t:z.::.K..~.-""-h"-0l-,j·j;u.l______

Grave or Lot No • .!if'_,?
Location of Grave

/tJ

Sec. __?_______

------------------------

Age:
Color

~3 Years ~Months _ _ Days.

ttJJ;/c;_

Occupation

/4,/( &amp;ike..-

single, married, widow, widower )?J4rri~/
Birthplace

~?1~~~~·=~----------------------­

4

Last place of residence
J7:2 7
S /.'
How long resident of this state::iz -.5
Husband' s Name
Father's Name

'J?e~son ~islet../

--~--~~~~~~~~---------

Country of Birth ~~~~~n~a~·~----------------­
Mother' s Name

.L.. e. ci J?/a...
---------------------------

Country of Birth ~C:~~~n~n~·-----------------­
Physician

--~~~a!~·----------------------­

Cause of Death chtoaic

:llJ.-/t:;U
.....z1·..seo..se.&lt;
,.

Ordered by ----------------------------Charge to -----------------------------Sexton
~EJ

Paid on Account by:

.Ar.s hznza. '%sle;t:/V.g,- sr~ .#pe E'a,sl
Cedar- /?aoi
ds ~wo.•

�T.D. FUNK
MCRTUARY BGOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Page

:30

FUKERAL of

d}:5"

#ktfy Louise. . Sch t ??.J~,c

Date of Funeral //JP~rch

5~ 5

Place of Death
Place of Funeral
Clergyman

k {7) /fl'f

/!larch

Date of Death

/lliss

/tJ a 177.

!Vf

I t'J

J&gt;'-"30

Other Information:

p

3/.

//

-------------------------

_....~~Oo::;;....;..·....;C=.:....___;;'B~r-:-.....:.:;o...::;;w::;..,nl-6.-_ _ _ __

Date of Burial

llJa v-cb

J[)

c(?,a }(

.·lhere Interred

1

I &lt;Jli/

J/i )/

Grave or Lot No. /~ tJ
Sec.
Location of Grave ------------------------Age: ~/ Years ~Months ____ Days.
Color

k;J11lt&lt;

Occupation /

u;/[e;.

single, married, widow, widower )1Ja r r i e
Birthplace )«tur-cac e

d

J

~as.

Last place of residence .50s /77/ss . ST
How long resident of this state _?/- ~
Husband's Name
Father's Name

CML
d II

Country of Birth
Mother's Name

Nit/' rcam./3

~&amp;?~a~in~(~e~)_______________

/ll4ry Gtitfi ±h

Country of Birth
Physician

!?: /i'CI!Jf/lPE R

lie r man I

c;:;:u olaf,oh

Cause of Death /ATerine.

J/emmarha9e,

Ordered by ----------------------------Charge to ----------------------------Sexton
::See

J

Paid on Account by:
/() 'r.

S' C bro.. ole: v-

�v
T.D. FUNK

Jv:CRTUARY BGOK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)
Page

d.../_

FUNERAL of

Jnfqai:o9 /Jkrv
I

Date of Funeral

marc.b

Lol,f/Se. ·
lO

Scbra. cler

}9 /Lf

/0 a.m _

Other Information:

Date of Death

S!j f /horn

Place of Death

So. fhe. Co. sk'e1-

Place of Funeral
Clergyman
Date of Burial
\'lhere Interred
Grave or Lot No.
Location of Grave

Sec.

Age: ____ Years
Color

Months ____ Days.
Occupation ---------------

single, married, widow, widower ----------Birthplace
Last place of residence ------------------How long resident of this state ----------Husband's Name
Father's Name----------------------------Country of Birth --------------------------Mother's Name

-----------------------------

Country of Birth --------------------------Physician --------------------------------Cause of Death ~5~/.~i~ll~b~o~r~n~---------------Ordered by
Charge to
Sexton -------------

Paid on Account by:

�T.D. FUNK

~·:CRTUARY

Pag:e

BOCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

.:Y:l..

FUKERAL of

llher;/8

JltrLEE

£bee b

Date of Funeral

,1krc h

Date of Death

Lj,t.5

Place of Funeral

Other Information:

II 11/iJ

9

f~5 {:}hi

Place of Death

Clergyman

1/.

111'1
0

cJhi.D

ffYown

Date of Burial

J?f(lvch

!I

1(/f

~t?~~h-~-~~·~~~---------------s
No.
9'.3
Sec.

Where Interred

Grave or Lot
Location of Grave

---------------------------

Age: ~ Years ____ Months ~ Days.
Color

4/ii Z:e.

Occupation

t:?done-

single, married, widow, widower ;Cu·~c..c/
Birthplace
Last place of residence
fc2!7
How long resident of this state
Husband' 5 Name
Father's Name

oJ~· tJ
~~ vrs
;

--------------------------------~in /J Lc:;bta 6 n

Country of Birth ~~~~~;~-----------------­
Mother's Name

,[kji'e&gt;n d/Jyl«

Country of Birth

-------------------------

Physician --~t?~~=~~e~r-r~~~n-------------------Cause of Death ~~~e~~~~~l~y~s~;~s_________________
Ordered by
Charge to
Sexton

----------

Paid on Account by:

Cr. z.

-

�t/
T.D. FUNK
MCRTUARY BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

P~ge

:33

_...;;;J;..;.·.....:...;J/~._,,~/JIJ~o"""B~R.:...:.t"""S;;,..__ _ _ _ __

FUKERAL of

£larch
$arc6

Date of Funeral
Date of Death

Place of Death C¢'ner-g
Place of Funeral

&amp;

Clergyman

..J,''f5.r:_-'/

~ s 5 t:7 /l fo r .,.,.....
IA.y}(J(!r clothe-~:

c:t

17(/t) 1,9/f/

I f/asI pi~/ KC

£un!&lt;'

/??tJ.

Ckaa~ I

""1-

/oh;n

Jo 1 ~ J&lt;.C 1/lo

I

/j'

JJ.

au;r-1( ....
1na in

we//

!Jlqrc6

Date of Burial

18 1'1/'l

Other Information:

s r.

/Y/7/'

vlhere Interred _a""'-"a;;,;_j/(;....1......"-'/1;-'-·;j
"-.....
/ _ _ _ _ _ __
Grave or Lot No.
Location of Grave
Age:

50

7f

Sec.

--'8'"'-----

-----------------

Years _ _ Months _

Color h&lt;

Occupation

Days.
/

a6(S) ,.~ Y

single, married, widow, widower
Birthplace

lt//dewer

_.~.a~~~s~·-------------------

r-&amp;r

Last place of residence
/~
;[C /?!c .
How long resident of this state - - - - - -

Hf G

Husband' 5 Name
Father's Name

---------------------------------------------------------

Country of Birth -----------------------Mother's Name

-------------------------------------

Country of Birth ------------------------------Physician -------------------------------------Cause of Death CaYb~//c,
Su/c/

/lc&gt;d

Ordered by

Paid on Account by:

...,ks &amp; !!

Charge to
Sexton

d'e.

Nc.: d

Cr-~e£L_

�T.D. FUNK
tv:CRTUARY BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913 -Sept. 6, 1916)
/
Page :J!L
FUKERAL of

/llrs E /;'.?.a b t~ L i sches~
I
(!

Date of Funeral /J/ar-c

6 :27

9:·M /1/?l

l'l/'1

/Jla YC b. .6 ~
/tJI? A/J ST

Date of Death
Place of Death

,,

Place of Funeral

/,P/77

Other Information:
c~s Kc'l

Alo:

)&lt;C KC shr-iYl

e__

II

r.. . .

Clergyman __.s~;r;._..a....,u~f..... e__r-_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Date of Burial

ll?arch .!2 9 l f / f

i'lhere Interred Ellen w;:; o

J /!Ans.

Grave or Lot No. --------Sec.
Location of Grave

-----------------------

Age: ~Years ~Months _1~ Days.

r

Occupation );~tt5C ?u; e.
single, married, widow, widower W//ecv'
Birthplace

&amp;eKe L

Ge..rmo.nv
7

Last place of residence /t:Jii ,A./
How long resident of this state
Husband' s Name
Father's Name

J

S/.

---------------------------

rca le s K v
;

Country of Birth __
0;~'-Y~M~~~n~yT--------------­
Mother's Name
Country of Birth
Physician

-------------------------

-......:Kj-J...JAbLI.rh~o..:..;.{e~h:....-_ _ _ _ _ _ __

Cause of Death ..;ll...:...:..r..:.Tt.:;;e..:.r-=o;;..___S=-e~h::..:e~r--.:C';=u:..:S;;..____
Ordered by ------------------------Charge to
Sexton

-------

Paid on Account by:

Ch&amp;lS .J..;sc/z eskv

'

�T.D. FUNK

~·:CRTUARY BCOK

Page

(Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

35

FUKERAL of

Rra~~l\a.. P Bo.~ber-·~(13~v-b~n)
Other Information:
llnr;
I
17
JCflt.f
c2:~
em
p

!/Jr5

'
Date of Funeral

~rif

Date of Death

li

IL/71

Place of Death ___S~~---~~~o~w~t-·s~.t?O~o_________
Place of Funeral
Clergyman

z;ct'sc a12g/ Cka,nc.l

E /wards

4pc; I

Date of Burial
'V/here Interred

17 19/~

__,_(2"--""g"-'-·'-1.;/________

Grave or Lot No.
Location of Grave

/6

Sec.

------------------------

Age: ~ .Years ____ Months ____ Days.
Color

/u£/e..

Occupation a/ ~t:Jme

single, married, widow, widower ~/ olo~
Birthplace
Last place of residence s r ...! t!JU; .s l??o
How long resident of this state ---------Husband' s Narne

_.J:..;...,;;o;...:...:.h....n.__________________

Father's Name--~-----------------------Country of Birth ------------------------Mother's Name

----------------------------

Country of Birth -------------------------Physician -------------------------------Cause of Death /1Jyo cca r o/; fis
7

Ordered by
Charge to
Sexton

------------

Paid on Account by:

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�T.D. FUNK

~·:CRTUARY

Pag:e

BCGK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

..2£

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Date of Funeral

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~·:CRTUARY BOCK

Page

(Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

.:1.l_

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MCRTUARY BCOK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)

Page ..:1.%_
FUNERAL of

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Country of Birth

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------

Paid on Account by:

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�T.D. FUNK

~·:CRTUARY

Page

BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)

.J..!L

FUNERAL of

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Date of Funeral

E. C:/le.s

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Other Information:
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Date of Death
Place of Death
Place of Funeral
Clergyman
Date of Burial
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-----------------------------

Grave or Lot No.
Location of Grave
Age: _____ Years

Sec.

Months ____ Days.

Color

Occupation ---------------

single, married, widow, widower ----------Birthplace
Last place of residence
How long resident of this state
Husband's Name

-----------------------------

Father's Name
Country of Birth
Mother's Name
Country of Birth --------------------------Physician ---------------------------------Cause of Death
Paid on Account by:
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�T.D. FUNK
MCRTUARY BOOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Page

~

FUNERAL of

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Date of Funeral

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�T .D. FUNK
I··ICRTUARY BOOK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)
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~:CRTUARY BGOK (Aug. 25,

Page

1913 - Sept. 6,

1916)

.£it_

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~:CRTUARY

Page

BCGK (Aug. 25, 1913 -Sept. 6, 1916)

..!iJ._

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Funeral fi...?J 2..~ rll'f
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�T.D. FUNK

~·:CRTUARY

BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

Pag:e !i.f_
j.~tJ~#?

-JZta.e." )3 /'l/'7
L.L. /flf_

Date of Funeral

Iua.e

Date of Death

93/

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Other Information:

Clergyman -.;M~a::.l....f___________

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Date of Burial

I3

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Grave or Lot No.
Sec.
Location of Grave ------------------------Age: 1~ Years ~
Color

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Occupation

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Country of Birth ------------------------Mother's Name

----------------------------

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Ordered by
Charge to
Sexton

-------

Sho1Paid on Account by:

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�T.D. FUNK

~·:CRTUARY

Page

BCCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

!i:Z_

James :IJt.-fnn
Date of Funeral ~ne. .2£ !9/Lf
Date of Death -J:a~ ,2_':1. I t./'1
FUNERAL of

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5 .' ()t),P;?'/

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-------------------------

----~~~o~;z~e-·~~~~~----------------­

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Country of Birth ------------------------Physician

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Cause of Death ~~~a~r~q~J.~~~S~/~S~------------Ordered by
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T.D. FUNK
MCRTUARY BGOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Page

!t:./_ _

Fm:ERAL of

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Date of Funeral

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Date of Death
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Place of Funeral

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Grave or Lot No. --------Sec.
Location of Grave

-------------------------

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Color

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Occupation

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Father's Name

----------------------------

Country of Birth
1'-1other' s Name

----------------------------------------------------

Country of Birth

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Cause of Death /lf?e~//c/ · c / lj'.s
Ordered by
Charge to
Sexton

----------

Paid on Account by:

£!..

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�T.D. FUNK
MCRTUARY BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Page !i.2_
FU!\E:iAL of .In [qaf" CJf'

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Date of Funeral

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Date of Death

/? C

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Clergyman ___J?~o~a~~~--------------------------------

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Date of Burial

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Grave or Lot No. --------Sec.
Location of Grave ------------------------sr;il

Age: Potn Years _____ Months _____ Days.

w___

Color ____

0 c cupa t ion -------------------

single, married, widow, widower---------Birthplace

/1/t:J

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Last place of residence
How long resident of this state ---------Husband's Name
Father' s Name

--------------------------_C_..;_
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.

Country of Birth ------------------------1\iother's Name
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Cause of Death

---------------------------

Ordered by ----------------------------Charge to
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---------

I

�T.D. FUNK
MCRTUARY BCCK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)
Page

_fL

FUKERAL of

~o.v-'i ~a.. ~ n e.

Date of Funeral
Date of Death

Iii dd

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Date of Burial
vlhere Interred

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//;//

Grave or Lot No. j,Z 7 3
Location of Grave

Sec.

'I

--~--------

Age:

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Color

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How long resident of thi_s__s~t-a~t-e___________

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single, married, widow, widower &amp;~rri~J

Ordered by

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�T.D. FUNK
Jv:CRTUARY BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)
Page

1f_

C~V 5m i T ;/
Funeral -h / v 1:2. , 11/'/
I
::&gt;

FUKERAL of
Date of

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Date of Death

Other Information:

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________
Grave or Lot No.
Sec.
Location of Grave -----------------------Age: ~Years
Color

Months _ _ Days.

w.

Occupation

aT ~me..

l!larrie/
-z.V. .T.~·;_____________

single, married, widow, widower
Birthplace

Last place of residence ?;z La. sr.How long resident of this state - - - - - - - Husband's Name
Father's Name

T

E.

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------~----~~-----------

---------------------------

Country of Birth -------------------------Mother's Name

---------------------------

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Cause of Death Cancer

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�T .D. FUNK
MCRTUARY BGGK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Pag.e 5~

A

£1?1J!VCis
SuG-~u£
Funeral
3t-tlv 1$ 171.3 (:~.-.rrer-)

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Date of

fA.tnOther Information:

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Grave or Lot No • .l.tr !.6
Location of Grave

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-----------------

Age:

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Ju

Occupation

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Country of Birth -~~
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Mother's Name

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Cause of Death acci denf"' / :iJr-owninJ
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------

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Place of Funeral

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T.D. FUNK

~:CRTU ARY BCCK

Pag:e

(Aug. 25, 1913 -Sept. 6, 1916)

5/

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-----------------------

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Color

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How long resident of this state
7'Z )'VJ-.s:
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MCRTUARY BOCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Page

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How long resident of this state

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~. :CRTUARY

Pag.e

BCCK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)

53

FUKERAL of

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Date of Funeral
Date of Death

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~:CRTUARY

Page

BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913 -Sept. 6, 1916)

5'f

FUKERAL of YELBERT LuG-EN£

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~·:CRTUARY

Page

BCCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

55

FUKERAL of

R ·11/;'L L;·ams

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Date of Funeral
Date of Death

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How long resident of this state --------Husband's Name
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Iv:CRTUARY BCOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

Pag.e

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FUKERAL of

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Date of Funeral
Date of Death

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-

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--------------------

Age: ~Years ~Months ~ Days.
Color

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Occupation

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Page 2Z_
FUKERAL of

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Age: _ _ Years _

I 3 Days.

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Color --------- Occupation ---------------

-----

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How long resident of this state ---------Husband's Name

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Country of Birth ----------------------------Mother's Name
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~·:CRTUARY BCOK (Aug. 25,

Page

1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

.21_

FUNERAL of

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of Grave

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---------------------------

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Color

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How long resident of this state ----------Husband' s Name
Father's Name

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MCRTUARY BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)
Page

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Date of Funeral ffuc; .:1.

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T.D. FUNK
MCRTUARY BGOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Page ..d.£_
FUKERAL of

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Date of Funeral

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Date of Death

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Date of Burial

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Grave or Lot No. ------------Sec.
Location of Grave

-------------------------

Age:

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Color

/dh;·t~

____ Months ____ Days.
Occupation

ar JtJne..

single, married, widow, widower ~rtieal
Birthplace ------------------------------Last place of residence
How long resident of this state
Husband's Name
Father's Name

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-----------------------------

Country of Birth ------------------------Mother's Name
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---------------------------

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T.D. FUNK
l\·:CRTUARY

Page

BOOK (Aug.

25,

Sept.

1913 -

6,

1916)

..6..i_

FUNERAL of

S..us i c.::,

Date of Funeral

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Date of Death

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Place of Death
Place of Funeral

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7

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Other Information:
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Birthplace

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----------------------------

Country of Birth ------------------------Mother's Name

----------------------------

Country of Birth ------------------------Physician -------------------------------Cause of Death
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T.D. FUNK
MCRTUARY BGGK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Pae:.e

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FUKERAL of

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2. a

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Date of Funeral

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Other Information:

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Date of Death
Place of Death
Place of Funeral

Clergyman --~---------------------------­
Date of Burial
Au!} :3 J /Vf
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/

Grave or Lot No. -------- Sec.
Location of Grave

-------------------------

Age: ~~ Years ____ Months ____ Days.
Color

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Z...:CRTUARY BGOK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)
Pag:e ~

haas Dosier GY"ani:
Funeral Sc;a /I IV?:
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Date of Burial

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Jv:CRTUARY BGOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Page

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FUNERAL of

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Color

Occupation 1@/;'r~ c/

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Birthplace
Last place of residence -----------------How long resident of this state

------

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Mother's Name

----------------------------

Country of Birth ------------------------Physician
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---------------------------

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-------------------------------

------

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�T .D. FUNK
:MCRTUARY BCOK (Aug. 25, 191.3 - Sept. 6, 1916)

Page

65

FUNERAL of

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Date of Funeral

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I

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Place of Death
Place of Funeral

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Clergyman --------------------------------Date of Burial
;Jo 1'11'1

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-------------------------

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Iv:CRTUARY BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

Page

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-~----

Age: ~Years ___ Months ___ Days.
Color ~~~---- Occupation -----------single, married, widow, widower - - - - Birthplace ------------------------------Last place of residence -~~-------------­
How long resident of this state - - - - Husband's Name
Father's Name

-----------------------------------------------------.

Country of Birth -------------------------Mother's Name

----------------------------

Country of Birth

-----------------------

Physician --------------------------------Cause of Death Va/Yg/o..r /~o.rf: hoqb/e_.

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�T.D. FUNK
lv:CRTUARY BGOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Pag:e

/'7

FUKERAL of

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Place of Death
Place of Funeral

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;

Date of Burial

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Grave or Lot No. --------Sec.
Location of Grave

-------------------------

Age: ~Years ____ Months ~ Days.
Color LV.

Occupation

af:

//ol?7e_.

single, married, widow, widower ~:)~---­
Birthplace

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_'-------=-------~~~,v~rs~-//

Last place of residence __1
How long resident of this state
Husband'5 Name
Father's Name

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Country of Birth
Mother's Name

----------------------------

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�T.D. FUNK

~:CRTUARY

Pag:e

BGOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

ft

FUNERAL

Veno..~J

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of

Date of Funeral ...."""'S'~e_,,e=:;;....._3=...;0;;___1.~...7~1.~...'/_ _.:l-'30
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Other Information:

//

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Grave or Lot No. ______ Sec.
Location of Grave

-------------------

Age: ____ Years ~Months ~3 .Days.
Color h

Occupation

t::1/ dm-e

single, married, widow, widower ~~~------­
Birthplace ~tvrence...

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Cause of Death -~12~~~n~tu·n~~~~~·zJ~s~--------_/
Paid on Account by:

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�T .D. FUNK

~·:CRTUARY

Page

BCCK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)

b f'

FUKERAL of

M'/hed £

Other Information:

UCL 3 1?/71

Date of Funeral

Date of Death VCL 2.,
Place of Death

J?.r- Ke-,

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_z_

56 Years

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(-l=ore~o.?"',)

single, married, widow, widower A?arriecl
Birthplace

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How long resident of this state

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------

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FUNK

~-:CRTUARY BOCK

(Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

Page ~

Ch~s. G Srnoci&lt;
Funeral Ocl 5 /9/Lj

FUKERP.L of

Date of

a~r3

Date of Death

7tJ/

Place of Death
Place of Funeral

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Other Information:

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Date of Burial

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Location of Grave ---------------------------------Age:

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Years

/

Months

/5

Days.

Color ~IV;.:.::;__ _ _ Occupation ~j;r~c/ /:
single, married, widow, widower ~~//a{;w e.
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How long resident of this state

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--------

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�T.D. FUNK
MCRTUARY BOOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Se:pt. 6, 1916)
Page

ZL

FUNERAL of

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Date of Funeral _.C2.:;.;L-....:...:...T_....;;5....,.7 ._./~f:.-1Z''--_..;;;..6,....;/3;;....0.....:~.....:~;..,;
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Other Information:

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Grave or Lot No.
Location of Grave
Age:

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Color

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Occupation La.6or-n··

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single, married, widow, widower S/n9/e.
;
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------

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�T.D. FUNK
MCRTUARY BCOK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)

~age

Z2:_

FU!\ERAL of

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Date of Funeralsf,~eel
Date of Death

Other Information:

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-------------------------

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~~~~~-----------------

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------------------------C e e.. \o...v- y
171

Age: ~ Years ~Months
Color

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~ Days.

Occupation Cori!rt:fcfor

single, married, widow, widower
Birthplace

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�T.D. FUNK
l\·:CRTUARY BCOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Se}:t. 6, 1916)
Pag:e

Z2_

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Date of Burial

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Grave or Lot No. - - - - Sec.
Location of Grave

-----------------------

Age : ~C
Color

Years ____ Months ____ Days.

It!

Occupation S4/es man

single, married, widow, · widower $a r r i e o/
Birthplace --~~e~n~n.~· --------------------­
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--------------------------

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· _E._w...;;....;..i..::;;s_--W~;_;;;'L...;;.L...;:E~T-'T----Country of Birth
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Country of Birth
Cause of Death

---------------------------

Ordered by ----------------------------Charge to -----------------------------Sexton

--------

Paid on Account by:

5on

�T .D. FUNK
MCRTUARY BGOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Page

2£

s.

J(dr!IEI?!#E
tJ?PE/f;f)IJ!V
Date of Funeral Oc/ c2.£ 1..9/f
Date of Death r:f?c;T o25
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FUKERAL of

Other Information:

I

Place of Funeral _ _'_;_ _ _ _"'_/'_ _ _ __
Clergyman

S/auff e ;-

ac

Date of Burial

.;2 b

If/"/

VCA... /( //;'//

\'lhere Interred

Grave or Lot No. _ _ _ _ Sec.
Location of Grave

----------------

Age:

~Years

Color

/ / Months

IV

Occupation

!9

Days.

C?/" /~n7e..,

single, married, widow, widower @~w .
Birthplace

--~--e~n~n~------------------­

Last place of residence I/?'// S W
How long resident of this state ..:35 ; vrs

------------------------

Husband's Name

Country of Birth
Mother's Name

--~A_e-...-..;..:;/J~n~-------

-------------------------

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Paid on Account by:

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�T.D. FUNK

~·:CRTUARY

Page

BCOK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)

75
Olall1!15 JoJVEs
Funeral veL. .:l 7,
I 11'/
;;

FUI\ERAL of
Date of

?rl)a;n.

r:JcZ: .25,
&gt; !Vi
Place of Death C/~ JaiL

Date of Death

Place of Funeral

9.?/tJ /77Ci

55 .

Other Information:
.J)du1/o. S

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--~~~~~c~r(~s~~~h~-------------------

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Date of Burial Ocf:

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I

Grave or Lot No. -------- Sec.
Location of Grave ------------------------Age: ~ Years ____ Months ____ Days.
Color

~

Occupation --------------

single, married, widow, widower ---------Birthplace ------------------------------Last place of residence -----------------How long resident of this state

---------

Husband' s Name --------------------------Father's Name---------------------------Country of Birth -------------------------X.1other' s Name

----------------------------

Country of Birth ------------------------Physician 1/ T Jones
Cause of Death

forole)&lt;y

~~~~~~,---------------

Ordered by
Charge to
Sexton

--------

lh

Paid on Account by:

y

�/
T.D. FUNK
MCRTUARY BGCK (Aug,. 25, 1913 -Sept. 6, 1916)

Page

Zi_
WoN..O/t ( WANVA)

FUKERAL of

.JA.A

OcT .:L9, J91'f
u~r :2..1..) !91'/

Date of Funeral

)

Date of Death

Conn

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Place of Death

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Other Information:

sr

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Clergyman ----------~------------------­
Date of Burial t?cl .29,
, /9/f

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Vlhere Interred

Grave or Lot No. - - - - S e c .
Location of Grave

-------------------------------5 Months c2.7 Days.

Age: _ _ Years

Color ~ttl~----- Occupation -------------single, married, widow, widower _S;;;.....______
Birthplace .Lawr-enc~

------~~--------------------

Last place of residence --~----~~r-~-How long resident of this state
· 5 -.2....7
Husband' s Narne

-------------------------/{!ALT£1r

Father's Name

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Country of Birth -----------------------

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Mother's Name

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Country of Birth _:J?~-~~K_o~a-_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___
Physician

J/

r

.;/;11/E S

Cause of Death ----------------------Ordered by -------------------------Charge to ------------------------Sexton

----------------

Paid on Account by:

�T.D. FUNK
IviCRTUARY BOOK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)
Pag:e

'77

FUKERAL of

M///an

Su!l;vp...n

Date of Funeral ~J/ 3

Oc.t: 3 I 1711/

DatE: of Death

S/aze 1/pSj?ilaL z;;?eKa... ~/l~

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Place of Funeral
Clergyman

Other Information:
2'30/?,l;?l

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£C&amp;r!CJnc/
_.~~~~Y.~.~~=------------------­

Date of Burial

&amp; //i //

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-=~~~~-----------------

Grave or Lot No.
~a
Sec.
Location of Grave -----------------------Age: ~Years _____ Months _____ Days.
Color h

Occupation

R

//Jason

single, married, widow, widower !?Zarr/t::..d
Birthplace

Lawr-ence.

/i:i//s.

Last place of residence 7t?S -4rK 5 /
How long resident of this state ~a,vrs
Husband' s Name
Father's Name

----------~~------------

----------------------------

Country of Birth ------------------------Mother's Name
Country of Birth

-------------------------

Physician ------------------------------Cause of Death ___?a...::;......;;a-.......t"""e;..;:S:;o..;I.-S._______________
Ordered by ---------------------------Charge to
Sexton

:2"fe e c/

Paid on Account by:

.i_.. //!. Mn~ue II roe~!:: ~ns.
;

-

�T .D. FUNK

~·:CRTUARY BCOK

Page

Z%_

FUNERAL

(Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

df;;L ;' IJ/D A ~IV£

of

A/t?e 4 !f/7"

Date of Funeral

7a

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Location of Grave -----------------------Age: ~Years ~Months ~~
Color /v'

Occupation

Days.

a / dme:-

single, married, widow, widower .It//~ tA./
Birthplace

_;;..::z:;_n~c/::;;..;....;....- - - - - - - - - - -

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How long resident of this state
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Father's Name

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Country of Birth

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Where Interred

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Other Information:

C o u...,1' y

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�/
T.D. FUNK
l\':CRTUARY BGGK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)
Page

Z!J_

FUKERAL of __,...._lj...._.u
.....-L-.:·I.....A.___,W:.....;.....;...o.;-y...;.A~H.....w-..____
Date of Funeral
Date of Death
Place of Death

lf/t7V. 5, 1914

Other Information:

~~--~,--~._----------~

A/tJI/. £(,, /9/:t

?

a az.

--'/~cJ:...:-2..=..3..:....-......k'~.'-'d~...::;S,k.r
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Clergyman

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--------------------------

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Date of Burial
i'lhere Interred

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• ..;;;;S;.,.,tr....;l_f'-t-t'---------

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;

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Grave or Lot No. _______ Sec.
Location of Grave ------------------------Age: ~Years
Color

if/

~ Months ~ Days.
Occupation

c::zr /-/oP7e--

single, married, widow, widower W/c:/c;t:.-&lt;.f
Birthplace

Ge r- rna n ?&lt;'
7

Last place of residence /t:J.23 A()/ s f
How long resident of this state £~ vrs
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Husband's Name--------------------------Father' s Narne __. .3,l,J;..:..
·~t1'""'41.~:...-~4.....L..&amp;./l.:..:;/(l~Pr....;__ _ _ __
Country of Birth

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Country of Birth ------------------------Physician 1?u do/ph
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Cause of Death C/zrcJa; e-

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Ordered by ----------------------------Charge to
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------

Paid on Account by:

-fos r 111

_//op/(;/JS
)

-

�T.D. FUNK

~·:CRTUARY

BGGK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)

Page .22._
FUNERAL of :7JAVfJJ

Other Information:

A0v. ~. /9 t..LJ

Date of Funeral
Date of Death

A/i EAI

/1!:11/.

2

!:~ /7

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Place of Funeral !:{_c . . k'
Place of Death

J. /ik!ffEivCE

Clergyman --------------------------------------------Date of Burial
\'lhere Interred ---------------------------Grave or Lot No. ---------Sec.
Location of Grave

-------------------------------

..£L
Color it!
Age:

Years _

~----

Months _ _ Days ·.
Occupation .Br-;d;~ /bv-man
/

single, married, widow, widower !?Jn-rie.d
Birthplace -------------------------------------------Last place of residence
How long resident of thi_s__s~ta-t~e-----------Hus band' s Name
Father's Name

--------------------------------------

Country of Birth -----------------------------Mother's Name-------------------------------------Country of Birth ------------------------------

Physician ~~~e~/~·~~~~-----------------------­
Cause of Death 1/alvu!a.t 1/eo.rr fli..S'e~se'
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Charge to

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Yt:J...n/els

~ £/~

:J?;-CJ.

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�T.D. FUNK

~·:CRTUARY

BCGK (Aug. 25, 1913 -Sept. 6, 1916)

Page~

FUKERilL of

~7l.~bv
Jle&lt;--~c?~ JhuK
r

Date of Funeral ~e. lt.. L.flr
A/~//

Date of Death

II

Place of Fun~ral

r/11 Other

Information:

/- ·~o ~

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Alii 5I

&lt;J__II~

Place of Death

5 ;·oo

A/~

----~~-----------------

Clergyman ------------/'-------------------Date of Burial A/t/1/. I ( 111/f'

t:Jct /{ ffi/1

tlhere Interred

1

~~~~~~---------------

Grave or Lot No. --------Sec.
Location of Grave
sTill

Age: horn Years ____ Months ____ Days.
Color ~h/~
· ______ Occupation SJ7~orn
single, married, widow, widower ----------Birthplace

Latvr(nce.

~/Js

Last place of residence --~-------------­
How long resident of this state

-------

Husband's Name --------------------------Father's Name
r- r- v
~u. k

h':"a.

I

Country of Birth ~awr~.I7CG
Mother's Name

/f:i/J.s:

---------------------------

Country of Birth ------------------------Physician ~~~--~~~~}~-------------C/1/f L
Ph&gt;//; ps
Cause of Death
Ordered by

---------------------------

Charge to
Sexton

--------

Paid on Account by:

#lrs //

)J~«J&lt;

�T .D. FUNK

~·:CRTUARY BCGK

(Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)

Pag:e 8~
FUKERAL of

----::_5~1J~8~1l......fi:...___;£=-..:;;.U:..:..R......k&lt;~£;;__ _ __
lf/r;v

Date of Funeral
Date of Death

4/ay;

Place of Death

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Place of 'Funeral
Clergyman

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Other Information:
0
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Date of Burial

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I

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Ce me u r-&gt;v

Grave or Lot No. --------Sec.
Location of Grave

-------------------------

Age:

7g Years ____ Months ____ Days • .

Color

/(/

Occupation

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---------

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~·:CRTUARY

Page

BOOK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)

U
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------------------------------------

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MCRTUARY BOCK (Aug. 25, 1913 -Sept. 6, 1916)
Page

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Date of Death

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Date of Death

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Date of

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Jv:CRTUARY BCOK (Aug. 25, 1913 -Sept. 6, 1916)

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----------

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li·:CRTUARY BOCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept.

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Funeral -Jg_a. 15

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Page

BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)

U

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-------

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�T .D. FUNK
lv:CRTUARY BOCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Page

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FUNERAL of

5 J//Ji L

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Date of Death

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Jan

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Date of Burial

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Occupation

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single, married, widow, widower
Birthplace

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~·:CRTUARY

Page

BGGK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)

/r:JO

FU!\ERAL of

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Date of Funeral
Date of Death

Jan

A

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---------------------

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Date of Burial

&amp;b. /

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.

Grave or Lot No. - - - - - Sec.
Location of Grave

----------------

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Months

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Color -"/{;;..;;...:..·- - - - Occupation .BanK C/er-K
single, married, widow, widower t!fldv:r/ec/
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Jv:CRTUARY BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)
Page

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!J ;11cCA8LJJ!v'.D
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----------------------

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L

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(Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

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~·:CRTUARY

BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

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I
Page

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Other Information:

d~tJa.m.
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_

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Location of Grave

-----------------------

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Color

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single, married, widow, widower---------Birthplace -------------------------------Last place of residence
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---------

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Father's Name

--------------------------

----------------------------

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---------------------------

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~·:CRTUARY·

Pag.e

BCOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

/tJJf

FU~ERAL

of

/::;J'E!fSON Ct1C/'/~

CEtJ;fGE

Feb ~ /7/S
hb:t 17!5

Date of Funeral
Date of Death

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Other Information:

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Grave or Lot No. _ _ _ _ Sec.
Location of Grave

------------------------

Age: ~Years

//

Months

;ty

Color ~a/~·--- Occupation

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single, married, widow, widower
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�T.D. FUNK

~·:CRTUARY

BGOK (Aug. 25, 1913 -Sept. 6, 1916)

Pag:e /tlS
FUKERAL of

fi

/JA'!?RY
7

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Other Information:

Date of Death _....cCJ~e...;;;b;..__.:z.
__~..;...~_/S
_ _ _ __
Place of Death

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Date of Burial

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--------------------------

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7

Ordered by ----------------------------Charge to -----------------------------Sexton

-------

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�T.D. FUNK

~:CRTUARY

BOOK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)

Page ~6'

/-#!u';!!{j)

FUNERAL of

Date of Funeral
Date of Death
Place of Death

.J?/Pf?A/£1/ V);f' ;11)

/2/; /6 /;115
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Other Information:

/! /lJ £ Church

Clergyman ------------------------------Date of Burial
J/ /;1/5
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Location of Grave -----------------------Age:

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::8

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&gt;~ ?V

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How long resident of this state ---------Husband's Name ----------------------Father's Name

--------------------------

Country of Birth ----------------------Mother's Name

-------------------------

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;

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Cause of Death
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Pro.

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Bet1177o/7;~
Lq df e&lt;

-------------------------------

------

Paid on Account by:

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�T.D. FUNK
MCRTUARY BOOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Page

/tlZ

Fllr~ ERAL

of

CtJ/i.ETT

Ji!!llliJIJ1

Date of Funeral

/eb 15 lf/5

Date of Death

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/

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-----------------------------------

Grave or Lot No. _ _ _ _ Sec.
Location of Grave --------------------------------Age: ~9 Years

~

Color

Occupation ..z/;m.;le..

...;;.U/......_._ _ _

Months

ot7

Days.

oF

Cl?.

single, married, widow, widower ~rr;'e/
Birthplace
Last place of residence
How long resident of thi_s___s~ta-t~e----------------Hus band' s Narne ------------------------------------Father' s Narne -------------------------------------Country of Birth - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Mother's Name

-------------------------------------

Country of Birth --------------------------Physician E.
E ~/ 1//'ps
;

J2

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Co/77.

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------

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Paid on Account by:

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�T.D. FUNK
MCRTUARY BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913 -Sept. 6, 1916)
Pag:e

/t/8"

/MI{y f.

FUKERAL of

7

Date of Funeral
Date of Death

/f!SI/;!L17;1/
;2~.11/

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Place of Death
Place of Funeral

Other Information:

9/(S l/T5T
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f_-___________
Date of Burial

Ub

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Grave or Lot No. _ _ _ _ Sec. - - - - - Location of Grave - - - - - - - - - - Age:

75

Color

Years _Months _ _ Days.

/1/

single, married, widow,
Birthplace

a-1: ~H?e_
widower ~~~

Occupation

rllmul/no Crc.cn
J

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Last place of residence
How long resident of this state
Husband' s Name
Father's Name

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;

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Mother's Name

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Cause of Death

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/

Ordered by -----------------------Charge t o - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Sexton

-------

Paid on Account by:

_-J I

AI~1? 77:JA/

�T.D. FUNK

J~·:CRTUARY

Page

BGOK (Aug. 25, 1913 -Sept. 6, 1916)

/tJf

,/u;?v s

FU!\ERAL of

/

Date of Funeral
Date of Death

;

Place of Death

GRANGER
Other Information:

hb Jf? /915'
&amp; 6 17 19/5
9t1 7' UA&lt;1/.

Y-:JO P/17

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Place of Funeral ____~_____;_;_________________
;::; c.v~ II

Clergyman

Date of Burial

&amp; h. IS' /Z/5

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Grave or Lot No. _ _ _ _ Sec.
Location of Grave
Age:

~~ Years ~Months -2:_ Days.

Color

W

Occupation

e:1/ /-/c,;-ne_.

single, married, widow, widower
Birthplace

JaJ'rlcsTbwa

L?&amp;rr/·ec/

/// V4r1&lt;
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Last place of residence ;{a~re~ce l~a5
How long resident of this state -ZLf J't-5
Husband's Name

--------------------------

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Country of Birth 1/ec.v Ven--t&lt;
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Mother's Name
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Father's Name

Country of Birth
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Ordered by ----------------------------Charge to
Sexton

-----------------------------

-------

Paid on Account by:

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�T.D. FUNK

MCRTUARY BCOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

Page

!itL

FUNERAL of

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Date of Funeral

&amp;b

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Date of Death

&amp;6

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Other Information:
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------

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Date of Burial

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vlhere Interred ---t2~a~K'---"'/6.J...:..!.I!t...J..I
_ _ _ _ _ __
Grave or Lot No. - - - - Sec.
Location of Grave - - - - - - - - - - - Age: ~ Years ___ Months ___ Days.
Color _!{~~:;~.'/,___ Occupation

a-1 Mme.

single, married, widow, widower /(i?rrle:d
Birthplace

---------~-----------------

Last place of residence --~~-----------­
How long resident of this state - - - - - - - -

G-eo. G-?1 nn

Husband's Name
Father's Name

---------------------------

Country of Birth ------------------------Mother's Name

---------------------------

Country of Birth - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Physician

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Cause of Death

dusculcn·- !lzro o v
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Ordered by ----------------------------Charge to
Sexton

--------

Paid on Account by:

TC Gunn

�T.D. FUNK
ECRTUARY BOOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - SeiJt.

Page

6, 1916)

L!.L

FUNERAL of

£/t• J? hc/YTER

Date of Funeral

&amp;b. .:2.3

Date of Death

kb

Place of Death

..2. I

Other Information:

/?IS

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Place of Funeral ~/l~£""'-=5';...___~..;;e~/7~17.:..-______
Clergyman

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Date of Burial
'\'lhere Interred

Uk

..23 /Jl/5

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_ _ _ _ _ __

Grave or Lot No. _ _ _ _ Sec.
Location of Grave - - - - - - - - - - - Age: ~Years ___ Months ___ Days.
Color

/v

Occupation Crocer)??al?

single, married, widow, widower

l?krricol

Birthplace - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Last place of residence --------------How long resident of this state

-----

Husband's N a m e - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Father's Name

-~--------------

Country of Birth ----------------------Mother's Name ----------------------Country of Birth - - - - - - - - - - - - - Physician

JoJ!tV

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Cause of Death __..,.i/:~r-=q-c""'m~.l..;;.
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'charge to
Sexton

v- &lt;?Larsh~!/

-----------------------

-------

Paid on Account by:

,!/;;17 le r J5ros

�T.D. FUNK

~·:CRTUARY BOOK

(Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)

Page //~
FUKERAL of

S/lIf!? I(

)1/l//lER
Other Information:

h /? .2£ IV5
Date of Death kk .:2.. f' I (15
Place of Death
f 12?/ 5 tu' L.Cfw r-c:nce.Place of Funeral Jl/1£ Church
Date of Funeral

Clergyman -""U""~'"-"-a..:..l..:.f_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

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Date of Burial

t

£e b :Zb /(/.5

vlhere Interred

Grave or Lot No. - - - - Sec.
Location of Grave

-----------------------

Age: ~Years

~ Months ~~ Days.

Color 1&lt;/A//c:.-

Occupation

aT

single, married, widow, widower
Birthplace

htJh?e..

4{//~a/

~&amp;8--~~~~~~------------------------­

f

Last place of residence
$ /.
How long resident of this state

S

,!(.)
vc&lt;
;

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Husband's Name
Father's Name

----------------------------------------------------

Country of Birth -----------------------Mother's Name

---------------------------

Country of Birth ------------------------Physician

P E 5n?&gt;/);

Cause of Death ?;?rtJnCo

/i?eumooia-

Ordered by ----------------------------Charge to --------------------------Sexton

----------

Paid on Account by:

_Alt-.

M#lER

�T.D. FUNK

~:CRTUARY BGOK

(Aug. 25, 1913 - Seft. 6, 1916)

Pag:e !..L;i
FUNERAL of

&amp;&amp;&lt;rr:v

SA/aP GBIJSS

J¢..6 ;2.7
&amp;b c:l-5

Date of Funeral
Date of Death

~.'tlo ;0,#/

1'1/5

Other Information:

1715

J?u Jo4o h &amp;_s;,a.

Place of Death
Place of Funeral

AV~BT!I

_jP /??/

Clergyman --~Z?~e.s~Z:~e=v~nz~q~n~---------------------Date of Burial
i'lhere Interred

&amp;6 .2..7 lf/5
&amp;a,o/e. GrcJve_.
I

Grave or Lot No.
~t?
Sec.
Location of Grave - - - - - - - - - - - - - Age:

2_

Years _Months _ _ Days.

Color ~i{/.~·---- Occupation
single, married, widow, widower ~/~/e
Birthplace

.L.atvrence

~as

Last place of residence 3
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How long resident of this state

&amp;1/r-r.h

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Husband's Name
Father' s Name

h/11/.&amp;'r?Z

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--------------------------------

Country of Birth -------------------------Mother' s Name

----------------------------

Country of Birth --------------------------Physician ___
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Cause of Death ff'rotzco
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-------

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1--:CRTUARY BCCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

Pag.e l/..Y_
FUNERAL of

/llrJLi v 4/ft'E A/£L 5 6 /r/ (coL)
7

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Date of Funeral

I

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Place of Death
735 A(;[ .ST

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Date of Death

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Place of Funeral

Other Information:

..:Z,tJo

Clergyman
Date of Burial

£6

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Grave or Lot No.
Location of Grave

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Color

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Occupation

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single, married, widow, widower 1fvrrriecl
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Country of Birth -------------------Mother's Name
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Country of Birth - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Physician
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Death ./kl

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Paid on Account by:

�T.D. FUNK

MCRTUARY BCCK (Aug. 25, 1913 -Sept. 6, 1916)

Pag.e

115
/JAr#/!

FUKERAL of

#f _4"y.2/ERSOA/

/Jlqrch

Date of Funeral

IZ 17/S

Other Information:

$arch /5,&gt; 1?/S
S i h?'??Orl s /-/cse
;

Date of Death
Place of Death

Place of Fun era 1 ___;;~__.::;.U.:....TJ;...:i?;.;...:;;;;e..:...r..:...n"--...;C;;;,.;..;.h..;.;w~r..loc...:h~--

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Date of Burial

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Grave or Lot No.
Sec.
Location of Grave_ _ __

------------------

Age: ~0
Color

Years ~Months ~/ Days.

it/

Occupation

a/ 1/ome..-

single, married, widow, widower
Birthplace

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How long resident of this state

$ss ST
35 yrs

Father's Name

E c/ d£yE(f50A/
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Country of Birth

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Mother's Name

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. 0~-h~------------------

Ordered by
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Paid on Account by:

_Ec/ 1/#PE/?50/11_

�T.D. FUNK

~:CRTUARY

Page

BCCK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)

/16

FUNERAL of

Jo11t1/ l./IC V

-----~~~~~~~~--------------------

Date of Funeral -f}qrc h .:2..'2-..:&gt; /915 ..2. -'3tJ J:?A'?

Other Information:

I

Date of Death /lqrc h .:t.o

1715

;T;;,L?eKo.....
;

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Place of Death

hnKs Chapel
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Place of Funeral
Clergyman

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Date of Burial ~rch
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_a. . . . .

:2-:L

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. . .1______________

Grave or Lot No. -----------Sec.
Location of Grave

-----------------------------------

Age: ~Years _____ Months _____ Days.
Color

Occupation c::?/r/ So/eli~ r

it/

single, married, widow, widower

w/cleCA...J e 'r

Birthplace
Last place of residence ---~--------------------­
How long resident of this state - - - - - - Husband' s Name
Father's Name

----------------------------------------

Country of Birth -----------------------------------Mother's Name

---------------------------------------

Country of Birth
Physician

:Vr.

Cause of Death

J !/

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7

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------

Paid on Account by:

f

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�T.D. FUNK
?v:CRTUARY BCOK (Aug. 25, 1913 -Sept. 6, 1916)
Pag:e

!17

FUNERAL of

EL/z.

Date of Funeral fla rch

.:2.£'

l f/5

-2.-30 ~

Other Information:

Date of Death
Place of Death
Place of Funeral
Clergyman -------------------------------Date of Burial
:lhere

1

--------------------------Interred
---------------------------

Grave or Lot No. --------Sec.
Location of Grave

-------------------------

Age: ~~ Years ____ Months ____ Days.
Color------- Occupation-----------single, married, widow, widower----Birthplace
Last place of residence --~~---------­
How long resident of this state - - - - - Husband's Name
Father's Name

---------------------------

Country of Birth ------------------------Mother' s Narne

---------------------------

Country of Birth ------------------------Physician -------------------------------Cause of Death Caace r- .c;f S,/c;;ma... c b
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~!_.S_.YS_:.....;'//1/...;..__ _ _ _ _ __
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------

Paid on Account by:

�T .D. FUNK

~·:CRTUARY BOOK

Page

(Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

il%_

FU!\ERAL of

#J:Irch

Date of Funeral
Date of Death

&amp;v.

Vlhere Interred

:zg-

b 2.0 ;1/

Place of Funeral

Date of Burial

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Sec.

------------------------

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Occupation ~ Zfborer-

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Grave or Lot No.
Location of Grave

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Other Information:

1?15

£/q.,ch ~ Lf 1?15

Place of Death

Clergyman

c

C//4J?LES

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~·:CRTUARY

Pag:e

BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913 -Sept. 6, 1916)

jj_£

FUKERAL of

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Date of Funeral

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Other Information:

Date of Death
Place of Death
Place of Funeral
Clergyman
Date of Burial
\'lhere Interred
Grave or Lot No. _ _ _ _ Sec.
Location of Grave

------------------------

Age:

3:(7

Color

Years _____ Months _____ Days.

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Occupation

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single, married, widow, widower k./;~t-Ut:.Y"
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-------------------------

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Country of Birth
Mother's Name

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---------------------------

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--------------------------

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~·:CRTU ARY BCCK

Page

(Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

/0!-0

FUKERAL of

EJ J.rAl3£ T/1

Date of Funeral

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Date of Burial /lla Yc.h :t? Jt/.5
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Location of Grave
Age: ~ Years ____ Months ____ Days.
Color

w

Occupation

a:l /1

single, married, widow, widower

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Birthplace
Last place of residence -~~------------­
How long resident of this state - - - - - Husband' 5 Name
Father's Name

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Country of Birth ---~-n-1r1&amp;~4~n~c/~------------Mother's Name

---------------------------

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------

Paid on Account by:

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1

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�T.D. FUNK
MCRTUARY BGOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Page /:2 I
FUKERAL of

LCJoe_£~
R-/?A'~
;
7

Date of Funeral

A Qr;L
;

Date of Death

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Place of Death

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Other Information:

17'15

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Place of Funeral _.fJ~u~~n.l0~s~~C~h~~~,g~e~L________
Clergyman

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Date of Burial _J2~;p~r..:.i.l---::5..:;....__..;./....l,?..:.l.;;;5_ _ _ _ __
Vlhere Interred

/12 12v..r?/e.

C r-ove_

Grave or Lot No. --------Sec.
Location of Grave ------------------------Age: ~Years ___ Months ___ Days.
Color

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Occupation _.i Q/;,p·n::_r-

single, married, widow, widower W/~c.ve Y"
Birthplace --~~~~·~----------------­
Last place of residence 5 .:to Ct:d/forn/Cj s r
How long resident of this state ;?.5 y=rs
Husband' s Name
Father's Name---------------------------Country of Birth ------------------------Mother's Name

----------------------------

Country of Birth ------------------------Physician ----~A(~·-~~
- --yl?~o-~_~_s______________
Cause of Death Aey n?~n I o.....Ordered by -----------------------------Charge to
Sexton

-------------------------------

-----------

Paid on Account by:

d f

_j;/lt'S

�T.D. FUNK

MCRTUARY BCCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

Page /.2.2_

FU~ERAL of dZf!fG-U Bj TE

/J;:zri/ ;s /915

Date of Funeral

l'i

April
,

Date of Death

s

Place of Death
Place of Funeral
Clergyman

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Other Information:

I '1!5

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Date of Burial ~+~~~~~~~~-------------/-lor-i J !5 l?/5
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Location of Grave

------------------------------

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Color

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Months ~ Days.

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Occupation

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-------

Birthplace k/;/1/am.aToc.vn

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How long resident of this state ;-/0- 3
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Mother's Name

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--------

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Paid on Account by:

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�T.D. FUNK
Iv:CRTUARY BCCK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)
Page /...2.3

E tiff/)(11 PrJ DR TA ·
Funeral 1/;zti I /£ /f/5

FUNERAL of
Date of

Other Information:
Z:3tJ

O.m.

¥-c.~· L I ~ 1715

Date of Death
Place of Death

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Place of Funeral

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//

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/6 /V5

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Grave or Lot No. _ _ _ _ Sec.
Location of Grave

-----------------------

Age: _ _ Years
Color

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Occupation

/3
aT

Days.

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--~-----=-~~---How long resident of this
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Father's Name
Country of Birth
Mother' s Name

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--------------------------

Country of Birth - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Physician

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-------------------------

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�T.D. FUNK
lv:CRTUARY BCGK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)
Page

S£'

FUNERAL of

7/JLI?/l!V dfRVEY
)

Date of Funeral d,eri/ It? 17/5
Date of Death

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Other Information:

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Place of Funeral

;j

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Location of Grave

-------------------------

Age:

~Years ~Months ~Days.

Color ~/?:'~·--- Occupation
single, married, widow,
Birthplace

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of residence 2'{) 9' Gor£e./J S T

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Mother's Name

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• -·:. · :

~·:CRTUARY BGOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept~:~~-;·.Jg16·~

Page j,25
FUKERAL of

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Date of Funeral /l1:2ri
,

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Date of Death

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Place of Funeral

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Date of Burial

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Location of Grave
Age: ~Years

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Mother's Name

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-------------------~~-~

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T.D. FUNK

~·:CRTUARY

BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913 -Sept. 6, 1916)

Page ),t b

Vh'LE;1(T!!VE .

FUKERAL of

.:B. /hrr.#'J/1;1/

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Date of Funeral

Other Information:

&gt;' /i/5'

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;

Date of Death

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Place of Funeral

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--------------------------------

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---'CJ~e;:..:;J..;..(--'-'/J;....:I-'-'/""-/_ _ _ _ _ __

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Grave or Lot No. _ _ _ _ Sec.
Location of Grave --------------------------------Age:

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Color

Years ____ Months _____ Days.

It! .

Occupation

&amp;r /Cnme r

single, married, widow, widower )Q?dtriecf
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;

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Father's Name

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Country of Birth _./)~r~a~n~c~L&lt;~--------------­
Mother' s Name

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Cause of Death

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Ordered by
Charge to
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---------

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Pe[or)???~n

Paid on Account by:

/

�T.D. FUNK
MCRTUARY BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - SeJ:t. 6, 1916)
Page

1.£7

FUNERAL of

LEL--1Np

W

Date of Funeral /?pel/

'

Date of Death

_4pr-i/

'

Place of Death

~OifE

Other Information:

d&lt;Z ms

.:29' /f?/5

/t:?f"CJ

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Place of Funeral OZ(a tuo.- ~~s:
Clergyman ---------------------------------Date of Burial
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s. - - - - - - - Grave or Lot No. --------Sec.
Location of Grave

--------------------------

Age: ~ Years ~ Months
Color

Jv.

~;? Days.

Occupation ...;5~7C..:..c:.:...'/7:...:o;;;..;.______

single' married' widow' widower s/·/?9/~
;
Birthplace

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Last place of residence /0~0 1/T ST.
How long resident of this state -2CJ vr..s.
7

Husband' ~ Name ---------------------------

Country of Birth
Mother's Name

j//cKsbury

~ss.

----------------------------

Country of Birth -------------------------Physician

--~;7(~.~~~
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Ordered by ------------------------------Charge to ------------------------------Sexton ----------------

Paid on Account by:

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t/

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�T .D. FUNK

~·:CRTUARY BGCK

Page

(Aug. 25, 1913 -Sept. 6, 1916)

PF'

FUKERAL of

51/j/.bNn

Date of Funeral

o-f

:=B;...;4;:..;...;'r':....::.a.::s.~....l--"&amp;'-l.,.;;&amp;\..:,..v~.::::;b___.l"-'-7.;..1_5

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Date of Death

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Other Information:

_ __

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Place of Funeral

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vlhere Interred

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_ _ _ _ _ _ __

Grave or Lot No.
Location of Grave

Sec.

------------------------

srdl

Age: horn Years
Color

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Page

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Page /YO
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Page

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~·ICRTUARY

Page

BGOK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)

.LJ.i.

FUNERAL of

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Date of Funeral 47 0 v .,2.. tJ 17!5

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�T.D. FUNK

MCRTUARY BCGK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)

Page

/35

FUKERAL of

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Date of Death
Place of Death

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~·:CRTUARY BGOK

Page

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Fm:ERAL of J//llf I v
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MCRTUARY BGOK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)

Page /3?
FUKERAL of f nf'anr tJf

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Date of Funeral
Date of Death

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Place of Funeral

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Page

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�T .D. FUNK
Jv:CRTUARY BGOK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept.

Page

6, 1916)

If/

FUNERAL of

£41?//1/l

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Date of Funeral sh;epJ t; /. ~complon

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Date of Death

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Other Information:
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Place of Fune ra 1

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---------------------------------------------Grave or Lot No. _ _ _ _ Sec.

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Location of Grave - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Age:

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Years

~

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Color ....@..__._ _ _ Occupation

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single, married, widow, widower l?/arr/eJ
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�T .D. FUNK

~:CRTUARY BGCK

(Aug. 25, 1913 -Sept. 6, 1916)

/f2

Page

FU~ERAL of

WiLLiAm /JJ!JRCUS. {!fflVE/11
Other Information:

Date of Funeral Jyne
Date of Death

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Place of Death
Place of Funeral

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Grave or Lot No. _ _ _ _ Sec.
Location of Grave

-----------------------

Age:

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Color

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Occupation Cvn·penT-er
I

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Birthplace

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Country of Birth ,4/ CCI ro / /no....
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�T.D. FUNK
Tv:CRTUARY BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)
Pag:e

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FUKERAL of

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Ln~ 2'- /'115

Date of Funeral
Date of Death

L

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Other Information:

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Place of

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Clergyman -------------------------------Date of Burial
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Color

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----------------------------

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7

�T.D. FUNK

~:CRTUARY BGCK

(Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

Page/.&amp;
FUl\ERAL of

Lyc/;0-

~ SII?IJrr!J#

~~,~----~-------------------

Date of Funeral ~ne

June

Date of Death

2'-/ 19!5

t!JO

tf?//J

Other Information:

.:::l..-:3 I '71'S
~ss

/6cJ .:L

Place of Death

,3

ST

Place of Funeral ____~_._______'_'-----------Clergyman

E/U/eo.v-el.s

kc . :'lj/,

Date of Burial

&gt;

/9'/5

vlhere Interred _.;;;;;.a_;;a..;....;_jK____..,!;-'-0...;../.:../J~r_ _ _ _ _ __
Grave or Lot No. --------Sec.
Location of Grave
Age: ~Years

~ Months

Color ~W.;;..;...._ _ _ Occupation

/? Days.

t?T ~;,ne:._

single, married, widow, widower 4://~t-V
Birthplace

Can a.d

o....

Last place of residence /6e7~
How long resident of this state
Husband's Name ~BE/f'T

J

..$ss.

.S/

--~*=~~~---

S77f4rrc:JA/

'ZJctv/p #JiLL s

Father's Name

Country of Birth ~;¢/--~f!~a~r~A:~-------------7
Mother's Name

----------------------------

Country of Birth ------------------------Physician

.#.'.

Cause of Death

J. .6;a/Y.50/1

_________________

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Ordered by
Charge to
Sexton-------

Paid on Account by:

C0

STro.££or7

�T.D. FUNK
IviCRTUARY BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Page

lf5

FUNERAL of

&amp;zz;v

Other Information:

Lne.

Date of Funeral
Date of Death

L/1~

Place of Death

f?37

Place of Funeral
Clergyman

.BAKER .
d&lt;.S /?/S

..2.~'

///.

/7/~

ct:?/1.11

,,

.2·'.30

sr

/'

/-/qwt:?YTk

Date of Burial ....;'3"-'L;:..=;u~n~~-..;...2-_5"_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
\'/here Interred __...0t~K....L,..,.oj#f......:~;..;;t:;..___ _ _ _ _ __
Grave or Lot No. _____ Sec.
Location of Grave -------------------Age: ~g

Years ___ Months ____ Days.

Color I&lt;)

Occupation

OT /lqn1e_

single, married, widow, widower lv/~W
Birthplace -~i/,~/~r~9~/~n~~
· ~~---------------­
/

pz

sr

Last place of residence
Co.I?,I-J,
How long resident of this state
/ -.z.
Husband's Name
Father's Name

;/luzEs

/~J/p.z:;LE/o/'f/'

Country of Birth - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Mother's Name
Country of Birth --------------------Physician

ctz/ers on

Cause of Death

Ce h:::Js/s

oP

C:Zr-~r-qs

Ordered by ----=::B'~42"'"'--~S;;.Jc
.........!l.....t?::;..:O.....l.=-"'E~v-----7
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Sexton

------

Paid on Account by:

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fiv./eal/' a

J

Ch('c.l(

�T.D. FUNK

~·:CRTUARY

Page

BOOK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)

L11._

FUKERAL of

CL.4Vj)

W

Lae.

Date of Funeral

/Vo!fRIS
Other Information:

-25 /?/5" s);;He)U?/(If 9- /'Cl a.

Lne. .:l...t.; . - 15

Date of Death

'

/??.

s:oo a .m.

::LJf. /?C. A/ t/?-rr."'cK

Place of Death

Place of Funeral Jea.vt:.nwo,... 'Th

A'¢.s.

Clergyman ---------------------------------------------Date of Burial ,Tun~ .2...5 19/5
~/here Interred

LeavenWorTh

Grave or Lot No. ----------Sec.
Location of Grave
Age: ~~ Years ______ Months ______ Days.
Color

...,It)""'---- Occupation ,/q6on~r

single, married, widow, widower hi~t&lt;N:.Y
Birthplace

/eave.J?t-Uorfh

~»s
/'

Last place of residence ---~~------~~-----­
How long resident of this state
3 g' yr.s
)

Husband's Name

--------------------------------------

Father's Name
Country of Birth -------------------------------Mother's Name

------------------------------------

Country of Birth -----------------------------Physician

d /

~nes

Ordered by -------------------------------------Charge to ------------------------------------------Sexton

------

Paid on Account by:

Ch~

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�T.D. FUNK

~:CRTUARY

Page

BGOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

/f/
fl/z/JBE//1 .4/.&amp;t?ri/V'

FUKERAL of

Date of Funeral

J:ne oZZ /

?/5

Date of Death

-Jun~ ..23 1'1'1.5

Place of Death

Lf"zt

~ss

,.,,

/~

~ -JtJ /).47

Other Information:

Sr

Place of Funeral -------------------------Clergyman

Bac !(ys

Date of Burial

Thne.. ..:!.Z

/Z/5

\'lhere Interred __.:::~:;,..;a~K---"/7/~/..:.·/;._/-"________
Grave or Lot No. --------Sec.
Location of Grave ----------------------Age:

~Years ~ Months ~Days.

Color

It!

Occupation

A{y?l~

single, married, widow, widower
Birthplace

lt//c/ot.V

Cet-mctn V
}

7£f/

Last place of residence
~ss S /
How long resident of this state
j[J;krs
Husband's Name

---------------------------

Father' s Name --'//,....,&lt;;,1£-=C.:;...,ojO=
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Country of Birth -------------------------Mother's Name ----------------------Country of Birth ----------------------Physician --~~~/~
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-------

Paid on Account by :

4/r5

$qr0 'YJ

�T.D. FUNK

I~:CRTUARY

BGOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

Page If~
FUKERAL of

&amp;diVK /J )/,4STlE

Date of Death

Other Information:

Ju11e.. c2 7 /~/5

Date of Funeral

:fYoe. ~.5 /?15
flz

Place of Death

La.

ST

Place of Funeral
Clergyman

-----------------------------------$7;q ffe r-

Date of Burial

xhrz&amp; .2.. 7

vlhere Interred STonv

r

IVS

Po;ol CC!77c~rv
7

Grave or Lot No. _ _ _ _ Sec.
Location of Grave

-----------------------------------

Age: ~Years _____ Months ;2? Days.
Color .;. ;/(/;. .·;_
. _ _ _ Occupation ~dbt::?rer
single, married, widow' widower
Birthplace

c0n9/6-:
;

HtUr-cnce. M/?S

7/tZ /a_

Last place of residence
How long resident of this state
Husband's Name ·
Father's Name

...J'c o

-~

g-

------------------------------------L?e~

~~_57/~

Country of Birth

--~=-c-o-~-~-4-n~ql
_______________

Mother's Name

2&gt;t~si~

Country of Birth
Physician

~-L)~~/,1/.f~

~n n

-------~~--------------------

,1'//c4:rson .

Cause of Death --------------------------------t

Ordered by ____h/~-=L-~~IV~~~~.~~/~~---------------Charge to ----------------------------------Sexton

----------

Paid on Account by:

4

/is/;·e..

�T.D. FUNK

~·:CRTUARY BCCK

Page

(Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

!J:.Z

FUKERAL of

t01viF~EP k/.4LI(ER

Date of Funeral

Ju/\~ .:2

1?;5

~??

/915

7

Date of Death

Jttnc:.

Place of Death

Yenver Colo

Other Information:
-Z-'3CJ

tl P. .V~o f- ro Chaj?e/
Ch?e/ ;7; /louse.. /tJ.2. '5 ,.4/a .

Place of Funeral ffi.J::JT;s f- dvYcfz

•

Clergyman

g'rou..N?

Date of Burial ~/v ~ /91.:5
I

\'/here Interred ___,~W~a~K.J..-...:h~/..;...o//._________
/.2..
Grave or Lot No. e35
Sec.
Location of Grave -------------------------

Age: ~ Years ____ Months ____ Days.
Color

N

Occupation

a

r

single, married, widow, widower

School

Sayle.,

Birthplace --------------------------------Last place of residence --~~-----------­
How long resident of this state - - - - - Husband' s Name --------------------------Father's Name -J"'A/??ES / / /?

kf/AL/(E/f

Country of Birth -------------------------Mother's Name --------------------------Country of Birth ------------------------Physician ----------------------------------Cause of Death Sq,cide. f-roJ?? !{ 7' c h lor-ide- ,f ll?u YC u ' )I
Ordered by vuthrtak'f.' r

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____
Sexton - - - - - - -

Paid on Account by:

Wa/ Ke y-

�T .D. FUNK
MCRTUARY BCOK (Aug. 25, 1913 -Sept. 6, 1916)
Page

1.5iJ

Jol!tV /l. tVEiiJ flt41t/
Funeral -s.IfA 1\L 't I 'liS

FUKERAL of
Date of

}

Jft.a.~ 30 /7/.5
Place of Death fiAt&lt;/ ~·ver- Ya;r;

Dp.te of Death

Place of Funeral

Date of Burial
vlhere Interred

6;.(}0 ~

t?t:t J( //i 1/

-=~~~~-------------

/1 /iO s//e r

Clergyman

Other Information:

..3·30P/J

( ~)

JU fy Lf: /915'
-.~.a'"'a~K---~.6...~.~..:.1..:..1..:...1_ _ _ _ _ __

Grave or Lot No. _ _ _ _ Sec.
Location of Grave
Age:

/:?

Color

----------------Years ~Months o2r Days.

tU

at Sch&amp;o/
widower 5/n~ /e..
I

Occupation

single, married, widow,
Birthplace .Lt:~turoz ce......

A::/?s

Last place of residence J c2! &amp;a den /4ne S T
How long resident of this state /3- :2...

-.zz

Husband' s Name
Father's Name

---------------------------------WE. W Ei0/171911/

Country of Birth .;;;;J/;;;;_:;;;~:?...:::::u:.rr•A~a=-s------------­

CillB!l AI S'A/ vJ t1B

Mother' s Name

Country of B i r t h - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Physician

&amp;.

Cause of Death
Ordered by

/1 T J;ne.s
t2Ccc' clc/Jia I ::LJro cvn.

/4/ £.

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Charge to ----------------------------Sexton

Paid on Account by:

lt: E w£;p&amp;&amp;f/ _

-----------:L.!vI

:31&gt; I V:;

�T .D. FUNK
l··:CRTUARY BGOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Page

IS!

FUKERAL of

3

ff/C#ft'~~ol!/

JULES

s.~4''-

Date of Funeral

J;7

Date of Death

6' /Z/.5
//~/ /2na

Place of Death
Place of Funeral

//. 'Or; /?47

8' IV5

)'a.

.sr

Other Information:
clev-er~

n1"'-""1 .

J-f a w

Iw

o y

z;;ny o... nox; e...

Clergyman 1/awarT~
Date of Burial

L /v

\'lhere Interred

7Q n fan ox I k

I

'8' 19/S

Grave or Lot No. _ _ _ _ Sec.
Location of Grave - - - - - - - - - - - Age: ~Years

//

Months ~Days.

/a

Occupation Carpeafe r
v
single, married, widow, widower @rrje.ci

Color

Birthplace

________________________________

~~~4f~/~·~o

Last place of residence
/ /bJ I rfoa S /
How long resident of this state 70 vr.s
7

Husband' s Name -------------------------------Father's Name

JAmEs

Country of Birth
Mother's Name

&amp;!!-4tf.5't?;1/ ( ?)

~~~~n~af~·------------

------------------------------------

Country of Birth ------------------------------Physician

-----=~~;~az~~~o~a~s~--------------------

Cause of Death ChJ-o.

BriT lz 1: · dseo..se,..

Ordered by ------------------------------Charge to -------------------------------------Sexton

-----------

( 5. ~E.)-

Paid on Account by :

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Jffi.s E (S)
/ft'cha. rclso·
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.

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�T.D. FUNK
Iv:CRTUARY BOCK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)

/52..

Pag:e

FUKERAL of

/1!4/fv
I

II STEElE
Jk/vI

Date of Funeral

/~

cYulv

Date of Death

13

I

·

19/5

5.· 00

; r;/.5

Inrl

.2:00 ;:',#;'

a..

sr.

Place of Death

8'f~

Place of Funeral

-------------------------

,l_ ) v

Clergyman

T/;e.

~ lv
I

Date of Burial

Other Information:

I

3 /? /:5'

...~.a...::....::;:a~K~....../d.&lt;.....f...o/~'""L;,.._ _ _ _ _ __
No. ?zEJ:k Sec. ____;,.!____

vlhere Interred

Grave or Lot
Location of Grave
Age:

-------------------

~Years ~

Color

a/

Months

Occupation

~

Days.

/(0/??e.-

single, married, widow, widower /;~:fnr-lec/
Birthplace

:!?as lo n

~~~~----------------------

Last place of residence 2ff~ kcl S/
How long resident of this state - - - - - - - -

Juaj:c:.

Husband's Name
Father's Name

S/ee/L.,..

---------------------------

Country of Birth - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Mother's Name

---------------------------

Country of Birth --------------------Physician

~; /,{ s/r/led
J
1/awula r /-/eaytdsease_

ClJzcJYSQO

Cause of Death

Ordered b y - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Charge t o - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Sexton

.&amp;e d

Paid on Account by:

Chas

0.

576/c:/orc/C f )
acfm

�T.D. FUNK
I\'ICRTUARY BCCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Page

L53

FUNERAL of

~1/;1/ 4lba!E.¥so/V
·tf:dlt. /f

Date of Funeral

7

;r.lu fv

Date of Death

)

Place of Death

z:z~

,,

Place of Funeral

IV~

/.:2. 11/5

.2 ;30?'~

Other Information:

%: 3or:

/f/r.4sr

E.

,._

/5/ay£..{: c: 'C

Clergyman

Date of Burial ~ lv
I

/f

/9/.5"

vlhere Interred ....t...O."'-i~iodi•.t:'l.....-&lt;&amp;~/;..;.',0-'-(/_ _ _ _ _ _ __
Grave or Lot No. --------Sec.
Location of Grave
Age: ~Years ~Months ;2/ Days.
Color /{)

Occupation

Iff? LC&lt;.6~rer

single, married, widow, widower
Birthplace

h/ c/ow e &lt;r

:S 0 eo/en .

Last place of residence --~~-~~~--­
How long resident of this state
.y.s- kr5
Husband's Name
Father's Name

'

----------------------------

Country of Birth ------------------------Mother's Name---------------------------Country of Birth ------------------------Physician S/m.~??&amp;?/25
Cause of Death t..oC~~~r.;..,it?"a""/:.....c._,.__....;G:=:;;._a=...SuU..J....:./~·z;'""""'~i/_____
Ordered by -----------------------------Charge to
Sexton

;f'ee c/

Paid on Account by:
~.5 $ar knsoa__

�T.D. FUNK
MCRTUARY BOCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Se:pt. 6, 1916)
Page

/5f

c

MLLI.Iln

//tJPCES
//:co
Date of Funeral Tulv /9 1715
I
Date of Death
J"' lv I Y' ltf/5

FUNERAL of

Other Information:

I

Place of Death

Lone

STay-

"

"'

Place of Funeral

Clergyman -------------------------------Date of Burial JY fv /Cj
!tf/5
7

!oas h/oc;(on Cr-eeK U/?1

\'lhere Interred

I

Grave or Lot No. _ _ _ _ Sec.
Location of Grave - - - - - - - - - - - Age: ~Years ~Months ~Days.
Color

Occupation .6Y"m&lt;:'~"""

ic/

single, married, widow, widower /?Jp·r/~d
Birthplace

_.h~:..~.l!'"""'s:.:....- - - - - - - - - - -

Last place of residence ~~-~~n~e=-~~~~~r______
How long resident of this state ---~~~~~v~~a._
7

Husband' s Name --------------------------Father's Name JEss i £
/-loDG-ES
Country of Birth ---~~~~~1~s~·--------------Mother's Name

-----------------------------------

Country of Birth --------------------------Physician
../.c;ne. S?C&lt; r ~nsCause of Death

-----------------------------

Ordered by ------------------------------Charge to -------------------------------Sexton

------

Paid on Account by:

/! /11.

&amp;e~ser _

�T.D. FUNK
r':CRTUARY BGGK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

/55

Pag:e

FUf\ERAL of .J-n-fa t:J.f o

~

7}/£{;)

WILE k::
)

.Julv IE? 1915
J: lv ;g 1715

Date of Funeral

)

Date of Death

Other Information:

5:3o.PA'?

)

f"£7 /o/4aSqaC S/.

Place of Death

/Vb

Place of Funeral

--------~--------------,,.

Clergyman --------------------------------Date of Burial -cklv
/f? /?/5
I
vlhere Interred
OAK ./;(//
Grave or Lot No. - - - - Sec.
Location of Grave

--------------------------

Age:

sr,·l/

~Years

Color

____ Months ____ Days.

U/

Occupation --------------

single, married, widow, widower - - - - - - Birthplace ------------------------------Last place of residence --~-------------­
How long resident of this state - - - - - - Husband's Name
Father's Name

-------------------------7l/EtJ

II) /.i.EV

--~~-=-~~-=~~~~-----

Country of Birth ~C{9 !cts

~--~,~~--------------

Mother's Name

LE/J/1)/?

k/CJ/J//?CI/ (i)

Country of Birth -.:..~--'CJ.-·- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Physician

Car-l

~/-l~ps
,

Cause of Death _..S~~~/~~.:...~--=~~o.;..r.;..n;;.___________
Ordered by - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Paid on Account by:

Charge to --------------------------

$r Wiley

Sexton

---------

I

�T .D. FUNK
~·:CRTUARY

Page

BOOK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)

/56

E fl/!rrs
WESlEY
l

FUKERAL of

Date of Funeral

.J~ /y 20 I 'I I 5

Date of Death

1"~ I''I

I

Other Information:

!V5

19

sr
of Funeral
'"
----------------------.2/e/

/-2C:Z/_

Place of Death
Place

c2/3 0 j?//7

I'

Clergyman

I

/lawoY16

&gt;

sTu lvI

Date of Burial
\•/here Interred

.:Zo

/'l/5'

__..&amp;~~=.c...~K':~.-..~..J/I~A"""'~--------

Grave or Lot No. _ _ _ _ Sec.
Location of Grave - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Age: ~Years
Color

2L__

IV

Months

o27

Days.

Occupation Ca r.J?e/7/e
I

r

single, married, widow, widower }?(qttie./
Birthplace

d{

I

Vo r )(

Last place of residence / .:l:l / _}A;/ ST
How long resident of this state
2(~ Jif5
Husband's Name
Father's Name

--------------------------

Country of Birth
Mother's Name

__..;.#.....;..;...~kf~tJ_r....;f~~----------

7

.$/M $EZC#Lr

Country of Birth
Physician

-"""'#....;;._.-r-~=t:J..;..r~l:':..--_________

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Cause of Death

JO H/lT/5

CE{J

7

----------------------------

Ordered by - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Charge t o - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Sexton

---------

Paid on Account by:

�---------

-

T.D. FUNK
~:CRTUARY

Page

BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)

/E.

c.

(SA "to ; ,.,)
/llf3EifT
/IBRIINZ
Other Information:
/..2~ ~ 5a,Ji Fe P /7)
Date of Funeral X 4t. c2.£ Lf/5
s~o a....
Date of Death Ju /,, 2'i. J?/5'
I
Place of Death ~.-?~~s C,; ~~:::: ~.
?
FUJ.\ERAL of

Place of Funeral

6/q/"' ~!/

hfie r: £/(haY L
Burial ,J;, /v cZ b /tfiS
I

Clergyman
Date of

vlhere Interred

~?1;;::;...:;:a~K_,__.A.t-0..;...i;....l/;......__ _ _ _ _ __

Grave or Lot No. - - - - Sec.
Location of Grave
Age: ~~ Years ____ Months ____ Days.
Color /{/

Occupation - - - - - - -

single, married, widow, widower

)?/qr;-iec/

Birthplace - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Last place of residence --~~---------­
How long resident of this state - - - - - - Husband's Name
Father's Name

------------------------------------------

Country of Birth - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Mother's Name

----------------------

Country of Birth - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Physician
Cause of

C E. h~} ;·er
Death acife. ?;??phr/DS

Ordered b y - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Paid on Account by:

Charge t o - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

ll/rs u6rcu;;;

Sexton

------

�T.D. FUNK
MCRTUARY BGOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Page

ff%'

E~IJ;- Pf @l?// C/?///1/1$
Funeral Ju/v -2.7 17/:J
~:zo~.#(
;
'

FUKERAL of
Date of

Date of Death

Other Information:

~/v ..29 &amp;5

Place of Funeral

I

-------------------------

Clergyman ____________l_,__________________
Date of Burial _J;~~~-r-1/___;:;;.;z.~'l-..:../J..~~:/:.;;...5'_ _ _ __
7

vlhere Interred --"a=~:....K.~.-......h""'~""'/:...:6~'/;_..______
Grave or Lot No. - - - - Sec.
Location of Grave

------------------

·
'/ h ~s
Age: ~Years~ Months ____ Days.
Color

_IU
________

Occupation -------------

single, married, widow, widower---------

,

Birthplace -..t::.S~r/n.;..:~P?~ea""'-s..__"""'~...;..~.;;..o.:;,se.:::;....__________
Last place of residence
How long resident of thi-s--st~a-t~e------------

Father' s Name --------------------------Country of Birth . ....;_;;;;.--r;_.;;..o..l;;tu:::;...:;;a.-=-----------Mother' s Name dJ'#IfGc!!VTE

/z(?s~tJ/?.P

Country of Birth - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Physician

/-/ L.

C hamPf' ys

Cause of Death lfcmafure.
Ordered by

.Ia[q 0

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Page

(Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

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Other Information:

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Date of Funeral J LA.! 'i. .3/
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Date of Death

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;

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BCCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

/M _

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MCRTUARY BCGK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Page

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~·:CRTUARY

Pag:e

BOCK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)

/63

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Pag.e

BOCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

L£ f

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Date of Death

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~·:CRTUARY BCCK

Page

(Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)

//5

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Place of Death
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------

-------------------

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-----

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-------------------------

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Color-=((/=----- Occupation----------single, married, widow, widower--------Birthplace ~«curcace..

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------

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~·:CRTUARY BGCK

Pag:e

(Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)

1/7

FUNERAL of

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-----------------------

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Color

W

Occupation

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?v:CRTUARY BGOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Page

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Date of Death
Place of Death

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Other Information:

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----------------

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Page

BCCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

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single, married, widow, widower
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Other Information:

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Jv:CRTUARY BCCK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)

Page

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-----------------------

Place of Death
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S.T;;ufter

Date of Burial

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Iv:CRTUARY BOOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

Page

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Color

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Jv:CRTUARY BOOK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)

Page I 75

ALEXANDER
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MCRTUARY BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913 -Sept. 6, 1916)

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Place of Death
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(Aug. 25, 1913 -Sept. 6, 1916)

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Pag:e

(Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

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MCRTUARY BOCK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)

Page

J11_
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FUKERAL of

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Date of Funeral
Date of Death

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Location of Grave - - - - - - - - - - - Age:

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Color ~k./~--- Occupation

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How long resident of this state
~ vrs
;
Husband's Name
Father's Name

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Country of Birth - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Mother's Name - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Country of Birth -----------------------------Physician

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�T.D. FUNK
lVICRTUARY BOOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Page

1%7

FUNERAL of

Nov.

Date of Funeral
Date of Death

No

Place of Death

?JI'f

Place of Funeral
Clergyman

W.

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-----------------------

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Date of Burial
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L/ 19 !5

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Kans.

Grave or Lot No. - - - - - Sec.
Location of Grave

------------------------

Age:

e{~ Ye~rs

Color

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~ Months

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Occupation /i:nne'r'" Re..f

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single, married, widow, widower /7J4rrl·c::.ol
Birthplace

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-=~-------------------------

Last place of residence %/f" ~ .s'(
How long resident of this state /~yrs
?

Husband's Name

---------------------------

C////5. S/U.fJRT
Birth __.....
a-.0......._/_0_____________

Father's Name
Country of

Mother's Name

--------------------------

Country of Birth - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Physician

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Cause of Death

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Ordered by ---------------------------Charge to ---------------------------Sexton

---------

Paid on Account by:

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5Tur-tffl:

�T.D. FUNK

MCRTUARY BOCK (Aug,. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)

Page )ftJ
FUKERAL of

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Date of Funeral

Mv.

Date of Death

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Place of Death
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�T.D. FUNK
MCRTUARY BOOK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)

/'1 I

Page

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Date of Death

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Place of Funeral

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..2.? /9'/.5'

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Grave or Lot No.
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Mother's Name

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------------

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�T.D. FUNK
MCRTUARY BCOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Page

/7 2.

FUKERAL of

//EC/~

.13£/?AI!Jl

Date of Funeral

#v .::27 !?15

Date of Death

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Place of Death

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Place of Funeral

Other Information:

c2..5 I '115
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------~---------------------------

Clergyman ---------------·-·---------------------------Date of Burial /Vc:;v 2.-b' 111.5
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------------------------

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Father's Name

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---------

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�T .D. FUNK
Jv:CRTUARY BCCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Page /fj
FUKERAL of

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5

Date of Funeral fle c.

/f/5

Date of Death

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Place of Death

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Clergyman

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Other Information:
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Grave or Lot No. _ _ _ _ Sec.
Location of Grave

-----------------------

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Color It/
Occupation C
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�T.D. FUNK
?v:CRTUARY BOOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Page ~

.4.

EL l.zllBETf!

FUNERAL of

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*",

Date of Funeral

:Dec. 5. !915'

Date of Death

~ec.

Place of Death

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Grave or Lot No. _ _ _ _ Sec.
Location of Grave

-------------------------------

Age:

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Color

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single, married, widow, widower
Birthplace

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~~-~~/~·0~----------------------­

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How long resident of this state
Jj/5 yrs.
Husband' s Name
Father's Name

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Country of Birth ___X
______________________
Mother's Name

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______________________
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------------------------------

-----------------

Paid on Account by:

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�T.D. FUNK
11·:CRTUARY BGOK (Aug. 25, 1913 -Sept. 6, 1916)
Page

/95
C/1//!?lES E /-1/iL
Funeral _2/ec. b. 1715

FUl\ERAL of
Date of

.:J/ec_

Date of Death
Place of Death

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Other Information:

1?15

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Place of Funeral

Clergyman -------------------------------------------Date of Burial 7Je.G 6 /Y/.5

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Grave or Lot No. - - - - S e c .
Location of Grave

--------------------------------_1[_ Months ~~ Days.
Occupation ~/ Shar;eener

Age: ~7/ Years
Color

t't/

single, married, widow, widower Marr!ec:l

___________________________________

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How long resident of this state '/~ Cjrs.
Husband' s Name

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-----------

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�T.D. FUNK

~·:CRTUARY

Page

BGOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

l'lb

FUNERAL of

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Date of Funeral

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Grave or Lot No. _ _ _ _ Sec.
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Age: ~Years
Color

CoL.

5

---------------/
Months _Days.

6

Occupation

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single, married, widow, widower

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Sexton

---------------

Paid on Account by:

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�T.D. FUNK
Jv:CRTUARY BGOK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)

Page

az_

FUKERAL of

.J";!VE J? ~LINN'
Yec g

Date of Funeral
Date of Death
Place of Death

Yec

/(/5'

b

~-'3CJ ~//

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Other Information:

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Place of Funeral

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---------------------------------

Clergyman ~~~.~J?~/~·s~G~o~l?~~-1________________________
Date of Burial
\•/here Interred

:Pee 2f 1?/5
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Grave or Lot No. - - - - - Sec.
Location of Grave

---------------------------------

Age:

t?O Years ~t? Months /~ Days.

Color

ttl

aT ~/7/~
widower W/dot-v~

Occupation

single, married, widow,

/Jf/·/,

Birthplace

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Last place of residence
f?17 f n /
How long resident of this state
-rz
Husband' s Name
Father's Name

rr.s:

-------------------------------S/1mt1EL

Country of Birth

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--~---~_n_~~~-n----~~n~q~·
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Paid on Account by:

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�T .D. FUNK
]I·:CRTUARY BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)
Pag:e

f2%_

FUNERAL of

dYifV C /J!Y.J)E/FS0/1/
I

Date of Funeral-Pee..

/f 1915

/C.Yt:J Co/7/7

Date of Death

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Place of Death
Place of Funeral

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Clergyman -------------------------------------------Date of Burial

--------------------------------------

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Grave or Lot No. - - - - Sec.
Location of Grave

----------------------------------

Age: ~Years ~ Months ~;7 Days.
Color ;;;...W~·;....____ Occupation

Ause U/if'e_

single, married, widow, widower ~/~4/
Birthplace

~~~~~e~~~e~n~---------------------------­

Last place of residence /!}'YtJ Co/l/J. S T
How long resident of this state
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Husband's Name

------------------------------------

Father's Name---------------------------------------Country of Birth -----------~------------------Mother' s Name ---------------------------------Country of Birth ------------------------Physician

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Cause of Death Sclev-o sis

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Ordered by ----------------------------Charge to
Sexton

------------------------------

------

Paid on Account by:

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�T .D. FUNK

~·:CRTUARY BGCK

Page

(Aug. 25, 1913 -Sept. 6, 1916)

.Lft

//I!N#A!f 5'/EJ!VEEJ?C-E;f
Funeral sA;,e,eecl
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Date of

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Place of Death
Place of Funeral
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Date of Death

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Other Information:
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-------------------------

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Grave or Lot No. _ _ _ _ Sec.
Location of Grave

------------------------

Age: ~Years ~Months ~~ Days.
Color

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Occupation

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How long resident of this state
1 .;no.
Husband's Name

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-------

Paid on Account by:

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�T.D. FUNK

~·:CRTUARY BCOK

Page

(Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

;too

FUNERAL

of

Fg//;vci s /JJETri'IER
.Pee.

Date of Funeral

I

Yec /5

Date of Death

Other Information:

7 1'1/S
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19/5

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;
Place of Funeral 1/?J? A/// S/
Place of Death

Clergyman S!OH-ffe..yDate of Burial X

---------------------------

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Grave or Lot No.
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~
Location of Grave ~~~~GC~g:~----------------

------

Age: ~~ Years ~

Months ~~ Days.

tt/

Occupation /lfo/o9raeler 15 Reti·,.eJ
'
single, married, widow, widower tv/c/ot.VeY-

Color

Birthplace

Cerrnany
;

Last place of residence .lawr-enc~ ~/1.5.
How long resident of this state ..?6C yrs ·
Husband' s Name
Father's Name

---------------------------

Country of Birth ------------------------Mother's Name

----------------------------

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;
Cause of Death A~r..:..lc_..;e~v-~,~
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Paid on Account by:

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�T .D. FUNK
l\·:CRTUARY BGOK (Aug. 25, 1913 -Sept. 6, 1916)
Page ~t)/
FUNERAL of

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Date of Funeral .Vee.
Date of Death

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Place of Death
Place of Funeral

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Other Information:

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~~~~~---------------

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Date of Burial Pee.

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Where Interred --~~~~j(~~A~~~/~/~1______________
Grave or Lot No. -----Sec.
Location of Grave

-----------------------

Age:

_2:f_

Years

Color ~

.5 Months /3 Days.
Occupation ------------

single, married, widow, widower /://%rr/~o/
Birthplace
Last place of residence --~-----------­
How long resident of this state ---------Husband's Name
Father's Name

-----------~~------------

Country of Birth ----------------------1\iother' s Name

----------------------------

Country of Birth ----------------------Physician :JJ Crise .
Cause of Death ~~~~~~~~~------------:Z:n .J..It.-1 n =?0Ordered by -------------------------Charge to -----------------------------Sexton

--------

Paid on Account by:

/llt's"S /laud~ .};;hnson

�T.D. FUNK
MCRTUARY BGOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Page 2C.1..
FUKERAL of

£

I.P/1

Date of Funeral

.:Pee.

S/E//ENS

1'1 /7/5

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Date of Death

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Place of Funeral

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Date of Burial

1'115

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. !_!_______________
Grave or Lot No.
Location of Grave

Sec.

-------------------------

Age: ~~ Years
Color ~

Months ____ Days.
Occupation -----------------

single, married, widow, widower-------------Birthplace ------------------------------Last place of residence --~-------------­
How long resident of this state -------------Husband' s Name
Father's Name

---------------------------

Country of Birth ------------------------Mother's Name

----------------------------

Country of Birth ------------------------Physician d;::: hm/l?tznpr{.
Cause of Death ~tf~r_e~r,ry~/a~~~-------------Ordered by
Charge to
Sexton

---------

Paid on Account by:

7ha. c/ STevens

�T.D. FUNK

~·:CRTUARY

BCCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

Page ~03

CJ?!lCE E, i-68TER
Funeral Pee. /9 1915'

FUKERAL of
Date of

Date of Death

'2Jec 17 1'115
S

Place of Death
Place of Funeral
Clergyman

Other Information:

, ·n un;::;ns

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)

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~~~r~o~~~n~----------------------­

Date of Burial 17ee- o2tJ /?15

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Grave or Lot No. _ _ _ _ Sec.
Location of Grave -----------------------Age: ~/ Years ____ Months ____ Days.
Color .:;;.;h.~--------- Occupation /&amp;uscu..-/1"~
single, married, widow, widower !"l'f:rrrir;/
Birthplace

~.ns.

--~=-------------------------

Last place of residence
How long resident of thi-s--st~a-t~e-----------Husband's Name
Father's Name

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J

Country of Birth
Mother's Name

~~~~-~_s___________________

4/i/GG/E

Country of Birth

Wo/f,P (W!1RP)

--•~~a~n~s~----------------

Physician ~L:~~~r~l~~~~%~~.
· ~~~~-f?~s_______________
Cause of Death Cerc.br-~J
Ordered by
Charge to
Sexton

-------

hlbscess
Paid on Account by:

E W. ~BrEI?_

�T.D. FUNK
MCRTUARY BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913 -Sept. 6, 1916)
Page :l~'f
FUKERAL of

/!1r

-1-

/llrs.

Date of Funeral ::Pee.

5'AmttEL

Other Information:

/7/5

~ ec t:Jh?,i?_Ton

Place of Death

,.:2:(J0 /,?#!.

ltY. /9/S

~C- J/-18-'

Date of Death

llvErr
l

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Place of Funeral
Clergyman -------------------------------Date of Burial --------------------------\'lhere Interred ------------------------Grave or Lot No. --------Sec.
Location of Grave

-----------------------

Age:

Years ____ Months ____ Days.

Color --------- Occupation -------------single, married, widow, widower---------Birthplace -----------------------------Last place of residence
How long resident of thi_s__s~ta-t~e-----------Husband' s Name
Father's Name

---------------------------

Country of Birth -----------------------Mother's Name

----------------------------

Country of Birth ------------------------Physician ----~-------------------------­
Cause of Death

---------------------------

Ordered by -----------------------------Charge to £C. &amp;rr/eTI
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Sexton
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---------

Paid on Account by:

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�T .D. FUNK
l\·:CRTUARY BOCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Page :l-tJ5
FUNERAL of

/1/lf/(51/UL

Date of Funeral flee

k¥1G11r

17 /f/5

Other Information:

!1/?.:J:so r-:'/17

Date of Death flee. I 8' /~/ 5
Place of Death

shi;pd ~ /rC ~

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Date of Burial
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d"C.

Grave or Lot No. - - - - Sec.
Location of Grave ----------------------Age: ~Years ____ Months ____ Days.
Color

/t!

Occupation

/orse. 0:""' n

single, married, widow, widower

e..- {as wraten)

5&gt;:nQb
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7

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How long resident of this state
1 o.iav
;
Husband's Name
Father's Name

sr. K. C

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--------------------------

----~---------------------

Country of Birth ------------------------Mother's Name

--------------------------Country of Birth
------------------------Physic ian --'A
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Cause of Death

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------~------------------

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---------

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�T.D. FUNK
MCRTUARY BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Page .:!~6
FUNERAL of /(/;/J!E!fJNE

o2.:t 17/S

Date of Funeral .J)ec.

..!t-'30 P#/

Other Information:

.Ve...c c:2..tJ /;?/5

Date of Death
Place of Death

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Place of Funeral
Clergyman

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1915

K /-////

Grave or Lot No. --------Sec.
Location of Grave

-------------------------

Age: ~Years ~Months ~7 Days.
Color

h

Occupation

/tf?P?e

single, married, widow, widower ~r-r!e.d
Birthplace &amp;er;;nanv
7

Last place of residence
How long resident of this state
Husband's Name
Father's Name

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Cermany

--~~~~,~----------------

Country of Birth ------------------------Mother's Name
Country of Birth ------------------------Physician

w~~~~~~m~b~e~rs~--------------------­

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Sexton

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\

Paid on Account by:

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�T.D. FUNK

~·:CRTUARY

BOOK (Aug,. 25, 1913 -Sept. 6, 1916)

Pag:e ~() 7

L ;N-c tJL A/ ct:?CJ I{'

FUNERAL of

Other Information:

Date of Funeral Sh:dreel/o Leco~e/oa
Date of Death

-:Dec.

Place of Death

:I/ouqla..s Co.

Place of Funeral

:Pee d26 /7/5 ~on~ fe

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Grave or Lot No.
Sec.
Location of Grave ------------------------Age:

S5

I

Years

Color ~

I

Months

_L

Days.

Occupation ~-------------

single, married, widow, widower 5/ne; I c/

Birthplace

L t:Cornp::;"Ton
•

/i::as:

Last place of residence .Mur/as Co. P- £,-177
How long resident of this state ----------Husband' 5 Name

----------------------------

Father's Name
Country of Birth -------------------------Mother's Name
Country of Birth
Physician

--------------------------

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Cause of Death Clrr:.n/a..Ordered by
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----------

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Paid on Account by:

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J\·:CRTUARY BCGK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

Page ,fr:Jff
FUKERAL of

$4/fC-/llf!TE

Date of Funeral flee.-

...2£ /:?/5

c2 f'

Date of Death ..:;:Jec

.:2-'30 ~/?7.

Other Information:

/V';~

/7'/5

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Place of Death
Place of Funeral

/-l/J'J. £.

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Date of Burial
Where Interred

..Pe c. 26 /7'/5

~&amp;1~~~~~~~~~/~~~~-------------

Grave or Lot No. - - - - - - Sec.
Location of Grave --------------------------------Age: ~Years _____ Months _____ Days.
Color

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f{L ~~

single, married, widow, widower W/~cu
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How long resident of this state
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-------------------------~j//1;.V5

-----~~~~---------------

Country of Birth -----------------------Mother's Name

---------------------------

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--------

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�T.D. FUNK
JY:CRTUARY BCCK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)

Page e!t~ 9'
FUKERAL of

£,4/?AIEST

Date of Funeral
Date of Peath
Place of Death

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Other Information:

ST

'
Place of Funeral ___l?.~a~-----------------I/

Clergyman ------------------------------Date of Burial ~n 1 lr/6
\'lhere Interred

_....;;;~_;o.;.;.,:/;..~..t_"'-h"-'-'-/:...../'-------

Grave or Lot No. _ _ _ _ Sec.
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Location of Grave -----------------------Age: _ _ Years _!f:_ Months
Color

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Days.

Occupation - - - - - - - - - - -

single, married, widow, widower~-----------Birthplace

/4cvreacc:.e

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How long resident of this state

J. S (
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Husband' s Name - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

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£""--'?l. . .d~o......,(e~h:....
________
Cause of Death

------------------------

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-----------

Paid on Account by:

IJ1r.

5'/mpsoY}

•

�T.D. FUNK
1-&gt;:CRTUARY BCOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - S·ept. 6, 1916)
Page~

FUNERAL of

£/L i C jan 0- Cu 1/E!{JfEZ

Date of Funeral

~J9o

f

/Y/6

Other Information:

Date of Death
Place of Death _7.......,..;.fi...:~;..._....-M_e_/____;S:;;;...,_r
_ _ __
Place of Funeral X

------------------------------------

Clergyman -------------------------------------------Date of Burial ---------------------------------------vlhere Interred CaTho~ ·c Ce.l77e0r-v
l

Grave or Lot No. -----------Sec.
Location of Grave
Age: ~Years ____ Months ____ Days.
Color W. @_x ico.n Occupation --------------single, married, widow, widower-------Birthplace )-ECJ/1/

0/c/

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Last place of residence
How long resident of thi-s-st~a-t~e--~~r-r-~----­
,
Husband's Name

---------------------------------------

Father's Name---------------------------------------Country of Birth --------------------------------Mother's Name

-----------------------------------------

Country of Birth --------------------------------Physician / - / / Jones
Cause of Death Cunshq r

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Ordered by -------------------------------------Charge to

---------------------------------------

Sexton

---------

Paid on Account by:

�T.D. FUNK
Iv:CRTUARY BGGK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Page .:2. I I

li_£1VR /L.

FUKERAL of

/

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Place of Death

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Place of Funeral
Clergyman

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Date of Funeral
Date of Death

E

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Other Information:

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?:;n/7

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Date of Burial

L

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Grave or Lot No. _ _ _ _ Sec.
Location of Grave ------------------Age: ~Years ___ Months ___ Days.
Color ~

Occupation --------------

single, married, widow, widower h/~wer
Birthplace ---------------------------------Last place of residence --~---------------­
How long resident of this state ---------Husband's Name
Father' s Narne ------------------------Country of Birth /77;-s A /J. 13lr:;/ow
I

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Mother's Name ----------------------Country of Birth --------------------Physician ~~~--r~e~g/~_L?,~~e~r~r~,Y~------------Cause of Death

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Ordered by ---------------------------Charge to ------------------------------Sexton

------------

Paid on Account by:

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�T.D. FUNK
Jv:CRTUARY BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
''

Page 21:&lt;..

~5/JAI/1 GR JIV!E/?
Date of Funeral );;11 { /f'/6 5hf'pc:/ frwn l?rr-v
FUNERAL of

;

Date of Death

Jan

Place of Death

Other Information:
?'.'3CJ a P?.

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1716
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Place of Funeral Muncie_
Clergyman
Date of Burial
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Jan

?15 (Jf/6)
C- Y' / n-tc.n Cn,ei; rV
7
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)

Grave or Lot No. --------Sec.
Location of Grave

-------------------------

Age:

~ 3 Years

Color

.;..;It/.;:;....;_._ _ _

Months ____ Days.

a/

Occupation

single, married, widow, widower

An?e.
h/c:/bw

Birthplace
Last place of residence
How long resident of thi_s__s~t-a_t_e____________
Husband's Name
Father's Name----------------------------Country of Birth -------------------------Mother's Name----------------------------Country of Birth -------------------------Physician :Dr ...2'/mmer-~ar;
Cause of DeathErq11c.Ao &amp;utnon,"

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-------------

Paid on Account by:

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~·:CRTUARY

Pag:e

BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913 -Sept. 6, 1916)

.:213

-r.!OsEe/1 NESE 4J/j_LER
Other
Funeral Jan 5 1716
/CJ.·oo 4 _17/_

FUNERAL of
Date of

Date of Death
Place of Death

Tan

3

Information:

/916

.3

I f;l I

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Place of Funeral :lJut~K'ayo/

C-4urch

Clergyman ------------------------------Date of Burial ;;-;,. o 5 I 'J/5
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Grave or Lot No.
J%.3
Sec. -.::8";;.._____
Location of Grave -----------------------Age: ~ Years ~ Months ~~

Days.

Color ~.!c/~.___ Occupation ~;("" ~rrnersingle, married, widow, widower ~rrieaf
Birthplace ~shlhtt;'n

Co;·

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Last place of residence / Y .2..( Y7" ST.'
How long resident of this state .J8' -/~/??a
Husband's Name
Father's Name

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Mother's Name

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Ordered by ----------------------------Charge to -----------------------------Sexton

------

Paid on Account by:

(n rs

ST()0T

�T .D. FUNK

~:CRTUARY BOOK

(Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

Page ~/f
Fm~ERAL

hRG-usaw

llzz..t'E

of

Date of Funeral

.JP.n h

Date of Death

~n

I '!I b

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+-9
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Other Information:
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$'L/b~

Place of Funeral

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;

Clergyman --------------------------------------------Date of Burial
6 19/b

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Sec. /I
Location of Grave____
-~---Age:

!i:..K_

Color

Years _Months _

Days.

Occupation a/ &amp;n?~

.J3

single, married, widow, widower
Birthplace ,J..aU/ t~nc~

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;

d;ns.

Last place of residence c!J'f/6 ~
How long resident of this state

A(J
££""

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Husband' s Name --------------------------Father's Name

---------------------------------

Country of Birth ------------------------------1'-!other' s Name

-----------------------------------

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1?u~/p)
;

Cause of Death

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-------

Paid on Account by:

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'+-

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�T .D. FUNK
l\·:CRTUARY BCCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

Page~/5

2Ja b v S/fli Tfl

FU!\ERAL of

I

Date of Funeral

~n. b /f/6

Date of Death

:Ia..n

Place of Death

S

San1;;.

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Other Information:

/..:Z.O~ P ~

!Tib

)('C /J?o.

~~~---~-----------------------

,,
----------------------------------------~~---~---------------------------------­

Place of Funeral
Clergyman
Date of Burial

Jan

6' /7//

\•lhere Interred ....;u;::;__a....;.)(~~&amp;;....:l;..;./....~.,'/_ _ _ _ _ ___
Grave or Lot No. _ _ _ _ Sec.
Location of Grave

--------------------------------

Age: _Years _Months
Color

it/

Occupation

17

Days.·

/~;ne..,

---------

single, married, widow, widower ~
Birthplace

%. C

~?'.

Last place of residence
How long resident of this state - - - - - - - Husband's Name
Father's Name

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Country of Birth -----------------------------Mother's Name

-----------------------------

Country of Birth -----------------------------Physician

/fef'~

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Cause of Death('V)ow C?C'atcd- lue:o..t/?ecfs
/

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------

Paid on Account by:

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T.D. FUNK
MCRTUARY BOCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Se:pt. 6, 1916)
Pag:e

c:2/b

FU!\ERAL of

E/Ji.EV
/

r. /-ll!EJI

cTan 9
J0n 7

Date of Funeral
Date of Death

I {/b

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Place of Death

Other Information:

E
-

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9 ;v E' n

C\.

tn index

7

Clergyman -------------------------------------------Date of Burial
~ n 9 I I IS

t2o..K 1/ril

vlhere Interred

Grave or Lot No. _ _ _ _ Sec.
Location of Grave ---------------------------------

· Age:~ Years~ Months ~7 Days.
Color

W

Occupation

//c;H7e-

single, married, widow, widower
Birthplace

~rr;ea/

£J?q~nd
/

Last place of residence ~;(_.:&lt;_, ~ 5./
How long resident of this state 3'?7; yr..s:

C B. /-)JLEN

Husband'5 Name
Father's Name

---------------------------------------

Country of Birth
Mother's Name
Country of Birth
Physician

--~~--~1/&lt;~q~~~q~n~of~----------------

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Paid on Account by:

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S

.

�T.D. FUNK

~·:CRTUARY

Page

BGGK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

c:2/2

Ell..E;V RasSELL ?ibwLEV
;
Date of Funeral ~ n
I0
19/b
.1/'oo ~,..??.
Date of Death
Jan 9 /f/b c? ~41
Place of Death
I I 3 9 /V' J sr
FUKERAL of

Place of Funeral
Clergyman

chCi£?e /
I

Other Information:

/Un/(s

7/zo;n,o.Son
i

Date of Burial

J«n

\'lhere Interred

Va /( /1;//

I (J

/9/6

Grave or Lot No. _ _ _ _ Sec.
Location of Grave

------------------------

Age:

~Years ~ Months ~e: Days.

Color

Occupation ---------------

single, married, widow, widower---------Birthplace Orrme rs ville-

/V 7 V

Last place of residence / / 3 ?
/Y
How long resident of this state -3c?
Husband's Name

J

y)-s

--------------------------~YnesT

Father's Name

RqsSELL

Country of Birth ------------------------Mother's Name

---------------------------

Country of Birth ------------------------Physician

Aa/erson

Cause of Death

---------------------------

Ordered by ----------------------------Charge to ------------------------------Sexton

-------

Paid on Account by:
_/Vrs ?u,-n; f r ~J

J?. !lam// Too

�v

T .D. FUNK
MCRTUARY BCCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
PageJ.ff

£_j);jJ/ CttLL£ v
7

FU!\ERAL of

:hn
];n

!..L 17/6
/{) !716
A/ yrd ST

Date of Funeral
Date of Death
Place of Death
Place of Funeral
Clergyman

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Other Information:

//

/1?/ey.J/c:le/

Date of Burial

JPn

ltlhere Interred

{?a J( $ / /

I

I Jf/6

Grave or Lot No. _ _ _ _ Sec.
Location of Grave

------------------------

Age:

bO

Color

h~-------

Years _Months _ _ Days.
Occupation

a7:&amp;m~

single, married, widow, widower---------Birthplace -----------------------------------Last place of residence ---~---------------­
How long resident of this state ---------Husband's Name
Father's Name

-------------------------------

---------------------------

Country of Birth ---------------------------Mother's Name
Country of Birth
Physician

-----------------------------

:R /. Tu he

Cause of Death

'f'

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- "---~~~~v~~---------------

------

\

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Paid on Account by:

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J£SS/E

II

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T.D. FUNK
MCRTUARY BOOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Page ~If
FUNERAL of

C;91f()L iiVE

'Ja.'n

Date of Funeral
Date of Death

Jc:'

Place of Death

Jj

Place of Funeral
Clergyman

U

Date of Burial
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-------------------------------------

Grave or Lot No. _ _ _ _ Sec.
Location of Grave

-----------------------------------

Age: ~Years _____ Months _____ Days.
Color t{;

Occupation

at: ~..-??e

single, married, widow, widower ~~~U/
Birthplace

#

7

}0 r- }&lt;(

Last place of residence 7' /22/ A/ k/.
How long resident of this state -------------Husband's Name
Father's Name

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Country of Birth -------------------------------Mother's Name-------------------------------Country of Birth --------------------------------Physician
i/tve17~
Cause of Death Sea/a //Tv

~~~~~~?'-------------------

Ordered by ----------------------------------Charge to ---------------------------------Sexton

----------------

Paid on Account by:

F, .73/1.LJ) uJ/rv

�T.D. FUNK
~·:CRTUARY

BCOK (Aug,. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

Page.£:({)

/7/J{f!f :B_ ~EiD

FUNERAL of

Ln

Date of Funeral
Date of Death

Io.

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Other Information:

..At~

5 ),,v.Jd

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9

-

Place of Funeral ------------------------Clergyman

---~~---~-·---------------------------------

Date of Burial --------------------------''lhere Interred _; U; ; . ; ;. 2:;: l;.:. K~.-.-..../I)" "'- ':./. .~;....;../
_ _ _ _ _ __
Grave or Lot No. --------Sec.
Location of Grave
Age:

~Years ____ Months ____ Days.

Color

W........__. _ _ _

Occupation - - - - - - - -

single, married, widow, widower---------Birthplace
Last place of residence --~--------­
How long resident of this state

-----------

Husband's Name--------------------------Father's Name---------------------------Country of Birth ------------------------Mother's Name
Country of Birth ------------------------Physician
!ltt/ch /nys tuj;/:e_.

J

Cause of Death

.L~

G

ti

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~,

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-------

Paid on Account by:

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�T.D. FUNK
]I·:CRTUARY BGOK (Aug. 25,

Pag:e

1913 - Sept. 6,

1916)

:l:l.. I

FUNERAL of

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Other Information:
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"C,

111~

13

Date of Death

27..2..

Place of Death

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Place of Funeral
Clergyman

s~n 1'-/

Date of Burial

/1/{,

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Grave or Lot No. _ _ _ _ Sec.
Location of Grave

----------------------------------

Age: ~ Ye~rs

_2:_

Months

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Color ~U/
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Mother's Name
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-----------

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�T.D. FUNK
Jv:CRTUARY BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Page ~,2~
FUKERAL of

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Date of Funeral
Date of Death
Place of Death

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Color W,

ta ve.

Months ____ Days.
Occupation - - - - - - - - -

single, married, widow, widower -----------Birthplace ------------------------------Last place of residence
How long resident of this state

------------

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---------------------------

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T.D. FUNK

~:CRTUARY BCOK

(Aug. 25·, 1913 -

Se~t. 6,

1916)

Pag:e _2.23
FUKE::iAL of fnFetnr of RussELL L&amp;~F"Etf'.D

Jan

Date of Funeral

:2_

19/6

Other Information:

Date of Death ---------------------------Place of Death __..s.Z......::'t):;...;5::;:;......._C=a;.;..;l1....:..n~......;S~7.:...._ _ __
Place of Funeral

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Location of Grave
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How long resident of this state
Husband's Name
Father's Name

---------------------------

Country of Birth ------------------------Mother's Name
Country of Birth
Physician

-------------------------

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Cause of Death

---------------------------

Ordered by -----------------------------Charge to
Sexton

----------

Paid on Account by:

/Jr.

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�T.D. FUNK

I~:CRTUARY

BGOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

Page ~jf
FUl\ERAL of

AJVC /E £ REYER

Date of Death

Ian .:26 11/£
'
Jan .2..3 IV£

Place of Death

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Date of Funeral

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f e TL

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-----------

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Iv:CRTUARY BCCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Pag.e

42:2.

Fur:ERAL of

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Date of Funeral

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Grave or Lot No. _ _ _ _ Sec.
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Birthplace

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.MCRTUARY BOOK (Aug. 25, 1913 -Sept. 6, 1916)
Page

o2o2b

$-!VRY /1/EWBy·

FUKERAL of

'

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Date of Death

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Date of Burial

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Location of Grave
-----------

------------------------

Age:

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Years ~ Months ~ Days.

Color .....W__..___ Occupation

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------------

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Jv:CRTUARY BGCK

Page

(Aug.

25,

-Sept.

1913

6,

1916)

».7

FU~ERAL of

!!(ETTiE

LAvCJ .

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Date of Funeral

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Other Information:

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Clergyman ------------------------------Date of Burial
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Grave or Lot No. - - - - Sec.
Location of Grave

------------------------

Age: ~Years
Color

~ Months ~~ Days.

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single, married, widow, widower ~/~a/
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�T.D. FUNK
Iv:CRTUARY BGOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Page

.2.2.?

FUKERAL of $~~y
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Date of Funeral
Date of Death

h t I/ /7/6
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Place of Funeral
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Color

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Country of Birth ---------------------------I-1other' s Name

-------------------------

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Cause of Death - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Ordered by
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------------

Paid on Account by:

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Er~n.s

�T.D. FUNK
Jv:CRTUARY BOCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Page _2;2_ f

E l. /z/-IBETti.

Sc/-INAcK.
Other Information:
~-·oo ~//?
Date of Funeral &amp;b JS 1916
7- ·.:g0 _r?#? .
Date of Death ~eb ;;z_ /91~
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Age: ~~ Years

~ Months ~~ Days.

Color ~it/~------ Occupation ~;f1~d~~~~=------single, married, widow, widower

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Birthplace ~~_;e~a~/2~---------------------­
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Father's Name

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Cause of Death

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-------

Paid on Account by:

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�T.D. FUNK
Jv:CRTUARY BGOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Pag:e ~3tJ
FUKERAL of Ji/;y/lltJ;V])
)

.PEWiTT S7i'LES

Date of Funeral

&amp;6 16 17/b

Date of Death

Feb /5 /9'/b

Place of Death

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Place of Funeral
Clergyman

V C

~

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Other Information:

J&lt;rI ST

--~------------------------------

Brou..;h

Date of Burial

Ee .b / b /7/6

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Grave or Lot No. _ _ _ _ Sec.
Location of Grave

----------------------------

Age: ____ Years ____ Months ~ Days.
Color

W.

Occupation -----------------

single, married, widow, widower
Birthplace

S/at?k
7

/2. /5' Kv
ST.
7

Last place of residence --~''-----'~---~~----­
How long resident of this state
£ ;/aus
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Mother's Name

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-------/

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Paid on Account by:

:D.

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�T .D. FUNK

:fi·:CRTUARY BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913 -Sept. 6, 1916)

Pageo23 /
FUNERAL of Tnf~nf- of: AlfT/IUR 5){EET
Other Information:
Date of Funeral Eeb 16
17'16 .2. .' 3CJ r

12/£

Eeb /b

Date of Death

S ;'/?? 17?ons

Place of Death
Place of Funeral
Clergyman

c/os~
;

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,,

Date of Burial

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1

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Sec.
Location of Grave
L?) B~------------------------------r~t?Kf'YJe tier Lor
Age:

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~Years

Color ?{)

____ Months ____ Days.
Occupation

--~~~-~~e~~----------

single, married, widow, widower Sln~le,
7

Birthplace S/mmc:J/?.5

A/os,Q
7/

Last place of residence ---~-------------­
How long resident of this state ------------Husband's Name

------------------------------------

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------------

Paid on Account by:

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T.D. FUNK

~·:CRTUARY BOOK

(Aug,. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

Pageo23:L

1{A Cf/EL E LLflv' !/A GU£

FUNERAL of

Date of Funeral5~:?0/h ])es /Ylq;hcs
Date of Death

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Other Information:
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Grave or Lot No.
Sec.
Location of Grave ---------------------Age:

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Color

6

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it!

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/&amp;me...

single, married, widow, widower Wido[.A..../
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7

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Mother' s Name

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Sexton

-------------

SE

Paid on Account by:

I

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�T .D. FUNK
1\·iCRTUARY BOOK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)
Page

e233

FUKERAL of

.;r(j_ j 1-J u fl

WIILLJJCE 5{JENCER
I

;:-e b,

Date of Funeral

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Date of Death
Place of Death

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Other Information:

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--~--~~--~~~=---------/,

4
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Grave or Lot No. - - - - Sec.
Location of Grave -----------------------Age:
Color

53

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tu

Occupation

&amp;t:

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Cause of Death

-------------------------

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--------

Paid on Account by:

_ &amp; . S,ee/Jcer
7/

�T.D. FUNK
Iv:CRTUARY BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)
Page

»r
S/llf/1J./

FUKERAL of

7

/eb

Date of Funeral

&amp;_b

Date of Death

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Location of Grave
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Years

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Occupation _A~~~c~n?~~~--------

Color tG/

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Husband' 5 Name

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--~/~?________

--------------------------------

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7

Father's Name
Country of Birth

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Mother's N a m e - - - - - - - - - - - - - Country of Birth -------~---------------Physician

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�T.D. FUNK
:MCRTUARY BGOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

Page ~35

.

51!1?/l/! ELJzi/BErH ;lJCC/l!{TV
FuneralShWeec/ z; Weslll/ex anler-, R.
Death £e b If /7/e{
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Date of
Date of

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Clergyman

Other Information:

S W "fie. w re.nc e..
U!esr /1/e)&lt;ander

----------~~0------------------­

Date of Burial ---------------------------

a.

loesT ~/exqahr-

'\'/here Interred

Grave or Lot No. _ _ _ _ Sec.
Location of Grave -----------------------.Age:

1.1_ Years _Q__

Color

It/

Months

Occupation

_i2_

Days.

hP?e..

single, married, widow, widower J7l4rr/ecf
Birthplace

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Last place of residence .2.. 17Ji
How long resident of this state

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w.

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/

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Physician

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Ordered by ----------------------------Charge to

------------------------------

Sexton

--------

Paid on Account by:

�T.D. FUNK
MCRTUARY BOOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Page

-236
'lirE!f 1?!JLsToN'
Funeral hj; :!..5', 17/b
Death Feb .:L 3 1'1/b

FUNERAL of
Date of
Date of

£

Place of Death
Place of Funeral

/.
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Other Information:

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Date of

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Grave or Lot No. _ _ _ _ Sec.
Location of Grave

------------------------

Age:

/7?

Years

Months ~ Days.

-Z:_

Color """/():.:;..;. . . _ _ _ Occupation hvrne r
single, married, widow, widower

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)

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Last place of residence £' /:??/. Sou t/

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�T.D. FUNK
l-':CRTUARY BGOK (Aug. 25,

1913 - Sept. 6,

1916)

Pageo257

ELizAB£1/1 £ 1-l/lvSLETT
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-------------------------------

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1-·:CRTUARY BOOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

Pag.e~
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Location of Grave

------------------------

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Color

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Months

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single, married, widow, widower ~~p/~
;
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'

�T.D. FUNK
r.-:CRTUARY BOOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

Pag:e ~3/
FUNERAL of

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--------------------------

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------------------------------

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�T.D. FUNK

~:CRTUARY BCCK

Pag:e

(Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

:l'lr:J
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FUNERAL of

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Date of Death
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---------

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T.D. FUNK

~·:CRTUARY

BCOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

Page c2JjI

E/JEL!NE Ti!~I?NTo/11
Funeral ll1aYch IL/,&gt; !V6

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--------------------------

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Page

BCiCK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)

c2'!:J...

FUNERAL of ...CnfAnr of-

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-------------------------

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-------------------------

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-------

...

�T.D. FUNK
JI·:CRTUAR.Y BCCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Page c21(;J
FUKERAL of

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Pa~e

BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913 -Sept. 6, 1916)

4..i!/_
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FUNERAL of

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Other Information:

Date of Funeral Sh'·~,ee.J ffJ~b
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'

�T.D. FUNK
Iv:CRTUARY BCCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

Page ~'-/5'

.J.. :8/l)(E/f

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FUKERAL of

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Date of Funeral

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J.·:CRTUARY BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Page

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Pag:e

BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

m_

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FUNERAL of

Date of Funeral

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Father's Name

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----------------------------

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1-·:CRTUARY BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Page o2_Ljg'
FUNERAL of
Date of Funeral

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Other Information:
0

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Location of Grave
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Sec.

-------------------------

~Years

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Occupation

&amp;

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single, married, widow, widower w;c:hwer
Birthplace -------------------------------Last place of residence
How long resident of this state ----------Husband's Name
Father's Name

-----------------------------

Country of Birth --------------------~---\
Mother's Name
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Sexton

------------

�T.D. FUNK
Jv:CRTUARY BCCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Pag:e m
FUKERAL of

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T.D. FUNK
MCRTUARY BCCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

Pag: e~

ELLEN PRiEs-TL V
7
Funeral $ch YO /V6
Death .#/ch 2~ 17/6

FUKERAL of
Date of
Date of

Place of Death

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Other Information:

5r

---------------~,~~------------//

Place of Funeral
Clergyman

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Date of Burial

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c?~ Years~ Months ~~ Days.

Color

_it!..;._____

Occupation

-'4-~t:J/??;..:;..:..:;t:-===------------

single, married, widow, widower
Birthplace

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How long resident of this state
Husband's Name

4 £.1S7t;rs.
1

---------------------------------

Father' s Name ___..;..JD"'-~~B~~F,;;..:If..,T'----=L=.:./..;..;.'M...~ool:ruO'-----Country of Birth ~V~'-·~~~(~/~n~;~
·o_~--------------­
Mother' s Name

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Country of Birth ~!0~r~4~n~c~~~-------------------­
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Cause of Death .....S,...e"""n..,.'.....
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Ordered by --------------------------------Charge to
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--------

Paid on Account by:

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�T.D. FUNK
:tv:CRTUARY BOOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Page

c25/

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Fm:ERJ..L of Ei.JzA

/l£7ri
f.. ..3'
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Date of Funeral
Date of Death

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Clergyman ----~--a__c_/~~~~s____________________
Date of Burial
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-----------------------

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How long resident of this state ---------Husband' s Name
Father's Name

---------------------------

Country of Birth ------------------------Mother's Name
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----~~~~~~-------------

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Jv:CRTUARY BOOK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)
Page ci,5J_
FUKERAL of

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�T.D. FUNK
lv:CRTUARY BOCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Page

.2.'53

-TAco a

FUKERAL of

Date of Funeral II
Date of Death

I

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Location of Grave

------------------------

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------

....

�T.D. FUNK
MCRTUARY BOOK (Aug. 25, 1913 -Sept. 6, 1916)
Pag:e ~5f
FUNERAL of

L.

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41.4so.iV
Other Information:

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---~----------------------------------

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�T.D. FUNK

l\·:CRTUARY BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Se:fit. 6, 1916)

Page .,25'5
FUKER..J.L of

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Date of Funeral /l;rr/1
Date of Death

1/t:JG/lA/

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Other Information:

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ST

Place of Funeral
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-----------------------------------ElderJ:t'n

Date of Burial .....7"~-.;,../,Lf/_-....:./.....:.b';..___ _ _ _ _ __
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Grave or Lot No. _ _ _ _ Sec.
Location of Grave

-----------------------------------

Age: ~Years ~Months /~ Days.
Color

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------------------------------------/!lo/l?/lS C'G?o/c=s-

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---~~~~~-------------------------

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--------

Paid on Account by:

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�T.D. FUNK
MCRTUARY BCCK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)
Page ~56
FU!\ERAL of

~I-JIII /11. SPEA/CEI?

Date of Funeral #e;!
Date of Death

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Grave or Lot No. _ _ _ _ Sec.
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------------------------

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T.D. FUNK
MCRTUARY BCOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Pag:e

.257

FUNERAL of

r.

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Date of Funeral

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Location of Grave

---------------------------------

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-------

I

�T.D. FUNK
MCRTUARY BOCK (Aug. 25, 1913 -Sept. 6, 1916)
Page 2.5''6
FUKERAL of

BETTIE :J3REC!I/ELSBALIE!f
4eri
I /9:&gt; , 1V6
,

Date of Funeral

Other Information:

-2,:30 P#?

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Grave or Lot No. -----------Sec.
Location of Grave

---------------------------------

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-----------------------------

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---------

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T.D. FUNK
MCRTUARY BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913 -Sept. 6, 1916)
Page .259

JOHN £ f.@BEtf'TS

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Date of Death
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------------------------

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~·:CRTUARY

Page

BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913 -Sept. 6, 1916)

c260

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~·:CRTUAnY

BCCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

Page .26'1

Ct2a.s. -r/-lt£.1 E SBiilB£S
Funeral /Jeri
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Date of

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Grave or Lot No. - - - - Sec.
Location of Grave ------------------Age: ~Years _/'/ Months ~/

Days.

single, married, widow, widower ~arrieo/
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-------

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T.D. FUNK
l\·:CRTUARY BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

Pag: e~
FUNERAL of

C/JI(/J /J. J/t?J?A/

Other Information:
Date of Funeral s#,(t?e/f; 4lAt.tt?rTo ~115 ~y I 17'/6 5.' ~? Sa11/a .,.Ce.

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Place of Death
Place of Funeral
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-------------------------------------~.;..;_...'4.;..;../l:.......;.:.M~4:...::;;-=~:;..__--------------------

Grave or Lot No. _ _ _ _ Sec.
Location of Grave

-------------------------------

Age: ~~ Years ~Months _____ Days.
Occupation ....8"-~-t?P?.;.;..:...:;;~;:;;..._________

Color W

single, married, widow, widower ~/44~
7
Birthplace

-~~~~~-----------------------­

Last place of residence /~.29' 4(/ss.
How long resident of this state 33 ) 4r.s.
Husband's Name
Father' s Name

------------------------------------

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-----------

Paid on Account by:

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�T.D. FUNK

~:CRTUARY

BCCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

Page ~b3
FUKERAL of

CI/;J&amp;Es 0

41t~/f/r'QW""

Date of Funeral

My

Date of Death

.fpril 2.£ /}?/6

Place of Death

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L

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Other Information:

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Color

Occupation ~qjtJr e or

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Birthplace
Last place of residence ---~~----------------­
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Father's Name

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--------

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�T.D. FUNK

~·:CRTUARY

Page

BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)

.&lt;t 'I
C. 1?oDG-~f?S

FUNERAL of JtJsE/J!-1

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Date of Death

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�T.D. FUNK

~·:CRTUARY

BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

Page ~b5

/lgr!/uE 5 /G:EL IN

FUNERAL of

Other Information:
/~tiS' Sa/}~ _;--e P/?7

Date of Funeral ~v ?
7

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Date of Death

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Place of Death Ce/l. /~sa.
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Location of Grave
Age:
Color

,tl

Years ____ Months ____ Days.

_v_.___

Occupation

Clerk

single, married, widow, widower )7?c?Y'ried
Birthplace
Last place of residence --~~~~~~~-­
How long resident of this state

-----

Husband's Name
Father' ·s Name

----------------------------

Country of Birth ------------------------Mother's Name

---------------------------

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Ordered by -----------------------------Charge to ------------------------------Sexton

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�T.D. FUNK

Jv:CRTUARY BCCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

Pag:e ~~b

/ll. W/-lLI(E8
Other Information:
Date of Funeral $av :L3 /9/6
S?n"fo. re. /t7 ..2 ..2.. a. nr1.
I
Date of Death ~.a~ :2./ /V6
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FUNERAL of 1/t?c.uELL

Place of Death

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Place of Funeral vale;~'//
Clergyman

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Date of Burial
Where Interred

S'-,2.3- /Y/1'

~~~4~~~~~~~/~/,~~-------------

Grave or Lot No. ------- Sec.
Location of Grave

------------------------

Age:

!5

Color

Years _ _ Months _Days.

/U.

Occupation

SChoo I

single, married, widow, widower S/'.rJq
£
;
Birthplace -----------------------------Last place of residence /~~ ~~s
How long resident of this state ---------Husband's Name
Father's Name

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Country of Birth -----------------------I'w1other' s Name
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l

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------------

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J~·:CRTUARY BCCK

Page

(Aug. 25, 1913 -Sept. 6, 1916)

nf_

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-----------------------

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-----------------------

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Jv:CRTUARY BCCK

(Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)

Page .-273

FU~E~AL of dJ?LLiE

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Jv:CRTUARY BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
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Place of Funeral

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Jv:CRTU ARY BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)
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------------------------------

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--------

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J~::CRTUARY

Pag:e

BGOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

m_

FUKERAL of

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Other Information:

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-------------------------

Grave or Lot No. -------Sec.
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------------------------

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Color - - - - - Occupation

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------------------------------

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~:CRTUARY

Page

BCCK (Aug. 25, 191.3 - Sept. 6, 1916)

-1.12..

A GREV
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Other Information:
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----------

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Jv:CRTUARY BCCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Se:pt. 6, 1916)

Page

.:278"'

FUNERAL of

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11
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Location of Grave

------------------------

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Color

It/

Occupation tJCCtJyntqnl

single, married, widow, widower -----------Birthplace

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Country of Birth

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Jv:CRTUARY BGGK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
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-----------------------

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Mother's Name

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------------------------

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------

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l\'iCRTUARY BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Page otZO
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Place of Funeral

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------~-----------------

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-------

Paid on Account by:

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�T.D. FUNK

J~·:CRTUARY

BCCK (Aug. 25, 1913 -Sept. 6, 1916)

Page ~8 I
FUKERAL of

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Date of

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------------------------

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Color

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8/

single, married, widow, widower Jv/a1w e r
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How long resident of this state
57' rs
Husband' s Name

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Father's Name

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Country of Birth __. ;;..//____.;!f""'""""C"-'-'/X~I/1:;.,;._________
Mother's Name

------------------------

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MCRTUARY BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913

~

Sept. 6, 1916)

Page ...1ff:l...
FUNERAL of

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-----------------------

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Occupation ~41~o~~~e~------

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single, married, widow, widower J?;kn:ie/
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How long resident of this state --~~uC'----Husband's Name

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:t-·:CRTUARY BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913 -Sept. 6, 1916)
Page oZ%3
FUKERAL of

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Other Information:
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Color

«)

Months _
Occupation

Days·.

~lne

single, married, widow, widower

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---------------------------

---------------------------

Country of Birth ------------------------Mother's Name
Country of

--------------------------Birth
-------------------------

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Iv:CRTUARY BOOK (Aug. 25, 1913 -Sept. 6, 1916)
Page

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MCRTUARY BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6,

Page

1916)

e2S7

GiL BEfiT 1 [ SNvDER
Other Information:
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---------------------------------

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Pag:e

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FUKERAL of

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BCOK (Aug. 25, 1913

Sept. 6, 1916)

Pag:e :z~r

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Color ....!3....___ _ _ Occupation

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~~~~/_5_s_._______________________

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Mother's Name

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------------------------------

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�T.D. FUNK

~:CRTUARY

BGOK (Aug,. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

Page ..t?tJ

w.

FUKER.AL of C#/JifiES
Date of Funeral
Date of Death
Place of Death

ff« o /.2.. /f/6
I
/luy /0 /f/6
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Place of Funeral
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Location of Grave

--------------------------------

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Years

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�T.D. FUNK
JI·:CRTUARY BOOK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Pag: e~

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----------------------

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I3
1716

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Grave or Lot No. - - - - Sec.
Location of Grave -----------------------Age: _ _ Years
Color

1&lt;/

_2_

Months __{__Days.

Occupation

dqH?t::..

single, married, widow, widower
Birthplace

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Husband's Name

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�T.D. FUNK
Iv:CRTUARY BOCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)
Page ,21~

C,Eo!f(;f SmlrH (si! .NER
Date of Funeral /luy /5 ///6
f'tJO P~
Date of Death
/!uo /..2_ 17/6
/'30 ,0
J
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-----------------------

Grave or Lot No . - - - - Sec.
Location of Grave

Age: ~ Years ____ Months ____ Days.
Color

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Birthplace

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Husband's Name
Father's Name

-------------------~--

---------------------------

Country of Birth - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Mother's Name

---------------------------

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~·:CRTUARY BCOK

Page

(Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

:293

FUKERAL of

Date of Funeral 8ut?.
/

Date of Death
Place of Death

I

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Other Information:
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------------------------

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Date of Burial

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Grave or Lot No. - - - - Sec.
Location of Grave

------------------------

Age: ~Years ~Months ~/ Days.
Color II)

Occupation

-"A~&lt;=-~T'-----­

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Birthplace ~~~~&amp;~12~---------------------­
Last place of residence
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How long resident of this state 3? ~Y..s
Husband's Name

---------------------------

Father' s Name ____...;.....______________________

Country of Birth -----------------------Mother's Name

---------------------------

Country of Birth -----------------------Physician ~4~~/.._C=i

_____________

Cause of Death

--------------------------

Ordered by ----------------------------Charge to
Sexton

-----------------------------

---------

Paid on Account by:

�T.D. FUNK
~·:CRTUARY

Page

BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)

:t71j

FUNERAL of

/JitJNZO
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Date of Death

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Date of

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Location of Grave

------------------------

t(g Years ~Months

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Mother's Name

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------

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�T.D. FUNK
J1·:CRTUARY BGCK (Aug.· 25, 1913 -

Se~t.

6, 1916)

Page~
FUKE!iAL of

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/JAJJ)ElfS [)J/

4J ..2(, !Vb

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Date of Death

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Place of Funeral

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Other Information:

1716

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J

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Grave or Lot No. _ _ _ _ Sec.
Location of Grave

---------------------------------

Age: ~Years ~Months /~ Days.
Color

0

Occupation ....fo.........,.'/?7"""'-'e......___________

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-------------------------------------------

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Page

BGGK (Aug. 25, 1913 -Sept. 6, 1916)

c276

FU~ERAL

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Place of Funeral

Clergyman -------------------------------Date of Burial cJyq ~ 7 /(/6
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1

Grave or Lot No. --------Sec.
Location of Grave
Age:

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Years _ _ Months _Days.

Color k/

Occupation -------------

single, married, widow, widower -----------Birthplace ------------------------------Last place of residence
~~ ~~
How long resident of this state ------------

Name---------------------------

Husband's
Father's Name

Country of Birth ------------------------Mother's Name

-----------------------------

Country of Birth ------------------------Physician
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Cause of Death ....
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�T.D. FUNK
Jv:CRTUARY BGCK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

Pag: e~

CE~r?&amp;£
Funeral
/7{:1_ Q

R white.

FUNERAL of
Date of

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.

30 19/6

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Date of Death

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Place of Death

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Other Information:
a.m.

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Place of Funeral
Clergyman

C. Brown

t)

Date of Burial ___
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vlhere Interred --4.0....-=~::...:K_._.........
!-I~~·/:--/:. . . .-_____
Grave or Lot No.
Location of Grave

I'[

Sec.

----------------------

Age:~ Years~ Months oZ~ Days.
Color

4!

Occupation

Gracey-

single, married, widow' widower
Birthplace

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Last place of residence ~/5'
How long resident of this state

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Husband's Name
-----------------------E.LJi&lt;/AJ?.D W/// Z:E

Father's Name
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l\':CRTUARY BOOK

(Aug. 25, 1913- Sept. 6, 1916)

Pagen
FUNERAL

Date of
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Death
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;

Place of Death
Place of Funeral
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Date of Burial
vlhere Interred
Grave or Lot No. _ _ _ _ Sec.
Location of Grave

-------------------------------Months ~/

Age: _ _ Years _

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_______ Occupation ~A~~~~~~~e~--------

Color ~H~)

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Birthplace ~dwrence.

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How long resident of this state -2...1 de:;:;:) vs
Husband' s Name
Father' s Name

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Country of Birth

~no/

----~--------------------

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------------------------------------

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----------

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�T.D. FUNK

J~·:CRTUARY

Pag:e

BGGK (Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

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FUKERAL of

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Date of Funeral

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Place of Death

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Place of Funeral
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Grave or Lot No. _ _ _ _ Sec.
Location of Grave

----------------------------------

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Color _...:4_;~-- Occupation S ch~e /
single, married, widow, widower S&lt;n~k
J

Birthplace _/],gq&amp; s

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Last place of residence -~~~~?U~·--~--&lt;~~&lt;-·~~~
How long resident of this state /~- ?- ?
Husband's Name

----------------------------------

Father' s Name ___....;;;L;..,.t/.;..__U;...;I....;S~---_D---.;.../...,c.:..K~---------Country of Birth
Mother's Name

.Teffe rson

CO.

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7

Country of Birth ---~~e~~~~....;e~r;...;s~~~n~____C;...;o__________
Physician

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Ordered by ------------------------------------Charge to ----------------------------------Sexton

-----------

Paid on Account by:

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�T.D. FUNK

~·:CRTUARY BOOK

(Aug. 25, 1913 - Sept. 6, 1916)

Page 3tJ~
FUKERAL

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Date of Funeral shf¥ed To

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Date of Burial ..::;S.~~,;,;~_,:.j;71":e:;..:e.wci..____.S:-=::;.,;;e"""/;;._6
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- _/._6_ _
Where Interred _.tf~~-a~n~n~~~--~~~~~~~~·--------­
Grave or Lot No. --------Sec.
Location of G~ve -----------------------Age:

17

\olor

Jacl·aa

Years _

Months _ _ Days.

STu/eat-

Occupation

single, married, widow, widower-~------­
Birthplace

6

nna-

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Last place of residence ~~~a~s~A~Y~~~--~~~n_s~·---­
How long resident of this state ~~=-~Y~r.~~~Husband's Name
Father's Name

/om 7/ GER

Country of Birth ------------------------Mother's Name 4/rs ~SE 7/CER
Country of Birth ~nne...

c:Jn~

Physician -------------------------------Cause of Death 1/al""n !ctr ~a. r/ Leo.. lo/7 (J)
Ordered by
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�T. D• . FUNK l'•~C:tTUA~Y BCGK INDEX
(Aug . 2 5 , 191 3 - Sept • 6, 191 6)
NAlvlE

PAGE

ABRANZ, Albert C.
AtAl'·f!, Ruth A.
.
ALEXANLRA, E.I. -----ALLEN, David
ALLEN, Eineley
ALLENDCHPH, Infant of Geo. - ---- -·- ··-AMBLER, C.B.
ANDERSON, Anna M.
ANDERSON, Henry B.

157
222

175
SO
216
166
28
115

··--··--·-· -·- -- 211

ANDERSON, Martha
---·--- --- 295
ANDERSON, Mary C. - ---------·---------· · 198
BABB, Issac
_____ , _______ -- 1
BAKER, Hatty ·- -- - 145
BAKER, Isaac L. -· -·-245
BALDWIN, Caroline
219
BARBER, Arabella P. (Mrs.)
35
BARNETT, Howard
106
BATES, Eva M.
271
BEAL, Harry K.
17
BENNETT, 1-lary
181
BEm~HARD, Jose~h C.
87
BESERA (BECERA), Julian
2
BEURYiliNN, Loui~
187
BISHOP, Clara E.
140
BRSCHTELSBAUER, Bettie
258
BROOKS, Albert G.
278
BROOKS, Jermiah
94
BRmm, Cordelia
22
BRUCKr·:ILLER, Otto
225
BUCH, Matilda (Mrs.)
6
BULIS, Earl R.
291
BURKE, Sarah
g2
CALHOUN, Phoebe
190
CARCARAN (CORCORAN), Dan
85
CARLSON, Henry
276
CHURCHILL, Infant of Mrs. W.A.
139
CHURCHILL, Whitman A.
100
CLARK, Elizabeth
120
CCLE, Harry Austin
103
COLEMAN, Alice R.
41
COLEMAN, Oswood A.
134
COLLETT, William
107
CCCK, Lincoln
---· 207
COOPER, Geo.
186
COOPER, George Pierson
104
COOPER, Perry
121
CRAVEN, l/lilliam r--Iarcus
142
CR0\1L, Laurena vl.
1
DAVIES, Infant of James W.
20
DICK, Nellie F.
299
DUNKLE, Infant of Ardan
242
DUNN, James
45
DUNNETT, Infant of H.L.
9
DUNNETT, Lela
10
DURKEE, Myron E.
5
~5

�T. D. FUNK ft.ORTUARY BOOK INDEX
(Augl25,1913 - Sept.6, 1916)
NAI-lli

PAGE

EBERHART, Infant of M.O.-·- - --- -- - -- 98
EBERHART, Paul _C---------------------- 160
EDDY, A. (Mrs.)
201
EDHOLM, Christine 97
EDSON, Emmyline
59
EDWARD, Velma
26~
ENO. Augusta (Mrs.)
- 51
ELIOT, Phoebe
- 173
ESTRADO, Eligio C
132
EVANS, 1-iary
- 228
FERGUSON, Lizzie
214
FISCHER, . Emma M
161
FITZGIBONS, John James - - -176
FLINN, Jane P . - - --·- -··
197
FORD, Charles C.
11~
FOUNTAIN, Mary (Ivlrs.)
- - -- -- -- - - 1 5
FUNK, Ella Maud
21
GERI•1AN, Celia (Mrs.) -14
GILBERT, Elizabeth C
240
GILES (GUILES), Cara E.
27 &amp; 39
GLASS, Robert F. ---1 72
GLENN, Ida F.
257
GOOD\-IIN, Clarence James
162
GRAHAM, Infant of Ralph
- 158
GRANT, Evans Dosier- -. --·---- ----·
63
GREY, Harry A
277
GRIFFIN, Joseph W
56
GRINTER, Rosana
212
GU1LEY, Edith
218
GUTIEREZ, Francisco
62
GUTIERREZ, Filiceano (?)
210
HALL, Isaac S.
99
HAGUE, Rachel Ellen -232
HA!'viER, Sarah . - -- -- ·---·- ----11 2
HARRIS, Beulah
----- ·---·· - ------272
HARVEY, Talran
124
HASTIE, Frank A.
148
HASTIE, Mary E.
267
HATTEN, Nancy J. (Mrs.)
18
HAYSLETT, Elizabeth F.
237
HAYSLETT, Geo. W.
96
HECK, Bernice
192
HELMICK, James B
25
HERiv!ANDEZ, Marice
~9
HILL, Charles E.
---- 195
HODGES vlilliam C.
·- 1 54
HOFFHAN, Valentine B.
126
HOGAN, Helen
255
HORN, Cora A.
- 262
HOUK, Baby Harry---51
HOUSE, Malinda Jane
78
HUEY, Charolett Hyla
165
HUNSH!GER, Kathelina--- - -- 246
HUNTER, Allen 245
HUNTE:t, Eli B.
111
HYETT, Samuel (MR.&amp; Iv~rs.) ---- ------ - -- 204
T~ ~ IJ T N

11H 1 1

~

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--

�T. D. FUNK .fv.CR'i'U .::.rtY BOCK INDEX
PAGE
IR'IIIN, 1,lilliam Harrison
133
ISLEY, Bernice Irene --- -- - - --- 24
JAJ..P, Wonda
· 76
JACOBS, Roy - ---38
JCHNSON, Kary P.
83
JONES, Peter -- 143
JOKES, Richard J.
125
JONES, Thomas
75
JORDAN, David
92
KARNES, Floyd E. ---- ---- - ----·- --- -- --· 243
KELLOGG, l&lt;1.artha - - - -------- -·--- --- -- 141
KENT, Mollie E.
273
KIDD, Martha Jane -- -- -- --- --------- ···4S
KINCAID, Margurite
122
KD~BALL, George ·
·- - --- 193
KIHGHT, Hairshul
·- ··- -------- 205
KUNCE, Lewis Hatfield --46
KUNKLE, Robert M. 131
LACY, John
116
LAHRI"iANN, Helena
- 138
LANDEN, (LANDER), Katherine - 206
LASTER, Rose Maxine -------- 221
LEE, Harriet (Mrs.)
40
LEE, Martha A. Ba
32
LEDABOER, Henrietta B.
---- 67
LEFFERD, Infant of Russell- -223
LEFFCRD, Marry M.
105
LESTER, Walter R.
58
LISCHESKY, Elizabeth (Mrs.)
34
LCVING, Elizabeth A.
194
LYONS, LaVerne Wendal
238
I',U\RKS, Alexander
270
lf.i..ARKS, Infant of Arthur L.
128
r-:ARRO'Il, Elizabeth (Mrs.)
7
~.i..ARTIN, Elizabeth
147
MASON, Edward L.
254
McCARTY, Sarah Elizabeth
235
McCONNELL, Laura Lula
130
McELRCY, John H.
191
McFARLAND, Charles W.
101
.rv.cHENRY, Infant of R.C.
47
McMILLAN , Mary I. --108
McNUTT, Alexander Richard
136
1-1ETTNER, Francis
200
I-t.EUFFELS, Lous ia (Mrs • )
26
MIFFLIN, Jane Elizabeth (Mrs.) ·
247
MILLER, Joseph Reese
- 213
MONROE, Alexander
-- 249
MOORE, Joshua
244
MOORE, Leland W.
127
!•:CRRIS, Ellen
23
MORRIS, Harry J. · ---- - · 71
1•1CRRIS, J .H.
33
MCRR0\'1, Charles 0.--- 263
MORTENSEN, Nellie (Mrs.)
60
JliORTENSON, John
1 53
MURPHY, Sarah - --- - - -- ---------·- 234

�T.D. FUNK MORTUA RY BOOK INDEX
NAME

FA GE

NEAL, Emma
-- ·- 171
NELSON, ~1olly Mae - .. -·- -···-·. ··---------- 114
NEWBY, Henry
-------- - · 226
NE"wBY , Nina ----- --- - ---·---------- - - - - 17 4
NEWMAN, Margari te
---------20~
NOLAND, Henry M.
- 2~1
NOLL, Frederick William
- -------·-- - 52
NORRIS , Claud W.
- ---------· -- -- --- ·
1 46
OECHSLI, Frank - - - -·- ·- --- -------- ·4
OLSON, Anton
.. 119
OPPERIVlAN , Katherine S. · · --- - --- - - --- ·-·- 74
OTTER, Mary A. (Mrs.) --·----- -- - -- - -- 12
OlvEN, Claude J. ·------ ·--- ·-- - ------ ·- ··- 3
OVJENS, Eric Griffin
. ---· -- --- ·-·· --- ·--· - 95
OWENS, William H.
-· · ·-·----·-·· -188
PADRTA, Eurika ·- - - --- 123
PALMER, Eliza beth A.---· 27 4
PARKErt , Wilfred E.
69
PEARSE, Lydia P.
- 284
PETTIBONE, Mil ton W.
168
PLANZ, Jacob
253
PLANZ, Mary (Mrs.)
53
PLATTS, Wesley E.
156
PORTER, Grace E.
203
PORTRIDGE, Eliza J.
251
PRIESTLY, Ellen
250
PUTZE, Marie
279
RAHRIG, Geo . -- ---91
RALSTON, Peter
236
RANKIN, John K.
13
164
REED, Maggie Ellis
REEVES, George W.
288
REID, Hattie B. - 220
RENFRmv, Charles W.
- - - 290
REUSCH, Myrtle Ada
177
REYER, Angie E. · ---··---- 224
RICHARDS, Lucy C.
260
RICHARDSON, John
. 159
RICHARDSON, Jules
151
RIDENOUR, Elisha
66
RISLEY, Sylvester A-.
- 29
ROBEilltiAN, Maud Nettie
180
ROBERTS, John F.
259
ROBINSON, James B.
84
RODELL, Anna K.
37
RODGERS , Joseph C.
264
ROPER, Geo. H. .
11
ROSE, Alexander
88
ROUSELAUX, Louise Robert~
-163
ROY/LAND, Mary Ella ---65
ROWLEY, Ellen Russell ---- 217
SANBORN, Edith Cook - -17B
SAYLOR, Edwin L.
· 293
SCHAAKE, Henry William
135
SCHMIDT, Stiner ----- - -- 292
SCHNACK, Elizabeth 229

�T.D. FUNK MORTUARY BOOK INDEX
NA~:E

PAGE

SCHOOLEY, Mary C. ------------------- 137
SCHOOLEY, Susie
------------------- 61
SCHRADER, Infant of Mary Louise ------ 31
SCHRADER, Mary Louise (Mrs.) --------- 30
SCO TT, Melvin K. -------------------- 167
SHAN E, James B. (Cap.) --------------- 19
SHORT, Anna Geo. (Mrs.) ------------- 129
SIBLEY, Jno. V. --------------------- 296
SIGELIN, Arthur
------------------- 265
SIMPSON, Earnest (Ernest) ----------- 209
SKEET, Infant of Arthur ------------- 231
SLACK, Jeremiah B. ------------------ 170
SMITH, (Baby)
--------------------- 215
SMITH, Cary
-------------------- 49
SMITH, G.W. (Mrs.) ------------------- 182
SMITH, George ----------------------- 292
SMITH, Mamie --------------------------86
SMITH, Rose E. ----------------------- 179
SMOCK, Chas, G. ---------------------- 70
SNODGRASS, Henry--------------------- 113
SNYDER, Gilbert J. ------------------- 287
SPENCER, John M. --------------------- 256
SPENCER, Joshua Wallace -------------- 233
SQUIRES, Constant F. ----------------- 261
STANDING, Infant of Ralph E. --------- 286
STEELE, Mary H. ---------------------- 152
STE!r:liEN, Carl Albert ---------------- 25!
STEINBERGER, Hannah ------------------ 199
STEVENS, Ida E. ---------------------- 202
STE\1./ART, Clarence -------------------- 16
STILES, Infant of DeWitt M. ---------- 90
STILES, Raymond DeWitt --------------- 230
STILlk~N,
---------------------STRAFFON, Marie
Lydia A.
______ ;_ ____________ 29~
144
STRAFFON, Robert J. ------------------ 64
STRODE, James H. --------------------- 93
STUART, George W. -------------------- 189
SUGRUE, Francis A. ------------------- 50
SULLIVAN, Joseph G. ------------------ 285
SULLIVAN, William -------------------- 77
THIELE, Walter Graham ---------------- 269
THORNTON, Emeline -------------------- 241
TICKNOR, Ray William ----------------~
TIGER, John
-------------------- --- 300
TOWNE, Cecelia 0. ----------- -------- 275
TRYON, Edward ----------------- ------ 280
TULLER, Nellie M. -------------------- 282
TURNER, Josiah M. -------------------- 239
TUTTLE, Charles E. ---- ------------44
VANHOESEN, Jarilda (Mrs.) ---------- 283
VENARD, Shirley ----------- ··---------- 68
VETTER, Caroline
169
1,'lALLINGTON, David L.
289
WAHL, Louisa (Mrs.)
43
WALKER, Howell M.
266
153
WALKER, Olive
WALKER, Winifred
·-·---·- 149

�T.D. FUI\K MCRTUARY BOOK INDEX
NAI'flE
WATKINS, John
WEIDMAN, John A.
WHITE, George R.
WHITE, Thomas C.
\•liCLER, Delbert Eugene - -- -----------WILEY, Infant of Theo.
'.'TILLETT, John A•
WILLIAMS, Arther R.
\'liNGER, Infant of Elmo
WOOD, Eunice (Mrs.) ----------------•·'WOOtS, Dora
WOCDS, Goldie I.
WOODERSON, John W.
WOYAHN, Julia
WULFKUHLE, Caroline (Mrs.)
YEAGER, Elizabeth
YOUNG, Alonzo

PAGE
184
150
297
72
54

155
73

55
57
102
196
196
42
79
36
117
294

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                <text>Text: The records of Funk Mortuary, covering the period between August 25, 1913 and September 6, 1916. Funk Mortuary was founded in 1909 by T.D. Funk and George Shaffer. In 1911, Funk assumed full ownership; he operated the mortuary until its sale in 1953. Following a series of changes in ownership, the mortuary is today known as Warren-McElwain Mortuary and continues operations in Lawrence (Kan.). This record book contains a photograph of Funk's horse-drawn hearse; a hand-written copy of a Lawrence Daily Journal article on the mortuary's 1911 sale; information about deceased persons prepared for burial at this mortuary; and an alphabetized index.&#13;
&#13;
A majority of these persons died and were interred in Douglas County (Kan.), but other records indicate interments in cities or townships in Kansas counties Shawnee, Wyandotte, Johnson, Franklin, Jefferson, Osborne, Leavenworth, Geary, Brown, Nemaha, Ottawa, Miami, and Coffey. Out-of-state records include persons interred in St. Louis (Mo.); San Antonio (Tex.; note misspelling of "Santonio"); Kalamazoo (Mich.); Dalton (Mo.); Red Rock (Okla.); Butler (Mo.); Des Moines (Iowa); Allison (Iowa); and Dallas (Tex.). Note misspellings of Kansas towns "Tongonxie" (Tonganoxie) and "Ponoma" (Pomona).</text>
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                    <text>Interview with Teresa Hernandez Schwartz
Interviewer: Nora Murphy
Date of Interview: October 6, 2019
Length of Interview: 72:42
Location of Interview: Home of Teresa Hernandez Schwartz
Transcription Completion Date: January 15, 2021
Transcriptionist: Emily Raymond
Teresa Hernandez Schwartz (Interviewee): The – the, the houses of La Yarda. Um –
Nora Murphy (Interviewer): Oh.
THS: I’ve got it upside down. That was taken –
NM: It’s all water.
THS: Yeah, there’s a – there was a fence there, and that was, a farmer planted corn right behind
there. Was pretty close to the bottom – to the back end of the – of one of the rows of houses. The
other, where we lived over there, they didn’t have any fence or anything.
NM: So, you lived, like, over here, and this is the edge of the river, or…?
THS: No, we lived, now this is where all the, the men used to plant their gardens.
NM: Oh, okay.
THS: Uh-huh. And, are – the houses are right here.
NM: Oh, where the water is now?
THS: Yeah.
NM: Oh, okay.
THS: See, all that was full of water. Uh-huh.
NM: Oh, so they took the photo after the flood.
THS: Yeah.
NM: Oh, okay.
THS: Well, I think that one was taken when it was filling up with water, because you couldn’t
see any of the – of this after.
NM: Oh, wow.

�THS: It was filled up.
NM: Yeah.
THS: Yeah. When we came – went in the next morning, we – our road had – had washed out, uh,
right away when the water started coming in, ‘cause it was coming in so bad that it just, the road
just caved in.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Where we used to come in and out. So, we had to go around that way, and of course when
we went around that way, that was when all the water was coming across there.
NM: Oh, dear.
THS: We had to go around there when my dad and I went to get the chickens, because my
mother wanted her chickens out. So, we put ‘em in a cage and he got up in front. He’s a big man,
so, you know, um, he was able to hold on and – and, uh, I was in the back, and the cage kept
going sideways and he kept saying: “Hold on, do not let loose,” because the water was rushing
over [murmurs].
NM: Oh, gee. Scary.
THS: Everything was just full of water.
NM: Where were your other – your brothers and sisters?
THS: Um, my brothers and sisters, they used to live there, at one time or another. My sister and
her husband, and then he was drafted into the service, World War II. And so, he left her there,
you know, because of my folks being…
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And then my – my brother lived on down to the other – of the other end from where we
lived. My sister was across from us, and, uh, so my brother lived over there with his kids, and
then he got a job at the – at the shops in Topeka.
NM: Oh, okay.
THS: Instead of working out on the railroad, you know, in the cold winter and everything. My,
uh, my dad used to say that, uh, when they came, we got ready for lunch, they would build the
fire. But he says there, that – we called them tacos, ‘cause you know, just the tortillas with beans
in it –
NM: Mm-hmm.

�THS: And pepper.
THS: And he said they was so frozen that you couldn’t eat them.
NM: Oh.
THS: Move ‘em, you know. They had to put ‘em on the fire to get ‘em thawed out before they
could…eat any lunch at all, yeah, ‘cause they carried it in their lunch pail. And they was out on
them little, the kids called ‘em pushy cars, but they really wasn’t. That was some kind of a little
deal that they, uh, had a motor on it, and they would go up and down the railroad tracks.
NM: Yeah. Well, let’s start at the beginning, as though you’d never told me anything about La
Yarda. Like, did you say that you – you moved there when you were two years old?
THS: Uh-huh.
NM: Where did you move from?
THS: We – I was born in Topeka.
NM: In Topeka.
THS: In Topeka they had the – the Santa Fe houses. My dad worked for the Santa Fe there. Um,
he worked for the – for the Santa Fe and they had little houses, but they was made out of wood
and the ground would, I mean the floor was dirt.
NM: Mm.
THS: There was – I remember my mother used to get up in the morning with a little pan and
water in it and sprinkle it so that all the inside of it, so that it wouldn’t get so, you know, uh…
NM: Dusty?
THS: Yeah, dusty.
NM: Oh.
THS: Mm-hmm. Because, you know, it would get real dusty and so she put water on it, and that
way it would kind of settle down.
NM: And you remember that?
THS: Yeah, mm-hmm. I was two, you know. I could remember. Them talking about it.
NM: Well, when was your birthday? Which year?

�THS: January the 6th.
NM: January 6th. What year were you born?
THS: 1930.
NM: 1930.
THS: Yeah, I’ll be 90 in Dec – in January.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: But anyway, so this was better housing over here.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: So my dad asked for a transfer, and he came up – we came over here, I was two years old.
You know, I – there was so many kids in that little space, that you got to learn a lot of talking
and everything from all them little kids. ‘Cause it was just…kind of a circle. And – and once in a
while they would put water all over that dirt so they could have a dance there.
NM: Are we talking about La Yarda here?
THS: No, we’re talking about –
NM: In Topeka?
THS: Topeka.
NM: Oh, okay.
THS: Before we moved down here.
NM: Oh, okay.
THS: Uh-huh. And they used to, uh, have dances right there.
NM: Oh.
THS: They would fix Mexican food, you know, just like a fiesta, only it wasn’t quite a fiesta
‘cause there wasn’t very much room, yeah. [NM laughs] But I learned to talk from them little
kids there.
NM: Mm-hmm.

�THS: I was going on three years old, really, when we moved down here. I was still two, but then
we moved to La Yarda because they had, you know, the houses down here was concrete.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And, uh, uh…there was two rows. And after we moved there, they – we just had been built
not too long before then. Uh, we…Mr. Romero, which was my sister-in-law, that’s her right
there, she married my brother Jesse. They was the ones that passed away here in January.
Anyway, they moved from Quenoma. They used to live in Quenoma. NOTE: Possibly she means
Quenemo, which is southwest of Baldwin? He worked for the railroad, too.
NM: Where is Quenoba?
THS: Quenoma is –
NM: Quenoma.
THS: Way up on the other side of Baldwin somewhere.
NM: Oh, okay.
THS: Uh-huh. But that’s where they moved, because they had better housing down there, too. I
don’t know what kind of housing they had over there, but they had eleven kids in their family.
And so, each one of us got four – four rooms.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: You know, and – and –
NM: Each family got four rooms?
THS: Each family got four rooms.
NM: Okay.
THS: There was three – three, four rooms on one side, and three or four rooms on the other, so
they got, you know.
NM: Like two rectangular buildings facing each other.
THS: And then the Ramirez moved in there. And then the Garcias moved in there. And we
moved in there. And, uh, let’s see, who else? My brother Pete moved in there with all his kids.
And then like I said, Lucia moved in there. And, uh, let’s see who else…uh…oh, they kept
moving in and out. But the Romeros and us were the only ones left in La Yarda when the ‘51
flood came.

Formatted: Spanish (Spain)

�NM: And you’re the Hernandezes.
THS: Uh-huh.
NM: Okay.
THS: Yeah.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: And the Romeros. All of the rest of ‘em had already moved and got houses on New Jersey
and Pennsylvania.
NM: Yeah, uh-huh.
THS: But the Romeros, they had eleven kids, so, you know, it was hard for them to get out and –
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And, uh, and my dad never even thought about moving. He just, you know. Actually, I was
the only one left. All the rest of ‘em had already moved out, you know, the girls.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: We had three girls and, uh…four – four boys. Three girls and four boys.
NM: In your family?
THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: Mm-hmm. And were you the youngest?
THS: I was the youngest.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Mm-hmm. Yeah.
NM: So when you moved to La Yarda, um, um…there were, like, seven other families living
there?
THS: Uh, they wasn’t all full yet, ‘cause they had just built the – the Santa Fe yards –
NM: Uh-huh.

�THS: Not too long before that. So, they started moving in, coming from different little towns,
you know.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And they all worked for the railroad.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: You know, so, when they moved for the railroad, they could get transferred wherever they
wanted to go.
NM: Right.
THS: So, when they seen that, uh, they got the houses there, uh, they decided that they wanted to
move to, you know, here to Lawrence, so –
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Um, I think it was us and the Romeros that moved in there first. And then came the
Garcias, and then – there’s a bug going in there [laughter]. Let’s see, what, I don’t want to do
that with that – with that deal, because –
NM: Oh, this bug here?
THS: Yeah.
NM: Oh. Want me to just put him outside?
THS: Just throw it out. Fritz will eat it [laughs].
NM: Want me to give him to Fritz?
THS: No, just, no, just throw it on the floor.
NM: Okay.
THS: He’ll pick it up. Yeah, he’ll pick it up. He – the minute I get up, because I have problems
with my hand since I broke it. And, uh, the minute I get up he’ll run over.
NM: Oh.
THS: Pick up all the crumbs that I’ve dropped on the floor.
NM: The crumbs.

�THS: He does it no matter where I’m sitting. And he can’t see very good, he’s – he’s going
blind, he’s a diabetic.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And he’s got cancer.
NM: Oh, gee.
THS: In two places, so –
NM: Wow.
THS: They only gave him three months to live, but he’s already lived over the – he doesn’t seem
to be –
NM: Must be something in the water.
THS: Must be.
NM: Pretty good.
THS: But anyway, getting back to –
NM: Yeah, to La Yarda.
THS: Yeah. Okay, then.
NM: So, were you all from Mexican families, like was your dad from Mexico?
THS: Yeah.
NM: Or your mom from Mexico?
THS: Yeah.
NM: And how did they get here?
THS: My mom, my dad…my dad’s dad, he – he was…he owned the – the hac – the hacienda, I
guess. Um, that’s what they call it. A farm.
NM: Okay.
THS: You know. He – he had 300 men working for him.
NM: In Mexico?

�THS: Uh-huh.
NM: Wow.
THS: That was my grandfather.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And so, my grandmother, my mother used to say she had a – a maid for the birds, the
canaries; a maid for the kids; a maid to cook the food; a maid to clean the house; a maid to, uh,
water the outside, you know, the dirt. He – they – she had a maid for everything.
NM: Gee.
THS: In the fall when the harvest came in, uh, my mother said she used to sit and, uh, um…for
three days, and divide all these, um, food, all this corn and – and beans and everything that they
had grown.
NM: Yeah.
THS: Divide it among all the workers.
NM: Wow.
THS: Besides, they got paid, you know, every, so many – every so, I don’t know how often, but
they did get paid.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Anyway, then my grandfather died, and my dad, since he was the oldest, he had a younger
sister and a younger brother. But since he was the oldest, he was left in charge of the hacienda.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: When the government was changing governments, and they was coming through, uh, they
could – my mother couldn’t remember, or my grandmother, if it was Zapata or Pancho Villa, or
which one was coming through, and they was killing all the men that – that owned anything at
all. So, they decided to come to the United States, and they sold the hacienda where they lived.
NM: Mm.
THS: They sold it and buried the money. And they came to the United States. So then, after
everything had settled, my grandmother said that they went back to – to Mexico, to dig up the
money. But the money wasn’t any good any more. It had already changed –

�NM: Oh, devalued? Oh, wow.
THS: So, since they didn’t have anything, then they moved back to the United States.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And, uh, my aunts, three – my aunt had two girls and her, but they wouldn’t let ‘em come
across the border, because they didn’t have no means of taking care of themselves, you know.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Nobody working, so that they could have money.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And then, um, my dad brought ‘em over. He says he didn’t want to leave ‘em up there. So,
he brought ‘em over as his daughters. So, he brought over five daughters, ‘cause there was two
of – of my sisters that was, you know, had been…
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Um, in Mexico. Anyway, um, so, but when he – they went back to Mexico, it was just my
– my mother, and my dad, and all them, you know, the two girls, my two sisters and my brother
was the only ones that went back. Well then, when they went back, they had my other brother up
there. And then they came back and they had my brother Joe in Kansas City and then they had
us, my brother Jesse and I in Topeka.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: So, they came back and they – they didn’t have anything, I mean, they just had to start over
again.
NM: Oh, goodness.
THS: ‘Cause everything was already gone.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And, uh –
NM: So, they got jobs in the railroad right away, your dad did?
THS: Mm-hmm. Yeah. He got a job right on the railroad. And then my – after years, after my,
uh, before my brother-in-law went into the army when they drafted him, World War II, uh, they
was all – they moved here through Lawrence, my brother and my brother-in-law.

�NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And so, they was working for the railroad, and then they got a better job in Topeka
working at the Santa Fe shops. So, they moved back to Topeka.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: So actually, during the ‘51 flood, there was only us and the Romeros left in there,
Everybody had already bought houses on New Jersey and Pennsylvania.
NM: Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm.
THS: But not all the Mexicans that lived on there lived in La Yarda. No.
NM: Where else did they live?
THS: Like the Chavez, Chavez didn’t. Now Peter Romero and his family all lived there.
NM: They lived in La Yarda.
THS: They were still there when the ‘51 flood came.
NM: Mm-hmm. Were there people living in the boxcars?
THS: Mm-hmm. Well, when – when my, uh, folks came over, even though they had a – a…oh,
uh, passport to come across,
NM: Mm-hmm?
THS: They came in a boxcar.
NM: They came in a boxcar, but they didn’t live in the boxcar when they –
THS: No. Well, in Kansas City they did.
NM: Oh, they did?
THS: When Joe was –
NM: In La Yarda there?
THS: And my uncle lived in, uh, in – in Pauline. He lived in a passenger car. Yeah. ‘Cause I
used to go visit him, you know. They had a daughter just about my age, and she passed away
years ago in California, but…they lived there till they moved to Topeka.
NM: Now, why would the railroad have somebody living in the passenger car?

�THS: Well, because they didn’t have any houses for them to live in.
NM: Oh.
THS: Uh-huh. So, that was the closest thing they could find, so I remember going through there
and they had curtains. They had a room and then they had curtains. Then they had another room
and curtains. And that’s the way, mm-hmm. But I remember going to visit ‘em, ‘cause their
oldest daughter was the same age.
NM: Was their car on the tracks, or was it off in the bushes somewhere?
THS: No, it was in the bushes.
NM: Oh, in the bushes. Oh, okay. So just an extra –
THS: They had just taken it and pushed it off the railroad tracks.
NM: An extra car, that –
THS: But it wasn’t a boxcar, it was a passenger car –
NM: That wasn’t being used. Okay.
THS: It had a lot of windows in it.
NM: Uh-huh. Interesting.
THS: So, um, but…no, it – it was…wasn’t very good, so when we – in the ‘51 flood, we got out,
Like I say, the Romeros, uh, Raymond Romero and them, their dad and mom let the – let the
Romeros go down and stay in their basement of their house. And next door lived their son, and
Raymond, and he told my dad that he would, uh, rent the upstairs. He says that we had some
people living up there, but they moved out, and it’s all clean and everything. If you want it you
can go ahead for $60 a month, you can go ahead and move there.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: So, we moved up there, up there, for about three months, then my dad decided we needed
to get out of there. And so, he bought that house over on Rhode Island Street, and that’s where
we lived –
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Till they left for a nursing home in St. Joseph, in Kansas City, so…yeah.

�NM: When you were at La Yarda, did you have to pay rent to live there, or was that just housing
for the workers?
THS: No, no.
NM: Okay.
THS: The – the bathroom, the toilet, was about from here to, uh…the, field, house over there.
NM: Wow.
THS: And you talk about going out there in the wintertime. You know. Oh, it was so cold. You
know, they had one for the men, and then one for the women, and over on the other row of
houses they had the same thing.
NM: Uh-huh. Did they have showers there, too?
THS: No, we had to take – we had to [laughs] we had to go out and there was a pump that sat in
the middle of both, over here, towards the front.
NM: Yeah.
THS: Not in the middle, but in the middle of both houses. There was a pump there, and we had
to go pump water out of there, and then we had to warm it up on the stove to take a bath.
NM: Wow.
THS: And in the summertime, we could see snakes down in there. But we didn’t have much
choice but to drink that water; we didn’t have anything else. We – I mean, we – we kids could
see ‘em down there, you know, and – and we’d ask the people – I mean, the parents to get ‘em
out, they didn’t want to get out.
NM: It was at the bottom of the well? These snakes?
THS: Yeah. Not too, you know, not too many, maybe we see a – a snake and some frogs, you
know, jumping around down there. Oh, yeah. And we had to drink that water, ‘cause that was the
only water. Well…this down here, see, that’s one of the toilets.
NM: Oh, right. Uh-huh.
THS: And this down here was a slaughterhouse. And they had a house there to live in, that’s
what the Romeros lived in, and then their dad worked on the slaughterhouse, cleaning the
slaughterhouse.
NM: Oh.

�THS: And, uh…So, uh, like I say, I mean, you know, we lived there and we thought it was very
fortunate. We had concrete –
NM: Yeah.
THS: On our floor, you know, instead of dirt.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And so, then when we all got a little bit bigger, then we went to pick potatoes for the – out
for Heck, over north of town.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: We all went. He’d come and pick us up at six o’clock in the morning in a big truck, and
we’d all get in the back of the truck. And then, uh, he’d take us up there and then he’d bring us
back at six o’clock at night. We picked potatoes, a 105 out in the heat.
NM: Dig ‘em up out of the ground?
THS: No, they’d take ‘em and plow; they’d have a tractor plow ‘em.
NM: Oh.
THS: And we’d pick ‘em up and put ‘em in a wire basket, and they’d carry the wire basket up to
where the trucks go to pick em’ up and then sack – put ‘em in a sack and –
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: They would come – uh, one of ‘em, two guys on the truck, one of ‘em would pick ‘em up
and throw ‘em, the sacks, on the truck, and the other one would, uh, write how many.
NM: Okay.
THS: ‘Cause we got ten cents a bag.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: A hundred pounds of potatoes, for picking ‘em. That’s what we – they paid us, ten cents a
sack.
NM: So, a bag was 100 pounds?
THS: Uh-huh.
NM: And you had ten cents?

�THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: So, at – at the end of the day, about how much did you make?
THS: Not very much [laughter], but it made enough. It made enough that we thought we had a
lot of money.
NM: Nice. Now, are you talking about when you were this age, like maybe you’re, uh, fourteen,
fifteen, something like that?
THS: Yeah.
NM: And these girls would all go with you?
THS: Oh, yeah.
NM: Do you know – do you remember their names, who these girls are?
THS: Yeah. Yeah, that’s my sister-in-law Jenny, that’s Mercy, that’s me, and that’s Carmen.
NM: And they’re all Hernandezes?
THS: No.
NM: No?
THS: No. A Romero, Garcia…
NM: Oh.
THS: And, uh, a Ramirez.
NM: Oh, okay.
THS: [Murmurs] Oh yeah.
NM: Did you say that’s you?
THS: Yeah.
NM: Aw. You’re looking right at the camera.
THS: [Murmurs] all the rest of ‘em. And I didn’t want to take pictures, but they insisted.
NM: That’s a cute picture.

�THS: But anyway, my daughter probably has one or two more. I told – she talked to me last
night, told her to start checking the – papers.
NM: Oh, good.
THS: And see if she could find some more. Or if she could find somebody that lived in La Yarda
that had pictures that wasn’t in the flood that they might have around.
NM: Yeah, that would be great. Wow.
THS: No, Peter was – Pete was in the flood, yeah.
NM: Mm-hmm. Pete Romero?
THS: Mm-hmm. Yeah. They was there.
NM: He was there that day?
THS: Yeah.
NM: I see – I see him every so often; he comes to the fiesta meetings.
THS: Yeah, does he?
NM: Yeah, he’s very busy with fiesta. Mm-hmm.
THS: He’s, uh, he – he was – he, that’s his sister right there.
NM: Oh.
THS: Which was my sister-in-law. Yeah, they took off and got – her and my brother took off to
Topeka and got married at 17.
NM: Oh, really?
THS: Yeah.
NM: So you’re mar – you’re – you’re related to the Romeros, then?
THS: Well, just by –
NM: By marriage.
THS: Yeah. By marriage. Mm-hmm.

�NM: Now, did you – when you were moved here and you were two years old, um, do you
remember your dad going off to work every day? Did he –
THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: Was he – did he get to stay home most nights, or did he have to go travel?
THS: [Laughs] You know, this is something that I never could figure out. During the floods,
‘course, between here and Lecompton, the – the water used to come over the railroad. Well, if
there was water on the railroad, the trains couldn’t go through.
NM: Mmm.
THS: You know, so they made a stop down here to Santa Fe.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Railroad, here. Uh, so they would take one of the men down there, and leave him there, all
night long. They’d –
NM: To guard the train?
THS: To – to see if the water was gonna come over the railroad.
NM: Oh.
THS: How in the world they were supposed to – to notify the Santa Fe depot, what I can figure
out, we didn’t have phones back there with – I mean, they sat there all night long with a fire
burning, you know, making sure. But the water didn’t get over the tracks, ‘cause if it did, the
trains would have to stop down here.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Well, down here at the Santa Fe depot, was underwater too.
NM: Mmm.
THS: You know.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: So they couldn’t –
NM: So, this – did it flood periodically? This ‘51 flood was a really big one, but –
THS: That was a big one.

�NM: But every so often it would flood?
THS: Yeah, it would – well, that’s the reason that my dad and Mr. Romero said – they – a guy
from, a bigshot from Santa Fe came down and told ‘em: “Look, let’s move you out, there’s a big
flood coming, you know – ”
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: “And we’ll send trucks to – to load all your things up.”
NM: Oh, they knew?
THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: Okay.
THS: “And – and, uh, move you out.”
“Oh, no, no, no. It’s gonna come up to the sidewalk, and it’ll go back down.” Well, it
came up to the sidewalk but it didn’t go back down this time. And that’s the reason we lost
everything.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Because they could have put it on trucks and taken it out.
NM: Oh.
THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: So, they had seen floods come and go –
THS: Oh, yeah.
NM: And they were not consequential.
THS: We used to – we used to get out there and fish, great big old fish. [Laughter] With a string
and – and a stick.
NM: Yeah.
THS: A stick off the – the trees, you know.
NM: Uh-huh.

�THS: And we tie a string on it; we thought we was fishing. [NM laughs] Great big old carp about
that big would come, you know, the water would bring ‘em back, and –
NM: Right, they would get landlocked.
THS: If it got a little bit higher, we’d get out there and swim in that dirty water.
NM: Oh, gee. Dangerous.
THS: It’s a wonder we didn’t get sick.
NM: Yeah, yeah.
THS: Yeah. We – we – we done it all. I mean, you know. And, I gotta tell you about this. This
Mr. Romero that lived in the slaughterhouse?
NM: Yeah?
THS: He was – they used to have a sale barn down here at the corner. Right on 11th Street, you
know, where that – that trail is.
NM: A barn?
THS: Right up on that hill, you know.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: There’s houses on this side, and there’s where Allen Press is, way back there. That used to
be Stokely’s, where they canned, uh, food, you know, beans and all that stuff, back there. Well,
they used to have sales every Saturday night. And Mr. Romero, he was no relation to any of the
Romeros. He used to go up there, he’d take a little – a little goat, or a little cow, or something,
you know. Not a cow, but a calf, you know.
NM: Yeah.
THS: And then he – he’d come by with a – a sack [laughs]. He’d tell us: “If you kids don’t say
anything, I’ll give you some meat after I cook it, okay?” [Laughs] He would tell us, of course we
wasn’t gonna say anything, ‘cause we didn’t eat meat that much, you know.
NM: Yeah. So he – he stole the calf from the slaughterhouse?
THS: Yes.
NM: Oh, gee.

�THS: Up here on the hill, there on 11th Street, where they had that – they had the sale every
Saturday morning.
NM: Oh. So, they were selling the cows and –
THS: The calves and everything.
NM: And he just snuck one out.
THS: He wouldn’t get the big cows, he would get the little calves, you know –
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Or the goats, you know. Then he, the goat, he would come down, dig a hole and – and, uh,
put some rocks down in there. And then he would put a – wrap the meat of the goat [laughs] and
put it down in there and then put ashes on top of that, and cook it all day and all night. And he
would say: “If you kids don’t say anything, I’ll give you some.” Well, we wasn’t about ready to
say anything if we was gonna get some meat, you know. But he used to do that quite a bit. And
then the, uh, the guys from…from the sale barn would come the next day, and they’d say: “Did
you kids see any – any, uh, we lost a goat.” [NM laughs] “A baby goat, did you kids see
anything?” “No, we didn’t see a thing.” Cause we knew that if we told them, we wasn’t gonna
get anything.
NM: How funny.
THS: And that was extra meat to eat, you know.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: Like I say, my mother cooked a chicken every Sunday. ‘Cause she raised chickens after a
while, after we was there. She’d cook the chicken every Sunday, the…uh…oh, the people that
came over would eat the chicken, if there was Sunday chicken left, we would eat it. If not, we ate
the soup off the chicken.
NM: Mmm. So, she had company?
THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: Every Sunday we had company, and she’d kill a chicken, ‘cause she – she raised some
chickens in the back, and so, uh, she’d kill a chicken.
NM: Now, you guys – did you all belong to St. John’s Church back then?

�THS: We went to St. John’s, when we had to sit on the three pews on the left-hand side. And we
had to pay a dime. They wouldn’t let us sit anywhere else in the church. We had to sit in the last
three pews.
NM: They had three pews set aside for the Mexican children?
THS: Uh-huh. In the back.
NM: Or Mexican-Americans, yeah?
THS: In the very back of the – of the church.
NM: In the back of the church.
THS: On the left-hand side.
NM: And you had to pay. Did other people have to pay to use the pews?
THS: I don’t know. I was too small, you know. I remember that – that my dad, on – when the
snow was so high, and it was so cold, he would carry me. But, you know, the men always walked
in front of the women. They’d never walk with them.
NM: Really?
THS: Uh-huh. That’s the truth.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Yeah, the men walked about three paces ahead of the women, and the women walked back
there.
NM: Hmm.
THS: And I always asked my mother how come they done that. “Oh, I don’t know,” she said,
“they just always done that.”
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Mm-hmm. They never walked together.
NM: Just the custom.
THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: Did you grow up speaking Spanish?

�THS: Uh, yeah.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: Yeah.
NM: And –
THS: I didn’t – I didn’t know any English till I went to school. I went to school at New York
School.
NM: New York School.
THS: Uh-huh. And they had a reunion there; I would have loved to have gone. A couple of
weeks ago, they had a reunion. I had – I went to that, uh…oh…that, uh, deal they had in Topeka,
you know, for the family. Uh, trying to think of the name. I’ll remember it pretty soon.
NM: Yeah.
THS: It was uh, you know, for all the family. So, I really wasn’t planning to go, but the girls
wanted to go, because they wanted to see, you know –
NM: Oh, a family reunion.
THS: A family reunion.
NM: Oh.
THS: Yeah, they had it in Topeka, in that church basement, in the church building over there.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: And so we went, but Andy said the only way he would take me would be in the – in the
wheelchair. And I knew he meant it. So I went, but he did take me in the wheelchair.
NM: Yeah. That’s fine.
THS: I don’t like to ride in the wagon – the wheelchair.
NM: Oh, you don’t? Does it make you nervous?
THS: It was my sister, my daughter-in-law’s wheelchair that had Huntington’s. And he still has
it. And so, he’ll bring it over and he’ll say: “I’m only gonna take you if I can take you in the
wheelchair. Or else we’re not going, Mama.”
NM: Well, I think it makes sense for you to go in the wheelchair.

�THS: Oh, it does to him, but not to me.
NM: Because then you get so tired, and dizzy, so, that way you can relax.
THS: I get really tired, too, them seats up there. And then they had this display of [murmurs]
cousins’ pictures on the table, but they was mostly from our – from my side of the family, you
know.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: There was hardly any pictures from the other side of the family.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: So –
NM: So, you knew everything. You saw everything that you already knew. You were looking for
new things to see.
THS: Yeah, the girls was, uh, took me up there, you know: “Mom, do you know who this is?”
Sure, I knew – [NM laughs] I knew ‘em all, you know. We grew up together.
NM: Sure.
THS: And, uh, when, um, uh, we went to, uh, pick potatoes, my, uh, cousins from Topeka and
Pauline came over
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: To earn a little money, ‘cause Mexicans wasn’t hired back, way back then.
NM: The what?
THS: The Mexicans, they wouldn’t hire ‘em.
NM: Nobody would hire you?
THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: Oh.
THS: And we went to eat, the only place we would be able to get a hamburger or a Coke would
be up at the bar. At the – even at the dime store. That’s – we couldn’t sit in a booth and – and eat,
they wouldn’t let us.

�NM: Really? And was it just understood, or was there a sign or…?
THS: No, they would tell you.
NM: Oh, they would tell you.
THS: They would tell you: “We will sell you food, but you can’t eat in in here. You’ll have to
take it with you.”
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Real quietly, you know, where nobody would hear.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: But that’s what they did. I remember Leo was, he – he was in Louisville, Kentucky. And
he hitchhiked home, so he could save money. Uh, he helped his mother pay the gas bill. She
owned a house there on Tennessee Street. 1321 Tennessee. And she rented it to Chinese people.
NM: Oh.
THS: And so, um, he always – she never had enough money because they didn’t pay very much.
But they did feed her. [Laughs] So Leo always, uh, he used to shine shoes in the service for other
guys to earn extra money.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: So that he could help his mother pay the gas bill.
NM: Oh, mm-hmm.
THS: And so, he hitchhiked home, and they met him up at the TP Junction. And just coming
down north, that north street, there was a place there, a restaurant that they called Deluxe.
NM: Yeah.
THS: And – and so he stopped there, it was in the – it was hot. And he said, he stopped there and
he had his uniform on. He stopped there to get something to drink. She says – the lady came over
and said: “We’ll sell you the drink, but you can’t drink it in here.”
NM: What did she have against Leo? He wasn’t a Mexican.
THS: Eh, no, but he – he looked like one.
NM: Oh.

�THS: [Laughs] You know, he’s dark-complected.
NM: Oh, my goodness.
THS: And so, she says: “We’ll sell you the drink, but you can’t drink it in here.”
And he said: “I had my uniform on. I said, ‘Lady, you can keep your drink. I don’t need it
that bad.’” And he continued to walk down to his mother’s house on Tennessee Street. But he
always remembered that, that they told him…
NM: Wow.
THS: But, you know, we was used to it. Now, um, I remember my brother came home one day
and – and he told my mom, he says: “Mom?” ‘Cause my dad didn’t make very much money on
the railroad, no. They paid him the least they could pay him, you know? And they worked him
all day in the hot sun and in the cold wind and the cold – cold winter. Anyway, um, they,
uh…um, Leo says, he used to shine shoes for the other soldiers so he could earn enough money
to send to his mother to pay for the gas bills.
NM: Yeah.
THS: So, but he said he was happy that the Chinese fed her. [Laughter]
NM: They’re good cooks.
THS: She wouldn’t – she wouldn’t have been able to get out and – you know, she was kind of
crippled too.
NM: Yeah.
THS: So, she wouldn’t have been able to get out. Now, there was some stories that, you know –
NM: Well, when you were at New York School, were there a lot of Mexican kids there?
THS: Oh, yeah.
NM: And did the teachers treat you okay?
THS: Yeah, they treated us really good.
NM: Were there white – or whiter Americans, I don’t know what the other people were called?
THS: There was a – there was a few colored kids too, because, you know, we all lived down here
on the east part of town.
NM: Uh-huh.

�THS: You know, we didn’t live on that part of, any of that part of town over there.
NM: So, the teachers just taught you…
THS: Yeah, they taught us just like they did the rest of the kids.
NM: That’s where you learned English?
THS: Mm-hmm. Yeah.
NM: Did you start in kindergarten –
THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: Or did you start in first grade?
THS: No, kindergarten.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Yeah. We all did.
NM: Yeah.
THS: We went on clear up to junior high. We went to junior high when junior high was on
Kentucky Street.
NM: Oh.
THS: There was three buildings.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: One on each side, you know, on…
NM: Yeah, that’s where Langston Hughes went to school.
THS: And you had to cross the street; when there was too many cars, you was late to the other
deal. And you had – we had gym on the third floor of the one over on that side of Kentucky
Street.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: So, if we was over there on – on that side of Kentucky Street, we’d have to cross the street,
run all the way up the stairs to gym, and if we didn’t make it, we’d get wrote up. We didn’t have
to come up and say, but everybody did, you know.

�NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: But all them stairs, you had to run up them stairs to get up to the gym [NM laughs].
NM: Now, when you went to that school, what was that school called; do you remember?
THS: Um…they called it, well, it was Central.
NM: Okay.
THS: Yeah, Central.
NM: Alright. And, um, so the Pinckney kids came into that school also? Were there kids from
Pinckney school and New York School, and – ?
THS: They all came up –
NM: Maybe some other school?
THS: Till they – till they, uh, moved the high school, Lawrence High, to the big high school.
And then they made that a junior high.
NM: Mm.
THS: Yeah. Up to that time that – we was there.
NM: And were you okay there? I mean, were the teachers nice to you then, too?
THS: Uh-huh. The teachers was good to us, and – and so was the kids.
NM: Yeah?
THS: I remember we had – well, I don’t know, but you know [murmurs] and Miss Six. She was
an older teacher. She was the nicest teacher you ever did see. There was quite a few colored kids
and they put us up there on the top of this – the one on – on, uh, the east side. The building on
the – there was one on the east side, one on the west side, and then one on the north side. There
was three buildings, yeah.
NM: Okay.
THS: And that was junior high. Okay, so you go in one building, you had a class there, and
maybe you had to go clear over to the other building to get there, to go to the other class.
NM: Mm-hmm.

�THS: Well, like I say, if you had gym, clear up to the top of the north building, and if you was on
the east building, you wouldn’t make it there. You got wrote up and you had to go stay after
school.
NM: Right. Yeah.
THS: So, um – I had a sore there.
NM: Oh, dear.
THS: I think – I think it has to do with that cancer I got on my nose.
NM: Oh.
THS: Yeah. And they took that one out, and I think it’s come back again.
NM: Mm.
THS: They took one out about that big on my cheek. And I had just had surgery for my eye,
because it was swollen shut.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And they just went to get the stitches out, and they sent me to a dermatologist.
NM: Oh, boy.
THS: He said they’d have to take that out. So now my eye is going shut again. But I’m not gonna
have to [murmurs].
NM: Oh, dear.
THS: But, no. But…and – and, Miss Six over there on the top of the – of the south building over
there, yeah, the south building, um…most of them was colored kids in there. Yeah. I don’t know
if they divided ‘em because of that, or – or what. But, there was about three of us Mexicans in
there with all these colored kids.
NM: Oh.
THS: Well, she couldn’t handle the kids. They’d get up and sing, and dance, and just carry on,
and she – she would say: “Now, kids, if you behave yourselves, I will give you an A!”
[Laughter] Well, we’d get an A too, ‘cause we was right there. Oh, it was so funny.
NM: So, what did Mrs. Six teach? Was she an English teacher?
THS: No, history.

�NM: Oh, history. Okay.
THS: Said: “If you behave yourself, I’ll give you all an A.” We all got an A, every one of us.
[Laughter]
NM: So, were you – were you the same kids all day, or did you change; switch around?
THS: No, we would change, because some of the kids took, uh, some kind of, uh, subject and the
others took another, you know.
NM: Mm-hmm. Right.
THS: And like the boys, they would play basketball or anything like that, so, you know, they
would change, they would go to – the girls would go to gym all – all at one time.
NM: Oh.
THS: Not at one time, a certain hour, and then the boys would go at a certain hour.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: But never together, you know. But, no, it was – it was real fun to go to school there. Then
when we went to high school, then it was a little bit different.
NM: Oh, was it?
THS: We didn’t, uh, we was just mixed in with everybody, and everybody treated us like
anybody else.
NM: Okay, well, that’s good.
THS: Uh-huh.
NM: That kind of surprises me.
THS: Yeah, it does. But, uh, the church, and if you ever go to the cemetery, you will walk behind
the – the garage –
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And you see, most of the older Mexican people are buried back there, because we wasn’t
allowed to be buried anywhere else in the cemetery.
NM: You had a certain area of the cemetery, yeah.

�THS: The back of the garage.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And we had to dig our own graves.
NM: Gee.
THS: And they had to make their own stone.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: They made it out of concrete and they wrote the names on it.
NM: Mm-hmm. Are your parents buried back there?
THS: Uh-huh.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Yeah.
NM: In the Catholic church?
THS: But, when Leo and I went to get our lots, I told him, he says: “Where do you want to go?”
I said: “I want ‘em over there by the lake.”
He says: “What for? You’re not gonna be able to see anything.”
I said: “I don’t care, I want…” So our – our tombstone’s just as you come in the gate.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: And then, uh, he said: “I want a vault.”
I says: “What you want a vault for, you’re gonna go to ashes anyway.”
He says: “I don’t care. I want a vault.”
NM: He said he wanted a vault?
THS: So he got his vault and [laughs] I got the –
NM: And you got the spot that you wanted.
THS: Uh-huh.
NM: Yeah, that’s great [laughs].

�THS: But, you know, most of it, it was because, we was, were – was able to, you know, be
buried anywhere then.
NM: Yes, yes.
THS: We didn’t have to be buried back – well, my folks are buried out there. Back there,
so…but Mrs. Mitchell’s buried – uh, she – she was a colored lady, she’s buried right next to
them.
NM: Uh-huh. So, did the colored people get buried in the – in the same area that the, um,
Mexican people did?
THS: When, uh, when Father, I think it was Father Larry, or one of ‘em, Father O’Neill, I can’t
remember which one it was, but that’s when we got, uh, and then of course when Father Tao
came, he was more or less, you know, for the whole. Uh, all the people in the church.
NM: Which one? Father who?
THS: Father Tao.
NM: Tao?
THS: Uh-huh.
NM: Oh.
THS: He was Monsignor Tao, I guess.
NM: Oh, okay.
THS: I don’t know if he was here before, um, when he was still…yeah, he – he married us,
Monsignor Tao, yeah.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Uh, I was in high school and my dad had been in the hospital for three, uh, three weeks in
Topeka. And there was no income coming in. And so, uh, Gladys Romero used to clean house
for Mary Tao. That was Monsignor’s sister. And so, she had to quit for so – well, she had breast
cancer. And she had to quit, and so she asked me if I wanted to go take that job over there. So
Mary, she hired me right away, you know. And – excuse me – and so, uh, she had me taking the
flowers off the altar and – and, uh, cleaning the – the house, you know, and
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And uh, uh…ironing, you know, tablecloths for the altar and all that. Oh, I done it all.
Yeah.

�NM: So, you kept the church clean.
THS: Yeah.
NM: And the –
THS: Well, they –
NM: Parish –
THS: They had people come in and clean the whole church, but –
NM: Oh, okay.
THS: Uh, she had me wash and iron the – the table – the altar cloths.
NM: Oh.
THS: Uh-huh. And the – the altar boys,
NM: Oh, the albs?
THS: ‘Cause at that time they didn’t have no girls, you know.
NM: Sure.
THS: Just boys. So I ironed all of them, so then when Leo and I got married, they had pictures
taken of her – him and I together with Monsignor and her.
NM: Oh.
THS: Oh, yeah. We got pictures, and then I asked her if she would stand up when we had Andy.
We was married three and a half years before Andy was born.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And she said yeah. So her and Leo’s brother stood up for Andy.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Yeah. Well, she got to where she was liking me real well, you know, she would just leave
me at the house and say: “Answer the phone, do whatever you want to do.” You know, they
would go somewhere and, so that’s what I did. And, uh, then I went to work in the laundry for
$12.50 a week.

�NM: Oh, I remember you working at the laundry. Yeah, where was the laundry?
THS: At Independent. Independent Laundry, right across from the seniors’ place, over on
Vermont.
NM: On Vermont, across from where the senior center is now? Okay.
THS: No, it’s across the street from there.
NM: Oh, okay. Across the street.
THS: Yeah. It was right next to the Brand building, where they had the W.R.E.N., it was right
next to it.
NM: Okay.
THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: So, what was that like? Was it all Mexican girls working there, or a whole bunch of
different girls?
THS: No, they had others. They had colored ladies working, and Mexican girls, and they had
white –
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: White women, but at that time, you know, we was kids, and everybody just took us under
their wing, you know, they just –
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: [Murmurs] Thought it was just a bunch of kids that just loved to work [laughter]. You
know.
NM: Well, it’s hard work, ironing all day.
THS: We worked from six…6:30 in the morning till 5:00 at night, mm-hmm. In that heat.
NM: And seven days a week, was it, or did you get Saturdays off?
THS: Ah, no, we had Saturday and Sunday.
NM: Oh, nice. Okay.
THS: Unless we – unless they was behind, ‘cause we had to do all the sheets of the – and the
pillowcases of the fraternity houses and the sorority houses.

�NM: Oh.
THS: And all the Memorial Hospital sheets. We had to do all the, I mean, Jenny and I used to, I
mean, leave piles of sheets, you know. But of course, they had some ladies put them in baskets,
you know –
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And then put their names up. But yeah, we done all of ‘em. All the fraternity and sorority
houses.
NM: Did they have big washing machines to wash ‘em?
THS: They had a big [unintelligible] Tommy. I think they had five of ‘em [unintelligible],
Tommy. And then they had, uh, women on that – they had another room. And then they had the
office upstairs. And the women in the other room, they sorted out all the clothes. Except the
hospital ones. And, uh, Tommy had to just throw ‘em in the washer like that.
NM: Oh, yeah.
THS: But you never know when – what you’re gonna find in that hospital.
NM: That’s what I’m thinking.
THS: He used to take it, take stuff and throw it clear over [laughs]. Make us jump. I learned how
to do it all, I learned how to press shirts, I learned how to fold clothes, I learned how to put
tickets on them, I learned how to separate things.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Yeah. I had to.
NM: I just gotta get one more story. I – I love that story you have of Christmas and how you’d
go to church, and then your dad…
THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: Would invite everybody home. So, tell me that story again.
THS: Yeah, um, we used to make tamales. My mother would get up at 3:00 in the morning, and
she would be on her knees with a metate, which is a rock, and then another rock, a big rock about
this – did you ever see one like that?
NM: Uh-uh.

�THS: Okay. It’s a big rock, about that wide, and about that, and it kind of slants down. And then
she used to have a – another rock about this – it was only about that wide. And it was about that
long. And so, she put the corn in there, and then get that rock, and rock back and forth, and back
and forth, till she got all that masa just right.
NM: Mmm.
THS: Okay. She’d get up at 3:00 in the morning, 2:00 in the morning, and be out there, uh –
NM: Outside?
THS: No, in the house.
NM: Oh.
THS: Yeah, they would cook the – the corn outside.
NM: Oh, they cooked it outside.
THS: Yeah, in great big old cans, about that big.
NM: Okay.
THS: Yeah, they built a fire –
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And cooked the corn. Then they would bring the corn in, and, uh, she would grind it. And
then they would take their hands and work with it, after she grinded it.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And so, then she had all the rest of the family come in and you’d take that spoon and you’d
put that corn on them corn shucks, you know, you spread it out just so-so. She had to have ‘em
just so-so. You talk about being young and trying to get that on there.
NM: Oh, yeah.
THS: You’d put it on there, it’d come back in your fingers. Then she would took – take a piece
of meat, and then she would fold ‘em so, and then she would stack – she would put a little
wooden thing, about that big, that my dad made with three – with…uh, four, uh, little doodads
about that big, just like a star.
NM: Mm-hmm.

�THS: Only it had one more than a star. And then, um, she would stack the tamales in that bucket
just so-so.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Because you had to have this, the steam – you can’t cook ‘em in water. You have to just
cook ‘em in steam. So, you let the steam go out –
NM: In between.
THS: And that’s what cooks the tamales.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: She would make two or three cans, and the cans was about that big, that used to be flour
cans.
NM: Yeah.
THS: Okay. And then, after – then we’d have to pray the rosary, and my grandmother: “We got
to pray the rosary before we go. You can’t go till we pray the rosary.” Well, it’d be alright if we
prayed the rosary, but after we’d prayed for John because he was sick, and – and Joe because he
was sick, and this and that, and us on our knees. She: “You have to get on your knees,” on a
concrete floor. You know.
NM: Cold floor. Mm-hmm.
THS: Then after that, we gotta lay the Baby Jesus down before we go to church. Okay. We gotta
lay the Baby Jesus down, and my dad would go to the store and he would buy bags of mixed nuts
and bags of hard candy, and they would have this great big old dish, and they would fill it up.
You can’t have any of that till after you lay the Baby Jesus down. Okay. Then we were allowed
to go and get a handful. [Laughs]
NM: After all those prayers.
THS: Then after, we’d go to Mass. Then after Mass, my dad would stand on – on the – on
the…steps of the church, after church. “Come on to the house for coffee and tamales. Come on
to the house,” my mother would say. They would set this great big old table in the kitchen and,
uh, so that’s…
NM: And that would be an afternoon Mass, or a – or a – ?
THS: No, midnight Mass.
NM: Midnight Mass?

�THS: Oh, we had to go to midnight Mass.
NM: Oh.
THS: We had to lay the Baby Jesus down.
NM: Oh.
THS: Before we went to midnight Mass. Oh, yeah.
NM: Ah, so it would be like…one in the morning by the time you were home.
THS: Yeah, by the time everybody left, it’d be six o’clock in the morning.
NM: Oh, goodness.
THS: And, uh, everybody would come in for coffee, my mother would make pots and pots of
coffee.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: For coffee and tamales, and of course, they start talking about way back in Mexico and
pretty soon it was six o’clock in the morning and [laughs] you know, but that was Christmas.
NM: What a party. Yeah.
THS: That was Christmas, and everybody always looked forward to it.
NM: Yeah.
THS: Not everybody came, you know, but we always had a houseful.
NM: Great story.
THS: Not just of our family, but…
NM: Yeah.
THS: You know, yeah. And my grandmother used to come, and she’d spend one month with –
with us, one month in Topeka with my aunt, and another month in Pauline with my uncle. And
then she would start over again. She said that way they won’t get tired of her. [NM laughs] So,
and she come over here, my dad would buy her a dress, and maybe shoes, or something like that.
Then she’d go to Matt’s in Topeka, and they’d do the same thing. ‘Cause way back then, you
didn’t get no Social Security or anything .
NM: No, there’s no –

�THS: So that was the only way that she could make it. Of course, when she lived there with ‘em
for that month, they would feed her and – and all that, you know, so…but no, she came, and
they’d, uh, I mean, coming from somebody that really owned so much stuff and then – it was
hard on her.
NM: Had to have been very hard, mm-hmm.
THS: But…they made it.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: You know.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And still they’re – she’s – she’s gone. She passed away. In fact, they’ve all passed away.
Actually, I’m the only oldest one out of the whole family.
NM: Mm.
THS: I mean, um…my dad’s and – and my uncles and my aunts, yeah.
NM: Mm-hmm. Yeah.
THS: Yeah. Everybody else has passed away.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: So…but no, we had – we had some good times.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And, uh, we – we played – we didn’t have to go out and find somebody to play. It was
always the boys against the girls. [NM laughs] Well, that’s because they would just push us
around and everything. Yeah, okay. “We’re gonna play football. We’re gonna play us against the
girls.” [NM laughs] “We’re gonna play baseball. Come on, girls. We’re gonna play against you.”
You know, and: “We’re gonna play basketball,” well, they – we had a – a basket that they had
cut the bottom out of it.
NM: Oh.
THS: And hang it up. And that was –
NM: That was your basketball.

�THS: It was always the boys against the girls, ‘cause there were so many. See, the – the Romeros
had eleven. Uh, we had seven. Uh, the Ramirez had, uh…ten, I think. And the Garcias had
eleven, too, I think.
NM: Gee.
THS: Yeah. They all had a big family, so –
NM: Right.
THS: We didn’t have to go out and – we – we just got pushed around. We didn’t have to go out
and find somebody to play with. [NM laughs] And then until we got a little bit older, and then
the Ramirez moved on New Jersey Street, right across from the Holy Rollers Church. [NM
laughs] The day that the Holy Rollers was gonna have church, we was all up in that porch, the
Ramirez porch, waiting to see them carry the people out. They would sing –
NM: Yeah?
THS: So much, that they would have to carry ‘em out.
NM: Wow.
THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: They would faint?
THS: We had a lot of fun. But, you know, we – we went to the movies, we had to sit way up
there in the balcony.
NM: You had to sit in the balcony.
THS: Yes, we wasn’t allowed to sit anywhere else in the movies. We did get in for ten cents, so
we had to save up fifty cents [murmurs, laughs]. And they had chapters, and we would go every
Saturday morning, to see the Lone Ranger and Gene Autry and Will Rogers and –
NM: Oh, yeah.
THS: For ten cents, but, yeah. We – we enjoyed it, and like I say, La Yarda, they had, you know,
bathrooms, but, oh, it was so cold [laughs].
NM: Oh, goodness.
THS: And, uh, in the house, uh, we had wood stoves.
NM: Mm-hmm.

�THS: And if the wood stove went out in the middle of the night, you were out of luck. You’re
gonna freeze to death [laughs].
NM: Did your dad try to keep wood in there all night?
THS: My dad did, mm-hmm.
NM: Oh.
THS: Yeah, he tried to keep it… ‘cause, you know, I still had one of my older sisters at home
with us, and then my other sister, she was married, but he was in the service, so she lived right
across from us.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: In the other row of houses.
NM: Did you help your mother cook and do all the chores?
THS: They did.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: I didn’t have to do it.
NM: You didn’t have to, ‘cause you were the youngest?
THS: Mm-hmm. The others always griped [unintelligible]. My mother always said: “Leave her
alone. She’s – she’s too young to get in here.” And so I didn’t learn how to do anything.
NM: Oh.
THS: No. Mm-mm. I didn’t have to, ‘cause, both the girls was –
NM: Well, how did you become such a great cook?
THS: I don’t know.
NM: Just experience.
THS: I just experienced – I didn’t know how to cook one bit when I got married to Leo. And he
knew how to cook.
NM: Yeah? ‘Cause he’d been in the army.
THS: Uh-huh. He knew how to cook real good, but I – I didn’t.

�NM: How funny.
THS: But I learned, mm-hmm.
NM: Yeah.
THS: And a lot of it, you know, I couldn’t remember what my mother used to tell us. ‘Cause she
used to sit me down with the other two [laughs] and tell us what we were supposed to do and
how we were supposed to do it.
NM: Uh-huh. But you didn’t remember.
THS: I was – I was always the youngest, so I didn’t have to. They did.
NM: Yeah.
THS: Yeah. And then in the summertime, like I say, we picked potatoes. Then we’d went to
California. My mother had an aunt up there. That’s where my sister got married. My dad was so
mad. [Laughs] He couldn’t find her, they took off and hid in – along the trees along the road.
And, uh, we used to, uh, the boys, well, they’d take me too, but they would take me till we got to
the peaches and apricots, because –
NM: Oh. Are we talking about California now?
THS: Uh-huh.
NM: Okay.
THS: They say that they made more money because they would be picking up, and they had little
buckets about that big.
NM: Yeah.
THS: So, all I did all day long was carry little buckets back and forth. The women was cutting
the apricots in half, and laying ‘em on this tray, my mother did it.
NM: Oh.
THS: To dry.
THS: And then they’d put ‘em in the oven.
NM: Oh. Now, when was it that you went to California?
THS: [Laughs] In the summertime.

�NM: Oh, in the summer. Just one summer, or different summers?
THS: No. Different summers.
NM: Several summers you went to California.
THS: We would go in time to – to work on the apricots.
NM: Oh.
THS: And then we worked on the peaches. We lived in a tent there. My mother cooked outside
in the pot.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: But the boys says: “Mom, we’d make more money if she carries them little buckets back.”
Well, you know, carry the – I was old enough to go to school, though, they made me go to school
in Cucamonga, and I’ll never forget that. I didn’t like that.
NM: The what?
THS: Cucamonga.
NM: What’s that?
THS: It’s a town in California.
NM: You went to school there?
THS: Where I went to school.
NM: Oh, so it was like a migrant children’s school, or…regular ?
THS: No, it was a mixed school, uh, but I didn’t know any – anybody. There was a row of
houses, great big old row of one-bedroom houses, I mean, it reached for about a mile.
NM: Yeah.
THS: Where they’d hire all these – where the let all these people live, to work on their grapes.
NM: Oh, on the grapes.
THS: Uh-huh.
NM: Oh.

�THS: So, we would go and work on the – on the apricots, and then the peaches, and then we’d
come back over to this little town, and the boys would work in the grapes.
NM: Oh.
THS: Well, the more grapes they picked, the more money they made.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: I must have been about eight or nine. Maybe not even that. I don’t think I was there…
Anyway, the truck would come and drop off all them little wooden boxes about that big.
NM: Right.
THS: Well, they didn’t want to stop picking, because the more boxes they would, so they
would…
NM: So, you were the go-fer, huh?
THS: I went to get them little boxes, I carried two, one in each hand, you know, and get over
there to ‘em.
NM: Were they cardboard or wood?
THS: Huh?
NM: Were they cardboard boxes, or wood?
THS: No, it was the wooden boxes.
NM: Ugh. Heavy.
THS: And so, I’d take one in each hand and then take ‘em to one, and then go get two more and
take ‘em to the other, and…
NM: Right.
THS: The other – my three brothers was working in the area [murmurs].
NM: Now, did you take the train to California, or how did you get there?
THS: We took the train.
NM: Oh.

�THS: See, my daddy got a pass, so we could go anywhere as long as the train ran.
NM: Right. And so, you knew people there that got you these jobs, and…
THS: Well, uh, my aunt, she – well you didn’t have to know anybody, you just go there. There
was plenty of people to –
NM: Oh.
THS: You know, they had to pick that before it would ripen.
NM: Right.
THS: And so then, when we went over to this other place after we got the peaches and we went
in the grapes, oh that sand was so hot, though, on your feet. But the boys would say: “Mom,”
‘cause the truck would dump the boxes clear out there.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Well, if they had to quit picking to get the boxes, then they made less money.
NM: Mm-hmm. There you go. So they got their little sister to help.
THS: Till I had to go to school, they told me I had to go to school. They told my mother she had
to send me. Well, she put me on this bus. I don’t know anybody on the bus, ‘cause none of the
people there was very friendly, you know.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: They all kept to themselves. She puts me on this bus, and we go all the way about from
here to Eudora on the bus.
NM: Mm.
THS: Maybe a little further. Then the bus goes in this place, the gates open. Great big old fence
about as tall as this house. The bus walks – drives in, they close the gate. There I was, standing in
the hallway crying, I didn’t know anybody there; I didn’t even know what class I was supposed
to be in.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: You know, she just put me on the bus and she says: “Go to the school.”
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And the gates didn’t open again until you got to go home.

�NM: Like a prison.
THS: Yeah.
NM: Wow.
THS: It was. To me it was a prison, anyway.
NM: Did – did anybody help you?
THS: No.
NM: No?
THS: Finally a teacher came over, and she asked me where I was from. And so, she took me
under her wing and took me to this grade, and, uh – uh, you know, told the teacher there and –
but none of the other kids ever talked to you. No.
NM: So strange.
THS: They wouldn’t even sit with you when you had lunch, because you’d go out in – in under
these trees, and they had –
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Picnic benches out there. None of ‘em would talk to you. They was Mexicans and white
kids there too.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: But they… oh well [murmurs], oh well. I made it. Then we’d come back and we’d go to
Minnesota to work in the potatoes, the carrots –
NM: Gee whiz.
THS: And the onions.
NM: Hmm. And you took the train out there?
THS: No. Raymond put us in the back end of this big old truck. Four families back there. And it
was cold back there, too.
NM: Oh, yeah.

�THS: In the wind, you know. And so, we’d go out there, and we’d sit – we’d live in the garage
on a dirt floor.
NM: Gee.
THS: One in each corner of the garage, you know. We all slept in the same garage.
NM: Ooh.
THS: We just had to, you know, and then the women cooked outside.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And then the man had some peach trees out there. And apricots. [Laughs] And, of course,
you know, we being kids, we’d go over there after dark and pick ‘em.
NM: Sure.
THS: Then the next morning he would come and he’d tell my – our mothers: “Would you please
keep your kids off of there.” Oh, we was hungry. You know, living in a place like that and
nowhere, you know. They’d take us to town on Saturday nights to watch a movie, you know, and
they wouldn’t let us off the truck, because they was afraid we’d get lost. So we sat in – on – in
the truck.
NM: A drive-in movie?
THS: Well, it really wasn’t a drive in, ‘cause all you got to see was the movie. You couldn’t –
they didn’t have no things to –
NM: You couldn’t hear it?
THS: Mm-mm. But we seen the movie. [NM laughs] Then they’d take us, uh, twice a week to go
take a bath in the – in the lake.
NM: Oh.
THS: Great big lakes in Minnesota.
NM: Oh, that’s the cold water.
THS: Yeah. Yeah. That’s where we went and got…
NM: And it – was that summertime, it was fall or…?
THS: It was fall, yeah, because that was the time we picked.

�NM: Oh, gee.
THS: But we made money, enough for the kids to come back and go to school.
NM: Yeah.
THS: You know, the boys. That was the important thing, that –
NM: Why did it cost money to go to school? Just for school supplies, you mean?
THS: For school supplies, mm-hmm.
NM: Did you have to wear a uniform to school?
THS: No.
NM: Okay.
THS: No. We – we wore just any…
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Any, uh, thing we wanted to. Of course, we didn’t look like the other kids did, but we was
dressed, you know, had shoes on.
NM: Sure.
THS: We didn’t have to go barefoot. Yeah, we done all that when we was in La Yarda. We
walked to school from the Santa Fe yards clear over to New York, and then to Central, and then
to the high school.
NM: That’s a walk. That’s –
THS: We didn’t have no rides. We just had, in the wintertime it was so cold.
NM: I bet. I’m trying to think, it must have been two miles to Central, a mile and a half maybe.
THS: Well, it was all the way on the other side from La Yarda, way back here, all the way on the
other side of Massachusetts Street, on Kentucky, and then high school clear over there where
Central was at.
NM: Yeah.
THS: So…but, we made it through, and we got, you know, things, after a while things got better,
like I say, we was able to sit anywhere in church, we was able to be buried anywhere in the
cemetery, and –

�NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And so, we was able to go anywhere and eat, you know, without saying: “No, we can’t
serve you.”
NM: Mm-hmm. That must have been hard for your parents, then, when they got here.
THS: It was. But, they didn’t go anywhere except to church, you know.
NM: Yeah.
THS: I don’t think my mother in her life ever went to the grocery store.
NM: Really?
THS: No.
NM: Did your dad go to the grocery store?
THS: Yeah.
NM: Oh.
THS: My dad went every two weeks, and bought pork chops. That’s…the only time we got to
eat meat, we didn’t have to [murmurs, laughs]. He brought a whole bunch of pork chops for us,
and then he brought back some fruit. Apples, oranges, bananas and everything. I always
remember he’d bring it, and my mother would divide each one of us a banana and an orange and
an apple, you know. ‘Course, the girls couldn’t eat theirs all. So what’d they do, we had no
icebox. They’d put it on top of the icebox. You know, they would eat one or two, and put the rest
of ‘em up there. What do you think, with three boys it’s gonna stay up there? No.
NM: It didn’t last.
THS: There would be arguments going on all the time because: “You ate my apple, you ate my
orange.” Mom says: “Well, you should have ate it, or you should have hid it instead of putting it
up there where the boys could – ” ‘Cause there was three boys, you know.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And so, but…that was the times that we had down in La Yarda, and like I say, we did play
a lot of games, but it was always the girls against the boys. They beat us every time. [Laughs]
And then of course we had, uh, places where we’d get to go out and dig caves on the side of the
–
NM: Oh.

�THS: Yeah, it was sandy ground, you know.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: Where the flood has – had been before.
NM: Right.
THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: And so you dug caves.
THS: So we used to dig caves.
NM: Oh, good.
THS: We had a lot of fun. We didn’t have to go out and find anybody else to play with.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Till later on, but…it was fun.
NM: Yeah. Well –
THS: I can remember all of that, and if there’s anything else you want to know, I’ll be more than
glad to –
NM: Well, I think I should probably let you go now, because we’ve been talking for, like, an
hour. I don’t want to wear you down.
THS: Oh, that’s alright. I’m not planning to do anything, no.
NM: Well, I’m thinking I’ll come back maybe next Sunday. What do you think?
THS: Sure.
NM: Yeah?
THS: Sure.
NM: Alright. Well, I’ll give you a call, see what’s a good time.
THS: Yeah. You still working?
NM: I work part-time.

�THS: Part-time.
NM: Mostly Mondays and Fridays.
THS: In Topeka?
NM: No, um, I’m doing home health now.
THS: Oh, I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to pry. I thought you was still working for the, uh…
NM: St. Francis? No, no.
THS: For the…oh…
NM: Oh, Democrats?
THS: Democratic.
NM: Yeah, well, I worked there for a while, and then there was a whole turnover, so I left with
the other people who were leaving, so…yeah, but I liked working there.
THS: Did you? Yeah, I know you said you did.
NM: Mm-hmm. [Laughs]
THS: Yeah, that’s what happens. They, you know, have turnovers.
NM: Well, your, uh, neighborhood’s changed. [Papers shuffling] I haven’t been here for a while.
THS: We got a church – [tape cuts off]
END OF TAPE

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                    <text>Interview with Teresa Hernandez Schwartz
Interviewer: Nora Murphy
Date of Interview: October 13, 2019
Length of Interview: 47:30
Location of Interview: Home of Teresa Hernandez Schwartz
Transcription Completion Date: 2021
Transcriptionist: Emily Raymond
Teresa Hernandez Schwartz (Interviewee): So…
Nora Murphy (Interviewer): So, um, did you know Father John Cousins got installed?
THS: Yeah.
NM: Yesterday.
THS: Uh-huh. That’s what Monty said.
NM: It was very beautiful, yeah.
THS: Says the archbishop was there.
NM: Mm-hmm. Yeah.
THS: So, yeah.
NM: The church was packed, full of people.
THS: Was it?
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Yeah. He said it was at the 4:30 Mass.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Yeah. Did you go to it?
NM: Yeah, I don’t usually go to 4:30 Mass, but, um, I just wanted to support Father. He’s not a
spring chicken, you know, he’s…
THS: That’s what that – that’s what Monty said. Do you know he’s been there at Haskell before?
I thought that I had heard about him.
NM: Oh, yeah.

�THS: Yeah. ‘Cause he said he was at Haskell for a while.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: So. But…he’s – he says he seems to be real nice.
NM: He is really, really nice. I wish you could – could meet him.
THS: Yeah. Well, maybe one of these days.
NM: Yeah.
THS: But Father, uh…what was his name that was here before, he lives up on the hill now.
NM: Oh, Father Curtis?
THS: Ah, yes.
NM: I’m gonna move this closer to you, ‘cause the machine is going.
THS: Okay, yeah. I – I’m sorry, but this goes on some Sundays, as you know, just –
NM: It’s a busy day.
THS: Yeah.
NM: Did your son come today, this morning?
THS: Yeah. And my grandson was here, too.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: You know, they just popped in and out.
NM: Yeah.
THS: And so, she came to some – think she only comes every other Sunday.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And then Anita was gonna have to work 12 hours today, but she decided she didn’t want
to, because she’s already worked. She worked 12 hours and then she – she got, well, she went to
work at 4:00, got off at 11:00, went back to work at – before 7:00, and then got off at, uh, 3:00
and then worked four more hours, so…
NM: Gee whiz.

�THS: Yeah. So…
NM: How many kids do you have?
THS: Four.
NM: Oh, four.
THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: So there’s Anita, and –
THS: And Andy, Anna.
NM: Andy. Anna. They all start with “A”?
THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: Who’s the fourth one?
THS: Well, except Richard. Richard.
NM: Oh, Richard [laughs].
THS: Yeah. He doesn’t, uh, start with “A”.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Yeah, he called me yesterday and he says on November the 12th he’s gonna have a knee
replacement.
NM: A knee replacement. Oh, that – he’s not that – he’s not very old, is he? Is he in his –
THS: Oh, yeah.
NM: In his 50s, maybe, or…?
THS: He’s, uh, Andy’s 61. And Richard’s 18 months younger than he is.
NM: Oh, okay.
THS: So yeah, they’re – ‘cause the girls are gonna be 55 in December.
NM: Oh, really?

�THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: Okay.
THS: Yeah. Anita’s thinking of retiring.
NM: Well, she’s young enough; she could have a second career doing something else.
THS: Yeah. She wants to go get a job, where she can have insurance.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: But Monty said today that if she went ahead and, uh, took disability, well she – she can.
She’s got that, uh, um, myasthenia gravis.
NM: Oh, she does. Oh.
THS: And so she – he said if she wants to take it, she could get, uh, her retirement from Frito
Lay and then get retirement, you know, disability.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: So, I don’t know. She’s – he’s gonna talk to her and see.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Sorry, I started to put a tablecloth on the table this morning, and this is as far as I got.
NM: Oh, yeah, well, it looks just fine.
THS: Well, everything is stacked up there. I’ll clean it off before I [unintelligible].
NM: So, what, did you have any more stories for me today?
THS: Well, um…did you hear about the – of the…prisoners of war that was right – right there?
NM: Visitors of war?
THS: The prisoners.
NM: Prisoners?
THS: They had – there was prisoners, a camp right there.
NM: Oh, prisoners’ ward. Oh, no, I don’t know anything about that.

�THS: Yeah. Well, it was right in front of the railroad tracks. And, of course, we was down that
little hill from the railroad tracks. We used to sit there and watch ‘em play basketball and ping
pong and all that. They used to be out there, yeah. They had their barracks and they had a fence
clear around it; it’s right there, just at the end of 11th Street.
NM: Oh.
THS: That’s what that was.
NM: Now, was this during World War II?
THS: Uh-huh.
NM: And these were Germans?
THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: Oh.
THS: German prisoners.
NM: Uh-huh, but you could just see them through the fence?
THS: Yeah, we used to sit on the railroad. Not all of us, just, you know, certain ones that wanted
to see. Sit on the rail – rails.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: And watch ‘em [NM laughs] play ball.
NM: What do you know?
THS: And then we used to, um, watch the circus come in.
NM: A circus.
THS: Uh-huh.
NM: Where did that set up?
THS: Uh, it would come in on the rail – on the – on the railroad.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: You know. I mean, not the railroad, but yeah, the railroad. And, uh, we could watch ‘em
unload the elephants and all these fancy-looking girls and –

�NM: Oh.
THS: You know, and all that stuff. Yeah, we used to sit on the rail and watch them whenever
they came to town. Yeah.
NM: Where would the circus set up; where would they set –
THS: Right up here.
NM: Really?
THS: Where I had to pick rocks up for years and I’m still picking, now I don’t get out there
anymore.
NM: In your yard?
THS: Mm-hmm. That was a parking lot.
NM: Oh, your yard was the parking lot for the circus, and the circus was a little bit north?
THS: No, it’s right up there.
NM: Oh, a little bit east?
THS: Yeah, where the park – next to the park.
NM: Really?
THS: You know where that glass house is?
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: Well right on the other side of the creek.
NM: Oh.
THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: So, you really haven’t moved very far.
THS: No, uh-uh. No. It’s – it’s, um, we used to…well, when we moved here, Leo started to
plant, so there was rocks – I have picked rocks up just since the last couple of years, when I
haven’t been able to. Used to pick boxes of ‘em, and then Andy would take ‘em up to his house
and put ‘em in his driveway.

�NM: Oh, really?
THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: Big rocks?
THS: Well, no, you know what they put in the parking lots.
NM: Oh, okay.
THS: Mm-hmm. About that size.
NM: Just gravel, uh-huh.
THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: So, there was all these rocks because it used to be a driveway. Oh.
THS: No, it used to be a parking lot.
NM: A parking lot, I mean. Yeah.
THS: Uh-huh, right there.
NM: Uh-huh [laughs].
THS: So, yeah, the garden was full of ‘em. Leo plowed the ground up, and you could see ‘em
[murmurs].
NM: Oh, isn’t that funny.
THS: Mm-hmm. But, um –
NM: And did you ever go to the circus when you were a kid?
THS: Uh-uh.
NM: No?
THS: We didn’t have any money.
NM: Oh.
THS: Yeah.
NM: How much did it cost?

�THS: Ah, I can’t remember.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Just – we never went to it, because we couldn’t afford it.
NM: Right.
THS: We could sit far away and watch ‘em, you know.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: We could sit over there just as you get off the railroad tracks coming down 11th Street.
NM: Yeah.
THS: We used to sit up in there somewhere and watch ‘em.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: But we, of course they had a big tent, we couldn’t see anything.
Anita: Mom, are you cold? Do you want your jacket?
THS: Uh, no. [Murmurs]
Anita: I’ll bring it to you.
THS: Yeah. Um…any – would you like to have something to drink?
NM: No, I’m fine.
THS: Okay.
NM: Thank you.
THS: Yeah, there’s water, and –
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And Dr. Pepper.
Anita: [Murmurs] Excuse me.
THS: What’s the matter? Oh.

�Anita: No, I’m just waiting for the thing to [murmurs].
THS: Oh. Anyway, uh, we used to do all of that, yeah.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: I mean, you know, the circus would come park their car – the rail cars right in front of our
house, so we would see all the elephants, because after they got ‘em off, they would go to
Massachusetts Street and have a parade.
NM: Really?
THS: And so, we used to watch – watch ‘em unload the elephants, and all these fancy girls with
their feathers on and everything, you know. Yeah.
NM: Were there big crowds of people to –
THS: Not –
NM: Come to the –
THS: Not – not when they was here, ‘cause we didn’t go to Massachusetts Street.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: We – we watched everything just off of sitting on the railroad track.
NM: So, but, was there, like, a tent where people would come to see a show, or was it…?
THS: Well, there was a tent, yeah, down here.
NM: Did they get a lot of people to come to the tent to see the show?
THS: Well, if you had money.
NM: If you had money [laughs].
THS: Yeah, we didn’t have any money.
NM: Right.
THS: So, we would just sit far away and watch people walk in. We couldn’t see any of the – of
the tricks or anything that was going on.
NM: Yeah.

�THS: You know, but we did see them unload all the – everything. Their wagons and –
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: And the clowns, and everything, we…
NM: So, when you were talking about the, um…the prisoners of war, and you were saying they
were over there, were – are you – are we still talking about your parking lot here? Like outside
your house, or were they –
THS: No.
NM: They were further down.
THS: I’m talking – I’m talking about in front of La Yarda.
NM: In front of what?
THS: La Yarda.
NM: Oh, La Yarda.
THS: See, there was two rows of houses like this; they faced each other.
NM: Yeah.
THS: The water pump sat right in the middle. And, uh, then the railroad was here. It was just
about from here – wasn’t even as far as from here to the Fields house.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: It was closer than that. ‘Cause it just went up the hill.
NM: Oh.
THS: We used to slide down that hill when we got back from school, instead of going clear
around.
NM: Ah.
THS: A lot of times, we didn’t do that too much because we would dirty our clothes.
NM: Yeah.

Formatted: Spanish (Spain)

�THS: So we didn’t, uh…but no, we used to see the prisoner camp. You know, you come down
11th Street
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Do you know where that path is? Where that – you ride your bicycles and walk?
NM: Right.
THS: Okay. When you go to the end of the, uh, there’s the [unintelligible] – there’s the City
garage there.
NM: Yeah.
THS: Okay. You just go that way, and, uh, there’s buildings right in there. Just right off the 11th
Street.
NM: Right.
THS: That’s where the – that’s where they, uh, put their, uh…they built fences. Real tall fences,
you know.
NM: Isn’t that something.
THS: And they would bring ‘em in on a – on a – on a, not a boxcar, but they’d bring ‘em in on a
regular passenger car.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: The train, and then they would unload ‘em there.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: There was quite a few of ‘em.
NM: Hmm. Gee.
THS: We thought it was kind of fun, you know, sitting up there watching ‘em playing ball.
NM: Very unusual.
THS: Well – ‘cause we knew that they was prisoners of war, you know.
NM: Uh-huh. Now, how old were you then?
THS: I was, uh…oh, my, let’s see. Well, it was during World War II.

�NM: Right.
THS: And I was born in 1930.
NM: Okay. So you’re, like, in your teenage years.
THS: Uh-huh.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: Yeah, some –
THS: Did you know anybody that had to go to war?
THS: Yeah, my brother did.
NM: Your brother?
THS: And my sis – and my brother-in-law did. And then my other brother, but he didn’t go to
war. He just joined the Navy.
NM: Oh.
THS: Uh, but my brother Joe, he was up there.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And my, um, brother-in-law, he was, uh…he was right in the middle of the – of the
shooting, and they shot him in the leg, and he fell, he couldn’t – couldn’t move, you know, he
was there. And the – he said the Germans was coming with their rifles and their bar – bar –
NM: Bayonets?
THS: Bayonets, yes. And they would, uh, stick ‘em to make sure that they was – that they was
dead, you know, and he said he heard ‘em coming. So what he did, he said, he pulled one of ‘em,
a dead one, over on top of him. So, he says they came along and – and, uh, stuck the one on top
of him. And that’s the only way that he got saved, and he was able to get out of the war.
NM: Wow.
THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: He came home.
THS: Yeah.

�NM: Did Joe come home?
THS: Joe came home, yes. Um, they both came home. Joe – Joe was, uh, in the Air Force. And,
uh, he was on the ground crew. And, uh, he said that, uh, the Germans was coming. And, uh, the
commander told ‘em to all go up, you know, with their rifles, you know, and fight. And he said
that they was just young kids in his, uh, in the squad…uh…
NM: Squadron?
THS: Squadron, yeah. My mouth isn’t just right today. And so, he says that the commander told
him, he started to run back. And he says the commander told him to shoot him.
NM: Oh!
THS: And he says, he told my mother: “Mom, I couldn’t shoot him. So, he told me, he said: ‘If
you don’t shoot him, I’m gonna shoot you.’” ‘Cause they didn’t want ‘em to run back, you
know.
NM: Yeah.
THS: They wanted ‘em to go forward.
NM: Right. And it started a panic if somebody runs back.
THS: And he says: “I wasn’t,” so they put him in the brig for six months because he didn’t – he
wouldn’t do that.
NM: Wow.
THS: And we didn’t know where he was at. We – we thought maybe he was dead somewhere,
‘cause we hadn’t heard from him. He used to write all the time to Mom, but he hadn’t wrote for
quite a while. And so my mother got, uh, this lady that was Spanish, she was [laughs], you know,
Mexican, that knew how to speak English.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: So, she went to her and asked her if she would go to the Red Cross and find out, you know,
something had happened to him. And so, she went, and, uh, then, uh, they got – they got – he got
permission to write to my mother and tell her that he had been in the brigs for six months.
NM: Oh, gee whiz.
THS: ‘Cause he wouldn’t have shot that – he wouldn’t shoot that –
NM: Mm-hmm.

�THS: Young kid. But he says: “I can’t [murmurs] shoot him or anything.” I mean, he said: “I felt
like running back.”
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: You know.
NM: Yeah.
THS: You’re scared.
NM: Oh, of course.
THS: You see all these people coming after you.
NM: Right. It seems so immoral to shoot one of your own.
THS: But he wasn’t hurt. When the war was over, he came home.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And my brother-in-law came home too, but he was hobbling for quite a while after that.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Wasn’t able to do that, but yeah. [Murmurs]
NM: Do you remember any shortages during the war, or things that were different? Did you have
to get those coupons, or…?
THS: Yeah.
NM: Yeah?
THS: Mm-hmm. We had a coupon book for sugar.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: And coffee was really hard to get.
NM: Oh.
THS: You know, they would just give you one, I think, every month.
NM: Oh.

�THS: But of course, we wasn’t used to drinking coffee. We drank milk all the time.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: We got it from the farmer down here at the corner. Down 11th Street at the railroad. He had
some apple trees, so we got the apples too.
NM: You did? [Laughs]
THS: In fact, he said: “Don’t pick my apples. I’m selling ‘em.” [NM laughs] But that didn’t
make any difference till he put a bull in the pen.
NM: You did what?
THS: He put a bull…
NM: Put a bull?
THS: A bull – a bull.
NM: Oh.
THS: Mm-hmm, you know.
NM: Yeah.
THS: Not a cow, but a bull.
NM: Yeah.
THS: Uh-huh.
NM: In with the apple trees?
THS: Yeah, well, we had to get in there to get to the apple trees. [NM laughs] So he put him in
there so that, uh, we would stay out of there, but you know, we’d get in there anyway. And then
when they got after us, we would just run as fast as we could. [NM laughs] And jump over the
fence, yeah.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: We went to get milk there, from the farmer. And he used to say: “Don’t pick my apples,”
you know. On the way home, we used to fill our pockets with apples.
NM: Oh.

�THS: Mm-hmm. But that was a lot of fun.
NM: Yeah.
THS: You know, he didn’t want us – he said: “I sell my apples.”
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: You know, there – oh, and Peter, his folks moved from Quenemo to Lawrence to the La
Yarda, and they lived there for a while. And then they moved back to Quenemo. And they lived
in Quenemo for a while, and then they moved back to Lawrence.
NM: Now, who was Peter?
THS: Romero.
NM: Oh, okay. Pete Romero?
THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: Oh, he went back and forth to Quenemo?
THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: Okay, and is that the same village that your parents came from?
THS: No.
NM: No.
THS: My, uh, parents came from Topeka.
NM: Oh.
THS: His parents came from Quenemo.
NM: Oh, yeah, okay. Sorry.
THS: Yeah. That’s alright.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: I can’t talk today anyway, for some reason [NM laughs]. My mouth is…sticking together.
Anyway, uh, yeah, they – they didn’t live in La Yarda all the time.

�NM: Yeah.
THS: In all them pictures that you see, um, all them people – did you ever make it to Watkins
Museum?
NM: Um, you know, I went over there, but I didn’t see the pictures of – I got distracted, so I’ll
have to try it again.
THS: They said they were on the third or the fourth floor. I don’t know, though they’re not on
the first floor.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: But all them people that are there…
Anita: Here’s those, Mom. Some of ‘em are originals, and I have copies of – that’s the one that’s
in the Watkins Museum.
NM: Oh, oh. This one?
Anita: Yeah.
NM: Yeah, wow.
Anita: And some of these are originals, but I do have copies of most of ‘em.
NM: Mm-hmm.
Anita: Um…so, um, I mean, if you want to take a copy, that’s fine; I wouldn’t take the original.
But, like, that’s 1951, when the – when it flooded.
NM: Yeah.
Anita: And…
THS: Is that where La Yarda was?
NM: In the –
Anita: Yeah.
NM: Are those the boxcars?
THS: Yes. Yeah. Them are the boxcars, mm-hmm. Them are pile of they call ‘em ties. They’re
the ones that they put on the railroad tracks –

�NM: Uh-huh.
THS: Underneath the rails.
NM: Right.
THS: That’s what my – my dad and all them used to do. Um…
NM: Wow. So, here’s one with houses in it.
Anita: Okay, here you go.
NM: So that’s north of 11th and Haskell, 1951 flood.
THS: This is a…[murmurs]…it goes this way. Hmm. [Long pause] This is right here on 11th
Street. Uh…this goes like that [murmurs]. I don’t really know what that is, right there.
NM: The building?
THS: The building, yeah, but that’s the boxcars.
NM: Oh.
THS: And this is
Anita: Isn’t that Poehler’s?
THS: Poehler, no, uh-uh. No, I don’t know, really, what that is. Um…well, these I don’t
remember. Oh –
Anita: And then there’s some more.
THS: We had it upside down. That’s where the German camp was.
NM: Oh.
THS: See? We had it upside down.
NM: So…
THS: See, there’s another –
NM: Are those the buildings the barracks where the Germans lived?
THS: Yeah.

�NM: Oh.
THS: See, there’s more buildings on there too.
NM: Oh, okay.
THS: I think there’s the same ones.
NM: Uh-huh. What do you know?
THS: We was looking at it upside down, that’s why.
Anita: I’ll look through the other ones, Mom, to see if there’s…
THS: Okay. I don’t know what she’s got there. That’s my sister’s house. And this is…this is my
mother’s, my mother and my dad.
NM: Now, is that at La Yarda, or a different place?
THS: No, that was on Rhode Island Street.
NM: Rhode Island? Uh-huh.
THS: Yeah. And this was too – that’s my mother, my sister, and, uh…that’s my – this is my
niece, my brother’s daughter, when she made her first Holy Communion. And that was my
mother and dad.
NM: That’s you, there?
THS: Yeah.
NM: Oh.
THS: Most of these pictures I think are from Rhode Island [murmurs].
NM: You’re so cute. Wait – Rita Hernandez, Avery, and Grandpa and Grandma.
THS: Yeah.
NM: Oh, so – that’s Rita.
THS: Oh, that’s Rita?
NM: It says –
THS: Oh, I guess it is. I thought it was –

�NM: On the back, it says Rita Hernandez and Avery.
THS: Yeah, it was Rita. I – I remember that.
NM: Awful cute.
THS: It was Rita. [Long pause] Let’s see…that’s my niece. That’s my…that’s my mother. And
that little lady was blind. She couldn’t see anything. But she could make it over to my mother’s
house and, um, visit my mother. I think this is – this is my dad and my grandmother, here.
NM: It says the little girl might be you, but I don’t know. Do you think that’s you?
THS: No.
NM: No, you were bigger than that in the Rhode Island house. Yeah.
THS: No, that’s not me. Mm-mm.
NM: Maybe it’s a different little girl.
THS: This is my sister, my other sister, my two cousins; one of them was a nun. This one was
the one that was a nun, right there.
NM: Oh.
THS: She went on to be a nun. This is my folks, this picture.
NM: Oh.
THS: I don’t know – did she show you something in here about –
NM: Um, there was a picture of a group of people from La Yarda in that book.
THS: Oh. Okay, then she knows, ‘cause she… [long pause, murmurs]
NM: You’re not in this picture, Teresa?
THS: No.
NM: Oh, okay.
THS: I was too young.
NM: A wedding or something.

�THS: Mm-hmm. See, the ‘51 flood, um…see the railroad?
NM: Yeah.
THS: That’s where the men used to sit and watch to make sure that the water didn’t get over.
NM: Oh.
THS: For the trains to go in. And this is, uh…hmm. [Murmurs]. This is the Santa Fe depot.
NM: That’s –
THS: It was an old Santa Fe depot, and they knocked it down and they built a new one.
NM: Oh.
THS: After the flood, because they couldn’t leave the other one, ‘cause of that water all inside of
it and everything.
NM: Right. Yeah, the one that’s there today is, like, 1950s sort of architecture.
THS: Yeah. We used to play across from there. We used to play in the sand piles. They had sand
piles there, and we used to get up and – that’s the only pleasure besides, you know, we used to
go up on the great big old sand piles and jump all the way down. [NM laughs] Mm-hmm. Yeah,
so…but, uh…I didn’t realize that that was, you know, some – but that’s, you know, boxcars,
there. Just right across from La Yarda.
NM: Yeah. Anita showed me a picture of some girls, and…let me find it.
THS: She did? Okay.
NM: Yeah.
THS: I don’t know where she got that book.
NM: Yeah.
THS: Ordered it or something. She’s always wanting, uh, you know, to go back into history.
Then I lost the paper with the DNA. Now I gotta go talk to [Roger Rachel?] and have her send –
I thought I was a Mexican, but we was – we’re Indians, wasn’t it?
Anita: Yeah, but they were –
THS: Mexican-Indians.
Anita: Mexican-Indians. They were from the United States side.

Formatted: Spanish (Spain)

�NM: Oh.
Anita: And then when they took Texas over, then they got pushed back. There’s – those are the
only last of the originals that I got, Mom.
NM: Oh.
THS: Okay.
Anita: So, those…
THS: Yeah. That’s me.
NM: Oh, that’s you as a baby.
THS: Yeah.
NM: The baby picture, or the girl picture?
THS: Both.
NM: There’s two pictures. Oh, they’re both you. Let’s take a look.
THS: Did you find that one about the – the girls in the –
NM: Yeah.
THS: She’s looking for – oh, you found it. Yes. Oh, yes. Uh-huh. She’s got the little boys, see
the water? They told us that the bridge – they had this old bridge, and if you got on it during the
‘51 flood, you could stand on it and you could – it, you could, uh, feel it moving back and forth.
NM: Oooh.
THS: Uh-huh.
NM: Oooh, that sounds creepy.
THS: See, all of North Lawrence was flooded. And so, um…and so first we was being girls, we
had to go and see. We get on this bridge and –
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: Feel it swinging back and forth. We got off of it in a hurry.
NM: You went and got on there, wow.

�THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: Look at this adorable baby picture, that is so cute.
THS: Yeah, that’s me. [Laughter]
NM: Looks really cute.
THS: Yeah, here we are – all are. And that’s Jenny, Mercy, Alberta, um, Gladys, me, and Toni.
Yep. The boys was – I think they was the Romeros. You know. Yeah, but, um, Peter and them,
they – they went to – they moved to Lawrence and then they moved back to – to, uh…is that
different from the – from the Santa Fe depot.
NM: Oh, yes, very.
THS: It was a lot different then.
NM: Different, yes.
THS: Yeah, they had to knock it down, ‘cause there was water all over the inside of it. Mmhmm. But, um, [murmurs]. I [murmurs] my next-door neighbor, Leroy Grummett. He had to go
in to get people out of North Lawrence, ‘cause North Lawrence was completely flooded.
NM: Wow.
THS: I mean, and people, you know, they told ‘em to get out, just like they told us, and –
NM: Right.
THS: And they wouldn’t get out. And so, he had a boat, and he would take the boat across and
he would get across all right, but on the way back, it would take him halfway to Eudora.
NM: Just the current, huh?
THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: Wow.
THS: So, anyway, uh…but he – he volunteered to do that and for the longest –
NM: Now, who was that? Who did that?
THS: Leroy Grummett.
NM: Leroy Grummett.

�THS: And for the longest time, his picture was at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, before they put
that other front in.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: Where the – where the pond, or the fish in there, the kids used to call it fishing. [NM
laughs] But, where you throw a little money in.
NM: Yeah.
THS: So they built that.
NM: So his picture used to be there, like, in honor of him for doing all that brave work?
THS: Yeah. Yeah, his picture was in there for a long time.
NM: Huh.
THS: But, uh, you know. It’s…it was fun, you know. Like I say, we didn’t need to go out and
find somebody to play with.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Or somebody to walk to school with. We – we always had a big crowd.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: So.
NM: Tell me again, what were the names of all the kids in your family?
THS: In my family?
NM: Yeah.
THS: Okay. Um, the…there’s my sisters. In California.
NM: Okay.
THS: And, uh, this is my other sister. And them are two of my cousins. That one’s the one that
was a nun.
NM: Now, what are your sisters’ names?
THS: Um, this one’s named Carmen.

�NM: Uh-huh.
THS: And this one was named Soledad.
NM: Soledad.
THS: Uh-huh.
NM: Wow.
THS: And then, uh, I have, uh, Pete and Joe and Chino and Jesse.
NM: Chino?
THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: What, is that short for something?
THS: Yeah. His name was Gabriel.
NM: Oh.
THS: But he had such curly hair, everybody called him Chino, which means curly hair in – in
English.
NM: Oh, it does?
THS: Yeah.
NM: Okay.
THS: He had real curly hair.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And so, everybody used to call him that because it was so short –
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: Instead of calling him Gabriel.
NM: Yeah. Did you have a nickname?
THS: Uh, no, my – my, um, brother that, uh, you know, was two years older than I was, uh, he
couldn’t call me Teresa. So, he called me, uh, “Chita.”

�NM: “Chita.”
THS: Uh-huh. ‘Cause my mother…and, you know, when I said the other day that – about them
sprinkling water all over? My grandmother used to keep us up on all that.
NM: Mm.
THS: Even when we was real little.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: She used to sit us and – and pray the rosary, and tell us what used to go in, you know.
What used to go in that little place where we used to live in Topeka. You know, where my
mother got up and watered the floor every morning –
NM: Yeah.
THS: And all that, yeah. My grandmother kept us up on that when we got a little bit older. Then
we didn’t, you know, where we came from.
NM: She told you how it used to be?
THS: Mm-hmm. Yeah.
NM: And she told you about old-time Mexico and the hacienda?
THS: Mm-hmm. Yeah.
NM: Those must have been good stories.
THS: Yeah, it was.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And, uh…you know, other than that, I don’t, uh, but anyway, that was her.
NM: Wow.
THS: That’s my dad and that was my grandmother.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Um, he brought her over. He would not leave her when he came to the United States, and
he would not leave my aunt and my two cousins. He brought them over as his daughters.

�NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: It’s a wonder they didn’t think that he had too many daughters all the same age. [NM
laughs] You know, because they was, you know, they was just about the same age.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: And there was four of ‘em, you know. All them four right there.
NM: Uh-huh. Yeah. And so then you were born here.
THS: Yeah.
NM: Uh-huh. And then, um, who else was born here; any of the boys?
THS: Uh, Pete and Carmen and Chole was born.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: In Mexico. Then they came to the United States when – when, uh – said that they had lost
the hacienda.
NM: Yeah.
THS: Because they was coming through and killing all the – all the men that was any – anybody
at all, you know. And so then, uh, they came back to the United States and Joe was born in
Kansas City. And then they went back, because they thought that they’d go and dig the – the
money out, but there was no digging money up, because it wasn’t worth the paper it was printed
on.
NM: Oh, yeah.
THS: So then, uh, Chino was born in Mexico, so there was, uh, Carmen – it was Pete, Carmen,
Chole, and Chino. And three of us was born here. Joe was born in Kansas City, and Jesse and I
was born in, we call him – well, we called him “Nutty” all the time, for Natividad.
NM: Oh.
THS: Till he went to work at the schools, and then the teachers refused for the kids to call him
that.
NM: Nutty. [Laughs]
THS: Yeah. They didn’t – they didn’t like it. They told ‘em that they – they had to call him
Jesse.

�NM: Okay.
THS: Or Natividad, ‘cause his name was Jesse Natividad.
NM: Oh, okay.
THS: But, yeah, there was a big history, but…
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: It’s, uh…I didn’t know that that was Rita. I guess it was Rita. Huh. And that hasn’t been
too long before my mom and dad passed away.
NM: Mm.
THS: ‘Cause, um…she’s married. I mean, she’s married on – on this – yeah, she’s married to –
you can tell that, uh…
NM: That’s a cute picture.
THS: I mean, she wasn’t married there in the picture –
NM: No.
THS: But she – she was married later on.
NM: Right.
THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: So, when did your mom and dad pass away?
THS: My mom and dad passed away, let’s see, the girls was, uh, in junior high.
NM: Oh.
THS: One in high school.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: Um…they asked me – my dad had – my dad was always falling. He had high blood
pressure. He was falling out in the yard, and the neighbors would call me and tell me, you know:
“Your dad has fallen, Teresa.” So, I kept getting in the car and go right up there and get
somebody to come pick him up, and – and, uh, he kept telling me: “Put us in a nursing home. Put
us – ”

�NM: Oh.
THS: I said: “I can’t do that.” I would go in the morning, give my mother an insulin shot, and my
dad would fix ‘em some – for them too, he would fix ‘em some eggs and toast for breakfast. And
then my sister-in-law, Jenny, would take lunch, and then I would take supper in for her. And, uh,
uh, put my mother to bed.
NM: Aww.
THS: You know, she was always in bed anyway, but I mean, you know, got her ready for bed.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: And, uh, he kept telling me, he says: “Put us in the nursing home.”
And I kept saying: “I can’t do that. I can’t do that.”
He says: “You got four kids. You can’t. And your husband’s working. You can’t
not…leave ‘em all the time and come over here every day, day after day.” You know, they was
living on, uh, Rhode Island and –
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: So finally, I went up there one day, and he says: “Look, I have asked you and asked you to
put us in the home. And you don’t listen to me.”
I said: “I can’t do it.”
He said: “Yes, you can. You can do it.” And so, my – my brother in Topeka, his wife had
a sister that’s a nun, and St. Joseph, uh, nursing home.
NM: Oh.
THS: In Kansas City.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And so, he was over that afternoon, and – and they told – and my dad told ‘em:
“See, we keep telling her to put us in the nursing home. She just won’t listen to us.”
He said: “You know, [Aunt?] Rita works in the… ” Her – her, uh…her name really
wasn’t Rita any more, ‘cause she was a nun, you know, and they change their names.
NM: Right.
THS: And so, he said: “I’ll call her.” So he gets on the phone and calls her. Within an hour they
was over at the house [NM laughs] Her and another nun.
NM: Problem solved, huh? Wow.

�THS: And so, they signed the papers. He – my brother was there too. They signed the papers and
they said: “We’ll be ready for ‘em tomorrow.”
NM: My goodness.
THS: And my brother said: “Alright, I’ll bring ‘em down.”
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: So, I was gonna drive, and he said: “No, I don’t want you to drive.” He said: “I’ll drive.”
So, him and my sister-in-law drove us, and then we took my mom and dad. Two weeks later, my
– well…a week later he – my dad had a stroke.
NM: Oh.
THS: So they put him in Providence Hospital.
NM: Oh, okay.
THS: And then, uh, they sent him back to the…to the nursing home.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And, uh, he died a week later.
NM: My goodness.
THS: Two weeks after.
NM: Wow.
THS: Mm-hmm. So, I got the feeling that he probably knew that he was going, and he wanted
my mother in a…‘cause I had had her here when she had broke her hip. I had had her here for
about a month and a half, here at the house, and – and she didn’t want to be here, because she
says: “You’re taking the kids’ bedroom,” you know. We only had three bedrooms, you know, the
boys and the girls and then ours. And, uh…we, uh – Leo says: “We have to bring her home from
the hospital.” Him and I slept out on the back porch, next to the birdfeeder. It was so cold.
NM: Oh! So that you could talk privately.
THS: Yeah. Yeah. So that my mother wouldn’t be worried that we was – that we didn’t have a
place to sleep. [NM laughs] Anyway, he – he died two weeks later. We was all there.
NM: Mm-hmm.

�THS: Except my brother, he – my sister-in-law was a diabetic, and she forgot her pills, so he was
on his way home when we called him and told him that Dad had passed away.
NM: Oh, yeah.
THS: He felt bad, so bad, because we had been there all night. We went in there about two
o’clock in the afternoon, stayed there all night. All of us, you know. There was no chairs, there
was two chairs in there. The rest of us was – sitting on – on…my mother’s bed, where she was
laying, on the opposite bed.
NM: Oh.
THS: You know. And, uh, some of ‘em was…uh, leaning against the windowsill.
NM: Yeah.
THS: You know.
NM: Yeah.
THS: And the – the boys, some of ‘em was sitting on the floor.
NM: Oh, goodness. Yeah, yeah. A full house in that room.
THS: Mm-hmm. And so then, when he passed away, I asked my mother, I says:
“You want to go home with me? I can make room for you now.”
And she says: “No. They take me to Mass every morning; they take me to the rosary
every afternoon.”
NM: Uh-huh. Was your mom a religious woman? Mm-hmm?
THS: And she says: “I don’t want to go home.”
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: She didn’t know – speak English, I mean, a word of English. She just – all she learned how
to say is: “Nurse, bedpan.”
NM: Oh.
THS: She was a diabetic, and so, you know, that’s all she learned.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Uh-huh. But, uh, Rita would go over and see her, pretty near every day.

�NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And then, um, you know, they would let us know. And when she got real sick, they let us
know. We was all there in the end, you know, when she passed away.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Um, the doctors told us: “She’s got pneumonia. If we go ahead and clean her lungs out,
she’ll last two weeks. If we let her go, uh, she’ll be gone in three days.”
NM: Mm.
THS: And, uh, so then the kids says: “Well, you’re the one that took care of her. You make up
your mind what you want to do.”
NM: Oh, brother.
THS: I said: “Well, we’re all family.”
They said: “No, you – you talk to the doctor. You tell her what you want to do.”
I said: “You know, I can’t do that.”
They said: “Yes, you can.” So, I went in and I talked to my mother; she was still talking.
She said: “Let me go. Your dad’s already gone. Don’t do anything to me.”
I said: “Mom, I can’t do that to you.”
She said: “Yes, you can. You got your kids, you got your husband. Go ahead. Let me
go.”
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: So, I told the doctor, I said: “She wants to go. She doesn’t want to stay.”
He said: “Well, that’s fine.” She was gone in three days.
NM: Wow.
THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: Just like he said.
THS: Yeah, just like he said. She was gone in three days.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: So then we sold the house, and we used all the money for…to pay for both the funerals.
NM: Mm-hmm, sure. And were they buried through St. John’s?
THS: Mm-hmm.

�NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. Both at St. John’s.
NM: Where – where did you meet Leo?
THS: Uh…he used to go to church. And I didn’t think much about it, because he was in the
service. And I always thought he was a [laughs]. He – he was – I always thought that he was
really thought he was really some – somebody, because his shoes was always so shiny. [NM
laughs] You could see yourself in them, you know? And he caught up with me. We used to go
every Saturday; a whole bunch of us girls used to go to the Meadow Acres in Topeka.
NM: Meadow Acres. Uh-huh.
THS: That’s a – that was a nightclub.
NM: Oh, okay.
THS: And it was close to Forbes Fields. So, all the guys from Forbes Fields used to go over
there.
NM: Oh.
THS: And we would dance all night long, and about a half an hour before we left [unintelligible],
the dance was over, we would sneak out and go.
NM: Okay.
THS: Yeah. And get out, and – well, then they’d – our folks says: “You gotta go to Mass.” So
went to Mass and he caught up with me, and he – he started making a conversation. I didn’t want
to listen to him [laughs]. I was tired; I wanted to go home and lay down, ‘cause I had to go to
work on Monday.
NM: Oh, no.
THS: And – and so he says: “How would you like to have a cup of coffee?”
I said: “No, I don’t wanna have a cup of coffee. I wanna go home.”
So he said: “Alright.” So then the next Sunday, it happened again. Then the third Sunday,
I thought: “Gosh. If he – if I don’t go have coffee with him, he won’t leave me alone.” So – oh,
sorry.
NM: That’s okay.
THS: Anyway, uh, we went to have coffee, to the Deluxe Café there on Massachusetts Street.
And so then he asked, you know, he started asking me questions:

�“Do you work? Where do you work? How long have you been there?” And all this stuff,
you know. I was so tired, I didn’t even care what I was saying. Well, Monday morning comes. I
come out with my friend Jenny to go across the street to have coffee on our coffee break. And
who should be out there [NM laughs] but him and his friend Gene.
NM: Oh.
THS: He says: “We came to take you for coffee.”
I said: “I only have fifteen minutes.”
He says: “Well, it won’t take long.” So the next day, he was there again. With Gene. The
third day, it was him by himself [laughs]. Gene wasn’t with him. [NM laughs] Anyway, then, uh,
the next day, he was there, till they changed shifts when he – when he had to go on days, he
wasn’t there, because he would change shifts every other week.
NM: Oh, okay.
THS: Mm-hmm. Midnight shift, and then the 4:00-12:00 shift, and then day shifts, so, um…then
every day he was out there, and the ladies down where they was sorting the clothes out in that
big room:
“Guess who’s out there? Guess who’s out there?” [Laughs]
“I don’t know who’s out there,” you know? [NM laughs] So, then finally we decided that
we, you know, we started going together, and when we went to the Meadow Acres, we went
together.
NM: Oh.
THS: Yeah, we took all the rest of the girls, but we went together.
NM: Did Leo like to dance?
THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: He did?
THS: Yeah. He was a good dancer.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Yeah. And so, you know, uh, then after that it was just…you know, you never got married
way back then. I guess you – you know, I was a Mexican.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And he was German, you know. You didn’t get married out of your race.
NM: Mm.

�THS: Way back then.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: You know, it was – it was hard. You should have heard my dad.
NM: Really?
THS: Yes. But Leo had a way that he – people most – most people would like him, you know?
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And so, after that, Dad – Dad began to where he was pretty good with him. And then, uh,
when we moved out here, Dad used to come out and help him, you know, clean weeds, the
weeds out of the garden and all of that.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Yeah. But…we was married 57 years.
NM: Oh, my goodness.
THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: A good long time.
THS: It is. It’s a long time.
NM: Well, I’m gonna have to get going.
THS: I’m sorry, I – you don’t – I was talking so much, I don’t know what you can use out of
there or not, but, yeah.
NM: Oh, yeah. That was great. I enjoyed hearing your stories. I – I can’t come for the next
couple of weeks though. I’ve gotta go do something else, so…
THS: Okay, that’s fine.
NM: Maybe in November I’ll swing by, see what you’re up to.
END OF TAPE

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                    <text>Interview with Teresa Hernandez Schwartz
Interviewer: Nora Murphy
Date of Interview: October 13, 2019
Length of Interview: 7:31
Location of Interview: Home of Teresa Hernandez Schwartz
Transcription Completion Date: 2021
Transcriptionist: Emily Raymond
Teresa Hernandez Schwartz (Interviewee): …Them all up after I got married. With my mother
and all the rest of the older women. We used to go to the basement to make that hot chocolate,
stirring it from 5:30 in the morning till eleven o’clock at night.
Nora Murphy (Interviewer): Oooh.
THS: I mean, till 9:00 in the morning.
NM: Wow, four hours?
THS: And then we’d rush up and go to Mass.
NM: Gee.
THS: We used to do that every year for our Lady of Guadalupe Day.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And then of course we’d dance, you know.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And, uh, um…you, know, uh, the women. Because when the – when the women from the
church had a – a…
Unknown, possibly Anita: A dinner.
THS: They wouldn’t let us out in the – where they was serving.
NM: Oh.
THS: [Murmurs] The Mexicans stay in the kitchen washing dishes. So Miss DeAmber, Miss
Adamson, Miss Greeley, and about three more ladies. They felt – I guess they felt bad for us,
‘cause they told us that they wasn’t going to, uh, they wasn’t going to…um…they wasn’t going
to let us be treated like that.
NM: Oh.

�THS: So they started the group, where they had all these Mexican ladies. Started a group for the
ladies. And then, uh, we had a colored lady, Mrs.…oh, I can’t think. She’s been – she’s buried
next to my fath – to my folks up there Mt. Calvary. She came in our room. And we used to have
[murmurs], so way back then was when they started the Mexican fiesta.
NM: Oh.
THS: Uh-huh. Way back then, because we was all young enough that we couldn’t – all of us
girls was in there. And, uh, Mrs. DeAmber used to say – she used to be something else – her
husband took pictures here in town for people. You know, wedding pictures and –
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: Anyway, she used to say: “I don’t like the way they treat you. They won’t let you in their –
in their, uh, groups. So we’re gonna do a group ourselves.”
NM: Oh.
THS: Okay.
NM: Now, she wasn’t Mexican, right?
THS: No.
NM: Right? Okay.
THS: No, uh, Mrs. DeAmber, Mrs. Greeley, Mrs. Adamson, none of them was – was Mexicans.
But because they treated us so bad, they decided they was going to form their own group with
the Mexicans.
NM: So, did they form a group for the – the mothers, too, or just for the children?
THS: No, for the mothers.
NM: Oh, for the mothers to get together.
THS: Yeah, that was for the mothers, yeah.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And, uh, then this when they started – this was way, way before then.
NM: Right.
THS: But that’s when they started making the – they started the Mexican fiesta, too. Uh, way
back then, Loretta used to run it – Loretta Chavez.

�NM: Loretta? Uh-huh?
THS: She used to –
NM: She’s still there [laughs].
THS: Does she – does she still work there?
NM: Yes, she’s still cooking.
THS: I didn’t know if she did or not.
NM: She’s the lead – she’s the head of it.
THS: Oh, is she?
NM: I mean, she – ‘cause she has all – everything in her mind, like how everything has to go,
and how many…how many beans and how many pounds of pork and…she has that all
memorized, so…
THS: Yeah.
NM: She’s kind of in charge, yeah.
THS: I know what it’s like, ‘cause, see, uh, we used to clean all them peppers, Leo and I.
NM: Oh.
THS: Forty pounds of peppers.
NM: Oh.
THS: And the beans. Oh, my. We used to sit out on the back porch, Leo and I cleaned all the
peppers and all the…
NM: For the Mexican fiesta?
THS: The next morning he would say – he would say, you know: “My fingers are kind of hot.”
NM: Oh.
THS: I said: “That’s because you’re not a Mexican.” [NM laughs] Yeah, we used to – we used to
do that.
NM: The ladies told me they used to make the tortillas from scratch.

�THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: Yeah, now, you know, they buy the tortillas now.
THS: I used to make that bread from scratch, too.
NM: Oh.
THS: And, uh, they – one year they told us, they says: “Well, we’re gonna let all the…all the
good women make the bread, and all the people that – and all the women that don’t know too
much make the cookies.”
NM: Oh, for Our Lady of Guadalupe?
THS: So they looked at me and they said: “You make cookies.” [Laughter] And then, uh, the last
year I went to help, uh, they went to put me to, uh, make burritos. I know how to make burritos.
Anyway, somebody – somebody went and told Loretta that I was too slow.
NM: Oh.
THS: So, I said: “To heck with it; I’m going home. You do ‘em.” You know.
NM: Yeah.
THS: And they told Joyce Mace too, Monty’s wife, [murmurs], they told her the same thing.
NM: Oh, no.
THS: I mean, you know, they says: “You’re too old. You – you can’t make ‘em fast enough.”
But we could do everything else fast enough.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: Like wash dishes.
NM: Oh.
THS: In the kitchen.
NM: Sure.
THS: Mm-hmm. Yeah. We could do all of that, but…
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Oh, well.

�NM: Well, you know, they didn’t do Our Lady of Guadalupe last year.
THS: Because, uh, I asked them – I was gonna make cookies, believe it or not. [NM laughs] I
had everything ready to make ‘em.
NM: Yeah.
THS: And they decided that they wasn’t gonna make ‘em, because the other group that goes to
church…had their own Our Lady of Guadalupe deal.
NM: Oh, like the New Mexicans.
THS: Uh-huh.
NM: That are –
THS: And they don’t really associate with these other women.
NM: Oh.
THS: I mean, you – you notice that when they – they used – if you ever went to the basement
[murmurs] hardly see any of them people down there.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: It was all the Mexicans that had been here for a long time.
NM: Right.
THS: So then they decided, I guess Loretta did, ‘cause she’s always been in charge of it, that
that, you know, they’d make theirs at midnight, and it was too soon to make it – make it the next
morning for us, but we used to go in there at 5:30 and start a batch of [unintelligible]. You
couldn’t burn it.
NM: Mm.
THS: You know, you had to be really careful.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Stir, and you couldn’t stop it, you know?
NM: Wow.

�THS: My sister-in-law done that for years and years. And I used to pick all the older Mexican
people, like her mother, my mother, Mrs. Garcia, all of ‘em.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And take ‘em up to the church, so they could start making the chocolate. Mm-hmm.
NM: Wow. That’s a labor of love.
THS: Yeah, it was [murmurs]. But that’s the reason – I said: “Oh, me. And here I got all this
stuff to make the cookies, and I won’t get to make ‘em.”
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: I’ll make some for my family this year. Still here, you know.
NM: It’ll be another good Christmas. [voice overlaps with THS]
THS: Yeah.
NM: Yeah. I’d better get going now.
END OF TAPE

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                    <text>Interview with Teresa Hernandez Schwartz
Interviewer: Nora Murphy
Date of Interview: November 14, 2019
Length of Interview: 65:25
Location of Interview: Home of Teresa Hernandez Schwartz
Transcription Completion Date: January 29, 2021
Transcriptionist: Emily Raymond
Teresa Hernandez Schwartz (Interviewee): Mashed potatoes and gravy. Uh, Andy always comes
and has dinner with me on Sunday.
Nora Murphy (Interviewer): I hope you’re not doing Thanksgiving dinner by yourself.
THS: No. [NM laughs] Andy’s cooking the turkey and ham. Yeah.
NM: Oh, good.
THS: And I’m, uh, I’m just gonna help the girls.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: But Anna showed up with, um, breast cancer.
NM: Really?
THS: Mm-hmm. So, she’s going on chemotherapy.
NM: Oh, my gosh.
THS: I don’t think she’s gonna be much good for us, but, uh, and then I’m supposed to go on the
12th and get this taken out, the cancer. They hope they can get it all out.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: If they can’t – if they can get it all out the first time, I’ll be there and it’s just no time at all,
but if they can’t get it out, then I’m gonna have to stay for about four hours –
NM: Oh.
THS: Till they get everything checked and make sure, and then go back in again and see if they
can get some more out, but…oh well. That happened before with this.
NM: Oh, the skin cancer, yeah.
THS: They took one out about that big.

�NM: Really?
THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: Wow.
THS: That hasn’t been a year [murmurs].
NM: Where do you go for that?
THS: I went to Overland Park.
NM: Oh, you did? Oh.
THS: Mm-hmm. Yeah. Uh, now, this time I’m going to Topeka.
NM: Oh.
THS: They said I could go to Overland Park or go to Topeka.
NM: Oh, okay. I’d rather go to Topeka, it’s a lot closer.
NM: Right. Yeah, me too.
THS: Andy’s going – Andy will always drive, but it’s so much closer than – than Overland Park.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Then you gotta walk in and you gotta go clear down this hall, and he insists on taking me
in a wheelchair. He will not let me walk. And so then we get the elevator and go, I don’t know
how many floors.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: So…but, I’d rather not go, but –
NM: Well, you –
THS: I ain’t got much choice.
NM: Gotta get certain things done.
THS: Yeah.
NM: Taken care of. Right?

�THS: Uh-huh. Right.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: But I – you know, I still – I still do laundry and cook and –
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: I don’t cook every day, ‘cause Anita, the – she likes salads and stuff like that. She’ll rather
eat salad. [Telephone rings] Excuse me.
NM: Oh, sure.
[THS has telephone conversation until 3:17]
THS: I have an appointment with – excuse me.
NM: Yeah, sure.
THS: With internal medicine at 10:30 on – on Friday, and then I have one with Dr. Costello, the
heart doctor, at one o’clock, so…
NM: Oh, the same day.
THS: Yeah.
NM: Oh, okay.
THS: Which will work out really good.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Because Anita’s off on Fridays. So, she’ll take me.
NM: Oh, that’s perfect. Yeah.
THS: When she can’t, then Andy will take me, but…
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Uh, he’s so busy out of town all the time. He –
NM: Is he the one that fixes the electrical transformers?
THS: Mm-hmm.

�NM: Boy, he must have had a busy year.
THS: Yeah.
NM: Storms everywhere.
THS: Yeah, he won’t go anymore.
NM: Oh, he won’t.
THS: Mm-mm. He told, well, he’s been there since he graduated from high school.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And he’s going to, uh, retire in four years.
NM: Really?
THS: So he’s – he’s pretty much on his own, you know. They let him go ahead and – but he told
‘em, he said: “I don’t wanna go anymore – ”
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: To all them places where the electricity, they need to work on it. The last time he went
was, uh, to South Dakota, I think. And before that, he went to New York. But he said: “No more,
Mom.” It’s – it’s, you know, the conditions are so bad. And you work clear down into the night.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: In the cold and the rain and everything.
NM: The worst weather there is – there he is.
THS: “So I told ‘em, I said: ‘I’m not going.’”
I said: “What are they gonna do, fire you?
He said: “No, they said ‘Alright.’”
NM: Okay.
THS: I says: “So you’re getting big enough now that you can make your own schedule.”
He said: “No,” he said, “I just told ‘em I didn’t wanna go anymore, you know. I’ll stay
here and do the works.”
NM: So he – they let him use – do the local work?
THS: Mm-hmm.

�NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Yeah. Kansas City, and I guess right now he’s working in Topeka.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: But he does go to Wichita and Dodge City and all of them, but going out of this – and
Kansas City, you know, Missouri and them, but not far away anymore.
NM: Yeah.
THS: But –
NM: Well, I’ve been thinking about La Yarda.
THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: And I’ve got a question for you.
THS: Yeah?
NM: So, I read something about La Yarda, and it said – it suggested that, um, if you were, like, a
laborer on the railroad tracks, you’ve probably lived in a – a – what do you call ‘em, a boxcar
that moved back and forth with your family?
THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: But if you were more of a supervisor, or a foreman, then you stayed in these, uh, like, La
Yarda. Is – was your dad, like, a foreman or a supervisor?
THS: No. No, he was just a railroad worker.
NM: Oh, okay.
THS: Um, I was born in Topeka, and in Topeka they had these little houses for the workers. Uh,
they called them the Santa Fe houses. They was just little shacks made out of wood and – and
dirt floor. My mother used to say that she had to get up every morning and water the – the floors
so they wouldn’t be so dusty.
NM: Ah.
THS: Mm-hmm. And I remember her telling me that when I was born, we didn’t even have a
bed.
NM: Mm-hmm.

�THS: She put me in a cardboard box. [NM laughs] And she said one night I got to crying real
bad, and she didn’t know why, but when she picked me up, there was a mouse running in the
box. And she said I had blood on one of my fingers.
NM: Oh. Oh, no.
THS: So, when my dad got a chance, they had just built these La Yarda.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And there – there was brick houses, you know.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And, uh, you know, the floors was concrete and all that.
NM: Concrete.
THS: And – and so, um, he got a chance to come down here. And so, he jumped at the chance.
NM: Oh.
THS: But, no, he just worked. And in the wintertime they drove them little [laughs] – I – I can’t
remember what they called ‘em in English, but there was this little deals that they all sat in the
thing to go fix – they didn’t even have a thing over ‘em or anything.
NM: The things where you pushed down and the other guy pushed down, and you went back and
forth like that?
THS: Yeah.
NM: Oh, I don’t know what those things are called, either.
THS: They – they, uh…so he got a chance to go, come down here, and, uh, then we had a better
house. I mean, we had a better place to live than live on the dirt floor in the little old shack.
NM: Yeah.
THS: Made out of wood, you know, and…but that’s how they all lived. So then when my dad
got a chance to come down here, then my brother came down with his family.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And then my brother-in-law came down, him and my – my, um, sister.

�NM: Your brother was an adult by then, and you were still a kid?
THS: My – my brother, he was already married. He had a bunch of kids.
NM: Oh. You were, when you were small –
THS: That was the oldest one.
NM: Oh, okay.
THS: Yeah, that was the oldest one.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Uh, so, they came down with – with his wife and his kids, I can’t remember how many
kids he had. He – he probably had about four. Something like that. And my sister and her
husband, they never had any kids, so…
NM: Oh.
THS: So they, uh, all came down, and they all worked for the railroad. And then my brother-inlaw was drafted into World War II.
NM: Mm.
THS: So, he had to go fight in Germany.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And then my brother had – not the one – the oldest one. Uh…he was the fourth one. He got
to go, he went into the Air Force.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And – and, uh, he was, till the – till the war ended, and then they came home.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And then my brother got a job in Topeka, in the Santa Fe shops. Somebody told him about
that. So, he got a job there, and, you know, he advanced himself.
NM: Mm.
THS: And, uh, they bought a little house, a one-bedroom house. They had fourteen kids.
NM: Oh, they did?

�THS: Uh-huh.
NM: Now, which brother was this?
THS: My oldest brother.
NM: What’s his name?
THS: He was the oldest. Uh, Pete.
NM: Oh, Pete. Okay.
THS: Mm-hmm. Yeah. And so, um, then they went back to Topeka, and then my brother-in-law,
when he came back from the service, he got a job up there, too.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: So, he went on back ‘cause it was better to be working inside the shops than it was out on
the cold, you know, winter. ‘Cause it was – my – my dad used to say to my mother, would they
all fix them a tortilla with beans on ‘em, you know, and – and, um, my dad used to say it was so
frozen, you couldn’t even bend it. He said they made a fire to try to warm ‘em up to get
something to eat, ‘cause they was out in the middle of nowhere, you know.
NM: And doing hard work.
THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: Yeah.
THS: So, but – we all survived. And I was gonna tell you about that fountain. I think – we still
think one of them guys threw that little snake in there [NM laughs] because there wasn’t much
water. It was just drain water. They had a floor underneath it, and then the pipe went clear down.
NM: Yeah.
THS: I don’t know where – unless the water we drank, the one that went clear down, but we
think them boys for orneriness threw. Yeah.
NM: Threw a snake down there.
THS: Well, it was just a little bitty snake about that big [NM laughs], and a little frog, you know,
so…something that they could catch. They wouldn’t catch a big one, you know. But anyway,
there was just about that much water, ‘cause there was a board underneath there in the tin.
NM: Oh.

�THS: So, it kept the rainwater up in there, but…it, the pipe went down deep.
NM: Funny.
THS: Oh, they was just ornery boys, yeah. They was wanting to play football, always wanted to
play against the girls [laughs]. They didn’t wanna have girls on their team.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: They just beat us around [laughter]. We got to where we wouldn’t want to play with them.
NM: [Laughs] Well, what would you girls play?
THS: Huh?
NM: What did you guys like to play, with the girls?
THS: Well, they either, uh – we played basketball, we played, you know, we played baseball.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: You know, and all that. Yeah, all the kind of sports, but we always – they always wanted
us to play, and they always wanted us to have our own team, not – not with them in it, you know.
NM: [Laughs] They wanted to win.
THS: Yeah. So…but, we – we walked to school. Uh, we went over to Central at, uh, 9th and
Kentucky.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: It was three buildings there.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And we – that’s where we – we went to, we went to New York School and then we went
on up there.
NM: Were there other, um, well, that was Liberty Memorial High School then, right? Were there
other high school – there was no other high school in town.
THS: Yeah.
NM: So, everybody in town went to that one high school.

�THS: Yeah, the one over on, uh, Massachusetts Street. But this was junior high school.
NM: Oh, that was junior high.
THS: Uh-huh. Yeah. We had a building in each corner of the – Kentucky, 9th and Kentucky.
NM: Did they call it Central Junior High then?
THS: Uh-huh.
NM: Oh, okay.
THS: Yeah. And when we – when the bell rang, we had to rush if we was upstairs on the second
or third floor. We had to rush all the way down and get across the street to go to another class.
NM: That sounds a little dangerous.
THS: If there was – if there was cars coming, we would be late, and then we’d get in trouble.
NM: Oh.
THS: Yeah, ‘cause we was late. To gym, we had to get down that other building, we had to – this
was one building, and on the other side was another building, and then on the other side was
another building.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: They wasn’t even close. I mean, you had to cross the street for all three.
NM: Right. That’s a strange configuration.
THS: And gym was clear up on the very top of, uh, one of the buildings. Uh, that was the one on
the north side. The office was downstairs, and you – when the bell rang, you had to run to get up
there, ‘cause if you was late, you were in trouble.
NM: Mm.
THS: You had to stay –
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: After school, and do what – what they was gonna do that day in gym. Yeah.
NM: Well, thinking back on your childhood, did you have a favorite teacher or, were there
different grades?

�THS: We had [laughs] Mrs. Six. We – we was the only class – I don’t know why they done this,
but we was a class where the Mexican kids and all the colored kids was. That was history.
NM: Oh, history.
THS: We was, uh, on the very top of the building on this side. Uh, and we had a lot of colored
kids in our class.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: Well, they would get up and dance and sing, you know, kids. Get up and dance and sing,
and she would say: “Now, listen. If you kids will behave yourself, I’ll give the whole class an
A!” [Laughs] Them kids would do that every time, so they could get an A. [NM laughs] She was
an older teacher. Her name was Mrs. Six. She had a son named Fred Six here in town.
NM: Oh.
THS: He done a business of some kind.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: But, yeah. She was – she would tell us.
NM: Oh, isn’t that funny.
THS: We – we – us girls never, you know, we had a couple of boys, but they didn’t, you know.
But you know how them colored kids will be dancing and singing, and they would be doing all
that, and then she – she’ll pound on her desk and she’ll say: “Now if everybody stays still, don’t
make any noise, I will give you an A.” [Laughter] And she would! We all got A’s in her history
class. I always remember her. She was – she was such a nice teacher. Like I said, she was an
older teacher and –
NM: Mm-hmm. What about in elementary school? Did you have a favorite teacher in elementary
school, in New York School?
THS: Uh, Mrs. Dawson. She was a sixth-grade teacher at New York School. We all went to New
York School, ‘cause –
NM: Sure. Yeah, you were in the neighborhood.
THS: So, but yeah. Mrs. Dawson was the one that was –
NM: She was your favorite?
THS: Mm-hmm.

�NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: ‘Cause she – she kind of looked after us, you know, you can tell.
NM: Yeah.
THS: You know. She was an older teacher, too, and she – she lived – actually, she lived there in
the – in the New York School area. I think she lived on Connecticut Street somewhere.
NM: Oh, so she was in the neighborhood.
THS: Mm-hmm. She was in the neighborhood.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: But, no, we went – then, of course, then they made, uh, Cent – they made…Well, after
they – they, um…they did away with them three buildings on Kentucky Street. Then they moved
Lawrence High up there.
NM: Oh, right.
THS: Or Lawrence High was a…yeah, Lawrence High was used to be there.
NM: Right.
THS: And then they moved it to high school. And then, uh, they put, uh, Central in.
NM: So, when you went to high school, did you go to Massachusetts Street, or did you go to –
like, Lou –
THS: I went to Massachusetts Street.
NM: Oh, you did. Okay.
THS: That’s where Central – that’s where Lawrence High was at.
NM: Right, that’s – yeah. Okay.
THS: And that’s where I – that’s where I went. That’s where most of the kids went. And then of
course, then there was – they moved it up there to – to where it’s at now.
NM: And did you have a favorite teacher in high school?
THS: Uh, not – not really, you know, um, it was so big.
NM: Yeah.

�THS: That you didn’t have a chance to – to, uh, ‘cause, that’s where the high school was at, you
know.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: So you didn’t really, you just, well, at Central we used to change every hour, too. But up
here we didn’t have to, because it was all in the building.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: We didn’t have to cross the street to go to Central.
NM: That was a very odd configuration, crossing the street. Preteens.
THS: There was three or four of us girls always late. We had to run up them stairs. Oh, to get
there in time. And if for some reason there was too many cars coming down Kentucky Street, we
was out of luck.
NM: Oh, yeah. Hmm.
THS: But, no. We, uh – we all went, and [laughs] we went to, uh, high school, there where
Central is at. And we all took Spanish, because we thought it was gonna be an easy, [NM laughs]
an easy class to take, you know. We was sure we’d get an A.
NM: Sure.
THS: But, when we got – when we started there, we found out that it was an entirely different
Spanish. It wasn’t the same Spanish that we was talking – that we was taught, you know, to
speak. It was a different – it was a high-class Spanish.
NM: Like what they speak in Spain, that kind of Spanish?
THS: Uh-huh.
NM: Oh, that’s very different.
THS: Yeah. And so, um, only one girl, and that was Lupe Chavez, she was the only one that
passed that class.
NM: Oh, no.
THS: All the rest of [laughs] you know –
NM: The Mexican kids…failed Spanish?

�THS: They would make us get up there on top of the – in front of the class and speak Spanish.
Well, we used to speak Spanish the way we was taught as kids.
NM: Yeah.
THS: Not the – not the way they wanted it out of the book.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: So they would tell us: “Now, if you don’t speak it the way we tell you to, we’re gonna
flunk you.”
NM: Oh, my goodness.
THS: Mm-hmm. But they did, you know.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: We never got past that.
NM: Now, did you speak Spanish at home?
THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: And did you speak English at home as well?
THS: No.
NM: No?
THS: I didn’t speak English till I went to school.
NM: Really?
THS: Till I went to New York School.
NM: Really?
THS: None of us did.
NM: And how did – how did you do?
THS: Well, we had to –
NM: Must’ve been a struggle.

�THS: Yeah, we had to learn Spanish – I mean, English.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: One thing about it, though, [rustling, NM moves recorder closer] the teachers was very, uh,
they had a lot of patience with us because they knew that. And they helped us out the best they
could.
NM: About how many kids in your class were, um, from La Yarda? Were there a lot?
THS: Uh, well, there was all different classes because, like, us, now, I was – me and my brother
Jesse was the only ones that, uh, you know, was old – was young enough that we had to go to
school.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Now the others had already grown up. ‘Cause see, my mom and dad came to the United
States, and then they – they went back to Mexico. So, um, let’s see that was…They went back –
they came; he brought the whole family with him. Then they went back to Mexico, because they
had sold the hacienda that my grandfather, um…
NM: Yeah.
THS: And, uh, then they buried the money because they was coming and killing all of – all the,
uh, I don’t know whether it was Pancho Villa or – or one of the others, was coming along and
killing all the men that had any – any, uh, property – that had any money or anything.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: So what they did, they sold it when they heard they was coming, and so they buried the
money. So they came to the United States, and then when everything was settled, they decided to
go back and dig the money up. But the money wasn’t worth the paper it was printed on.
NM: Oh.
THS: Because it had changed government.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And so, uh, they came back – they went up there, and they had – they had Pete, Chole,
Carmen. They had three kids.
NM: Mm-hmm.

�THS: And my dad left ‘em up there. He came down – he came down, back to Topeka, with my
grandmother. And so, he left my mother up there with the three kids. Well, he never sent them
any money to live on or to eat on.
NM: Wow.
THS: My mother said that the only way they got to live, ‘cause in Mexico they have a – well, all
the Mexican people [murmurs], which I don’t.
NM: They did what?
THS: You – you go visiting and they give you something to eat.
NM: Oh, yeah. Sure
THS: You know, bread, or they give you, uh, something, you know. Whatever they got in the
house, they’ll give you, you know. And so, my mother used to take an apron and they would give
her a piece of bread, a little loaf of bread, or – or some avocados or something. She – she
wouldn’t eat it. She would put it in her apron.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And then she’d take it home to the kids.
NM: Feed the kids, wow.
THS: That’s the only way they got anything to eat. And my oldest brother Pete, oh, he was so
mad all the time because Dad had left them up there. He said he went to work for this farmer one
time, worked from sunup to sundown, picking watermelons. And at the end of the day, he
thought they was gonna give him some money. They gave him a watermelon. Oh, he was so
mad.
NM: Oh, my goodness. Wow.
THS: I said: “Well, Pete, at least you had some watermelon.” [Laughs] Oh, he was mad. He was
always mad at my dad because he’d done that.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: You know.
NM: Your dad thought he would return with all this money, so –
THS: Yeah.
NM: Your dad probably thought he was doing a great thing.

�THS: Yeah.
NM: Yeah.
THS: But he didn’t. He left ‘em up there for a year.
NM: A year?
THS: Yeah, and so my, uh, other brother was buried – I mean, was born up there.
NM: Mm-hmm. Topeka?
THS: No, in Mexico.
NM: Oh, in Mexico.
THS: Yes. See, they took three kids up, and then they came back to the United States. And then
he decided to go back. Well, that’s when he left my mother up there, and she was pregnant, so
she – she had Chino up there, and then they came back. Well, during the time they was here the
first time, they had Joe. He was born in Kansas City. And then they went back and then they
came back a second time, and then, uh, Jesse and I was born here in Topeka.
NM: So, when you dad left your mom, he left her where, in Mexico, or in – ?
THS: Mexico.
NM: In Mexico. Oh, ‘cause when you said up there, I thought you meant Topeka.
THS: No. No, he left her in Mexico.
NM: Oh. Oh, okay.
THS: Without sending her any money or anything.
NM: And where did he go?
THS: If you get hot, we can turn that down.
NM: Oh, I’m fine. Where did he go when he left her in Mexico?
THS: My dad was – well, all the men in Mexico, think that they’re something big, and – and they
all run around on their wives, you know.
NM: Oh.

�THS: Every one of ‘em does that. I – I always remember when I was, you know, real small, my
dad would come home from work. One thing, he worked every day.
NM: Yeah.
THS: He never missed a day. But on Saturdays, he would come home, take a shower, eat supper,
and off he would go.
NM: To go partying?
THS: I – we don’t know where he went.
NM: Wow.
THS: Till eleven, twelve o’clock, he’d come home.
NM: Oh.
THS: My mother stayed home. She never once said anything about where you go, but it
basically, when we grew up, we knew that all these men, Mexican men, run around, you know.
NM: Oh, uh-huh.
THS: But my dad did a little more than run around, I guess.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And so, um, when he went – when he went, they went back to Mexico and he left her up
there, well – he was just here with my grandmother.
NM: He was here in Kansas?
THS: In Topeka. In Topeka.
NM: Oh, he came back to Topeka.
THS: Yeah, they came back.
NM: And he knew that they didn’t have the money.
THS: Yeah.
NM: And he didn’t send your mother any money.
THS: No.

�NM: Wow. That’s stressful.
THS: Yeah. Eventually he, uh, after a year or so, then he sent her some money. And then she
came back with, uh, three kids.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: My oldest brother Pete, he was so mad.
NM: Mm.
THS: Because he said he left ‘em up there without anything.
NM: Mm-hmm. But nobody said anything to him?
THS: No. My grandmother was with him.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: My dad’s mother. Yeah.
NM: And you would think she would say something, but didn’t. They just accepted it. That was
the way men are.
THS: That was the way men…
NM: Oh, okay.
THS: Mm-hmm. And my – my, uh, when they first came down, my aunt’s husband had left her
up there with two girls. And they wouldn’t let her across the border, because she had no means
of taking care of herself.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: You know. So, my dad brought ‘em over as, uh, my aunt and the two girls as – as his
daughters. They’re on the passport as his daughters. He brought ‘em over. So, then they all
settled in Topeka.
NM: Did you have an idea in your head that you wanted to marry outside of the Mexican
community? No? It just happened that way.
THS: It just happened that way.
NM: Mm-hmm.

�THS: Mm-hmm. We used to go – a whole bunch of us girls used to go to the Meadow Acres in
Topeka dancing every Saturday night with the Forbes – the Forbes Fields was just right down the
road from there.
NM: Oh, okay. Forbes Field, yeah, yeah.
THS: And all them Air Force guys used to go to the, uh, Meadow Acres. It was just a block or
two from the Meadow Acres. So we’d go, a whole bunch of us get together in the car, and we’d
go up there. Just to dance, you know, and about a half an hour before the dance was over, we all
– we would sit over close to the door. We would all disappear. You know, they was up there,
drinking on the – at the bar, you know.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And so, we would all disappear. We’d –
NM and THS: Go home.
THS: So, we was tired when we got home. So, one day I was walking across the park from
church and Leo caught up with me and he said, uh, he got to talking. He was really a talker. He
got to talking, and then he said:
“Would you like to go have a cup of coffee?”
I said: “All I want to do is go home and go to bed.” I mean, I – we had been out till one
o’clock in the morning, you know, and then get up and go to church at 9:00.
And so I said: “No, I don’t want a coffee.” I said: “I want to go home and go to sleep.”
So the next Sunday, then, there he comes again.
I said: “No, I want to go home.” [laughs] “I’m tired. I don’t want any coffee.”
So then the third Sunday, he came again and I thought: “Well, he’s not gonna leave me
alone till I – you know – till he really knows that I’m not going.” So he started, you want a cup
of coffee and I thought: “Oh, gosh. Maybe if I go have a cup of coffee, he’ll leave me alone.” All
I wanted to do is go home and go to sleep, you know.
NM: Right.
THS: ‘Cause I had to go to work the next morning. I mean –
NM: On Sunday?
THS: On Monday morning. No, Monday morning.
NM: Oh, Monday. Sure.
THS: So, he said: “Well, what – you don’t want to go to the drugstore there.” The Rainey’s was
there at the corner.
I said: “No, I don’t want to go to the drugstore.”
He says: “Well, how about going to the Deluxe Café?”

�And I says: “Well, all right.”
So we went over there and then he started asking questions: “Are you working?”
I said: “Yes.”
I said – he said: “Where do you work?”
Big mouth me, I said: “Right behind here, at the Independent Laundry.”
He says: “You do? How long have you been working there?”
I said: “Oh, I been working there for a couple of years.”
NM: What was it called where you worked?
THS: Independent Laundry.
NM: Oh, Independent. Oh.
THS: Uh-huh. Yeah. I worked with Jenny Garcia folding sheets. We could really fold sheets. Oh,
my. We could – and it was so hot in there. You know, so the next morning I come – ‘cause I had,
you had to come through the room where – to go across the street to drink coffee, to where they
sorted out all the clothes.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: There was a couple of older women back there. And the minute I stepped to the door to
come through the big deal, they said: “Ha, ha, ha, guess who’s out there?” [NM laughs] I didn’t
know who in the world they was talking to, ‘cause there was a bunch of us, you know, going
over there for coffee. Well, who should…there he sat. With his friend Gene.
I said: “Oh, gosh.”
He said: “I come to take you for coffee.”
I said: “I only got fifteen minutes.” [Laughs] So, ‘course Jenny and I and all them girls
was going over there for coffee anyway, you know, so we went over, him and Gene went with
us, and we had coffee. And they paid for the whole bunch.
NM: Nice.
THS: So, then the next morning, there him and Gene was out there again. So, there we go for
coffee. Then the third morning, he was there by himself, ‘cause they worked shift work at – at
the Color Press. And Gene had to stay over, ‘cause the guy that was supposed to come in didn’t
come in on time, so he had to stay.
NM: Where were they working?
THS: At the Kansas Color Press.
NM: Kansas Color Press. Okay.
THS: It was right there on Haskell.

�NM: Oh, okay.
THS: Uh-huh. So, from then on, he was there every morning till he changed shifts. Then when
he changed ‘em he says, I told ‘em: “He’s not there today.” Well, the ladies would let me know:
“He’s not there today. You know, he’s not there today.” Well, we knew – I knew he had changed
shifts to days, ‘cause they had to be at work at eight o’clock to four, so…
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Then after –
NM: Now, did he go to those dances out in Topeka?
THS: Then he got to –
NM: Is that when he originally saw you?
THS: No, uh-uh.
NM: No? How did he happen to see you then, if you, ‘cause you said you were coming from
dance –
THS: He went to church.
NM: Oh, oh. So, you went to Mass –
THS: Uh-huh.
NM: And then you went –
THS: Yeah. We used to sing up in the choir.
NM: Oh, okay.
THS: Yeah.
NM: Oh, you went to church. And is he in the choir too?
THS: No, he didn’t.
NM: No, but he saw you.
THS: Uh-huh, yeah.
NM: Oh, okay.

�THS: Yeah, just the Mexican people.
NM: Oh, I thought maybe he bumped into you at that dance.
THS: No.
NM: Okay.
THS: No. He had just gotten out of the Army.
NM: Oh, okay.
THS: I used to hate [laughs] he used to have his shoes so polished, you could see yourself in
‘em. I thought that was just…oh, gosh. How can he do something like that, you know?
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: And his uniform was just so – so clean and so nice, you know.
NM: Did he still wear his uniform?
THS: Um…well, yeah, ‘cause he was still, um, in Fort Riley.
NM: Oh.
THS: Uh-huh. See, he went into the Army at, uh, in Missouri. Can’t think of the name. And he
was there for quite a while. He was in the Korean War. And then from there, they said they
needed him over in Louisville, ‘cause Kentucky and the U.S., and the…um…oh, 101st Airborne.
NM: Oh, okay. 101st Airborne.
THS: Yeah. So they shipped him over there, but he wasn’t in the Airborne. He was – he went
into the Army.
NM: Oh.
THS: And then they shipped him over there, and then he came back. They shipped him, after a
year’s time they shipped him back to, uh, Fort Riley and then he was there at Fort Riley for quite
a while.
NM: Oh, okay.
THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: So then –

�THS: But this – but this was before we ever started going out.
NM: Oh, okay.
THS: I used to see him in church with his uniform, you know [NM laughs]. I – you know, I
didn’t know who he was or anything like that, you know, so…
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: But anyway…I think we got married about a year and a half later.
NM: Mm.
THS: And, uh, one day he drove up and he said: “We’re gonna go to church.”
I said: “Oh, we are? What are we going to church for?”
He says: “You’ll find out.” Well, he had made arrangements with Father Tao and Mary
Tao, that they were supposed to bless the engagement ring before he put it on my finger.
NM: And you didn’t know?
THS: I didn’t even know he had it.
NM: Wow.
THS: He didn’t tell me. He said we were just going to church. And I used to work for Mary Tao
at the parish house.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: I used to clean the – the house.
NM: Oh, okay.
THS: And put – take flowers off the altar and, you know, I did a lot of work there. When I was
still going to high school.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And so, um, that was quite a ways back, you know.
NM: Right.
THS: Before I went to work in the laundry. Yeah, I worked for her for years and years. Uh-huh.
In fact, she kind of took me under her wing. She just, you know, uh, do a lot of things for me.
NM: Right.

�THS: You know.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And, uh, eventually there for a while I worked after I left high school. I worked there for a
couple of years, you know, in the daytime.
NM: Oh, really?
THS: Till I went to, uh, work at the laundry.
NM: Were you, like, the parish secretary or something, or – ?
THS: No, I just cleaned the house and –
NM: Uh-huh. Took care of things.
THS: And done – done errands for her, you know, and for Father. And, uh, she used to pay me
real good. So then when, um, when I went on to church, I didn’t know, but my parents was in
there. My mother and dad was sitting in there, and so was his mother. Yes. So I – I walked into
the church and Monsignor flagged at us to come on up, and so we went on up. I still didn’t know
what we was there for. Anyway, he takes the engagement ring out, and Father blesses it. Then he
puts it on my finger.
NM: Wow, with everybody watching?
THS: Hmm? Yeah.
NM: Goodness.
THS: Well, just, there wasn’t anybody there in church. Just my parents and – and, uh…
NM: And his parents.
THS: And his – and his mother. His dad was already gone.
NM: Oh, okay.
THS: Just his mother.
NM: Yeah.
THS: And his younger brother, ‘cause he drove his mother around everywhere.
NM: Uh-huh.

�THS: They lived there on 1321 Tennessee.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: So, they was pretty close to the church.
NM: Yeah, it’s right – right next door, yeah.
THS: But anyway, uh…that’s why – and I still got the paper that Father –
NM: Oh.
THS: Father, uh, Tao wrote, you know.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: To get the – now, I didn’t even know where he’d got the engagement ring or what. I mean,
he put it on my finger and Father blessed it.
NM: Isn’t that great?
THS: You’re talking about being surprised.
NM: Yeah.
THS: You know.
THS: But, anyway…
NM: That’s a good story.
THS: About a year later, then we got married.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: ‘Course, my mother didn’t like him.
NM: No?
THS: My father didn’t like him. And his mother didn’t like him. His mother said he had to marry
me because I probably – he got me pregnant.
NM: His mother didn’t like him, or his mother didn’t –
THS: His mother didn’t like me.

�NM: Oh.
THS: His mother didn’t like me.
NM: Was it a Mexican-German thing? German-American?
THS: Well, not really.
NM: No?
THS: Us, ‘cause she didn’t have any money. She – she ran that – the way it happened was that
his father, uh, passed away; he was forty-some years old. He had a heart attack. They lived in
this great big house on the road to Leavenworth. It had fourteen rooms.
NM: Oooh.
THS: A maid’s room. Yeah, she had a maid. She had a maid for the kids and a maid to do the
cooking.
NM: Gee.
THS: Uh-huh. Fourteen rooms they had in that house. And, uh, it was on the way to
Leavenworth, just going from Basehor on down. Uh, so, um, she – she went around and told –
telling everybody that he had gotten me pregnant. We didn’t have – we was married three and a
half years before Andy was born.
NM: Oh.
THS: You know.
NM: Yeah.
THS: It – but…I just, you know. Anyway, when – when his father passed away at 47, Joe was
going to St. Benedict’s. He was the oldest.
NM: Oh.
THS: So, he came right home and took over the farm.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: He just, I mean, he actually took it over. I mean everything, you know.
NM: Yeah.

�THS: And so, he used to tell the workers, cause he had quite a few workers.
NM: Yeah?
THS: Yeah, for him. Um, used to tell the workers that him and – and, uh, Leo was partners. And
two brothers was partners.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Well, then Leo finds out that, uh, he paid the far – the helpers more than he paid him.
NM: Oh, no.
THS: And then he finds out that he was keeping him out of the Army because he wanted him to
stay and work at the farm.
NM: Oh.
THS: You know.
NM: Yeah.
THS: At that time, if you had – if you was a farmer, you didn’t have to go into the service.
NM: Mm.
THS: You know.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Or if you ran something that, you know, you was – had to do with – with not being able to,
you know, people. You know, like –
NM: Somebody depending on you, yeah.
THS: Yeah. Anyway, Leo got mad, and he went and enlisted in the Army.
NM: Oh, gee. I bet his brother was mad. [Laughs]
THS: He was. Joe was mad. And then, he sells – he sells the farm.
NM: Really?
THS: Yeah. Well, him and this guy from, a lawyer from Kansas City, was in it together.
Uh…one of them owned all the stock, and the other one, the house, and the thing. Whatever they

�had on the farm. Anyway, Joe goes and sells everything. And, uh, of course he had to give half
of it to the guy in Kansas City.
NM: Yeah.
THS: But, uh, you know, they had got the money from to buy this – this farm.
NM: Oh, yeah.
THS: To begin with, his, uh…his grandfather gave his dad money to marry his mother.
NM: His grand…Oh, okay. Okay.
THS: She – she was, she had polio.
NM: Really?
THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: Okay.
THS: And so, he gave him enough money to buy a farm.
NM: Wow.
THS: His dad, Leo’s dad, that was married to his mother.
NM: Yeah.
THS: Gave him enough money to buy a farm.
NM: Okay.
THS: ‘Cause he was rich. He – he was one of the first representatives in the state of Kansas. His
picture’s in the courthouse.
NM: This is Leo’s grandfather? Wow. Okay.
THS: Anyway, um, can you imagine him marrying that little old Mexican from La Yarda? [NM
laughs] Anyway, uh, Joe goes and sells all of this. He builds himself a new house, buys himself a
new car, buys himself a milk truck to deliver milk around there. Leo, nothing. Then he gets
$1500 and moves his mother to Lawrence and, uh, pays $1500 for that rooming house on – on
Tennessee.
NM: The poor mother must have been –

�THS: Yeah.
NM: Devastated.
THS: And, uh, that was it.
NM: Wow.
THS: So, about, we was married about five years, I think, when all his sisters came down and
asked Leo if he would go with them to court, to sue him.
NM: Oooh.
THS: Because that money should have been divided equally among the girls. There was, uh,
three girls.
NM: And to the mother.
THS: And to the mother.
NM: Gee.
THS: Leo was supporting his – he was shining shoes on the weekend in the Army to make
enough money to send her, so she could pay her gas bill.
NM: Wow.
THS: In that big rooming house.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And Joe was sitting up there in Basehor.
NM: What a selfish man. Wonder what happened to him?
THS: I don’t know. But he was buried. He was not buried, he was married, you know, he
married Anna, I mean, Edna up there.
NM: Oh.
THS: And when we got, Leo and I got married, he wouldn’t let her come.
NM: Really?
THS: He would not let her. He came.

�NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: I don’t know why, because him and Leo didn’t get along.
NM: Was he the brother that came to see the engagement ring?
THS: No.
NM: A different brother?
THS: Uh-huh.
NM: Oh, okay.
THS: Yeah. Yeah, his younger brother.
NM: Oh.
THS: In fact, they still come over.
NM: Really?
THS: Him and Ruthie.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: She’s got money left and right.
NM: Really?
THS: You know, when she – when she comes – they came this summer. They had – they came,
and the girls had a picnic up in front; they invited the neighborhood.
NM: Uh-huh?
THS: You know, everybody has a good time when they do that, you know. And so, um, but he
came, the girls came, and they was here for – on a Sunday afternoon talking to Leo. They was
outside. I didn’t know what they was talking about. I – I didn’t care. I thought they had –
NM: Sure. Yeah, his sisters.
THS: None of my business. Anyway, when he come in, he said they wanted to take Joe to court.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And sue him for that money. Cause it should have been divided equally among all of them.

�NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: All the girls, and it wasn’t.
NM: Right.
THS: But Leo told ‘em no.
NM: Really? Said forget it?
THS: They – they wasn’t very happy with him, but he said he wasn’t. He said: “I got my house.”
He said: “I got my kids. I don’t need any more. I don’t need anything he’s got.”
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Was what he told ‘em.
NM: Yeah.
THS: So…but then after a while, they kind of all when Mary died; she left him some money.
And, uh, then [murmurs] passed away here not too long ago, just a couple years ago was when
she passed away in Emporia. But, uh, you know. It happens, I guess, with families.
NM: That rooming house thing’s very strange.
THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: So, she was in charge of the rooming house and she had to run this thing, and – ?
THS: No, she charged ‘em, but they were Chinese.
NM: Oh. [Laughter] You have so many twists and turns in your story.
THS: They – they was all Chinese.
NM: Oh, okay.
THS: That she rented to.
NM: Okay.
THS: Yeah, Leo had a room upstairs, you know, where he slept and stuff.
NM: Yeah.

�THS: Ed slept on the couch down in the dining room.
NM: Oh.
THS: And Clara slept in the bedroom with her mother, you know, different beds, but they slept
in – yeah, so she could rent ‘em up there. But the only reason that they didn’t give her so much
money was because they fed her.
NM: They fed her? The Chinese food?
THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: Wow.
THS: And she couldn’t get around very good, you know. She did get around –
NM: Right.
THS: ‘Cause she come one day, went out with Leo and picked strawberries out there, you know.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: Yeah, she could get around, but not that good. And – and so, uh, they – they would feed
her. They would cook. They didn’t have a stove upstairs, so they cooked down on her stove.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: And they would just make enough food for her, too.
NM: And where did all these Chinese people come from? I mean –
THS: They were going up to KU.
NM: Oh, they were at KU. Okay.
THS: Students.
NM: They were students. Interesting.
THS: And of course, they didn’t have very much money, either.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: You know. And one time, they sent her a whole bunch of stuff from China.
NM: Oh.

�THS: You know, their mothers. I guess they told her that she was so nice about [murmurs], so
they sent her some good luck charms and stuff like that, you know.
NM: Uh-huh. Oh, that’s really funny. Good story.
THS: But no, they cooked, ‘cause she was the only one in the house that had a stove downstairs.
NM: Sure.
THS: So, they came down and cooked, and while they was cooking, they knew she couldn’t get
around very good, so they – they fed her.
NM: Made enough for her, too.
THS: Mm-hmm. And then, of course, then they was students, so they didn’t have much. I guess
their parents did, up in China, but, uh…
NM: Oh, yeah.
THS: You know, whether they send ‘em money or not, I imagine they did. But they wasn’t
gonna tell her that.
NM: Yeah.
THS: You know. They was glad they was getting a place to cook and all that. And they would do
the dishes and everything.
NM: Yeah. Huh.
THS: They would go to the grocery store. Of course, Leo did too. Leo went to the grocery store
for her.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: But, uh…and he helped to pay for the gas bill, ‘cause the gas bill was terrible.
NM: Oh, it must have been terrible. Those big drafty houses.
THS: There was – it was…
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: But anyway, um…that’s the way things… You know, like I say, we never had – we was
pretty near going crazy ‘cause we thought we was – he wanted kids, and I wanted kids. I wanted
ten kids.

�NM: Oh.
THS: [Laughs] He wanted that many, but then after I had the girls, the doctor said, you know, he
says: “You’ll either – ” He called us both in to the doctor’s. He says: “You’ll either lose her, or
lose the baby.”
NM: What did you say?
THS: He, Dr. Herman called us both in, after I had the girls.
NM: After you had the girls?
THS: Yeah, and he told us, he said: “Leo,” he says, uh, “if she doesn’t have a hysterectomy,
she’ll – if she gets pregnant, she’ll either die or lose the baby.”
NM: Oh.
THS: “So which would you rather have?”
NM: Wow.
THS: Leo says: “We’ll just go ahead,” at that time you couldn’t; you wasn’t supposed to have a
hysterectomy.
NM: Yeah, it was unusual. How old were you?
THS: I was probably about 27.
NM: Oh, no. Oh, that’s too bad.
THS: I had the boys. The boys are eighteen – eighteen years apart. And – I mean, not eighteen
years, but four. And I say eighteen – eighteen months apart.
NM: Eighteen months apart.
THS: Then the girls – the girls was four years apart.
NM: Four years apart, okay.
THS: And Richard.
NM: Well, you have a great family.
THS: Yeah. But that was it.

�NM: Uh-huh.
THS: But, you know, we – we had the two boys, and we had the two girls.
NM: Yeah, you had two matched pairs. That’s great. Great, beautiful family you have.
THS: I remember Dr. Herman. Dr. Wilcox was in there, and he was delivering babies. And he
says: “Oh, my gosh, there’s another one coming.” ‘Cause at the time you didn’t know. You
didn’t have no sonograms.
NM: Right.
THS: And the only reason the doctor kept telling me I was gaining too much weight ‘cause I was
eating too much, and I was…uh, I was – had, he could hear a real strong heartbeat. That’s
because one of ‘em was this way, and the other one was this way.
NM: Wow.
THS: And he kept putting me on a diet, and kept telling me: “You’ve got to lose weight.
You’ve got to lose weight.”
So then when Dr. Wilcox, they was in together, him and Herman. And, uh, Dr. Wilcox
was delivering me. He got one out and then he turned around and he said:
“Oh, good heavens, put her to sleep. There’s another one coming.”
And I could hear Dr. Herman say: “Can I go tell – can I go tell Leo? Can I go tell Leo?”
[Laughter] And Dr. Herman – Dr. Wilcox says: “That’s alright, you go tell him.”
So he went out there laughing, and then he come back laughing, and he says:
“You know what?” He says Leo was pretty near asleep. ‘Course he was working the
midnight shift.
NM: Oh.
THS: He said Leo was pretty near asleep and he said:
“I told him to get up,” so he said, “he got up, he sat up, and he said: ‘What’s the matter?’
I said: ‘You just had two babies.’”
And he said: “He looked at me, didn’t say a word.” He said he looked down at the floor
and just stood there for a while.
And then he said: “But I only have one bed.” [NM laughs]
He said: “I told him we’d keep ‘em here long enough for him to go home and make
another one.” And he did. He made the little beds for ‘em.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: And he used to sit here and read, and he’d put one foot under one leg, under one of the legs
of the bed, and the other one on the other leg, and he would read and he would push one and then
push the other one while I got the meals done, you know.

�NM: Yeah.
THS: And the laundry and stuff like that.
NM: Isn’t that great?
THS: Yeah, he used to love to read.
NM: Yeah.
THS: And he kept the girls happy that way, because you know, he made them little beds no
bigger than that.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: In fact, when Rita’s granddaughter came, they asked for one. I don’t know whatever
happened to the other one.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: But he had made –
NM: Yeah. Yeah. What do you know?
THS: He loved to work with wood and plant a garden and everything.
NM: Mm-hmm. Well I’m gonna have to get going, Teresa.
THS: Well, sorry that we didn’t get too much [murmurs].
NM: Oh, you always have good stories.
THS: You know, it’s, uh…I don’t remember, you know, too much anymore, ‘cause I’m getting
up in years.
NM: You have a pretty good memory.
THS: But I do remember walking to church in the snow.
NM: Oh.
THS: We had to go to church. Raymond says: “I’ll give you a truck, I’ll give you a ride in the
back of the truck.” He had this great big huge truck. We climb in, and can you imagine how cold
it was?
NM: Oh, no. [Laughs]

�THS: He used to take us to Minnesota to work in the vegetables, too. In that big truck.
NM: Wow.
THS: Four families.
NM: That was in the summertime?
THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: Yeah. That must have been fun, a little bit fun, huh?
THS: Well, it was, to a certain extent.
NM: Rough.
THS: But we had to, uh, we had to, uh…we had to work.
NM: Oh.
THS: And to get a shower, we had to go jump in the lake. We had no other way to take a shower.
NM: In Minnesota, I bet that water was cold.
THS: It was. [Laughter] And none of us knew how to swim. Now Raymond might’ve, but none
of us.
NM: Oh boy.
THS: But we had a good time.
NM: Yeah. Did you ever learn how to swim? No?
THS: I didn’t, but Leo did. Leo and the boys, he used to get the whole neighborhood in the
pickup truck, in his old pickup truck. Went all over to Lone Star Lake to swim.
NM: Oh, fun.
THS: Yeah. Take ‘em all. Neighborhood.
NM: Yeah.
THS: You know.
NM: Whole neighborhood.

�THS: The guys come in -- Andy: “Mom? Dad?”
I said: “No, don’t call Mom. Talk to your dad.” He had an old pickup that just went
[imitates putting noise] all the way to the lake.
NM: All the way to Lone Star Lake.
THS: But he had the back end full of girls and boys.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: That asked their mothers if they could go, you know. Of course, Leo knew how to swim
real good. I didn’t. I – I still don’t. I still don’t like the water.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: You know? I did in Minnesota, ‘cause we had to take a shower [laughs]
NM: Right, sure.
THS: Or you’d never get a shower.
NM: What did they have you picking there?
THS: Um…carrots and potatoes and onions.
NM: Mm.
THS: And, uh, we lived in a garage.
NM: Really?
THS: Mm-hmm. Four families. One in each corner of the garage.
NM: Was it hot?
THS: Uh-huh. And, uh, uh…they had – the ladies had to cook outside.
NM: Did they have a cement floor, or dirt floor?
THS: Dirt floor.
NM: Oh, gee whiz.
THS: Yeah. Oh, we had some – in California, when we had to – to work in the peaches, we, uh,
we lived in a tent. My mother cooked outside.

�NM: You did?
THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: Was that for, like, a summer, or…when – ?
THS: Well, that was just till the harvest was over. We – we picked peaches and then we picked
apricots.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And then when that was done, then we went over to pick grapes. Over to –
NM: Did she take you out of school?
THS: Huh? Yeah. They made me go to school.
NM: Oh, they made you go to school there.
THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: So, you left New York school just to go to California for a while?
THS: Well, when I came back, I went back to New York School.
NM: New York School, yeah.
THS: That’s the only way that the boys would make any money to get clothes for school.
Nobody hired ‘em.
NM: Yeah.
THS: Nobody hired Mexican kids.
NM: Mm.
THS: And when we went to – to Minnesota, you know, like I say, four families made.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: Went because they had to have enough money for school.
NM: Right. Yeah.
THS: But…it was fun, though. You know, a whole bunch of kids together.

�NM: But hard work, very hard work.
THS: Yeah. We was so tired by the time we got in that garage, we didn’t care.
NM: No. Hard to play.
THS: We wanted to sleep.
NM: Mm-hmm. Yeah.
THS: And no, I had to go to school in Cucamonga, and I didn’t like that. I had to get on the bus.
NM: Where’s Cucamonga?
THS: In California.
NM: Oh. [Laughter]
THS: Yeah. That’s a town.
NM: Okay.
THS: The gates would – they had great big old fences, the gates would open, the bus would go
in, the gates would close.
NM: Mm.
THS: And you – they would open when the – at the end of the day when the bus was loaded up
again.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: They’d go and drop you off somewhere. Then you had to walk.
NM: Yeah. Hm.
THS: And if you got there early enough, if you woke up early enough, you could have cactus for
lunch.
NM: Cactus?
THS: Mm-hmm. But if you didn’t get up early enough, they was all gone.
NM: Oh.

�THS: Was a time my mother – my mother used to get up at daylight to go out there, and there’s a
whole row of cactus behind the houses where the – the boys went and picked grapes.
NM: Yeah?
THS: And, uh, if they got there early enough, if my mother got up early enough, we’d have
cactus for supper besides beans, you know. So, we ate cactus.
NM: How do you prepare cactus?
THS: My – you take all the stickers out with a little paring knife.
NM: Yeah.
THS: And then you cut ‘em.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: And then you, uh, put ‘em in to boil, and then you put ‘em on a skillet with some cilantro
and onion, and you mix ‘em up and they’re the best things.
NM: Are they really?
THS: With beans and tortillas. Oh boy.
NM: Oh, my gosh.
THS: That’s all we ever had to eat.
NM: Uh-huh. Cactus, beans, and tortillas.
THS: Except when the gypsies came. Then we had olives because they – there was a whole row
of olives in front of the houses. And so they’d come and they’d pick all the olives out and put in
a great big old, uh, tubs.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: And cooked them all night long. And so, we was kids, you know, and they was all dressed
like gypsies, and they drove, and they came in on buggies just like you see in a book.
NM: Yeah.
THS: Uh-huh. And they would come in and they’d pick all them olives off, the farmer didn’t
care. They’d pick ‘em all up and they would start cooking ‘em all night, and – and then the next
day they would ask us if we wanted some. Of course, we didn’t have anything but beans and
cactus [NM laughs].

�NM: Sure. But – but you didn’t know how to cook, um, olives, but they did.
THS: No. No, they had great big old pans. And I don’t know what they put in ‘em. But they built
a fire all night till one day it rained up in the mountains and the water came down. It came down
where the – their tents, where their little wagons was, and their tents, and their tubs, and it just
took the whole thing.
NM: Oh, no.
THS: That was the last time we seen ‘em there.
NM: Mm. What a disaster.
THS: We didn’t see ‘em there anymore.
NM: Yeah. How – how many years in a row did you go to California?
THS: Pretty near every year.
NM: Really?
THS: Till we got up into, uh, I think I got up into junior high.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: When we came – see, we had a pass. My dad got a pass. We could go anywhere the train
went.
NM: Oh.
THS: Without having to pay.
NM: Sure.
THS: And so, my sister had got married up there.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: First we went ‘cause my aunt was up there. And then, uh, my sister got married up there,
so she used to tell us: “Come on down.” And – and behind her was a orange grove. All we had to
do was just go about from here to that white pickup, and get oranges for breakfast.
NM: Oh, nice.
THS: Then there was, uh, row of English walnuts.

�NM: Mmm.
THS: And after they went through and harvested them, we could go over and pick all we wanted,
and there was a place right across from my sister’s house. And we could go sell ‘em there.
NM: Really?
THS: Oh, we done it all.
NM: You had – you had it all figured out.
THS: Yeah.
NM: All the angles.
THS: Well, because, you know, with that pass, we could go anywhere.
NM: Oh, yeah.
THS: Mm-hmm.
NM: Yeah, you were lucky to get those passes.
THS: In fact, the whole family, my brother and his kids, and my brother-in-law and my sister, we
was all going to California to live.
NM: Mm.
THS: When we got to Needles, California. There was no air conditioning in the car, so we got to
Needles, California, my brother-in-law [murmurs] jumped off – off the train and he says:
“Whew! I wanna go down and get some air.” He got – jumped down, jumped back up, and he
says, he told my sister: “Let me tell you something. If it’s this hot where we’re going, I’m
coming back tomorrow.” [Laughs] But they didn’t. They stayed and worked for that summer,
and then they all came back.
NM: No incentive to stay there. Yeah.
THS: No.
NM: Too hot.
THS: It was a beautiful place, you know, but…
NM: Mm.

�THS: You could see a lot of stuff, and –
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: And my, uh, brother-in-law in California worked in the – where they bring all this, uh,
garbage for the pigs they had.
NM: Oh
THS: They had pigs’ pens.
NM: Yeah.
THS: And, of course, um, there would be all kinds of silverware and everything, that people
would just drop it in, you know, accidentally.
NM: Sure.
THS: But it would be in there, and he’d pick it all up and bring it home and polish it up and take
it up, and make extra money.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: Besides what he was getting to feed the pigs and stuff.
NM: Yeah. Resourceful.
THS: In fact, I still got some up there.
NM: Do you, really?
THS: My mother left, uh-huh.
NM: Oh, wow.
THS: Sterling silver. All the kids can do whatever they want to.
NM: Sure. That’s amazing. What a great story.
THS: Uh-huh. It’s a – it was a tough world, but…
NM: Mm-hmm, yeah.
THS: You know, and then when I married Leo, it was entirely different, you know, ‘cause he
worked all the time.

�NM: Oh, he worked very hard.
THS: And then I worked, too, you know.
NM: Mm-hmm.
THS: After I left the laundry, then the kids, he wouldn’t let me work till they got into high
school. I mean junior high, the girls. Yeah. He said no. And so, I stood and I – I – done laundry
for people. I done the shirts for Butch.
NM: Yeah.
THS: ‘Cause he worked at – in the grocery store.
NM: Okay.
THS: I ironed all his shirts and washed ‘em.
NM: That’s a lot of work.
THS: I babysat. I done everything I could to give us extra money.
NM: Yeah.
THS: And then…then I went to work at the – when I worked at the laundry then. And then, uh,
he went to work for the City. And his legs was getting really bad, so I told him, I says: “Give it
up.” You know, I’m still working. I was working the Presbyterian Manor there.
NM: Oh, yeah.
THS: I said: “Just give it up. I’m working, and you can draw your Social Security.” So that’s
what he did
NM: Yeah. Good.
THS: But he was always mowing grass.
NM: I know.
THS: Cleaning garages for people, you know.
NM: Uh-huh.
THS: Just doing everything. Him and the boys. The boys all know how to work.
NM: Uh-huh. That’s right.

�THS: ‘Course Richard, all he does is sit in the chair and –
NM: Work on the computer? [Laughs]
THS: And make money. Yeah, he had a full knee replacement yesterday.
NM: Oh, really?
THS: I thought I wouldn’t call him maybe till tomorrow, until he got a little more rest.
NM: Yeah, good idea. Well, I’m gonna have to get going, Teresa
THS: Yeah, I don’t know about a knee replacement, ‘cause he sits in a chair all the time,
working on the computer.
NM: Yeah, that’s kind of funny.
THS: Not – not unless he – he hurt it, uh, taking the scooter to the swim –
NM: Does – does he go to the gym and exercise at the gym – [tape cuts off]
END OF TAPE

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                  <text>La Yarda was a neighborhood of worker housing provided by the Santa Fe Railroad for Mexican-American railroad workers in Lawrence, Kansas; located near the Kansas (Kaw) River, the neighborhood was largely destroyed by a major flood in 1951. In 2006, Helen Krische, archivist at the Watkins Community Museum, began an oral history project to document the La Yarda and Mexican-American communities in Lawrence, Kansas. The project was resumed in 2019 by Nora Murphy and Emily Raymond. The interviews primarily feature the children of the railroad workers who migrated to Lawrence in the early 20th century; they describe daily life, social activities, and living conditions in the Mexican-American community in Lawrence from roughly the 1920s through the 1970s.</text>
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                  <text>2021</text>
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                  <text>These works are the intellectual property of the Watkins Museum of History, Lawrence, Kansas. The public may freely copy, modify, and share this Item for noncommercial purposes if they include the original source information. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s).</text>
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              <text>01:12:42 (2019-10-06)</text>
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                <text>Teresa Hernandez Schwartz La Yarda Interview</text>
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                <text>Teresa Hernandez Schwartz lived with her parents in Lawrence's La Yarda neighborhood. Teresa was interviewed by Nora Murphy on October 6, October 13, and November 14, 2019, as part of an oral history project to document the La Yarda and Mexican-American communities in Lawrence, Kansas. La Yarda was a neighborhood of worker housing provided by the Santa Fe Railroad for Mexican-American railroad workers; located near the Kansas (Kaw) River, the neighborhood was largely destroyed by a major flood in 1951. Teresa describes her family's migration from Mexico to Kansas, their experiences living in railroad housing communities in Topeka and Lawrence, and the 1951 flood that forced the La Yarda community to disperse. Teresa also describes her family's relationships with other Mexican-American families in Lawrence, their experiences attending local schools and St. John's Church, their working life and family foodways, the effects of World War II and the German prisoner of war camp in Lawrence, and experiences of discrimination and segregation faced by the Mexican-American community in Lawrence. Teresa's daughter, Anita Schwartz, is also present for portions of the interview. </text>
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                <text>Murphy, Nora</text>
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                <text>Raymond, Emily</text>
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                <text>Lawrence (Kan.)</text>
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                <text>1920s - 1970s</text>
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                <text>October and November 2019</text>
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                <text>2019-10-13 interview: 2a-TSchwartz-20191013.mp3 and 2b-TSchwartz-20191013.mp3 (audio)/2a-TSchwartz-20191013.pdf and 2b-TSchwartz-20191013.pdf (transcription)</text>
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                <text>Watkins Community Museum (Lawrence, Kan.)</text>
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                <text>To access the audio recording of these interviews, go to &lt;a href="https://archive.org/details/1-tschwartz-20191006"&gt;https://archive.org/details/1-tschwartz-20191006&lt;/a&gt;.</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="34374">
                <text>&lt;a href="https://archives.lib.ku.edu/repositories/3/resources/5295"&gt;Additional research on the La Yarda community&lt;/a&gt; is held at the Spencer Research Library at the University of Kansas.</text>
              </elementText>
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            <name>Rights</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="34375">
                <text>Published with the permission of Teresa Hernandez Schwartz. This work is the intellectual property of the Watkins Museum of History, Lawrence, Kansas. The public may freely copy, modify, and share this Item for noncommercial purposes if they include the original source information. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s).</text>
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                <text>La Yarda Oral History Project</text>
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                    <text>Tape 25: Interview with Pedro (Pete) Romero
Interviewer: Helen Krische
Date of Interview: May 23, 2006
Length of Interview: 47:18
Location of Interview: St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church
Transcription Completion Date: 2021
Transcriptionist: Emily Raymond
Pedro Romero (Interviewee): When I got more information, then – then I was able to put it
down, uh, as true figures.
Helen Krische (Interviewer): Okay, so you sketched all of this of the yards?
PR: Yeah, so that’s – so that I would have something to kind of go by so that I could, uh, uh,
relay the…the, uh…um…what I thought it looked like to the artist.
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: The artist eventually, to do the painting.
HK: Mm-hmm. Okay.
PR: But, like I said, I – I got some pictures here, and…this – this is, uh, one of the pictures.
Okay, let – let’s go back to this.
HK: Okay.
PR: It was – I – I got some, I forgot to bring it – I got some pictures –
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: That I took with a camera.
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: I forgot to bring ‘em with me.
HK: Oh, those would be –
PR: I tell you what, I was running late, but…um, um, you – have you seen the – the picture of
the buildings, well, what they looked like?
HK: The only thing I have are these that Buddy brought me.
PR: Okay –

�HK: And let me scan.
PR: Okay, there – there – there is an artist’s picture, of – the –
HK: Really?
PR: This artist, a guy by the name of Frankie Chavez.
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: He – he’d, uh, he’d painted the, uh, what the building looked like.
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: He got – he got a lot of the – he got a lot of the information from me.
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: I was able to get it to him, and…lot of the people liked it, lot of the older people said that
was pretty much what – what it looked like, uh, we – we couldn’t, nobody had any pictures of it.
HK: Then.
PR: And I even went to the, uh, Topeka, to the Santa Fe, uh…railroad there, and they couldn’t
help me out, and I went up to, uh, the…what is it, the Kansas Historic…place in Topeka.
HK: Kansas Historical Society, yeah.
PR: I went there and they couldn’t help me, I went to the City, here in Lawrence, uh, they – they
was able to show me some maps.
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: Some, uh, maps back in the 1940s, but none of the maps had this, uh, Santa Fe yards in it.
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: It showed the tracks, which ran – I think east and west –
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: But there was never a picture of – of this…of this, uh…Santa Fe yards.
HK: Yeah. That’s great.

�PR: Well, and like I said, this is what I kind of showed the artist what – what, what I kind of
looked at. And then – and then here, here – back in 1951, the flood.
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: It’s an old, it’s an old reprint, it’s kind of bad but you can see the – the building.
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: The building was under the water. And…if you can use any of these pictures I’d be glad to –
HK: So was this – this building, or – ?
PR: Yeah, yeah.
HK: Okay, so it’s just –
PR: Um, I kind of wish I could have bought the, uh, the drawing. I mean, the drawing is, it’s
great, it’s all in color –
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: It’s uh, but this is the – gosh, I don’t even – this was the building [murmurs]. This was kind
of looking at the building like –
HK: In the back of it, yeah.
PR: Like this.
HK: Uh-huh.
PR: It was kind of looking in it. But, um, like I said, I’m – I really haven’t got too much to, uh, I
just thought I’d bring you what – what I had.
HK: Sure.
PR: And this – this is an old picture of the old Santa Fe depot there.
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: At the time of the flood.
HK: The flood.

�PR: Uh… [long pause, pages turning]. This picture here…this picture here, uh, was looking, uh,
east about – about a quarter, about a quarter of a mile down these railroad tracks was where the –
where the apartments were at.
HK: Oh, okay.
PR: The Santa Fe apartments.
HK: Okay.
PR: And…and…now, I – I’m sure you – you can look through some of these pictures, but I’m
sure you’ve probably… [long pause, pages turning]
HK: Well, this is a different one I haven’t seen. Now, this one I do have a copy of.
PR: Yeah.
HK: Yeah. Got a copy of this one. Um…this one I don’t have a copy of. [Long pause, HK
murmurs, pages turning]. Now where is this looking from, or…?
PR: Um, that is looking, um, east.
HK: Okay.
PR: Of – of the, uh, the Santa Fe, apart – this was all during the 1951 flood.
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: And the railroad tracks ran right up this way.
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: They were up above; all that was flooded. It was funny because my parents, uh, the 1951
flood came and I remember we waited till the water went down and then we went back in, and
tried to clean up the apartments.
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: So we could move back in there. The Romeros, the mud [murmurs], that the water had left.
HK: Mm-hmm. So did you live in – in these buildings?
PR: Uh…yes. Um…I really would like to have had you see the drawing, the artist’s drawing.
HK: Yeah.

Formatted: French (France)

�PR: [Murmurs] Um…
HK: Buddy is supposed to be making a copy of something, and I don’t know if it’s that drawing
or maybe it’s, is it? Okay.
PR: I have, um, I have a big artist’s, uh, drawing at home.
HK: Uh-huh.
PR: And then the – the ones that I gave Buddy and Irene are – are the smaller –
HK: Okay.
PR: Are the smaller ones, but I got the big –
HK: Oh, okay.
PR: I got the big one and it’s beautiful; I got it all framed up and all that. It’s a real pretty picture.
But, uh, if there’s any way I can help you, I’d be glad to.
HK: Yeah.
PR: I real – like I said, there’s not really much, too much that I got. I got a few pictures.
HK: Well, I might scan these.
PR: Yeah.
HK: And, do you know the names of all the people in them, or – ?
PR: Yeah.
HK: Okay.
PR: Pretty much.
HK: Yeah, I think that…
PR: I can’t remember – oh, I got a sinus headache.
HK: I’ll bet, so this weather is really bad.
PR: Yeah.

�HK: Yeah. This one I already have a scan of. Yeah, I’ve been trying to get people to identify the
people in the photographs for me, so [laughs] sometimes it’s been successful and sometimes it
hasn’t, so…
PR: I – I got a picture here; these are my brothers, here.
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: Uh…I – I, I really like this picture here a lot because it’s got so much detail about what –
what the Santa Fe…what part of the Santa Fe buildings looked like. Um…we had
to…okay…where is it, come on…there was a – this – this was the end of the building here.
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: This is the end of the building right here.
HK: Okay.
PR: [Murmurs] And back in the back, in these two, I think it was corn, a cornfield. Now right up
above here was the railroad track, the Santa Fe railroad track.
HK: Okay, and there’s…the Santa Fe depot, is that –
PR: No, no.
HK: No?
PR: The – the Santa Fe depot was farther; I believe, if my directions are right, west.
HK: Okay.
PR: It was farther west. I think the train runs east and west –
HK: Uh-huh.
PR: I think so.
HK: Yeah.
PR: Well, anyways, uh, this – this was kind of a – it looks like it’s corn.
HK: Uh-huh.
PR: And then back here, they, uh, somebody at one time had a – a corn…uh – uh, bin.
HK: Mm-hmm.

Formatted: Spanish (Spain)

�PR: It was, I think there was about two of them. This is one of them, where they stored the
popcorn. Popcorn. And then this – this was on the tracks, this one, the – the, um…I don’t
remember what it was called, tank or something like that [murmurs].
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: But anyways, uh…we had a water pump.
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: We had a water pump right where…there – there used to be two, there used to be two units,
this one here and then there’s one right across, and – and this, the pump was right in between –
HK: Middle.
PR: Right between both of them.
HK: Neat. Can I scan this too?
PR: Yeah, yeah. You can – would you like to take the picture out of it? Take the picture out of it.
HK: It would probably work better. We were trying to do one inside a frame this morning and it
just didn’t –
PR: Yeah, yeah.
HK: So, um, Pete, if I could, this is a – this is a, uh, consent form, uh, for you to sign. Um, to do
the oral history with. And it basically just says that you give all the rights to, um, the recording,
to the museum, and a copy of it may go to the Kansas State Historical Society.
PR: Okay. Yeah, like I said, I’m not very good. I’m –
HK: Well, you know –
PR: On tape and all that.
HK: Yeah. We can just, you know, do an audiotape, that’s fine too. And if, you know, if you
ever want to stop during the interview, just let me know and we can just stop.
PR: So, what kind of questions would you ask me?
HK: Okay, well, I have a list of questions here that I kind of go down.
PR: Could you kind of go over them with me right now before –

�HK: Sure. Do you want to look at ‘em?
PR: Yeah, I’m – I’m not even properly dressed [laughs]. [Long pause] What – what if you don’t
know some of the answers?
HK: That’s fine. Usually I just, you know, I don’t really just ask question after question. I just
kind of, we just kind of talk and, um, usually the information comes out, I don’t even have to
ask, because, you know, when people start telling you their story, then it’s just kind of natural
that a lot of those questions are already answered, so… But if there’s any of them that you don’t
want me to ask you, that’s fine too. So… You can just tell me: “I don’t want to answer that
question,” and I [laughs] – that’s fine.
PR: So, I guess the purpose of me coming here was to, you know, be interviewed and all that.
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: But mostly I just kind of wanted to help you out on any old pictures of something that I had.
HK: Yeah, but you have – you have memories too, of –
PR: Yeah.
HK: Since you lived there, you know, you can, um, you have firsthand experience.
PR: Do – do I have to be – because I’m being – if I’m photographed, will – will it be shown with
me in my old…[laughs].
HK: We don’t – we don’t have to run the camera, that’s fine.
PR: Okay.
HK: We can just do it with the – I have a tape in here, so we can just do it with the audiotape.
PR: You know, one of these days, like I said, I’m not very good at this, but one of these days this
is kind of what I – I – I wanted to do.
HK: Hmm, okay.
[Long pause]
PR: You know I – I’m kind of better when I’m by myself and –
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: I’m just writing notes down and thoughts [murmurs] and all that.

�[Long pause]
HK: You have all your information down here, don’t you?
PR: Well, yeah, I got some information, but like I said, I – I never did finish it. This is something
that I wanted to do, and – and I never finished it. But, you know, at least I got – I got started a
little bit on it, so, you know, I can pass it on to my grandkids and things like that.
HK: Yeah.
PR: But I – I really never, that’s as far as I got. And, I mean, there’s so much more. But like I
said, sometimes, I’m – I’m better when I’m, you know, by myself and just jotting down, you
know…
HK: Sure. [Long pause, pages turning] Okay. So I might just, um, scan this too. Just for
information about your family. Would that be okay?
PR: Yeah, I guess so. Is – is everybody that’s interviewed, are they gonna be used? I mean, are
they gonna be, uh, um…[murmurs] Everybody that has an interview will be, uh…in the
newspaper or whatever you –
HK: Well, not necessarily in the newspaper. What we’ll do is that we’ll keep a copy of the tape
at the museum. And then we’ll also send a copy of the tape to the Kansas State Historical Society
in Topeka. And, um, then eventually out of this, I hope that we can do a story, like in the, um, the
Kansas magazine – that’s the publication of the Kansas State Historical Society – about
Lawrence, because, I mean, things have been written about Topeka, things have been written
about Kansas City in the Argentine district, but nothing has been written about Lawrence and the
Mexican-American community that started here. And so I was trying to, um, get together enough
information so that Lawrence, the story of Lawrence would be heard too.
PR: Yeah.
HK: And, um, because I went to – I went to Spencer Research Library up at KU to try to find
information and they didn’t have anything. And then I went to, um, to the Kansas State
Historical Society to see if they had any information about Lawrence and they didn’t, so it’s kind
of, um, Lawrence has been forgotten, I think.
PR: Yeah, it really has. Um –
HK: And then Buddy called me and asked me if I would do something for the fiesta, because it’s
the 25th anniversary.
PR: Yeah.
HK: So…

�PR: Okay. I – I tell you what I’d like to do with this.
HK: Okay.
PR: Uh, I was kind of doing a project here with this person.
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: And…I told ‘em that I would never use this.
HK: Oh, okay. That’s fine.
PR: Until – until I completed this.
HK: Okay, that’s fine.
PR: It was kind of a project between me and the other person.
HK: Okay, that’s fine.
PR: Okay. But, okay, I – I would be happy to help you do this.
HK: Okay.
PR: Um, like I said, there’s one or two questions that I may not be able to help you with.
HK: Okay.
PR: But I think my brother’s getting interviewed too, so –
HK: Okay, alright.
PR: In the next couple of days, so –
HK: Okay.
PR: Yeah, so I’ll be glad to help you with this.
HK: Okay. So…
PR: I – so do you ask me these questions or I write ‘em down or what?
HK: Okay. Did you sign the consent form already?
PR: Oh, okay.

�HK: ‘Cause we need to do that before we get started. For –
PR: Okay. Ink?
HK: Ink. Yes. I have ink. [Laughs]
PR: Okay…interviewee, that’d be me?
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: You know what? My name is Pete. I go by Pete, but my real name is Pedro. [Long pause]
Today’s five…
HK: 23rd.
PR: 23rd, ‘06. I’d better put my last name down.
HK: I’ll give you a copy of that before you leave.
PR: Okay. [Long pause] Okay.
HK: Alrighty. Fantastic. Oh, you need to put your name up here at the top.
PR: Oh.
HK: In that blank, there.
PR: Okay. Um, print?
HK: That’s fine. [Long pause]
PR: Okay.
HK: Alrighty. Okay. So I’ll just start out asking you a little bit –
PR: Okay.
HK: Um…uh, we can identify ourselves. Um, I’m Helen Krische, and…
PR: Uh…Pedro Romero.
HK: Okay. And, um, I’m gonna start this out by asking a question about your – your parents,
where they came from, and how you happened – the family happened to end up in Lawrence.
PR: Uh…my – my father was from Veracruz. And my mother was from, um, uh, Mexico City.

Formatted: Spanish (Spain)

�HK: Mm-hmm. And how they ended up in Lawrence.
PR: Oh. Uh…they – they wanted a better jobs. And they – they knew friends that had came to
the U.S. and, uh, they heard that there was jobs here in this country, so that’s – they came here to
this country looking for – for jobs or work.
HK: Mm-hmm. Did he start – did your father start out working on the railroad, or…?
PR: Uh, yes. Yes. He, um…um…I believe that, uh, the, uh, U.S. government, uh, needed
workers for the railroad, so, uh, they went down there to, uh, Mexico to find workers and they –
they brought ‘em over to this country.
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: I think that’s how my parents, uh, got into this country, with the help of the U.S.
government.
HK: Mm-hmm. Do you know what year that was, or around what time that was?
PR: Um…[long pause]. I’m gonna say maybe, uh, 1917.
HK: Okay. I think that’s one of the earlier families –
PR: Yeah, oh, yeah. The – the first ones.
HK: Yeah.
PR: And – and can I tell you more?
HK: Sure, yeah. Just, you know, we don’t have to set, you just tell me whatever.
PR: Well, they, uh, my mother and dad both – I believe the year was 1917. And my dad was real
young, and my mother was even younger. I think my mother was about 6 years younger than
him. Uh, they married in, uh, 1921, I believe. Um…they raised thirteen kids.
HK: Wow.
PR: Thirteen kids, and that’s…I think I’m probably about the middle – about the middle child.
HK: Mm-hmm. What were their names?
PR: Um…Gonzalo Romero and Avelina Romero. Um…[murmurs] my dad, uh…had one sister.
And…his mother, uh, I believe his – his real dad died. So he – he had a stepfather by the name
of, um…what’s his name…God, I can’t remember [murmurs]. Felix. Felix Chavez.
HK: Oh, okay.

�PR: And that – that was his step – that was his stepdad. So, somewhere along the line, he – his
real dad must have been named Romero.
HK: Did they, uh, did your father speak English before he came to the United States, or was that
something that he – he learned while he was here?
PR: Um, it was something that he learned while he was here. He was – him and my mother were
always embarrassed by – by their English. So they – they spoke to us, they spoke to us in
Spanish.
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: But, yeah, my – my dad learned – my dad learned English, but, you know, because he had,
uh, you know, because he…his whole life centered around the English language. But, uh, he was
more comfortable with the Spanish language.
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: My mother – my mother never did learn, uh, to speak English very well. She would speak it,
she would speak English, but, uh…she – she was never comfortable with – with speaking
English, but we grew up, you know, both on, on…we grew up Spanish first of the language, then
English second.
HK: Mm-hmm. So were all the children born in the United States, or were some of them born in
Mexico before they moved here?
PR: No, we were all born in – in, we were all born in Kansas.
HK: Oh.
PR: Uh, we were all born in different towns, though, because my, uh, my dad, uh, would, uh, get
orders from the railroad to go to different – different towns to help…with the – with the railroad
tracks.
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: So I think we lived, like, in Humboldt, we lived in Baldwin, we lived – I think we even lived
in the Kansas City area for a short time. Um…but I guess mostly all our life was here in
Lawrence. But we did – we did move around. But even though we – we did move around, my
brother – my older brothers and sisters would – would tell me about some of the places we – we
lived. Some of the towns we lived in, but I – I don’t remember. The only place I remember here
is in Lawrence.
HK: Mm-hmm.

�PR: That’s the only place I remember. But they did tell me, though, that we moved wherever the
railroad sent my dad, wherever they needed.
HK: Mm-hmm. So did he just work exclusively for the Santa Fe railroad, or did he work for
other railroads too?
PR: No, no, he just worked for the Santa Fe railroad. He – he worked on the crew – on the track
crew. Um, it was rough, it was rough, they worked outside all the time. I remember as a kid, that
my dad, I remember Dad coming home with his rain – his rain jacket on, and I remember during
the wintertime, um, when it snowed they – they…called my dad. They would go after my dad to,
uh, go to work to clear the tracks out.
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: And it was funny because at that time, they didn’t have telephones.
HK: Yeah.
PR: So the only way that they could – they could get in touch with the men was somebody from
in town, the depot, would go up there. And it must have been a good experience –
HK: Yeah.
PR: To go to these different, uh…uh…places where the men lived, because at that time I don’t
think that too many Mexicans had telephones. I’m pretty sure they didn’t, so the only way they
could ever get in touch was to go out there. So…
HK: Huh. Did he work – did he work all year long on the railroad?
PR: Yeah, he worked for 46 years. Um, there was a time, uh, probably back in the 70s or 80s,
that he could have retired, but they – they lost track of his records –
HK: Oh, my gosh.
PR: They lost track of his records, so in – in order to, I guess get his full benefits, he had to work
– he had to work 46 years.
HK: Oh, geez.
PR: But it – it was, it was a tough life on guys [murmurs]. I really admired my dad for – for…for
working that many years.
HK: Yeah. Did he – did he just, did he have any other side jobs, or any other –
PR: No, no. Uh, he didn’t. The Santa Fe gave him a patch of ground right beside the tracks, and,
they gave the men, and the men would go out there and plant gardens.

�HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: And I remember as a kid, be hot out there and we’d be out there with our dad and help him
plant tomatoes and peppers and sweet potatoes and all that. And it was funny because we’d be
out there helping our dad and some of our friends, our age, would come down and want us to go
play. Go play with them, but we couldn’t do it because our dad wanted us there in the garden.
My dad was pretty strict, a good man, a good…but he was pretty strict with us. We always – we
always wanted to go play with our friends, but we couldn’t ever do it.
HK: Yeah.
PR: And – and that – that was about the only, that was about the only side job that – about the
only thing that he did, really. He didn’t have a side job, not that I know of.
HK: Mm-hmm. How did – how did he, um, make out during the Depression years?
PR: Well, I – I think they did okay because they – they lived there at the apartments.
HK: Uh-huh.
PR: And the apartments were free.
HK: Uh-huh.
PR: They were free, I – they had water, but it was from the pump.
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: They – their light was, I think it was from this little, uh…kerosene lamps.
HK: Oh, uh-huh.
PR: Kerosene lamps. Um, that was their light, um…their heat was with coal. They used to have
the – the kitchen stove was, uh, coal-fed, the, uh, we had the potbelly stoves there, and that was
our heat. I – I remember, I remember wintertime, boy, I don’t see how we survived. I don’t see
how we survived, but we did. I remember as little kids, there was a bunch of us. Uh…as kids,
we, at nighttime we’d get up there and huddle around the…that potbelly, uh, stove and stay
warm, you know. Gosh I remember that potbelly stove being – being about as red as – as – that
purse there. And, um…um, for…food, my parents raised pretty much everything that we ate.
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: Um, his job was always – I believe his job was always secure with the railroad, because they
all – the railroad was the only transportation, you know, at that time –

�HK: Uh-huh.
PR: So his, I think his job was pretty secure. Um, food-wise, everything, we – he, uh, raised
chickens, uh…I think he even had a hog or two.
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: Um…for meat. For vegetables, he had this big garden and they stored a lot of the stuff.
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: For the – for the winter time they [murmurs]. Canned tomatoes, peaches, um…pears. But, a
lot of the stuff that they – that we ate during the winter time was – was canned.
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: So – so but they always, they always had something, they always had something to eat. I
remember we used to eat the heck out of chicken. [Both laugh] Chicken, chicken was always,
chicken was always there.
HK: It’s stable.
PR: Yeah, really.
HK: Yeah.
PR: I, uh, I’m really interested in completing this [murmurs], but like I said, I – I’m better, you
know, when I’m – when I’m by myself and [murmurs] special things, certain things happened
that bring me back to these memories.
HK: Yeah, sure.
PR: And I linger on these memories and I – I want to jot them down and to express the feelings
that I had about that time, so [murmurs] complete that.
HK: Yeah. Yeah. And, uh, your mom, did she – of course, she made all of her – she made
tortillas for bread and, um…
PR: Yeah
HK: Did she do a lot of sewing for the kids, for their clothing?
PR: Right, yeah. Uh…yeah, my mother, she did, um, she – she did all the cooking…she…did a
lot of the clothing.
HK: Mm-hmm.

�PR: I remember the girls, my sisters, would always get these real pretty flour dresses, you know,
made from the –
HK: Flour sacks.
PR: Flour sacks and things like that. And, um…my mother, well – our – our main ingredients of
food was instead of bread, we used to eat tortillas. So she made tortillas all the time.
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: She made tortillas all the time. I mean, she made ‘em, I think, in the morning, and she’d
make ‘em again in the afternoon, so we – we’ve always had [murmurs] tortillas. We ate a lot of
frijoles.
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: Potatoes and things like that.
HK: So what would be a typical meal at your house?
PR: Um, a typical meal would be, uh…then?
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: Oh, tortillas and frijoles. Potatoes. For meat, it – it was usually chicken.
HK: Chicken.
PR: So that – that was pretty typical.
HK: Did you have meat every day, or was it sort of a once or twice a week thing, or – ?
PR: Um, okay, I think it was maybe…I’m gonna say, I’m gonna go back about chicken on, you
know, I’ll go back, I think maybe chicken, maybe a couple of times a week. The – the rest of the
time, uh, my parents bought a lot of, like, uh…bologna meat and maybe pork chops, whatever. I
guess my parents would always get whenever on sale, the pork chops. But yes, we – we – we had
our share of, uh…of good healthy food.
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: We, I can never say we went hungry. I mean, you know, there was probably a lot of times
we didn’t like what was being served, but, I mean, it was there for us to eat if we wanted to eat,
so…

�HK: Sure. Did you – did you as a child go downtown much; did you go, like, to different
businesses and…?
PR: Um…yeah, we – I tell you what, I lived there at the Santa Fe apartment till I was…I think it
might have been the sixth grade.
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: And we all – we all decided, we all decided it was a…it was a joy to – to go into town.
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: And we – we’d go to the movies. Um…our, the school – the school was in town, so you
know, we all went to New York School. And the Santa Fe – the Santa Fe apartment – well, we
call ‘em the Santa Fe yards. We did. Somebody else might call it the Santa Fe apartments, but we
called it the Santa Fe yards. We, to get to – to the town, we had to go over the tracks. Had kind
of a steep little hill, and that was the first set of tracks.
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: And between – in between that track there and other tracks, it must have been about, I’m
gonna say at least five or six sets of tracks that – that we had to cross in order to say we were in
town. Once we got past the tracks, we would say we were in town. [HK laughs] But, um, there –
there was a road, there was a – a road where the – where the trucks and whatever needed to get
back in there used it [murmurs], but we always used the – we would always get to town by
crossing the tracks, either walking across the tracks or crawling, uh, crawling underneath the
track, underneath the boxcars.
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: And a lot of times when we did crawl under the boxcars, you know, the engine would, you
could hear it start and the train would jerk and [murmurs], but we’d get out. We were so used to
– to crawling underneath the – the – the train tracks. The trains –
HK: Did anyone ever get hurt?
PR: No, nobody ever did. We did that a lot. That was, we probably did that as much as – there
was always, there was always trains there, so we – we – we did a lot of crawling underneath ‘em.
And every once in a while you know the train wouldn’t be there where you could stand up and
where you could walk across the tracks, but a lot of times the tracks – the – the trains would be
there, so we had to crawl, you know, crawl underneath ‘em to get, you know, into town. Um, we
did that as long as I can remember. Going to school, yeah, I don’t know how we did it with our
schoolbooks and all that. But, uh…we used to do it, and, oh…all – all of the stores that, uh, my
parents went to, um, like I said, my – my parents raised a lot of the food that they needed. We
were talking about the Depression. They – they did a lot of their – their food raising. But then, uh
– uh – they also did a lot of, uh, grocery shopping.

�HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: Um, in town. In town I’m talking about streets like, um, uh…9th and New York…9th and –
let’s see – 9th and New York. At 9th and New York there used to be a little store called Johnson’s
Grocery Store. And then, um, let’s see…and then there was another store, uh…another store…on
8th Street. We used to call one “The Little Store” and it was kind of a one flat deal. And then we
used to call – we used to call the – the other store “The Big Store” because it was a two-story
house [murmurs].
HK: So these were just little neighborhood grocery stores.
PR: Right, yes. We did – we did a lot of the, uh…one of the reasons why we went in town was to
go to the store, or go to school, or go to our church, St. John’s Church, which – which I think
must have been, I’m gonna say, from the Santa Fe yard to the church, I’m gonna say it was about
a mile.
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: It might have been more, maybe a mile and a half. But we used to, we used to walk that…on
Sundays. We would all walk down to – we all walked to church. And it would be cold
[murmurs]. We used to go to the movies. Our parents would give us, like, what was it, fifty
cents. You could – you could always see a movie and buy popcorn and all that stuff for fifty
cents. And, um, other times we came into town was, well…we – we’d play baseball. We’d play
baseball at the South Park. We’d play, uh baseball at the Municipal Stadium.
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: It’s right there, right off –
HK: Hobbs Park, yeah.
PR: Yeah. But we – we – we came into town quite a bit. We always envied the – the kids in the
city. Yeah, we – we’d always envy them kids ‘cause they – we were ashamed. We were ashamed
to be living at the Santa Fe apartments because, you know, the Santa Fe apartments, um,
uh…everybody, all our friends had – all our friends – some of our friends, now, the ones that
lived in town, they had addresses.
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: House addresses, and we didn’t have one like that.
HK: Hmm.
PR: Uh…there – there must have been – there must have been an address for that. Otherwise
how could we have gotten our mail?

�HK: Yeah.
PR: But, um, we always envied our friends in the town because, you know, they – they, uh, they
had – they had an address and all that, and all we were – we were just the, uh, the Santa Fe yards.
HK: So did you experience a lot of prejudice?
PR: Um…
HK: In Lawrence at that time?
PR: Myself…I didn’t think so then. But now, I – I – I think I did. For one thing, you know, I go
by Pete, but my real name is Pedro on my birth certificate. And I had thought about it years later
and I said: “Why, how come I didn’t keep my – my name Pedro?”
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: And, uh…um…I – I really didn’t experience a lot of, uh, a lot of, uh…racial things like that.
I did notice it, you know, that the groups all kind of stuck, you know, the kids all stuck to
themselves, the white groups would stick to themselves, the Hispanics would to themselves, the
blacks to themselves and all that. But, um…I guess I did experience it, because, uh, it was
always us. It was always us, it wasn’t us mingling in with the other kids and all that. We – we
were just…we were just as a group, like we knew we had to stay together.
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: Um…[sighs, long pause]
HK: Is there – was there any difference between, like, the – the kids who came from the Santa Fe
yards and the kids who actually lived in houses?
PR: Yes.
HK: Around on Pennsylvania – and New York Streets?
PR: Yeah.
HK: Those Hispanic children?
PR: Yes, yeah.
HK: Was there a lot of difference between the two, or…?
PR: Oh…

�HK: Did you still hang together close?
PR: Yeah, yeah. Oh, yeah, we – we hung around them and, um…we always thought that they
were better than us. But, I mean, you know, we all got along real good and all that, so – I really
don’t think there was too much, uh…difference. Only that, you know, they – they lived in houses
and we lived in – in the apartment building.
HK: Yeah. How did school go for you? Was it…?
PR: [Sighs]. School to me was hard. School to me was hard, I was…I was pretty attached to
home.
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: And it was hard for me when I had to go to kindergarten at the school, it was hard for me. I
remember looking out the window, the school window, wishing I would go home. It was – it
was, it was – it was scary for me, it was, because like I said, we’d always – we’d always pretty
much, uh, um…stayed at the – the apartments.
HK: Mm-hmm.
PR: And then when it came time to go away, like being, uh, being home for the first time. But, I
mean, you know, I guess all – all kids experience that.
HK: Yeah. Did you speak any English before you started school, or – ?
PR: Um…I did speak English. I – I, it’s funny because – [tape cuts off at 47:18]
END OF TAPE 25

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                    <text>Interview with Pedro (Pete) Romero
Interviewer: Emily Raymond
Date of Interview: January 29, 2021
Length of Interview: 19:03
Location of Interview: Recorded over telephone
Transcription Completion Date: February 1, 2021
Transcriptionist: Emily Raymond
Emily Raymond (Interviewer): Alright. For the purposes of the tape, my name is Emily
Raymond. Today’s date is Friday, January 29, 2021, and I am about to call Pete Romero to
interview him. [Dial tone]
Pete Romero (Interviewee): Hello?
ER: Hello, Pete. It’s Emily.
PR: Hi, Emily! How’s it going?
ER: I’m doing well, how are you?
PR: Hey, okay, I just got through stepping in the house; I’m doing some chores.
ER: Is this still a good time?
PR: Uh…yeah. Yeah, it is a good time. Uh, yeah, go – let’s go ahead.
ER: Okay.
PR: Okay.
ER: Well, let me introduce myself first. We – we’ve never met. And I wish we could do it in
person, but unfortunately –
PR: Yeah. Hey, you know what, maybe if you want to, maybe next time we get – maybe next
time we can get together, and I – I can kind of show you things – things, uh, uh, pictures and –
and, uh, you know, maybe there’s some things maybe that, uh, maybe nobody has seen, and
maybe – maybe you – you might be able to, uh…maybe there’s something there that, you know,
you might be able to use. But yes, uh, um, you know, it kind of would be kind of nice to, uh, to –
to meet in person, but, ah, you know, right now with everything that’s going on and all that, it –
it’s, uh, um…I’m kind of a little, uh, stay-at-home person. I’d rather do things here at home. But
do you know what, Emily? If there’s a good place that we could meet, where there’s not a lot of
people…
ER: Would you prefer to do that?
PR: Sure.

�ER: Okay. That way, you can bring some of the paintings and the drawings.
PR: Sure, yeah. Sure, yeah, we can do that. Uh…is there, uh, things we can discuss right now?
ER: We can, if you like. I can just start by asking you a few questions.
PR: Okay. Now, so, this is all being recorded, right?
ER: Yes, this is being recorded.
PR: Okay. Oh, okay. Okay, well, um…I’m not gonna say nothing that I shouldn’t say, so it’s all
right. And I guess, what that letter was from, uh, that, uh, uh – is it Noreen?
ER: It’s Nora Murphy.
PR: Nora. Nora. Nora. Nora. I always call her Noreen. Nora. Okay. Yeah, so that letter that she
sent me, uh, she had me fill it out and, uh, I went ahead with it. So…
ER: Well, that sounds good. We just wanted to make sure we had all of the necessary forms
before we did the interview.
PR: Yeah. Could – could you hold on for a second, okay? The – the phone’s ringing and I’m on
–
ER: Yes, of course.
PR: See, we’re expecting a phone call. Just a second. [Background conversation continues until
4:07] Uh, Emily, I was – we’re kind of, hoping to hear from the – from the Douglas County
Health, to have my wife have her shot taken, and, uh, well, we just kind of hanging around the
phone, so…when they call up, so she can get – so she can get, uh, on the list to have that shot
taken.
ER: Good, I hope she can.
PR: I – I took my shot at the VA hospital there in Topeka, the first one. I haven’t taken the
second one, that’s in a couple more weeks. That’s, uh, that’s where I’m kind of at right now.
ER: Well, I hope she can get her shot, too.
PR: Yeah, yeah. It just seems like the ones that need it the most aren’t getting it. Like – like me, I
– I’m in pretty good health, but, you know, ‘cause being that I was a veteran, I got to – I got to
go in to get my shot, so…
ER: Oh, excellent. Good.

�PR: Yeah. Okay –
ER: Well, one of the things I was going to ask anyway was about your family. During the first
interview, I – we didn’t find out whether you had a wife or kids, so could you – could you tell
me a bit about your family?
PR: Uh, well, yes. Uh, um, I’m married to, uh, uh…my wife is named Anna Marie Romero.
ER: Anna Marie.
PR: Romero.
ER: Alright.
PR: Her maiden name was Perez.
ER: Oh, okay.
PR: Uh, I have two sons, uh…Paul. Paul Romero, who is, uh, 51 years old. He lives in Kansas
City. He’s a banker in, uh, that UMB Bank in Kansas City.
ER: Oh, good. So, he’s close by, so you can visit him.
PR: Yeah, yeah, he’s close by. Then I have my son Vince. Vince Romero, who – who is, um,
uh…he’s married to, uh, Samantha. And, uh…let’s see, okay. He – he’s got – he’s got seven
kids.
ER: Seven, my goodness.
PR: Yeah.
ER: You must be proud.
PR: He’s got seven kids. And – and, uh, my son Paul has two.
ER: Okay.
PR: Three, three. Three, three.
ER: So, between all of those two, you’ve got ten grandkids?
PR: Right.
ER: Oh, congratulations. [PR laughs] Do you get to see them pretty often?

�PR: Uh, yeah, uh, yeah…I, uh, I try to see ‘em as much as I can. Some – sometimes I think I – I
can be a nuisance to – to, uh, to my, uh, two boys, ‘cause I’m always, you know, calling ‘em up
and asking ‘em about the grandkids and wanting to talk to ‘em and…
ER: I don’t – I don’t think that would be a nuisance. I – I enjoy talking to my grandparents.
PR: Yes.
ER: What do you like to do with your grandkids?
PR: What do I like to do? Oh, I – oh, I – um, they’re – they’re into sports. They’re – they’re into
sports, uh…uh, baseball, uh, soccer. Football. Um…them are my grandsons. My – my
granddaughters, I like to just, you know, um…I like to – to, uh, they’re – one of ‘em is in ballet,
and the other one is, uh, is a real good, uh, uh, street – seamstress.
ER: Oh.
PR: Likes to sew and things like that. Okay, so…I could, uh, my grandkids on – on my – on my
son Vince’s side – side, they range in age from two to thirteen years old, and they all attend St.
John’s School.
ER: Oh, my goodness. I have actually never been to St. John’s School.
PR: What’s that?
ER: I have never been to St. John’s School.
PR: Oh, it – it’s a nice church. It’s really a good church. There’s so much, uh, uh…diversity in –
in the St. John’s Church.
ER: Well, that’s refreshing to hear.
PR: Yeah, it’s – it’s a pretty neat church. We’re – me and the wife, we’re pretty involved in it.
We try to get involved in quite a bit of it. I’m, uh, I’m an usher at, uh, the 4:30 Mass, and, um…I
just, yeah, so much of our life centers around the church. I think the church is our second home.
ER: Is it? I’m glad.
PR: Yeah.
ER: My parents are very involved in their church back home. I grew up Baptist.
PR: Right. Yes.
ER: So they are much the same. And so, you grew up Catholic, is that correct?

�PR: Right, yeah, I grew up Catholic. And all my life I’ve been – been around the church. Altar
boy, just everything that, uh, everything that – that – that, uh, involved the church, I try to get
involved in it.
ER: Excellent. Well, how did you meet your wife?
PR: Uh, well, we – we met, uh, I met my wife through a cousin of hers. Um, I met her – she’s
from Topeka.
ER: Okay.
PR: I – I met her at a, there was a dance. Uh, we – we all liked to go to the dances. Long time
ago, you know, that was one of the things, you know, people went to dances and things like that.
ER: Right.
PR: That’s where, uh…that – that is where a lot of our people, uh, used to – used to like to do.
They used to like to, on the weekends, maybe, uh, be a dance in Topeka or Ottawa, or you know,
just someplace. And we’ll all like to go out there and just meet up friends and dance and things
like that. Uh, I – I met her in, uh, 1964. Uh, we got married two years later, uh, got married in
1966. Got married at, uh, Lady Guadalupe Church in Topeka.
ER: Oh. That’s special. I’m glad for you.
PR: Well, thank you. Thank you.
ER: I – in fact, I think ‘64, yeah, that was the year that my dad was born.
PR: Oh, oh really? In ‘64, really?
ER: Yes.
PR: Wow.
ER: It’s a small world.
PR: Well, yes. Uh, let’s see, uh, ‘64, so you’re – you’re, okay. Okay, so your dad is, uh,
uh…how old is your dad?
ER: He’s – oh, good question. 56, I believe. I’m not very good at math.
PR: 56, okay, okay. Okay.
ER: Yep, 56. That’s what it is.

�PR: Yeah. Okay. So, Emily, you’re – you’re, Amy, you’re – you’re doing school, uh, this is a
kind of a school project you’re doing?
ER: Well, in part. I’m – right now I am a graduate student at the KU History Department.
PR: Okay.
ER: And about, uh, well, at some point last year, they sent out an e-mail asking if someone
would like to help with transcription, with the Watkins History Museum.
PR: Right.
ER: And I – before I started my graduate career, I was a transcriptionist at a doctor’s office.
PR: Uh-huh.
ER: So…
PR: Yes.
ER: I said I would love to help, and it is definitely much more interesting than listening to
medical cases.
PR: [Laughs] Oh, for sure. For sure, yeah.
ER: I actually get to talk to people.
PR: Right. Yeah. I, um, my – my son works for, uh, a hospital there in Kansas City. He’s uh,
he’s the health, um, administration department.
ER: Oh, very good. I hope he’s got his vaccine, then.
PR: No, no, he’s not. He – he’s, uh, he – he’s doing real good. No, he’s – so far, he hasn’t got
nothing, and he’s taken shots and things like that, so everything’s okay.
ER: Good, I’m glad to hear that. It’s – it’s incredible what we have available today.
PR: Right, yeah.
ER: What was – what was healthcare like for you? I mean, I imagine we – we’ve grown in leaps
and bounds, but what was it like when you were a kid? What kind of things were available to
you, healthcare-wise?
PR: Oh, my – my goodness, Amy, it – it – okay, we – we grew up, uh, in, uh, La Yarda. It’s a
place, uh, down there by the Santa Fe, uh, by the Santa Fe depot. Uh…um, well, it’s, uh…it – it

�was – it was pretty tough. It was pretty hard, but – oh, we didn’t know it. We, to us it was just –
it was just part of, uh, living, uh, where we were living. Um, gosh. Um…
ER: Sure, of course. That was – it was normal for you, when you were growing up.
PR: Yeah. You – you know what? Emily? Amy? Emily or Amy?
ER: It’s Emily.
PR: Emily. Okay, Emily. You know, Emily, I – I’d like to get together with you in person.
ER: That would be wonderful.
PR: Would that be okay? And – and I can show you more of what I got.
ER: Yes, I would. Is there a – a place you had in mind? I will happily go wherever you’re
comfortable.
PR: Well, I – I’d like to get together with you where there’s not too many people. Uh, um, how
about – can we get into the, uh, Watkins, uh, museum?
ER: That’s a good question. I will ask Nora. She would – she would know more about that,
having access to it. That would be a good idea, because there wouldn’t be too many people
around.
PR: No, there wouldn’t be too many people. And you know, being that it’s part of history that
we’re going after, this might be a good deal.
ER: That’s a good idea, Pete. I will – I will contact Nora, and I’ll ask her about availability.
How’s that?
PR: Yeah, and – and you might mention to Nora that I’ve been trying to get ahold of her. And
her line seems to be busy all the time.
ER: Oh. That’s odd. Okay, what I’ll do is send her an e-mail. That’s usually the way I
communicate with her, and –
PR: Right.
ER: I’ll let her know you’ve been trying to get ahold of her. But yes, I’d really like to meet with
you in person.
PR: Sure, yeah. That would be better. You know, I got a lot of, uh, I got a lot of transcripts here,
and I’d like to show ‘em to you and all that. But I – I can’t, well, we can’t do that over the phone.
ER: Yeah.

�PR: But, yeah, I’d like to get together with you.
ER: Okay. And I – we’ll both wear masks, and we’ll – we’ll definitely be safe. So, I will –
PR: Sure.
ER: I’ll check with Nora, and see what might be available.
PR: Yeah, check and – and see, see if there’s a place where we can – where we can get together.
ER: Okay. That sounds like a good idea, Pete.
PR: Yeah, okay. And I’ll bring you – I’ll bring you everything that I got, and we can go from
there.
ER: Wonderful. I’ll look forward to it.
PR: Okay. Emily, uh, I’m – I’m anxious to meet with you, uh, um…I – I think I got an exciting
childhood life that I’d like to share with you, and –
ER: I agree.
PR: And maybe with, uh…the people here in Lawrence.
ER: Yes. I – I would like them to know about it as well. So I – I’m looking forward to our
meeting.
PR: Sure. I’ll be excited to do that, okay?
ER: Okay. I’ll give you a call when I’ve talked to Nora.
PR: Oh, for sure, yeah. Maybe we can make it next week or something like that, someplace.
ER: Yes, that sounds very good.
PR: That sounds great. Okay, Emily?
ER: Alright.
PR: I’m – I’m sorry I can’t help you.
ER: No, you – you are being helpful. And we’ll talk more in person; it will be easier that way.
PR: Okay, sure. So, is – is it easy for you to, you know, just kind of get away, and –

�ER: I teach classes on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays.
PR: Oh, really?
ER: So usually Tuesdays and Thursdays are – are more open.
PR: Yeah. Oh, hey, that sounds good. Thursdays, yeah.
ER: Okay.
PR: That sounds – what – what building do you teach in?
ER: Well, I’m doing it remotely this semester; I’m an adjunct professor.
PR: Oh, okay.
ER: Yeah.
PR: Oh, okay.
ER: But I have an office on the KU campus.
PR: Sure. Yeah, I – I worked for the – I worked for KU for quite a few years, and I think I know
every building on the campus there.
ER: Oh, yeah. You probably know Wescoe Hall, then.
PR: Oh, yeah. I been there a lot of times in Wescoe Hall, yeah.
ER: Yeah, that’s where my office is.
PR: Okay, okay, Emily. So, I think we can get together again?
ER: Yes, I would enjoy that.
PR: Okay. I – I’m sorry, like I said, I – I just, I – I had some, uh, grocery shopping and I, uh, I
tried to hurry as much as I could so I could get together with you.
ER: That sounds good. And no worries.
PR: I – okay.
ER: Okay. I’ll talk with Nora and I’ll get back with you, alright?
PR: Yeah, yeah. Okay. Talk to Nora, and you might mention that I tried to get her on – on her –
on her cell phone, and, uh, every time I call up, her line seems to be busy.

�ER: Okay. I’ll send her an e-mail right now.
PR: Okay. Thank you, Emily.
ER: Thank you, Pete. Have a good day.
PR: Okay, bye-bye.
ER: Bye.
END OF TAPE

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                    <text>Interview with Pedro (Pete) Romero
Interviewer: Emily Raymond
Date of Interview: February 4, 2021
Length of Interview: 90:46
Location of Interview: St. John’s Parish House
Transcription Completion Date: February 25, 2021
Transcriptionist: Emily Raymond
Pete Romero (Interviewee): I – you know, I’ve always wanted to write down a lot of notes about
– about my life, and, uh, oh, you know, I like to do this here, write notes down. And then one –
one day, maybe, get it all together and – and maybe…making a book out of it, you know.
Emily Raymond (Interviewer): I think you should.
PR: Kind of pass it on to the family.
ER: You’ve gone to all this trouble to make all the notes.
PR: Well, yeah. I was gonna…
ER: And with the self-publishing platforms nowadays…
PR: Right.
ER: You can – you can publish books yourself as often as you like.
PR: Here’s – here’s the history of the Romero family.
ER: Oh, that’s right. I remember you said your parents were Gonzalo and Avelina.
PR: Yeah, yeah. Let’s see…
ER: Oh, you’re so lucky to have these pictures.
PR: And there was, uh –
ER: Your parents.
PR: Thirteen of us and – and we’re – we’re all in that book. We’re all in that book.
ER: Oh, you have a table of contents, good.
PR: Yeah.
ER: There are you. December 7th. Okay, so that’s – you called her Jennie. Okay.

�PR: Yeah.
ER: I’ll be sure to spell it with an “ie” when I do the transcript. I’ve heard the name before, but I
wanted to make sure I got all the spellings right.
PR: I checked it out with the family and asked ‘em if it was okay if I used this – if I could,
uh…uh…take this book and let somebody look at it and – I got their permission, you know, to…
ER: Oh, okay. Of course.
PR: So, anything that you can use in there, you can – you’re welcome to use, and…
ER: Topeka, Kansas. Okay. [Background voices for several seconds] Okay, so your mother was
– your mother lived to 89 years old.
PR: Yes.
ER: That’s impressive.
PR: Yeah. She passed away when – when she passed away, I, uh…you know, there was thirteen
of us, so we all took our turns going down there every evening. Somebody went down there
every – every evening to check ‘em out, to make sure they were okay, ‘cause they wanted to live
in that house.
ER: Oh, okay.
PR: They wanted – they wanted to live in that house, so, there was thirteen of us, so everybody
took their turn. Uh…in the evening; on the weekends, um, on the weekends, we stood there all
day with them. And then we left them alone in the evenings, you know, because they –
ER: Of course.
PR: You know, they, that’s the way they wanted it, you know. They just wanted to be there in
the daytime. And, well, really, they probably didn’t even want us there [laughs], but they were so
– you know, they like to have their independence and all that. It was their house, and I just
wanted to do things.
ER: But you still want to look out for them, and just check in, make sure they’re okay.
PR: Yeah, so, anyways, uh, it was, um…it was – it was on the weekend, and it was my turn. So, I
went down to – went down to my parents’ house and the house…my mother was cooking. And it
– she had a heart attack. Anyways, the house filled up with smoke.
ER: Oh, no.

�PR: So anyways, when I got there, I drove through the alley, and I seen all the smoke coming out
of the house. So, I parked the car in – I parked the car in the parking lot there, and I – it was, I
think it was, like, in spring. It was April or something. Anyways, anyways, I – I parked my car,
and I seen, uh, a pile, looked like a pile of rags out there. Well, it was my dad. My dad was pretty
– pretty much blind. Somehow, he had managed to get himself out of the house. He got out of
the house, probably looking – looking for help, and I guess he just…fatigue got to him, and he
was laying out there and I found him out there. And I asked him where Mom was, and he said:
“She’s inside the house.” So I said: “Okay, Dad, I’m gonna put – put you” – let me see, how it
was that I did it – I put him in the house that wasn’t full of smoke, and, you know, to get him out
of the rain. Right inside the house, and I couldn’t see nothing. It was all full of smoke. My mom
had been cooking something, and, uh…um…
ER: It started burning.
PR: It just, you know, started – started a smoke fire. Smoke. Anyway, I found her, she was on
the floor, so I – I’m the one that found my mom. But anyways, and…she died. She – she died
from a heart attack that day.
ER: Oh.
PR: Um, and my dad after that, he – he didn’t want to continue living. You know, he said he
wanted to be with – with Avelina. Uh, so, I think he maybe lasted about a year. My – my dad
really gave up on living after he lost my mom. Um…
ER: How long were they married?
PR: 76 years.
ER: Oh, my gosh.
PR: 76.
ER: I think that’s a personal record for me.
PR: Right, yeah, that was – that was a long time.
ER: I – I don’t blame him for feeling that way, when you spend so much time with someone, it’s
hard to imagine living without them.
PR: Right, yeah. It was hard.
ER: I like how you wrote here, he liked to fish.
PR: Yeah. He liked to go fishing.

�ER: And he’s got his – his birthday cake with all the candles. It sounds like you had a really
close family.
PR: Oh, we were close. We were big. We were a big family, but you know, we – we took care of
each other and all that. And we were poor. And you know, working, my dad worked for the
railroad.
ER: Yeah, tell me about that a bit. I’m – I’m interested about what – what was it like, just
growing up, daily living there?
PR: Well, we, uh…like I said, we – we were poor, but we didn’t know it. Um…I – I think we
lived – we had six rooms that…let’s see [murmurs] that fourteen of us shared.
ER: Fourteen people for six rooms? Wow.
PR: Yeah, uh, my parents, and my brothers and sisters. Somehow, we managed in these – in, um,
to, uh, live there in La Yarda. You know, the – the rooms – the little rooms were six – I think
they were, like, eight by ten. They were eight by ten rooms. And, uh, um…they were concrete.
Concrete floors and all that.
ER: Must have been cold.
PR: Oh, it was. In the wintertime it was cold. We used to have to, in order to heat the house, we
had to haul wood. Wood – we had the little wood stoves.
ER: Oh, the little potbelly stoves.
PR: Yeah, potbellied, to keep us warm and all that. It was cold. It was cold in there. Gosh, I
remember as a little kid, in the wintertime, looking out the windows, and the windows would be
all frosted with ice.
ER: Oh.
PR: It was that – it was that cold. We had – if we had to go to the bathroom, the bathroom was
outside, like around 40 feet.
ER: Oh, that’s right.
PR: And, oh gosh, I remember having to go – I remember having to use the bathroom a few
times, and I looked – went outside and looked up in the sky at the bright stars and all that, and
went to the bathroom and came right back in. We didn’t stay out there very long.
ER: No.

�PR: No, and – and, well, to this day I don’t know how my parents did it. All them kids and we all
had to sleep, uh, we all had to sleep together. I think it, like all the boys slept together. It was,
gosh, I think two of the rooms that we used were for the boys to sleep.
ER: Mm-hmm.
PR: And then my sisters had a couple rooms for theirselves, and Mom and Dad in their room.
Had a little kitchen. But, that was – it was pretty rough. Our – our water, our water was at the
water pump outside, and –
ER: Right.
PR: We had to get the water and haul it from outside, inside the house.
ER: Oh.
PR: For drinking water and taking a bath and things like that. Um…
ER: The amount of work.
PR: Oh, yeah. I – I don’t know how my parents did it, but we did it – and, you know, to us, it – it
must have been rough. It – it had to be tough.
ER: No doubt.
PR: But us guys didn’t know it. I knew, you know, we – we had something in our tummy and
woke up next morning and all that. We were – we were surviving and all that. And it – it, um, it
was pretty rough there at the – La Yarda. Going to school – going – little kids, little kids…there
was no sidewalks or anything.
ER: Oh, back then.
PR: In La Yarda. It was just a path. A path that had just been worn in time by people going
through that little path, and we had to, uh, to go to school we had to climb this – this little hill; on
top of the hill was the railroad tracks. And, Emily, I tell you, in the wintertime, I – I don’t even
think we had galoshes. I – I think it was just our regular shoes and things like that.
ER: Oh, not even waterproof boots.
PR: No, no waterproof, no, we didn’t know such – there was no such thing existed like that for
us, you know. The – the – um, can I say “The white kids” or “Anglo kids”?
ER: Yeah, absolutely.
PR: Yeah, it won’t offend you? Okay. You know, you know, the – the little white kids we’d go
to school with, they had their galoshes on, and big old mittens – gloves, and all that.

�ER: Fluffy coats.
PR: Yeah. We always thought they were – we always thought they were rich, because, you
know, they – they had better stuff than us. But anyways, we went to New York School. And,
um…we went to New York School, and I remember going to New York School, uh, we all had –
we all had Spanish, and we were all – we were born, given Spanish names. But when we went to
school, they changed our names.
ER: Oh.
PR: My name was Pedro. That’s what my parents got on – but I got to school, and they called me
Peter, okay?
ER: Oh. Okay.
PR: I had a brother named Tony. Antonio. Went to school, and from Antonio, they called him
Tony. Francisco, Frank. Juanita, Jennie.
ER: So, they Anglicized everyone’s names.
PR: Yeah, that’s – that’s what happened to us. When we went there, and it was hard for us,
because…
ER: I imagine it was.
PR: Yeah, ‘cause we grew up on Spanish. Our parents, that’s what they talked to us, in Spanish.
So, anyways, we – we’d go to school, and, uh…we were – we were – it was hard for us, because,
uh, a lot of the words that they used, the teachers used, well, we didn’t know that. We were, you
know, taught the – the words in Spanish. And it – it was a little tough. It was a little tough.
ER: I imagine it was. And you must have done remarkably well, for not knowing any English
when you arrived.
PR: And you know, to us, oh, my gosh, New York School was a – it was like a palace!
ER: Oh, was it?
PR: Wow, in these scripts that I got, I’ll describe some of that, but gosh, we went to New York
School. Beautiful building there, and we went inside and the floors were tiled, and we’d never
seen – we’d never seen nothing like tiled floors and all that. And, God, we were amazed by that,
and how nice and warm – how nice and warm it was.
ER: Oh, the school was heated.
PR: Inside the school, compared to our house –

�ER: True.
PR: In La Yarda. Going to New York School, gosh, bathrooms.
ER: Actual bathrooms.
PR: Inside bathroom, and we couldn’t get over it. Gosh. We were so used to the outhouse out
there in La Yarda and all that, my gosh, that was so neat.
ER: Seemed like a luxury.
PR: Oh, my God. Water fountains.
ER: Water fountains.
PR: They had water fountains inside – inside the – inside the building. We were used to going
outside and getting our water in – had little buckets, I guess that’s what we had, buckets, and
whenever we wanted water, we’d just get a drink of water, but it – it was – oh, New York School
was so beautiful. And it – it was funny because, um, I – I remember – I remember one time, we –
to, uh, for lunch, we used to take our little lunch, uh, sacks. The – the white kids had their little,
real nice.
ER: Oh, the tin boxes.
PR: Nice buckets and things like that. And now, today, you know, they – they eat in school and
all that. They eat in the school, but…
ER: So, there wasn’t a cafeteria back then?
PR: No. No, there was no cafeteria.
ER: Okay.
PR: So, um, gosh, the kids would – us guys, we had paper sacks.
ER: Yeah, like that.
PR: And we’d take our little lunch and all that. And the other kids, white kids, had – had lunch
buckets and nice pails and all that. I remember one time, I remember we – we grew up on – on
tacos and things like that, um, burritos. You know, at – at that time, I thought, “Gosh, we’re
poor.” We eat this food, ‘cause that’s all we had, you know, tortillas. Tortillas, and we’d make
burritos and all that. So anyways, uh – uh, I remember one time we, uh, we – my parents, my
mother made us some burritos for us. It’s a tortilla, and inside was –
ER: I like burritos, yeah.

�PR: So, anyways, uh, we – one time we took them and – and, uh, the white kids looked at us,
checking out our little burritos, and they’d say: “What the heck is that?” And – and, uh, we –
we’d tell ‘em that’s what we ate. And then I guess we must have told our mother and all that, our
mother about it, you know, the kids wondering what that was. Kind of odd-looking food. So,
after that my mother started making us butter and jelly sandwiches.
ER: Oh, okay, with the –
PR: But, yeah, you know, things like that, that happened to us, and…
ER: Were you ever teased for that kind of food, or were they more curious about it?
PR: I think they were more curious.
ER: Okay.
PR: Yeah, I – I think they were more curious about what, you know, but, you know, it was funny
because, um…Um – okay, I’m gonna read some of these; is that okay?
ER: Oh, yes, go ahead.
PR: What was – my – my, uh…thoughts get a little, uh, um…
ER: Well, and you said you have a headache, too.
PR: Yeah, I’ve got – I’ve got my headache, but I – I don’t know, about school…uh, the kids –
the – the – we felt different. But we felt different because we were – our features were different.
The color of our skin was different. Um, our language was different. Okay, um…we – we never
really had real nice clothes.
ER: Right.
PR: Most of our clothes were hand-me-down clothes, things like that. Um…and I don’t know,
we always felt that the other kids were better than us. Um…now, we were – we had to speak –
we were always kind of…scared, because we didn’t know if we were gonna say the right thing.
ER: Right.
PR: You know, use the right word. We were bilingual, I guess.
ER: You – oh, absolutely.
PR: Yeah, we were bilingual, at home Spanish, at school was English and all that, so we were
always a little bit, uh, I think we were always a little scared to get up there and talk and all that.
We felt so much better when we were in our group.

�ER: Right.
PR: When all the little Mexicans were all together. Um – we felt much better, you know, and…
ER: Did you stick together at school that way?
PR: Oh, yeah. For – yeah, for sure, yeah, we did. We – we stuck pretty much together. We did
everything. We did everything together. Our…our best friends were the – our own MexicanAmerican – Mexican kids. We – we never did go to any of our white friends’ house.
ER: No?
PR: No, we never did. We always stuck around with – with our kind. Oh, gosh, we – at church,
St. John’s Church, we were little kids, maybe…seven, six, seven years old.
ER: Oh.
PR: We were altar boys at – at the St. John’s Church here.
ER: Oh, yeah, that’s right; you were an altar boy.
PR: Yeah, we were altar boys. We had our own group. Uh…then, um, we had a lot of altar boys
and they were all put in different – in squads, we called ‘em – they called ‘em squads.
ER: Squads.
PR: Squad Two, Squad…
ER: Oh, okay.
PR: And – and, um, um…it was – it was – it was always, always kids that, you know, they was
only Mexican kids that – that, uh, that made up that group. And then – and then, when we got a
little older and we all played on the same baseball team. So, we stuck together pretty much.
Today – today, they’re – they’re still our best friends.
ER: Oh.
PR: Today they’re still our – today they’re still –
ER: I’m glad.
PR: Our best friends, and some of ‘em have passed away, and – and we’ve always – we always
relied on each other. They – we felt so comfortable when we were with our own kind. Um…
ER: So, you – you played baseball at – was it South Park, or Hobbs Park?

�PR: Uh – uh, well, we played at South Park.
ER: At South Park, okay.
PR: We played at South Park, at South Park and the other Hobbs Park.
ER: Okay.
PR: Yeah.
ER: I remember from your first transcript, you had mentioned playing in a park.
PR: Yeah – we played there. We played for the St. John’s…uh…team.
ER: Oh, they had a team?
PR: Yeah – the –
ER: I didn’t know that.
PR: Yeah. It was St. John’s team. In fact, we got some – we got a lot of pictures of –
ER: Were you good?
PR: I was average. I was average [laughs].
ER: Are you being modest?
PR: Yeah, I was pretty – yeah, I, uh, I had other brothers that were quite a bit better than me. But
I mean, you know, I knew the game, and I knew the position to play, and I – yeah, I just, um…
ER: Did you play any other sports? Um, let’s see – basketball, football?
PR: Well, that was funny. That was funny, Emily, ‘cause like I said, uh, we’d always felt
comfortable playing with each other. In fact, when we were, like, maybe…twenty…eighteen,
nineteen, twenty, we formed our own baseball. We had our own baseball team. Softball. Fast
pitch. And, uh, we – we would go, uh, on these baseball, these, uh, Mexican-American
tournaments. There’d be some in Topeka, there’d be some in Kansas City, Chanute, uh…
ER: I never knew about this.
PR: Uh, yes, uh…Salina, it was – we had a team, um, I don’t even know what we called each
other, but we had a team – we were – we were pretty good. We were pretty good. You know,
Mexican-Americans, uh, there – there were some pretty good athletes. But when you got to
school, it was funny because, uh, the Mexican-Americans, they – they – they, uh, they were all

�smaller people, you know. For instance, uh, in junior high and high school, it seemed like the –
the bigger – the American kids…they – they, uh, they were bigger kids. You know, they – the
little, the Hispanic people, they’re not real tall people and then –
ER: Right.
PR: Yeah. So anyways, uh – um, um, the – the Mexican-American kids, they were good, but,
you know, they – they, you know, in football you need the big old guys and all that.
ER: Yes.
PR: So that was one of the reasons why we kind of stuck together.
ER: That makes sense.
PR: Yeah, we kinda stuck together. Um, gosh…oh, gosh, I [murmurs] but, yeah, um, we – we
stuck together pretty good. [Murmurs]
ER: I like how you’re all still friends, that you still maintain that connection over the years.
PR: Oh, yeah.
ER: That’s special.
PR: And you know what, yeah, we – we – we still – we – we still look out for each other. You
know, we – we always want to know how a certain person is, you know, like I got some friends
like, um, Izzy Bermudez.
ER: Yes.
PR: He’s a fireman, he’s – he’s not doing too good, but I – I always manage to find out how he’s
doing, and we, uh, um…um, later in life, we – we – we cut grass at the cemetery. The Catholic
cemetery.
ER: Oh, so you were responsible for keeping that up.
PR: Yeah.
ER: Okay.
PR: We cut – we volunteered to do that, so we did that. It was – at first it was all Mexican
people, the guys that did it and all that, and slowly the, uh, the white – white guys would come
out there and help us later on and all that, but we – we did – we did a lot of things together, and
we were well…uh…how do I put it? We were – we looked out after each other. That was – that
was the thing, looking out for each other. We always did that.

�ER: A community in the true sense.
PR: Yeah. Yeah, that was – that was the way our parents, um, taught us to be. To – to look out
for each other, take care of yourself, you know. In the end, you’re gonna realize how important it
was. And everything they said is true. You know, you care for – care for other people, and you
show ‘em, and they’re gonna do the same for you, so…
ER: And you must have seen them demonstrate examples of this. While you were growing up,
they would take care of your neighbors, for example.
PR: Oh, for sure.
ER: If they were sick, or –
PR: Yeah, for sure. Yeah, I’m – I was told by my older sisters that when we were young and,
um, my mother would have to have a doctor’s appointment or something like that, or she had to
do something, well, all the neighbor ladies would, um, take care of us kids.
ER: Oh.
PR: And – and there’s some pictures out there where there’s a bunch of kids, and there’s a lady
in the background. I guess she’s taking care of all them kids [laughs]. Yeah, it was things like
that, you know. It was just – it was really something, because it’s nothing like that today.
Nothing today, we – well, then, to the Hispanics, they always had big families.
ER: Right.
PR: They were – they were all Catholics and all that, so they all had big families. Today you got
your family, maybe four, maybe three or four kids, and that’s about it. But, um…yeah, the –
living at La Yarda taught us a lot. Taught us a lot. My dad – my dad was, uh, given a piece of
land by the, um, by the railroad.
ER: Oh, okay.
PR: And – and, uh, my dad, uh, on this piece of land that they gave him, it was just not very far
from where La Yarda was, maybe…two, maybe a hundred feet away. My dad would grow, uh,
tomatoes, corn, radishes, things like that. Things like – things that he – we could grow that we
didn’t need to go to the store.
ER: Sure. That makes sense.
PR: Yeah. We didn’t need to go to the store. Oh, gosh, I remember when he – I remember my
dad had the garden. He – he would plant the tomato plants in the ground, and our job was to get
water from – from, um, a pump, a water pump that was farther up the track. I remember them
buckets full of water. By the time – by the time we got from the pump to the – the plants that
were in the ground to be watered, well, we had lost half of the water, because we were young,

�going along, all the water was sloshing out. Oh my gosh, Emily, I told myself, I told myself, I’ll
– I’ll never have a garden, because it – it was rough, and my dad, you know, he paid pretty good
attention to the garden. He made it – he made sure we did it right.
ER: Yes.
PR: He made sure it was right.
ER: It’s a lot of work, keeping up a garden.
PR: Sure. For little kids, it was – it was, like I said, it was – it was tough. ‘Course, you know, we
didn’t know it, because it was expected of us.
ER: Right.
PR: To help do the chores and all that. So anyways, I always thought: “Man, I’m never gonna
have a garden. That’s too hard.” So anyways, I got married and got a garden.
ER: Yeah, of course you did.
PR: Got a garden. Same thing with the fireplace. In the winter times at La Yarda, oh my gosh,
them buildings got so cold. Oh, Emily, I tell you –
ER: With the concrete floors.
PR: Oh, the concrete floor and the windows would cake up with – with ice, I guess it was
because all the – all of us being inside, these six rooms that we lived in, and all that heat.
ER: Mm-hmm.
PR: Hitting that glass, and just all ice. I remember we used to have to scrub the, uh –
ER: Oh, to see outside.
PR: The ice off to see [murmurs].
ER: My goodness.
PR: My, um, we cut our own firewood. Oh, God, them days. I remember the days that little kids
[murmurs] hand saws, sawing the logs.
ER: Gosh, and they’re kids, too.
PR: Small enough to – to put into the woodstove. Oh, gosh. I don’t know how my mother did it.
Oh, gosh. All them kids and feedin’ all them kids, and –

�ER: What would she make? I mean, I know you said she made burritos. What else would she
make?
PR: Oh, we ate beans. Frijoles. Frijoles.
ER: Frijoles.
PR: You know, Emily, it’s – it’s funny because today, all this food that we ate – we thought –
man, this is – this is poor man’s food. Today, man, shoot, this food that we’re eating now, today,
oh, it’s…probably [unintelligible, dollar’s?] business, you know. Taco Bell, and –
ER: Yeah, it’s –
PR: Things like that.
ER: Taco Bueno.
PR: All the – God, all that food that we ate, and we – we got tired of [laughter]. Got tired of
eating the same food, eating our frijoles with our tortilla. And instead of using a spoon or fork,
the Mexicans used, uh, the tortilla.
ER: Yeah, strips of tortilla.
PR: Into the strips and, like that. But anyways, gosh, we – anyways, yeah. The, uh, uh…we had
stoves. My mother had stoves, and that’s the way she cooked, with a woodstove. Um…it, uh, it
was very tough.
ER: Did you eat vegetables from your dad’s garden?
PR: Uh, yeah.
ER: So a lot of tomatoes, then?
PR: Yeah. Oh, yeah, we, yeah, my mother would, uh, can. She – she would can the, um, um,
tomatoes.
ER: Oh, okay.
PR: Yeah, and –
ER: So you’d have some for the winter.
PR: Yeah, for the wintertime and all that, so – yeah, so, oh, gosh, you know, I – I remember too,
is my – my, uh, there was – La Yarda was down here, and right across the tracks was the City.
We had a lot of – we had a lot of cousins that – that lived – that – we didn’t have a lot, but we –
some of our cousins lived across the tracks, which was the City. And we always thought that was

�so neat. We always envied, as little kids from La Yarda, we always envied our – our relatives
that lived in the City part. The City part – part – they had houses with electricity.
ER: Running water.
PR: Running water. Some of ‘em had bathrooms inside, latrines inside. I think there were some
they had outside too. But we always envied them kids. I – I remember, I remember going to
school and – and, I mean, the teacher would ask us: “Well, what does your dad do for a living?”
And – and we – we didn’t know exactly what to say. We know that he worked for the railroads.
His job was – my dad’s job was, and all these other people that lived at La Yarda, the men, their
job was what they called a section gang.
ER: Section gang.
PR: Yeah. They’re the ones that cleaned up, cleaned the, uh, the – the tracks.
ER: Oh, okay.
PR: Yeah, they – they cleaned the tracks in the wintertime. I remember the wintertime, my dad
would come home all full of snow.
ER: Oh.
PR: Full of snow, or a lot of times, in the winter times when it was storming real hard, they’d call
out the men, and, um, tell ‘em that they had to report to work, because the railroad tracks were
getting covered with snow.
ER: In the middle of the night?
PR: Yes, I remember that. I remember, they would – the – the – they used to call him the
foreman. The foreman would get somebody and – and go – the guy would, the man would come
to the yard on foot and tell the men that they were to report to work.
ER: Oh, that’s right, because you didn’t have telephones.
PR: Yeah, they didn’t have telephones, so…gosh, I – I remember my dad going to work and all
that, on the tracks. But anyways, going back to the City, yes, going back to the City. Um, our –
our City relatives, that’s what I’m gonna call ‘em, they had addresses on their house. 910 New
Jersey Street.
ER: Oh, that’s right.
PR: Or 820 New Jersey Street, and all that. We – we didn’t even have an – we didn’t even have
an address to where we lived. The teachers would ask us: “What’s your address?”
ER: Oh.

�PR: We didn’t know. All we knew is that – there used to be a mailbox. It was for the people that
worked – that lived there at the Santa Fe apartments, La Yarda.
ER: Uh-huh.
PR: I – there used to be a – a mailbox. Oh, gosh. It must have been about a quarter of a mile from
La Yarda.
ER: Really?
PR: Yes. So – so we have to walk all that ways down there. Yeah, that was one thing I
remember. Our cousins that lived in the City, we always wished: “Gosh, one of these days we’ll
be – we’ll live in the City.”
ER: You’ll have an address.
PR: Yeah, we’ll have an address. Yeah, things like that I remember. I – I too, you know, I
remember the – the, um – we didn’t have no electricity.
ER: Mm-hmm.
PR: Uh, my parents – my parents had these, uh, kerosene lamps.
ER: Oh, okay.
PR: To, you know, for nighttime. That’s the – that’s the light we had. Kerosene lamps. Uh, later
on – later on, we, uh, they – they, uh, installed electric. We had electric lights. But for a long
time, that’s what we lived with, just, uh…gasoline lamps.
ER: Did they ever get knocked over by accident, or…? It must have been a fire hazard.
PR: No, not really.
ER: Not really?
PR: Not, not really.
ER: Well, that’s good.
PR: Yeah, that was good, but…I – I don’t know, I don’t know how we did it. That many people
living in them little rooms?
ER: I don’t know how you did it, either.

�PR: It, oh, my gosh, I remember one time as a little kid, the Mexican-Americans, they were
superstitious, okay? I remember, uh, when I was a kid, my dad, there was – there was always –
there was sometime there’d be an owl, you know, squeaking at nighttime. And I mean, you
know, when you hear something like that, I’m sure it’s – with the Anglos too, you know. Owl
howling at night means that somebody’s gonna die.
ER: Oh, is that what it means?
PR: Well, in the Mexican-American, yes, it is. So, I remember my dad, he had a .22 rifle, and
he’d go out there in the middle of the night and try to find that owl.
ER: And shoot the owl? [Laughter]
PR: Yeah, because really, it was. It was, uh, an old superstitious, uh, uh, tale that if an owl
hooted at nighttime, somebody was gonna die.
ER: I’ve never heard of that one before.
PR: Yeah. Somebody was gonna die, and –
ER: Do you remember other ones like that?
PR: Well, yeah, like La Llorona.
ER: Oh, the weeping woman.
PR: Yeah, the weeping woman.
ER: I heard about that in Spanish class.
PR: Yeah, you heard that in Spanish. Yeah, people were scared to go out at – at night at the river,
‘cause if La Llorona was there…
ER: I don’t blame them, I don’t think I’d want to, either. [Laughter]
PR: Yeah, you know, things like that – that, uh, that happened, and…Christmastime. I – I
remember Christmastimes. My sisters – my parents didn’t have no money. Gosh, in fact, my dad
worked for the railroad, uh, when I was a kid. Summertime would come, and there used to be
farmers out – out in the country, that they’d, uh, they’d grow potatoes.
ER: Oh, okay.
PR: And – and in the summertime, instead of my dad taking vacation time, he would spend it out
there picking potatoes to earn extra money.
ER: For Christmas?

�PR: Well, for –
ER: For everything.
PR: For everything. And I – I picked potatoes for a long time, too.
ER: Did you?
PR: Yeah, I picked, oh gosh, I must have been maybe eleven years old. Out there – out there in
the fields picking, uh, potatoes.
ER: That must have been hot work, just…
PR: It – it was hot, but us kids, we were ornery.
ER: Oh.
PR: We used to make – we used to make games out of picking –
ER: Did you?
PR: Throwing tomatoes – ah, throwing potatoes at – at the railroad tracks, at the railroads. Okay,
the – the railroad cars.
ER: That sounds about right.
PR: That would pass by there on the tracks, and we’d be out there [laughs] throwing potatoes at
them.
ER: You made your own fun.
PR: Yeah, we – we made our own fun. And my sisters, for Christmastime…they – they would –
they would save their money and buy us, man, like a little truck or a little car or something like
that. I remember that. We didn’t have no money. They didn’t have much money, but they always
managed to – to buy something for us.
ER: Get something, at least.
PR: Little thing, and God, we thought, man, that was the greatest thing. The greatest thing, yeah.
Gosh. We – we used to make tamales at –
ER: Oh, I love tamales.
PR: That – that’s a Christmas tradition. We used to make tamales. My dad would get the corn,
and we had a room where we grinded up the corn kernels.

�ER: By hand?
PR: Yeah, by hand.
ER: Oh, my gosh.
PR: And – and they – they made the masa, which is the dough. And the women would, um, they,
uh, the women would get in there and work –
ER: Knead it?
PR: Whatever you call it, yeah. That, and, uh…it was just – the process of making tamales,
getting the corn husk and all that, and –
ER: It’s an all-day process.
PR: Oh, yeah.
ER: In the town where I grew up, there were families used to make ‘em.
PR: They take all day.
ER: Yes, all day long.
PR: You start early in the morning, and maybe by 9:00, you know, maybe you quit about that
time, about 9:00 that evening you’d be, yeah, we – things like that, made tamales. My – my dad
had two chicken pens. Had two chicken pens out there that we raised chicken to eat. We ate the
heck out of chickens. [ER laughs] Our poor little chickens, I remember, you know, as we got
older, our job was to wring the – wring the necks.
ER: Oh, my gosh.
PR: Yeah, so we al – we always had chicken. Sunday. Sunday as a little kid, Sunday was a big
day, ‘cause my mom went out, went all out and made us a good dinner.
ER: Chicken dinner.
PR: Yeah, chicken dinner, we had chicken. We ate sopa, I’m sure you know sopa, and, uh, um…
ER: What about eggs? Did –
PR: Oh, yes. We – we had our own – we grew – my dad had all these chickens. Doggone it, I
remember…
ER: That’s a lot of eggs.

�PR: Yeah, I remember my dad bought the little chickens. The little chicks, oh, they were so –
ER: They were tiny ones.
PR: Yeah, they were so beautiful little chickens, and – and, uh, they grew to be bigger, and we
raised ‘em for eggs, for the eggs, for the meat. My – my dad had two chicken pens. And it was
our job to go feed ‘em, oh, gosh, be – before we did anything, before we went out there and
played with our friends or anything, one of our deal was to go feed the chickens. Feed them,
chicken, feed the chicken, water the chickens. It was –
ER: So that was one of your chores.
PR: Yeah, it was a chore. We – we had to do chores. We had chores to do. And like I said, haul
wood or water, but, uh, we – we’ve always, you know, we grew up learning to do things. I mean,
it – it, uh, it was – it was hard work, but we – we did it, and, you know, we just thought that was
part of living our life.
ER: Sure.
PR: Like that, so, yeah, and…
ER: Did your dad ever teach you things, like when he would work on house renovation or
construction? My dad used to teach us how to do that.
PR: Ah…
ER: When he would work on the house, we were little, and we’d watch him, and he’d show us
how to do things.
PR: Yeah…I tell you…my dad, he – he was – he was kind of a quiet man. He was kind of a quiet
man. He’s – he’s in, uh, yeah…my mom, if us boys did something, if the boy – if any of the
brothers and sisters did something, mostly the brothers, if the brothers did something wrong,
well, that evening my mom would tell – would, uh, would tell my dad.
ER: Oh.
PR: And, uh, I remember my dad would – he – he – he’d get after us. [ER laughs]. He’d get after
us. A lot of times I don’t even think that my dad knew why he was getting after us [laughter]. All
he knew was that Mom said we did something wrong. We had a fight amongst each other or
something like that, and, uh, we were well-disciplined.
ER: I imagine you were.
PR: Discipline. Discipline is a big word for us. Discipline, we – to this day, there was – my
parents taught us that respect, to have for the women. To the women, especially our sisters.

�Today – to this day, my sisters can get after us boys [ER laughs] and us boys won’t say nothin’
to ‘em. We would not say…you had to get after us and all that, and we just – we don’t say
nothing to ‘em, and, a lot of times they’ll kid around, they’ll say: “You guys better be – you guys
better behave. Today. Today. You guys better do this and that.” And: “Okay, okay.”
ER: Do what you’re told.
PR: Yeah, my – oh, my parents were real, real – that was one of the thumbs of rule, is to respect
the women. That was one thing they always taught us. Respect the women.
ER: And your friends, were they raised the same way?
PR: Yeah. Yeah, yes.
ER: So, this is community values, just part of it.
PR: Yeah, that was – that was – that was one of the culture things. One of the culture things.
Music, we – we all listened to the same type of music, and I was gonna show you…this is, you –
you say you’re from Texas?
ER: I am.
PR: You’ve been around all the Spanish people then.
ER: I have. That’s why we have the good tamales instead of having to go to Taco Bueno.
PR: You know, the – the music like this.
ER: Oh, you’ve got records.
PR: Yeah, we – these are old. These are – these are some of my mother’s, we grew up on this
type of music here.
ER: [Band name]
PR: Yeah. I could – I could…I wish my mind wasn’t so blank.
ER: I don’t think I’ve ever actually listened to a record. I’ve never had a turntable.
PR: Oh, yeah, we – oh, this kind of music we grew up on. Gosh. You know, as kids, every
Saturday on the weekend, there’d be a Mexican dance. And we all went to it.
ER: Oh, did you?
PR: Oh, my gosh, yeah, we went to every – we all looked forward to Saturday night, when we’d
go to the dances and meet – meet all the girls, and –

�ER: Of course.
PR: And – oh gosh, I remember going, buying a special shirt or pants.
ER: Oh, okay.
PR: Just going down there. That was – that was something we looked forward to, the dances on
the weekends. Now, there’s no more things like that. And there’s nothing like that anymore, but
that was one of the big ways the Mexican-Americans got together.
ER: Sure.
PR: Here in Lawrence, uh, it’s funny, ‘cause here in Lawrence, when the Mexican-Americans
came to this country, my parents, they came to this – they came to Kansas. They settled here in
Kansas, so they – they would tell their – their relatives in Mexico: “Hey, Kansas ain’t a bad
place; come on down.”
ER: Sure.
PR: And – and, you know, it was different. It was cold.
ER: I imagine.
PR: So, some of ‘em went back, but a lot of ‘em that stayed – well, what happened was that we
were all related.
ER: Oh, okay.
PR: At La Yarda. I think we were all related, so – so when it came time to dating and all that,
well, the – the – all the girls that we knew, we were all related to [ER laughs], so I ended up
getting married to a girl from Topeka – Anna, my wife Anna, Anna Perez. But she was in
Topeka, that’s how I met her, because there wasn’t no girls here, here in Lawrence.
ER: That you weren’t related to.
PR: That we weren’t related. That, or the – the ones that we did know that weren’t related to us,
well, they were like, almost sisters to us.
ER: Yeah, sure.
PR: Because we grew around, you know, like the Bermudezes. Uh, uh…Rachel Bermudez, she
wasn’t related to us, but we knew her so good –
ER: It felt like family.

�PR: They felt like sisters, so… or – or – or the Chavez, um, they had a lot of daughters about my
age, but, doggone it all, you grew up together.
ER: Just not the same.
PR: She’s like a sister, I can’t – so I, like I said, we used to go to the dances on the weekends. I
met my wife at a dance.
ER: And that’s where you met her.
PR: Oh, my God, yeah. Oh, gosh. I remember the day I met her.
ER: You do?
PR: I remember the day I met her. I got – she – her cousin introduced me to her, and gosh, she
was – she was dressed in a – she was dressed in a black dress. Oh, my God, she – whoo!
[Laughter] Beautiful.
ER: Swept off your feet.
PR: Oh, my God, yeah, she was beautiful, man. So I married her, and…two boys. Got two boys,
uh, Paul.
ER: And Vince.
PR: And Vince. And Vince – Vince’s got – Vince’s got six kids, all going to St. John’s School.
He’s – they got their seventh one coming up in May. But anyway, that – that’s how – that’s how
I met my wife, through the, uh, going to dances back then.
ER: That’s sweet, though.
PR: We were all related. You know, like I said, when the people, uh, from Kansas told the
people in Mexico: “Hey, come on down up here,” it’s, you know, when they told their cousins
and things like that. So, all the cousins would come to live in Kansas, and like I said, we were all
related when it came to dating and all that.
ER: Had to go elsewhere.
PR: We had to go someplace and look. And – and at school. And at school. Let me tell you, in
school, when I was in grade school, we were – we – we were – we were…us, and the Anglo kids,
the white kids. We – we got along okay. We got along okay. Uh, in junior high, junior high was
a little different. Junior high, the white kids would – they liked to hang around with us. We got
along with them pretty good. Um…high school. High school was way different. I – I don’t know
what – what – in high school, I – I think what happened was the – the white kids, um…they
didn’t – they didn’t associate with us as much as they used to when we were younger.

�ER: Right. ‘Cause kids will play together when they’re younger.
PR: Yeah. But as we got older, you know, they – they kind of stuck to their own selves.
ER: Mm-hmm.
PR: They stuck to their own selves. In my time, you – you couldn’t date a white girl.
ER: Oh.
PR: You couldn’t date a white girl.
ER: It just wasn’t done.
PR: Yeah. If – if you dated a white girl, you – you know, people kind of looked – it wasn’t like
today, you know. Today, interracial marriages are –
ER: Are more common.
PR: But then, gosh, so it – it was hard growing up for me, ‘cause I – I, well, I liked girls and all
that, but I couldn’t really date.
ER: Yeah.
PR: Really date, so…back again, you know, it goes back to having these social events. Um,
Mexican dances and all that. So, but – but I did notice, in high school. The kids sort of – it’s
almost like, if – if they felt that we were different, and – and – even with the – the black kids –
ER: Mm-hmm.
PR: They – they kind of stuck together, in their groups. As a kid – as a young junior high school
kid, high school mostly, the only really good friends I had were the Mexican friends. The kids
that I grew up with.
ER: The ones you played baseball with.
PR: Yeah, I played baseball, altar boy, and – but that – that’s the closest I’ve – that’s…that’s
why I was so close to them. High school, that’s – that’s all I ever hung around with, was the
Mexican kids that I knew. I felt comfortable with them. I really felt real comfortable with them. I
– I remember – I remember, um, segregation.
ER: Oh, you remember that?
PR: Oh, my gosh, yeah. I – I remember as a kid, um, we – we weren’t allowed in the swimming
pools.

�ER: Really?
PR: Yeah, we weren’t allowed in the swimming pools. So, we would go down there to the
swimming pools, and – and watch all these kids swimming and all that, and I remember [laughs]
I remember leaning against the fence and watching the kids swimming in there.
ER: Oh.
PR: And they always told us: “Well, you can’t get in there because you have to pay.”
ER: Oh.
PR: You had to be a member. But that was their way of keeping out
ER: That was, yeah, that was what they said was technically the reason.
PR: They said: “You gotta be a member.” Oh, gosh, I remember so many times watching, going
down there, watching all them kids, white kids, out there in the swimming pool, and…uh…
ER: That seems cruel.
PR: It…
ER: You’re just kids, you know.
PR: Gosh, I remember us guys…ten, eleven, twelve years old, going out there to the country and
finding some pond out there and – and swimming in them ponds. And you know what, it was
funny because [laughs] pretty soon, the farmers’ cows would [laughs] and – and, uh, drink water
out of the – out of the –
ER: The stock ponds, I think they call ‘em.
PR: The stock pond, yeah. Them things, we’d go out there, and that was our way of getting in the
water. We had to go to places like that. Or go to the river. The Kaw River.
ER: That must have been dangerous, too.
PR: Oh. Oh, my gosh, yeah. You know, Emily, I remember one time as little kids, we were little
kids. Our – our parents…good parents, excellent parents, but a lot of the time, they – they didn’t
know where we were at because, you know, at that, a long time ago, you could send your kids
out there and – and they were safe.
ER: Yeah.
PR: You know, you didn’t have to worry about predators being out there and things like that.
You – you – you send your kids out there and say: “You kids come back for lunch.” So, we’d go

�out there, I remember one time we were at the river, wading in the river, and then, uh, we were
getting ready to leave, and we were standing by – on the bank of the river. And we were – we’d
left, and about twelve seconds later, that bank that we were standing on caved in. I mean, you
could just see it – whoosh!
ER: Oh, my gosh.
PR: That whole section.
ER: All of it? Wow.
PR: Yes, if we would have been there, um, a few seconds earlier, us guys would have been in the
river. But that’s things that we had to do, because we weren’t allowed in the swimming pools. I –
I – I remember when me and my wife Anna got married, and, uh, in the evening we’d go out
for…you know, a root beer or something like that.
ER: Yeah.
PR: I remember going to the – there was one stand, a root beer stand here – here in Lawrence,
that, uh, all them people would get served in them, you know, glass…
ER: Oh, like in the pictures that have the glass with the straws.
PR: That, uh, ice and all that kind of…we – we were put in cups.
ER: Just plain old cups.
PR: They had paper cups. We were put in paper – they put our drinks in the paper cups.
ER: What a shame.
PR: And…I remember going into the service, and I was stationed in, um, in, uh, the South. I – I
remember Atlanta, Georgia. I remember, uh, getting off a plane in Atlanta, Georgia. I went – I
was hungry, so I stopped at this one place, this – they used to call ‘em drugstores, then.
ER: Oh, okay. I gotcha.
PR: And I went to this drugstore to get something to eat. When I went in there – this was in the
‘60s – went to this place to get something to eat, and they had – there was like a big old, there
was a table and counter.
ER: Oh, yeah.
PR: A table, this is the counter.
ER: Yeah, with stools.

�PR: Yeah, with stools, there you go. So, I went in there, and they had for whites, this section was
for whites, this section was for blacks, and I went in there, thinking to myself: “Where do I go?”
ER: Oh, my gosh.
PR: I’m not white. Or I’m not black.
ER: What did you do?
PR: I got to sit in the middle.
ER: That sounds smart.
PR: Even doing that, you know, they looked at me. White people would look at me. The black
people would look at me. I – I didn’t know where to go. So I, like I already said, I went in the
middle, in the middle of the counter there, and I was okay there. Same thing, you see the
bathrooms. Using the bathrooms.
ER: My gosh.
PR: What bathroom do I use? Do I use the white or black? I was in between. And using the
bathroom, the water fountains. Remember the water fountains too, white and black, and there
was nothing for us, there wasn’t no middle person, so…
ER: It must have been bewildering, just not knowing where you fit.
PR: Oh, for sure, yeah. But you know what? I – I don’t know. I don’t know which I felt better
with. I might have felt better with the blacks, because…I’m a little darker, closer to the blacks
than I am to the whites. So, I – I was probably closer to being with the black people. Oh, gosh…
ER: That’s unfathomable. I never grew up with that.
PR: Yeah.
ER: We grew up with smoking and nonsmoking sections, but I – never, never like that.
PR: Yeah. It – it was quite, yeah. And in the South.
ER: It was – it was very bad in the South.
PR: Sure.
ER: More pronounced, anyway. I know racism is everywhere, but in the South it was – it was
very prevalent.

�PR: It was tough, it was tough – it, uh, I didn’t know where, which one to go to. So, like I said, I
just found the middle of the counter and went to the middle counter, I got served…oh.
Bathrooms, water fountains, everything like that. Um, I was gonna show you, this –
ER: Oh, you got a picture there.
PR: That’s a picture of my two little brothers.
ER: Oh. I love their overalls.
PR: And then – that was La Yarda right, well, this is – this was La Yarda.
ER: Okay, it’s right behind them.
PR: This was the…
ER: Which brothers are these?
PR: Uh…okay, that’s my brother, uh, uh…Rick. Enrique.
ER: Enrique.
PR: And then my brother Omar. Gonzalo Romero.
ER: Oh. On the left.
PR: Yeah, this – this…
ER: I see, oh, he’s got – okay, so you’ve got shoes, but they definitely weren’t the waterproof
kind.
PR: No, no – I, yeah, really, they weren’t.
ER: That’s a cute picture.
PR: Yeah, that’s a cute picture. That was back probably about 19…maybe 19, in the ‘50s,
probably early ‘50s.
ER: So, do you remember when the flood happened?
PR: Yeah.
ER: Other people have talked about that in their interviews.
PR: Yeah, they talked…and – and I was – okay – do you, uh…this – this was the layout and –as
I can remember. I’m no artist, okay, but I can remember.

�ER: Oh, but this will do.
PR: These were the La Yarda, the two buildings. Okay – walked south, and there was the
railroad tracks.
ER: Oh, okay.
PR: Yeah, this was the railroad tracks there. You had to climb up a little s – a little hill, uh, to
cross the tracks. Once you got across the tracks, that was the City.
ER: Oh, okay.
PR: Everything out here was in the country. But I remember as a kid, I remember this here. I
remember this little – it was a dirt road, a dirt road that ran down, uh, east and west. Uh, I
remember some of the buildings. There was a little pond out here. Here’s the two bathrooms.
ER: And there’s your chicken pens.
PR: Yeah, a chicken pen there, and another chicken pen. Gosh, I think I drew this back in
19…about 20-02. ‘Cause this is still fresh in my mind. I tell you, my – my memory is still okay,
but…
ER: I’d say it’s good. You have excellent recall.
PR: I – I feel that, you know, this is necessary to do, because one of these days, there ain’t gonna
be nobody around, you know.
ER: To remember.
PR: That actually lived in these places here. So, this – this is what I find, this is what I find real
interesting, I – I’d like to really get involved in this, but one of my biggest drawbacks is that I’m
not a very good speaker, you know? Like I can put things down on paper better than I can talk
about it – I’ve always been like that.
ER: I’m the same way. I like to write things down.
PR: Yeah. I like to write, seem like I could express myself better. I mean, gosh, I envy the people
that can get up there and speak and…
ER: Oh, it’s such a gift.
PR: All they do is open their mouth and these words are coming out. Me, I’m thinking about:
“What am I gonna say, am I saying it right?” [Murmurs] Oh, gosh.
ER: Even when I do lectures, I have to write out what I’m going to say.

�PR: Yeah, I’m – I’m like that. You – you know, I was – I was…[rustling]
ER: I like that magic bag. It’s like Mary Poppins. You just –
PR: What’s that?
ER: Like Mary Poppins’ bag, that she could just –
PR: Oh!
ER: Put all these things in there.
PR: Yeah. [Paper rustling]
ER: It’s just – it’s fascinating that these pictures here, you know, of the foundation, you know,
that’s the pump. That’s where it was.
PR: Right, yeah, yeah.
ER: That’s amazing.
PR: Did you ever see this? [paper rustling]
ER: What’s this? “La Yarda: Undiscovered Oasis.”
PR: Did you – you ever see it?
ER: No, I haven’t.
PR: Okay.
ER: But this would be the kind of thing that they would – if they could restore the area, they
could put this on plaques.
PR: Yes. They – they have…they have, uh, the, uh, they keep telling me they got money. They
keep telling me they – they got some grant money, that they could do – that they could help, uh,
maybe making this possible. But…
ER: I don’t see why not.
PR: I tell you what, it –
ER: Especially with volunteer work, I mean –

�PR: It – the – the land today, the – the railroad, the Santa Fe Railroad gave, uh, um, the land to
the – to the City. So, what the City doing now, is they – where La Yarda sits, right, not too far,
maybe a couple hundred, maybe a hundred feet or something like that. They built – the City’s
got sewers, um, City sanitation.
ER: Oh, okay.
PR: Plants out there. I guess that’s what you call ‘em. But I was thinking, son of a gun, if – if the
City just – it belongs to the City now. If – if they could just buy a little piece of land –
ER: Sure.
PR: Clear that area out, and – and fence it, maybe fence it? I don’t know how long the fence
would last, but –
ER: Still.
PR: They could do something like that.
ER: Oh, I like that picture.
PR: Yeah.
ER: All the little kids. 1933.
PR: This is the way – this is the way La Yarda looked like.
ER: Oh, okay. I got you.
PR: There was two of them. There was two of ‘em.
ER: And there’s the pump in between the two.
PR: Yeah, there’s the pump, and these were the two ends. The – the two ends were the biggest
part of the…of the building there. But yeah, there was these – there was all these doors, and all
these doors led to a different room.
ER: I wonder who was responsible for making the drawing here.
PR: Ah…
ER: Do you – was that Frank Chavez?
PR: Yeah, I –
ER: Was it –

�PR: I got the original picture of that.
ER: That’s right. That’s the one you showed me on your cell phone. So, this is that.
PR: I can – yeah. That is it.
ER: Wow.
PR: The slab is still out there. The slab is still out there, it’s –
ER: I’d like to go out there and see it.
PR: One of these days –
ER: Yeah, when it’s not snowing.
PR: No, no, one of these days – if – one of the best times might be in the springtime, because
well, right now it’s all right, but it’s cold and…
ER: Yeah.
PR: Today is a good – um…before – while – while it’s still cold, and there’s poison ivy, and
that’s not out there, it’s dead, but –
ER: Oh, that’s true. That’s right.
PR: Yeah, there’s…in springtime, summertime, there’s, you have to watch it, ‘cause there’s
poison ivy out there.
ER: Maybe at the end of February, or March, when it warms up, but the plants having started
coming back yet.
PR: Go out there. Man, I – I thought about how we could preserve, uh…
ER: Even a small piece, like –
PR: This piece of land, yes.
ER: Just seems like such a shame.
PR: And – and the City – the – the City could go in there and take care of it. Could – Park and
Recreation.
ER: Just like a park, you know, hire people to mow the lawn, and…

�PR: Get, you know, clean it out, and maybe put…grass and all that, and keep it mowed and all
that, and…God, it’s very interesting. Like I said, there was a German camp just right – right up
the road.
ER: That’s fascinating. I wouldn’t have thought that – right there, you know.
PR: There’s a lot of history in there, that deal there. Lot of history.
ER: Especially when you think: Lawrence is a community that’s really proud of its history –
PR: Right, yeah.
ER: So, why not preserve this?
PR: Yeah. To me, the Hispanics are left out.
ER: I would agree.
PR: They – they are left out. One of the – one of the reasons was because the – the MexicanAmerican community, they all lived in La Yarda, and East Lawrence. New Jersey Street,
Pennsylvania and all that. Their parents made it a goal in their life to get their kids educated.
That was very important, get them kids to school, make a better life for themselves. Get out. Get
something nice out there. The Mexican-American people in – in Lawrence, they’re spread all
over Lawrence now. You know? Once they got a chance to get a good job…
ER: They left.
PR: They wanted something better. So, man, you’ll find ‘em all over now. West side,
south…they’re all there.
ER: Mm-hmm.
PR: But not in a group anymore. The – the first, the chance that they got to get out, make
something for, you know, make ‘em a better life, they – they moved away. They…different parts
of Lawrence now. But at one time, they were all pretty much on the east side.
ER: And that needs to be preserved, because that’s – that’s where your parents lived. They
helped you…
PR: Right
ER: Think about something else beyond La Yarda, and that’s where you started, so I think it’s a
shame that it would just go unpreserved like that.
PR: Yeah, they’re – like I said, about the only time you see the Mexican-American people get
together is when they go to church.

�ER: Oh, when – okay.
PR: You go to church or the fiesta, the fiesta that’s held in June. And you see all the Mexicans
and all that. They’re all here in Lawrence. They’re all here in Lawrence, but they’re all spread
out.
ER: Yeah, just not in the same place.
PR: No, not no more. Once they got a chance to, uh, uh, get out and…get better jobs, better jobs
and…get out there, and instead of living, you know, there’s nothing wrong with the east side, but
that’s where we all kind of grew up on.
ER: Yeah.
PR: But you know, there’s places, nice places out there that they can – they can have.
ER: So, you’ve been going to St. John’s for – how long, would you say?
PR: Oh, forever. I been – I was baptized here in Lawrence. I was baptized at St. John’s.
ER: Oh, were you?
PR: Um…we were altar boys. Little kids.
ER: In the squads.
PR: Yeah, in the squads. We always made fun of each other, because [ER laughs] you know,
we’d be altar boys, and the altar – are you Catholic?
ER: Ah, no. I have some Catholic family members, but I was raised Baptist.
PR: The altar was kind of steps, and I remember we – we’d be kneeling down on the top stairs,
and – and you could always see the shoes, all the little Mexican shoes all had holes in ‘em.
[Laughter]
ER: Oh.
PR: Holes in ‘em, and maybe some cardboard, you know.
ER: I believe you.
PR: And they, uh, all the shoes had holes in ‘em, with cardboard. But yeah, um, like I said, you –
you see all the Mexican-American community at places, at church. They’re mostly all Catholic,
so…yeah, we – we – we never have gotten away from the church. This church is our second
home.

�ER: That’s what you said on the – on the phone, you and your wife, you know, it feels like a
second home to you.
PR: Oh, it is a second home. It’s, um, all the people that got baptized, got married, and got buried
there. That’s – church is about – it is our second home.
ER: Are you still – are you able to have in-person services over here yet, or…?
PR: Um…
ER: How did that change with the pandemic?
PR: Okay…let’s see…you – there’s church service, but you have to sign up.
ER: Oh, okay.
PR: You have to sign up, and then once you get in church, and the pews – you, they’re distanced
six feet.
ER: Right.
PR: But the first thing you gotta do is you got to, uh, uh, you got to, uh, make an appointment.
Um, and then once, once you make an appointment ,you can get in, then, uh, they…have you,
every six feet apart. So, at church, I – I’m gonna say there’s maybe…a couple hundred people
when the church is filled up. With – with this epidemic and all that, there might be, like, thirty
people in there.
ER: Oh, my gosh.
PR: Thirty people that, you know, signed up. A lot of people still don’t want to go, because, you
know, they don’t feel safe. But it – it’s still open, and it’s – it’s different. It don’t even seem like
a church hardly any more, because of the restrictions that there is.
ER: That’s what I miss, I think, most about, ‘cause we’re not having in person services at church.
I miss seeing people every week.
PR: Yeah.
ER: That I wouldn’t necessarily…it’s just not having that close community in person. They have
‘em online, but it’s not the same – it’s not the same.
PR: My wife, Anna – she – she likes to watch it on – there’s a Catholic station on TV.
ER: Oh, is there?

�PR: Yeah, yeah, I think it’s Channel 91. Midco. I think it’s Channel 91 – she’ll watch it on –
ER: I haven’t got cable.
PR: So, she’ll watch it on Sunday at, uh, 7:00 Mass. But me, I…I like to come into the church,
but I like to stay my distance, but it’s – it’s not – it’s not like it used to be.
ER: No.
PR: Yeah, used to be you could go to church and meet your friends and talk and all that. Now
you go to church, you know – you’re too far away to talk to each other.
ER: Can’t shake hands.
PR: You can’t shake hands, or…it just – and then after church is over, you know, we used to get
outside and talk and all that, but you can’t.
ER: Maybe even go out to lunch, or…?
PR: What’s that?
ER: Maybe go out to lunch, or something like that, and…
PR: Yeah.
ER: Just visit.
PR: Yeah. We used to do that, but not no more, no. Um…
ER: It seems so strange to think that a year ago, you know, I’d just go and get some coffee, talk
with people.
PR: For sure.
ER: We’d stand around talking, and we’d shake hands, we’d sing together, and then…nothing.
That’s – it’s been difficult, adjusting to the lack of community.
PR: Yeah. Hey, so, Emily, how can your project, uh, how can you help us?
ER: I’d like to know that. I’d like to ask Nora how I could be involved.
PR: How can you be of help to us?
ER: What do you think?

�PR: I – I think…I really think that this – this – this is possible. This is possible, but we have to
get people involved. I’m, uh, I’m all for it. I’d like to –
ER: Maybe preserving –
PR: But, yes, I’d preserve, maybe do something to – to La Yarda. Uh…I’d like to preserve it, but
we – we need the people, and, I don’t know, it just seems that people…it just seems like people
just aren’t interested in it. I mean, you know, we – we tell our – our – our grandkids, we tell our
two boys about how it was and all that, and they – they listen to us, and, you know, they can’t
believe that – that, you know. We had a life there in La Yarda and all that.
ER: Right.
PR: But…I don’t know, I – I just, I – I wish there was a way that, uh, we could do something
about this.
ER: I think it is doable.
PR: Yeah.
ER: And I’m hoping that when Nora finishes the project, maybe she can…present it to – to a
committee, maybe even to the City –
PR: Right.
ER: Some members of the City, and get them interested, but even something as simple as writing
letters, if we could get people to inquire about what might be possible.
PR: You know…I know a lot of these people. They’re – they’re, uh…they’re smart people.
They’re smart people, but, and just like the Mexican-Americans, like the Mexican-Americans,
they – they’re kind of, uh, quiet people.
ER: Mm-hmm.
PR: They’re kind of quiet. The – they’re smart, they’re smart people. But – but they’re – they’re
kind of quiet, you know, they – they don’t like to get out there and – and speak up.
ER: Sure.
PR: I’m – I’m the same way, too, like I said, I’m…I’m pretty good at writing stuff – I don’t
know if I am, but, you know.
ER: I think you are.
PR: Like I said, you know, writing stuff down.

�ER: You’ve had years of practice.
PR: Yeah, and like I said, I’m better at –
ER: I got it.
PR: Oh, thank you. Try and open my sinus up. I – I, yeah, I’m – I’d like to be, I’d like to help as
much as I could, I can, but I – I can’t see myself speaking up there in front of the City, the City
leaders.
ER: And that’s just it; you shouldn’t have to. Like, there should be people that can do that, with
different talents. You do the writing, and someone else can, say, do the speaking if they’re
comfortable with that, they have….
PR: That – that’s me right there.
ER: That’s – that’s what we need, is more people involved.
PR: Right. I…I, um, I got the – I got the feelings to do it and all this stuff, my intention’s good,
but like I said, I’m just, I just can’t, I’m just not that kind of a person that…that can get up and
talk about this to the public, like the City and all that.
ER: Someone else can do that. Look at this – all this foundational work that you’ve done. It
would make an excellent book.
PR: Oh, my God. That’s, well, I – I’m, well, I, living in La Yarda, it just made me
appreciate…people. Caring for each other. I don’t know, it’s – it’s a good feeling, you know,
to…um, caring for people. Respecting people. I think – I think we lost a lot of that respect today.
ER: That’s a shame.
PR: It’s a shame, because we said – like we live, we live for ourselves now. We could reach out,
reach out and try to help each other, like we used to do. Like we used to do. We used to reach out
and help each other and…
ER: And you’ve been honest about how hard it was. You know, it wasn’t an easy life, but…
PR: For sure.
ER: But you’re right, you also – when you leave that behind, now we miss the community
aspect.
PR: Yeah, yeah.
ER: Where people wouldn’t think twice about, you know, helping someone else, and of course
you’d do that.

�PR: Yeah. Gosh.
ER: Now, it seems people are more hesitant to just reach out.
PR: Right.
ER: I think this – this deserves to be remembered.
PR: Well, you know, if this – if this, I’ll be glad to help you any way I can. [Murmurs] I don’t
know, if you’ve seen any of these pictures there.
ER: I haven’t seen any pictures.
PR: Okay, you haven’t seen no pictures at all? Okay, this –
ER: No, all I’m doing is transcription, so I never saw any of the materials. Gosh, all those skirts.
All made by hand. Oh, Mary Nunez. I did – I transcribed her interview.
PR: Mary Nunez?
ER: Mm-hmm.
PR: Mary Nunez. You – you did an interview with her?
ER: Oh, I transcribed it. I think Helen had done that. Helen Krische was the first one to start
working on this.
PR: Oh, okay, okay.
ER: Yeah.
PR: Okay, yeah.
ER: But I had done…Garcia…I love the costumes.
PR: That’s – that’s me right there.
ER: That’s you?
PR: Yeah.
ER: Oh, my goodness.
PR: We used to have a dance group.

�ER: Do you?
PR: We used to have, when we were small kids, about that age there, what, eleven years, maybe?
ER: I love the gold braid on that costume.
PR: Yeah, we used – we used to go around and dance for the Kiwanis Club or the Lions’ Club.
ER: Oh, okay. I gotcha.
PR: And the people ate all that stuff up [laughs]. Seeing us little Mexicans out there dancing.
ER: It’s cute. So, here’s the railroad tracks.
PR: That – that was the flood. That was the flood.
ER: The ‘51 flood, is that right?
PR: The ‘51 flood. Okay, this – this right here, these, um…
ER: Oh, my gosh.
PR: These were little buildings that the railroad men, my dad, they had all their tools in these
sheds there, and every morning they’d go out there, that’s where they would meet. From there
they got the orders to go wherever, wherever they had to.
ER: All that water. Gosh.
PR: But all that was underwater, at one time.
ER: That’s unfathomable. Oh, here – wow, right up to the –
PR: The railroad tracks are right here. And all that was flooded, that’s why my parents had to
move. They got tired of…they got tired of cleaning up that mud, and all that.
ER: I would too. Oh, my gosh.
PR: This was La Yarda. Okay, this – this is the roof. That is the roof.
ER: Up to the power lines.
PR: That’s the roof there, and that’s that little piece that sticks out.
ER: All just underwater.
PR: All underwater.

�ER: I can’t imagine what that was like. I’ve never lived on a coast, or even lived through a huge
flood like this, so…my gosh, such destruction.
PR: That’s an old picture of my…
ER: Oh, that’s your mom and dad?
PR: Yeah, that’s my mom. My dad.
ER: You have your mom’s eyes, I think.
PR: [Laughs] My grandma.
ER: Is that your dad’s mom, or your mom’s mom?
PR: Yeah, my dad’s mom.
ER: What was her name?
PR: Gregoria.
ER: Okay.
PR: Gregoria.
ER: Okay, she had written –
PR: Yeah.
ER: It was in the book, there.
PR: She was…
ER: You’re lucky to have so many good pictures.
PR: Oh, my – okay, my mom was from Mexico City, and my dad was from Veracruz. And I tell
you what, as kids, boy, we – we were taught to respect our elders. Oh, my gosh. Oh, like we – we
– the elders, like the women, we would call ‘em Dona Maria, Dona Rosa. Everything – well, in
English, it’d be like “Ma’am” or –
ER: Yeah.
PR: But, everybody, all the ladies we talked to, we – we’d address ‘em by Dona. D-O-N-A.
Dona Maria. Dona Rosa.

�ER: My parents raised us to do that, too. You know, Mr. John or Miss Ramona.
PR: Yeah, right.
ER: I still – I still do that now, because it just feels odd not to call them by their first names.
PR: Yeah.
ER: But you’re right, I – this – it deserves to be preserved.
PR: Yeah, so if there’s any way that you could help us, oh gosh, you know, we have a lot of
young kids today. Young kids in their 40s, 50s, probably – intelligent Mexican Americans. But, I
don’t know, I’d like to see some of them kids step up today. Step up, um, and – and take more
interest in – in their roots. You know, these – my two boys, okay, Paul graduated from the, um,
business, school of business. He’s, uh, he’s, um…he works at – for the UMBA, uh, bank in
Kansas City. In Kansas City, Missouri. I got my son Vincent, who works at, uh…
ER: Healthcare, was it?
PR: He’s health administration.
ER: That’s right.
PR: He works at the hospital there in, um, Kansas City, Shawnee…uh, I think it’s called Advent
now.
ER: Oh, okay.
PR: But, you know, I’d like to see our younger people step up. A lot of them, you know, are
smart kids.
ER: Of course they are.
PR: They’re smart kids, but, I just, I don’t know, they’re just – really, you know, on – on the
school board, we don’t have anybody on the school board, um, I wish we did. I – I, that’s one of
the things I’d like to see happen while I’m still living, to see some of these young kids grow up,
you know, and be on the school board, or be on the City commission. I – I look forward to the
day –
ER: To have a voice in the town.
PR: Yeah, have a voice in – in Lawrence. But we don’t have nothing like that. We don’t have
nothing like that. I don’t know. I don’t know why.
ER: I hope that happens for you. I hope you get to see that.

�PR: I do, I live for the day that I see one of these, somebody on the school board.
ER: One of your grandkids, even, maybe.
PR: Yeah. Like I said, the Hispanic-American community here in Lawrence…they’re – they’re –
they’re there, but they’re – but they won’t – they – they just don’t stand out.
ER: Right.
PR: You know, to be noticed.
ER: Like you said, quiet.
PR: Yeah, they’re quiet. They’re – I guess we all –
ER: Smart, intelligent, full of history and – and knowledge, but just not…
PR: And all this history and all that, we’re keeping it to ourselves. And one of these days, all that
history’s gonna die with people that actually lived in, you know, like in La Yarda and all that,
so…anyways, um…
ER: Well, thank you for sitting down and showing me all of this.
PR: If – if I can be of any help, I’ll be glad to help you out, and, um, like I said, I wish – I wish
more could be done.
ER: I think it can.
PR: I hope so.
ER: And I’m hoping that when Nora’s carrying this project through to completion, that that will
go some way to at least putting it out there, and being visible.
PR: Yes. I always think of myself as being a – not a leader, but a follower. You know, I –
ER: And we need both.
PR: Well, yeah.
ER: Just like we need the Marys and the Marthas.
PR: Right, yeah.
ER: That’s what keeps us going.

�PR: I’ll be glad to help Nora in any way I can. But…we – we gotta do something. If we don’t,
history’s gonna pass us by.
ER: And that will be a shame that we can’t fix.
PR: Yeah…well.
ER: I’ll go ahead and turn this off.
PR: Okay. Okay, well, I’ll gather up –
END OF TAPE

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                  <text>La Yarda was a neighborhood of worker housing provided by the Santa Fe Railroad for Mexican-American railroad workers in Lawrence, Kansas; located near the Kansas (Kaw) River, the neighborhood was largely destroyed by a major flood in 1951. In 2006, Helen Krische, archivist at the Watkins Community Museum, began an oral history project to document the La Yarda and Mexican-American communities in Lawrence, Kansas. The project was resumed in 2019 by Nora Murphy and Emily Raymond. The interviews primarily feature the children of the railroad workers who migrated to Lawrence in the early 20th century; they describe daily life, social activities, and living conditions in the Mexican-American community in Lawrence from roughly the 1920s through the 1970s.</text>
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                  <text>These works are the intellectual property of the Watkins Museum of History, Lawrence, Kansas. The public may freely copy, modify, and share this Item for noncommercial purposes if they include the original source information. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s).</text>
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              <text>00:47:18 (2006)</text>
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                <text>Pedro (Pete) Romero La Yarda Interview</text>
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                <text>Pedro (Pete) Romero was interviewed by Helen Krische on May 23, 2006, and then by Emily Raymond on January 29 and February 4, 2021, as part of an oral history project to document the La Yarda and Mexican-American communities in Lawrence, Kansas. Pedro lived with his parents and siblings in Lawrence's La Yarda neighborhood. La Yarda was a neighborhood of worker housing provided by the Santa Fe Railroad for Mexican-American railroad workers; located near the Kansas (Kaw) River; the neighborhood was largely destroyed by a major flood in 1951.  In the 2006 interview, Pedro and Helen discuss photos and drawings of the Santa Fe depot and the La Yarda area. Pedro also describes his family's migration from Mexico to Lawrence, his father's experiences as a railroad worker, and his experiences growing up in La Yarda and East Lawrence. In the 2021 interviews, Pedro talks about how he met his wife, their involvement with St. John's Catholic Church, and their two sons. He also also describes his family's relationships with other Mexican-American families in Lawrence, their experiences attending local schools and playing sports, their family's foodways and social life, and experiences of discrimination and segregation faced by the Mexican-American community in Lawrence.</text>
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                <text>Raymond, Emily</text>
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                <text>To access the audio recording of these interviews, go to &lt;a href="https://archive.org/details/6-promero-202102204"&gt;https://archive.org/details/6-promero-202102204&lt;/a&gt;.</text>
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                <text>&lt;a href="https://archives.lib.ku.edu/repositories/3/resources/5295"&gt;Additional research on the La Yarda community&lt;/a&gt; is held at the Spencer Research Library at the University of Kansas.</text>
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                <text>Published with the permission of Peter Romero. This work is the intellectual property of the Watkins Museum of History, Lawrence, Kansas. The public may freely copy, modify, and share this Item for noncommercial purposes if they include the original source information. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s).</text>
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                    <text>Interview with Isabel (Chavez) Gonzales
Interviewer: Emily Raymond
Date of Interview: February 19, 2021
Length of Interview: 41:21
Location of Interview: Recorded over telephone
Transcription Completion Date: February 28, 2021
Transcriptionist: Emily Raymond
Isabel Gonzales (Interviewee): Well, most of ‘em are older than me, but – but I did know who
they were, yeah.
Emily Raymond (Interviewer): So, how did you find out about the project?
IG: Um, my friend, Judy Romero, uh, e-mailed me and said somebody had asked her to do some
proofreading. She’s really busy right now taking care of her mom, uh, that she said she wouldn’t
have time, and she asked if I was interested, and I said: “Yeah I can,” and so she gave me the
information.
ER: Well, that’s fantastic. So, well, I mean, there are standard questions that – a woman named
Helen Krische started this project, and she had a list of questions that she would just go down
and ask people. So, I have those, but I’m also just interested in hearing about anything you have
to remember; we don’t have to stick to a script.
IG: Mm-hmm.
ER: So, let’s just start with – what was daily life like, when you were growing up in La Yarda?
IG: Well, here’s, yes, I didn’t know if Nora had told you, that it was about La Yarda, but I, no, I
told her I didn’t, uh, grow up there or even – well, not too far from it, but, no, I told her I really
didn’t have anything to say about La Yarda. I went to pick up a friend, and – or walked her
home, but that’s all. And so, um, and the same thing with my brother Carlos, who’s younger than
me. And she said, well, that – that, um, are you the doctoral student?
ER: Yes, that’s me.
IG: Yeah, well, she said she thought you might be interested in just, uh, I guess, the life growing
up in East Lawrence, and that’s why, but if you only are interested in La Yarda, I couldn’t help
you with that.
ER: No, we – I’m interested in – in all of it, actually, because it helps to get a picture of what life
was like outside of La Yarda in Lawrence as well, because some of the kids who grew up in La
Yarda, they would say, well, you know, we went to school, we went to church, but we didn’t
know much about what was going on in the town. Maybe they went to the movie theater, or
something like that. So, it’s – it would be helpful for us to have a little bit of context form
someone who’s – who was living outside the community at that time. So yes, please, tell me
what you remember.

�IG: Well – well, because it was, we lived at 805 Pennsylvania Street. Are you in – you’re from
Lawrence, right? Or are you there now?
ER: Oh, yeah. I know where Pennsylvania Street is.
IG: Okay. At the time, the 800 block of Pennsylvania was the most east street in Lawrence. The
next – the next over, there was just, right across the street from us, were all, uh, buildings, like
the cider building and there was an egg plant, and different things like that, but no houses. But
one house on the corner, but after that there were no more streets. But if you walked down 8th
Street, I think there was maybe a couple blocks, if I remember right, that was La Yarda.
ER: Oh, okay.
IG: So, they were – they were kind of separate, but we were the last three east that was nearest
La Yarda. Um, and a friend of mine, Celia Garcia, lived there, and, uh, actually, she’s two years
older, she’s a friend of my sister, and sometimes we’d walk her home or – or walk, you know, to
and from, so I remember just barely, barely remember entering that – that area. But, uh, as far as,
you know, if you’re interested in just what – what it was like, our childhood, is that what you’re
wanting to know?
ER: Oh, yes. I do. I – I’d love to know things like whether you had any holidays that you
enjoyed celebrating, what your mom would cook for dinner –
IG: Uh-huh.
ER: Traditions that you guys had, just what it was like growing up in East Lawrence at that time.
IG: Yeah, well, the main thing is that there was so many big families, you know, I’m one of
fourteen children.
ER: Oh, my goodness.
IG: And then – and then down the street, there was, uh, the Romeros, and the Ramirezes and the
Romeros and [unintelligible] the Bermudezes, everybody had either – anywhere from seven
children to, I think the Romeros had sixteen children.
ER: I think you’re right.
IG: But everybody had – huh?
ER: I think you’re right, what Pete said.
IG: Pete, yeah. And then the, um, Ramirezes had eleven, the, um, Mendozas I think had ten or
eleven, so what was very fun was that almost all of us had somebody our age, two or three or
four people our age that we could play with and grow up with, so we always had lots and lots of

�fun, ‘cause we, you know, played baseball in the street, since we were the last street besides
those businesses, so by the evenings, there was no traffic down that street.
ER: Oh, that’s right.
IG: We’d play baseball in the street, uh, just stay up real late at night, not like today, we could
stay up till ten or eleven, dark, you know, in the summer, play that “Truth, Dare, Promise, or
Repeat.” Uh, we – we just had lots of children to play with. I do remember that. We put on plays
with the Grand Ole Opry and Little House on the Prairie, Laura Ingalls, and commercials, we
just had a lot of kids to do things with, which was fun. One thing that I never thought was
dangerous, but, until I grew up, of course [ER laughs], going – going east, let’s see, it would be
north. North, right at the 800 block of Pennsylvania going north, there was nothing but, um,
these big sand piles. I don’t know if it belonged to the railroad. The Santa Fe railroad or who –
ER: Interesting.
IG: But there was huge – pardon?
ER: Interesting. I – I remember someone mentioning those sand piles, but I don’t remember what
they were for.
IG: Yeah, I don’t either. We didn’t know, ‘cause we were children, but they were huge. Now, to
me, they were, like, two stories high, but I was a kid. And what we used to do, which now I think
would be very dangerous, is a lot of us would go over there, we’d climb to the top and slide
down. And we just kept doing it over and over, I’m sure we brought those sand piles down some,
but they were always so high. Nobody ever got buried in it or hurt, but that was one of our, that
was our entertainment, one of the things we used to do, but um, just, I always remember lots and
lots of kids and outdoors, we were just outdoors all the time, you know, in the winter playing
outside, not that we – nobody made us, but we just were, um, well, I didn’t, I’m the tenth child,
so there’s just four under me. And so, we never had a TV till I was thirteen in our household.
ER: Oh, okay.
IG: So you could tell, there’s nothing to do in the house, there’s no TV, so, uh, we just played
outside all the time. Uh, had a couple of bikes, and everybody took turns riding those. Just made
up games to – to play outside, but, uh, the – and then, of course, in the winter not so much unless
there was snow outside. Um, our parents were very, very devout Catholics, and I think all the
Mexican families were in that area.
ER: Mm-hmm.
IG: Um, and, um, so, you know, we went to church every, uh, Sunday, of course, and during
Lent, we went twice during the week for services. Um, my father especially was, uh, head of our
family, as far as religion went.
ER: Oh, okay

�IG: I don’t know if any – we used to say the rosary every night. He built an altar, like a roomsize altar; it was tall.
ER: Oh, really?
IG: And he built – oh, yeah, it was really beautiful, looked like a little bit of an altar you’d see in
a church. Not that elaborate, but of – it was an altar that, um, and he led the rosary every night,
uh, sometimes in Spanish, sometimes in English, ‘cause he mostly spoke Spanish. My mom
spoke both. And, um…but, and then we went to Catholic school when it was open, I started there
in fourth grade, I think. There was no Catholic school before that.
ER: Oh, okay.
IG: Um, so I went fourth through eighth, and then my younger siblings got to go when they were
younger. All of the older siblings did not go. We used to go to, uh, catechism, like on Saturday
morning.
ER: Oh, okay.
IG: CCD. And, uh, you know, I’m thinking of all of the stuff in my childhood was good, it was
positive, uh, it was good. Except for one thing, and it’s super sad, because of what it was, and it
was the church. Um, at the time we were growing up, St. John’s was the only Catholic Church in
Lawrence. And, uh, unfortunately, there was a priest there that was, uh, very prejudiced against
blacks, Mexicans, um…yeah. And we were very – even though all the Mexicans went there, we
were still a minority. The church was mainly white. I think there might have been one or maybe
two black families that went there. But, uh, uh, I, you know, this incident was never reported or
told or anything, and I – I happened to tell Nora about it because I felt – I felt like, you know,
that it – it probably should be known. Uh, there was an incident where, uh, somebody tore up the
bulletins. They used to have the bulletins in the back of the church, and when you left you picked
one up, and –
ER: Oh, sure.
IG: Uh, yeah, so somebody had torn some up, and – and uh, we got a phone call. I don’t know if
it was that same Sunday or on Monday, the next day, from the Monsignor. And he said that my
brother Frankie, who was at that time fourteen, I was ten, uh, that Frankie had torn them. Well,
we always went to church and we sat way towards the front ‘cause that’s where my dad wanted
to sit. Like maybe, I don’t know, I don’t know if you’re familiar with St. John’s Church, but
we’d sit about ten pews back.
ER: Oh, okay.
IG: Out of the – you know, it was pretty close to the front.
ER: Sure.

�IG: Uh, and, uh, and, um, Mom – Mom, I guess, was the one that answered the phone, and she
says: “No, it’s impossible; he would not have done that.” And, um, you know, thought probably
some little kid did it. And he said – well no, I don’t know how he – how he thought, why he
thought, that my brother had done that, and my brother said of course he didn’t tear up bulletins
at church, and so, um, that priest told Mom if she didn’t write a letter apologizing, uh, for her son
tearing up the bulletins, that we could not go back to that church. Well, us being such a Catholic
family, we never missed a Sunday Mass.
ER: Of course.
IG: Mom, she said: “I don’t have a choice. I have to write this. There’s no other church.” It was
the only Catholic church in Lawrence, and I remember, I’m 74 years old right now, but the
reason I remember it so distinctly is because it affected me so strongly. I was ten, I saw my mom
sitting down with a paper and a pen, and she was crying.
And I said: “Mom, do not write that letter. Frankie didn’t do it.”
And she said: “I have to, because we can’t – otherwise, we can’t go to church.”
And, um, to this day, that’s what I remember. I do not remember if she actually wrote it.
I’m assuming she did, because we continued going to church. But that incident just stuck so
much in my head because of, um, the tremendous meaning it was for us. My dad even, um, we
didn’t have a car, so we always walked to church from 8th and Pennsylvania to where it is at 12th
and Kentucky, I guess.
ER: Yeah, that sounds about right.
IG: Uh, 1234, ‘cause we went there so much, I remember. But um, on Sundays, my mom – I
didn’t know this till after my dad had died – my mom told us that not all Sundays, but she said
many Sundays he would go to Mass twice. And we said: “Why?” – excuse me – and she said:
“Well, because he went the first time out of obligation,” ‘cause as Catholics we’re, uh, that’s,
we’re obligated to attend Mass once a week, you know, on Sundays. Back then they didn’t have
Saturday Masses. And then he said he went the second time because he loved God. And so, it
was like, he didn’t want to go out of obligation only. He wanted to go to, you know, tell God he
loved Him. And then he’d walk us, because we would go to a later Mass, and he’d walk us. I
remember walking with him to church. But, uh, he was just very, very devout person. You know,
all the time, when we left for school, he gave all of us a blessing, and before we went to bed he
blessed us, and, you know, that’s the way we were raised, uh, knowing that how – how important
church was. But other than that, I didn’t, you know, uh, feel any discrimination, like a lot of
people have, throughout, um, other than that priest and his sister, who taught us CCD, because
from first, second, and third grade, me and then all of my siblings went, his sister taught, uh, the
Monsignor’s sister taught, uh, the catechism classes on Saturday morning.
ER: Oh, okay.
IG: And so we went to her, and she was the same way. She pretty much ignored anybody, like
the few Mexican kids that were there. Um, if she passed out a treat at the end, uh, we got skipped
over, and the Monsignor did that too, when we were in the school. When we got our report cards,

�he would – every time we got our report cards, he’d come and pass ‘em out, say the name, kind
of look at it, make a comment, give it to the person. But he never called us up at all. We just got
handed the report cards later, same thing, passed out a treat, we didn’t get it. So, they were very,
uh, very, uh, prejudiced.
ER: How spiteful. That’s horrible. Especially for a man of the cloth.
IG: Yeah, I agree now. As a child I didn’t – I noticed it, but I didn’t think too much of it. But as
an adult, when I think back, yeah, it was. And it happened for many, many years, but that was a
time during the ‘50s, um, and ‘60s, probably early ‘60s, that, people didn’t talk so much about it
or protest too much about it, because it was pretty common. Discrimination was, you know, I
don’t know if you know, but my older sister said there was signs everywhere, you know, where
they – they couldn’t do into a restaurant to get anything. They could get it to go. They had to go
to the back door to get a drink, or, uh, something to eat.
ER: Oh, right, yes.
IG: That was pretty, uh, obvious in the ‘40s and ‘50s, anywhere. Um, but, um, anyway, uh, but
other than that, my – at the schools, the nuns were very nice to us. The nuns were really nice to
us, the, uh…[child yelling] okay, just a second.
ER: You’re fine.
IG: The, uh, the other teachers that I had when I was in, um, uh, middle school and high school,
they were all – they were all super good, and I never dis – uh, experienced any, uh,
discrimination at the – I went to Lawrence Junior High, uh, right there on Massachusetts.
ER: Oh, okay.
IG: And then on – and then, Lawrence High School. Uh, you know, good experience, I just – I
just didn’t have any other problems. Um, so the childhood really was, I thought, very good. And
then you were asking about, um, uh, like holidays we celebrate?
ER: Yeah, like did you have any family traditions that you would celebrate every year, or…I
know you lived in a large community, so did you ever get together with people and, I don’t
know, have cookouts or picnics or something like that?
IG: No, no, because each family was so big that we just did it with our own family. And later
when older sisters and older siblings were married, they would come with their children, so we
would have our nieces and nephews, and, um, like my oldest brother is, um, 20 – I think 23 or 24
years older than me. I don’t remember living with him at all. He had gotten married by the time I
have a memory. So, I was really young. So, and my sister too, so we weren’t all fourteen in the
same house at the same time. Some were gone and married, or moved out before the younger
ones were born. But, uh, well, we always, of course, celebrated Christmas and, uh, birthdays,
um, Easter. But always just with our own family, not with the neighbors.

�ER: Oh, okay.
IG: Yeah.
ER: I was curious as – as to whether you had done church activities like that. I mean, I remember
when I was growing up, we did a lot of things with – with our church family, but that’s because
our – we didn’t really have any relatives, so we were just kind of adopted.
IG: Oh, you don’t have, uh, siblings?
ER: I have – I have a brother.
IG: Oh, okay.
ER: So…
IG: Just two of you? Sorry.
ER: I know, it’s – it’s strange because we –
IG: No, I’m sorry. You know, it’s different. Because one Thanksgiving, on Thanksgiving, our
older siblings that were married and had children, maybe they’d had two or three by then, or
four, they would come for Thanksgiving and we’d have lots of people there. And my – my
younger sister, one year none of them could come, the weather was real bad, so none of the
married siblings and children came. And I remember my sister Vicky, when we sat down to eat,
she looked real said and she says: “This is so sad, there’s only ten of us.”
ER: Oh.
IG: Cause there’s probably like 25 or more, 30 normally.
ER: Oh, my goodness.
IG: Yeah. So, you know, we’re always used to, uh, lots and lots of family and friends, actually. I
had, uh, three really good friends, and, um, that lived like, one block away, and another that lived
close, and um, and then they would come for Christmas Eve Mass and to eat tamales at our
house afterwards. They came a lot to our house, my close friends. More than any of the other
siblings – an older brother used to have a lot of friends come over, too.
ER: Oh, okay. That must have been special. I’m glad that you had some – some friends that you
could just invite over to your house. Now, you said your – your dad spoke Spanish, yes? And
your mother spoke both?
IG: Both of our parents were born in Mexico.
ER: Oh, when was that?

�IG: They, yeah, my – my dad didn’t come till he was about fifteen, walked from central Mexico,
Guanajuato, all the way, he worked in Texas for a while, then in Colorado for a while, then
finally worked for the Union Pacific railroad, you know, and ended up here in Topeka, but – but,
uh, he came at fifteen, and my mom was brought by her parents when she was three years old.
ER: Oh, okay.
IG: So, they grew up speaking Spanish, yeah.
ER: Do you remember anything about your dad’s job during that time? I mean, obviously he was
away from the home, but did he ever come home and tell you stories about it?
IG: Not too much, I just knew that, um, it was real hard work. He was a – they fixed the tracks,
repaired the tracks.
ER: Oh, okay.
IG: That was his main job, and he had to travel to a lot of different towns, too. And it was all
outdoor work, and, you know, he’d have to work no matter what the weather, storm real bad,
cold weather or snow. Or the heat. And he always had two jobs. He worked as a custodian for the
school, and I forgot what else, but he almost always had two jobs. But, you know, we saw him of
course on weekends, and in the evenings when he came home. But no, he – he never really spoke
English at – at home. I understood that he – he knew Spanish, I mean he knew English, but he
just preferred to speak Spanish, and so we didn’t talk to him a lot. Mom would – Mom was the
translator between us and our dad, really. Our – my older siblings all spoke Spanish first. So they
knew it. The younger ones did not.
ER: Did you ever have to take a Spanish class in high school?
IG: Well, I didn’t have to, I chose to, I took it all through high school and KU. And I’m a
Spanish – retired Spanish teacher. Uh, ‘cause I – I love the language, and we have relatives in
Guanajuato, Mexico, and I used to go every two years to visit them. I lived with them a couple
summers, and so uh, um, I took it because I wanted to. And, uh, some of my siblings speak, the
younger ones speak it, some do not, or – or know some, but not a lot. Um…but they – both
parents came here because of the extreme poverty that they lived in, you know, sometimes my
dad told me the story about, um, uh, well his parents both died when he was really young, I think
by five years old he was an orphan.
ER: Oh, my gosh.
IG: Went to live with an uncle. Yeah, went to live with an uncle, and he became a shepherd. He
had him watching the sheep all during the night. And, uh, not treated, didn’t treat him too good,
didn’t feed him really very much, and so he chose to – to leave when he was either fourteen and
a half, fifteen, or something like that. But he said when he was young that sometimes they had no
food, and, uh, that they were given marijuana plants to chew on. And I remember telling my

�students this one time and they said: “What?” You know, they say marijuana’s supposed to make
you hun – make you, uh, hungry or something, I forgot what they said.
ER: Is it? I don’t know.
IG: But that’s what I think they told me. But – I taught at Topeka High for many years, in
Topeka West, but, no, he – they said – no, he said that – you know how today, it’s medicinal. He
said no, it would – it would curb their hunger. It was looked – it was used as medicine. So their –
so they wouldn’t feel hunger pangs. And, uh –
ER: I didn’t know that.
IG: Yeah, that’s what they – ‘cause it grew freely. It, you know, they didn’t have to buy it or
anything. It just grew in the fields. And, uh, uh, even today, they – they know that they can use
that for, like, use the leaves and put ‘em on your – if you have arthritis, um, our cousins and,
‘cause they had come here one time, and my sister, older sister has arthritis, and they said, she
said: “Oh, it hurts,” and she tried different medicines.
And then my cousin said: “Well, have you tried marijuana?” This was, like, thirty years
ago. [Laughter]
And she says: “Well, no, it’s illegal.”
And he – and we said: “Isn’t that illegal in Mexico?”
And he says: “Yes, but nobody cares.” You know, I know that a lot of – they have a lot of
laws, but they don’t really enforce them very much.
ER: Right.
IG: So, he said: “Ah, we just go down the street.” He named the lady who had it, and he said you
soak the, uh, leaves in alcohol, and then you lay it on top of wherever you have the arthritis pain.
And it’s supposed to help. And now we’re finding out today, yes, they’re using it for medicine,
so –
ER: Oh, my gosh. I guess – I just, I never knew that about it. I knew that, you know, regular
smoking can be an appetite suppressant, but I didn’t know that just chewing the leaves would
have a similar effect.
IG: Yeah, that’s what they – they just chewed the leaves. They just picked ‘em for free out in the
fields, so –
ER: Oh, my goodness.
IG: But anyway, I know that both my mom’s family too were just really poor and when she
came, there was a revolution was going on and there was, you know, burning – burning, you
know, villages. And they – they had to flee. But, uh, anyway, I – they had a difficult childhood,
both of ‘em. Ours was very pleasant, even though we had a big family, you know, we always had
enough food, we had – our parents were good people, and, uh, I don’t remember any, you know,
really anything negative. Um…I know my brother Carlos probably, he’s four years younger than

�me. I told, um, Nora because – in that La Yarda, uh, interview, uh, my sister Helen and my
brother John Chavez were interviewed.
ER: Oh, okay. I remember that I transcribed their interview as well.
IG: Oh, okay. Well, I proofread ‘em, and, um, I laugh ‘cause I said – because one of the
questions was, you know, was anything negative or did you feel, you know, any prejudice? And,
uh, both of ‘em were just real pleasant and sweet [laughs]. And they didn’t mention anything,
and so I told Nora, you got the two angels in our family.
ER: Oh, my gosh.
IG: ‘Cause they are. They just don’t – they don’t say anything negative, or even if it’s the truth,
of course, I’m not – I’m not making things up – they just steer away from saying anything that
might be, um, uh, negative. So, I said, I told Nora, kiddingly, I said: “You should interview my
brother Carlos. He’ll tell you the true story. Or – or I know some things.” But no, ‘cause they’re
– they’re older, and so they would know more about stuff before, like, in the – probably the ‘30s
and ‘40s, instead of – mine is, like, ‘50s, really, when I was a child, it was in the ‘50s.
ER: Right. Well, and it’s just good to talk to different people of varying ages so that we can kind
of see what changed over time, what might have stayed the same. I’ve, you know, I’ve had a
couple people say they experienced a lot of discrimination growing up, and then others like you,
they said, well, there was a couple of isolated incidents. I believe one of them remembered going
to church and being asked to sit in the very back, instead of –
IG: Oh, yeah.
ER: Instead of up front, which shocked me, honestly, I…
IG: Oh, actually, the – the, you know, we use kneelers. The kneelers, you know how they have
pads on ‘em?
ER: Yeah.
IG: They took the pads – they took the pads off of the last two rows I think, all the way across.
And, uh, that’s where, before I went to church, the older ones said they were – they were all
supposed to sit in the back.
ER: Oh, my gosh.
IG: Oh, there’s just tons of incidences. It was not nice, what happened. Oh, gosh, one time I
remember the procession, we used to practice this. When we were going to St. John’s, we
practiced for the May procession. And, uh, we’re, you know, lined up two by two, the nuns lined
us up and everything, and Father came over to watch the practice one time. And Cecelia Garcia,
which, she was a good friend of my older sister’s, two years older than me, she was the one that

�lived in La Yarda. She – I guess she got a little bit ahead of her partner, ‘cause I was – I was near
her, but I don’t remember how far, and Father just yanked her back so hard he tore her dress.
ER: Oh, my gosh.
IG: And, yeah. And, uh, just a lot of little things, lot of things that happened because of who
those two people were. But, you know, I think everybody just wanted to forget that. I don’t
know. ‘Cause other than that, we had a – it was good. Life was – life was not bad. For my older
siblings, I’m sure they had more things that happened.
ER: Sure.
IG: But anyway.
ER: I’m glad that, you know, we are seeing this change over time.
IG: Yes.
ER: I think the worst story I heard was, and I cannot remember the name of the interviewee, but
she would say that every time they did the passing of the peace, she would, you know, put her
hand out, and she said: “Nobody would take my hand.”
IG: Oh, yeah. That had been before my time. I don’t remember that. But I’m sure that did
happen, yeah.
ER: It just –
IG: It’s really sad, uh, Emily, because even today, all the stuff that’s going on, with mainly black
but Asian now too because of the virus, but you know – all - starting with George Floyd and all
that, I was just shocked at all the – the really bad discrimination against blacks. And not
everywhere, but it’s definitely still here. We just have to work harder and harder at, uh,
informing young people.
ER: It’s sad that it takes tragedies to – to get us to think about these things.
IG: Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm.
ER: I mean, yes, of course things have gotten better, but it definitely doesn’t mean we need to
become complacent, so you have an excellent point.
IG: Right. Right.
ER: Goodness. Speaking of –
IG: I’m not sure what else, any other questions –

�ER: I was gonna ask you a question about, um, what about healthcare? I study the history of
medicine, so maybe this is more personal interest, but what – what was healthcare like back
then?
IG: Um, well, you know how today everybody goes for maybe a yearly physical? We did not.
We went when we were sick. Um, and I – it was rare. People, you know, even though we were
poor, we ate well, but I don’t, I don’t remember anybody getting sick very often, or needing to
go to the doctor. Uh, we would get the shots. We did go to the dentist.
ER: Okay.
IG: Uh, but we did not, we did not, I – it was rarely I think that we, in my memory, I could be
not remembering well, but I don’t remember going for physicals at all, really, maybe, yeah, till I
was an adult. And you know, already married and living here in Topeka, and go for your yearly
checkup. But, uh…but that’s about it, I – I know that we did go to the dentist. Um –
ER: I was curious about the dentist. Others had said, you know, we – we went maybe once or
twice, when we were in elementary school, and then someone else said: “Well, I didn’t go until I
was married.” It’s amazing how much changed in such a short period of time.
IG: Mm-hmm. Yeah, um, yeah, it just – it wasn’t, I guess I didn’t even see that people were
getting sick very much. That they needed to go to a doctor appointment.
ER: Were the diets pretty good, I mean, back then?
IG: The food, yeah. Well, um, I – we had, um, we ate, I think beans and – and tortillas and chili
pretty much every day, but my mom also made, um, I remember her making, like, goulash and
hamburgers and, um –
ER: Oh, okay.
IG: Mexican food, like tostadas and enchiladas. Tacos. Um…but, um, mainly Mexican food, but
we did eat American food, too. Mashed potatoes and, uh, like green beans and things like that.
Um…
ER: And you said you were outside really often, you know, playing, like –
IG: Oh, yeah, all day. In the summer, from the time you get up till you go to bed almost, except
for coming in to eat, we were outside all the time, yes.’
ER: What about swimming?
IG: We got a lot of sun, never used, uh, what do you call it? Sun…
ER: Suntan lotion?

�IG: Sunblock? Yeah, whatever.
ER: Sunblock, oh my gosh.
IG: Sunscreen, never, I didn’t even know it existed, so we never, ever used that. And we were
out in the sun all the time, everybody, all the kids. Oh, and then fruit in the summer. We always
had, uh, my dad would – used to come around with trucks of watermelons and cantaloupe.
ER: Oh, my gosh.
IG: And they were real cheap, so we always bought lots of watermelons and cantaloupes. So we
had a lot of that in the summer. In the winter, um, I think mainly, like, plums and apples. But not
– peaches, my mom used to can. Oh, and my dad had a huge – two – two gardens, actually three
gardens. He had one in North Lawrence.
ER: Three gardens. Oh, my gosh.
IG: A huge garden, and he did corn, and – and carrots, and radishes, and tomatoes. Tons of
tomatoes, and, um, lots and lots, onions, he did – he planted a lot of stuff, ‘cause we used to go to
the gardens with him and pick. He’d bring bushels and bushel baskets home. Somebody –
somebody who had a truck would bring ‘em for him.
ER: Okay.
IG: But he’d walk from our house to North Lawrence to where his garden was, and then when
the produce was ready, they would help him bring it home, and then my mom did a lot of
canning. So, she canned a lot of that – the fruits and the vegetables. And then, somebody said he
had one near our house, which I didn’t know about that one. And then he had one in our
backyard. So we, he grew a lot of, uh, vegetables.
ER: That must have been an enormous amount of work.
IG: Yeah, so I think we ate – ate well.
ER: Did he sell any of the vegetables, or did your mom just can whatever was left over?
IG: No, yeah, she just canned it. Yeah.
ER: What about swimming? Um, I remember some people I interviewed said that they were not
allowed to go to the swimming pool in Lawrence, and so they went to the river instead. They
said that was pretty dangerous.
IG: Yes, well, that’s another sad thing, none of us learned how to swim, except for I think one
brother, ‘cause he used to go to the river to swim. But that was – that’s true, you couldn’t use the
public swimming pool. But no, none of us ever learned to swim, to this day I didn’t, because I

�guess when you grow up and you’ve never been around water that – to swim, you just, I had a
little fear of it, so I just never…never did learn to swim.
ER: Oh, okay. I was – I was curious about that. I’d actually heard several talk about how – you
know, they’d say, well, we went down to the river, stood on the sandbars, and it was so
dangerous, but we didn’t think that at the time you know, because when you’re kids, you just
don’t think about it.
IG: Well, and then our parents, uh, forbid us to go after one of the Mendoza boys, a young boy, I
think he was about nine or ten, was swimming in the river, and he drowned.
ER: Oh, my gosh.
IG: I remember that, he would have – I think he was, like, a couple years younger than me. And
so then, you know, our parents didn’t – didn’t allow us to go there. One brother went anyway.
Um, so he was a – one of the rebellious ones that had all kinds of experiences that –
ER: Oh, my gosh.
IG: Some he’s shared, some he has not shared. But, uh…
ER: Probably for the best.
IG: Yeah. Anyway. But, um, so as far as – we used to play, um, we went to New York School,
which was just, like, a block and a half from our house. And, um, they, um, had a big, you know,
playground outside, and a jungle gym, and a few equipment, so all summer when school was out,
we could go there to play.
ER: Oh, how fun.
IG: We used to go. And then they had a summer, some kind of summer program where they –
they would set up ping pong tables and box hockey and have competitions, you get a snack, so
all the kids, we always went there. And then on Sundays, we’d go play baseball on their field
there. So, it was real nice that we had that, uh, that school so close to our house.
ER: I imagine that was fun.
IG: Oh, yeah. It was a lot of fun to go there. And I remember when it snowed a whole bunch,
‘cause when I was little, it seemed like it snowed more in the winter. Uh, I just remember my, we
kind of enjoyed it when it was a lot of snow, because my dad would not let us go to school. We
walked. We walked to – now, this would not have been New York School. It would have been
St. John’s, which was about a mile.
ER: Oh, okay.

�IG: It would have been the middle school, uh, Central Junior High, which was 14th and Mass
[Street]. And then the high school, which was about three miles. But I used to walk home. We
got a ride to school, but I’d always walk home from Lawrence High or Central Junior High. But
if it was real high snow, because, you know, back then I forgot, you know, girls didn’t wear
pants. So, we only wore skirts.
ER: Yeah, that’s true.
IG: Yeah, so we had skirts on, and then, you know, short socks, and the shoes. So your legs are
exposed, of course we have a coat on, but not to cover our legs, and so, I just remember we, our
legs would be red.
ER: Oh, my gosh.
IG: Our faces were red when we got to school, bright red. Uh, and I remember one teacher at
Lawrence, I mean at the Central Junior High, my ninth grade English teacher, Mrs. Black. My
locker was right outside her room, and you go to your locker first, and I got there and it was a
real cold winter day, and I know my face was bright red, and my legs. She came out of her room
and saw me getting in my locker, and she – she came up and started, like, patting and rubbing my
cheeks and saying: “You poor little thing,” ‘cause I was all red.
ER: Oh.
IG: But, uh, she was feeling sorry for me, for walking, but, um. So, on those days, especially
deep snow, we didn’t have boots. He said: “No, don’t” – he’d tell my mom, he’d go to work, but
he’d tell my mom: “Don’t send the kids.” Because he didn’t want us to be out in the snow and
that cold without, you know, proper – proper clothing. And I don’t know if the boys went, they
had pants. I don’t remember. But he didn’t want us to go, because it was just too cold, he said.
ER: I can’t, I can’t imagine walking to school dressed like that in the kind of weather that we had
just last week.
IG: Yeah. Yeah, no.
ER: I was thinking, my gosh, it’s dangerous for kids just to be out in this kind of weather, and…
IG: And some of ‘em, like, waiting for a bus now, that’s, yeah. That’s why they canceled for a
couple of days.
ER: That was a wise decision. I…
IG: Mm-hmm.
ER: It’s so easy to take for granted all the things that we have now, especially in – in doing these
interviews, you know, things that never even occurred to me that we just have access to.

�IG: Oh, yeah, we just – well, everybody had outhouses back then. I remember outhouses. So you
know, if you had to go when it’s dark or raining or cold –
ER: Oh, my gosh.
IG: You still had to go outside to go to the outhouse, but also, we didn’t have, uh, since we had
an outhouse only, we didn’t have a tub, like with running water.
ER: Oh, that’s right.
IG: So we had a big, what they called a [unintelligible]. It’s a metal, round metal container, and
one of ‘em was kind of oblong, like what you see is a horse trough, you know the horses, they
get water?
ER: Yeah, yeah.
IG: We had two, a round one and then an oblong one. And we, Mom would put – in the winter,
she’d put it in the kitchen and then boil water and then put regular water and hot water in there,
and, uh, everybody would have to take turns taking baths there in the kitchen, where it was
warm.
ER: Oh, so much work. Oh, my gosh.
IG: In summer. Lot of work, yeah, with so many children. Well, Saturday, and that was probably
a lot of people, Saturday was your bath day, so it was just once a week. But everybody had to
take turns, and I think we did it, ‘cause I always did it with my sister, who was two years older
than me, so we were in that tub two at a time. And then, uh, in the summer she put the – it was
outside. And she’d fill it up and we’d take our baths on the side of our house. Just outside.
ER: Oh, my goodness.
IG: I know! One thing is, we – we, the neighbors on one side would be the opposite side of our
house. They couldn’t see us. It was a real small little house, with an elderly couple. And then on
the other side was a barn. I don’t even know what it was. It was a big huge barn that ran from the
front of our house to the end of our house, the alley. So, there’s nobody in there to see us either,
so we were, uh, so, you know, we weren’t exposed to anybody. But I don’t even know what kind
of barn that was, it was a huge barn, at first I thought it was some kind of a car place, but now I
don’t even remember what it was.
ER: So no livestock or anything, just…
IG: No.
ER: I mean, I guess you would have smelled that if it was.
IG: Yeah. Yeah.

�ER: Oh, my goodness. Well, thank you for taking the time to talk with me.
IG: Sure.
ER: I don’t want to take up too much of your time, I know you’ve got things to take care of, but I
appreciate you telling me about what life was like back then.
IG: Sure. Sure, you’re welcome. And good luck. Are you, you say, you’re the doctoral student,
right?
ER: Yes, ma’am.
IG: That – that is amazing. I just – I went to KU, but only got the graduate. I didn’t go get a
Master’s or anything. This was a long time ago, I was there in the ‘60s, and um, nobody
encourages us back then to go to school at all, or even continue. I don’t know, it’s just, I guess
being poor, nobody thought we could do it, but my daughter is a teacher also, and, uh, she has a
Master’s, and she so badly wants to get a doctorate, but, um, she has four children and it’s kind
of hard right now. But she really, really wants to do that. I hope she gets to, so congratulations to
you, best of luck.
ER: Thank you. And best of luck to your daughter. If she can get a Master’s, she can get a
doctorate. I promise.
IG: That’s what I’m saying. She’s real smart. So I’m sure she will eventually, some time.
ER: I’m actually enjoying the doctorate more than I enjoyed the Master’s work, so I hope the
same is true for her.
IG: Oh, good. Good.
ER: Well, thank you, Isabel.
IG: Okay. Thank you.
ER: Have a wonderful evening.
IG: Okay. Uh-huh. Bye-bye.
ER: Take care. Bye.
IG: You too. Bye.
END OF TAPE

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                  <text>La Yarda was a neighborhood of worker housing provided by the Santa Fe Railroad for Mexican-American railroad workers in Lawrence, Kansas; located near the Kansas (Kaw) River, the neighborhood was largely destroyed by a major flood in 1951. In 2006, Helen Krische, archivist at the Watkins Community Museum, began an oral history project to document the La Yarda and Mexican-American communities in Lawrence, Kansas. The project was resumed in 2019 by Nora Murphy and Emily Raymond. The interviews primarily feature the children of the railroad workers who migrated to Lawrence in the early 20th century; they describe daily life, social activities, and living conditions in the Mexican-American community in Lawrence from roughly the 1920s through the 1970s.</text>
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                <text>Isabel (Chavez) Gonzales La Yarda Interview</text>
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                <text>Isabel (Chavez) Gonzalez was interviewed by Emily Raymond on February 19, 2021, as part of an oral history project to document the La Yarda and Mexican-American communities in Lawrence, Kansas. La Yarda was a neighborhood of worker housing provided by the Santa Fe Railroad for Mexican-American railroad workers; located near the Kansas (Kaw) River, the neighborhood was largely destroyed by a major flood in 1951. Isabel grew up in East Lawrence, and recounts her childhood as part of Lawrence's Mexican-American community. She attended St. John's School, Central Middle School, and Lawrence High School; she also discusses her family's experiences as part of the St. John's Church congregation. She shares memories of childhood pasttimes, life without indoor plumbing, and her father's extensive vegetable gardens. Isabel describes her family's migration from Mexico to Lawrence, and discusses experiences of discrimination and segregation faced by the Mexican-American community in Lawrence. </text>
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                <text>To access the audio recording of this interview, go to &lt;a href="https://archive.org/details/7-igonzales-20210219"&gt;https://archive.org/details/7-igonzales-20210219&lt;/a&gt;.</text>
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                <text>&lt;a href="https://archives.lib.ku.edu/repositories/3/resources/5295"&gt;Additional research on the La Yarda community&lt;/a&gt; is held at the Spencer Research Library at the University of Kansas.</text>
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                <text>Published with the permission of Isabel Gonzales. This work is the intellectual property of the Watkins Museum of History, Lawrence, Kansas. The public may freely copy, modify, and share this Item for noncommercial purposes if they include the original source information. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s).</text>
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                    <text>Interview with Carlos Chavez
Interviewer: Emily Raymond
Date of Interview: March 9, 2021
Length of Interview: 36:43
Location of Interview: Recorded over telephone
Transcription Completion Date: March 14, 2021
Transcriptionist: Emily Raymond
Carlos Chavez (Interviewee): Like, uh, this is, like, from the mid-‘50s to early ‘60s. So, uh, we
used to have, uh, some KU students who would come to all of our neighborhood houses at
Christmastime, and they used to take us, uh, to some building at KU, on a horse-pulling wagon,
and we sat on bales of hay, and uh, we would sing Christmas carols. And then we got to this big
building, uh, where they took us to, and they would have snacks, and they had a gift for each one
of us with our names on it under this huge tree. And, uh, then they would bring us back after we
celebrated a little bit, which was different. And they always gave us toys, not like we got at
home, just clothes [laughs].
Emily Raymond (Interviewer): That’s sweet. I hadn’t heard anyone tell me about that before.
CC: Really?
ER: Nope.
CC: Yeah. And, you know, we see our neighbors that we grew up with and played with all the
time, going too, ‘cause, you know, I guess we were all poor in that neighborhood. Uh, and then
sometimes I’d go with my mom pulling a wagon with jars and a bag of vegetables. And we went
to 9th and New York Street. And there’s a church basement there, we would go down, and I
didn’t know, I can’t remember the name of that church. It’s still there. Where, uh, she and other
ladies were canning vegetables. And it was real hot in there, and I know I’d meet a couple of my
buddies there, and we’d play outside, around the churchyard, while they were down there
canning. But, um…and then during the summer, at New York School, uh, they had a summer
playground for us, from ages to, like, about 10 to 17-year-olds. And from around the
neighborhood.
ER: Oh, okay.
CC: And they played games like, uh, they had, like, checkers and caroms, Ping-Pong, box
hockey, and then all sports to play catch with. You know, they had balls and gloves and stuff.
And you had to sign in and sign out, so you couldn’t leave without signing out, so they would
have an idea of who all was there.
ER: Sure.
CC: But, uh, and then, some of the home games that we played, you know, at our houses in the
neighborhood, were, like, “Rover, Red Rover,” and “Truth, Dare, Promise or Repeat.” And we’d
play ditch-‘em – that was mostly the guys on bikes.

�ER: “Ditch-‘em?”
CC: Ditch-‘em, yeah, it’s on bicycles, you have two teams and you just drive all around the back
of the neighborhood and stuff and, uh, try and catch up with ‘em. When you catch up with
somebody, you tag ‘em, you know, then they’re out. Just eliminating people.
ER: Oh, okay. I gotcha.
CC: Yeah. And then we had, like, spear fights with those cornstalks back behind the buildings
[ER laughs]. But you couldn’t have dirt clods on ‘em, so, that was illegal.
ER: Oh. I – okay, you got rules for –
CC: Oh, yeah. And our favorite game was “rubbers.” And this, you probably don’t know what
that is, but that’s when we used to have, uh, old inner tubes, ‘cause we had a lot of flats over
there, with all the glass and stuff.
ER: Right.
CC: And you’d get an old inner tube and you’d cut up rings. And then you tie ‘em together, and
it was, like, you could have four to five rings, and then each one got five of those. And then you
had teams, and of course you chased each other, shooting somebody. And then you can’t shoot in
the face. And, uh, you eliminated people that way. So, that was a game we all really liked to
play. And then, of course, we – some of us were by ourselves or something, we’d just, uh, we’d
go down to the dump and, uh, look around there, and you could catch tadpoles in a puddle that
was by the waste plant. I don’t understand how there was always, uh, tadpoles there. Now that
I’m grown, I don’t understand it.
ER: I don’t either.
CC: And then we’d play in the sand piles over by the Santa Fe depot, and we’d catch lizards
there. There was a lot of lizards. They were real fast.
ER: Oh, ‘cause they like – they like the hot, arid environments with the sand.
CC: Right. Right. Or we’d just play in the woods, you know, a lot of wooded area there. Or go
swimming in the river, you know, ‘cause of course, the pools were off-limits for us, so…
ER: The pools were off-limits?
CC: Yeah, there was a sign: “Whites Only,” there. And so, we would just go down by the river,
but it was usually with older guys, and they would talk us into coming in, but, you know, it’s just
more or less wading in the water. None of us really knew how to swim. All I knew how to do
was dog-paddle.

�ER: That must have been dangerous.
CC: It was dangerous. Of course, we didn’t know it at the time.
ER: No, of course.
CC: The older ones would tell us, you know, you have to stay close to the shore and stuff. But,
uh…and another favorite thing was, uh, they butchered across the street, and we’d go down there
and watch ‘em butcher cows and pigs on Tuesdays and Thursdays. But there was a real small
ledge that you had to drop down into and see a small – through a small window. And it was a
tight fit, and we’d have to take turns climbing in and out, so everybody could watch ‘em butcher,
but yeah, I got to know how they butchered each one of those animals.
ER: Goodness.
CC: Yeah. ‘Course, in the inside, you know, like in wintertime and stuff, you know, one thing
we hated was our phone was on a party line. ‘Course, that didn’t bother me until I was later in
my teens, but [ER laughs]. Yeah.
ER: That – that makes sense.
CC: Everybody listening in on your conversations. But, uh, then when we were littler, I had an
older brother than came in from Kansas City. And on Saturdays, and then he would let us watch
this shock show, with Gregory Graves. I don’t know if you know anything about that. It was just
shows like The Mummy and Frankenstein movies and stuff.
ER: Oh, okay.
CC: It was usually at about [9:30?] at night. And, uh, we’d watch that, and of course my mom
would always be at the back room with my littlest brother; he was a baby. And we had an
outhouse, and the girls were always afraid to go out there, so I always had to go out there with
‘em and stand out there [laughs]. It was weird because they were scared too, because there was,
uh, a place called the Tampico, which was a bar, it was just – uh, not next door, but the door after
that.
ER: Okay.
CC: And there was always a lot of, you know, drunk guys walking around out there and stuff.
You could hear ‘em laughing and hollering and stuff.
ER: Oh. Alright.
CC: Yeah. And then, uh, I was gonna tell you about a – a kind of a work history that you
wouldn’t see today, and that’s when I was seven years old, I started selling newspapers. But they
were just walking up and down Massachusetts. And I only had, like, four blocks that I could be
on, and that was on the west side of the street. And I would sell the Journal-World paper going

�up and down Massachusetts Street, and, uh, they were seven cents a paper. They gave us ten
[papers] to start off with.
ER: Seven cents. My gosh.
CC: Yeah.
ER: You wouldn’t get that today.
CC: No, no. And the Kansas-City Star right now about the cheap price. But, uh, if they gave you
a dime, sometimes they would say, “Keep the change,” and we got to keep it ourselves. I can’t
remember if they even paid us for that, but I know we always had the – the three cents if they
gave you a dime. I would even ask, you know, if I could keep the change.
ER: Oh. That’s cute.
CC: The one thing I always did was, I was – I stayed close by this, uh, it was a midget named
Leo. And he rode a small cart, selling things, you know, I’m sure that’s even in the papers and
stuff, about him and his history. And, uh, ‘cause he attracted a lot of people, so it helped me sell
more papers.
ER: I never heard about Leo. No one ever told me about him.
CC: Really? Oh, yeah, you can look that up, ‘cause he was real popular in, you know, he wore
glasses, and he wore, like, an engineer cap, you know, train engineer cap.
ER: Oh.
CC: And, uh, I could just picture him right now, too. But when I was ten, I was selling peanuts at
KU football stadium, and Gale Sayers was playing there at that time. So I – I got to see him play,
but I didn’t ever meet him. And then at twelve and thirteen, it was funny because, uh, at twelve I
was working on a farm for Paul [name?] across from Garrett’s Market in North Lawrence.
ER: Okay.
CC: And they would leave me there in a field of soybeans, just to pull weeds. And I’d be there
by myself, and that’s, you know, at twelve years old. And at thirteen, I went to, uh, Hemphill’s
farm, which was also in North Lawrence, and that was, uh, uh, baling hay. And both those jobs, I
never even tried to get – my mom, somehow, talked to somebody and told me: “Hey, you’re
gonna go with this guy, he’s gonna pick you up,” you know, so he was a stranger to me.
ER: Oh, my goodness.
CC: Yeah, by myself out there, you know, in these fields. It was really different. And you
wouldn’t see that today.

�ER: No. Now you have to fill out paperwork – well, and then kids can’t even work, you know,
under a certain age.
CC: Right.
ER: Goodness. So, did you get to keep the money that you earned, or did you give it to your
family to kind of help out with expenses, or…?
CC: No, no, I had to help give it to my mom, other than that. And, uh, in fact when I was making
money then, I would go downtown. I don’t know if you remember, they used to be open until
8:30 on Thursdays. And I would always go up town and buy her something and bring it back,
and sometimes I’d get me, like, a shirt, maybe, or something.
ER: What would you get her?
CC: Oh, cooking stuff. I mean, kitchen stuff, you know, like that. Spoons and stuff, you know,
she always – I always saw pans that were old, I would see, but of course she liked using her own,
but –
ER: That’s sweet.
CC: To me, I thought she would – yeah [laughs]. And, uh, and then after that, at fourteen I was a
custodian at a community building. And at fifteen I was – I worked at the sirloin stockade in
Lawrence. And, uh, but I got some funny stories about disciplinary times. When I –
ER: I’d like to hear about those.
CC: Yeah, when I was real little, I used to think that my older brothers and sisters – they lived
out of town – were my aunts and uncles, ‘cause, you know, they were a lot older than I was.
ER: Oh, okay.
CC: I don’t even remember them being at the house or, you know, anything. And so, one day my
oldest brother came to visit, and asked if we – I wanted to go to the dump with him. Of course I
did, yeah. And he started gathering all these broken parts of bikes and stuff, and I thought:
“Wow,” and he was putting ‘em in his station wagon. Well, when he took me home, he just
dropped me off and left. And I was telling my mom I didn’t like him anymore, because, you
know, he stoled our toys.
She said: “What do you mean he stoled your toys?”
I said: “From the dump, and took them. They, you know, those were ours.” And she
didn’t see it that way, ‘cause he was gonna take ‘em to his own kids and fix’ em up.
ER: Oh, I see.
CC: Yeah. And I didn’t know anything about that. I just thought he was gonna bring ‘em to our
house, and fix ‘em up.

�ER: Oh, no.
CC: But…and then when I was ten years old, we used to go around to different gardens. They
had gardens everywhere around there. And, uh, I used to carry around a salt shaker. You know,
I’d put wax paper under the lid and screw it down. Those old glass ones.
ER: Yeah.
CC: And carry it around. And, uh, so one time I stopped at a garden, and, uh, was filling up on
tomatoes, and I fell asleep. And I was laying there, and my belly was full, and then I was
awakened by this older woman. She was a small woman, but she – shadowed over me and
blocked out the sun [laughs] in a loud voice, that I didn’t understand what she was saying. She
grabbed me by the ear and – and walked me down the alley where my dad was out there burning
trash. And she spoke to him in Spanish, and it sounded pretty dramatic, anyway. He pulled me in
the yard and gave me a boot in the rear [laughs] and then –
ER: Oh, my gosh.
CC: Up to the house where my mom was already waiting. She heard her talking. Waiting with
the belt. And I guess that was called stealing, but to us, we just thought: “Well, you know,
there’s a lot of gardens; a lot of tomatoes out there.”
ER: Yeah, sure. Why not, you know, just…
CC: Yeah.
ER: Oh.
CC: And when I was nine years old, um, I was mad because, uh, my shoes had holes in ‘em. And
I wanted some Keds, you know, everybody was getting those Keds.
ER: Oh, yeah. I know what you mean. Those…
CC: Yeah, Mom said we couldn’t afford ‘em, so I decided to run away to Texas and make
money [ER laughs]. So, I had to take my little brother – he was four and a half – because I was
supposed to be watching him. So, I got a bag with an extra shirt for him and a long-sleeved shirt
for me in the winter months, working outside, ‘cause, like, my dad was always wearing longsleeved shirts. And I also took my big sombrero that I got to block out the sun, that my older
brother gave me. We headed down the tracks behind those buildings, the cider building and
those.
ER: Yeah.
CC: So we wouldn’t be seen, and also, I figured the track would lead us to Texas.

�ER: That’s so cute.
CC: Yeah, we were by my sister’s house, who lived at 12th and 13th in Haskell. And, uh, she
lived up, kind of on a hill, to me. Well, right now it just seems like, you know, nothing. But then
it was like a hill. And when my brother had to use the bathroom, so I told him to go up in there
and tell her – tell her that I’m out here. And so I laid belly-down along the curb, hiding under my
sombrero. And it wasn’t long that I heard: “Carlos? Carlos? Get up here.” And she took me
inside and he was sitting there with a milk mustache, eating cookies.
ER: Oh, my gosh. So that was the end of the runaway plot.
CC: Oh, yeah. She called my mom and took me home. And Mom hugged my little brother, and
the belt started hugging me.
ER: I bet. Oh, my gosh. I like that you thought you could run to Texas on the track. That’s –
CC: Oh, yeah. Yeah, anything was possible back then when you’re a kid. You know, there was a
lot of – lot of free space there, that you could explore and do things.
ER: Your sister had mentioned that you guys spent a lot of time outside.
CC: Oh, yeah. Yeah, we did. Yeah, like especially playing those, uh, “Rover, Red Rover” games
and that “Truth, Dare, Promise or Repeat.” That was our biggest one.
ER: Was it?
CC: The neighbors would even come up and we’d play that one.
ER: I remember those two. We also played Kick the Can; did you ever do that?
CC: Kick the Can? No, no.
ER: Oh, well, it’s pretty simple. It was just an outdoor game where everyone would hide and
then one person would be looking for them, and the idea was for someone in hiding to come out
and kick the can down the curb, and then you’d have to go run back and hide. And if you were
caught, then you were “it,” and you had to – had to find –
CC: Oh really?
ER: It was a silly game, but we would spend hours outside, doing that.
CC: Oh, yeah. Yeah. We were outside all the time, even in the wintertime. We’d make snow, uh,
forts, and we used to pile all that snow up against our fence, and that helped build the fort, you
know, and throw snowballs. It was great.
ER: That sounds like fun.

�CC: Yeah. And in the summertime too, we had a couple – we had a guy, a Mr. Hill that used to
come around in this blue pickup truck, and he had watermelons and cantaloupes. And he was a
real nice guy, because when we were little, you know, he would ask me if I would go up to the
different houses, and run up there and just let ‘em know that he was out there. He didn’t have a
bell or anything like that, you know, like an ice cream truck.
ER: Right.
CC: But he had a whole back bin full of watermelons and cantaloupes. And he would even let us
try ‘em. He’d cut out a little triangle and plug, and let us taste it, and then, you know, of course
we’d buy watermelon. And then, for the littlest guys, he would give us those little round ones. I
don’t see them anymore, but they – they were just, looked like the size of a baseball or softball.
ER: Oh, okay.
CC: And they were good. He would give us those free. So…but that’s pretty much all I had
thought about and stuff. I’m not sure what all you really wanted.
ER: No, I like those memories. I just like, um, a bit of context. Like I told your sister, even
though you didn’t grow up in La Yarda –
CC: Yes.
ER: It’s helpful to know what was going on in Lawrence at the time, like you said, things like
“Whites Only” at the swimming pool. Uh, I wouldn’t have known about that otherwise. So…
CC: Right.
ER: It’s all important. I’m curious – how did you enjoy school?
CC: Well, we – it was three miles away. We walked. It was, uh, St. John’s. And, uh, it was good.
It was good. Uh, we – we played in the South Park there – it’s South Park, isn’t it? Yeah, it’s still
–
ER: Yeah.
CC: Called South Park. Where the fire engine is. Yeah. And we used to have races there, going
around those trails, with sidewalks. Uh, but no, school was real good. In fact, you know, being in
a Catholic school, they’re – they are real strict, and so when I got to Central Junior High one
year, there, in ninth grade, I was like, uh, “A” average. Which didn’t last long, but [laughs] yeah,
it was – they were pretty much advanced in, uh…private school.
ER: And how about church life? Um, you sister said your parents were – were very involved in
the church.

�CC: Yeah.
ER: Especially your dad.
CC: Oh, yeah, he was. Yeah. And, uh, uh, of course we said the rosary every night, you know, in
front of an altar that he built. And that was something else, ‘cause man, he would be in front. He
had a huge rosary, and then of course my mom would be in the back, ‘cause, uh, she was the
disciplinarian. Start giggling and you had to go to the bathroom real quick, because by then we
had a regular bathroom inside, and – and I remember that once one started giggling, the other
one’d start, and oh man, my two sisters that are older than me – but, uh, Isabel, the oldest one,
she was pretty strict. The three of us were just gigglers.
ER: Giggles are contagious.
CC: Oh, yeah, they are. Yeah, they are. For no reason. [Laughs]
ER: So how about this altar? Your sister mentioned it as well. What did it look like?
CC: He made about five altars. And, uh, right now the older siblings, each one of ‘em have one
at their house, you know.
ER: Oh.
CC: Mom passed, ‘cause she used to have all of ‘em. But, uh, oh, it’s – it’s huge. It’s probably
six or seven feet tall. And, uh, and it looks like an altar you would see at a church. It even had a
tabernacle and it had little – little, uh, chalices inside.
ER: Oh, my goodness.
CC: The doors would open. Oh, yeah, it was good too, you know, and detailed. And I have
pictures of saints and everything, and it had a crucifix. And underneath it, it had a glass that
covered, uh, the Last Supper. And it had all the picture, of all the apostles and everything in
there. So, it was, yeah, it was nice.
ER: That’s nice that you have those things to remember them by. That he made – so you can
share ‘em around.
CC: Right, right.
ER: So, how about – tell me about your family now. When did you meet your wife?
CC: Well, I’m divorced now, but I met her in – when, not until I moved here to Kansas City.
But, uh, and actually I was married twice, because I used to be married to a – she’s passed away,
but, uh, in Coffeyville. And I had one son there. And, uh, I moved here years later, and I met
another lady, and then I’ve got three kids by her. But, um, no, we – we still get together. We
have, uh, family reunions, like, every three to five years. And I usually was the one that started

�those, but, you know, wanting to pass that on to the younger generation. I did that, uh, two –
three years ago. And they had one, but it was a small one, so we were planning a big one this
year. And they’re always in Lawrence, since we all started out there. But there’s four families,
and there’s, like, and what I have is a family tree that I created, and it’s a website. And right
now, there’s 547 names.
ER: Oh, my goodness.
CC: Of just family, yeah, there’s – there’s four families, uh, mainly, that are from the same
ancestors. And those are Estrada, Gonzales, Chavez, and Alvarez. So…yeah, we have a big
family, so we’re looking forward to getting together again, which was planned already for last
year, but that didn’t happen ‘cause of the COVID. But, um, probably not this year either. I’m not
sure. But –
ER: It will depend on how they get the vaccines out, and –
CC: Right.
ER: How effective they are.
CC: They’re usually at the 4-H grounds.
ER: Hmm.
CC: There in Lawrence.
ER: Well, I hope that can happen for you. I mean, that sounds like a really nice thing to be able
to do.
CC: Yeah. And it’s funny because most of the ones that, uh, the girls married guys from Topeka,
and then the guys married girls from Topeka, so [laughs] and that’s where mostly everybody is,
between Topeka and Lawrence. There are some in Texas.
ER: So, how did they meet in Topeka, if you lived in Lawrence?
CC: They always had dances there in Topeka.
ER: Oh, dances.
CC: And, uh, yeah, oh, yeah. Weddings and everybody was always invited. And so, they’re
usually in Topeka where everybody met, because they would have dances, you know, and of
course that’s where they would meet [murmurs]. Everybody went to ‘em. That’s mostly how
they went.
ER: How old did you have to be to go to one of those?

�CC: There was no age. There was no age.
ER: Oh, just anyone.
CC: Most of the family, though, of the wedding party or whatever, they would have younger kids
there, but the rest of ‘em would just be, you know, teenagers on up to 70s and 80s. Man, there
was, you know, everybody loved to dance at the dances there. And as a kid, you kind of had to
know, learn how to do those dances, you know. [Cungas?] and rancheras and [unintelligible]
stuff.
ER: That sounds like fun.
CC: Oh, it was. It was, it’s always fun.
ER: So, I’m curious, apart from the “Whites Only” sign at the swimming pool, which takes me
by surprise, um, did you ever experience any other kinds of discrimination, or witness it firsthand
while you were growing up?
CC: Uh…not so much. I – I mean, I did when I was older, you know, I was in high school and
stuff, but that was, you know, back when they were having riots and stuff. And that was already
in the ‘60s.
ER: Oh, okay.
CC: But, no, before that, I – I was trying to remember, but I barely remember, um, friend of
mine, and I don’t even remember who it was, but he was taking me to go swimming, and ‘cause
this was after I was in, uh, Cub Scouts.
ER: Oh, okay.
CC: Now, that was a story, because my dad, I didn’t know him very much, you know. He died
when I was eleven. But I remember one time I had a – I was gonna get an award, and I told my
mom, so she told him to take me, you know, walking, and that was up to St. John’s, you know.
We went up there and, uh, I was supposed to get a Wolf badge. And, uh, so he knew I was gonna
get an award. Well, I was up in line, and they didn’t have mine for some reason. It was a
mistake, and my, uh, Mrs. Boyle was her name. She was our den leader. And she came up to me
and apologized and said, you know, she was gonna get it to me, you know, within a week or two,
but it didn’t come in. And so, I just said: “Okay,” you know, but I couldn’t tell my dad, because,
you know, he didn’t speak English. And I didn’t know how to tell him that, he was kind of
looking at me, you know, he would – in Spanish I did understand what he said: “Y tu?” You
know: “And you?”
ER: Mm-hmm.
CC: Like “Everybody got one, but where was yours?” and stuff. And I just didn’t know what to
do. I shrugged my shoulders. It’s funny ‘cause he was so tall, uh, my oldest brother and my

�youngest brother, they’re both six foot, and the rest of us in between are five [feet] eight [inches].
So, they were the bookends. But he was six foot also, and he had those long legs, and I
remember walking with him, holding his hand, and I was taking, like, three steps to every one of
his. And, uh, it wasn’t till we had to get all the way home to tell my mom, you know, what
happened. And then she explained it to him.
ER: Oh, okay. So, your mom would translate for you guys.
CC: Yeah.
ER: I didn’t know if you had grown up speaking both Spanish and English.
CC: No, not at that age, when it was him, ‘cause she would speak to us in English. And, uh, I
didn’t learn my Spanish till I was older, in the service and stuff. But, um, my dad – I hardly ever
even saw him, ‘cause he was always gone. He was always working. He worked two jobs and
stuff, all the time, you know, and then of course when he got sick, he was in the hospital and
stuff, so, yeah…
ER: You said you were in the service; which branch?
CC: I was in the Marine Corps.
ER: Oh, okay.
CC: Yeah. I started out about three years in the reserves. I had about four cousins and a brotherin-law that was in that reserve unit. But then I just couldn’t take that once a month and
everything, so I went ahead and went into active service. And, uh, I avoided Vietnam when I
went in, because the outfit they sent me to had just gotten back. But, oh, there’s a – there’s a
Twilight Zone story there, because when I got out in ‘75, I was overseas, and then when I came
back, I didn’t get any mail or – the right mail. My mom and all of ‘em had moved. She was the
last one to move out of Lawrence, and she went to Topeka.
ER: Uh-huh.
CC: They tore that whole block down. Pennsylvania Street. They were gonna build a highway, I
guess from K-10 or something, to North Lawrence, I’m not sure what they were gonna do there.
Well, I never received a letter, and so when I got out in ‘75, I got to the bus station, it was
already about 4:00 in the morning. And I had all my gear with me, and I had no money. I’d been
just eating chips and stuff, because I had a check for five hundred dollars, but I didn’t have it
cashed at the time.
ER: Right.
CC: So I was walking down Massachusetts Street, and I noticed there was a restaurant open, I
can’t remember if it was Rainey’s or something. It was kind of like a drugstore restaurant. But I
went in there, and there was Judge Rankin, was there, and I – he talked to me, you know, about

�being in the service and stuff, and he bought me breakfast, and then he asked me if I needed a
ride home. And I said: “Yeah, I’ll take one,” and he told those police officers to give me a ride
home. And so they were gonna turn their car in, they were done. And they asked where I lived,
and I said 805 Pennsylvania.
And they said, uh, “No, you don’t live there.”
I said: “Sure I do, I’ve lived there all my life.” And they took me there, and there was
nothing there.
ER: Oh, how bizarre.
CC: What in the world? And, uh, I said: “Well, go down the alley,” ‘cause, you know, where are
they at?
And they said: “No, well, we gotta turn this car in.”
I said: “Well, I have a brother that lives on Craig Court,” but I didn’t know the address.
And they took me up to that circle drive, and, gosh, it was on the other side of these huge bushes.
But I didn’t know, you know, his address, and it wasn’t out there on the box – mailbox or
anything, so…
And they said: “Well, we gotta turn this car in. Where do you wanna go?”
I said: “Well, just take me back to 805 Pennsylvania,” and they dropped me off there.
And I was walking down the alley, and then I decided to go out in the street, in New Jersey
Street, and I walked all the way down to about, um, well, it was the 10th or between 10th and
1100 block. And, uh, I saw a light come on, and it was [Jamie’s] house. And so, I went and I
knocked on the door, and [Jamie?], he was getting ready to go to Stokely’s, where he worked. A
lot of ‘em worked at Stokely’s, a [murmurs] there on 9th Street. And, uh, he was surprised to see
me, you know, and I said, yeah, I said:
“Hey,” I said, “I was supposed to go home, but there’s not even a house there.”
He just laughed, he said: “You didn’t know that?”
And I said: “No, where’s my mom? Where is she living?”
ER: Oh, my gosh.
CC: “Oh, they moved to Topeka.” He said that she was the last one to move out, but they, you
know, they bought everybody out on that block. And then they already tore it all down. And, uh,
so anyway, I got to call my sister that lived over on 6th Street, and, uh, she came, and her
husband came and got me. And then they took me to Topeka, to where my mom lived. That was
– that was just crazy, they couldn’t believe I didn’t know.
ER: No one had written to tell you?
CC: Well, my mom said she wrote to me, but I didn’t get the mail, ‘cause I was overseas I guess,
that’s why.
ER: Oh, that’s – that is so strange. So disorienting, my gosh.
CC: But no, as far as, uh, uh, I was – like I was saying, there was a kid that took me to some club
place. That they had a pool there, an inside pool. And, uh, they asked me if I had an ID and I said

�no, I just had told them my name. And they said: “Well, you can’t come in here.” Now, I don’t
know if they were saying it was because of the ID, because I told ‘em my name, but he didn’t
have an ID. You know, they were members, his family was.
ER: Oh, okay.
CC: And so, his mom, I remember, just brought me back and dropped me off at home. But,
uh…that, and, man, I can’t remember the name of the kid. And I – but I remember going to
school with him for a few years, when I was a kid, real kid. So, that’s about the only thing. No,
after that, though, you know, with the riots and stuff. That was – that came way later.
ER: Do you still keep in touch with some of your friends from school?
CC: Yeah, yeah. I have. I haven’t been to a reunion. I did go to, well, I was living in Coffeyville,
and then I came down to pick up a car in Topeka, and I stopped in Lawrence, but it was the day
before the reunion, and, uh, that was our 40th. And then I, uh, went to a club there in Lawrence,
that I knew a guy that was running it. And I met a lot of the guys there that came in for the
reunion. I got to see them, anyway, but… There’s a few of them that I still stay in touch with, but
not many – not – not a whole lot. I got so much family, it’s hard to keep up with the other
people.
ER: I imagine it is. Your sister said something like that.
CC: Every month or so, which I’ve gotta do, uh, today or tomorrow, is I write a letter – or, you
know, just a – talking about what’s going on, if anybody has any news, you know, graduations or
weddings or anything, you know. I call it the family network. And then I send out a birthday list
with the month of everybody’s birthdays, so everybody can keep up with whose birthday it is.
And I’ve been doing that for several years now, so…
ER: That’s a special thing to do.
CC: Yeah, that takes up times, too, so, ‘cause I gotta know what to write, you know, some
suggestions like – obey your parents, hug your kids, stuff like that. Just a whole bunch of those
in.
ER: And what do you do for work? Or are you retired?
CC: I retired last year. I worked for Proctor and Gamble. I loaded rail cars and trucks and, uh,
made soap.
ER: And –
CC: I worked there 30 years.
ER: 30 years.

�CC: Mm-hmm.
ER: And you do the writing in your spare time?
CC: Yes.
ER: Good, you keep busy.
CC: Oh, yeah, I stay busy. I got two kids living with me, you know, they’re busy with them too,
you know, stuff that they’re going through and everything, and trying to get ‘em to go through
some different stuff and more stuff [laughs].
ER: What do you like to do with your grandkids?
CC: Oh, I like playing with them. ‘Cause I, man, I tell you what, it’s a whole ‘nother world; I’m
not at all good with, uh, phones and computers and stuff like that, you know, other than emails
and stuff, but gosh, the three-year-old, the four-year-old, they know how to work an iPad and of
course, you know, they – I can’t show ‘em anything. But now, I do make sure that they don’t use
it very much time with that, ‘cause they might at home, but not – not here. ‘Cause I want ‘em to,
you know, play and talk, you know, see what they like to do, and – and go outside and do
walking and stuff. That kind of playing.
ER: Sure. Take them outside of the digital world for a while.
CC: Yeah.
ER: Well, I hope you can do more of that, now that some of the restrictions are being lifted.
CC: Yes, yes, that did, uh, take a toll on it, so…
ER: Must have been kind of difficult to adjust.
CC: Yeah. Yeah, it was different.
ER: Do you still attend church at St. John’s?
CC: No, no, I live in Shawnee.
ER: Oh, you live in Shawnee. Okay.
CC: Yeah.
ER: For some reason I thought you lived in Lawrence.
CC: No. Uh, I – we tried to go – my brother, I got an older brother that lives here in Shawnee, we
sometimes go visit family together, but, uh, we try to go there on, uh, the – December the 12th,

�the Lady Guadalupe Day. And, uh, they usually have a – we meet people there, and then they
have in the basement, they have that, uh hot chocolate, what you call atole. And, uh [murmurs]
so we get to talk to some of the older people, friends and stuff there. But, you know, and then we
went to a lot of funerals, too, that they had there, and of course now you can’t go.
ER: That’s true.
CC: Well…
ER: Many things have changed.
CC: Yeah. And I keep up with some of the stuff that goes on in Lawrence, because I got two
sisters and a brother that live there now.
ER: Oh, okay.
CC: And they got families, too.
ER: Well, I’m glad you can still keep up with them to some extent.
CC: Oh, yeah. Yeah. Yeah, we’re a close family. We’re – everybody’s, you know, involved with
each other and stuff. And it just keeps growing and growing. Like I said, there’s 547 names, but I
know there’s probably five or six that are not on there, of new ones that [laughs].
ER: That’s a family forest, I think, not a tree.
CC: Yeah [laughs].
ER: Well, I’m happy for you. I’m glad that you have such a support network.
CC: Yes, yes.
ER: Well, is there anything else that you remember, or that you had written down?
CC: Nothing that I can tell. [Laughs] There’s a lot of stories, but – that I told my sister about, and
that’s probably why she recommended me. But, no, those stories are – they’re just for family
[laughs].
ER: Yeah. Well, that’s good. It will give you something to pass on.
CC: Oh, yeah. Yeah.
ER: Well, I really appreciate –
CC: Do you have a big family?

�ER: I’m – do I have a big family? Um, not really. I grew up in Texas, and our relatives live in
New England, so we would see them sometimes, maybe if we’d go up there annually, when I
was a kid, but –
CC: Yeah.
ER: We – we grew up in a pretty small town, so the people we lived with became our family.
CC: Gotcha. That’s good, too. That’s good, too.
ER: I still keep I touch with all of them like I do with regular family, so it’s nice. It’s – there are
some definite advantages to growing up in a small town.
CC: Right, right.
ER: Well, I really appreciate you taking the time to talk with me, Carlos.
CC: Sure, sure. Not a problem.
ER: And if you remember anything else, or you have anything else you want to share, please feel
free to give me a call again.
CC: Okay. I will.
ER: Alright. Enjoy the rest of your day, and good luck recovering from your surgery.
CC: Thank you. You too. Be careful.
ER: Bye.
CC: God bless you. Bye.
END OF TAPE

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                  <text>La Yarda was a neighborhood of worker housing provided by the Santa Fe Railroad for Mexican-American railroad workers in Lawrence, Kansas; located near the Kansas (Kaw) River, the neighborhood was largely destroyed by a major flood in 1951. In 2006, Helen Krische, archivist at the Watkins Community Museum, began an oral history project to document the La Yarda and Mexican-American communities in Lawrence, Kansas. The project was resumed in 2019 by Nora Murphy and Emily Raymond. The interviews primarily feature the children of the railroad workers who migrated to Lawrence in the early 20th century; they describe daily life, social activities, and living conditions in the Mexican-American community in Lawrence from roughly the 1920s through the 1970s.</text>
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                  <text>These works are the intellectual property of the Watkins Museum of History, Lawrence, Kansas. The public may freely copy, modify, and share this Item for noncommercial purposes if they include the original source information. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s).</text>
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                <text>Carlos Chavez La Yarda Interview</text>
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                <text>Carlos Chavez was interviewed by Emily Raymond on March 9, 2021, as part of an oral history project to document the La Yarda and Mexican-American communities in Lawrence, Kansas. La Yarda was a neighborhood of worker housing provided by the Santa Fe Railroad for Mexican-American railroad workers; located near the Kansas (Kaw) River, the neighborhood was largely destroyed by a major flood in 1951. Carlos grew up in East Lawrence, and recounts his memories of his childhood as part of Lawrence's Mexican-American community in the 1950s and 1960s. Carlos describes jobs that he had while growing up, pasttimes enjoyed by neighborhood children, and aspects of the social life of Lawrence's Mexican-American community. He describes his experience returning to Lawrence after military service in the mid-1970s. Carlos also discusses experiences of discrimination and segregation faced by the Mexican-American community in Lawrence. </text>
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                <text>To access the audio recording of this interview, go to &lt;a href="https://archive.org/details/8-cchavez-20210309"&gt;https://archive.org/details/8-cchavez-20210309&lt;/a&gt;.</text>
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                <text>&lt;a href="https://archives.lib.ku.edu/repositories/3/resources/5295"&gt;Additional research on the La Yarda community&lt;/a&gt; is held at the Spencer Research Library at the University of Kansas.</text>
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                <text>Published with the permission of Carlos Chavez. This work is the intellectual property of the Watkins Museum of History, Lawrence, Kansas. The public may freely copy, modify, and share this Item for noncommercial purposes if they include the original source information. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s).</text>
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                <text>La Yarda Oral History Project</text>
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                    <text>Tape 15: Interview with Tiburcio Reyes, Sr.
Interviewer: Helen Krische
Date of Interview: 2006
Length of Interview: 37:13
Location of Interview: St. John the Evangelist Church, Lawrence, KS
Transcription Completion Date: September 13, 2020
Transcriptionist: Emily Raymond
Proofreader: Silvia Peralez
Helen Krische (Interviewer): There we go. Alright, I think we’re rolling. Alrighty. Um…these
are just some, some pictures that I’ve gotten from other people and –
Tiburcio Reyes, Sr. (Interviewee): Uh-huh.
HK: What I do is I make a copy of them and then I ask them to identify people that are in the
pictures so that we get a handle on who’s who –
TRS: Uh-huh.
HK: But, um, when you bring your pictures in that’s probably what I’ll do too is just –
TRS: Okay.
HK: I’ll make a copy like this, I’ll scan them into the computer.
TRS: Uh-huh.
HK: But I’ll also make a copy so that you can write the names of whoever the people are on
there, so…and you’re welcome to bring those in either later today, or tomorrow I’ll be here all
day long, too. So you can just bring them in whenever you’re ready. Um…so I guess that
basically what this is about is that we’re just trying to get information from people about, you
know, the first, the first, uh, Mexican-Americans that came here to Lawrence. And I know a lot
of them came in on the railroad, and –
TRS: Right.
HK: Was that – was that the situation with your parents?
TRS: Yes, my dad come to the railroad Union Pacific, work on the Union Pacific in Sackerville.
They – he was born in Ranger, Texas and they…they come up to the railroad. And he went to
school in Sackerville, which is on the other side of Emporia. And then they moved up here, Mom
and Dad. Um…and they married and I was born in Wellington, Kansas in 1942. So they came
here in 1943, say a year after I was born. They come to Lawrence and that’s where we reside
ever since.
HK: So he was born in Texas, your father.

1

�TRS: Right. Yes.
HK: And what was his name?
TRS: Tiburcio. Joe. Tiburcio L. Reyes, excuse me.
HK: And your mother?
TRS: [hard to decipher name – Felicia maybe?] Garcia was her maiden name, and she’ll, uh,
you’ll have information on my marriage, she’s a Garcia. They had – my grandfather – they had
eleven children, which my [unintelligible] mama was six girls and five boys, I believe, on my
mom’s side. And Dad, he was an only child that we knew of. He was adopted, also. So he was
adopted from his father’s…his name was…Espinoza was his last name.
HK: So that was his adoptive father?
TRS: No, yeah, no, the one that adopted. The adoptive father is [Lino?] Reyes.
HK: Ok, so his real father was…
TRS: Right, yeah. Manuel Espinoza. Adopted I guess when he was a year old.
HK: Okay. Do you know from what area of Mexico they were originally from?
TRS: No, I don’t, not on my father’s side. Now, my mother’s side, my aunt will have all of that.
They was, my grandmother and grandpa was from San Juan de Los Lagos, from what I
understand. So that’s where I know they’re from. But as far as Dad’s concerned, no I never got
into that – that – knowing where his dad come from. I knew that he was born in Texas, and they
raised him in Sackerville. And he went to school in Sackerville.
HK: So he spoke English.
TRS: Oh yes.
HK: Did he speak any Spanish growing up?
TRS: Yes, Dad spoke fluent Spanish, so did Mom. And I speak Spanish and my oldest sister and
I speak Spanish. I got a younger brother and younger sister that don’t…comprehend it hardly at
all.
HK: Do any of your children speak Spanish?
TRS: They’re starting, they’re trying to learn now, which is something of a lost art. We talked
about that. We lost our language back in, back when I was come over and was going to school
here because they didn’t use it…we had a Spanish class, but not that much, so most of it was

2

�English. So we kind of lost contact with our language. Which now it’s a good start bringing it
back and learning it, so I got a grandson’s taking Spanish in school, my daughter’s trying to learn
little by little, you know, trying to converse more in Spanish too. Yeah, we lost all that when I
was – like I said, from my younger sister and younger brother, they, I was fortunate, we lived
with my grandmother and grandfather for a year or two, me and my sister, so we was young
enough that we had to speak both languages, cause that’s what they – mostly they communicated
with us in Spanish, and that helped a lot. And I used to run errands for some older ladies here in
town when I was – on the east side. I’d go to the grocery store for them, and so I had to learn – I
learned how to speak – and if I didn’t know I called grandmother and my mom up and we’d get
it lined out for me there. I was very fortunate that way.
HK: Where does your family live here in Lawrence?
TRS: Where do we live?
HK: Mm-hmm.
TRS: We lived – we lived on, uh, that I remember was on New Jersey Street [unintelligible]. But
mostly on the east side. New Jersey Street and we lived on Pennsylvania, 745 Pennsylvania, I
remember that, that’s when I was going to junior high school, I think. Grade school we lived on
814 New Jersey, I believe, it was right in that area there. And then we moved to Rhode Island
Street just, uh, before we come to North Lawrence in the ‘50s. And then we went to North
Lawrence and then been there ever since in the 1950s Mom and Dad opened the El Matador
Café.
HK: Oh, okay.
TRS: Which has been there now, we’re going on 50 years. It’s gone on for 49, almost 50 years
now. They opened it in the ‘50s when I was in school.
HK: Okay. That’s my favorite one, yeah. [laughs]
TRS: See, Grandfather and Uncle Leon originally opened the Tropicana. And then it changed
hands. He went out, my uncle got out, and my mom operated it for my grandfather for about a
year or so, in the middle ‘50s. And that didn’t work out, so we went and bought the building
where the Matador is at now, and Mom ran the kitchen at the 1040 Cafe. Our mayor then who
was John Emick [A Google search brought up Emick’s name in the Lawrence city records], liked
Mom’s cooking, and…he got her into there and we ran the kitchen there for a year or so. And
that’s when we bought – they purchased the building.
HK: Where was that located at?
TRS: The 1040 Cafe was right across from where McDonald’s is now. It used to be a, was it the
college motel? There was a motel in there also. Right on the corner there of, uh, Michigan and
6th Street.

3

�HK: Oh, okay.
TRS: Where the old Dillons store used to be. Before the Dillons store went in there, there was a
car lot on the corner, 1040 Café and then the Jayhawk gas station on the north side of the road
before Dillons was. They operated that when I was in high school…
HK: That – that was just American food?
TRS: No, she done both. We done both. She – Mom was a very good cook, she was a fry cook,
dinner, she would bring up dinner and everything. So we had everything. On football game days
I remember we had a turkey, she cooked roast pork, roast beef, we had steaks, you know the
shrimp, I remember fried shrimp, fried oysters, T-bones, KC [Kansas City] strip. They had a
beautiful broiler there, ‘cause I been cooking since I was 12 years old with Mom. And they had a
great broiler. They had a broiler that you could bring the meat right up underneath the flame,
instead of having it on top of the flame. I always liked it when the…all the grease stuff falls
down there. Lotta people like the smoke in it, but you know, I loved that broiler. It was a great
broiler…
HK: Is that building still there, or not?
TRS: No. It tore down when Dillons put their store in there. Dillons put their grocery store in
there. And that’s when they tore it down. And we – we’d been out for a while, we’d been over to
start a restaurant in North Lawrence.
HK: Now was that, was that the same time that Michigan Street BBQ was on that street?
TRS: You know, I don’t remember it being there at that - I think it was, I don’t remember when
the year that Michigan St BBQ was there. I know what you’re talking about. Uh…I think it
was…I wanna say it was there, yeah. I don’t remember the years exactly, but I do remember
Michigan Street Barbecue being there.
HK: Okay…okay. So when did they open up El Matador?
TRS: You know, I’m not real sure about that. Once they, in about 1956, uh, ‘cause we bought it
when we went over to 1040. I can research that, find out the exact dates, but I can find out
through…I guess when we started paying taxes on it. And it’s right around 1956. I got married in
‘57, I was young and so I remember that. We was already at the restaurant. So we was already
there. And we’d been open for a while. So I’m gonna say ‘56, ‘55-‘56, somewhere in that area.
HK: So this was a whole family-operated business?
TRS: Mom and Dad started, and I been carrying on. I got a daughter works for me now. And
grandkids.
HK: So you currently –

4

�TRS: Yeah, I currently own it and operate it. Yeah, with my – with my daughter and my
grandkids.
HK: Okay, great.
TRS: So we’ll keep it going, hope for another 50 years. It’s a great meeting place for family, I
remember my mama always liked the family together, so we’d do all Thanksgivings, Christmas
dinners over there. We’d have like 35, 45 people for Thanksgiving dinner and Christmas dinner,
you know.
HK: I love the way that the menu is geared toward the people who eat there all the time, you
know.
TRS: Our oldest name on the menu was Fire Chief Miller. Do you remember him?
HK: No.
TRS: Fire Chief Miller was our fire chief back in the ‘50s. And he started being a customer at the
Tropicana when we ran it before we moved to 1040. And that’s the reason, that’s why they got
their name on the menu. Mom would say, well, Fire Chief Miller, or so-and-so, that’s what
they’ll order is this. And usually they ordered it, the same thing every time they come in. Dr.
Reed, and Dr. Branson’s up the hill, you do what they want to order…they more or less order the
same thing all the time.
HK: So the Dr. Branson Special.
TRS: Mm-hmm. We have, uh, have one man that had three names on there. Three specials. But
he was a regular customer for Mom and Dad for years and years and his name was Mr. Bradley.
Frank Bradley, who was also their bookkeeper. And through the years he would change his
special to another special, so Frank Bradley one, two, and three, which is the only one that has
three names on there. So I’ve kind of continued it, you know, I didn’t do it for a few years after I
took it over, but I starting getting a lot of people asking about getting their name on the menu. I
said, well…
HK: That’s a great piece of history.
TRS: Yeah, it is, lot of people in there…lot of good customers. Lot of regular customers came
through the doors.
HK: Well, back to when you were growing up, um…what school did you attend?
TRS: I went to New York School from the front door to the back door, first through the sixth,
and then I went to Central Junior High School. Then I went to Lawrence High.
HK: Okay. And how did you, did you experience any type of prejudice while you were going to
school, or…

5

�TRS: Yeah. It was sad, you know. I don’t think that so much in grade school…uh, it wasn’t that
much, maybe ‘cause we was young, and everybody, you know, there wasn’t a difference. It
started when I was in – went to junior high school. Course I was in the seventh grade. I was very
gymnastic, I loved gymnastics. And I was very good. And I went in – seventh grade I was put on
the gymnastic squad…but again, then I come back and then for my junior year, my next year, the
eighth grade, I came back and they wouldn’t, when I started [combing?] my hair. You know that
‘50s look, and I had to have sideburns, you know, so I was kind of…and, uh…it was really sad,
you know, because I did enjoy the gymnastics squad. So that and, uh, I had some problems with
some school kids, school…cause they was on the football team, just stuff like that. We had a
little few problems with them, you know. It was more evident in there. Then, then in high school
the coach, our coach there…I shouldn’t say his name…but we had, me and a colored friend of
mine, just a friend, we was in gym together and one of the – the gym teacher got sick and went to
the hospital. And we had a student teacher come down from KU hill. And he said, “Why are you
guys” – he’d just set everything up, bars and rings and everything – “but I’m giving you three
hours, so I can see what you guys do, ‘cause the teacher’s sick and I want to know what you guys
do.” [unintelligible] He walked over to us and pulled us off to the side, said, “I want to talk to
you two guys.” We said, “What did we do?” [laughs] He said, “[unintelligible] I want to know
what you guys are doing making Fs. You see, you guys shouldn’t be on the gymnastics team.”
Well, the school told him. And he said: “Well, first of all, unless you excel” – the effort; I don’t
know what he called it, effort or excel – “then you don’t get a better grade.” You know. But also
you can’t do anything to excel unless you have somebody to spot you and help you get past it.
That’s where you’re left in limbo. But, it’s sad that some guys couldn’t do anything, but I guess
cause they – they applied themselves more or something. I don’t know, you know. But he says:
“Well I can’t rectify what has been going on for years,” he said, “but I can give you a better
grade this semester.” And I meant to go back and find, and I had another teacher, very
prominent, known teacher was, uh…we was talking about immigration, that’s funny, this comes
up right now too [laughs]: “Should we shut our borders to immigration?” And he popped off and
said – I don’t know whether he thought it was funny or what, but he said: “No…well, you know,
I’ll accept Mexico cause we do need somebody to run our laundries.”
[prolonged pause]
TRS: Very prominent coach. Very, very well-known coach. So it kind of struck a sour note with
Joe. [laughs] And I never forgot it. I never forgot it. So there was. There was. I don’t think it was
as bad here in Lawrence as it was in other towns. I have relation in Newton, Wichita and I had
been, I worked for an outfit out of Wichita and I was up north and I heard something about it and
we weren’t treated very well up there. But we went in and worked and I hauled tile for an outfit.
We was in a town up north, there, Bellville or something like that. Anyhow, up north, and we
went in this restaurant. And, of course, I was with four other guys, five of them, and the waitress
went back to the kitchen and was asking if I could be served. And I told the guys, I said, “We
may not get served here, guys,” cause I could see her. I said, “I think she’s asking permission to
serve me,” and they looked back and said “By God, I think she is too.” Said, “Well if you don’t
get served none of us gonna get served, you know, so we’ll all leave.” I got served, we got
served, but…was about five years ago. Yes, and uh, like I say, Lawrence I don’t think was as bad
as a lot of places. Do you, I remember when there was a Santa Fe lunch down here where I

6

�remember blacks sat on one side, whites sat on the other side, right across from the Santa Fe
depot, there was two counters.
HK: Really?
TRS: I could sit on any side I want to. [Laughs]
HK: There you go. What about other businesses downtown, when you went, like, to the movies
or to any of those places downtown?
TRS: Ah…in some places sometimes…and I, you know, even sometimes in this day and age you
still get it. I’ve had it happen to me at businesses where I go to a store and shop around and
somebody will follow you around the aisles. My son has had it happen at Jayhawk Bookstore,
few years back, just recently, about two weeks back, and his brother-in-law was with him. And,
uh, my son worked for KU and he was walking around the bookstore looking at something and,
uh, my, his brother-in-law noticed this guy following them around the aisles and he asked him:
“What was that going, what was that all about back there?” He said: “What do you think?” And
he said: “You’re kidding me,” he said, “I’d never have thought that.” He said, “Well, you
wouldn’t. You wouldn’t know it. You don’t know the feeling.” [laughs] But it’s true. And it
does. And it is. And there’s something you have to know, being, you know, uh, you have to feel
it, have it happen to you to know what it feels like. Yeah, it has been. There’s still some, yeah, in
Lawrence. I like Lawrence; I wouldn’t live anywhere else. I’ve lived and went a lot of places,
I’ve been quite a few places.
HK: Going back to your father working for the railroad, did he help any of the other people that
were coming in new from Mexico working on the railroad, did he assist them at all?
TRS: You know, I think they had, yeah, they had some friends and stuff, but it was, you know,
back then, I don’t think it was near as much as it is now of the new people come in – people
come up to the railroads, things like that while working, you know, branching out.
[unintelligible] Lawrence [unintelligible] branch out. Dad got away from the railroad, went to
work construction, got in the restaurant business, things like that. But, um, they, you know, they,
Dad and Mom was always helping somebody, but I’m not gonna say it was all anybody else
coming up from Mexico. Cause, I didn’t, I don’t remember that many people coming into
Lawrence at that time. Course, you know, I was young, so I don’t know.
HK: Did they go to St. John’s Church, or did they –
TRS: No, they didn’t. They did not. My grandmother and grandfather went to St. John’s. Dad
was a Baptist. Mom was baptized Catholic but she followed Dad’s religion. We was all baptized
in the Catholic church. My grandparents baptized all my family in the Catholic church.
HK: Did your dad do any other kind of work besides work construction and work in the
restaurants?

7

�TRS: Ah, he was an instrument repairman at the Odell Music Store for quite a few years. He
picked that up, and he done some instrument repair work. So that –
HK: So he was a woodworker too?
TRS: No, an instrument repair, like the flutes and –
HK: Oh, okay.
TRS: Saxophones, trumpets and everything, they – he re-reed them and re-cushion and just, you
know he repaired them, so he knew what he was – got into that. I don’t know how he got into
that, but he did, I remember him doing that for a long time. We was kids, young kids, you know,
so…
HK: And how many were in your family?
TRS: We had four. Two brothers, two sisters.
HK: Okay. Do they still live in Lawrence?
TRS: My brother lives in California. And he went out there in the 50s and joined the Marine
Corps and he stayed out there ever since. My two sisters and I live here. One lives in, my sister
lives in Baldwin and Overbrook, my other sister lives over here off of 27th St. [Unintelligible]
District. And I live in North Lawrence.
HK: Okay. And when you were growing up, what was the healthcare like for you? Did your dad
have insurance, or…
TRS: Ah, you know, I don’t remember whether Dad had insurance…he did…we had Dr.
[Margaret? Dr. Ray Clark?], so they was very good. I don’t know, I really can’t say that he had, I
know they didn’t have health insurance in later years. I really don’t, I don’t remember any health
insurance at all. It could have been when he worked with – he worked at KU Hill for a while, the
janitor there. But no, I don’t remember health insurance.
HK: So there wasn’t any kind of dental care?
TRS: No, we just, whenever we – when I needed a tooth pulled. [laughs] But no, other than that,
no. But we had a very good doctor [Dr. Margaret? Dr. Ray Clark?] was very close to Mom and
Dad, so I never had any problem there at all.
HK: And, um, your mom when you were growing up, did she, she obviously did all the cooking
and…did she make your clothes, the girls’ dresses anyway?
TRS: No, Grandmother did make all of our clothes and stuff. Shirts and stuff like that, I
remember that. No, Mom didn’t do any much of sewing, but she would cook. She was always a
cook. She worked at, oh, God, various cafes: [Gilkerson’s Café?] downtown, the [Crown?], then

8

�she worked for Jim Star, which is Jim’s, uh, Jim’s Drive-In, I think in North Lawrence was what
it was years ago before they went into business herself. She had always cooked, had all these
cooking jobs.
HK: So did you have your grandparents living with you while you were growing up, or –
TRS: No.
HK: Did they have a separate house?
TRS: They had a separate home. They had a separate house. My – we had the opportunity to go
live with them for a while, me and my older sister. Dad and Mom, I – got sick and they was
away for a while, so we had to go, we went to stay with my grandparents. I’m gonna say a year
or two, I remember it was a couple years. We were young.
HK: Did you learn a lot while you were living with your grandparents, any of the traditional
ways?
TRS: Any what?
HK: Any of the traditional Mexican ways that you didn’t learn from your parents?
TRS: Well, no I don’t know, I guess I remembered everything just, you know, growing up with
them. I knew my grandfather made wine, I wished I’d learned the recipes! And grandmother
made, she made very, she was always an excellent cook. So we had tamales around
Christmastime she made, I’d help her grind corn and she had a very strict way she had to do it.
Other than that, everything made from scratch. Excellent cook.
HK: So what would be a typical meal?
TRS: You know, [unintelligible] beans and potatoes and fried fish and spiced pork with pepper
and course my grandmother and even aunts, they…fresh tortillas made, you know, at mealtimes
instead of going to Dillons. [laughs] I got to have ‘em brought in from Kansas City now, but
there’s no way you can. All enough to run a restaurant, yeah, fresh tortillas and fresh peppers
made in a bowl. Pepper with your eggs, something like that. There really was a, they’ve always
said the joke at home at my house was “Dad, if you had to live on fried potatoes and beans and
tortillas and pepper, you’d be happy.” [Laughs] He’d be happy all the time, so…
HK: Did your parents raise a garden?
TRS: My parents didn’t. My grandfather, he gardened a lot. Big gardener. Very big gardener. He
always gardened a lot. But Mom and Dad never did.
HK: What kinds of vegetables?

9

�TRS: Oh, he had strawberries, he had some strawberries, and he moved to North Lawrence, had
pear trees, apple trees, plum trees and everything. But he always raised peppers. He always had
peppers, tomatoes and, um, strawberries, um, onions of course, everything, you know, just a
typical garden. I don’t, uh, remember what else. Corn, corn, you know, we planted corn, you
know, sometimes had watermelons.
HK: So did you as grandkids have to go over and help with the garden, or…
TRS: We didn’t, you know, I don’t think he had us around there too much…we made more
mess…but when I got older, when Grandpa’d go off to Mexico I’d have to tend to help the
garden stuff. I was real close to my grandparents and my grandfather, yeah.
HK: So did they go back to Mexico quite frequently, or…
TRS: No, they – they went a few times earlier in the days, uh, when I was a kid. Um, but one of
my aunts married and moved, they moved her to, she moved to Mexico with her husband.
Consequently, my grandfather brought three of the older children back to the United States in the
late ‘40s, I’m gonna say, from Mexico. He went down and brought them back with him and then
later on in the year he was instrumental in bringing the – his daughter back, which was [their?]
mom, and the rest of the family in, uh, I’m gonna say, in the ‘50s. He brought her back and with
the rest of the family. I can’t name exactly how many kids they had, when he brought them all
back. [Unintelligible] My cousin and her family back in the ‘60s. Grandpa did help a lot bringing
them to the United States.
HK: And did they all settle in Lawrence?
TRS: Mm-hmm. Most of them, now probably have some in Topeka. Most of them in this area
though, most of ‘em in the area here, in Topeka and Lawrence.
HK: Where’s your wife from?
TRS: My wife? Mine’s from here, Lawrence.
HK: From Lawrence?
TRS: Yeah, I’ve been married three times.
HK: Oh, okay.
TRS: My first wife was from, um, Bazaar, round the area where my dad was raised at, from
Bazaar, and my second wife was from Arkansas. And my third wife was from here, Lawrence
area. I’ve been married three times.
HK: Well, in talking with some of the other people, they said that it was so hard to find anybody
here in Lawrence ‘cause everybody was related to each other; that they had to go to Topeka or
Kansas City or… [laughs]

10

�TRS: Yeah, you gotta tell your kids, now so-and-so, that’s your cousin. [Laughs]
HK: So you had to really be careful there.
TRS: Everybody’s more or less kinda related here in town, related to everybody.
HK: Well, what do you think of the, um, children of today? Do you think that they’re carrying on
the traditional ways, or do you think that they need to revisit the traditional ways?
TRS: Well, you know, I think that that changes with all, everybody I think, you know, the times
change and everything. I think they’re trying a lot, but I don’t think there’s as many, as much,
what do I wanna say…in all – all the families, you know, and some families carry it on to their
families. And, of course, you know, you get involved, like my family went in the restaurant
business, so you get involved in your different way of life. People have different occupations and
you know, different things they get into, so, you know, they’ll get off into doing that. I think we
lose track of a lot of traditions over the years. I think we’ve lost track of a lot of tradition over the
years. I think that’s, uh, that’s like the language, you know, we should have kept it up. Our
grandkids, my children, all of our children should have been speaking Spanish a lot more but, we
didn’t, and we did, we lost that, you know. But it’s nice that they’re trying to pick it up now.
They’re trying, you know, it’s good to try.
HK: Are you familiar with the Days of the Dead?
TRS: Not exactly familiar with it and how they honored the Dia de Los Muertos. I’m not really,
it’s like our Memorial Day, I think.
HK: Well, I think it’s All Saints Day. It’s, um, the first part of November.
TRS: Hmm, okay.
HK: When they have all the saints.
TRS: I kinda [laughs] kind of relate that to the Cinco de Mayo sometimes, with that – that was
kinda my, oh, there’s this story, it’s funny, we gotta turn that thing off. [laughs]
HK: No, let’s hear it!
TRS: Cinco de Mayo, you know, these guys, we go celebrate Cinco de Mayo. [Unintelligible] I
don’t know, I think it’s Mexican independence – no, that’s February 16th or 15th. Well, you know
I’m not real sure. I call it the Budweiser Holiday. [laughs] So, when I got on the bandwagon, I
had my girlfriend, my cousin, get on the computer and print out what the Cinco de Mayo is. You
know, what happened on that day. [Unintelligible] So I’d lay ‘em around so everybody would
know what they were celebrating.
HK: That’s funny.

11

�TRS: What are you celebrating? [laughs] Not real sure… That’s like the Dia de los Muertos. I’m
not that [unintelligible].
HK: I know that it’s sort of having a resurgence recently, I know that there’s a lot of – and it may
be because of the immigrants – the new immigrants coming up from Mexico and bringing it with
them, that tradition.
TRS: I heard, some friends I knew from Mexico, they said no, everything’s celebrated down
there. It’s kinds like that, it just a certain place I guess, you know, like around [Pueblo?] you
know, but it’s not a big holiday down there or anything like that.
HK: So going back to the immigration question [both laugh]…I’m not gonna be as bad as your
high school, but, um, do you have any thoughts on that?
TRS: Yes, I, you know, I know it’s a sad situation, but they’re looking, this country was made on
immigrants and immigration, and people looking for a better life. Freedom. And that’s where our
foundation is. And there’s nothing different with these people, they’re looking for a better life for
their families because poverty is very bad in Mexico. We know that, and it’s, I don’t know, you
just don’t know how to do it, they’re gonna come up here and work. I think that the sad thing is,
they’ve been doing it for years and years, they should have had a – and a lot of them don’t want
to live here. Lot of them like their homeland. Lot of people like their homeland. Which is like
me, I’ve lived here all my life in Lawrence, so I, maybe that’s why I like Lawrence, I wouldn’t
wanna go anywhere else. But the poverty, they came here looking for a better life. And they’d
like to work, and some of ‘em would like to work and go back home. [Unintelligible] the older I
get. But if they’d fix up a way that they could work, if they want to become citizens that’s fine,
you know. But [unintelligible] saying and we know that we have, 9/11 woke us up, that there’s a
lot of bad stuff coming across the borders that, you know, need to be in check too, but people are
willing to work, I’m sure are willing to get a picture, an ID, so they can have a right to work and
make money and take care of their families. And I think there should be a way to do it. I think
this, government, bureaucrat, all that stuff will go, you know, the amnesty things and stuff like
that I think it’d work but they need to get, uh, some kind of documentation to help these people.
And I’ve always said, if they’re here to work and to do good, they’re, they’d be willing to get the
ID with their picture, but the way it’s going now is not good. Not good at all. It makes them feel
like criminals, and if you help somebody, you’re gonna, they’re gonna criminalize that, make
you a criminal for doing that. If you’re helping illegals, they wanna put [5,000? 10,000?] after so
many times, it’s 3-10 years in prison, just cause you helped, like I say, one of my people, you
know. And there are a lot of people that are doing bad, they know that as a – being a construction
worker myself, I know there are companies that treat ‘em and work ‘em very much like dogs.
And then they don’t pay ‘em, or say: “Hey, I don’t got no money, you know, you’re out. Turn
me in, what are you gonna do?” You know? And that’s sad. That’s sad. But this is in all – there’s
stuff like that goes on all the time, and it’s not right, but it happens. And a lot of them are
working without insurance and things like that. And all they’re doing is making a – one thing I
will guarantee you one thing, these people that come up here don’t forget their families back
home. Like a lot of people that leave home here, go off somewhere else, “Bye Mom and Dad,
send me some money would you please? I’m out of money again.” But these people, every week

12

�the money goes back to their families. They don’t forget about home, you know, whether it’s
brother, sisters, mom, dad, whatever, or family, you know, wives and children.
HK: You said your brother was in the military. Were you in the military?
TRS: Yes. I was in the Army.
HK: Where did you serve?
TRS: I served in the Army.
HK: Did you stay in the United States during your –
TRS: No, I was in Vietnam. And he served in Vietnam before me. He come back the year and I
went over the year after.
HK: What years did you serve?
TRS: I was there from January 15, 1966 to January 15, 1967. He was there in, uh, ‘65 to ’66, I’m
gonna say. He come back before I went over.
HK: So you were there when it was starting to escalate?
TRS: Mm-hmm. I got a cousin served also, he was in the Navy.
HK: Well, um, is there anything you want to add to this?
TRS: I can’t think of anything, we went through quite a bit. [laughs] No, I can’t think of
anything.
HK: I think you told us all the information about your dad, and, your parents and your
grandparents, and –
TRS: Hopefully that’s everything. I’ll try to find some pictures. I got some pictures of my
grandmother and grandfather and my dad and I, the family together.
HK: Oh, that would be great.
TRS: And, some pictures of Mom and Dad.
HK: Okay. Fantastic. Alright, well let me turn this off.
END OF TAPE 15

13

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                  <text>La Yarda was a neighborhood of worker housing provided by the Santa Fe Railroad for Mexican-American railroad workers in Lawrence, Kansas; located near the Kansas (Kaw) River, the neighborhood was largely destroyed by a major flood in 1951. In 2006, Helen Krische, archivist at the Watkins Community Museum, began an oral history project to document the La Yarda and Mexican-American communities in Lawrence, Kansas. The project was resumed in 2019 by Nora Murphy and Emily Raymond. The interviews primarily feature the children of the railroad workers who migrated to Lawrence in the early 20th century; they describe daily life, social activities, and living conditions in the Mexican-American community in Lawrence from roughly the 1920s through the 1970s.</text>
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            <name>Title</name>
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                <text>Tiburcio Reyes, Sr., La Yarda Interview</text>
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                <text>Reyes, Tiburcio, Sr.</text>
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                <text>Tiburcio Reyes, Sr. was interviewed by Helen Krische in 2006 as part of an oral history project to document the La Yarda and Mexican-American communities in Lawrence, Kansas. La Yarda was a neighborhood of worker housing provided by the Santa Fe Railroad for Mexican-American railroad workers; located near the Kansas (Kaw) River, the neighborhood was largely destroyed by a major flood in 1951. Tiburcio grew up in East and North Lawrence; his father was one of a number of Mexican-American railroad workers who settled in Lawrence before 1950. Tiburcio describes his family's migration from Mexico to Lawrence, and their work to establish the Tropicana and El Matador restaurants in North Lawrence; at the time of the interview, Tiburcio owned and operated the El Matador Cafe with his daughter and grandchildren. He discussed his military service during the Vietnam War, and his thoughts about immigration. Tiburcio also discusses experiences of discrimination and segregation faced by the Mexican-American community in Lawrence. </text>
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            <name>Contributor</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="34488">
                <text>Krische, Helen</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="34489">
                <text>Raymond, Emily</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="34490">
                <text>Peralez, Silvia</text>
              </elementText>
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            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="34491">
                <text>Lawrence (Kan.)</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="34492">
                <text>1920s - 1970s</text>
              </elementText>
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            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
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                <text>2006</text>
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                <text>PDF (transcription)</text>
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                <text>15-TReyesSr-2006.mp4 (video)</text>
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                <text>15-TReyesSr-2006.pdf (transcription)</text>
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            <name>Publisher</name>
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                <text>Watkins Community Museum (Lawrence, Kan.)</text>
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            <description>A related resource</description>
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                <text>To access the video and audio recordings of this interview, go to &lt;a href="https://archive.org/details/15-treyes-sr-2006"&gt;https://archive.org/details/15-treyes-sr-2006&lt;/a&gt;.</text>
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                <text>The &lt;a href="https://www.watkinsmuseum.org/"&gt;Watkins Museum of History&lt;/a&gt; also holds items related to this collection.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="34503">
                <text>&lt;a href="https://archives.lib.ku.edu/repositories/3/resources/5295"&gt;Additional research on the La Yarda community&lt;/a&gt; is held at the Spencer Research Library at the University of Kansas.</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="34504">
                <text>Published with the permission of Tiburcio Reyes, Jr., on behalf of Tiburcio Reyes, Sr. This work is the intellectual property of the Watkins Museum of History, Lawrence, Kansas. The public may freely copy, modify, and share this Item for noncommercial purposes if they include the original source information. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s).</text>
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            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="34505">
                <text>La Yarda Oral History Project</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="34506">
                <text>La Yarda (Lawrence, Kan.)</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="34507">
                <text>Mexican Americans -- Housing -- Kansas -- Lawrence</text>
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                <text>Mexican Americans -- History -- Kansas -- Lawrence</text>
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                <text>Mexican Americans -- Social conditions -- Kansas -- Lawrence </text>
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            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="34510">
                <text>Oral History</text>
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                    <text>Tape 16a: Interview with Israel Bermudez and Rachel Lemus
Interviewer: Helen Krische
Date of Interview: 2006
Length of Interview: 31:49
Location of Interview: St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church
Transcription Completion Date: September 30, 2020
Transcriptionist: Emily Raymond
Israel Bermudez (Interviewee): …Yeah, yeah. Some of the stuff she brought up I can just barely
remember. But the first priest that was there, then a different priest…my God, how does she
remember all that?
Helen Krische (Interviewer): She must have a good one. Are we ready to roll? We have tape in
the thing here?
Unknown Male: Yep, it’s ready.
HK: Okay. Alright, first what I’m gonna do is, let’s see, we need to get two consent forms going
here. Um, this consent form is just, um, to let you know that this is an oral history of MexicanAmericans here in Lawrence. And that, uh, we’ll keep a copy at the Watkins Community
Museum of History and we’ll also probably give a copy to the Kansas State Historical Society
and, uh, we will make a copy for you. And, um, basically it’s just to kind of tell you that, um, in
doing this that, that you will grant us all the rights and, uh, and intellectual property rights, uh,
for this interview and that we can, um, make other audiotapes of it and we can use it for research
and publications and also for, um, putting on the website if we choose to do that.
IB: [unintelligible]
HK: Oh yeah, sure! [laughs]
IB: All the stories –
HK: If you let us do movies, that would be great too. So, I’m gonna give this one to you to sign.
We’ll need your name up here at the top and then there are two options here that says that you
won’t have any restrictions on what we’ve recorded and then there’s one underneath that says
that you do want restrictions on what has been recorded. And then fill out the other information
down at the bottom…I’ll give you just a minute, Rachel… [long silence, picks back up at 2:18]
IB: So you want my name here again, and –
HK: Uh-huh, your address and everything so that we can contact you.
IB: In print? I print better than I can write.
HK: Okay, well that’s fine. [laughs] Let’s see.

�IB: Cause I went to New York School.
HK: Here you go…Use that pen.
IB: What’s the date today?
HK: 22nd.
[long silence, picks back up at 3:19]
IB: [unintelligible, maybe asks who someone is]
HK: Oh, it’s Brian. [laughs]
IB: Okay.
HK: Alrighty.
IB: It’s kind of legible [unintelligible].
HK: [laughs] True brother and sister. Alright, um, I’m Helen Krische, we’re doing this for the
tape, and this is Israel, um, Bermudez and Rachel Lemus.
Rachel Lemus (Interviewee): Yes.
HK: And they’re brother and sister, we might add that to the tape. And, um, first of all I guess
one of the, one of the basic questions is, what part of Mexico is your family originally, originally
from?
RL: My dad was from the state of Sacatecas. And my mother was from the state of Torion.
HK: Okay. And how did they happen to, um, come all the way out to settle in Kansas?
RL: Well, it’s the same thing they’re doing now, they’re looking for work, my dad, he…the way
I talked to him one time, they came from Mexico and they went to Nebraska.
HK: Mm-hmm.
RL: G-e-r-i-n-g, Nebraska. That’s where my first, my oldest sister was born. And then they came
over to Kansas ‘cause of the railroad was hiring Mexicans. And that’s what I understand, I don’t
know about him.
IB: Most of, most of…work [unintelligible].
RL: And then they came here I think to Kansas City, then they came, I don’t think they lived in
Kansas City, but then they came here.

�HK: Do you know around what time this was?
RL: Well, my oldest sister was, is, was born 1926.
HK: Okay.
RL: So that’s about the time and the rest of us were born here in Lawrence, Kansas. And the next
one was in the 1920s, I would say about 19, between 1928 and Ruben was born here too, he was
born in February 1928. And they were already here in Lawrence.
HK: Did they join the St. John’s Church as soon as they moved here, or –
RL: I don’t remember. I’m sure they did. I mean, I’m sure they did. Very, very religious.
IB: Baptized [unintelligible] in the church.
HK: Did they work for the, uh, Santa Fe railroad or the Union Pacific?
IB: I’m not sure. I think Santa Fe. I’m not sure.
HK: Do you know where –
IB: Yeah, I don’t think he worked with the railroad too long. ‘Cause he had an injury and he had
to quit that and then go to work somewhere else.
RL: At KU?
IB: Yeah.
HK: Okay. So, do you know if they lived in, um, any of the housing complexes that –
IB: [unintelligible]
RL: Santa Fe, I don’t remember them…
IB: Um…I think…
RL: I remember being there but I don’t think visiting, but I don’t, cause we lived in New Jersey
and 7th and the 8th.
IB: Mm-hmm.
RL: And then they…the last house was 810 New Jersey. It was same little vicinity.
IB: We all lived two or three blocks of each other.

�RL: I don’t remember unless somebody comes in [ad?] tells you that…[unintelligible] Older but
better memory, but I don’t remember living there.
HK: Yeah.
IB: [unintelligible] …I can remember when I was about four or five, we lived on New Jersey
street. 740 wasn’t it?
RL: 19 New Jersey. Because then you would, I understood, the only ones that could live in them,
they call it the yards was like, just a
IB: Two-row houses. Little apartments.
RL: And then I remember that the water, everybody used, the faucet was right there in the
middle. The outhouses were over there, they had their side and they had their side. But I
guess…like he said, my dad went to work, he worked over on the –
IB: I don’t think, on the railroad he didn’t work too long. So that’s probably one of the reasons
we never lived in those houses.
HK: Mm-hmm. Did you have, um, was it just your parents and, um, you kids, or did you have
other extended family members living with you, or…?
RL: Just visit –
IB: Visit.
RL: Stay a little longer [when?] visiting maybe.
IB: Sometimes a couple of [unintelligible] [laughs] [says something about jokes, maybe?]
RL: That’s, my mother stayed home, there was 12 of us.
HK: Wow. That’s a big family.
RL: Well, after me there was three that passed, and I never really asked her if they were stillborn
[“probably”?] But after I was born there was, there was I didn’t know whether you wanted
pictures but –
HK: Oh, yeah.
RL: I had these, I should have taken time [unintelligible] my mother. That’s my dad and that’s…
IB: That’s Ruben…

�RL: [We/You?] weren’t even here yet.
IB: No, I said, Ruben…
RL: That was my oldest sister and my oldest brother. And my mom.
IB: Yeah, I think I was out picking up beer cans. [laughs]
RL: Huh?
IB: I think I was out, out picking up beer cans. That’s why I’m not in that picture. [laughs]
IB: And the [unintelligible]
RL: And this is, that’s, the twelve – the nine of us living here. But I think they were stillborn
‘cause we had no pictures or my mother became a diabetic about that time, got pretty bad, so
probably that’s why she didn’t, they didn’t live, or something. I wish I’d have asked, but at the
time, you know –
IB: Well, I think the, I think the gravestone was just the birthday –
RL: Well yeah, that’s what I got off of the old ones.
IB: So there was, they must have been stillborn.
HK: So are they buried here at Mt. Calvary?
RL: Mm-hmm.
HK: Yeah, we’ll probably scan these, and then…
RL: Yeah, they were, the time the father wanted them to, some of them to have markers, so the, I
don’t know that we were rich but important they, I remember my dad getting this, uh, Coca-Cola
cart, wasn’t it, Izzy? Put concrete in it and then he kind of, like, built up a cross and then just put
the dates that I copied.
HK: Oh.
RL: And he said that everything had, should be marked up there. And after my dad passed away,
I was executor and I thought: “The first thing I’m gonna do is buy them, um, their, so that’s what
they got now. Theirs is newer than all, all the rest of [unintelligible]. And that’s the dates I got,
19, let’s see, ’41…
IB: ‘43, and ‘46.
RL: ‘43 and ‘46.

�IB: [unintelligible]
RL: Yeah, he volunteers to cut the grass, that’s why it always [unintelligible].
IB: Cut, cut grass over there, yeah.
HK: So, did you grow up, um, in your household, did, did you grow up speaking Spanish,
or…speaking –
RL: Both.
HK: …English also?
RL: Both.
HK: Both?
RL: And that’s why I don’t know how to speak Spanish good, or English –
IB: Mom and Dad never spoke English, so we had to learn Spanish and speak Spanish.
RL: Mother would never speak Spanish.
IB: And English rather.
RL: And English, she’d probably, she went downtown to pay the gas bill or Duckwalls
[unintelligible] she didn’t have to speak. She went to get thread and she knew [unintelligible],
she knew how much, and for gas bill, whatever she paid, she knew how much, and…My
husband tried to trick her one time. She wouldn’t speak…so we, that’s what we learned. They
didn’t go to – really probably grade-school level. So the Spanish I know, I get real embarrassed
when I meet, I’ve met lots of people from Mexico. My husband hasn’t had the schooling either.
But the, the girls that I’ve met and worked with, they’ve gone to, let’s see, high school level and
I always tell ‘em: “Don’t laugh at me and, because the Spanish I know is…”
IB: Slim. It’s slim.
RL: And then my mother and them didn’t go to probably grade school level, [that’s the?]
Spanish, and I hesitate to, when I speak [I say?] “No, no, you go ahead,” you know…
HK: So do, do your children speak Spanish, or…?
IB: Mine don’t.
RL: Mine understand it, but more than they can speak it.

�IB: When you start speaking Spanish, my kids, they start looking, ‘cause they know something’s
going on. [unintelligible] they can pick up what you’re talking about by…
RL: And I regretted not, not speaking to them, you know. Because now, my husband came from
Mexico. And I got some friends and their kids, and they’re just little you know, right now those
little kids speak English and Spanish just like that. And I thought, why didn’t I speak to, you
know. It’s [not?] too late. [unintelligible] or something, I feel awful. ‘Cause you know, we didn’t
speak to –
IB: Well, that’s like, we went to Mexico, all of us together. Brothers and sisters and
[unintelligible]. And I was in Mexico, and down there they don’t speak no English. And I was
like, in a foreign country. I could understand them, but I couldn’t speak, ‘cause they speak fast.
And I was in Korea and Japan during the service, and I, I could speak to those people more than I
could speak to the people in Mexico, seemed like. I felt…I don’t know why, I just felt different.
‘Cause in Mexico they just rattle off, and I don’t speak that good, so I, I was kind of ashamed
trying to speak, I couldn’t speak. But I feel really bad cause they were interpreting too, the
people who were talking to me. He said this, [unintelligible] and I said that, couldn’t speak. But I
just didn’t use it that much. If you don’t use it, it just kind of goes away. So of course we was
going to school, back then, back then they didn’t want you speaking any Spanish in school, even
to each other. So they always kind of frowned on it. Didn’t speak it to other kids because they
didn’t want you to, so the only time you spoke it when you went home, the rest of the time you
were speaking English. You learn both at the same time.
HK: Did you go to the, what schools did you attend here in Lawrence?
RL: New York School, for grade school, and then over here on 9th and, uh, what was that oneway street? Kentucky. There’s a filling station.
IB: 9th and Kentucky. Oh, you mean Central.
RL: Central.
IB: Junior high used to be on 9th and Kentucky.
RL: There’s a bank over there, and then there’s a, the offices and then I think it’s a gas place.
There was three buildings and I can’t remember all of them. Central –
IB: …Ohio –
RL: [Manuel?]
IB: Ohio and Central.
RL: There was three buildings that we had to change classes, you know. That’s where we went
to junior high, and then we went to, um…

�IB: High school.
RL: You went to –
IB: Central.
RL: Where did you go to high school?
IB: Central.
RL: Central. Central down Massachusetts was high school. But I didn’t, I got to go to Lawrence
High. And that was [unintelligible] graduated and that was it.
IB: And we had, they had St. John’s when I was growing up [unintelligible] ‘Cause I remember
the nuns. They were, they were kinda strict, and they’d pull your ear, and…
RL: And my kids did –
IB: They’re gonna have trouble enough trying to learn without somebody pinching, pulling their
ear, so I said [unintelligible] public school.
RL: And my kids did go to St. John’s, and my grandkids are in St. John’s. And my daughter’s
kind of, like, you know, she lives way over there by Corpus Christi. I went to [unintelligible] and
that’s where I want my kids to go, unless there was no room. Then her boy, instead of going
from sixth grade to wherever he had to go to the new schools. She’s got ‘em over here in Central
because she went to Central. And then he would be going to Lawrence High. When he should
probably be going, I don’t know what the boundaries, but as long as there’s room they can go.
She said: “I went there, I want them to go there.”
IB: Well, usually if they have a choice, the school system [unintelligible] Lawrence High, rather
than Free State.
RL: Yeah, if there’s any room.
IB: Yeah.
RL: As I say, as long as there’s room she could do this.
IB: I said, hardly anybody get turned down going to Lawrence High, Central or other schools,
anybody who wants to go to Central. The other way around, and it’s in the system, it still is…
[certain?] people somewhere. That’s probably – like I say, if you want to go to Central and you
live somewhere else, they usually let you go to Central. If you’re here and you want to go to one
of the other junior highs, most of the time, [unintelligible] unless they got a lot of room, or you
got some reason [unintelligible].
HK: Well, what was it like growing up in Lawrence?

�RL: Fun. I tell my grandkids, they got all these expensive toys, blah blah blah. We had, I said,
we had, it wasn’t Barbie doll then. I remember getting these dolls. I could never understand
when did they buy them, we were with them when they went to town. My sister I remember had
a big sack of these dolls, and you know, we just cherished that doll like it was made out of gold.
Our kids, Barbie’s in, next year it’s something else, and it’s, ah, well, you know. I don’t think
they – they just lookin’ to see what’s next and then they’re gonna get it. And then we had all of,
after supper was all over, we all lived, all the Mexicans lived in one section. We were Mexicans,
black and white. Middle of the day if you were cooking and you needed [unintelligible] you
needed three eggs and you just had two, you could go next door and, “Can I borrow a egg?” Now
we don’t even know who our neighbors are. In the evening we’d all get down on the street,
Pennsylvania Street, ‘cause there was, I guess cause there’s not many cars at the end of the road
there. And we’d play hide-and-seek, we’d play, the guys would make this thing, what is it, where
you jump, you know, the, higher…the wood? thing you guys built. You know, we just –
IB: What do you call that, I can’t remember.
RL: We were happy. That was our happy – we didn’t, we didn’t go to the parks. Walked
everywhere, every Saturday we went to confession, walked from 810 New Jersey up to the
church.
IB: Only time you crossed Connecticut Street was to go to church [unintelligible] Connecticut.
The rest of the time you didn’t. Only time we went over there was, there’s people, trying to, I
don’t know, beat us up or whatever, but…you gotta be fast.
HK: So was there, did you experience any prejudice growing up?
IB and RL: Yes. Yes.
RL: Even up – I met my husband here. We came to – it was a friend in Topeka. And then there
were dances or something, and he stayed in my sister-in-law’s house which I used to remember
was her younger sister, and that’s how we met. But they started giving these Mexican shows and
you had to go to Topeka. And my dad, you know, we didn’t have that. We don’t have what we
got now, videos, we got a channel, I wish we had, my parents it was nothing, you didn’t hear
nothing, no music, no CDs, now you can go everywhere and…food, same thing, cause we, they
made it at home. But back in ‘62 we, he says: “You wanna go to Topeka, take your dad and we
go to the movies.” So we were going to Topeka for the first time and we knew the day – the
night, the night it was. We knew where, North Topeka. We got there like an hour early. So my
dad, he spotted a bar [laughs] he told my husband, “Let’s go have a beer, Frank.” He says: “Your
dad wants to go over there and even if I don’t get one I wanna be with him.” I said, “Oh, go
ahead.” “What are you gonna do?” I said, I’ll just, they had kind of like a waiting area, you’d go
in. I said: “I’ll just sit here.” Well they came back right away and they said “No…”
IB: Wouldn’t serve them.

�RL: “We don’t serve” – and that was in ‘62 in Topeka. And then the guys experienced a lot when
they went into the service.
IB: Yeah, I went into the service in ‘53, and I came home and there was two of us that – that
were on leave, and we was gonna have a little party, after – before we left. And so we went to,
back then they didn’t sell liquor to the Indians. Specially in Haskell, ‘cause most of them were
young, and they’d always get drunk and get in trouble, so they just wouldn’t do it. But we
usually didn’t have – we usually didn’t drink liquor anyway. If we – but anyway, we was going
to, we went to the liquor store to get something to drink, and ‘cause we was gonna leave in a
couple of days, and the guy said, he wasn’t gonna sell it to us. So we said: “Well, why?” He said
“Cause I don’t have to.” We said: “Well, you know, there’s gotta be a reason you don’t want to
sell it to us.” And he said: “Well, I just don’t have to.” And, and back then like I said, they
wouldn’t sell to Indians, so we said: “Well, we’re not Indians, we’re Mexicans.” And he said: “I
don’t care what you are, you know, I don’t have to sell it to you.” So then my friend was getting
kind of mad and he’s kind of a burly guy, and so I was trying to hold him back and, you know, I
said: “You know,” I said, “we’re not gonna bother you. Just give us a bottle, we’re gone.” He
said: “Well I don’t have to sell to you people.” So I thought, okay. So we went outside and of
course we went somewhere else [unintelligible]. Course after you’ve had a few then you kinda
start, you’re still boiling inside, and I can see why people go through life and they’re – they’re
trying to live the right life and [faint sounds] intoxicated, go back and do something we shouldn’t
have done. And then, after that you’re on the wrong side of the law all the time. And I can see
why people do that, you know. But I mean, that was for no reason. We wasn’t, we wasn’t gonna
sit in there and drink, you know. Like you couldn’t go to bars and sit and drink in bars, ‘cause
they didn’t let you. You’d go in and buy your stuff and leave [unintelligible]. But the liquor store
was the same way. You could go in and buy it long as you had an ID that you was old enough. In
those days, and I used to get irritated, ‘cause I was in the service going to Korea and [laughs] I’m
going out to war and I can’t even get a, you know, something to drink in a bar or liquor store or
something. And there was a lot of places you couldn’t go in. And they wouldn’t, they wouldn’t
have a sign up there, but they would, if you went in to get something they would just see you
there at the bar or the counter and they would just ignore you.
RL: Ignore you, like you weren’t there.
IB: Anybody else come in there and you, you know, after a while, you know they’re not gonna
serve you, so even – even if you want to get it to go, you know. It’s just like, I grew up with a lot
of black friends and we had a Mexican ball club and they had a black ball club and we used to
play each other all the time. And we’d get together and drink a few beers and stuff, and we was
always teasing each other. And I was teasing this one black kid and I said [unintelligible]. He
said, well yeah, he said, “You guys think it’s easy, you – you try growing up having to sit in the
back of the bus all the time.” And I say, “You mean you guys got on the bus?” I said, “Why
didn’t you get on the bus?” And he started laughing, he thought that was a joke, but that was, that
was true. Most of the time you [unintelligible] the bus. If you had legs you could walk.
RL: Well, the movies, down here at the Granada…
IB: Yeah [unintelligible] –

�RL: We could go in but we had to sit in the back row, we weren’t allowed to go. And if you went
up beyond… Well, you tell them about that incident with, uh –
IB: Well, I, I had two friends that were older friends. One was a black man and one was white.
The white person was, he was like 17. He was a real good friend of ours, the family. Then the
other guy was kind of in the service and he was a [unintelligible] but he used to take me to the
movies on Saturdays. So every once in a while, that’s the only way I got to go to the movies
when I was a kid. They, one of them would take me, and when I went with the – and the movies
had sections for the blacks that sat in the back, usually up in the balcony in the corner [in the
back?] in a certain area, three rows or something like that. Every time I went with the black man,
he always, he always, uh, bought my ticket for me, which I would [owe him for?] Every time I
went with this friend of mine who was a white boy, he was 17 and he always gave me the
money. Back then it was 11 cents, to go to the movie. He always gave me the 11 cents to go to
the movie. And it used to make feel good so I’d get up there, put the 11 cents up there. I
remember this one time I, I was going to put my 11 cents this gal at the door and she said: “We
don’t have no more colored seats.” And I didn’t understand what she meant, so I said: “What?”
And she said: “We don’t have no more colored seats.” What’s, I’m trying to think, what’s a
colored seat? And so finally he says, he was standing behind me, and he says, he said: “What’s
the problem?” And she said: “Oh, is he with you? And he said, “Yeah, why, what’s the
problem?” “No problem,” and she gave me the ticket, you know. And I went home to tell, and I
told my brothers. Of course, they just started laughing, all over the chair and, you know, I still
don’t know what it means or what it is. And then finally they said, they said: “Well, they thought
you was a little black kid.” ‘Cause I was real dark anyway. And then they would laugh and then I
go, “Oh, that’s what it was.” [laughs] But I mean, you know, you grow up, I grew up like that,
with things like that. And even today there’s still stuff.
RL: Yeah, I feel like it’s coming. I don’t know why.
IB: And I – I figure if I’m in a group of white people, you know and they’re talking and they’re
talking about black people in a certain way, oh, I know if I’m not in the group they’re gonna talk
about me. I mean, not all people, but the people that are that way, ‘cause you know I was in the
[fire department?] and we had, like, maybe two black people on there. And every once in a while
when they weren’t around, these guys would be talking about them. And I’d get mad, because
you know, I knew they were talking about me and I was – you know and I kind of get, get
almost, you know, “Why are you talking about the other guys, you know, they’re just people like
anybody else.” [unintelligible] But, I mean, that’s how I felt. And I always told my kids, you
know, “If somebody’s standing there talking about another race in a certain way, they’re gonna
be talking about you when you’re not there. And it is true. That’s why I said, it still goes on.
‘Cause I’m still around people who, who talk about somebody else, you know…and I know
you’re gonna say that about me.
RL: But like I said, we were in the neighborhood with black people next door, Mexican, another
black, white person. We were all together, you know, all kind of like a family. All got along.

�IB: And I remember growing up with people, too, that, I went to [Oregon?] on New Hampshire,
there. And we had this, I worked with this, these voicers make the music and [unintelligible] and
I, I worked for a guy named [Ricky?] who was from Arkansas. And he started working there
sweeping floors when he was 16, 17 and he ended up, you know, doing things, he, he invented a
lot of the stuff that they made. But he got to be what they call a voicer, he’s the guy that tunes all
the organs and stuff. And he had like a 11th grade, 10th grade education from Arkansas. But he
wasn’t dumb, he was smart. And then after that they uh, they got a union in there and the union,
you know, they [fight?] for all the [bandmen?] in the union, and he ended up being president of
the union. And so the – the company didn’t like him because he was the president of the union,
you know, he was – getting good money. And they had, uh, they, they didn’t have no steps for
how much people could – they just paid ‘em, you know, nobody knew what the other guy made.
So they decided to get a union, because there was some guys that came in [unintelligible] related
to the supervisor, and they’d come and [unintelligible] everybody else started [unintelligible]
And so when they got the union, they thought, you know, they made ‘em have steps that you go
up the ladder and you get paid, and all that. Anyway, so one of the deals with him they were, the
company didn’t like him because he was the president of the union, and he was getting big
bucks, so they turn around and put one of the, one of the deals for a voicer, you had to have a
college education in music. And of course, so then they try to get him out of there, but you
couldn’t do it because he was already there before this came out. And they were trying to get him
out of there, and they, they couldn’t. ‘Cause it’s against the law, you know. And so all the time
he was in there, they hired all these college people with music degrees and stuff. And he was the
only one…but he invented half of the stuff that was there. So he knew down the road, you know,
something like [unintelligible]. So he, when he invented stuff he would put part of the stuff here
and part of it here and part of it at home so they couldn’t just come in and say, “Okay, this is
what you do now.” There was always something missing and that’s the way he kept his security
more or less. And I remember he had these other guys around him, they were all college people,
he was the only one that was 11th grade education. And then he’d always, when they talked about
black people he’d always bring me in there and say, “You know, he grew up with black people
[unintelligible].”
All of them would always say: “Well, I have black friends too.”
And so he said: “Well, who are they?”
“Well, some guy I went to college with.”
And he said: “No, it was just somebody you got acquainted with.” Said: “No, black friends are
people that you, you know, that you know everything about them. Like you know their kids, you
know where they live, you know their mother’s name and all that.” And that’s the way I
explained it to him.
So this guy says: “No, I have one. My best friend’s a black man.”
I said: “Where’d you meet him?”
“I met him in college, and then he went to our church and we played organs together and stuff.
And I said, I said: “Well, what’s his wife’s name?”
He said: “Well, I think her name’s – ”
“How many kids do they have?”
“Well, I think he has – ”
I said: “What do you mean, you think he has?”
“Have you ever been to his house?”
He says: “No.”

�“Has he ever been to your house?”
“No.”
I said, “Then you, he’s not really a friend, he’s just an acquaintance.” I said: “A friend, usually
you know everything about them, they know everything about you.” I said [unintelligible] Or
smoke a cigarette and give ‘em, you know. I said, that’s, you know, those are friends, they’re not
acquaintances. But that’s [unintelligible]. And there was a lot of, some, not a lot of – some still to
this day. But I grew up, you know, prejudice was…The only thing I, where I didn’t see a lot of
prejudice was when I went into the service. ‘Cause then if you performed [unintelligible] I
remember, my life completely changed when I went into the service, ‘cause then we were all
equal. You know, when I went and joined up, there was a bunch of Topeka, this area, we all met
in Kansas City. And there was a group that came from Chicago or somewhere, where we all met
in Kansas City, on the trains that went from Kansas City to California. We – I joined the
Marines, so all the way out there, there was, like, gangs of guys from, you know, Chicago, and
there was guys from the Kansas City area, and a lot of them were just from little towns like I
was. And they were kind of like, you know, all the guys from Chicago would sit together, they
had their big ducktails and their little, you know, back then it was ducktails and [pink? big?]
pants and all that, and they all smoked and drank. Tattoos and everything, I was just, I was
scared to death of ‘em. [laughs] And they were tough, you know, and they’d push each other
around, and they had, they carried their knives, and they got out there, you know, and I’m sitting
on the train, it took us three days to get out there [tape goes silent, then cuts off]
END OF TAPE 16A

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                    <text>Tape 16b: Interview with Israel Bermudez and Rachel Lemus
Interviewer: Helen Krische
Date of Interview: 2006
Length of Interview: 31:46
Location of Interview: St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church
Transcription Completion Date: October 13, 2020
Transcriptionist: Emily Raymond
[Tape begins with buzzing and static noise]
Israel Bermudez (Interviewee): …It was an accident, but just…happened to get hurt.
HK: Was that at New York School where they were congregated.
IB: Now, that was a bad time too, because there was a lot of people that came in from out of
town to get, you know, in trouble, and down in East Lawrence –
RL: They’re doing that now.
IB: East Lawrence, they shot out all the streetlights. And then they’d go down the street in their
cars with their lights [off? out?] And you know, if they see somebody they didn’t like, or
something, they’d start chasing or shooting them or whatever. I mean, you can sit there in the
evenings on your porch and there’s bullets come through the leaves in the trees, you know. And
that didn’t last long, couple of weeks, maybe two or three. The thing about it is, I went to the – to
the store one time, and like I said, I had black friends, that I grew up with and played ball with,
and when those riots and things were going on, there was a lot of, like, [unintelligible] people
came in too. And then you had the black [unintelligible]. And they were all around. And there
was, there was a lot of tension here, when you walk in a store somewhere, they look at you, and
try to figure out: Are you a militant, or are you with them, or are you with them? I, I was in a
store one time talking to this black fellow that I went with, played ball, and there was, some
college, I think they were college kids, and they were older. And I don’t think they were from
town. I think they were just troublemakers. And they came in, we was standing there and they
got all around, about six of ‘em. [murmurs] “They’re gonna, they’re gonna beat us up, boy.” And
so I thought: “Well, all we can do is stand back to back and fight as many as we can.” But back
then I didn’t think about it, you know. Back then fights were just hands, you know. Didn’t use
nothing. The militants did, but most of the time, when you see somebody, [unintelligible] they
was just fistfighting, you know. One got beat up and then get up and go home. And after that it
started turning into knives and guns and all that kind of stuff. [unintelligible] There was a lot of –
RL: We had a – funerals, we was just talking about this the other day – we didn’t go to the
funeral home, they brought the body to the home.
IB: Yeah.
RL: And then in those days you brought the body to the home, and okay, let’s say somebody
died, I don’t think we ever had one for us, but you know, somebody [unintelligible]. And the

�parents would get together and they figured, you know, you’re gonna, after the rosary, you’re
gonna offer coffee and rolls. So that’s when my mother sometimes would say, “Go get the
coffee,” you know, big can, or “Go get the five pounds of sugar and we’ll take it over, take it to
her before so she know they have it.” Somebody else would bring – buy bread, and then after the
rosary we had – we were little, we were looking forward to that bread. We, we drank coffee all
our lives, since we were little.
IB: Yeah. Mm-hmm.
RL: Us kids were, I remember, I remember some putting in a milk bottle.
IB: You had milk, but you [unintelligible], but that was it.
RL: Lot of milk, and, but we drank coffee. And up to this day I, my husband’s trying to, “You
drink too much coffee.” I said, “Oh, that’s okay.” Something’s gonna take me one of these days
anyhow, I believe. It isn’t like, you know, I’m bothering somebody else by, you know, smoking
in your face, or nothing, but…the funerals were like that. Very seldom did they go to the little –
IB: The whole family went to the funeral, these little kids would be [unintelligible], everybody
else [unintelligible] Having the rosary or something like that. The person’s laying right there in
the dining room [unintelligible] in the casket. So the little kids just didn’t want to stand there, so
they’d be outside. [murmurs] We’d always peek in the window, you know, to see the body, what
was there. That’s the way it was.
RL: It’s all, like I said, we’re all together.
IB: Lotta that growing up like that is just because you were poor. And you, you know, you
couldn’t afford this and that. So that’s the way you had to do things.
RL: Well, I have a piece of paper, ‘cause my dad lived with me after my mom passed away, he
came to live with me. And I found this little paper that’s handwritten, I think he paid $300 for the
house, $10 payment. I’ve got that.
HK: Oh.
RL: And he got this little house, then he built two bedrooms. It was just the living room, really a
living room, one bedroom, kitchen, and the back like a porch. Then he, then the city came, you
had outhouses, then the city came and said no more outhouses, you’re gonna have to put your
bathroom in there. And that was fine. But down the basement of that house my dad had, there
was a faucet, he put up walls and there was a stool, a real stool, you know, it might have been
used, but –
IB: We dug the, we dug the line, sewer line, to the, to the –
RL: And the way you flushed it, there was a faucet there, and there was a bucket, so you know,
when you needed to flush it you just fill it and it would flush. But then the city came and says no

�more, they give us a [unintelligible], so then he put the bathroom upstairs. Then he built two
bedrooms, one for the boys and one for the girls. Cause we had, they had their own little –
IB: See, back then you –
RL: I can’t remember how we slept.
IB: Back then you didn’t know, [murmurs] let anybody in that door if you didn’t want to. Even
the police. But back then you didn’t want that. So the city would come and the police would
come.
HK: What house was this, what is the address?
RL: 810 New Jersey.
HK: 810 New Jersey.
RL: That I remember that there, I remember the 740 and 819 before that, I don’t remember. But
the 810 New Jersey I remember, we had the outhouses, you go out there, and there was just, what
outhouses looks like. And then, the city came in and said we were kind of lucky ‘cause Dad, he
got, measured, there was like a porch and he divided a little wall and then we’d put the stool, the
tub and the basin, and this, my mother’s Maytag with her washer. He had a few tools. But we
had that, and then he made a shower downstairs, just put a wall like, you know, a wall and then
we had a curtain, in case somebody had to go to the bathroom and then it was a shower.
IB: You might have one lightbulb in that one room.
RL: Yeah.
IB: There wasn’t outlets or anything. Just the light would hang, you know, most of the time you
had kerosene lamps [unintelligible]
RL: And my dad would put them, yeah, nowadays, when my dad was doing some work. For
them to learn – well, to help him too – that’s why my brothers all know how to do things ‘cause
my dad had ‘em right there. You know, right there, and they –
IB: We used to run away, but then we had to come back and [murmurs] [laughs]
RL: But you know, they had, like [unintelligible], we burned a fire, I remember we had a big
stove in the living room. Big top like that. And we would dry our socks, and it took forever, thick
socks. Cause there was a little, he made a little wooden box and he’d tell these boys, “When I
come back from work, that wood has to be all cut so I can” – big enough to put in the fireplace.
Wood and the guys would do it. I mean, they knew it had to be done, but first they’d come home
and have a cup of coffee. And then they’d get out there and do that and my dad would never get
after, that I can remember, get after them, get in here. Now the kids, “Eh, I’ll do it later Mom.”
Not my kids, but –

�IB: He went down to KU and, landscaping. They cut trees and stuff down. So he’d always take
‘em to the landfill, and so he’d always tell the children, “Just take it to the backyard and drop
them off.” I mean, these logs were that big around. They would just drop ‘em in the yard and so
it was our job to get them [unintelligible]. And then we had this crosscut saw, needed two guys,
one on each side, and one of our jobs was to cut wood every day for the stove, you know, and
then we could play. So we, so we’d always start doing that and then the little ones would sit on
the logs so we couldn’t move them, [unintelligible] get up there. And after a while the neighbor
kids would come around, say “That looks like fun,” you know, like Tom, you know, like
painting the fence. So pretty soon they get, rather than just stand there and watch,
“[unintelligible] My turn!” You know, they kinda, so, they’d all come home, we’d saw the wood
and then we’d go play ball, you know.
HK: Mm-hmm.
IB: But it was, that’s the way –
RL: Our swings were a rope in the tree. Remember, Izzy? And Daddy had a little work shed, and
then he had a garage and it was swinging from that rope clear across. That was, like I said, we
didn’t have nothing like a little, uh – swing set.
IB: Only problem there was we had a mean dog, and he was always chained there. When you
swung across there –
HK: He’d try to get you.
IB: He’d try to get you. Every once in a while he would, too. [laughs]
RL: But no, we just looked forward, you know, we knew we had to get our work done. And like
I said, I remember my dad would have those boys, they built the two bedrooms. And he had ‘em
right there, watching him, handing him, they know what a screwdriver was, a whatever, you
know, that’s how they learned.
IB: Other thing about it was you had two [murmurs] screwdriver, one hammer and all this,
sometimes get [rocks? nails?] somebody come along with a hammer, but you just didn’t have a
whole lot of stuff to work with.
RL: In those days my dad worked his self, and he became a foreman for KU. I’ve got some
newspapers on it. He became a landscaper for the grounds. And he had no education by the time
he got in there. You know, sometimes people don’t know, they have the education, go to school,
but they got it up here.
IB: [Murmurs] Well, my dad, at the beginning he didn’t know English, so he [unintelligible] He
got records to learn how to do English. That’s how he kind of learned. My oldest brother has
some really good stories –

�RL: He’s coming for the fiesta. He comes every year, he’s in, he lives up in the mountains in
Denver, about 20 miles from Denver. He comes, he’ll be coming Thursday and he – he can
remember things and I said, “Too bad he’s not coming,” you know. That – later he’ll be here, but
I mean, that…My dad, um, he liked to drink, like, he wasn’t one of those, like some people and
they go to the bar every day or every weekend, not like that. We, we were, us kids were first.
You know, like I say, he didn’t take much to get drunk, you know, like people, but we were, we
came first for him. I mean, he had two jobs. He worked, uh, I guess when he worked at KU,
right? Then they, the older men made these carts, big square and those big wheels put in the
middle and then they put handles, they’d go down the alleys, pick up cardboard, ‘cause you
could sell cardboard, copper, which you could get more money even now. Pop bottles –
IB: Pop bottles.
RL: He’d get all that and go sell it for extra money.
IB: We kids did that too. We, I did that growing up.
RL: But actually the older men, you know, Mr. Garcia, Mr…
IB: Used to do that all the time.
RL: They’d go down the alleys.
IB: As a little kid, you know, we used to get wagons or we’d carry, cardboard, you know, you
had to break the boxes down and carry the cardboard, and, uh, we used to have to go to this
junkyard which was only about two blocks down the street. But as a little kid you come in there
too, you maybe pulled the wagon, cardboard, and they’d – they’d put it on the scale and weigh it
and then whatever it was they give you so much per pound. And the guys that run that thing
would cheat you. I mean, you were a little kid, and you were coming in with this cardboard. And
these guys are cheating you. They’d always stand in front of the [unintelligible], and they’d
never let you see what it weighed. And so we knew it weighed more than that, ‘cause you know,
they’d give us half of what it was. And we knew, we carried it over there. And so then one time
we was in the yard doing that, and this lady that used to do that, she used to live in
[unintelligible]. She’d go up and down the alley getting stuff and taking it back. She said, “Well
what you do to get back at em,” she said, “when you get the cardboard lay it down, get you a
bucket of water and then just sprinkle it, to make it heavier [unintelligible]. And we thought, you
know, it’ll work. [laughs] So we did that and we’d take it in and the guys said, “Well that’s only
about 15 pounds [murmurs; then says 25 pounds?]. But then, so he’d cheat you down to 20, 15
pounds so we end up, you know, getting even. But with metal you couldn’t do that, ‘cause it was
metal. You’d find metal stuff. And so after awhile, this is getting to be bad, ‘cause you know
they’re cheating you. But there was nothing you could do, and as little kids you start thinking,
“Well, they’re cheating us and they’re grown men and we can’t do nothing about it.” So we go
“Well, in the evenings when the thing closes down, the junkyard closes down, let’s go jump the
fence and throw half that stuff back and resell it to them.” [laughs] So we did that, we did that for
a while and then they got a dog and we couldn’t jump the fence anymore. That’s where this
junkyard dog came in. We, we was trying to get one guy over there, you know, with the dog, but

�they have high fences, [unintelligible] room, you know. You’re a little kid, you know, you gotta
run fast, hit that thing, get up that thing, that dog’s right behind you, so. Sometimes you could do
it and sometimes you couldn’t.
RL: The other way that we made money for us younger kids was, he was a farmer, Heck?
murmurs] I think they still have a farm.
IB: There was three or four farmers, they were all brothers.
RL: They’d bring this, like I guess, it’s a truck, right? Am I right?
IB: Flatbed truck.
RL: And he’d park in the middle of the block, two times, here, and he’d – he’d pick us up. And
we’d get in the back of the truck and he’d keep us all day picking potatoes.
IB: …No more than sixteen, they always had a place, they’d pick you up either this corner or this
corner. You had to be there at like 6:30 or something. So everybody that could walk around, five
years old, everybody got on that truck and went. You sat there in the morning with your little bag
of, your little lunch. And the truck would come and everybody gets on there and I mean
everybody, if there’s 50 people there, there’s only room for 30, otherwise everybody’s gonna be
standing up or they’d be hanging over the side.
RL: We were young –
IB: Oh, yeah.
RL: Like 12 and 10 years old when we went –
HK: So what year was this? About what time period?
IB: Late ‘40s.
HK: Okay.
IB: Then you went out there and you picked potatoes, you know, family, you’d go out there and
get what they called a station [tape fades briefly] there and the next guy, and as a family you
went out there and you kind of all stayed together, you know, until, most of the time. Unless
there was some girls, and the older guys –
RL: That’s what I was saying. Instead of him helping his sister, he went to help his girlfriend.
[laughs]
IB: Some days I would pick five bushels when I should have picked 35 or something.

�RL: And we had a lot of Mexicans, young men, single, come in, and where would they go? They
send ‘em to Bermuda’s. ‘Cause like I said, my dad was a foreman, and if somebody looking for a
job, they send ‘em to Bermudas. But they didn’t have no papers, the ones that came from
Mexico, and my dad said: “You’re better off going to the city, because you won’t be able to get
nothing here.” And, uh, but we had fun too, getting in that truck and going out there, we’re
standing up in the truck, ‘cause he had, he had these boards there, and but, that was help for us
and we really –
IB: It was dangerous, ‘cause you –
RL: But we had –
IB: Kids, and the whole family, and they had grandmas out there, you know, like 75 years old.
They were out there picking potatoes. And the only shade you had was when you found a
sunflower stalk, and then you’d turn around and pretend like this is buried in the ground and you
put a piece, some sacks over it. And then there was competition because sometimes you run short
on sacks. The truck had come around. You got potatoes, you gotta put ‘em in a sack, so you was
running over there and steal some sacks. [laughs] And there’d be little fights. Just little
[unintelligible]. I mean, [unintelligible] but it was kinda funny, you know. You had to survive,
kind of.
RL: But we always, you guys had, like I was telling her, a lot of boys came, from – I don’t know
where they came from. Spanish speaking, those had to come from Mexico. But they’d always,
sometimes our porch was a bit, you know, was hot, so you had no, little, one fan for the whole
household. When we were young, we’d sleep out on the porch, and as soon as it was getting
light, Dad would wake us up: “Come on in.” And then we’d come in the house.
IB: Or the dogs would carry you away.
RL: But we had, we had, well they were friends, we didn’t really know ‘em. But they’d take ‘em
in, and they’d stay at our house.
IB: When we was, uh –
RL: And, and you more like [unintelligible] our house.
IB: When we was kids, I mean, we was real poor, a quarter go a long way. And there would be
bums that would get off the train ‘cause we lived about a block from a train station. The railroad
tracks, and they’d, hobos and stuff, would come down that alley all the time. And they must’ve
marked the houses, cause they’d go along and they’d come up to that house, and my mom would
always feed ‘em.
RL: Always.
IB: And we had –

�RL: Always. Always.
IB: She’d always make something for ‘em, and have ‘em sit on the back step there, and she’d
give ‘em coffee and [unintelligible]. And then one guy told me that’s what they do, they’d go
down and mark a house, they’d put an X or something on it. And the next one will come down,
he knows he can get something to eat there. But she never turned ‘em down.
RL: Never turned ‘em down. Fed ‘em, I don’t care if they’re black, white or Hispanic.
IB: She would make ‘em something like [unintelligible] tortillas, we always had tortillas. My
mom, seemed like she’d sit there and make tortillas, round the back –
RL: Flour tortillas.
IB: There’d be six of us sitting at the table [unintelligible], she’d have a little pile like that of
tortillas. And everybody grabs one, and it takes thirty seconds to get rid of it. And she would
keep that thing like that all the time, cooking and rolling ‘em out and making the dough and all
that. After a while you get to thinking, you know, she was pretty good. Pretty fast.
RL: Like I said, they didn’t go to school but my mom sometimes would tell us, she told me one
time, she said: “Your mother, what a mother” or something like that. She says: “You get the
stupid mother.” I said: Why do you say that? She says: “‘Cause I never went to school.” I said:
“Well, your parents didn’t let you, I mean, they felt like you didn’t need to go to school.” It was
just gonna be work, work, work. But yet, her and the whole neighborhood, there was like three or
four women, after they ate lunch and got their dishes – they’d sit together in one house. They’d
take turns. And they had crochet, you know, like they’d make a curtain for that –
HK: Mm-hmm.
RL: And form a – a little angel, a horse, a basket with flowers, and they’d, she’d put a, you
know, they were gonna quit time to go get supper, she’d put a little safety pin, you know, she’d –
and then she’d go to the Salvation Army and she seen a dress that was a little, seen a dress for
larger person. She’d look at the material: “That’s practically new.” Well, she’d buy it and
downsize it to fit us. And you know, and then she, I said, “Who else, Mother, you don’t need no
education, you’ve had twelve children. Nine of us living. Dad was never on welfare. And you
could crochet anything. You could sew anything. You could cook.” I remember this cornbread
she – I think it’s cool, I think I’m gonna make cornbread. She was going to get her flour, put
whatever, no measuring, break the egg, and I remember a little crack coming down that
cornbread. No recipe. I said: “Well, who had, you had twelve kids. You could cook anything you
want. Sew, crochet, what else does a woman need to know?”
IB: Even when she went blind later on in life, she would sit there and crochet all the time, just –
RL: Yeah, diabetic. She was a diabetic. But no, we were – after they’re gone, you – I said a lot of
times to my husband, thinking about it, you know, what you don’t say to your parents when
they’re living, you know. You know, they came to a country with not knowing anybody. Now

�the people that are coming, they have somebody, you know, somebody’s already here for them,
so they got two or three families there. They had nobody. Took a chance and came because, you
know. But they didn’t – and here my dad [had?] the education, he didn’t have it, became a
foreman for KU over…over…I think right, over 30 years, 35?
IB: He’s a [unintelligible] now.
HK: Well, what would you do when someone became ill?
RL: Uh…the…
IB: You’d never see a doctor. The only time you see a person that was, the school nurse. That’s
the only time you ever see any medical people, unless you really got real sick, or cut your leg or
– ‘cause I remember my brother cut his, almost cut his foot off. Stepped on a Mason jar or
[unintelligible]. Cut all the [unintelligible], they had to take him to the doctor then. And then he
come back and he needed crutches. Well, we couldn’t afford crutches. So my dad cut a limb that
had a fork in it, and there, and put a deal up here, and that was his crutch. He was pretty fast.
You could still catch him.
RL: Homemade scooters, uh, the boys, uh, stilts out of wood –
IB: You made – you made up your own games.
RL: That was fun.
IB: We had games where we’d, like we had stilts, everybody had stilts, and we’d get up there
and then we’d fight on stilts, try to get – or we’d get a smaller guy in the back and, you know,
you’re the horse and he’s the – and they’d fight, they’d pull each other and try to [unintelligible]
each other. And then there was a, down on Pennsylvania Street there used to be a TNT popcorn
place that shelled corn, and the cobs went out in a pile and it was probably bigger than this
house. That was my playground. We used to go out there and play king of the mountains on that.
The biggest guy would get up there, used to throw the other ones all off, and – you’re a little kid,
corn cobs are rough, by the time you get done, you’d be all scarred. [laughs] But you’d play
there for hours and hours and hours. Every day after school we’d go down there and play, then
they’d haul ‘em all off, and then we’d have to wait until they start building ‘em up again. And
then we had guys that were 17, 18 years old [murmurs]. They went up there, and we were like
little kids, like 11 or 12, they got up there, and they were always king of the mountain usually.
Every time you’d try to gang up on ‘em, one guy would grab on and –
RL: But everybody helped each other, especially, you know, the women having one child after
another, you know, another little one. Uh, Mom, they got together, well okay, so-and so had a
baby – didn’t have to worry because they, my mother knew that this – you baptize a baby you
become a…
IB: Godparent.

�RL: Yeah, but [murmurs] mom and dad. What they call comadre and compadre. You baptize my
baby, you would be my comadre, and she’d be my child’s daughter. And, you know, they were
there to help, Mother didn’t just – have the baby, didn’t have to worry, ‘cause they knew that
these other ladies would take care of those kids. Wash ‘em, feed ‘em. You know, that was fun
days.
IB: And back in those days, if you went to somebody’s house and you were acting up, they
would beat your butt just like you’re their kid, and that’s the way it was. Nobody ever said
anything about it. You go over and misbehave at somebody’s house and they’d take the paddle to
you or throw you out or whatever, smack you around. And you never said anything, ‘cause you
know you’re wrong and, you ain’t gonna go tell nobody nothing ‘cause then they’ll get after you
for being ornery at that place or something, but that’s the way it was. Everybody, if you were in
their house, you did what they told you to do.
RL: Also, the funerals – if they knew people were real poor, we’d collect, they’d collect among
the neighborhood, to have whatever, and, and that’s another thing they did. We was – I think
about it now that I’m older, and I said: “Those were the good old days to me.” [laughs] Even
though we were poor, we appreciated. Appreciated, you know, what we got. I think our kids –
our grandkids – I didn’t do that with my kids. Barbie doll, [Delores’s?] Barbie dolls, and she
didn’t have no more dolls. And I didn’t have – like I said, I wanted her to have a little bit, but I
don’t want her to be – now, my grandkids, it’s a different story. My grandkids. I have a son and
daughter. It’s just a completely different –
IB: When you grew up poor, you appreciate things.
RL: Mm-hmm, I think so.
IB: ‘Cause I grew up on beans and tortillas and…
RL: Oatmeal.
IB: The only meat I knew was hamburgers and hot dogs and chicken. I went into the service, and
you know, you get these trays, you go through, they’re slopping all this food, and God – I’d taste
the meat and I’d say: “What is this?” Those guys would look at us – brisket or whatever it was,
pork chops – I said, “Man this is really good,” you know. I’d make a big deal out of it, they’re
looking at me like –
RL: Well, during the week –
IB: Where you been, in a cave or something?
RL: During the week it was wieners. Mother would get the wiener and cut it up, fry potatoes and
put the wiener in there. Or wieners with hamburger. But Sunday was special, we knew we were
gonna have a good – you know, like a chicken. Also marriages. Somebody got married, these
women had these pans, they were white. And they had a navy blue line, just a quarter of an inch
trim, or navy blue. And my – it was always chicken molé. It’s like a barbecue sauce, you know.

�They just boil the chicken and then they make this molé. And then they’d put the chicken in, and
there was rice, with two kinds, a vermicelli, it was like a little spaghetti, and sometimes they had
salad. Well, when there was a marriage the lady would ask my mom: “Could you help me with
the rice?” Sure, yeah. There was never a no. She would bring the rice. And then when they’re
real close, they’ll, don’t – don’t bring it. And tomato, and onion and the garlic. It takes rice, but a
lot of times they would just bring the rice, “Can you make 5 pounds of rice?” And they’d
distribute. Then we would take it to the, wherever they were gonna have their wedding. And
that’s how the food was made. It wasn’t catered in. [laughs]
HK: Yeah.
RL: And it was strictly, that was a typical molé. The broth, made it more tasty with that
vermicelli, and rice was using the broth of when you boil the chicken. That’s what makes
everything good now. But no, you could go – on Sundays the boys would go to church and
they’d come back and they’d have two or three friends and it was a day they get to come and
[sit?] and drinking coffee. And the other time they’d go to this other person’s house, you know,
that’s the way – every Saturday I remember these boys had a car, Saturday afternoon ‘cause they
were gonna date, I guess, in the evening, wash their car, I mean, they had ‘em clean. Washed
their cars inside and out.
IB: That was my brothers. I didn’t get a car till I was 22.
RL: You had a yellow Chevy I remember –
IB: 22 years old. I’d been in the Marines and got out, and bought me a car.
RL: And then when the boys went into the service we had four brothers – well, five of my, four
of my brothers went into the service – and they’d come, in, like leave, was it leave? And they’d
come in like 2:00 in the morning, I mean, knocking and just knocking at the door.
IB: We never told ‘em we was coming.
RL: And they wouldn’t tell us when they was coming. Oh, and then everybody got up, and
Mama was ready to make the pot of coffee was in a percolator, wasn’t it?
IB: And then they’d call everybody that –
RL: Yeah, it was –
IB: You got these people staring at you, this room and that room, you know, they’re looking at
you like –
RL: The best coffee I’ve ever had, you know, was from the older ladies. Ms. Ramirez was my
godmother, if you talked to [one of the Ramirezes?], it was a pan with two handles. The water
boiling, the coffee, I’d watch it.

�IB: Well they, back in those days they didn’t use coffeepots. Just got a big pot and filled it up
with grounds, coffee. And then they’d let it boil, put a lid on and let it boil, and I’m [sitting
there?] and stuff would settle on the bottom –
RL: And you could go down –
IB: Everybody had one, they were that big –
RL: You could go down to this person’s house and for sure they were gonna offer you to eat. No
problem, it was just everybody was together. The men all, they were compadres, ‘cause you
know, every family had a large family [unintelligible] godfather, everybody was godparents and
comadres and compadres. But that’s the way they – once in a while my dad would go to
[unintelligible] and my godfather, he liked a beer or two now and then, couple beers, and my
mother, the – they went to something. We’d look forward to the evenings and looked forward to
that steak. But that’s the way that we were raised, and, you know, hand-me-downs. And we had
clothes – my brothers I’m sure handed, you know, the bigger one down, down. And I was the
youngest one.
IB: I was the youngest, I never got – by the time I got it, “What is this?” [laughs] “What’s this
supposed to be?” [all laugh] I was the youngest boy, so anytime anything came to me, it was –
what is it?
RL: I tell my granddaughters, they got a drawer of socks. Oh, God! You know, how they sell
those socks like six in there. I had two pair. I had one with the hole in the heel, and one without a
hole. So this thing with – I was learning how to darn and this thing was about this thick and you
know, I’d be all – and I’d always make sure the night before, especially in the wintertime, that I
was gonna end up with the best on Sunday. We’d wash ‘em in the night, put ‘em on top of the
stove to be dry and now my grandkids have all these pairs of socks. They got so many.
IB: The boys were – you took care of your own socks.
HK: Oh, gosh.
IB: The boys growing up, you know, you had your own socks and your own underwear,
everything, so you more or less washed them and took care of them. And I remember a lot of
times you just had what you call the tops, they were just the top of the socks [laughs]. The holes
were in the [laughs]. And my brother, he was always trying to figure out, [someone coughs]. One
time when he was in junior high, he was talking to this girl and put his foot up, he forgot he had
his tops on. And the sock [laughs], turn around, he said “God!” But we just got all the tops, and
they were just the [unintelligible], so –
RL: Was you – are you a Lawrence person?
HK: Yes, I am. I went to St. John’s School.
RL: Oh, okay.

�HK: And, uh –
IB: Your last name’s what?
RL: Krische.
IB: The Marlboro person, the guy that owned the Marlboro factory, what was his name…?
HK: George. Bob.
IB: Bob. Yeah, Bob Krische.
HK: Mm-hmm. Yeah, he’s my uncle.
IB: Oh.
HK: Yeah.
IB: He hired a lot of them Mexicans. A lot of ‘em used to work for him. They’d say, “Go out to
Krische’s, he’ll hire you.”
HK: Yeah…well, it looks like our tape ran out. Um, I think –
IB: I was just getting wound up, too.
HK: Yeah, I know.
IB: I was on a roll.
RL: Um, do you need anything like this for the flood? Are you interested in this, and like – ?
HK: Oh, sure.
RL: I kinda, I found these two, ‘cause like I said, my parents – my dad came to live with me for a
while and I got all the pictures.
HK: Mm-hmm.
RL: You can see there, I don’t know where that’s at, but I thought that was a depot but it’s a
depot, two floors?
IB: Uh, the Santa Fe depot used to be two or three stories.
RL: Oh really? And looks like maybe that’s after the water left.

�IB: Yeah, that was [unintelligible? deeper?]. ‘Cause that was in ‘51.
RL: ‘51.
IB: I was, uh, 16 I think. When I was a kid I went – I used to like this girl that lived down near
the Santa Fe houses, and the flood was coming and they was putting sandbags up in the doors.
To impress her parents, I went down there, get sandbags and we’d put ‘em in the doors. Course
the water went through ‘em [laughs]. About two years later –
HK: Val brought this picture and, if you know, let’s see, well I think we identified all these.
RL: Mm-hmm.
HK: There are some that aren’t identified.
IB: You got names [unintelligible]
HK: So yeah, there’s names, and here’s a pen, if there’s some that you know there, go ahead and
fill it in.
END OF TAPE 16B

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                  <text>These works are the intellectual property of the Watkins Museum of History, Lawrence, Kansas. The public may freely copy, modify, and share this Item for noncommercial purposes if they include the original source information. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s).</text>
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                <text>Siblings Israel Bermudez and Rachel (Bermudez) Lemus were interviewed by Helen Krische in 2006 as part of an oral history project to document the La Yarda and Mexican-American communities in Lawrence, Kansas. La Yarda was a neighborhood of worker housing provided by the Santa Fe Railroad for Mexican-American railroad workers; located near the Kansas (Kaw) River, the neighborhood was largely destroyed by a major flood in 1951. The interview is split into two parts. Israel and Rachel grew up in East Lawrence; their family came to Lawrence in the late 1920s due to their father's work on the railroad. Israel and Rachel describe their family's journey from Mexico to Lawrence, their school experiences, and their experiences of discrimination and segregation as part of the Mexican-American community in Lawrence. Israel served in the military and shares some memories from that time. Rachel and Israel also describe daily life in their neighborhood, including work, childhood pasttimes, foodways, and funeral customs.</text>
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                <text>&lt;a href="https://archives.lib.ku.edu/repositories/3/resources/5295"&gt;Additional research on the La Yarda community&lt;/a&gt; is held at the Spencer Research Library at the University of Kansas.</text>
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                <text>Published with the permission of Israel Bermudez and Rachel Lemus. This work is the intellectual property of the Watkins Museum of History, Lawrence, Kansas. The public may freely copy, modify, and share this Item for noncommercial purposes if they include the original source information. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s).</text>
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                    <text>Tape 17: Interview with John Chavez and Helen (Chavez) Martinez
Interviewer: Helen Krische
Date of Interview: 2006
Length of Interview: 33:57
Location of Interview: St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church
Transcription Completion Date: October 20, 2020
Transcriptionist: Emily Raymond
Helen Krische (Interviewer): We’re gonna talk a little bit about your parents and when they first
came into this area. Um, did they come directly from Mexico, or, um…were they already in the
U.S.?
John Chavez (Interviewee): [murmurs] into Texas. I know my father –
HCM: Actually, we do have a whole history written down here. A little bit of – let’s see here,
now actually, we had a, well, our reunion, family reunion several years ago.
HK: Uh-huh.
HCM: My sister put an album together and so she did write down, actually, did put down a little
history of when my dad –
[murmured sounds, difficult to distinguish from the static]
HCM: Because actually he…he was quite young, probably just a teenager when he did come to
the United States.
HK: Mm-hmm.
HCM: How…let’s see here. [murmured sounds] Okay, eventually, uh, after his parents, you
know had passed away, well then he eventually made his way on into Texas and was alone. Uh,
he worked in Pueblo, Colorado, and, uh, was working for the Union Pacific Railroad.
JC: I think when he was in Texas, though, he worked as a farmhand, not in Kansas, but maybe
two years. In Colorado. [murmurs] eventually comes through here, the Union Pacific comes
through Lawrence, uh, some way, he come into Lawrence.
HK: Right.
HCM: And then. Then lived in Williamstown.
JC: Well, he – he lived first in Lawrence –
HCM: In Lawrence.

�JC: Then he moved to, uh, Williamstown for a couple, few years and then came back, um, to
Lawrence.
HK: Do you know what year that was? Approximately?
JC: Uh, well, yeah, uh, I was born in 1936 and I was born in Williamstown. And my sister, she
was a couple years older than I was, so she was born there also. We were the only two, so it had
to be between ‘35 and ‘39.
HK: Okay.
HCM: When they moved to Lawrence?
JC: When they were, the time spent over there.
JC: Now when they came into Lawrence, I can’t be sure.
HCM: ’41, when I was born.
JC: Then came back [HCM interrupts] The first time they came –
HCM: Oh, okay, yeah.
JC: Let’s see…‘26, ‘27…My oldest brother was born in ‘28.
HK: Did he speak any English, or did he just speak Spanish?
JC: My father? No, he spoke English. I’m not sure how early he – he learned it, you know, but it
was in Texas. I remember when we were young, he spoke – he spoke very little just in English, I
guess he was ashamed of the way he spoke and he didn’t want to mess with that. And, uh –
HCM: But our parents conversed with each other in Spanish.
HK: Uh-huh.
JC: Yeah.
HCM: The older, brother and sisters learned Spanish because they would speak to them, but
when we younger ones came along, they would speak to us. My dad would speak to us in
Spanish and we’d answer him in English [laughs].
JC: Yeah, well, once we started in school, you know, you just learn the English and just forgot
about the Spanish.
HK: Uh-huh.

�JC: Just forgot all the Spanish. If we didn’t have to use it, we wouldn’t use it.
HK: Uh-huh.
JC: My mother could understand very good English and she spoke to us in English [murmurs].
HK: Do your children speak Spanish? No?
JC: No.
HCM: Now they want to.
HK: Now they want to. [laughs]
HCM: Everything back then, was, they discouraged, you know, society really discouraged the
Spanish.
HK: Yeah.
HCM: In fact, you know, when I started school, you know, my name is – is Elena. In
kindergarten they changed it over to Helen. So it just stuck, you know. But, which is the
translation into English. Everything was more or less encouraged to be English.
HK: Where did you live at, in Lawrence?
JC: When we first came to Lawrence, we lived um, 805 Pennsylvania.
HK: Okay.
JC: But, uh, earlier, I think my parents lived on New Jersey Street, maybe 801. And that may not
be the only place they lived, but that was before they went to Williamstown. When they came
back they bought a house on Pennsylvania there. And that’s where we stayed until they, until my
dad passed away. And then Mom got moved here. I remember that, uh, Haskell –
HCM: The Haskell –
JC: Happened in ‘74, [17?]74, you remember that?
HK: Uh-huh. Then what was it –
HCM: The city –
JC: The Haskell –

�HCM: Yeah, the city was gonna, uh, make a Haskell loop and they – they had all the people that
lived on the 800 block of Pennsylvania, they bought out the houses and they, and, uh, you know,
they tore them down, now it’s all gone.
HK: Uh huh.
HCM: And so –
JC: They were moving us to the 900 block too and I guess they got so many complaints that they
stopped.
HK: Really.
JC: [murmurs] They never went through with it and I think there was supposed to be some kind
of, uh, connection with Highway 10, not sure.
HK: Oh.
JC: Down, down by the depot in that area.
HK: Yeah. Was that in the ‘70s or was it in the early ‘80s?
JC and HCM: No. [conflicting voices]
HCM: ‘70s.
JC: ‘Cause Mom moved out in ‘74 in Topeka, so that had to be about –
HK: Yeah, I don’t remember that. I don’t know where I was [laughs].
JC: Yeah.
HK: Having fun, I suppose.
JC: Yeah, I’m sure there’s a record of that somewhere in the city.
HK: Yeah. Huh. So they just tore down those houses?
JC: Yeah.
HK: Huh.
HCM: The tree that my dad planted, when our youngest brother was born, is still there.
JC: Yeah.

�HK: Oh, that’s neat.
HCM: In fact, we have a –
JC: There’s a picture of it in there, of our brother’s tree. Uh, I think it might be in that section,
I’m not sure.
HCM: But he just sketched, he had a drawing that he sketched, with, the tree and our house.
[murmurs]
JC: Yeah, Pennsylvania and New Jersey was about the only streets that Mexican people lived on,
close to the Santa Fe yards. There’s a few, very few who lived away from there. I know some
lived in, uh, North Lawrence, that was the Garcias. And then there was, uh, some [murmurs].
New Jersey. [murmurs] I don’t remember anybody else. Mexicans [murmurs].
HK: I know that, um, in talking to some people, that their father worked for the Union Pacific
railroad, that they had lived in, like, converted cattle cars and stuff like that. Was that…?
JC: Yeah.
HCM: Yeah.
JC: Actually, that’s where I was [born?].
HK: Really?
HCM: Yeah, the boxcars.
JC: Yeah. In Williamstown Square, they had, uh, they had two boxcars set off to the side of the
tracks –
HK: Uh-huh.
JC: And there was two families that lived there. Ours and then the other one was Jimenez. I’m
not sure if you’re gonna [interview Fidel?] or not.
HCM: Yes, I have.
JC: Okay. His was the other family that lived there.
HK: Oh, okay.
JC: So that was kind of unusual.
HK: Yeah. Yeah. Do you remember anything about, did you, did they live in it very long, or…?

�JC: No, I’d say maybe three years [murmurs], I don’t remember a lot about it, except there was
no light [murmurs].
HCM: No electricity. Carmen – well, Carmen would tell about how Dad, uh, made a bed for our
oldest brother, you know, sort of uh, like a foldaway bed. And during the day it would fold up to
the wall. I mean, but, at times they would put it down and they would use it as a stage to
[laughs]. My sisters and John would – would use that as, you know, entertain a show to put on
plays or whatever.
HK: How funny.
HCM: So there was a lot of entertainment [for themselves?]
HK: Did your, uh, parents have a garden?
JC and HCM: Oh yeah.
JC: I think everybody –
HK: Everybody did.
JC: Yeah.
HCM: Three gardens that my dad had.
HK: Oh, my gosh.
HCM: He had one in North Lawrence, he had one over by the yards, (that would be La Yarda)
and then just a small one in our backyard.
JC: They weren’t so small, they was pretty big too. [laughs]
HCM: Go out and get the cilantro, the onions, yeah…so he worked all three of them at the same
time, and, uh, because when the harvest would come in, then you’d go take the car, help him, and
then, boy, was that a joy to see Dad bring the bushel baskets, you know, lift them over the porch,
that railing, put ‘em on the porch. Oranges – not oranges – but tomatoes…
HK: Did he sell any of the produce to other people?
HCM: No, just, I just recall Mary and I once just took, uh, it was a red wagon and Mom had us
just go around the neighborhood. As a rule, she canned – canned tomatoes, and we – we had
enough in our family that we, for the winter, you know, she made hot sauce out of it. You know,
just canned tomatoes, and [unintelligible] for family.
HK: How many children were in your family?

�HCM: Fourteen.
HK: Wow.
HCM: So.
HK: Yeah.
HCM: Yeah, fourteen.
HK: So I guess that she, um, she did a lot of sewing, too?
HCM: Oh. Oh, yes. We have some stories in here that’s, some – some of our, you know, brothers
and sisters had written. In fact, Lupe writes about a story here. My mom, you know, she drew a
picture of one of the dresses that Mom made. But we, uh, my mom did sewing and not with
patterns, it was just cutting out, you know, cutting out the pattern out of the newspaper and
measuring us, you know, stand right there and that old kettle, you know, sewing machine would
just be going and she’d can. Gosh.
TC: [murmurs]
HCM: No, I don’t think so.
TC: [murmurs]
HCM: Unless she did for Lupe and Carmen, because we came along…
TC: [murmurs]
HCM: So Coyo, like Coyo writes in one of her stories, she said: “Oh, the rickrack.” [laughs] She
said: “I didn’t like the rickrack but I didn’t wanna tell Mom.” ‘Cause that was, Mom would add
to, rickrack everywhere. [laughs]
HK: How did she do her laundry?
HCM: Oh, gosh. Yeah, that. At first she did it, you know, I remember that old washboard that
she used to have and then, uh, she would go to my grandma’s, which my grandma lived just right
across the alley from us, once a week she’d go there and she’d, you know, use Grandma’s
machine, come back and we’d hang clothes out on the line. And, uh…it was a while before Mom
got her own washing machine. And then when she did, my aunt bought that for her and my aunt
lived in Topeka and had a big family of her own, but she bought Mom a washing machine. But it
was always hanging clothes out on the line. Oh gosh…I remember one year we got a dryer.
[laughs] ‘Cause in the wintertime, I remember those clothes would be stiff. [laughs] You know,
when we’d go bring them in or, she’d just hang ‘em inside the house, you know, [unintelligible].
HK: Uh-huh, uh-huh. Sure.

�HCM: It was hard for her. ‘Cause when she had, when she did get it with the wringer, type, you
know, you have to put it through the…what was it, those rollers?
HK: The rollers, yeah.
HCM: Uh-huh.
HK: Yeah. Did she ever get her hand stuck in there? My mom used to get her hand stuck in
there.
HCM: No, but my, but Trini did, our oldest brother did, one time. I remember that. [laughs] Oh,
God…
HK: Well, what kind of, did your dad ever tell you any stories about, uh, his work on the
railroad, or…what was your impression of his work?
HCM: Oh, gosh. Other than…not really, other than I do recall, we didn’t have a telephone but
our neighbors behind us, maybe, you know, every now and then they would call Dad of – of an
evening or late at night. If there was a train derailment, or something, they would call him. But
through the neighbors, the neighbors, you know, would let Dad know and I just recall Dad, then,
would be, you know, a winter night having to dress warmly and we were all of course were
worried, Mom, she worried about him. Because back then, I’m sure there were coyotes and
things like this, you know, that were out, ‘cause he’d have to be out by himself, you know. And,
uh, there’s really no protection, you know. I know it was, it was a concern and a worry for Mom.
Dad didn’t ever [someone clears throat], I don’t think I ever heard any complaint.
JC: No.
HCM: Never.
JC: No, he was always happy to work all the time. [laughs]
HK: Little more money coming in.
JC: Yes, uh-huh. He did used to talk about his days in Mexico when he was a young boy, ‘cause
he used to be a sheep-herder.
HK: Oh, okay.
JC: For an uncle. The uncle didn’t treat him right, he didn’t even hardly pay him anything at all,
so he didn’t like that at all, but, he’d be out in the fields overnight with the sheep. And to keep
warm, he would, you know, sleep right in amongst them.
HK: Uh-huh.

�JC: And, uh, he said lots of time he would wake up in the morning all wet, and sheep, you know,
sweating.
HK: Oh, no.
JC: He had a, he had a hard life before he came up here.
HK: Did he talk about, uh, about having enough to eat, or…stuff like that, or…?
HCM: Actually, whatever, what little we do know is, we learned from mom, you know, by
asking her. Later in years we really didn’t take time to ask, you know, about our parents’ history.
And of course Dad was so busy all the time, working, you know, if he wasn’t working right after
he got off work he go straight to the garden, catch the bus, you know, home. And, uh, back to the
other garden he was, you know. Just a hard life.
HK: What did your family do during the holidays?
HCM: Oh, gosh. There, with so many of us, it was always a holiday, I think [laughs]. Yeah, we,
like, like Christmas, I remember…a Christmas tree, a lot of times maybe to school, when we
were in grade school, maybe the school would, uh, have a – where they would give the
Christmas tree away after, you know, the Christmas break and draw straws.
JC: I got – I got to bring it home one time.
HCM: I got to bring it home one year too, so I’m wondering if maybe it wasn’t, maybe on
purpose [laughs].
JC: Yeah.
HCM: But we’d bring, drive the Christmas tree home. And then I do recall sitting there in the
evenings, Carmen and Lupe would help us to cut out newspapers and we’d just cut ‘em into
strips, you know, and –
HK: Uh-huh.
HCM: They’d make paste out of water and flour, and we’d just make the chain things. And, you
know, Christmas decorations. Until later on of course, then, you know, as the girls got older they
worked and they were able to – to buy decorations. But you know, very early years [murmurs].
HK: Did you give gifts to each other, like homemade gifts, or…?
HCM: Um, let’s see, I – I remember always we’d just receive, like, two gifts, you know, just two
gifts. And always –
JC: We didn’t actually give it to each other, the gifts.

�HCM: No, we didn’t. No.
JC: Mom.
HCM: Mom and the girls, the older ones, would all purchase the gifts and it was always – one
item was always something to wear. Usually pajamas. And then a toy. But, um…
JC: One thing I remember. I’m not sure it was Christmastime, but I think it might have been.
There was, uh, somebody that would come ‘round in a truck and they would drop off, uh, large
bags of stuff.
HCM: You know, it was, I think it was –
JC: School, or –
HCM: No, I think it was probably, uh, whether it was Salvation Army or somebody would
donate the big bags.
JC: And they would go down Pennsylvania Street and I know they would stop at our house and
they’d go on down and stop somewhere else, or, I’m not sure if it was –
HCM: But most of it was clothes.
JC: I don’t remember what was inside ‘em much, but I remember seeing the bags.
HCM: Sometimes the clothes weren’t all –
HK: Wasn’t that great.
HCM: No [laughs].
HK: Well, what did you all do for entertainment?
HCM: Oh, with each other it just seemed like, oh –
JC: Played ball.
HCM: Marbles for you boys, and –
JC: Softball.
HCM: Softball. We girls [conflicting voices]
JC: We would go to the park there, by the school.

�HCM: We just had our own entertainment with each other, and well of course we had a brother,
my brother Ralph, he was what, two years younger than John? He was our entertainment. Oh.
JC: Yeah.
HCM: He was a clown. He was, I mean, he provided us this total entertainment like – say for
Halloween, well we really in younger years couldn’t afford to get costumes, so they’d line us all
up after school and we had our, that old wooden stove there, the soot and all that, you know, he’d
make us all hobos, you know. Or clowns or hobos and just get, you know, a big shirt, that’s what
we’d, you know, a pillow or whatever. But he, he took care of our costumes and, uh, he would
tell us stories or dress up, you know, and…always, always entertain us, but like I said, we got a
lot of stories of him in here.
JC: We’d play hide and seek. Baseball, out in the street, football, same thing, just all the
neighborhood kids get together and [murmurs]. And marbles, I think we played horseshoes I
don’t remember.
HCM: No, and then Dad would make a swing for us and [murmurs] for the tree that we had, we
had a tree like this and you just got the rope and a tire and…and then it seems like we all, in our
family had either a sibling that was close in age to us, you know, like we had Ralph. Together
they did things, I had sisters, two years, you know, difference in age and so we were always
together. So we all had somebody to, you know, to always share our time with and, you know.
JC: I remember when we were little too, we’d have a day where we got quite a bit of rain and the
water would be running down the street. Everybody would get little sticks and pretend they was
boats and race ‘em down to the, down to the sewer, and we’d pick ‘em up before they went
down. Then we’d go back and do it again. That was our entertainment too, part of the time.
HCM: And always helping Mom, you know, always have the little ones to help out with. And
back then, too, in our younger years we didn’t have running water either so, went and go get
water, you know, water was down a couple of houses away. There was access to, to water –
JC: It was in between two houses –
HK: City pipe? Was it city water that came through a pipe, is that…?
JC: Hmm…
HK: Or was it a regular pump?
JC: No, um…
HCM: Spigot.
JC: …no, I think, you just turned it and –

�HK: Spigot. Yeah.
JC: But it wasn’t in anybody’s yard, I don’t think. It was in between two houses, and there was
little fences there, so I couldn’t tell one house or another. It was three – you know, two houses
away from where we were. I’m not sure, but down the street [murmurs].
HK: Anybody get into trouble, with 13 kids in the family? [laughs] There must have been
something going on all the time. [laughs]
HCM: Actually…actually, you know, no, we really didn’t.
JC: No, I remember one time Izzy and Ralph had got into some kind of problem – I don’t know
if I should say anything – [laughs] – it didn’t involve the police or nothing but they had done
something ornery in the neighborhood there, caused a big smell, a big stink and all. You’ve
talked to Izzy, haven’t you?
HK: Uh, yes.
JC: Bermudez, with Rachel? If he didn’t say anything about it, then I probably won’t either
[laughs].
HCM: Oh, gosh.
...[Passage from 23:26 to 24:21 redacted]…
HCM: I don’t recall, you know, and then we had that popcorn, what was it, that was next to it,
TNT –
JC: TNT? Or no, [Bartel’s?], uh…I think it was [Bartel’s feeder?].
HCM: But I do remember we’d always go get pop – the boys were Ralph and you probably did
too – we’d get the kernels of corn that were to the side.
JC: Oh, yeah.
HCM: And, uh, and bring those, and of course we just, you know, get the kernels off, make our
own popcorn, so it was –
JC: They had big wire bins, and they would have all the corn in there. And of course, you know,
they’d rub against each other, and against the wire, and just fall to the outside –
HCM: So what fell, yeah, so what fell out, we’d, we’d bring home and that was –
JC: They weren’t gonna scoop it up. They were just gonna use the kernels on the cob, take them
off, so we got what was scraped off of them. Fell outside the bin and used that.

�HCM: And then what about, the story about Ralph, do you remember? The time we thought he
was lost?
JC: [laughs] Oh. How did that go, anyway?
HCM: When…when we were all younger, [Ralph playing?], and of course it was getting
evening, dusk, and Mom called us all to come in. And, uh, everybody came in but Ralph. We
didn’t know where he was, we thought: “Oh no, where is he?” We all went out looking for him,
couldn’t find him. So she asked one of the neighbor boys, that was, you know, always hanging
out with him, and he went looking for him, you know, Ralph. So back then I recall Mom got
really worried. We have uh, we, my dad had built an [altar?] so Mom went back and back and
went in front of the altar to pray. She was just really beside herself. So all of us just followed her,
you know, right behind her, same thing, you know, everybody’s quiet, but we knew what she
was praying for, so we did too. The next thing we know, we heard it start thundering. And, oh…
then Mom got really worried, ‘cause then we could hear the rain. So there she goes from the
[back?] room into the dining room into the kitchen to go out the door to see where Ralph was,
and here he comes running in the back door, soaking wet. What he did, there was a ladder behind
our house, and as you can see the roof isn’t that big, so he had climbed up there and he fell
asleep on top of the roof of the house, and of course the rain woke him up. [laughs.] So I said:
“Boy, I think God does hear Mom’s prayers, because here he comes, you know.” She was always
into all kinds of…
HK: What did you – what the family do for healthcare? Did you call the doctor when somebody
got sick, or did your mom have a lot of home remedies, or – ?
HCM: Well, home remedies for one thing, but yes, uh, but also the doctors, when we were real
sick the doctors would come, and uh, just to give you an idea, this is just a cartoon caricature of
what Ralph drew when one of my sisters was sick, the doctor came to the house. And of course,
you know, all of us in the back room, want to go peek and see what’s going on. This is an idea of
what…this is a sick person in the living room.
HK: All that noise and commotion.
HCM: Yes, commotion because, you know, only when you were really sick would Mom call the
doctor, and other than that they would, uh, they would try to use home remedies.
HK: Funny.
HCM: Oh, I know.
HK: Whack him over the head. [laughs]
JC: Some of the remedies, cut, slice a potato in little thin slices and get ‘em on –
HCM: Put vinegar, I think Dad would put vinegar on them? Whenever he had a fever real bad, I
do recall once being real sick and Dad used a handkerchief or some cloth. I know he came home

�from work and our fever hadn’t left us, so I know he sliced potatoes, what he dipped them in, it
had to have been strong for us to – but then he would wrap it up in this, you know, in some cloth
and –
JC: Put it around your forehead.
HCM: Put it around your forehead. ‘Course we’re lying down. And we’d fall asleep. When we
woke up, we were feeling a lot better, so whatever it was, the aroma or what, I don’t know. But
they did, you know, try. [someone clears throat] expense for doctors…
HK: Well, what was it like growing up in Lawrence, in general? Do you remember much about
the downtown area…?
JC: Only going to the movies to see Cowboy shows at the Varsity. It was mostly the theater we
went to, and, uh, that’s about the only time we went downtown. Other than having a ball game at
the South Park. Walk home and maybe stop and get some ice cream.
HCM: At the Velvet Freeze.
JC: Well, there, and there was another place closer to the park, and I –
HCM: You’re right, I think –
JC: On the west side of the street between – I think 10th Street.
HCM: I think, [ten, hundred block?] I don’t remember. I remember the, the store but I don’t
remember the name of it. But I do recall –
JC: Stopping there.
HCM: Mm-hmm.
HK: Do you remember experiencing any prejudice, you know, in the schools or downtown,
or…?
HCM: I think, for my part there was some, but not as much as the older brothers and sisters
experienced, because yes, they could tell you, I know, they were not allowed, you know, in some
of the restaurants, you know, so…
JC: ‘Course we didn’t really go to restaurants much; we couldn’t afford to. And, uh…
HCM: Or just to get a Coke or something. Carmen, my sister Carmen could probably tell you,
‘cause she did it. She used to work for, um, I don’t know what [murmurs] shop, the Eldridge gift
shop, that she recalled. And my aunt Marge worked at [Gamell’s?] and she said, you know,
[murmurs] worked there. When she wanted to go in for maybe a Coke somewhere [murmurs,
unintelligible]. And actually, my brother Carlos, and he was quite younger. Quite, he’s quite

�younger than I am. There was a swimming pool, the one right there. They didn’t allow him to go
in –
HK: Was that the Jayhawk [Plunge?] or whatever it was called?
HCM: Where the, yes, yes, that was back then, right. Uh-huh. I remember he went with friends
and, uh, he wasn’t allowed to go in there. Then when I came along, by then things were a [little
fair?], so yeah we were able to, you know [murmurs] restaurant. Or the drugstores where they’d
have soda.
HK: Where –
JC: I don’t remember that much myself, but I remember my brother, when he went to rent a
house – yeah rent a house or rent a room, can’t remember which it was. He’d just got married,
um, he was fairly light skinned, so when they, he went, they accepted him, you know and
everything, but then when he took his wife – she was quite a bit darker – they wouldn’t allow
them to rent. It was some –
HCM: Honestly, that’s happened to Andy and I too, when we got married, rent our first
apartment. They didn’t want to rent to us, either, come to think about it.
HK: What kind of – um, when did you get your first job?
JC: I got my first job at 14, working for the school district. An uncle of mine, somehow he heard
about it I guess, talking about it I went up and got hired as a janitor –
HK: Oh, okay.
JC: At 14 and, I been working ever since. I never had a break in between where I didn’t have a
job. And before that, we worked at potato – picking potatoes for a, for a couple of farmers here
in town, the [Hechts?]. And that was, uh, it was work, but it was a lot of fun too. You could be
with all your friends, ride in the truck, up in the back, while you were there. The work was kind
of, well, it was dirty. Kinda dirty and kinda hard on your fingernails, and fingers. But, I don’t
know, it was fun too. So that’s we did, I can’t remember what year we did that, but, I started
working at 14, maybe two or three years before that.
END OF TAPE 17a

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                    <text>Tape 17b: Interview with John Chavez and Helen (Chavez) Martinez
Interviewer: Helen Krische
Date of Interview: 2006
Length of Interview: 8:43
Location of Interview: St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church
Transcription Completion Date: October 27, 2020
Transcriptionist: Emily Raymond
Helen Krische (Interviewer): Um, when did you meet your – your wife, or your husband? Were
they from around here originally, or…”
John Chavez (Interviewee): Uh, my wife was from Kansas City. Argentine District. And, uh, I
guess a lot of times we’d meet people through dances or weddings, maybe baptisms, or
whatever, just get together, you get to see people you didn’t know. So the first time I saw her,
first time I met her, was at a wedding dance. Teresa and Leo Schwartz. They got married here in
the church. They had a dance in the community building and, uh, she happened to come down
with, uh, people that were involved, I’m not sure if it was sponsoring something or what they
were, but they came down from Kansas City. And she may have brought her – she was
babysitting for – they brought her down, so that’s how I met her.
Helen Chavez Martinez (Interviewee): Same experience. Mutual, through a wedding. [murmurs]
HK: Was he from Lawrence, or…?
HCM: No, from Ottawa.
HK: Ottawa.
HCM: But, uh, his sister, uh, married a neighbor of ours that [JC clears throat] a few houses from
us, the Bermudezes. And, uh, we were up close with his sister [murmurs]. They asked him to be
in the wedding, and he was in the wedding because of his sister and –
HK: Okay.
HCM: Like John says, it’s just about, that’s how we all –
[laughter]
JC: There wasn’t too many people here to choose from, or I guess you know, as I said, the same,
you know, that were your same age. So whenever you saw somebody from out of town, I guess,
it was more attraction; I don’t know what it was [laughs].
HK: Well, you have, most of the people were your relatives. [laughs]
JC: Yeah, seemed like they were, yeah.

�HK: And how do you think, uh, how do you think it’s been different for your children growing
up? Uh, you know, growing up in Lawrence. Do you think that it’s been a lot different for them,
or…?
HCM: [murmurs] More opportunities for them [murmurs]. And of course Lawrence has really
grown. Back then, Lawrence was very, just, small and there was not much, other than the
movies, for us. Now there’s activities for them, they can go see arts center, they can get involved
in different programs. Swimming, we didn’t really grow up learning to swim, because we
didn’t… The only place that I recall, uh, Mexican people, if they wanted to swim, they would go
to the river. Because I recall going with our, my oldest brothers and sisters would watch, swim at
the river. There was a sand pile. We stood up at the sand pile and watched. But, you know, it was
very dangerous.
HK: Yeah. Definitely.
JC: That was another activity we had, sand piles.
HCM: The sand piles, yeah.
JC: I can’t remember how often but it was pretty often. ‘Course everybody told us, you know,
not to be there ‘cause it was dangerous, but we didn’t think it was at that age, I guess. There was
a lot of family –
HCM: And it was very close to where we lived, just right down the road.
JC: Yeah. Yeah.
HK: There’s a lot of sand bars along that area.
JC: Yeah, mm-hmm.
HCM: So no, our – our children and grandchildren have so much more opportunities. And they,
now, you know, they pursue the school, the education.
JC: Mm-hmm.
HCM: Back then, it was, it was a little bit of a [struggle?] to go to school, if you wanted to, [JC
clears throat, obscuring HCM’s voice].
HK: How far did you go in school?
HCM: From high school –
JC: High school.
HCM: Yeah, high school.

�HK: High school.
HCM: Mm-hmm.
JC: I think the kids now are [clears throat] the Mexican –
HCM: Our younger brothers and sisters did go on to college.
JC: Yeah. Yeah, they’re more comfortable in school, with their classmates. Uh, I think maybe
they, maybe that we weren’t that comfortable in school.
HCM: That’s true.
JC: Cause there were very few Mexicans and…hadn’t been around that much, you know. Next
generation gets more used to seeing people at a younger age. And they had more time to go to
school, so it makes everything else a little easier. [murmurs] Integrated into the system, the
school system and, uh, and their friends. They have a better, easier time making friends.
HK: What do you think about all of the, um, immigrants? [JC laughs] All going on now?
JC: I think, well, so far, they – they’ve been doing [unintelligible] I think is good, they need to
control borders somehow. But, uh, they also should give people who are very poor opportunities
to support their families, so…You know, when you don’t see a person, don’t know a person, you
kind of, you know, stay away, but once you know a person, you want to help them. I think that’s
the main thing, you know. Once you see a person, get to know ‘em a little better, you want to do
something for them and they are much less fortunate than you are, money-wise.
HCM: You know, they wanted a better life for themselves, for their families, because that’s how
our parents came. You know, we know what it was. For them, they want them to have lives. By
the same token, yes, they should, you know, they should have – have a, you know, legally
become citizens.
HK: Do you remember your parents helping any of, uh, if there were new families that moved
into town?
HCM: We had [JC clears throat] remember them visiting, you know, we had several new
families that would stop and visit Mom sometimes, but, uh…
JC: I remember some person helping Dad around the house and he would pay him, but I’m not
sure if it was just ‘cause he had the ability that maybe Dad didn’t have or he was just trying to
help him somehow, but I don’t know. I’m sure they did help each other.
HK: Do you remember anything about the Depression years? If it was extra hard for your family,
or…?

�HCM: Our – Carmen and Lupe probably would tell you about that, but I – I can’t recall talking
about [murmurs].
JC: Mm-hmm.
HK: Well, can you think of anything else that you want to mention?
JC: I just know that in this, in this area, in this, uh, time, in our history that there was a person
who, I didn’t know the person but I was told that, uh…Mexican lady was working the Santa Fe
yards and [he would] gather all the children together and would teach them, uh, Catholic
religion.
HK: Huh.
JC: And, like I say, I wasn’t involved with that, but maybe this gentleman over here might have
been. [Laughs] And, uh, well, it was just something unusual for somebody to – to gather all of,
all the young kids, and, uh, have class for ‘em [unintelligible].
HK: And that person, that person was also Mexican?
JC: Yeah. Yeah. There was a lot of people who come, uh, for short periods of time, then go back
to stuff they do now, and I think that’s probably one of them. Also, some came and they – they
died here, and they never made it, you know, never went back to Mexico. They were out in the
cemetery for bottom?] markers.
HK: Oh.
JC: And, uh, whether their families ever did go back to [murmurs].
HK: Well, I thank you very much. It’s been a pleasure. And, uh, we’ll get you copies of the
consent forms. And – [tape cuts off for final 15 seconds]
END OF TAPE 17B

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                <text>John Chavez and Helen (Chavez) Martinez were interviewed by Helen Krische in 2006 as part of an oral history project to document the La Yarda and Mexican-American communities in Lawrence, Kansas. La Yarda was a neighborhood of worker housing provided by the Santa Fe Railroad for Mexican-American railroad workers; located near the Kansas (Kaw) River, the neighborhood was largely destroyed by a major flood in 1951. The interview is split into two parts. John and Helen grew up in East Lawrence; they discuss their family's migration from Mexico to Lawrence, their father's work for the railroads and his extensive gardens, and their mother's strategies for managing a large family. They share memories of holiday traditions, childhood pasttimes, and social activities. John and Helen also describe their experiences of discrimination and segregation as part of the Mexican-American community in Lawrence.</text>
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                <text>To access the video and audio recordings of this interview, go to &lt;a href="https://archive.org/details/17-jchavez-hmartinez-2006-e"&gt;https://archive.org/details/17-jchavez-hmartinez-2006-e&lt;/a&gt;.</text>
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                    <text>Tape 18: Interview with Mary Nunez
Interviewer: Helen Krische
Date of Interview: 2006
Length of Interview: 38:20
Location of Interview: St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church
Transcription Completion Date: November 6, 2020
Transcriptionist: Emily Raymond
Helen Krische (Interviewer): The, uh, Kansas State Historical Society, and there – it’ll be
available for researchers to come in and do research with it and stuff, so…and, uh…and if you
don’t, you know, if you start feeling uncomfortable and you don’t want to continue –
Mary Nunez (Interviewee): Oh, I mean, I can just, I just want to answer your questions; I really
don’t want to –
HK: Okay. See, you can print – you can print your name up there. And then down at the bottom
is information, because we’ll give you a copy of the tape that we’re making and, so I’ll contact
you when it’s ready. And this part right here just – if you have any restrictions on what we’re
doing with the tapes, or…any of the information, you can…okay?
MN: What’s this for?
HK: Oh, that was just if you had restrictions that you, if there was something that you didn’t –
and then fill in your address and stuff and your name down there, sign it. [Long silence until
1:41] And we’ll give you a copy of this before you leave today, so…And, um, I’m Helen
Krische, and this is Heather [Bollier?], my assistant here. She’s the camera operator.
MN: Are you related to Father Krische?
HK: Yes, I am. He’s a cousin. Uh-huh. Yeah. So I’ve been in St. John’s for a long time and went
to school at, uh, at St. John’s School, pretty much grew up here.
MN: Really?
HK: So, yeah.
MN: You been around here.
HK: Yep, been around here a long time, so, yeah. So I was really thrilled that he asked me to do
this. I thought it was a great thing. Great thing I can do for the community.
MN: What is it that you want to know?
HK: Okay, well, um, Sonny was here and we talked a little bit, oh yeah. Oh yeah. Some people
have been bringing in pictures, so I’ve been scanning them, and, um…so, do you know any of

�those people’s names? Like on this one, I don’t have any of the names of these guys here. And
there’s another picture with a bunch of young girls on it.
MN: [Unintelligible] Denise, Robert, Denise??
HK: I think most of them we have identified except for the little, little girls up front there.
MN: [murmurs] Ramirez…Yeah, yeah. Not all of them.
HK: So, you’re Sonny’s aunt?
MN: Sonny? No, we’re not related.
HK: Reyes?
MN: Oh, Sonny Reyes. Oh yeah, yeah. Yeah.
HK: You’re his aunt?
MN: I thought you were talking about Sonny Garcia.
HK: No. You’re Sonny’s aunt?
MN: Uh-huh. My sister’s son.
HK: Okay. And do you know a lot of information about, um…your mother?
MN: Not much, like I said. Except I know she came when she was very young.
HK: Uh-huh.
MN: Uh, my dad was, uh, coming over here before he brought her over.
HK: Uh-huh.
MN: Came over about three or four years beforehand. You know, like they’re doing now.
HK: Uh-huh.
MN: And then he liked it, so he went back and got her.
HK: Did he, what did he work? What was his job?
MN: Uh, Santa Fe.
HK: Santa Fe.

�MN: Railroad.
HK: Uh-huh. Did you live at the, uh, railroad, uh – ?
MN: Santa Fe Apartments.
HK: Apartments, uh-huh.
MN: Uh, here in Lawrence, uh-huh, and, uh, we lived in Lecompton for a while, until I was
about thirteen.
HK: How old were you when you lived in the Santa Fe apartments?
MN: Um, I was about seventeen or eighteen.
HK: Uh-huh. So you were pretty much almost an adult when you lived there.
MN: Mm-hmm. But we weren’t there very long, though.
HK: Mm-hmm. What do you remember about the time that you did live there?
MN: Um, we were just there about – about a year and my dad bought a home in, um, in South
Lawrence. And, um, not much, except we had to draw water from the pump. And, uh, we didn’t
have a telephone. We had outhouses [unintelligible] That’s about it. Went to school – oh, let’s
see, when we moved there I was only, I was finishing school. Sixth grade. That was about it.
And we moved out of there, I think I was about fifteen when we moved out of there.
HK: Mm-hmm. Did your – did your dad come directly from Mexico, then?
MN: To Lawrence?
HK: Your parents? Your parents?
MN: No. No, they came through Nebraska. My brother was born in Nebraska. [unintelligible] It
was in Dodge City, Kansas.
HK: Uh-huh.
MN: And, uh, when they came over they had one daughter, three years old. And, uh…um, that
was the only one they had when they came over and then the rest of us were born here in
Lecompton.
HK: Oh, okay. So you – you actually lived in Lecompton rather than Lawrence when you were
growing up?

�MN: Right. They moved into Lawrence when I was, uh, thirteen or fourteen. Around that age
[’42?].
HK: How was it, what was it like growing up in Lecompton?
MN: It was very nice. Quiet. Um…
HK: Did you live in the town or did you live in the –
MN: No, we lived at a, the um, east side of Lecompton. Close to railroad track they built some
homes there.
HK: Oh, okay.
MN: For us. And I didn’t like it there because we didn’t have nothing to do except, you know,
we – we, uh, were home most of the time, at home or school. We had a lot of fun though. Out in
the country.
HK: Yeah. What kind of, um, what kind of housing did they build there? Were they similar to
the Santa Fe apartments, or…were they different?
MN: Well, when we first got moved there it was just, like, shacks. One-room house, I guess you
may say, and they’d only converted some, from what I understand, cattle cars into a four-room
house. [unintelligible] They made ‘em real nice, and um, I think they finally tore ‘em down, I
think they have a home there now. [murmurs]
HK: So how were the houses arranged? Did they have different rooms, or – ?
MN: No, their walls, like the length of the car.
HK: Mm-hmm.
MN: And they were all one after the other and they had, uh, they made two of ‘em.
[unintelligible] Cattle cars. And we lived in one, on one side. It was pretty crowded. We stayed
there until I was fourteen.
HK: Did they have, like, curtains that separated the rooms, or – ?
MN: Oh, no. We had doors, we had doors. It was pretty well, pretty modern. And, uh, my dad
bought furniture and curtains and stuff like that. We had a living room, we had a kitchen, we had
two bedrooms, which we all piled into –
HK: Uh-huh.
MN: And, um, they were real nice.

�HK: What kind of – what did you use for heating there?
MN: Pot-belly stove. And I remember there was a wood-stove in the kitchen.
HK: Did you have electricity there?
MN: Nope.
HK: No electricity, what about running water?
MN: Nope. We had well water.
HK: So you just had a pump outside, which you used for water?
MN: Mm-hmm.
HK: Did you ever come into Lawrence when you were a child?
MN: Oh, yeah. We used to visit – we used to visit Lawrence all the time.
HK: Okay.
MN: Yeah. And Topeka.
HK: Mm-hmm. Did you meet your – where did you meet your husband, was he from Lawrence
or Topeka?
MN: Uh, he was from Lawrence, uh-huh, and he used to go to Lecompton and work there, with
Dad. They lived in the other side. The other addition. For a while they were just, uh, just the
young men helping dad I guess.
HK: Mm-hmm. Did your dad, um, did he do anything else besides work for the railroad? Did he
have any other kind of jobs?
MN: No. He had hobbies, he had, uh, he liked to go fishing. And he liked to garden. He, uh,
pretty much that’s all he did, and support us.
HK: What was your dad’s name?
MN: Thomas.
HK: Thomas…?
MN: Garcia.
HK: Garcia. And your mother?

�MN: Tijuana Garcia, well, she went by her maiden name. She, they didn’t use her – she didn’t
use her, her, um, married name because they don’t do that in Mexico. They pretty much keep
their maiden name, so she kept her maiden name.
HK: What was her maiden name?
MN: It was [Carrillo?].
HK: And what part of Mexico was she from?
MN: Oh, gosh. I don’t know what part of Mexico or what, but I can tell you the name of the
town.
HK: Okay.
MN: Uh, where she was from was San Juan de Los Lagos.
HK: Okay.
MN: And my dad I’m not so sure, but he lived real close by, like Eudora.
HK: Mm-hmm. Okay. Do you know what year they came from Mexico? Or approximately?
MN: Yes, around 19…[long pause] before 1920 [long pause]. Around, uh, 1919 or 1920, about
that area. They were both very young. My mother probably about, she was born in 1895. She had
to be about…about twenty-five years old.
HK: Mm-hmm. What do you remember about your mother, growing up?
MN: She was always working. Washing [laughs], cooking. She liked to work out in the garden,
she had a flowerbed. She had flowerbeds all over. And she’d help Dad harvest the garden.
HK: Uh-huh. And how many children were there?
MN: Uh, there was eleven of us altogether, but, uh, they soon, you know, began to get – leave
the house and so, uh. My oldest brothers and sisters, they left. Pretty much in the 40’s.[murmurs]
they started getting married, and then my brother went into the service. And we used to go north
to work.
HK: Hmm.
MN: Worked, um, crops.
HK: In the summertime?

�MN: Mm-hmm. For extra money.
HK: How far north did they go?
MN: Um, Minnesota. Minnesota [murmurs] that I can remember. I was still young.
HK: Was that picking strawberries, or…?
MN: Oh no, um, we’d do, uh…harvest the, like, onion crops
HK: Uh-huh.
MN: Carrots, I think, and I – I don’t know…we used to harvest corn, beets. But I didn’t, I didn’t
do the beets because I was [murmurs] Big machetes or some kind of a…
HK: Those knives.
MN: So I didn’t do that. Just went along for the ride.
HK: So the whole family –
MN: We’d get back to go to school, in time for school.
HK: Yeah. And how did your mom, um, what did she do for you kids and your clothes and stuff
like that?
MN: She used to make a lot of our clothes out of flour sacks. They were printeds, she used to
sew our dresses. She was very good at it.
HK: And did she do any kind of, uh, canning, [unintelligible]?
MN: You know, I don’t think she did. I don’t remember if she did. I don’t think we even had
time.
HK: Yeah. A lot of people have memories of, um, their parents or their mother or – or whoever
going to the corner grocery stores in the neighborhood.
MN: Well, we had, we had, in Lecompton we only had one store, one – one, um, service station
and one post office and one bank and isn’t there anymore. They don’t have a bank there
anymore.
HK: Yeah.
MN: And, um, I remember going to the store, to get the mail and…

�HK: Mm-hmm. Did you, um, did you go to high school in Lawrence, then, or…did you go to
high school?
MN: No, I didn’t go to high school. I just, uh, went to, uh…uh, elementary school in Lecompton
up to sixth grade and then we moved to Lawrence my last semester of sixth grade. And finished
it there.
HK: Okay.
MN: In Lawrence. I didn’t go to [unintelligible] school because I was petrified. I was so used to
having such a small classroom at – when we came to Lawrence there was too many kids around.
A table like this and all the kids were [unintelligible] table. It was too much for me.
HK: Yeah. Yeah, I could imagine, coming from a really small town like that. That would be
quite a shock [laughs].
MN: It was, for me anyway [laughs]. I didn’t like it.
HK: What did you do for, um, like when you were a – a small child and you got sick, um, were
there…?
MN: We had a doctor. We had a nice doctor. He took care of all of us. We were all born at home.
And he took care of all of us. It was Dr. Moss. That’s [murmurs] Dr. Moss. I don’t remember his
face or anything, but I know he was, uh, a little bit on the chubby side, but I can’t remember,
maybe not. [laughs] Hard to remember. But he was a really good doctor. He delivered all of us at
home.
HK: So there was an actual doctor at the delivery.
MN: He used to come to see us at the house.
HK: House calls. Boy, that’s a rarity today.
MN: I know. But today we have more money [murmurs] anybody wants to do that any more.
HK: Yeah. So they didn’t use midwives or anything like that?
MN: Um, my mother probably did, but…you know, I don’t remember. I remember her having
one child with my last sister. But I don’t remember who helped her. But she did have somebody
there. Besides a doctor.
HK: So you didn’t have any, like, extended family that lived close by, or…?
MN: No.
HK: Anyone like that to help her out.

�MN: We were the only ones.
HK: When you were growing – when you were going to school, did you experience any kind of
prejudice?
MN: Lecompton was very prejudiced. Very prejudiced. But we still had friends there. We had
several friends.
HK: Do you remember any of the things that happened, that…?
MN: Well…not really. But…I don’t, don’t remember doing too much outside of certain friends
that we had, you know. Uh, we didn’t have a whole lot of friends, you know, I mean, just certain
country folks I guess. But Lecompton was very prejudiced. And I don’t know about today
because I don’t…I have friends in Lecompton yet, but they’re not prejudiced. I suppose it’s a lot
of prejudice there.
HK: What about when you went to Lawrence?
MN: In Lawrence I never experienced it, anything like that. I never did.
HK: So, it was better here than in Lecompton…or a different…?
MN: I never experienced anything like that, maybe somebody else. I hear a lot of stories, but I
don’t remember experiencing anything like that.
HK: Did you, um, raise your children here in Lawrence?
MN: Yes, uh-huh.
HK: How did they go? Did they have a good time in school?
MN: Oh, yes. They got along real well [murmurs]
HK: Did you grow up speaking Spanish or – ?
MN: Yes, we did. I – I did not speak English when I went to school, and they held me back one
year.
HK: Okay.
MN: And, uh, all of us were that way. But it didn’t take very long to pick it up.
HK: Did you teach your children Spanish?
MN: Nope. [HK laughs] I didn’t.

�HK: What do you think about that? Do you think you should have?
MN: I didn’t think – I didn’t think I could speak it well enough to teach it to ‘em, because I
didn’t want ‘em to learn the slang way. And, uh…actually I should have went on ahead and
spoken it anyway. I can – I can speak it, and I can understand it real well, but I really can’t do
it…I feel like I can’t do it very well, you know. But I’m glad I – I learned it.
HK: Yeah.
MN: Yeah.
HK: It sure is helpful, I think. Because, um, from my understanding, um…that the Spanish
population is, it was really growing and there was a great demand for people who can – who can
speak Spanish, and so…yeah.
MN: I’m really sorry my kids didn’t learn it, because I feel like they were left out. And they
missed out on a lot of nice, you know, um, understanding of our music and, you know, and
converse with other people, different people that know Spanish.
HK: Mm-hmm.
MN: And, um…really I – I regret not [murmurs] teaching, you know, taking the time to teach
‘em. And I hope these kids today – well, I don’t know about today, because a lot of kids don’t
know Spanish anymore. I mean, my – my grandchildren, they don’t know Spanish. That I know
of.
HK: Mm-hmm.
MN: My children, some of my children understand…they say they understand somewhat, you
know, some words.
HK: Mm-hmm. Did you keep any, um…um, traditions alive and, uh, passing on to your
children? What your parents did – did they have any special traditions that – that you passed on
to your children?
MN: No, I think we pretty much made our own traditions. There’s only one tradition that I know
that I probably picked up. It’s, uh, on Christmas Eve my mother made tamales. Uh, that’s
something we do for Christmas. I guess some people make ‘em year-round, but that’s the only
time I make ‘em. And, uh, and have my family come over. But I really didn’t start doing that till
they were growing up. It’s been almost 30 years now that I’ve been having –
HK: Are any of your daughters doing…?
MN: No, but they want to learn. They have – they all help me. The grandchildren help me. They
all, they all want to learn.

�HK: That’s good.
MN: Whether they carry the tradition or not, I don’t know, but, uh, they want – they like them,
so they wanna learn how to make ‘em.
HK: Mm-hmm. Your daughters, um, how many daughters do you have?
MN: Two.
HK: Two.
MN: And four boys.
HK: Four boys. My goodness. That must have been a rowdy household. [laughs]
MN: But you know what? It – it probably was, but in those days we just…had the kids and you
know, whatever came along, we had to live with it.
HK: Mm-hmm. So they all went through the Lawrence school district schools? Yeah? Did they
all graduate from high school, or…?
MN: Yes.
HK: Mm-hmm. Any of them go on to college?
MN: My daughter did. She finished college. And I have one grandson that – that, uh, he
graduated from Free State and he, uh…he had, uh…valedictorian?
HK: Mm-hmm.
MN: Graduate [murmurs] and he’s still going to school. He’s continuing education.
HK: Very good. What does he plan to be?
MN: I don’t know. Uh, he’s in Chicago right now.
HK: Oh. Long ways away then.
MN: Uh-huh. He’s going to school there. He’s, uh, I don’t remember what the name of his
college is, but he wanted to go to college.
HK: Where was your husband from? Is he from –
MN: Lawrence.

�HK: From Lawrence.
MN: Mm-hmm.
HK: And did his family grow up in Lawrence, was he
MN: Mm-hmm.
HK: Did you know many of the, um, Mexican-Americans in the community?
MN: I knew, I knew ‘em all, pretty much. I – I pretty much knew all of ‘em, and still associate
with them. It’s not a very large community anymore because of…uh, the, uh, the older ones, all
[murmurs] older are pretty much gone.
HK: Yeah, it’s too bad that I couldn’t have interviewed some of the – the older ones before they
passed, because that would have been really, really a nice thing to do.
MN: I, uh, had pictures and things, but during the flood I lost quite a few.
HK: Oh. no.
MN: Pictures. The 1952 flood in Lawrence.
HK: Uh-huh. I think that’s what happened to a lot of people. There’s, um, just not many pictures
left around anymore. What do you think of the new, uh, immigrants that are coming in today?
MN: What do I think of ‘em? I think they’re, uh…I think they’re, uh…[murmurs] I’m not
against it because they’re trying to make a better life. Trying to improve their lives, and I think
that, um, they should let ‘em come over because this – this country was made of people who
came from other countries. We’re all immigrants, actually. Don’t you agree?
HK: I agree. Wholeheartedly.
MN: Now, why [unintelligible] there – Well, there is quite a few, uh, immigrants that have come
from Mexico coming over, I guess. I’m not sure whether there’s more of those than any other
kind of, uh, nationality. But I think, it’s not gonna hurt any, because we got plenty of space here
in the United States. And they – they want to work. And people here don’t, they – they don’t
want to work. [murmurs] some people don’t want to work So why not let ‘em work, why not let
em’ improve their lives and bring their children up in a better environment? And I – I just, I’m
not, I don’t know much about politics but I think the president in Mexico ought to be doing
something about this. Or somebody over there making changes in their country so they wouldn’t
be coming over here if they don’t want to, you know. I thought, you know, I think they should be
able to get a chance at living or in their country if they want to, but they’re being forced out
because they have to go and earn money somewhere, you know. And I understand that – that
President [Fox?] is here in the United States right now. So, I don’t really care for him much.

�HK: Hopefully he’ll discuss something about the issue. [laughs]
MN: Well, I hope they learn. Get better for the immigrants here because – especially the ones
that are already here.
HK: So, do you see a big difference in, uh, when you were growing up, and the way that your
grandchildren are growing up today?
MN: Oh, a vast difference. It’s so much nicer and easier for them, I mean, we had it a bit harder
than they have it, you know, I mean, that’s what we worked hard for, so they can, you know,
have a better life. I mean, not the best, but it wasn’t the worst either. [laughs]
HK: Yeah, yeah. Certainly better than when how you grew up, right?
MN: Yeah. But you know what? That’s the way we were raised, that way. I don’t remember
being [unintelligible] or anything like that. It was a harder life, you know?
HK: Mm-hmm. Definitely.
MN: I don’t – I can’t say I hated it because we had to do this or do that, or – it’s just something
we had to do, all of us, we all went through it, and not just us.
HK: Do you remember what a, um, I know that you said that your – your dad had vegetable
gardens and stuff. Um, what would be a typical meal in your house?
MN: I…I know Mom made tortillas. We didn’t buy them.
HK: Yeah [laughs]. No Dillons.
MN: Make them – we don’t make them anymore, we buy them. But, uh, the beans were good,
and we had a lot of meat that Dad used to raise, uh…pigs. And he had a – well, of course we had
milk, ‘cause we had cows, we had goats, we had chickens, you know, chickens, and, um…and
the boys learned how to cook American, the American way, so we used to do a lot of cooking
too. Make our meals on holidays. You know, the – the turkey and the baked pies and all that.
They, the boys did that.
HK: Oh, so they were quite the cooks, huh?
MN: All my sisters. One sister was an excellent cook. She learned how to cook, she used to cook
a lot for us, when she was home.
HK: Is that the one that, um, that ran the – those restaurants?
MN: Yeah, uh-huh. She used to cook for us when she, when she was home.

�HK: Mm-hmm. So what would you eat, um, what would your mom fix for, like, supper every
day?
MN: You know what, I don’t remember. I really don’t, ‘cause for one thing I didn’t, I didn’t like
to eat.
HK: Oh.
MN: I don’t know how I survived. I didn’t like to eat.
HK: Uh-huh.
MN: Uh, you know, I had, I didn’t – I don’t know what kept me alive but I must have ate
something [both laugh]. I remember she used to make vegetable soup and I wanted to just drink
the broth. I didn’t want to eat stuff that was in it.
HK: Uh-huh.
MN: Oatmeal used to make me sick. But, you know, I don’t remember even having any favorite
foods.
HK: Would you have, did they fix meat every day, or…?
MN: Oh, I’m sure we had meat every day, ‘cause, you know, we had chickens and we had pork
and I’m sure that we…I didn’t eat, so I don’t know. Really don’t remember much about that. It’s
strange, but I don’t. [laughs]
HK: What did, uh, what did you do for entertainment?
MN: Let’s see, what did we do for entertainment? During the wintertime we had this, we had
this, one of those box sleds that we – us kids used to go out and go up and down this little road
we had there by our home. And in the evening, while the moon was out, we’d be out there sleigh
riding, you know? And, uh, pretty much just play out in the yard, like, you know, whatever.
HK: Did your parents ever have any other, um, adults over for –
MN: Oh, yes. We had a lot of friends. They had friends, they’d come over on weekends, or we’d,
maybe we’d go to Lawrence or go to Topeka. Oh, yes.
HK: Did you, did you have a radio, or –
MN: We had a radio. And it had a battery, one of those big old car batteries.
HK: Mm-hmm.

�MN: We had, uh, we used to listen to the radio with that battery in the radio and, uh, sometimes
it would go, it would run down, I guess, and I remember at one time, we was watching –
listening to, uh, one of those series, and the battery went out and “Oh my gosh”. [HK laughs]
What was it, were they soap operas then?
HK: Uh-huh. You didn’t know how it ended.
MN: Yeah, there we’d go, we’d take the battery out and then the kids take it out to the, get it
charged, you know.
HK: Uh-huh. [laughs] That’s funny.
MN: Yeah. We did have a radio.
HK: Um, what did your parents do during the Depression years? Was it extra tough during those
years, or…?
MN: You know, I don’t know, but we always had food on the table. I don’t remember anything
like that, suffering or maybe starvation or anything like that, you know, we…Dad took care of us
pretty well.
HK: Mm-hmm. How did your dad get around? Did he have, um, did he just walk, or…?
MN: He used to drive, uh, guess it’s what they used to call a Ford. He used to have a car.
HK: So he had a car.
MN: We’ve always had a car.
HK: Okay. Do you know how much he made working for the railroad?
MN: Oh, I think I did see his check one time. I’m thinking, like, $3,000 a year. [murmurs] His
income tax, or whatever it was, it was supposed to be around $3,000 a year, I believe.
HK: That’s pretty good, for those days.
MN: I’m just thinking, that’s what he might have made later on in years, but, uh, when I was
little, I’m not sure they made that much. But, you know, [murmurs] today. I have no idea what it
cost then, but I’m not sure, it wasn’t very much.
HK: What did you all do, like, um, for holidays, like Christmastime and…other than make
tamales. I know you said your mother made tamales.
MN: I don’t remember very much.
HK: Anything else? Did you exchange gifts, or…?

�MN: No, we didn’t exchange gifts. We didn’t even have a Christmas tree because we didn’t have
electricity. My mother’s washing machine, she did have a washing machine. It was a gas
washing machine.
HK: Oh. How did that work?
MN: Gas.
HK: Did they, did they have to have a gas tank on it, or…?
MN: It had to be gas, ‘cause I don’t think it was battery-run. And because – because my dad
converted later to electric.
HK: Oh, okay. Hmm.
MN: But I think it was gas. Gasoline.
HK: Oh, so they’d just pour the gasoline in –
MN: I don’t, I have no idea about the [unintelligible]. I don’t, I have no idea what was done, but
she had a machine. Before she still had to do a lot of washing for us, washing.
HK: Which she probably had to carry, you didn’t have indoor plumbing.
MN: No, we had to carry water from the well, and like, it was about, like…I say, like, I say like
from here to the school.
HK: Mm-hmm. So wash day was really a big thing to have to fill the tub –
MN: Oh, yeah. We had to hang all the clothes outside, and, you know, hang them out. And I
remember in those days I used to, I guess I used to see my mother go out there and hang, and I
probably [unintelligible, jeans?]. And I used to see her out there picking up all the vegetables out
of the garden out in the hot sun, you know, and she had her hat on, and she’d be out there
working.
HK: Would she put in long, long days?
MN: Oh, yes. Uh-huh. She worked pretty hard. She did. We have it easy today. We need to take
the dishes out of the dishwasher.
HK: Yeah, isn’t that the truth. [laughs]
MN: The truth [laughs]. We’re really lazy.

�HK: Yeah, yeah. So…we don’t have – we have a lot of free time compared to – to the hours that
they put in, for work.
MN: They were, they didn’t have time to do a whole lot, because, you know, it took time to wash
and do all that. I – I really don’t see how they did it, because I don’t have time for a whole lot,
you know, to do a whole lot. But we have so many of the things we do that we didn’t then. We
have a television. That sometimes gets in the way.
HK: That wastes a lot of time, I think.
MN: Personally, I don’t watch a lot of TV myself. Um…I like to work outside in the yard and
just do different things.
HK: Well, is there anything else that you would like to add, that – that may have crossed your
memory?
MN: No. I’m surprised I said this much. [both laugh]
HK: Well, we appreciate you coming and sharing with us, and like I said, we’ll be giving you a
copy of the tape later on. I’ll call you –
MN: I probably will hate to look at it.
HK: Oh. [laughs] Well, I’m sure that your – your children and your grandchildren will appreciate
it.
MN: Oh, my gosh. I probably won’t show it to them.
HK: No? [both laugh] Oh, but you should. I’m sure that they would like to have it.
MN: They’ll probably say: “Mom, why couldn’t we just – ” [tape cuts off at 37:18]
END OF TAPE 18

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                  <text>La Yarda was a neighborhood of worker housing provided by the Santa Fe Railroad for Mexican-American railroad workers in Lawrence, Kansas; located near the Kansas (Kaw) River, the neighborhood was largely destroyed by a major flood in 1951. In 2006, Helen Krische, archivist at the Watkins Community Museum, began an oral history project to document the La Yarda and Mexican-American communities in Lawrence, Kansas. The project was resumed in 2019 by Nora Murphy and Emily Raymond. The interviews primarily feature the children of the railroad workers who migrated to Lawrence in the early 20th century; they describe daily life, social activities, and living conditions in the Mexican-American community in Lawrence from roughly the 1920s through the 1970s.</text>
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                  <text>These works are the intellectual property of the Watkins Museum of History, Lawrence, Kansas. The public may freely copy, modify, and share this Item for noncommercial purposes if they include the original source information. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s).</text>
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                <text>Mary Nunez La Yarda Interview</text>
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                <text>Mary Nunez was interviewed by Helen Krische in 2006 as part of an oral history project to document the La Yarda and Mexican-American communities in Lawrence, Kansas. La Yarda was a neighborhood of worker housing provided by the Santa Fe Railroad for Mexican-American railroad workers; located near the Kansas (Kaw) River, the neighborhood was largely destroyed by a major flood in 1951. Mary grew up in Lecompton and then moved to Lawrence with her parents when she was a teenager. Mary's family lived in housing provided by the railroad in both Lecompton and Lawrence, and describes the living conditions in those communities. She describes her family's migration from Mexico to Kansa, and her parents' strategies, such as gardening and handsewing clothing, for providing for a large family. Mary shares her memories of her school and healthcare experiences in childhood. She discusses family foodways and childhood pasttimes. She describes her experiences of cultural assimilation, especially regarding speaking Spanish and holiday traditions. Mary also describes her experiences of discrimination and segregation as part of the Mexican-American community in Lawrence, and shares her views on immigration. </text>
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                <text>Krische, Helen</text>
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                <text>Lawrence (Kan.)</text>
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                <text>To access the video and audio recordings of this interview, go to &lt;a href="https://archive.org/details/18-mnunez-2006"&gt;https://archive.org/details/18-mnunez-2006&lt;/a&gt;.</text>
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                <text>&lt;a href="https://archives.lib.ku.edu/repositories/3/resources/5295"&gt;Additional research on the La Yarda community&lt;/a&gt; is held at the Spencer Research Library at the University of Kansas.</text>
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                <text>Published with the permission of Dionne Chavez, on behalf of Mary Nunez. This work is the intellectual property of the Watkins Museum of History, Lawrence, Kansas. The public may freely copy, modify, and share this Item for noncommercial purposes if they include the original source information. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s).</text>
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                <text>La Yarda Oral History Project</text>
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                    <text>Tape 19: Interview with Frank Romero
Interviewer: Helen Krische
Date of Interview: 2006
Length of Interview: 47:20
Location of Interview: St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church
Transcription Completion Date:
Transcriptionist: Emily Raymond
Proofreader: Ellie Rumback
Helen Krische (Interviewer): And this is basically a consent form. And um, sign right there.
And I’m Helen Krische and this is Heather Bolyer.
Heather Bolyer: Hi.
HK: I don’t know if you know any of the Krisches.
Frank Romero (Interviewee): [Murmurs.] Yes, how is he doing?
HK: Well, you know I haven’t really talked to him.
FR: You haven’t?
HK: [laughs] I haven’t had a chance to –
FR: You sound like my family.
HK: Really keeping me busy.
FR: Yeah, there is twelve of us living [murmurs].
HK. Okay. Now, first thing I need you to do is write your name here. And this basically gives
the museum permission to use the tape in both the video and the audio tape. And we have to do
some other things. Right here, it says if you want, this one is if you don’t have any restrictions
on the use of the information and down here is if you do have restrictions and what those
restrictions are. You can X, put an X by either one of those. Down here is your contact
information. Sign, sign once again there and then your address. [long pause] A copy of this will
also probably go to the Kansas State Historical Society. Um, because we will eventually ask
them for a grant to transcribe the tape. And usually when we do something like that they want
you know copies of, so…that, but for the most part it will be used for research purposes either
that or else or used as exhibits for publications perhaps. There has not been anything written in
Lawrence Mexican-American when they do a publication, and you know, like during the
interview if there is any time that you want to stop and take a break or, you know you want to
stop it completely and don’t want to talk any more to me that’s fine too, if you don’t want to
answer any of my questions, that’s fine too. You know, just say I don’t want to answer that.
That is cool with me. So, all right?

�FR: All right.
HK: Okay, and we will give you a copy of the consent form too before you leave. I’ll give this
to Heather. Heather is a witness on this too. [HK laughs] All right. First of all, the questions that
I usually ask are about your parents, and where they came from in Mexico. If you know their
names and when they first came to the United States.
FR: Well my dad’s brother, my dad’s name was Gonzolo [unintelligible] and my mother was
named [unintelligible] Ramirez, and my dad’s uh, mother, and her last name was Rivas. I don’t
know that we kept…this is when they celebrated their 75th wedding anniversary.
HK: 75th?
FR: Yeah.
HK: Wow.
FR: Like I said, my dad was born in Veracruz, Mexico in 1904. He moved to the United States at
age seven. And my mother was born in Mexico City in 1908, and she came to the United States
at age fourteen. They were married April the 2nd, 1924 in Topeka. And the couple moved to
Humboldt in 1939, and they have lived in Lawrence since 1943.
HK: Wow.
FR: And these, they are the parents of Jimmy Hernandez, Frank Romero, Tony Romero, Peter
Romero, Gonzalo Jr. Romero, Becky Stevens, Rick Romero - all of Lawrence. Then they had
Tina Guerrero, Alberta Gutierrez, Teresa Martinez, and Laurie Aguilar (sp?) - all of Topeka.
Their son Joe Romero is deceased. They have 39 grandchildren, 49 great-grandchildren, and 7
great-[great?] grandchildren. And Gonzalo Romero retired in 1969 from the Santa Fe Railroad
after 46 years of service. And then my mother Melina used to homemake.
HK: Oh.
FR: Kinda tells you their story.
HK: Yeah, it sure does. How many children were there altogether?
FR: Uh, thirteen.
HK: Thirteen.
FR: And Joe, he – he died.
HK: Mm-hmm. And where are you in the birth order?
FR: I’m second.

�HK: You’re second?
FR: Yeah. Jimmy is first. I’m second.
HK: Okay.
FR: [Murmurs] And out of the, out of – out of the six sons that they had, four of them served in
the United States Service. The Army.
HK: Oh. Is that WWII?
FR: Frank, during the Korean War - that’s me. And Peter, and then Joe, and Gonzalo Jr. served
in Vietnam. That’s about, uh – and they crossed the border, and I think my dad said they paid
either 10 cents or 25 cents.
HK: To cross the border?
FR: To cross the border from Laredo.
HK: Oh, okay.
FR: Back in 1910 it was. And, uh, then they say, he told me that, uh, they lived in, kind of,
barracks there till they were assigned what to [unintelligible] – where to come to.
HK: Uh-huh.
FR: They came to, uh, Lawrence, Kansas.
HK: So he joined the Santa Fe Railroad right away?
FR: Yeah.
HK: Yeah. Did they recruit him while he still lived in Mexico, or…?
FR: I think so, or they were looking for workers and laborers and they’d cross the border.
[Murmurs] from there they would ship ‘em, ship ‘em [murmurs].
HK: Uh-huh, uh-huh.
FR: He worked for [murmurs].
HK: So did he, did he live in, uh, the Santa Fe apartments?
FR: Right, here in Lawrence.

�HK: And you all did, did you…?
FR: Well, till we grew up and went our own way, where we grew up. A good playhouse there.
[HK laughs] A good playground.
HK: You always had lots of –
FR: We had a lot of company there. All kids of all ages.
HK: Uh-huh.
FR: And, the, the good part about it – it was only about a block away from, uh, [laughs] from the
dump. And whenever we needed a toy or anything else, we’d go over there and find toys or – or
find wood to make toys with. Like I say, we had a lot of, uh, lot of children there, our age. And,
uh, we had hills, we’d make caves in the hills. We had trees, climb trees and make slings – cut,
cut, you know, slingshots there. Yeah, we had a – had a good time. And I, um, went to school.
When I first started kindergarten, I didn’t even know how to speak English. [Murmurs] I
remember very clearly, I remember asking my cousin to tell the teacher when I wanted to go to
the bathroom [both laugh]. So, that’s uh, that’s [murmurs]. We had good times. There, the, uh
Chavez boys [murmurs] the picture of section houses. Pretty similar to what it used to be.
HK: Uh-huh.
FR: I don’t know if anybody’s ever brought the pictures up here.
HK: Yeah. Huh-uh. I haven’t seen it.
FR: Well, I’ll tell you what, when I, when I leave here, I’ll think about it. It’s – it’s quite large.
HK: Oh, okay.
FR: It’s, uh, it’s, uh…that’s where we all came from.
HK: Yeah. Well, maybe we can take a picture of it with the camera. And that’ll be –
FR: Kind of [murmurs].
HK: Okay. That would be fantastic.
FR: I think this is, uh, Frankie Chavez.
HK: Oh, okay. What do you remember about the apartments? How were they –
FR: Well –
HK: Laid out, or – ?

�FR: Well, they was laid out in a row. Two rows. And, um, everybody that lived there, they had,
um, two or three rooms. So, and, uh…it was big enough, long enough to raise quite a few
families in there.
HK: Uh-huh.
FR: So, they’d put families in there, got – they had two rooms or three rooms. There was a lot of
families in there.
HK: Uh-huh.
FR: And, uh, like I said…it had outdoor toilets. And then, uh, before the dump filled everything
up there in the back, we had a lake up there.
HK: Oh.
FR: It wasn’t a very, very big lake, but it was a good-sized pond. And, uh, in the wintertime it
would freeze up, and we’d, uh, we’d go out there and play ice hockey.
HK: Uh-huh.
FR: We’d try to fish, there was some fish, [murmurs]. Awful [both laugh]. [Murmurs]
HK: Uh-huh.
FR: Like I say, in 1951 the flood come through there. I was in the service at the time. But the
city, they had filled it up twice... Third time.
HK: How did they heat, heat the apartments in the winter time?
FR: Uh, wood stoves.
HK: Wood stoves.
FR: Yeah. The, uh, the guys that worked on the railroad, they’d, uh, bring the old ties. They had
big stacks of ‘em. And at certain times of the year they’d, uh, they…they’d get, they had some
kind of uh, a saw that they hooked up to a back tire of a Model T with. And it had a big blade on
it. And, uh, they’d cut these, the ties. And, uh…to, uh, it was big enough for the, for your stoves.
We’d put ‘em on [unintelligible]. During the day, when they were leavin’ we’d chop these
blocks [murmurs] size sticks. That was our heating for a long time. I remember we had coal, we
used coal quite a bit. I remember laying in bed and laying on the sofa when my bed was
[unintelligible]. I’d wait till early in the mornings. Mother would get up and I’d lay in bed and
just kind of laid back till she’d get a fire burning, burning. [both laugh] It was something else.
HK: What did she cook on? What did your mom –

�FR: She had a wood stove. The old-time wood stoves. She was always cooking, [murmurs] every
Monday, every Monday was washing day. Well, not only her but all the people - all the women
that lived in the yards there would only wash on Monday. [Murmurs] wood stove and big tubs,
put ‘em up there and heat the water and, uh, get to washing clothes. The clothesline poles in the
back. Those clothesline poles were dangerous.
HK: Yeah. Yeah.
FR: Because [laughs] as kids we used to play hide and seek, and at night time, at night time we’d
run down through there and if somebody would forget to put one of the sticks up that hold the
wire up –
HK: Clothesline you?
FR: Choke.
HK: So, when the women did the laundry, it was all, it was like a cooperative effort, they all
came together?
FR: No, no, everybody was in front of their apartments.
HK: Oh, okay.
FR: Little, a little, in front of the [unintelligible] yard there, there was a good-sized yard, most of
them. [Murmurs] going through the yards and [scratching sounds, murmuring]. It seemed like
everybody wanted to wash on Mondays.
HK: Okay. So, did they, um, did they have one huge pot of boiling water, or did they each have
their own?
FR: No, they – everybody had their own.
HK: Oh, okay. Okay. Yeah. How did they get their water?
FR: They had a – an old pump. Crank it, and water would come out.
HK: Mm-hmm. Was that City water, or, do you know?
FR: I hope so. [both laugh]
HK: Do you know?
FR: I think so. It was pretty clear. Nobody, no one ever died from it. [HK laughs]
HK: I guess that’s a good sign.

�FR: It must’ve been city water.
HK: Did your parents raise a garden during the summertime?
FR: Oh, yeah. Everybody raised a garden. Everybody raised a garden. Alongside the railroad
tracks. [Murmurs] We always [had/hired?] some guy, come through with a horse and plow, plow
all that up, everybody had to [murmurs]? My dad [murmurs].
HK: Someone mentioned that they used to have guards around the garden so that people
wouldn’t steal.
FR: Mmmm…No.
HK: No?
FR: No, I think somebody was thinking about, uh, back there in the war years, they had a
prisoner of war camp across the railroad tracks.
HK: Uh-huh.
FR: And they had guards there. They had German prisoners there.
HK: Uh-huh.
FR: But, uh, that was something else too. [murmurs].
HK: Did you ever interact with the prisoners?
FR: No, but you could see ‘em out there playing basketball. They would go out during the day
and work.
HK: Uh-huh.
FR: [Murmurs] I never heard.
HK: So did – did the kids do anything, uh, for entertainment other than ice hockey and…and
dumpster diving? [laughs]
FR: Well, like I say, we had those hills there, and, uh, [murmurs] birds [murmurs]. We’d dig
holes in the – in the hillsides and make caves, and every once in a while we’d get a cave – cave
in on us.
HK: [laughs] Did you swim at all?
FR: Uh, the only time we’d swim was in the river.

�HK: Okay. On the sandbars?
FR: Uh…yeah, yeah.
HK: That’s pretty dangerous.
FR: Oh, tell me about it. There was about three – about four of us out there, and we started
diving off the sandbars [murmurs] to the middle of the river [murmurs]. And I dived off. And I
hit the bottom.
HK: Oh.
FR: Yeah. The sand [murmurs] the current got hold of me. I thought I was gone. One of the guys
was, seeing that I was in trouble down there, he grabbed me and pulled me out. I never went
back in.
HK: That was enough for you, huh? [laughs]
FR: That was it.
HK: Did anyone ever drown there, or…?
FR: Uh, there was a little boy. I think he was, uh, one of the Mendoza boys. [Murmurs].
HK: Got caught up in the current.
FR: Well, he – he kinda, it kind of, the river was up and [unintelligible].
HK: Uh-huh
FR: He went swimming back there in the back [murmurs].
HK: Well, what would happen if anyone became ill? Was, uh, did they go get the doctor, or did
your mom do home remedies?
FR: Uh, Dad, Mom would, uh, wake up Dad, and Dad would do up…uh…sometimes he’d go
somewhere to some house where they had a telephone. [murmurs, back there in the yards?] Any
time of night he would come. [Murmurs] Seemed like had a satchel had all kinds of pills in it
[murmurs] give you a pill and [murmurs] got well.
HK: Yeah. Was, do you know if he was, like, contracted by the railroad to be the primary
doctor?
FR: No, I don’t think so.

�HK: Or – or was it just who the people chose?
FR: Yeah, yeah. [Murmurs] He had his, uh, I think he had his office behind, on the corner
[murmurs].
HK: Did you as children get to go to town very much, or…?
FR: Uh [clears throat] we went to, uh, [murmurs]. See the [murmurs]. I don’t even remember
how much it cost. [Murmurs] I mean, today’s standard.
HK: Yeah. Yeah.
FR: But every Saturday [murmurs].
HK: Did you experience any prejudice when you went into town, or…?
FR: Oh, I kind of [murmurs] Mexican family. Place up at North, North Third street [murmurs] I
think it’s called [murmurs]. To top it off, now it’s owned by uh, a Mexican family now. [both
laugh] We stood –
HK: Kind of ironic.
FR: We went, we went in there, stood in line [murmurs] and finally got to where, you know, they
give you a chair, or a table, to sit, and then they said “No, we can’t serve you, can’t serve
Mexicans.” So, we came out [unintelligible].
HK: Sure.
FR: So it happened that the guy that owned the, uh, the manager at that time, his mother used to
work at the post office, that’s where I was working. But she never mentioned it and I never
[murmurs].
HK: Huh.
FR: [Murmurs, pretend?]
HK: Yeah. Where did you go to school at?
FR: Uh, New York.
HK: New York School. And did you, um, what was that like?
FR: Uh, I went to school till the, uh, fourth grade.
HK: Okay.

�FR: Then, uh, my dad, uh, transferred into [murmurs], they had a reduction [murmur] section. So
we had to transfer into Humboldt. We stayed in Humboldt for almost three years.
HK: Mm-hmm.
FR: And when I came back, when we came back, I was in ninth grade at that time.
HK: Did you go to the high school here, or…?
FR: Yeah, I went to...
HK: Liberty Memorial?
FR: Liberty Memorial, yeah. After [murmurs, granddaughter].
HK: Oh.
FR: She went to [murmurs] high school.
HK: Uh-huh, uh-huh, so did everything look familiar to you?
FR: It’s all, it’s all [murmurs].
HK: Uh-huh.
FR: [Murmurs] Yeah, I used to live in the yard, what they called section housing.
HK: Uh-huh.
FR: When I was going to Central, I used to, they’d give you an hour at twelve o’ clock,
[murmurs] run back and we used to run from Central back to the yard, and eat, and run back to
Central. I used to make [murmurs]. Every once in a while, I’d [murmurs]. Jump on his bike
[murmurs]. The hard time was when the weather [murmurs].
HK: Yeah. Did, um, did your mom do a lot of sewing when you were little, and making your
clothes, or…?
FR: Oh, yeah, she, uh, well, I had to uh…I had to, uh, I had a – two pair of pants and, uh, two
shirts and one I wore one day and then I’d wash, especially when I was got to where I was
admiring girls.
HK: Yeah [laughs].
FR: I had to wash – I had to wash that fast, that shirt at night. You know, and have the - have the
other one ready.

�HK: Uh-huh. Did she make, uh, dresses, the dresses for the girls in the family?
FR: Uh, I – I guess she did. I guess she did. I remember when I was going to – I started working
over at, uh, at, uh, Woolworth. I was about, uh, tenth grade. I got enough money – during the war
years, we had to have, you had to have stamps to buy, to be able to buy a bike. Anyway, I
bought, I saved enough money to get me a bike, and, uh, that’s what [murmurs], if I was going to
finish high school, that’s what I would need. [Murmurs].
HK: So, you’re pretty industrious.
FR: Well… [Helen laughs] I, uh, it seemed like I always wanted to make something of myself.
HK: Yeah.
FR: When I got out of school, I, uh, I went to work for the railroad.
HK: The Santa Fe also?
FR: Yeah, no, I went to, it was Union Pacific. And…uh, I met uh [murmurs] Bertha Bermudez?
Her dad worked on the railroad. We had, let’s see, a section going, going towards the [murmurs].
He stopped and talked to me. Her dad said: “Do you go to school?” I says: “Yeah,” I says, “I
graduated.” He said: “What are you doing here?” He said: “You go to school [murmurs] more
[something beeping in background] the more I got to thinking about what he said [murmurs].
And it so happened that, uh, they had in the – the paper about [murmurs] letter carriers for the
post office, they had a test [murmurs].
HK: Uh-huh.
FR: Well, I took the test and I passed it, but my Army service took [murmurs]. And, uh, like six
months later [murmurs]. I said yeah. [Murmurs]. Retired from the post office.
HK: Oh. How many years did you work for them?
FR: Uh, I think there’s 34 altogether when I retired [murmurs].
HK: Uh-huh. Did you enjoy it? Were you, were you one that walked and carried the mail, or did
you…?
FR: Well, I started out walking. And I had a couple, two or three different routes that I’d walk,
and then I finally got the one where, where I was at home.
HK: Uh-huh.
FR: Well, I started, uh, I served the mail [murmurs]. So from then on, I – I drove, put the mail in,
opened the box [murmurs].

�HK: Uh-huh. What section of Lawrence did you work in?
FR: North Lawrence.
HK: North Lawrence.
FR: [Murmurs]
HK: Oh, okay. Well, that’s being developed, isn’t it?
FR: Pardon?
HK: That’s being developed now.
FR: Yeah. Lot of new kids out there. [Murmurs], ball park open there.
HK: Do you still keep a garden? Do you have a garden over there?
FR: No.
HK: No? Not a gardener. [Laughs]
FR: No, it’s cheaper, it’s cheaper – it’s cheaper to buy what you need than it is to try to raise a
garden. Buy all the plants and all the fertilizer and gotta keep the bugs off of ‘em. It’s cheaper
just to buy…my wife, my wife likes to [murmurs].
HK: How did you meet your wife?
FR: Uh…she, uh, she was born in Lecompton. And then, uh, her father and mother decided they
was gonna go back to Mexico. So, she went, they - they went back. So, uh, she must [murmurs].
Anyway, and, uh, when she was about, uh, about fifteen or sixteen, her grandfather said, “Well,”
[murmurs] Her father decided that she was getting old and old enough to get married so they had
to bring her back. [HK laughs] So her grandfather went back and got her and two brothers
[murmurs] when she was, when she was eighteen, that’s when. Then when I went into the
service, she couldn’t – she couldn’t write any Spa- she couldn’t write English. And I didn’t know
enough to write Spanish. So I got me a dictionary. English to Spanish.
HK: Uh-huh.
FR: So I started picking out the words that I wanted to, wanted to – to say, and that’s the way I
learned to write [murmurs] read and write in Spanish. I can read and write it, but not, you know,
real good. Just enough to get by.
HK: Uh-huh. Uh-huh.

�FR: [Murmurs] Anyway, all the time I was in service we wrote letters. The first letter took me
about an hour, an hour and a half. And after that, [murmurs]
HK: Yeah. Does she – she apparently speaks English now.
FR: Oh, yeah. Too much. [both laugh]
HK: Too much? [laughs]
HK: What do you think of, uh, the new immigrants that are…coming here today?
FR: You know, these, a lot of ‘em are educated. It’s either the, when they, my parents and the
other [murmurs] they were all laborers. And, uh they [beeping noise] didn’t have much
education.
HK: Mm-hmm.
FR: And some of the guys that are coming over, they already got their education [murmurs]
themselves. But, uh, I don’t know, there’s a lot of... Myself, I think that the only thing that has to
be done [murmurs] the guys that are hired. I see a lot of ‘em working up there roofing and stuff
like that. Those jobs are hard. But, uh they [murmurs].
HK: Yeah.
FR: I don’t know, they…it’s hard to, hard to answer because they’re – they’re taking jobs, jobs
away from, from, uh, the kids, but our kids don’t want those kind of jobs.
HK: Yeah. Yeah.
FR: They don’t, they don’t want those kind of jobs. So [murmurs] I know my grandkids
[murmurs]. Kids they have [murmurs].
HK: Yeah. Do you remember, um, well let’s see…when were you born?
FR: In ’29.
HK: ‘29. So you were right at the start of the Depression, so do you – do you remember
anything?
FR: The only – only thing I remember is my mother hated – hates rabbits. [HK laughs] She hates
rabbits. I guess that’s, uh, Dad, and…I guess, what they ate most of the time. Rabbit.
HK: Uh-huh.
FR: Must’ve been a good rabbit season. I remember when we was in Humboldt, they would, uh,
[murmurs] my dad and this other gentleman would go out in the fields and they wouldn’t even

�take a rifle or anything… just a stick. It snowed enough that the rabbits had a hard time. Kept
jumping and running.
HK: Uh-huh. Uh-huh.
FR: And they’d just club ‘em. Put ‘em in the sack. [Murmurs] That’s why Mom would
[murmurs]. She was a – she was a good mother.
HK: Yeah.
FR: And, uh, I remember, uh, [murmurs] during the Depression. These guys, they’d call ‘em
hobos, and, guys on trains [murmurs]. They’d stop [murmurs] get something to eat, and
[murmurs]. Good thing they liked frijoles [laughs] And tortillas. But, you know, these guys
would always, they’d eat, and then they’d head to the wood pile and chop wood.
HK: Oh.
FR: Never turned anybody out [murmurs]. Always had, always had plenty to eat, seemed like.
HK: Uh-huh. What would be, um, like at your, uh…what would be a typical meal that your
mother would fix for you all?
FR: Well, uh, beans was always there.
HK: Mm-hmm.
FR: And rice. And, uh, spare ribs, pork chops [murmurs] everything together, kids started
growing up and…[murmurs]. Tamales at Christmastime. Everybody would get together and
make tamales. Just, uh, something [murmurs] tamales at Christmastime.
HK: Did you exchange gifts during Christmas?
FR: Uh, yeah. Well, you know, not too big. But I do- what I remember most of all is when we
lived at the yard, um…every Christmas, uh, the Salvation Army would come and drive down
there [murmurs]. And they would have a bag and they would have a toy. And, uh, an apple or
something [murmurs] one of the kids that lived there. I don’t remember they ever missed
anybody that was going to school. [Murmurs] I remember that. [Murmurs]. Who turned our
names in, I have no idea, but I do know that, uh, that was a welcome sight.
HK: Yeah. And did your family belong to St. John’s?
FR: Uh, yeah. They went, – they came to church here.
HK: Mm-hmm.
FR: Uh, we all [murmurs].

�HK: Did you always walk to church?
FR: Uh, you know, on, that’s another thing that, uh, Christmas [murmurs]. Go to midnight Mass.
HK: Uh-huh.
FR: Uh, from the yard, you walked, you walked to church. And it’d wind up at about, like, one
o’clock, and we were all walking back. That’s, uh…oh, you know [murmurs] where Dillons is?
HK: Mm-hmm.
FR: Well, back then it was across the railroad tracks…it was about a quarter of a mile.
HK: I heard that, uh –
FR: You wanna, you wanna take the shortcut, you just, uh, go under the railroad tracks. The –
the railroad cars. Instead of coming out on, uh, on, 8th Street, we’d come out on 9th Street.
HK: Uh-huh.
FR: Every once in a while you’d go under there, and, uh, a train [murmurs], and, uh, it’s kind of
a chance.
HK: Yeah, some of the other people talked about going underneath the cars to take the shortcut,
and…
FR: It was awful dark down there.
HK: Yeah.
FR: It was awful dark.
HK: Did anyone ever get hurt doing that?
FR: No. I was, I remember one night I was going home, like I say, there was a dump back there
and, uh, during the day, trucks would come by. And every once in a while, something would fall
off. Anyways, there was this one night I was coming back from the movies, must have been
about 11 o’clock. And, uh, [unintelligible] I got as far as the Poehler building. And over there,
there was something on the – there was, it was just waving like this. [murmurs] “My God, what
do I do now?” ‘Cause I had to go by.
HK: Uh-huh.
FR: I got my courage up and I went up there, and what it was – was a piece of big paper had fell
off of the truck and wrapped itself around one of the switches.

�HK: Oh. [laughs]
FR: And that’s – the wind, it had it going like this. [HK laughs].
HK: Thought you were seeing ghosts or something.
FR: Oh, I tell you. Talk about ghosts. One night, uh, I was coming back down that same street,
[ten?] people used to [murmurs] beer joint at that time. I got to the, the alley between, I think it
was on Pennsylvania, the corner of 8th and Pennsylvania.
HK: Uh-huh.
FR: I was, uh, when I got to the alley I turned there, and, uh…I was coming home and a woman
come out of that alley with a big old black dog. So, I kinda slowed down, and, uh…I hollered to
her, I said: “[Murmurs].” To the corner and she must have been, oh I’d say, from here to the
wall, and, uh, like I say, I was slowing down. This woman turned the corner, went, uh, south on
Pennsylvania. And all the dogs on – on the end of that block started howling. And, uh, when I
got to the corner I looked up to see if she was there, but she was gone.
HK: Hmm. I’ll be darned.
FR: But the dogs on the other end of the block, they were cryin’ I suppose. I don’t know what it
was, but I still had about a half mile to go. And I was, it’s funny to think about. Funny things
happened to me out there.
HK: Yeah, yeah. So, were there very many people living, still living in the Santa Fe apartments
when they, when uh, the ‘51 flood destroyed them, or…?
FR: Uh, my dad and mother was there. And, uh, I’m not sure if the grocery store was still there.
Like I say, I was in the service at that time.
HK: Uh-huh.
FR: [Murmurs] Anyway, after the ‘51 flood [murmurs, rebuilding?] everybody went up, come
up, come up town and [murmurs].
HK: So your parents moved to, uh, where did they move?
FR: They moved over there to, uh, 920 New Jersey Street. They moved up [there?]. Mom loved
[murmurs].
HK: When your dad was working for the railroad, did he have any kind of, um, supplemental
jobs that he did?
FR: Um…no, well, after he retired he kind of mowed yards [murmurs].

�HK: Mm-hmm.
FR: Sometimes I would [murmurs, having kids?]. And having gardens.
HK: Yeah. Did he ever sell his produce to other people, or…?
FR: Uh…
HK: It was just for the family?
FR: Yeah, yeah.
HK: You have any, um, memories of your dad, um, you know like, did he talk about his railroad
work, or…?
FR: Uh, no, he – he, uh, he kind of drove a truck over there for a while. And, uh, we had a,
[murmurs]. He loved to fish, loved to fish. It was [murmurs] go over there, it was always behind
[murmurs] started biting in about 20 minutes [murmurs]. Used to go over there and they stay
there four or five hours. But, uh, he constantly fished. Uh, [murmurs], catfish probably weighed
sixty pounds.
HK: Wow.
FR: I don’t know how he got it on there. He’d put it up on [murmurs, top to bottom?] pushing
[murmurs]. Yeah. I remember, I remember, he never showed, I would say, showed too – too
much affection. Uh, the only time he showed me affection was, uh, sick or something [murmurs].
[To himself?]
HK: Well, he did really good for providing for his big family.
FR: He did, he did. He did.
HK: Especially in difficult times.
FR: He must have did a good job. [laughs] ‘Cause all the boys he had, and all the girls he had,
they never got in trouble.
HK: How many did you say there were altogether?
FR: Thirteen.
HK: Thirteen. How many boys and how many girls?
FR: Uh, I think it’s, uh, seven boys and uh, six boys and seven girls.

�HK: Seven girls.
FR: Yeah, yeah. All of ‘em done well, so [murmurs].
HK: Yeah. Definitely.
FR: [Murmurs, both laugh] But, uh, other than that [murmurs].
HK: Well –
FR: And, uh, if we did something wrong, Mother would say: “Just wait till your dad gets home
and I tell him.” [HK laughs] And, you know, sometimes she would and sometimes she wouldn’t,
and sometimes when she did, we’d already forgotten about it. [Both laugh] And we still got it.
HK: Do you remember your parents helping any other people that, um, like other railroad
workers that were just getting started?
FR: Well, the only time that, uh, that I remember them helping was uh, when these, uh, like I
said, it was, uh, workers from Mexico would come, and they went [murmurs] it was on a kind of
contract. Then, uh, they’d get there about November. They’d wear just, like, shirts or something.
[Murmurs] Guys that lived there would get old coats [murmurs].
HK: Did they stay at your house at all?
FR: No, they had their own room. Uh, like I said, there were these things, these, uh, yards, they
had sometimes, they rented rooms [murmurs].
HK: Oh, okay.
FR: That’s where they lived.
HK: Okay. Did they fix their own food and all that?
FR: Yeah, yeah. A lot of good men [murmurs].
HK: Well, I guess with the outline of the yard is still there, I mean, the concrete slabs –
FR: The concrete slabs are still there.
HK: Yeah. I need to go down and take pictures of it, so…kind of see where, how the layout is.
FR: Like I say, that picture [murmurs, Charlie?] Like I say, they were, very, very close to –
HK: Well, if you bring it, we’ll take a picture –
FR: Okay.

�HK: So that way we can…
FR: Are you gonna be here this afternoon?
HK: Yes, I’m gonna be here. Are you gonna come back for the get-together thing at 1:30?
Around 1:30 they’re supposed to have a bunch of the people that I’ve already interviewed, are
gonna come back and just kind of sit around and talk, so…
FR: Around 1:30?
HK: Uh-huh.
FR: Uh, I’ll come back at 1:30.
HK: Okay. Well, pretty close. [Laughs]
FR: I’ll bring, I’ll bring – I’ll bring it up.
HK: Okay. That sounds good.
FR: Everybody I know [murmurs].
HK: Okay. Alrighty.
FR: Like I say, we’re pretty close. [Murmurs] Chavezes, like John [tape cuts off at 47:06]
END OF TAPE 19

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                  <text>La Yarda Oral History Project</text>
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                  <text>La Yarda (Lawrence, Kan.)</text>
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                  <text>Mexican Americans -- Housing -- Kansas -- Lawrence</text>
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                  <text>Mexican Americans -- History -- Kansas -- Lawrence</text>
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                  <text>La Yarda was a neighborhood of worker housing provided by the Santa Fe Railroad for Mexican-American railroad workers in Lawrence, Kansas; located near the Kansas (Kaw) River, the neighborhood was largely destroyed by a major flood in 1951. In 2006, Helen Krische, archivist at the Watkins Community Museum, began an oral history project to document the La Yarda and Mexican-American communities in Lawrence, Kansas. The project was resumed in 2019 by Nora Murphy and Emily Raymond. The interviews primarily feature the children of the railroad workers who migrated to Lawrence in the early 20th century; they describe daily life, social activities, and living conditions in the Mexican-American community in Lawrence from roughly the 1920s through the 1970s.</text>
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                  <text>2006</text>
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                <text>Frank Romero La Yarda Interview</text>
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                <text>Romero, Frank</text>
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                <text>Frank Romero was interviewed by Helen Krische in 2006 as part of an oral history project to document the La Yarda and Mexican-American communities in Lawrence, Kansas. La Yarda was a neighborhood of worker housing provided by the Santa Fe Railroad for Mexican-American railroad workers; located near the Kansas (Kaw) River, the neighborhood was largely destroyed by a major flood in 1951. Frank lived with his parents and siblings in Lawrence's La Yarda neighborhood. Frank describes his family's migration from Mexico to Lawrence, and the living conditions in La Yarda. He describes childhood pasttimes, and experiences with school and healthcare. He discusses his family's affiliation with the St. John's Church congregation. He talks about how he met his wife, and the role the Spanish language had in their courtship. Frank also describes his work as a mail carrier in North Lawrence. </text>
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                <text>Krische, Helen</text>
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                <text>Raymond, Emily</text>
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                <text>Rumback, Ellie</text>
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                <text>Lawrence (Kan.)</text>
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                <text>1920s - 1970s</text>
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                <text>2006</text>
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                <text>Watkins Community Museum (Lawrence, Kan.)</text>
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                <text>To access the video and audio recordings of this interview, go to &lt;a href="https://archive.org/details/19-fromero-2006"&gt;https://archive.org/details/19-fromero-2006&lt;/a&gt;.</text>
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                <text>&lt;a href="https://archives.lib.ku.edu/repositories/3/resources/5295"&gt;Additional research on the La Yarda community&lt;/a&gt; is held at the Spencer Research Library at the University of Kansas.</text>
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                <text>Published with the permission of Amy Chavez, on behalf of Frank Romero. This work is the intellectual property of the Watkins Museum of History, Lawrence, Kansas. The public may freely copy, modify, and share this Item for noncommercial purposes if they include the original source information. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s).</text>
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                <text>La Yarda Oral History Project</text>
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                    <text>Tape 20a: Interview with Valentin Romero
Interviewer: Helen Krische
Date of Interview: 2006
Length of Interview: 31:45
Location of Interview: St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church
Transcription Completion Date: November 20, 2020
Transcriptionist: Emily Raymond
Helen Krische (Interviewer): Okay.
Valentin Romero (Interviewee): You probably have a number of questions.
HK: Yeah, well, um –
VR: Pre – Pre-made? Alright.
HK [laughs]: I do, but first we’ve got some paperwork to take care of. And, um, I’m gonna
introduce myself first on the tape, and – and I’m Helen Krische, the interviewer. And, um, this is
Val Romero. And, um, he’s going to do an interview with us today. And first of all, I’m going to
have – uh, this is our consent form. This, um, basically tells what we are doing; we’re doing the,
um, the oral history for, uh, Mexican-Americans here in Lawrence. And the tapes are going to be
held at the Watkins Community Museum, and also possibly go to the Kansas State Historical
Society. Um, and it’s basically asking for you to grant, um, both of these entities all the rights for
recordings, including the intellectual property rights. And, um, this may be, uh…all or parts of
the interviews might be, uh, either in written form; they may be transcribed. Um, we have our
audiotape, videotape, and they may eventually be put on compact discs. Um, they might be put
on the website, um, all of these things, and this is asking for your permission to do this. And I
also want to state that if at any time you want to discontinue the interview, um…if you don’t
want to answer a question that I ask, that’s perfectly fine. Um, if you want to stop briefly for a
rest break, that’s fine, too. So, just let me know, you know, how you’re feeling, what you want to
do, and we can accommodate you.
VR: Well, I – I think my information is about as public as it can be [HK laughs]. I may, uh, say
something that, uh, may not be quite right, but…um, as far as accuracy, just…from my
experience [murmurs].
HK: Sure, sure. And if you could sign that for me, please?
VR: Where would you want the signature?
HK: First of all, I need your name up here: “I the undersigned.”
VR: Alright. [Pause] I’ll give you my real name.
HK [laughs]: Oh, okay. [Pause] What is your real name?

�VR: Valentin.
HK: Oh, okay.
[Pause]
VR: Okay, that’s – that’s the way I spell it there. It’s – it’s just a good Russian name.
HK [laughs]: Okay, down at the bottom, there are two little things, it says, um: “I make the
foregoing gift and grants of right with no restrictions.” And then the next one says that there are
some restrictions, so whichever one of those you want to…um, just put an “X” by it if you want
to, or…
VR: Far as I know, the first one is applicable.
HK: Okay. And then below that, um, we have – there you can print your name and the date. And
then your other information, um, we’re gonna make copies of these tapes so that we can, uh,
contact you and give you a copy, um, as soon as possible. And then today we’ll also give you a
copy of the consent form that you’re signing.
VR: And you want my date on here?
HK: Yeah, what – what is today’s date?
VR: 22nd.
HK: 22nd.
[Pause]
VR: My fingers are stiff nowadays. [HK laughs] Alright. You want the rest of it filled out?
HK: Yeah, the address and your phone number. So that way we can contact you when we have
the tapes ready to give to you.
[Long pause]
VR: I don’t write as fast as I used to.
HK: That’s fine, just take your time.
[Long pause]
VR: I see in today’s paper they have, uh…uh, where they want ‘em to learn how to write again.
HK: Yeah. [Laughs] With some people, you can’t really read their writing anymore, so…

�VR: That’s very true.
HK: Yeah. Alright –
VR: That’s the way I was to begin with [laughs].
HK: Alrighty. So, um, Val, what part of Mexico did your family originally come from?
VR: My, uh, dad came from Leon, Mexico, state of Guanajuato (sic). And my mother also from,
um, the state of Guanajuato (sic). A little town, oh, I’d say, maybe fifteen miles away. [Via?] Del
Plato. Uh…Leon at that time was, uh…a village that the last time I visited, and that’s been over
twenty years ago. It was over 400,000 people.
HK: Yeah.
VR: And, um [clears throat], anyway, uh…my dad, at the young age of – I would say seventeen,
eighteen – when the revolution was there of 1910, uh, was one of the compelling reasons that he
might want to come to the United States. ‘Cause everything was chaos around that part of the
country.
HK: Mm-hmm.
VR: [Clears throat]: Um…they had, at that time, what they call a [unintelligible?] mass which is
kind of a gathering or fiesta-type thing, and they’d invite the young people to come into the city
square and they had music and what have you. Now this is being told, uh, this is repeating.
HK: Uh-huh.
VR: This is – I think that I – and from there they would keep the young men who were eligible
for conscription into the forces. Uh, now, I don’t know whether it was for the federal forces or
the revolutionary forces. This, I never understood. However, [clears throat], my dad supposedly
was, uh, caught in one of those. And, uh, he was in the military of some sort, for a while. And,
uh, the day that they found out that the railroad went north, which was quite a ways to go, they
says, uh, we’ll just drop our arms and go on. And, uh, he came into the United States by way of
El Paso. Uh, permanent residents under the railroad. Uh…at that time, there was not just one
railroad, but, uh, different people on the railroad were connecting. Uh…the rail systems. To
make a rail system. So, uh, my sister Gladys was born in Wichita. She’s – my brother Raymond
is the older, he was born here in Lawrence. And I was born here in Lawrence. So there’s a time
there that, uh, they went from one railroad company into another company until they got to,
uh…uh connect it with Santa Fe. And one of his first stations Santa Fe was Lecompton, Kansas.
And from Lecompton, Kansas, this would be about 1910. Up when ex-president Teddy
Roosevelt came to Lawrence to dedicate the water fountain. My dad got to shake hands with, uh,
Teddy Roosevelt. And, uh, maybe I’m saying this wrong, but he – he said, “Hey, there’s no other
president [unintelligible] that’s the one I met, Teddy Roosevelt.” Uh, this was one of his things
that he kept until age 92 [clears throat]. Uh, coming in…the, uh, railroad would, uh, bring the

�people in and they would drop them at, uh, different, uh, sections. Uh, well, they’d come through
Emporia, they’d come through, uh…actually, I don’t remember the next town there. Then Osage
City, um, Carbondale, Pauline, Topeka, Kansas. Topeka, Kansas, they’d come to Spencer. From
Spencer they’d come to Lecompton. Uh, Lecompton to Lawrence. So my dad chose Lawrence
for the last stop during his stop.
HK: Mm-hmm.
VR: Uh, however, he spent time in Lecompton, working on that particular section. Uh…and, um,
of course they came without any transportation. So, uh, when the railroads would have, uh,
derailment or some need for one section to help another section, to help another section, uh, they
would bring ‘em together. In this way the men, the workers, laborers, would interact to find out
where they came from, what year they may have came – came in, how old are you, how many
chicos do you have, how many niños? Family. Uh…and that’s the way they started to get, uh,
acquainted with one another.
HK: Mm-hmm.
VR: And the Santa Fe at that time, after you worked so long, you were eligible for a pass, which
would let you board the train and you could go to Kansas City, Chicago, or wherever you wanted
to, long as the Santa Fe was running there. Uh…that’s the way my dad knew a few people in
Topeka and – and he never did stay much in Kansas City, because he – he said that was just not,
uh…it just wasn’t his kind of town.
HK: Mm-hmm. So he worked for the Santa Fe railroad?
VR: Yes, he worked for the Santa Fe over 30 years. Mm-hmm. And, uh [laughs] then they had
the lay off just before Social Security, so he didn’t get in on – on that.
HK: Oh.
VR: But he later found a job, of course, and he did get Social Security. But, uh, during those, uh,
earlier years, they had a union or – or an organization and they had medical hospital in Topeka,
uh, for the workers, that is. ‘Cause, uh, I was born at what would be, at the, before the 9th Street.
That’s where the original Santa Fe bunkhouses that were made out of ties, railroad ties, in
Lawrence
HK: Oh.
VR: And, um, that was the housing for the workers. And then, however in ‘27, when I was born,
they made the new houses across the tracks, east, but you had to get in by way of 8th Street to get
to the real nice cement floors, brick, good windows, good doors, good roofs, just a real good
place to be.
HK: This was in Lawrence?

�VR: Yes, this was Lawrence. This was all Lawrence, east Lawrence. Uh, the yards, the Santa Fe
yards were larger than what they are today. And Poehler Company was a wholesaler company
that brought in wholesale groceries for the – for the area. And then they, redistributed it again,
what I understand. I never worked there or [worked?] for there, Mr…let’s see, Mr. Henshaw?
That sound right? Kerchaw. Mr. Kerchaw ran the business at that time. Everybody knew one
another, or knew of one another. So, uh, I went to New York School for, uh, all of us, you might
say, all of us went to school except for a couple of ‘em that went to Pinckney. And then some of
the older boys went to the old Quincey High School, or maybe I’m wrong, high school. No, uh –
Quincey School, uh, where the US Armory used to be on 11th Street. They’re pretty near right
across from, uh, Capitol Federal today.
HK: Oh.
VR: Uh…the Central Junior High, and – and the old high building which was the high school.
And, um, [Manuel?], the other school, there’s one on each corner. Uh, where the schools I went
to for junior high. And then from there, uh, graduated or came to Lawrence High School at 1400
block Massachusetts.
HK: Mm-hmm.
VR: And my brother was the first Mexican boy to graduate from – from the high school. I guess
I was the second one [laughs]. Uh…it was Mr. [Weir?] was my, uh, principal. And, um, I got
drafted, uh, let’s see, I got out of school in – for graduation and then June the 4th, 1945, I entered
the armed forces. Which happened to be Army for me.
HK: Uh-huh.
VR: And I went to the European theater, everybody says: “Why do you call it the European
theater?” [“Hey,” addressing someone who entered the room.] That’s just what it was –
Unknown Person: Excuse me, I’m gonna bring some stuff in, just in case y’all get thirsty, okay?
HK: Okay.
Unknown Person: Some ice…
VR: And then, after serving just a short two years in the Army, I came home at, um, I worked for
Skelly Oil Company.
HK: Mm-hmm.
VR: And a Chrysler Plymouth Agency. And I worked there maybe 20 years, and then after that I
went into the post office. Um, but in the meantime I’d taken a couple of years at the University
of Kansas. And I don’t know if it’s fair to say this or not, but I had a lady counselor that when I
went up to the University of Kansas: “You don’t belong here!” That isn’t what I was there for. I

�– I said: “Young lady, I’m here to learn. I – why do you tell me – tell me that I don’t belong
here?” And, um, I just let it go at that.
HK: Uh-huh.
VR: But she still continued the counseling, but it wasn’t any – any counseling that I would give
to someone else. Uh…I never looked into the lady’s background or anything, but I’d see her
running around campus and she had the hair braided around her head like that. And nobody
spoke to her, so I suppose she was somewhat of a “I’m over here and you guys are over here”…
HK: Yeah. She wasn’t very encouraging.
VR: Not – not very encouraging, no. And, uh…those are the only few jobs I ever had with, uh,
working for Chrysler. And working for Skelly Oil Company.
HK: You did get married?
VR: Oh, yes, yes, I – we would go to, uh, dances like, uh, Ottawa, Chanute. Uh, Kansas City
occasionally, Topeka, and – and, uh, we – some of ‘em were weddings, you know, where
couples married and you know one another and we actually, the old folks knew just about
everybody around. And, uh, they’d say, come get together. Yes, I married in 1957.
HK: Okay.
VR: Mm-hmm. Um, my wife, Elizabeth, is from Osawatomie, Kansas. I met her in Chanute at,
uh, what they call the Sixteenth of September Celebration, ‘cause, uh, Chanute had a big
Mexican population working in the Santa Fe shops. And, the people from Oklahoma,
Independence, Fredonia, Howard, Kansas, uh, Coffeyville, Newton, Wichita, El Dorado, they
would all come in and take over the town for two days.
HK: Oh.
VR: It was quite a celebration, quite a get-together.
HK: Uh-huh.
VR: That’s where I met her. [HK laughs] And, uh, the funny part about it was, the next time I
met her was at Ottawa, and, uh, I was sitting right next to her and I really didn’t pay much
attention to her. And, uh, I went out and danced and when I came back to sit down on the chair –
when I sat down on the chair, the chair collapsed.
HK: Uh-oh.
VR: And I said, that’s when I really saw her. [HK laughs] And from there on, we became friends
and later – then got married…and everybody says: “Hey, somebody just wanted you to see who
was next to you.” [HK laughs] But the chair did break. [HK laughs]. Yeah…

�HK: How many children do you have?
VR: Four.
HK: Four.
VR: Two boys and two girls.
HK: Mm-hmm.
VR: Yes, and all the children went to high school. The oldest girl, she finished college. Of course
you plan for the first one, and you don’t really plan for the – the full commitment –
HK: Yeah.
VR: Of the rest, because, uh, well, to hear the prices of college now as to the prices of college
then, um, I even kind of wonder how I got my first daughter through college.
HK: Mm-hmm.
VR: Um, I wasn’t making that much, and although I was very fortunate, I averaged about $305
dollars a month, and, uh, that – that was a pretty good salary at that time.
HK: Mm-hmm. Could you describe – did you live in La Yarda?
VR: Yes.
HK: Could you describe a little bit about, um, what it was like living there and what it looked
like, and…?
VR: Oh, okay, uh…the yard, if you take this container here, it was kind of an E-shape without
the center. And then this other side was, say, facing the center. We had a community pump on
the south side. And [clears throat] the toilets were on the opposite side. Uh, two sets, one for
each side.
HK: Those were like outhouses?
VR: Yes, outhouses.
HK: Like the – mm-hmm.
VR: There were – there was an apartment here on this corner, apartment here, apartment here,
and an apartment at this corner. And the – the ladies would plant flowers in front of their houses
to equal the outer shape of the – of the “L,” you might say.

�HK: Mm-hmm.
VR: And, uh, then where the pump house – now this is City water – not City water, it was Santa
Fe well water, which was made for the old steam engines to refill.
HK: Mm-hmm.
VR: I don’t think the City was connected to that, but we had piped water –
HK: Mm-hmm.
VR: Not, uh, lever pump. Uh [clears throat] from there, uh…there was a big walnut tree. I would
say that that walnut tree was half as big as this table.
HK: Wow.
VR: And under that tree on the hot summer days, lunch was under that tree. Picnic style, you
might say.
HK: Mm-hmm.
VR: And, uh, ‘course each family brought enough for their, each family. That was one of the
things there. And back here, towards, behind the outhouses, we made, a – leveled off some
ground and we’d play, uh, something like tennis, only we had paddles instead of tennis rackets.
And we’d build our own playhouse, uh…out of logs and what have you, kind of a little stage
there, but it was on the ground.
HK: Mm-hmm.
VR: And we would, uh, uh…dramatize, uh…we had the – uh, an older boy that was a little bit
hard of hearing. But he had ideas. He says: “Let’s do this and let’s do that,” and we’d, uh, we
were actors. [HK laughs] We were actors. And I don’t remember exact scenes or – they were
strictly what little we knew there, and, uh, one of the scenes was: “Ahhh! I am a great hunter, I
shall go out and hunt a rabbit.” And that was the end of it. [HK laughs] And the next scene was,
uh…what was it…oh: “I am a musician. I have a guitar but I don’t know how to play it.”
[Laughs] Well – I mean, this is – is really true, what we were doing, we…uh, and then we’d say:
“Well, up at school, we sit down and we write and we read and Mrs. Wood and Miss Overly,
they tell us, they’ll read a story to us.” So one of the girls would – we didn’t have books, like you
might say, and she put her hands up like this and kind of read a – a makeup story, you know.
HK: Mm-hmm.
VR: I – I forget what the subjects were, but really, for not having material readings, we, uh, we
were still competent at reading. And, uh, this particular family, the Romeros, were transferred to
Humboldt, Kansas, which is south, pretty near to Chanute. So, us – my brother and mom and
another family – decided to go visit them. Uh, one Sunday afternoon – one Sunday, whole day,

�we left early and came back late. The thing was, we said: “Okay, what’s the name of your
town?” “Oh…is it Hamburger?” [Both laugh]. So we…we said: “Well, write it out for us.” And
– and, uh, that – that was one of the descriptions of the town Humboldt, Kansas. I remember that
real well, and I said: “Hamburger? That doesn’t quite…” Well, however. Uh…then that
particular family was moved back to Lawrence. Uh [clears throat], and my – now, if I go back to
Lecompton, and my dad, like I said, worked on the railroad. But in the cold weather, they would,
uh, uh, not give ‘em vacation, but they’d, uh, there was just time that they really couldn’t work.
HK: Mm-hmm.
VR: So he worked for a pipe company that was building a pipeline through one side of
Lecompton.
HK: Mm-hmm.
VR: I don’t know whether it was gas or gasoline or what it was, but they…they said my dad was
a smaller man, [murmurs] very muscular, very short person, very agile. He could have been a
good gymnasium – you know, a gymnast. And they’d send him down at the bottom of the pipe,
the pipe was to align it, cause they’d say: “Hey, Johnny! John, John! Go down there and check
that pipe.” And I – I kept thinking back, I said: “You know, Dad, you used to take a lot of
chances going down in those ditches, ‘cause they could cave in or something.” He says: “Yeah,”
he says, “You know, I didn’t think anything about it; it just was a day’s work.” I said: “But, Dad,
how come, uh…you did that?” And he said: “Well, I had to work. We had to earn money,” he
says, “the farmer down the road wanted to sell me some land for two dollars an acre, and I was
trying to make money.” But we never did buy that land, so…two dollars an acre is – compared to
what it is today, that’s quite a…well, anyway. Then I look back and our Sunflower Ordinance
work came out, some of the young ladies that were left here applied to work out there, and they
were on that powder line, the mixing, that were highly explosive just like any [murmurs]. I said:
“Did you guys work there?” I said, and they said: “Yes, even your sister was there.” I said: “How
long was my sister working there?” She worked two weeks and that was all. [HK laughs]. She
said the, uh, the explosion rate was too high.
HK: Yeah.
VR: Uh, for the flash, and I should – not explosion, but flash –
HK: Mm-hmm.
VR: That place. But, uh…far as Lawrence, we would come to the concerts at South Park. We
would go to the University, they had a summer school, uh, dances up there. We’d attend those.
‘Course we’d go to the museum, and we’d see Comanche Indians [HK laughs, tape cuts off].
END OF TAPE 20A

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                    <text>Tape 20b: Interview with Valentin Romero
Interviewer: Helen Krische
Date of Interview: 2006
Length of Interview: 32:56
Location of Interview: St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church
Transcription Completion Date: November 20, 2020
Transcriptionist: Emily Raymond
Valentin Romero (Interviewee): Our other trip was to go the University and we’d have a picnic
up there, at [unintelligible].
Helen Krische (Interviewer): Uh-huh.
VR: But this was on a streetcar, not a – not a bus or –
HK: Was Woodland Parks still in operation at that time?
VR: Uh, Woodland Park was there; it was operated by [Game?] Price.
HK: Mm-hmm.
VR: Uh, related to – let’s see, his sister – his wife was part – one of [unintelligible] family. And,
um, Woodland Park, the way I remember it, they had a baseball diamond, they had a horse track,
and that’s all I can remember. And it was, if you go down 11th Street and could have gone
straight through the woods, uh, that’s where it was.
HK: Okay. So it was – was it right next to the cemetery, is that right?
VR: Uh, before you get to St. John’s or Mount Calvary Cemetery. Uh, it was towards the
railroad tracks. Mm-hmm.
HK: Now, the – the houses in the La Yarda, were they constructed of brick?
VR: Yes. The ones that were constructed on the east side of the railroad, uh, by way of entrance
of 8th Street, they were very, they were cement slabs, brick house, double brick. And, uh, like I
said, good windows and good doors, air-tight. And a chimney, they had, for your wood stove, of
course, at that time. Uh, wood stove was for making food and, uh, for heat in the wintertime.
HK: How did those compare with, like, Union Pacific houses?
VR: Now, Union Pacific housing at that time, what little I remember, were boxcars.
HK: Okay.
VR: They were modified boxcars. Very, very neat, but of course an 80-foot boxcar is quite a bit
of space.

�HK: Mm-hmm.
VR: Like today home trailers.
HK: Okay.
VR: They’re about 80 foot.
HK: Yeah. Did they have the boxcars, like, divided up into rooms, or…? How did –
VR: Uh, most generally one family per boxcar.
HK: Uh-huh.
VR: Uh, yes, they, uh, if they didn’t have walls, uh, they strung a curtain or – or…whatever it
was for privacy.
HK: Mm-hmm.
VR: And, uh, now those people had a – a pump. They had a hand pump. Uh, they didn’t have…
well, Union Pacific had their own water systems for their steam engines. But, uh, they didn’t
have it for all the different sections.
HK: So the water that you got that was piped in, was that sanitary water, that you know of?
VR: Yes, it, uh, ‘cause it was the same water that the Santa Fe depot used for their own use
within the depot.
HK: Mm-hmm. What – what did you all do for healthcare? Like if you had to see the doctor,
or…?
VR: Well, uh, under healthcare…the quickest doctor I can think of is Dr. Orchard (sic). He was a
family practitioner, and he brought a lot of the babies into the world.
HK: Mm-hmm. Did – did he make house calls there, at, uh…?
VR: Oh, yes, they made house calls. And I was gonna say Dr. Cabell? But that isn’t the right
name. Um…he was, uh, right down the street from 9th Street and Kentucky. Upstairs [clears
throat], uh, he was another – another doctor. And then the surgeon, Dr. Zimmerman, uh, well,
they were the three basic – there was other doctors, and Dr. Jones, but they were the three basic
doctors that, uh, our people went to.
HK: Mm-hmm. And did– did the Santa Fe Railroad help to pay for your healthcare, or was
there…?

�VR: Uh, the healthcare that the Santa Fe had was for, uh, the worker only.
HK: Oh, okay.
VR: I don’t recall that it was for family. See, like I said, my dad came out of the railroad system
just when Social Security kicked in. And at that time, they may have had other provisions within
their, uh, medical health.
HK: Okay. And dental care, was there any dental care at that time?
VR: Uh, yes, Dr. McFarland [spelling?]. Dr. McFarland was a good doctor, but he – he was an
older dentist, and all I can remember is this one person said: “I have a bad tooth, and I have a bad
tooth, I’ll go to see Dr. McFarland.” Dr. McFarland said: “Alright, climb up here. And we’ll take
that tooth out.” And he said: “That poor doctor did as much as he could, and couldn’t come out,
and he says: “I’m gonna have to get on top of you to – to get – get that tooth out.” And he said,
he practically climbed on him to remove the tooth, but other than that, that’s just one of the
stories.
HK: Yeah. [Both laugh]
VR: But, uh, I don’t recall us as a family having tooth problems. I mean, we may have had ‘em,
we may have had ‘em, or…because I didn’t start seeing the dentist until I went to school and
they would examine your teeth and kind of give you a little checkup.
HK: Now, did you – did you grow up speaking Spanish, or were you –
VR: Yeah.
HK: Bilingual, or…?
VR: Uh, I was…my sister and my brother had gone to school earlier.
HK: Mm-hmm.
VR: So they – they were already ahead of me. But being I stayed home, I spoke to my mom and
dad in Spanish.
HK: Uh-huh.
VR: And, uh, my – I say that my mom and dad knew good Spanish. I don’t know if you
understand…like people have street Spanish out here, or street English, and over here they have,
uh, uh, broken English.
HK: Uh-huh.

�VR: My – my mom and dad spoke good Spanish. What I call good Spanish. Uh…in fact, the
whole community spoke the better Spanish, in my opinion.
HK: Did you teach your children any Spanish? Did they grow up speaking any Spanish?
VR: What was that, now?
HK: Did your children grow up speaking Spanish?
VR: Yes, up till the – the time my grandfather – their grandfather died.
HK: Mm-hmm.
VR: Mm-hmm. Now, my last two children, Grandfather was already gone, so, uh…sure, they
know enchilada, comadres, uh, things like that, and Carlos O’Kelly, and…[HK laughs] uh, but,
uh, they can understand a lot of it.
HK: Uh-huh.
VR: But their words are stumbling sometimes. And we do use Spanish, and if we come up to a
word, they’ll throw English in there, and keep on going.
HK: Sure, sure.
VR: Now, on my wife’s side, out of their little town of Osawatomie, they had to learn English
because, uh, there were just so few of them, even if it was a – a roundhouse, uh…community,
there wasn’t that many Spanish-speaking people. They were mostly Italian.
HK: Oh.
VR: Mm-hmm. And, uh, she, the mother, her mother knew good English, I mean, very well, in
English. Her mother and – and my – Liz’s uncle – he lived in Stanley, which was…oh, I don’t
know how far, maybe 40 miles away from there. And, uh, they were just one family. One family,
so they – they just fell in to the community.
HK: Mm-hmm. Did you have any other extended family living with you? I know that you had
your dad and mom were there of course, but did you have any aunts and uncles that – ?
VR: No. No, I did not. However, this lady, Matiana from Eudora, uh, I’d hear all the children:
“We’re gonna go to Grandmother’s house, or Grandmother’s coming over!” And I asked my
mom, I said: “Mama, I don’t have a grandmother.” She said: “No, you don’t, you – you have
yours in Mexico.” So this lady Matiana said: “I’ll be your grandmother.” And…well, what do
you think, I mean, sure! So, now I was in grade school when this happened. So I would get on
the train, Santa Fe train, the workman’s, uh, the work train. And I’d ride the caboose to Eudora.
And, uh, then – this would be on a Friday, maybe, or a Saturday, I’d go – and then I’d spend the
night with them at Eudora, at her house. And, well, hey, I did chores, I did what little I did,

�‘cause – and then I’d come back in the big train from Kansas City to Lawrence, and it would stop
at Eudora and pick you up and bring you in. Yes, that was quite a deal. I did that until the lady
passed away, and I guess I would have been, uh, I was still in junior high. And I was one of the
pallbearers. And they lived away from the main road and…and, uh, when she passed away, it
rained so much that they couldn’t get through that road.
HK: Oh.
VR: So we carried the casket, well, maybe today you might say a quarter of a mile.
HK: Wow.
VR: And, uh, we just walked it all the way through. And, you know, we never did rest. We just
walked it and I was one of the carriers.
HK: Mm-hmm.
VR: One of the pallbearers. But that lady, I – I don’t know if she ever had a husband or not, but,
uh, she had a son by the name of John. And, uh, they were just good people. Good people to me,
uh…well, she – she says: “What would you like to eat?” or, you know…just like a, you might
say, a grandmother spoils a kid.
HK: Sure.
VR: And I think that, like she said, uh…uh, in Spanish: “Tu eres la luz de la casa,” in other
words, saying: “You are the light of home, the…You bring light into our home.”
HK: How sweet.
VR: Uh-huh. And I…kind of remember that.
HK: Did you, uh, were you aware of any prejudice in Lawrence growing up, or, um…?
VR: Well, I really didn’t know what prejudice was.
HK: Uh-huh.
VR: Uh, I ate at the restaurants, at Mr. Reed’s. I, uh…I went to the show. Let’s see, what else did
I do…I went to the barbershop. Well, I did just about everything.
HK: Mm-hmm.
VR: ‘Course, uh…you might say I was kind of a loner there for a while, ‘cause all the other boys
were already working and they were, uh, doing what they’re doing.
HK: Mm-hmm.

�VR: And, uh, they had brothers and sisters: “Oh, I’m gonna go with my brother or I’m gonna go
with my sister. Or the three of us are gonna go,” And see, I was – I was the only one left in our
family and I kind of had to go, well, kind of alone.
HK: Mm-hmm.
VR: Yes. Uh…no, but, uh, the only thing that bothered me – well, not – not bothered me – but I
saw here at St. John’s that, um, they wanted us, when we came to Mass, to sit on the back pews.
HK: Mm.
VR: But I didn’t take that as, uh, as being discriminating. I mean, I didn’t feel it at that time.
HK: Mm-hmm.
VR: Maybe it – it was, maybe – maybe…but we did occupy the last, um, pews. Mm-hmm.
HK: Did your family join St. John’s when they first came here to Lawrence?
VR: Yes, yes.
HK: Yeah, so…that is a long –
VR: In fact, in 1927 when I was born, Dad said: “Hey, they built a church for you.” [HK laughs]
See, if you look at our cornerstone, it says 1927.
HK: Uh-huh.
VR: Yeah, yeah. Marie Ice, and Ice [murmurs] under, we were baptized under Father Fitzgerald.
I can’t think of his first name. Yeah…uh, yes I would attend the summer relish – uh, religion
school with the nuns from Leavenworth. No, I – I don’t feel, ‘cause the boys I ran around in high
school, we would go to the Meadow Acres in Topeka to see the big bands. And, uh…then the
university occasionally would get a big band and we’d go to that.
HK: Mm-hmm.
VR: Although I never did go to the, uh, the high school prom, I – I guess I just didn’t go.
[laughs]. But as far as going in the – we’d get over to the Dynamite, which was over past 23rd
Street. And then Mr. Wiedeman’s, he would serve us ice cream though he had other stuff he
could sell, but, uh…we usually got a dish of ice cream. Then, the Velvet Freeze, we’d sit down
in there and we’d be served. I don’t recall any – I mean, to me, now, now this is just me. Maybe
somebody else had a different experience. But, no… But I noticed that Ottawa and Topeka and
some of those towns were really bad about that. I don’t know what the reason was, but, uh…I
suppose they had ugly moments or something.

�HK: Yeah. So how do you think, um, the lives of Mexican-Americans today differ? I mean, do
you think it’s a lot better for them now? Um, what advantages do you see that they have?
VR: Well, uh, when we lived down there at the section houses, everybody was the same. Nobody
had money.
HK: Mm-hmm.
VR: I mean, you could come down Massachusetts Street and you’d know all the – all the shop
owners, and they were a little better off, of course. [Clears throat] But far as the children that
went to school at New York School, uh…uh, we were all on the same level. ‘Cause I remember
one kid by the name of Charles, he says: “What is money?” You know? “Uh, I don’t know any
math.” But hey, I – I had a quarter my mom…on Saturdays would give me a quarter and I’d
come to the [Pathe?] Theatre. And I’d buy popcorn, and then after that I had enough to buy a
hamburger at Mr. Reed’s hamburger stand. And when I spent my quarter, that was the end of the
day. [HK laughs]
HK: Well, can you think of anything else that…?
VR: Well, at our house we never had a lock.
HK: Oh.
VR: We – we never locked our door.
HK: Uh-huh.
VR: If, uh…my dad had some tools, like a saw or hammer, couple of hammers, a – a big
sledgehammer, uh…different-sized saws, and things that people’d say: “John, I need a – I need a
heavy hammer!” “Well you know where it’s at, it’s over in the tool house there at home!” And
they’d have wedges for splitting wood, you know.
HK: Mm-hmm, mm-hmm.
VR: Uh…well…and then, of course, when my brother learned how to drive, we bought us a
Model A Ford truck and we did a little hauling, you know, people, they – they, sometimes they’d
move and they’d say: “Can you haul this over to the other house?” We did things like that. And
then in the ‘40s, ‘39s and ‘40s, before the ‘51 flood, uh…in the summertime the whole town, not
– not only us – would go out and pick potatoes with, uh…hauled out potatoes on the other side of
the river.
HK: Oh.
VR: I – I worked for Mr. Nicholson, a – a gentleman, an older gentleman that had a greenhouse
on East 11th. And I’d help him plant tomatoes, I’d help him cut asparagus, uh…in the fall, we,

�uh, picked turnips. Uh, what else did we do…well, anyways, he didn’t have no – he had
livestock, but we didn’t move bales or anything like that.
HK: Mm-hmm.
VR: That came later on. I…I learned quite a bit from him. He, uh, him and Annie, uh, ran this,
well, 80-acre farm. Well, that’s what, uh…people used to be able to live off of an 80-acre farm
that they’d raise corn, they’d raise, uh…oh, what else would they raise…? And then he had him
an apple orchard there, to one side, by an apple orchard, I think he had eighteen trees and, uh, he
did a lot of spraying work and a lot of taking care of the orchard.
HK: Mm-hmm.
VR: And then there was a vinegar cider plant on, uh, the 800 block of, uh, Pennsylvania. And
when the, uh, apple season was on, and – and I didn’t go out to Mr. Nicholson, I’d bring me a
bag, take it to school, and then on the way back I’d stop at Mr. Krum’s, uh, vinegar place. I’d
say: “Mr. Krum, do you have any good apples?” He said: “Well, you know all the apples I use
for vinegar, why don’t you go back there and fill up your own sack?” Well, a little sack was a
little bit bigger than a little sack. [HK laughs] And he said: “Oh, do you have a dime?” I said:
“Sure, I have a dime,” that’s about what I…he’d charge me. And every once in a while I
wouldn’t have my dime, he says: “Go back there, go back there.” [HK laughs] He was real good
to – to me, anyhow. I – I don’t know…
HK: Did you, um, where – do you remember the – the POW camp being over on that side? How
– how far was it from, um, the…La Yarda there?
VR: Uh, just across the tracks.
HK: Okay.
VR: Across the main line and two spur tracks. The two spur tracks I’m talking about are where
we had the bulk stations of gasoline, bulk stations. Uh…they would bring in carloads of…uh,
train carloads of gasoline and it’d be siphoned out of the tank car into storage cars. There was,
uh, Skelly Oil Company, City Service, [RV?], and then two other companies that had a – a line
up there. And then immediately to the east was, uh, POW camp, mm-hmm.
HK: Was there – ?
VR: But, uh, they didn’t give us any trouble, they…they, a couple of ‘em spoke English.
HK: Mm-hmm.
VR: Let’s see, what was the only phrase I knew at that time? This was pre-, pre-Army time. [HK
laughs]. Uh… ‘Course, I’d hear the other older people downtown said: “Wie sprechen Sie
Deutsch?” and uh, uh…well, I said [unintelligible] and…Well, that, you know. And, uh, yeah,

�they had their compound, wired compound there. Far as trouble, they were no trouble, they –
they were farmed out to people with farms.
HK: Mm-hmm.
VR: You know…
HK: So when the ‘51 flood came, did that destroy the compound there, or…?
VR: The water was above the chimney.
HK: Oh, gosh.
VR: Of the place, there. And, uh [clears throat] Joe Ramirez and myself, we went down there
when the water was coming across the 8th Street road. And we told the folks: “The water is
coming, and they say it’s gonna be above your houses. Move.” And, um, well, us young kids,
you might say, we were – we would still be…we would still be about, uh, under eighteen, trying
to tell older folks what to do, or –
HK: Mm-hmm.
VR: Or what we recommended that somebody else told us to do. Yes, they moved, but they left
their – some of their furniture stuff, uh, propped up –
HK: Mm-hmm.
VR: Uh, and then of course you – when you come back, everything’s in disarray.
HK: Mm-hmm. So did the – did the people move out at that time from the compound?
VR: Yes, they all moved into town. A few of them stayed in town afterwards. Uh…it, they
reclaimed it, just as good as it was before…
HK: Mm-hmm. Well, I think we’re about to run out of tape.
VR: Oh, my goodness. Time, huh? Yeah, that’s the one thing you don’t want to run out of.
HK: That’s right, that’s right. Well, I thank you very much for coming and telling – telling us
about your experiences.
VR: Well, uh…there’s probably a lot of other things to say, but, uh…you’ll – you’ll get it from
the rest of the people.
HK: Uh-huh, uh-huh. Fantastic.
VR: But, uh, sometimes, if you get two or three – at least two of them together –

�HK: Mm-hmm.
VR: They’ll, uh, they’ll bring up ideas, families. See, now, like I said, I was just Mom and Dad
and my sister there for a while.
HK: Mm-hmm.
VR: My brother was in the Navy for four years. In fact, he enlisted, uh, one day before the 1941,
when the…December the 7th. He enlisted in the – when they made the announcement over the
radio, he took off to Kansas City and they sent him up to Great Lakes and then from there they
turned around and sent him to San Diego.
HK: Yeah.
VR: Uh, I just went to Leavenworth a couple of times [HK laughs]. Then they – then they sent
me to Camp Hood, Texas, for, uh…I took my training.
HK: Mm-hmm.
VR: But, uh, my brother and I, uh…noticed that some of the boys that had been in the army, like
Mr.…um, well anyways, he was sheriff here at one time. Uh, Saunders. Uh…Sanders, Sanders.
He was already in the Army in Hawaii and he would write – I think his folks moved, were
renting and they had to move from one house to another. And, uh…they miscommunicated, and,
uh, that’s when my brother and I, and my sisters said: “We’re gonna buy a house so Dad and
Mom will have an address that we can write to while we were in the service.”
HK: Oh, that’s…okay. Well, um…I think what I’m gonna do is, let me get you a copy of this.
[Long pause] This consent form. [Tape cuts off at 28:54]
END OF TAPE 20B

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                  <text>La Yarda was a neighborhood of worker housing provided by the Santa Fe Railroad for Mexican-American railroad workers in Lawrence, Kansas; located near the Kansas (Kaw) River, the neighborhood was largely destroyed by a major flood in 1951. In 2006, Helen Krische, archivist at the Watkins Community Museum, began an oral history project to document the La Yarda and Mexican-American communities in Lawrence, Kansas. The project was resumed in 2019 by Nora Murphy and Emily Raymond. The interviews primarily feature the children of the railroad workers who migrated to Lawrence in the early 20th century; they describe daily life, social activities, and living conditions in the Mexican-American community in Lawrence from roughly the 1920s through the 1970s.</text>
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                  <text>2021</text>
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                  <text>These works are the intellectual property of the Watkins Museum of History, Lawrence, Kansas. The public may freely copy, modify, and share this Item for noncommercial purposes if they include the original source information. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s).</text>
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                <text>Valentin Romero La Yarda Interview</text>
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                <text>Valentin Romero was interviewed by Helen Krische in 2006 as part of an oral history project to document the La Yarda and Mexican-American communities in Lawrence, Kansas. La Yarda was a neighborhood of worker housing provided by the Santa Fe Railroad for Mexican-American railroad workers; located near the Kansas (Kaw) River, the neighborhood was largely destroyed by a major flood in 1951. Valentin lived with his parents and siblings in Lawrence's La Yarda neighborhood, and then in East Lawrence. Valentin describes his family's migration from Mexico to Lawrence, his father's work for the railroad, and his school experiences. Valentin discusses his work history, and describes how he met his wife. He describes the living conditions in the La Yarda neighborhood, childhood pasttimes, and social activities of the Mexican-American community in Lawrence and other Kansas towns. Valentin discusses experiences of discrimination and segregation encountered by Mexican-American community members. Valentin also describes the impact of the 1951 flood on the La Yarda neighborhood.</text>
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                <text>Krische, Helen</text>
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                <text>Raymond, Emily</text>
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                <text>Lawrence (Kan.)</text>
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                <text>1920s - 1970s</text>
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                <text>20-VRomero-2006.mp4 (video)</text>
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                <text>Watkins Community Museum (Lawrence, Kan.)</text>
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                <text>To access the video and audio recordings of this interview, go to &lt;a href="https://archive.org/details/20-vromero-2006"&gt;https://archive.org/details/20-vromero-2006&lt;/a&gt;.</text>
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                <text>&lt;a href="https://archives.lib.ku.edu/repositories/3/resources/5295"&gt;Additional research on the La Yarda community&lt;/a&gt; is held at the Spencer Research Library at the University of Kansas.</text>
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                <text>Published with the permission of Elizabeth Romero, on behalf of Valentin Romero. This work is the intellectual property of the Watkins Museum of History, Lawrence, Kansas. The public may freely copy, modify, and share this Item for noncommercial purposes if they include the original source information. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s).</text>
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                <text>La Yarda Oral History Project</text>
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                    <text>Tape 21a: Interview with Ramon (Raymond) Romero
Interviewer: Helen Krische
Date of Interview: 2006
Length of Interview: 48:08
Location of Interview: St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church
Transcription Completion Date: December 13, 2020
Transcriptionist: Emily Raymond
Interviewee’s daughter Lupe states on March 1, 2021: “He let people call him Raymond and other
Mexican Americans who knew him called him by his real name Ramon. So his full name is Ramon
Enrique Romero Sr.”

NOTE: Garbled sounds and static until about 16:00. Some words intelligible from 16:00-20:00.
Tape clears up slightly after 20:00 but does not become mostly intelligible until about 21:50. I
began transcribing what words I could manage to decipher at 15:48. I have left blanks (___)
where the speech is distorted or otherwise unintelligible.
Raymond Romero (Interviewee): We’d get chicken and strawberries, corn…I remember, about
twice…Next.
Helen Krische (Interviewer): Next? Just run down the question list, huh? Um, so you spoke
Spanish.
RR: Well, yes. Oh, you want to know about that?
HK: Oh, yeah.
RR: Back in 1945 when I started kindergarten, the worst __ that I ever got was Susan __, the
assistant __ superintendent here. __ E. Birch was the __ , and he’d go over to schools __, show
us what penmanship was. Write your name __. Well, __ he must have gotten out of the wrong
side of the bed that day __ there was about four or five of us. __ I was the closest one ___.
Grabbed me. “__ you little devil!” What can I do __? I was scared. What you gonna do? __ little
kid. That was about the worst treatment I’ve gotten. __ I’ll let it go at that.
HK: So you just learned English?
RR: __ Starting in the kindergarten, first grade I knew a little more. Second grade, a couple __
finally graduated.
HK: Did you graduate from, um, Lawrence?
RR: From Liberty __ Most of – most of these kids, uh __. What was the other __? Some of those
– some of those kids __ got to, uh, third grade. One or two families moved out of here. They
moved to __. Might as well stay here during the Depression.
HK: Yeah.

�RR: Then, let’s see. The only ones who – me and Marty were the only ones that were left __ who
came through junior high. I don’t know what happened __ in junior high. I couldn’t quit because
I wanted to get moving. I kept on going, got out of Liberty. But as far as I know, I was the first
Mexican that graduated. What tickled me, you know, there was a library, had a picture of
different people there. Who are these people? I seen their picture there __. “Who’s that guy?”
Said: “We want to know.” “Well, you’re talking to him.” [Laughter] __ she put it down or what
she done. That was the last time __.
HK: ___.
RR: __ question, where did you get those pictures? I said: “Well at that time if I remember __
they were charging us 25 cents a picture. And that was in ‘41. ‘40 or ‘41. Times were hard, and,
then, see, the war didn’t start until December the 7th, 1941. Then everything started going up __
Roosevelt, yeah, Roosevelt __ everybody, not just the __. Now, what’s next?
HK: Yeah. Well, when did you – where did you meet your wife?
RR: My wife –
HK: Was she from around here?
RR: Oh, you shouldn’t have asked me [HK laughs]. I was getting off – I was getting off the train
after my first discharge. Ah…my old girlfriend, she had, uh, moved to California. I didn’t know
it ‘til I got home that, uh, she had moved to California. __ Oh, well, God be with you. This, when
I got off the train there in the Union Pacific __, I got down and had my little seat back. And there
she was with her mother and, uh, her brother, they were getting on the train. __ I winked at her
and she, well…that’s how the relationship started. Every time I’d get a chance to see her, __ they
moved, they lived at, uh, little town by the name of Williamstown. You know where that’s at?
HK: Billtown?
RR: Billtown.
HK: Yeah.
RR: Well, how come you call it Billtown?
HK: I just had heard it called Billtown. There’s a Billtown, Billtown Café there, yeah.
RR: Yeah, on the highway now.
HK: Uh-huh.
RR: Sharon’s Café.

�HK: Uh-huh.
RR: Before that, there was, uh, I remember there was a store, a post office…and the
superintendent of schools for Jefferson County lived there in Billtown.
HK: Mm-hmm.
RR: And the – the foreman of the railroad, he lived there. And, let’s see, who else? There was
only one black family that I can remember there. Wait a minute, I take it back; there was another
__ the older black folks there, and the other one was the Lewises. Maybe you might have heard
of them. The old man Lewis, the one that had, he had, uh, __ big old horse thing __ and he’d
give it some milk: “Come on, honey! Come on, honey!” [laughs] __ Come on! Drinking milk.
HK: I’ll be darned.
RR: So there you are.
HK: So, she was from Billtown?
RR: Yeah __ that time. Now I guess all the kids that can save a little money they bought a ticket
and got out of there which I don’t blame ‘em. Used to go to the grocery store, they go to the
grocery store. __ I’ve got a daughter who used to teach there, in fact, she was a librarian, well,
she is a librarian, she told me, uh, yesterday? Yesterday was Sunday.
HK: Yeah.
RR: She said they were gonna move all the books out of the library there and build and move to
Perry.
HK: Really.
RR: She’s a – a librarian down in Perry. Yeah. By the way, my wife is a graduate of that little
dinky school. __ I think she said there was four kids in her grade.
HK: Four? [Laughs] That is small.
RR: And there were just three families that lived there, Mexican families that lived there. The
Chavez, the Jiminez…no, I guess there was just two. [Eudora?], I think he was in Topeka. I don’t
know why he got there to work, or when he worked.
HK: So the Chavez family moved from Billtown to Lawrence?
RR: Oh, do you know them?
HK: Mm-hmm. I think I went to school with, uh, I think Victoria was in my grade.

�RR: Which Victoria?
HK: Victoria Chavez. Vicky.
RR: When I went to __ it was just Trini, Lupe…Trini, Lupe… When I got back, we had to line
‘em up. [HK laughs, murmuring] children. Chavez and the Jimenez. Jimenez was, uh, __ Luis __
Chavez. Salvador. He was there, but he – he moved, I think he was by himself. [Murmuring]
Well, what’s next?
HK: Well, I want to know a little bit about what kind of jobs did you work at?
RR: When?
HK: I – well, you probably worked a lot of jobs when you were young, growing up, I can
imagine.
RR: I worked for [tree?], I worked for Alfred Heck, and Charlie Shockey…then joined the Navy
and forgot about the world.
HK: Mm-hmm.
RR: I visited the world. And then when I got back, getting off the train I was offered a job.
HK: Really?
RR: See, I had worked in the summertime, I had worked there, um…during the flood __ John
Kennedy. He said: “Hey,” he said, “you want a job? I could use you in the morning.”
I said: “Listen, I’m just getting here.”
He said: “I’m gonna put you down.”
So I worked one day and I asked the clerk there, I said: “Hey, John Kennedy put me
down.”
He said: “Oh, yes,” he said, “you’re the sailor.”
I said “Yeah.”
He said: “Yeah, he told me about you.” [murmurs] I went to work for him…and I quit in
19…80. July of 1980.
HK: So that – that was Kennedy Glass? Or…?
RR: Kennedy Glass Children. The older are John Kennedy’s children.
HK: Okay.
RR: There was a bunch of…well, one just died here not too long ago. I think it’s [Name] but I’m
not sure. It was John, let’s see, that was John. That was by old John Kennedy’s first wife and by
his second wife, he had Max, Bernard, [murmurs].

�HK: Uh… [long pause] Never even heard of…
RR: Well anyways, he had four or five boys. Two wives. He retired, can’t even remember when
he retired. [Long pause] In between __ various moments __. Until I got transferred, I got
transferred to Topeka once, I worked there for seven years and I worked on the east, uh, side of
Lawrence. Oh, about five years. All the way, all the time, I was given credit for 36 years.
[Murmurs]
HK: What kind of work was it?
RR: General. Anything, really. Anything they [begins laughing]
HK: Anything they wanted you to do, huh? [HK laughs]
RR: Yeah.
HK: Well, what were some of your experiences when you were growing up in Lawrence? Did
you, um, were there – was there a lot of prejudice in Lawrence?
RR: Oh, yes. I’ll never forget the – the other, the other Mexican kids, say: “You going into the
__?”
Said: “Oh, I might, I might not.”
Said: “You know what? They made us go up there on top and – and sit with the black
ones.”
I said: “They did? Well,” [laughs] “I’m not going to no __.” I used to go to the [Pattee?]
theater. Maybe you heard about that.
HK: Mm-hmm.
RR: It was just an alleyway and, uh, I’ll never forget, on Saturdays they’d have a matinee there.
All of the kids would come in and __ your tickets will be, uh, five bottles. And, uh, I needed to
get Cokes now and then, I finally, uh, somebody had discarded an old whiskey bottle. I threw
that in the collection. [Murmurs, laughs] That were rough times.
HK: Yeah.
RR: But the whiskey was here. [HK laughs] Yeah. Yeah…
HK: What – what about the restaurants and, um, other places in town? Did they discriminate
against Mexican men?
RR: Oh, yeah, and the ones that discriminated were mostly the ones in North Lawrence.
HK: Hm.

�RR: There was, uh, kind of a drive-in, in there. And we went in the old jalopy, and we sat there
and we sat there and we sat there and we sat there. Finally I went to the kitchen window, said:
“Hey, you gonna wait on us?”
“Hell no. Get out of here.”
And we got out of there before they beat us up. We – we didn’t have no ball bats, or else
we’d have probably had a little showdown.
HK: Yeah [laughs].
RR: And [murmurs] the varsity __ Mexicans __.
HK: Mm.
RR: What? The film?
Interview Assistant: I’m checking the tape.
HK: Checking the tape. What did, um, what are your earliest memories of your mother?
RR: My earliest memories?
HK: Mm-hmm.
RR: Well, hard-working. Tried to keep us clean with what…uh, she had to work with.
HK: Mm-hmm.
RR: Cause at that time I think they were just paying…two dollars a day, five cents a week on the
railroad. And that’s what we had to subsist on. Eat and everything. Of course I remember, she
went to the, uh, store and she’d buy a pound of bacon, a loaf of bread…uh, wieners or lunch
meat. You can’t do that now.
HK: No.
RR: If you get any lunch meat, well, that will be over a dollar. Wieners, that’s gonna be, I see
where Checkers got ‘em for 89 cents. And then, uh, bacon, that’s going out of sight.
HK: Mm-hmm.
RR: I think it costs close to three dollars for bacon. You couldn’t do that in those days. Get two
dollars and 80 cen – 85 cents, 89 cents for a week’s work and __. You had to live high on the
hog __ on his feet.
HK: Mm-hmm.
RR: Yeah.

�HK: Did she have a lot of, um, special recipes that she would cook?
RR: Soup
HK: Chicken soup? [Laughs]
RR: Yeah, you know, folks raised, oh, about 15, 20 chickens.
HK: Mm-hmm.
RR: Then when the hens had the chicks, we’d…raise ‘em up and butcher ‘em. That’s what we
had to eat. And now and then, uh, there was a stockyard there that, uh, they’d…gave us, gave my
dad a pig for 50 cents. And that’s why he raised pigs, on table scraps, weeds, water and
everything. Get good size and then butcher ‘em. It was good old hard days.
HK: Yeah. What about a garden?
RR: Oh, yeah, they put out a garden. One thing he always, my dad always __ corn.
HK: Hmm.
RR: And then tomatoes, tomatoes… specially what do you call them, string beans, string beans –
HK: Mm-hmm.
RR: String beans, tomatoes, hot peppers. He’d give somebody a __ or two down the road, he’d
plant. I know he’d keep the seeds __, that’s how he got __. And they’d pickle, pickled the
peppers __. They’d have to cut ‘em open [laughs]. __ I’ll never forget, my mother’s, uh, the
peppers, she’d slice ‘em up, then take a __ out of them. They’d pick ‘em, take a piece out at a
time. __ Tortillas. They made their own tortillas. They made their own corn tortillas and flour
tortillas. You don’t see the young ones doing anything like that.
HK: No…I’ll bet those peppers – those peppers were probably – the seeds were originally
brought up from Mexico, huh?
RR: I’ll bet they were. ‘Course [murmurs].
HK: Just kept the seeds every year and replanted them.
RR: Yeah. Only thing was, is I remember my dad – he’d plant peppers right here, right, this year,
next year he’d plant a little ways from there. The same thing with tomatoes…corn, same thing.
There’s something in there that he couldn’t explain, it would, uh [murmurs], farming, you know,
they get their seeds from the seedhouse. That’s it.
HK: Mm-hmm.

�RR: Wheat, the same way. Corn, the same way. Uh, soy beans, same way. Uh, what else? Milo
the same way. Here we are, the greatest nation in the world.
HK: Yeah.
RR: By knowing what to do –
HK: How did things change when the Depression came? Did that, um…did you eat a lot less,
then?
RR: When the Depression came?
HK: Mm-hmm.
RR: Back in, uh, 1927, ‘28, ‘29, there was less food and less work, and a lot of things less. And,
uh, people made [murmurs], did, the, uh, lamb’s quarters [an annual plant, also known as white
goosefoot], think you ought to know what they are. Lamb’s quarters?
HK: The plants, or the –
RR: The – the plants.
HK: Yeah.
RR: Well, they’d take the leaves and cook them greens, and, uh…those old folks would spice
‘em up, would make a nice little dish. And I remember some black folks that had, uh, nettles for
greens. Hot. I draw the line right there. [HK laughs] Stinkin’ things.
HK: Didn’t want any of those. How did they, um, manage to clothe all of you kids and keep you
in shoes and…?
RR: Lot of ‘em was hand-me-downs, and, uh, I remember the, uh, the JC Penney. Montgomery
Ward is another term. They’d have sales, folks would buy what clothes they could afford to.
HK: Mm-hmm.
RR: [Murmurs] And then there wasn’t no, like here, at that time, like all these places where they
have, uh…secondhand clothing. There wasn’t –
HK: Mm-hmm. Did your mother sew at all?
RR: Oh, yeah. I remember my dad was – think he said he was 70 or 71 when he wore his first
piece of – first glasses, to be able to see a little better.
HK: Oh.

�RR: I know I was 60 when I first started wearing glasses.
HK: Uh-huh.
RR: And, uh, I’m 86 now. [Murmurs]
HK: Yeah.
RR: 1980s-something. [Murmurs]
HK: What happened if – if one of you kids got sick or something? How –
RR: Our kids, now?
HK: No, when you were growing up. You as a child, what happened?
RR: If we went to school, they’d send ‘em to – to the school, what do you call it? At that time
there was a nurse, Etta Kettlesburger, Kettlesburger. She was from Salina. And that’s one woman
I’ll always give credit. She’d try to help the Mexicans and the blacks. And, uh, she would,
uh…more or less try to take care of us.
HK: Mm-hmm.
RR: ‘Course, she said, those are the people that didn’t have the opportunity for a lot of things
[murmurs]. She just died not too long ago. She was a little over 100 years old.
HK: Wow.
RR: She was in a rest home there in Salina, she was from Salina.
HK: Mm-hmm.
RR: I remember when she was young and started being the nurse here in Lawrence.
HK: Mm-hmm.
RR: Who else…
HK: Well, did you, um, did you ever get to go to the dentist, or…?
RR: At that time, you know what? We didn’t know what a dentist was. All we knew was in
school, they’d take the whole class. They’d have a little box, uh, about that. They put, um,
instruments in. And: “Okay, you can come in and sit down. Open your mouth.” There was a
dentist…and whoever was taking care of [murmurs].

�HK: Mm-hmm.
RR: That’s how they knew, we knew that. That, you know, you had bad teeth. When you get the
chance, see if your parents can afford to take you to the dentist.
HK: Mm-hmm.
RR: I remember the first time I went to the dentist, Dr. Kennedy. This Dr. Kennedy who is living
now, it was his father. [Murmurs].
HK: Wow.
RR: I don’t remember [murmurs] upstairs, in, uh, 900 block of New Jersey – uh, Massachusetts.
On the east – the west side of the street.
HK: Mm-hmm.
RR: And he was, uh, he was a pretty good dentist. I think he charged us 50 cents for fixing our
teeth. They don’t charge no 50 cents now.
HK: Nope, nope.
RR: And then this – his son, well, he took over the dental practice. He just retired here
about…wanna say fifteen years ago, maybe a little longer [murmurs]. He’s still living. I seen him
at the store, we speak to each other. He – he’s no kid, I’m 86 and he’s a lot older than I am.
HK: Really? Hmm.
RR: But you – you can’t tell his age.
HK: What do you think are some of the biggest differences between, um…when you were
growing up and how things are now?
RR: Just like day and night. [HK laughs] Now, well, [murmurs] money is more plentiful and the
wages are a lot higher. And, um…I remember back in the old days, when the canning factory
was open. We were in high school, and we went sometime to work over there and we would get
15 cents an hour. And by the end of the week, we thought we had a lot of money, oh yeah. At
least I remember buying my first pair of white shoes [murmurs]. And, uh, clothing that I’d
needed ‘em for school. Socks. And of course our parents got the rest of it, at JC Penney’s and
Montgomery Ward. Then there was [Name?], a clothing store there. They had – they were
fancier, we couldn’t afford those. We’d just bypass it.
HK: Yeah. So, did your dad, um…or did your family, where did they move to after – I know
when the ‘51 flood happened, um, did that wipe out pretty much the living area?
RR: We were living in town then.

�HK: Were you?
RR: Yeah. Uh, [murmurs], my present wife she was there. And we would see the water. See, we
lived on the 900 block of Pennsylvania. Kind of on a hill there.
HK: Mm-hmm.
RR: You could see the water, down where there was an old junkyard and the, uh, Santa Fe
freight house. Freight house. And the offices down there, and [unintelligible] house. And, uh,
the, uh, tracks. But since then, they have raised the tracks and they, uh, and they built the new,
uh, the freight house [murmurs] freight. They put in a McDonald’s, put, uh, what do you call it,
beer establishment?
HK: Mm. Um…Abe and Jake’s? Abe and Jake’s?
RR: Oh, no. Abe and Jake’s –
HK: No?
RR: Was up here.
HK: Yeah.
RR: That’s some [murmurs].
HK: This was, this was…where was it located at?
RR: Eight – no, ninth – Eighth and ninth [tape cuts off at 47:25]
END OF TAPE 21A

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                    <text>Tape 21b: Interview with Raymond Romero
Interviewer: Helen Krische
Date of Interview: 2006
Length of Interview: 8:49
Location of Interview: St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church
Transcription Completion Date: December 15, 2020
Transcriptionist: Emily Raymond
Interviewee’s daughter Lupe states on March 1, 2021: “He let people call him Raymond and other
Mexican Americans who knew him called him by his real name Ramon. So his full name is Ramon
Enrique Romero Sr.”

Raymond Romero (Interviewee): [Murmurs]…grocery store that I knew of. That, uh, we done
business with.
Helen Krische (Interviewer): Mm-hmm.
RR: They’d have something on sale and we’d go over there and get it. [murmurs]
HK: Did your family, um, do – did they put their stuff on credit and then pay once a month,
or…?
RR: Yeah, when Johnson’s, when Johnson’s was open, I’ll never forget it. They, uh, they’d give
credit to working men. And…they would let us – let them run up so much. We didn’t have no
trouble then ‘cause my wife was working, and, uh, we made it with five children.
HK: Mm-hmm. Do any of your children speak Spanish?
RR: Let’s see – one, two, three of ‘em speak Spanish fluently.
HK: Mm-hmm.
RR: And the other two: “I don’t want to learn it.” [Laughter] That’s the end of that.
HK: Do you think it’s helpful –
RR: Oh, yes.
HK: For them to know how to speak Spanish?
RR: Especially – especially the one that’s a librarian.
HK: Mm-hmm.
RR: When she…when she graduated out of KU, she didn’t know much Spanish, so she – her
first job was down in, uh, Peace Corps.

�HK: Mm-hmm.
RR: And she went to, uh…Ecuador. Quito, Ecuador. [Murmurs] The young lady might have
heard of it. Close to the Panama Canal. And she was in Peace – her and her husband were there
in the Peace Corps. And then, uh, they went to, um…Costa Rica, San Jose. They were there for a
while. She – she got to teach there. And, uh, then they came to, uh, McAllen, Texas. Abilene,
Texas. Um…there was another town that they – three towns in Texas. She taught school there.
Her husband was, uh, had something to do with the court system. Probation officer.
HK: Oh.
RR: That’s how she – they moved around. And she’s, what, 59?
HK: What do you think of the situation today, with Mexican Americans?
RR: Well…I don’t know how much you know about history, but when Spain was at war in 1936,
‘34, ‘35, ‘36, [Name_____ Franco] said: “We now have the first colony of all the Spanish.”
Alright, then he put up the second [colony?]. That bunch didn’t believe in a lot of Francisco
______ theory A lot of ‘em ended up in North Africa, Casabianca, [Place name], and Algiers
[Place name]. There was a few of ‘em in Egypt. And then [murmurs] throughout Ivory Coast.
HK: Mm-hmm.
RR: Just like the Mexicans are doing now, from Mexico. Yeah, the Mexican situation here is
now, that these people are coming here simply because there is nothing in Mexico can offer.
Because the politicians – you’re a politician, you’re a rich man, you know everything, and you
gonna get hoard up all the money. Well, these poor guys…you heard of the expression in
English? Crumbpickers. These guys were crumbpickers. And they said: “We’re not gonna be
crumbpickers. [Murmurs] since we know how to read and write. We’re gonna go to the United
States,” and got up here.
HK: Mm-hmm.
RR: Some of ‘em are well-educated, some of ‘em are not. They’re gonna have to change their
way of their customs. I notice here in church, you’ve got –
HK: Mm-hmm.
RR: Okay. To have the Spanish Mass, that’s the worst thing they can do to try to teach our
Mexican people how to learn the, uh…the, um, English language. By segregating ‘em that way.
HK: Mm-hmm.
RR: They should just throw ‘em in there, that’s what they done in – to our – us, and our folks.
When they came to church, they went right into the – to the, uh…English Mass, and stayed there

�and learned what they did. If they died, well, [murmurs], funeral, last rites [murmurs]. Uh, let’s
see, what else? Um…oh yeah, that – five minutes?
HK: Five minutes. [Laughs]
RR: Is that all I got left, or did I run over?
HK: That’s all you got left.
Interview Assistant: That’s all you got left.
HK: So you better talk fast. [Laughs]
RR: Well, stop talking [murmurs]. Well, anyways, the only problem that you have with these
modern Mexicans now, they’re better off than their first [murmurs] father and mother
[murmurs]. Because these guys know how to read and write. When my parents came over, they
did not have those schools in Mexico. And, uh, most of them, their writing was just an “X.” And
that was it. I’ll never forget one of ‘em. one of ‘em was working there on Santa Fe: “Juan! You
signed – you forged that!” He says: “You signed my name! You supposed to write.” He says:
“Look, that’s my name!” An “X.” [HK laughs] Well, there you are. Now, what else?
HK: That’s it. Well, thank you very much, Raymond. It’s been really enjoyable, and I think that
we learned a lot about history here.
RR: Did you meet the other kids yet? [Murmurs]
HK: Well, they did, but they don’t go back as far as you do. So –
RR: I started in 1925.
HK: Yeah.
RR: Brought it up to the present time.
HK: So, yeah.
RR: That was only –
HK: It’s been a pleasure.
RR: That’s only eighty-six…eighty…eighty-one years.
HK: Well, that’s a long time. That’s a lot of history. So…

�RR: There’s some Mexicans older than I am here, but they were born and raised in, uh, one of
‘em in Argentine, the other was in Emporia…I don’t know…Ottawa. One of [murmurs] was, uh
[murmurs]. That’s the best I can give you. I don’t know whether it’ll help you any or not.
HK: Well, we appreciate it. And it certainly has helped us. So…yeah.
RR: Okay. The only thing that you left out is what did I go through in the war time.
HK: Oh. Well, see, we’re gonna save that, because you’re gonna do a – a World War II oral
history with us, right?
RR: Okay. Okay.
HK: So, and we’ll learn all about that then. So…yep. We’ll be –
RR: Just – just don’t ask me about French Indochina.
HK: Oh. [Laughs]
RR: I didn’t know that they had cut all those [murmurs] countries.
HK: Uh-huh.
RR: [Murmurs] faster than I can [murmurs]. Well, am I the last one?
HK: You’re the last one for today.
RR: Well, I hope I can help if you –
HK: Yeah – [tape cuts off at 8:24]
END OF TAPE 21B

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                    <text>Tape 22: Interview with Clara Bucia and Thomas Ramirez
Interviewer: Helen Krische
Date of Interview: 2006
Length of Interview: 47:16
Location of Interview: St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church
Transcription Completion Date: September 18, 2020
Transcriptionist: Emily Raymond
Proofreader: Ellie Rumback
Helen Krische (Interviewer): Alrighty. Um, usually the first question that I ask people is about
your parents. Um, where your parents were from, did they come from Mexico?
Thomas Ramirez (Interviewee): Yes. Yes.
HK: And what were their names?
TR: Uh – Jesus and Mary Ramirez.
HK: Okay. And what part of – do you know what part of Mexico?
TR: Yeah. My father came from Mexico City and my mother come from a town named
[Torreal?] Mexico, not very far from there.
HK: Okay. So it was pretty close to Mexico City.
TR: That’s where they came from. Yes, uh-huh.
HK: And they were Spanish-speaking?
TR: Yes. Uh-huh.
HK: And, um, when did they come up to the United States, do you know?
TR: Well, my father came down here in uh, well he was born in 1904.
HK: Uh-huh.
Clara Bucia (Interviewee): He was nine – he was, uh, eighteen when he came up here.
TR: Yeah, something like that, yeah.
HK: And did he work on the railroads?
CB: Yes, he did. Many years.

�TR: Yeah - that’s what, many years, I think close to 50.
HK: Uh-huh. What railroad did he –
TR: Santa Fe.
HK: Santa Fe railroad, okay. Did he work in any of the other small towns or did he come directly
to Lawrence, or how did that happen?
TR: Well, let’s see. I know he – they used to live in Chicago at one time.
CB: I know he met my mother in Wichita.
TR: Yeah, in Wichita maybe. I don’t know if he worked in the railroad there too - or maybe it
was all combined.
CB: No, he did. No, he did, it was all combined.
TR: It’s all combined. Must be.
HK: Oh okay. But they eventually ended up in Lawrence, here.
TR: Lawrence. Yes.
HK: Were both of you born here in Lawrence?
TR: Yes. Yes ma’am.
CB: There was thirteen of us born here.
HK: Ooh, wow! A big family.
TR: There’s thirteen of us. There’s still twelve of us yet.
HK: Huh. What year were you born?
TR: I was born in 1927.
CB: ‘31.
HK: ‘31. So where are you in the birth order, are you –
CB: I’m third. He’s the first.
TR: I’m the godfather. I’m the oldest.

�HK: The oldest of all thirteen?
TR: All thirteen, I’m the oldest. Yeah, I’m 78.
HK: Wow.
CB: You always hear that. [laughs]
TR: I’m proud of it.
HK: Give your age away. [laughs]
TR: Sorry.
CB: That’s okay.
TR: That’s alright.
HK: So, um, where did you live at when you lived here in Lawrence, or as you were growing up,
where did you live?
TR: As I was growing up? Lived, uh, well, we lived along the railroad tracks ‘cause my father
you know worked on a railroad. The Santa Fe section used to be way on the east side down there,
they used to have Santa Fe houses. Across the tracks.
CB: It’s across the tracks - it’s across the tracks way on the other side. Way down.
HK: What was it like living there?
TR: It was, it was nice. The good old days.
CB: It was the best life.
TR: Best life I think we ever had. Everything was so peaceful, you didn’t have to worry about
nothing.
CB: Nothing.
TR: Nothing, man, everybody just friendly, we all helped each other, in every way.
CB: There was about eight, there was about eight families who lived there. And, uh, there were
nothing but bunk houses, like, like made out of brick, and everybody got along, we’d all make
dinner and go outside and everybody shared what they had. All of us kids played together and
made up things and games and…I’ll never forget that. Just, never.
TR: For Christmas, you know, we used to all get together, and we all made hot tamales and
everything else and we used to decorate our trees and all, you know, which were real simple
at that time, you know. Any cloth, any piece of paper, anything else with coloring, that was

�our decoration, a lot of it, and if you had a set of lights, man, you really had something. And
we used to walk all the way from way up there on the east side and we used to walk all the
way to St. John to go to midnight Mass and all this and that, you know.
CB: The parents, all the families, they all used to plant peppers and tomatoes and all that, and
then they all shared them among all of us.
HK: So you had a big community garden?
TR/CB: Oh yeah. The majority – my father and all those ones that lived over there, they all had
big gardens and everything. Yeah, they grew tomatoes, corn, everything, they had everything.
HK: Was there any livestock over there?
CB: Chickens. Lot of chickens.
TR: Chickens, yeah.
HK: So you had plenty of meat.
TR: I remember when I used to go get some milk, one of the men, Candelario? I used to go get
him his milk for him in the morning before I went to school when I was just a kid growing up.
He used to give me five dollars and I thought he gave me a lot of money at that time. That was
back in, uh, shoot - ‘37, early ‘40, in the ‘40s.
HK: So that was kind of after the Depression years, or…
TR: Yeah. Yeah, tough years.
HK: Did anything change for the families during the Depression, was it any harder for them
during that time?
CB: It was, it was hard for us as children because we were Mexicans and it made a big
difference. That’s why we were happy over there, away from people over here. Because the fact
that we were not wanted, you know, and they didn’t wanna have nothing to do with us and so
that’s the way it was. Now, we come up to the restaurant, which was the restaurant right by the
railroad tracks, right by the depot. We’d go in there and get hamburgers, but we had to have
them in a bag and eat them outside. We had water, drinking fountains, it was for the whites and
for the blacks, so they wouldn’t let us drink from the whites. We had to drink over there with the
blacks. And, oh, I mean, I went to school and they wouldn’t play with me because I was a
Mexican. Kids were so cruel, you know. And it took me…before I even would forgive white
people, I had to go into the mil – well, my husband - I met my husband and we went into the
military. That’s where I met a lot of different people. I’m talking about Mexicans and Indians
and whites and I mean, from all over. You know. That’s where I felt, at least I felt welcome,
because there’s no race in military life. We were in the military for 26 years.

�TR: You know, it’s kind of crazy. I went into the service in 1946, January of ’46. I was in the Air
Corps and I was in the Air Force for two years and uh, when I went in, I was classified as white.
When I come out, I was classified as a Mexican-American when I come out. And I think the
thing that hurt me too was that, uh, the Salvation Army, uh, we had to pay for everything when I
was in the service, uh…no, wait a minute, Red Cross. When the trains used to take us you know
in military, we had to pay for everything at the Red Cross we had to pay them and the Salvation
Army would give it to us. Yeah. Those were hard years and it felt awful because you know a lot
of times you’d go eat at a restaurant or something like that and they would tell you: “I’m sorry,
we can’t serve you.”
CB: We used to get maybe, with the people, maybe we’d just rub up against them and they
would look at you and go like this, you know.
HK: Oh, my God.
CB: Yeah, you know. Things like that.
TR: You know, it was a real prejudiced time. Oh, excuse me, sis. Go ahead.
CB: That’s why I, I said, it took me a long time to forgive white people. Until we went, I met my
husband and we went to the military and I found out there was a lot of good people. White
people, and any race you wanted in there. So we were in there 26 years and I come back
thinking, okay, you know, and when I got here I was so surprised, it’s still going on. I mean, not
as much, but still goes on.
TR: But you, you know, it –
CB: It goes on in our church yet.
HK: Oh…
CB: St. John’s. It still goes on. I moved from, um, well, the father there, made us sit in the back.
The last four seats were for Mexicans.
HK: What years?
TR: We had to sit in the back.
CB: Way back.
HK: What years?
CB: Oh, God. Still little.
TR: We were young then.
CB: But, I can tell you which father it was.

�TR: I know my, uh, my mother used to tell me….We had to sit way at the back.
CB: We, uh, yeah, and if, for some reason like if we came in late, the father would stop the Mass
till we found a place to sit.
TR: It was Father [name?].
CB: Well, I wasn’t gonna say the name.
TR: Monsignor [name?].
CB: Well, I wasn’t gonna say the name.
TR: You remember him?
CB: Yes. Yes, I do.
TR: He was strict. And I guess he got irritated lot of times because people would just come into
church late, I guess. And you know, that kind of made sense in a way, because people – you
don’t come into church late. But, uh, he was tough anyway.
CB: Just about –
TR: He was a good – he was good, maybe he just overworked himself or something, you know.
CB: Just about a year ago, that I stopped sitting in the back all that time, all those years. Because
we…I wasn’t used to sitting up at the front. But I was sitting with some people that would never
shake my hand. I mean, couples. They would never, you know, I would be there waiting for them
to turn around and shake my hand and they wouldn’t ever do it. So I thought, “Okay, you know,
I’m not gonna be here,” you know, so I went to the front. I’m very happy now in the front. I am. I
am very happy.
TR: I know, my mother was the same way. Excuse me. My mother was the same way. You
know, it hurt her feelings because a lot of times she would stick her hand out, you know, for the
sign of peace –
CB: And they wouldn’t do it.
TR: And they wouldn’t do it. And it used to hurt my mother. See, my mother’s been gone about
20 years or so, and it used to hurt my mother because she’d stick her hand out there and you
know, nobody would receive it.
CB: And it’s still going on in the church here. Still. I mean, you look at –

TR: I mean, you can see it and you can sense it.

�CB: You know, I mean, no matter where you go, like, even the rummage house here. I work
here. And I can see some. There’s not that many, but there’s some that still, they just kind of give
you that, you know, so, you just kind of stay away from…it just brings back memories.
TR: We still live with that.
CB: Bring back memories.
TR: A little. Not as bad as it used to be, but it still happens.
CB: It’s still here.
TR: Still here.
CB: Still here.
HK: Where did you go to school at?
CB: New York.
TR: New York. New York School is where we went to school.
HK: Did you go to New York School too?
CB: Yes I did.
TR: And then I went to Central Junior High.
HK: What kind of prejudice was there in those schools?
CB: I know in New York School they wouldn’t play with me because I was a Mexican. Central
they wouldn’t do - they were the same thing. You know, just better than I was. And we lived
across the track. And that made a big difference.
TR: I tell you what - I even tell my kids, my kids about actually the way it used to be a long time
ago, they can’t believe it actually happened. Because they never went through it.
HK: Can you think of some specific incidences? Like…I don’t know, would they call you
names? Would they…
TR: Yeah, sure.
CB: Oh, yeah. Yeah, they did. You know, Mexicans and she’s just a Mexican and all this kind of
stuff, and she doesn’t – well, we didn’t have any money to buy clothes. You know, my parents
were poor. But, I mean, we never missed really anything because we weren’t, you know, used to
anything, so what we didn’t have we didn’t miss. I didn’t have a bicycle, I didn’t have any, all

�these things that they have nowadays. I mean, my doll was from the dump. We had a dump there
near our – my first doll was there. We used to play, um - store, and all the canned stuff that we’d
find at the dumps, put them together like a grocery store, just to play, you know. But that was,
we’d walk to school, as cold as it was. Walk to church, you know.
TR: Yeah.
CB: We didn’t have cars.
TR: We didn’t have no cars, no nothing. Like I said it was real bad, I say I was only about 10
years old. And you know, Mexicans and blacks and [unintelligible] we used to go to like,
Ottawa, and they wouldn’t serve us there either. And I was just young, you know? And then
Emporia was real prejudiced real bad too. And then we went to a tournament and at that time I
was kinda playing a little basketball. Kind of a Mexican ball team we had together. And we went
to Chanute down there and this Mexican girl served us, and when they serve – she – they served
her, well, they fired her. Because had she served us and she wasn’t supposed to. But she did it
anyway, and you know, those things that we had to live through, you know?
HK: What about Topeka or Kansas City? Did you go there at all, did you experience…?
CB: Back when we were young I don’t think we used to go to Topeka. You know, later on we
did but it was with the Mexican people, which was okay, but…it wasn’t with the Mexican people
we had problems with, you know. But you still see, you still find it –
TR: But you know, it’s an awful feeling. It’s an awful feeling, you know.
CB: Worst feeling in the world.
TR: We used to go to a restaurant, go eat and I tell ‘em: “Sorry, we can’t serve you.” Man, that’s
an awful feeling.
CB: I mean, how sorry can you be, you know?
TR: I said, Yeah, man, it’s an awful feeling, man, that people don’t realize the feeling, you know,
that you have.
CB: Yeah, like I said, it takes – it took me – and I still, if I meet somebody I have to feel them
first, you know, to see how they’re gonna act with me, you know, in order for me to…
TR: You know, I worked for the high school for 20 years and when I worked at Central too, I
worked 20 years in schools, and I never had any, any problem except the last year one of the
kids, one of the white kids spit on me. And I could never understand why, you know? And
then
now, you know, I’ve been working at KU now for the last 14 years, but I just work part time.
And there’s a lot of good kids, I mean, beautiful personalities, they kind of make me feel like I’m
one of them. But there’s some of ‘em there, there’s some young ladies, what’s-her-name like that,
I tell you what, they look at you like you’re, you’re nothing. That’s a feeling, you know, that’s

�just a feeling you have, you know. And maybe it’s my fault too because you know, I don’t know,
I… She says I talk quite a bit, so. [laughs]
CB: He does.
TR: And I just –
CB: Can you raise your hand? [laughs]
TR: I enjoy, enjoy being around people and you know, the people that I know, you know. I like
to pass the time, talk to them and all, this and that, but... It was tough in those years.
CB: It was.
TR: 10 years old and I was even picking potatoes at the age of 10 years old. I even worked for
the railroad at the age of 15. I worked with my father on the extra gang here, on the railroad. He
didn’t want me to work on the railroad. [pause] That was hard work. Those rails up there, all
that sun hitting you, you know, all that rails, and those railroad ties, all that creosote, and we
used to carry those things by hand. Now they got, you know, machines and everything to do it
with now, and that was…hard times.
CB: That’s why I think when I look, I work up at the rummage sale I see a lot of the Mexican
people come in and they don’t speak Spanish. So I’m there, really, you know, to help them and
all that.
TR: She does, she interprets quite a bit.
CB: And uh, I know their feelings, you know, how they feel, you know, ‘cause they come in here
and because they don’t know how to speak it they look at them like, [Come here?] I need your
help. But I – I know how they feel, you know.
TR: That’s the same way I am too.
CB: Yeah, I know the feeling. And I feel sorry for them. And you know, old Bush trying to get
them out of here. Well, hey they want to work. They’re poor. They want, you know, they’re
trying to make a living, they’re not bothering anybody. You know, they’re not hurting anybody. I
agree that they should speak English, they should learn, but I don’t think that they should get ‘em
out of here. I mean, they’re getting money over here, over there, they’re not. They got families.
TR: Yep, and they’re making only fifty cents an hour.
CB: Yeah, so they’ll take any job anybody doesn’t want, you know. So –
TR: And they’re willing to do it, you know, just to, just to make a little money. And then I hear
on TV, you know, that some people say it’s not fair that they’re sending some of their money
that they make here over there to their family. I don’t know what difference, if they’re making –
it’s their money, why in the devil can’t they send it over there?

�CB: Yeah. Yeah.
TR: And like I tell you, this place we go down there… [Villa de San Juan?] down there, down
there by, in Texas down by Brownsville, McAllen, Texas, they…damn, I forgot what I was
gonna tell you.
CB: Goods. [laughs]
TR: Anyway, one of the ladies told us there that they only make 50 cents an hour.
HK: Oh, gosh.
TR: Can you picture that? 50 cents an hour? Eight-hour day, four dollars a day. Here what’s four
dollars isn’t hardly nothing at all. And those people just coming over here because, you know,
their families’d probably starve. Here at least, here in the United States, you know, they got the
Salvation Army, they got Link, they got all these other places that will help you, you’re not
gonna starve to death. But over there, over there if you don’t have your own garden, and you
don’t want to work, your family’s gonna starve to death. That’s probably why a lot of them are
coming over here. And all they want is a job. That’s all they’re looking for. I don’t think they’re
trying to take jobs. But you know what? But my – my first opinion is, is that we spoil a lot of our
kids because we’ve given them everything that they want. And normally sometimes –
CB: Everything we didn’t have.
TR: Sometimes they both are working, they both are working and we’ve bought them everything
they want, whatever they want. So you know, a lot of them are going right through high school,
and probably some of them in college, lot of them probably never done a day’s work in their
whole life, you know? So why should they work? Sometimes over at KU I see some of the, I
guess some of the well-to-do kids, driving brand new cars. [Hot damn?] they go to the ATM
machine, they pull out the money, I guess the parents are just putting the money in it. [laugh] But
yet, over there where I work, I see some of those kids out there struggling to work two or three
hours, two hours, to make it through school and I praise those kids. [Long pause] Yeah. Yeah.
CB: It was, it was rough, anyway.
TR: It was tough.
CB: It’s taken me a long time to forgive, and I still, like I still sit around and it just comes right
back to me, you know, still.
TR: This right now reminds me of uh, you know, a long time ago, pretty much all, the majority
of Mexican people that came down here, my father. They came from Mexico. They didn’t have
no railroad workers. So the majority of ‘em that came in from Mexico, they didn’t have any
work, so they, they all came to work for the railroad. And now you’re seeing the same darn thing,
it just seems like it’s going around again. They don’t have the help, anything like that, and now,
they gotta use it now.

�CB: My dad, my father, when he worked in the railroad, he’d come back to work maybe 2:00 or
3:00 in the morning, sore, and it would be snow, I mean inches of snow. He’d come back, his
whole hair was just nothing but ice –
TR: Frozen. Frozen.
CB: His beard frozen, [unintelligible] in here, his hands were frozen, and you know, just and
we’d come in and try to warm him up and hug him and just try to keep him, you know.
TR: It was all, all full of ice, and everything else, all full of ice –
CB: So he worked hard, you know, to raise us.
TR: It was a big family. But you know one thing about it, I never did ever hear my dad ever
complain.
CB: He never complained, never.
TR: For a big family of thirteen. Yeah, but those were, those were tough years.
CB: We didn’t need prejudice with it either. But we went through it.
HK: Did, did your parents often help people who were just coming up from Mexico that were
like, new employees?
CB: They weren’t coming then like they are now, at that time.
TR: At that time, you hardly ever seen any Mexican people out in the middle out here. They
were mostly just stayed north of you, know, outside, you know, Arizona, and Texas and all
those, you know, they stayed mostly [unintelligible]. That’s why I say, you know, today, you
know, I, you know, the way I look at it, I think that if they’d pay ‘em a decent wage along the
borders, a lot of them would probably not even come all the way up this way. But you know,
they know they can find a job here, and like I say, the other day I was watching TV the other day
and some kid, 15-16 years old, he said my father is already over there. He says, I’m gonna get
over there. He’s over in Mexico. [unintelligible] They’re desperate. That’s the reason why a lot
of them are coming over, because they know you can make a little money over here. So I mean, I
can understand that. I think if I was living over there I’d be coming over here too, you know, if I
could feel I could better myself or better my family over there. And the thing about it is a lot of
these kids today, they don’t want to work. You can see it up there where I work. Those kids,
some of ‘em, they come to work one day and next day they don’t come, and that’s the way it is
all the time. That’s why you can’t hardly find workers. Especially over at Memorial over there,
at Memorial, over here, [business name?], they can’t keep employees. Nobody wants to work.
CB: Well, what –
TR: And then you can’t blame these ki- oh, excuse me. You can’t blame these kids. Uh, you

�know, they can better themselves, you know, on the computer and all this and that like that, you
know, you can’t blame them. That’s why a lot of them just don’t do none of that, you know.
CB: That’s why military helped me out a lot. You know, to try to get out of it, to get out of all
that. ‘Cause like I said, we were in 26 years in every country you can think of, in towns and all
that, so I learned that, you know, there’s a lot of good people, a lot of them, all colors, but they
were good people. And then I come here thinking I was gonna find out, come back and find…it
wasn’t as bad, but still the same thing. Yeah. Yeah, so…And I’m still leery sometimes, you
know, meeting people, and, you know. Sometimes I go to the stores and I, I will open the door
for, you know, an older lady, maybe a lady with a child, and I open it but it’s like, “No thank
you”.
HK: No thank you.
CB: I’m the one that turns around: “Thank you.” [TR laughs] You know? Because, you know, I
mean, I learned a lot too, to be that way from being treated the way I was, you know, so I
learned that. You had to –
TR: You know, that’s what I see in church too. Go ahead.
CB: No, go ahead.
TR: You know, even in church here a lot of times you know, you get up there, you get in there,
well sometimes you go to a different Mass or something like that, and you go “What’s the
name?” and you stick your hand out like this you know, for the deal, the peace. And normally
any other time you go [unintelligible] somebody’ll grab your hand, you know.
CB: Sometimes they don’t.
TR: But, get your hand out there and they just stay there ‘cause nobody’ll want to do it. So you
don’t even –
CB: I don’t even wanna turn around. And you know, because, I don’t know whether they’re
gonna accept my hand or not. You know?
TR: Well see, that’s the same way I feel.
CB: I just don’t know and it feels good when you hold somebody’s hand, it feels good, you
know. I’m afraid to do it. Even in the front, I’d sit there and wait, see who’s going to hold out
their hand, you know, so. It’s still, it’s still here. Not like it was, but still here.
TR: Yeah. And not like it used to be, but yeah.
HK: So, um, when you were growing up, um, what kind of…I know that your mom probably did
all the cooking.

�CB: Yes, she did.
HK: And she probably did the sewing. Did she make all of your dresses?
CB: Out of, out of bags of flour.
TR: Flour sacks.
CB: They were printed at that time, at the printers. We’d get our- our skirts made out of those,
yeah.
HK: And what kind, okay, what would be like a typical meal for you and your family?
CB: Beans, tortillas...
TR: Beans and tortillas.
CB: Chili, rice.
TR: Chile, rice.
CB: We never starved.
TR: We never starved.
CB: We never starved.
TR: [Unintelligible] every meal.
CB: Never starved.
TR: My mother used to have a big old pan about that big and –
CB: Not that big.
TR: I mean, for breakfast.
CB: Not that big.
TR: Just for breakfast! [laughs] This was just for breakfast!
CB: It was not like that. [laughs] We had potatoes, and let’s see, fried potatoes and all that.

�TR: Yeah, yeah.
HK: Did she have any special desserts that she would make for you?
CB: Um, I don’t think we really could afford desserts. My, my – she used to shop for, well, go
grocery shopping for my dad to make his lunch. She used to put an apple or orange, banana,
whatever in there. Well, my dad used to bring it back so that we could eat it.
TR: All the kids.
HK: Aww.
CB: Yeah. The kids. Because he, I don’t know, maybe he felt, you know, we weren’t getting it.
So he would bring it back, and just, we’d all run for that lunch meal, you know, cause we knew.
And then we’d, uh, go to the store shopping and there was little pies like that and I used to say
“Dad can I get a pie, a little pie from there?” He says “Yeah go ahead,” you know, so I went
ahead and I’d eat it all the way home so I wouldn’t have to share it with – because I mean, I
never got to have pie except that one time. [laughs] But you know, he did, he used to tell me
“Yeah, go ahead and get, you know, a little pie.” It was always too much money, you know,
spending as far as I was concerned and he was concerned but he would let me do that because I
went to the store.
HK When you went grocery shopping, was it to like the little corner store, or - ?
TR: Yeah, uh-huh.
CB: It was called Carter’s grocery store.
TR: And we had Mildred too.
CB: Well, yeah, but we went to Carter’s more than we did to Mildred.
TR: Yeah.
HK: Did your parents have, like, a line of credit there or…?
TR: Uh…
CB: At the store.
TR: Yes. Yes
HK: I know before some of the others said that their, their dad would get paid once a month
TR: Once a month.
HK: And then they would just, you know, pay it.

�[voices all together]
CB: But we never went hungry.
TR: We never went hungry.
CB: Never did.
TR: You never, you never heard about diabetes either.
CB: No, you never heard anything like that either.
HK: [laughs]
TR: Everybody ate good.
HK: Speaking, speaking of diabetes, did, um…when somebody would get sick in the family,
what would they do, I mean, would - ?
CB: Help each other.
TR: Yeah, we helped each other.
CB: Help each other.
HK: Did they, did they, like, call the doctor or did they do like, a home remedy type of thing?
CB: Lot of home remedies.
TR: Lot of home remedies. Yeah.
HK: Was there anything specific that you can remember? As being a home remedy? Like for an
earache or toothache or anything like that?
CB: Oh dear, there was a lot of them. Gosh. Colds. God, there is, there is, I can’t even remember
the names of the things that we used to – Oh, I do know, though, that they used to – we’d see the
doctor come in and they chase all of us out, okay? Pretty soon they come back. “So your mama
just had a baby,” he had a little black bag. Like where did the baby come from? [laughs]
TR: He’d come to the house.
CB: It was in his little black bag. He brought it in the bag. We believed that! [laughs] We
believed it. Because [unintelligible] the doctor would come with his little, little black bag, you
know.
HK: That’s funny.

�CB: It was funny. It was funny. [laughs] We used, I know we used a lot of Vaseline and Vicks.
TR: Vicks. Lot of Vicks.
CB: Vicks. Bayer aspirin.
TR: Bayer aspirins.
CB: I know they used to put, for a headache, I think slices of onions right here on the sides of
your head.
HK: Wow.
CB: God, so many things…
HK: What about earaches? Did they…?
CB: Oh, dear, I couldn’t –
TR: Oil, some kind of oil they’d put in there.
CB: Some kind of oil or something like that. I don’t remember.
TR: I don’t remember.
HK: I know my mom used to use, I think it was mineral oil or something like that.
TR: Yeah, uh-huh, yeah, it just kinda –
HK: Heat it up –
TR: Heat it up and put it in, yeah. Uh-huh. Yeah.
HK: So that was something
TR: Yeah, oh yeah.
CB: Like I said, thirteen –
TR: But you know, those were quiet years too. I mean, I tell you what, even when my, when we
were all small, you could leave, you didn’t have to worry about night, I mean, you could leave
your door wide open, sleep out on the porch and everything, you didn’t have to worry about
nothing. Everything’s so quiet and everything now, compared to what it is today. You know, one
time I heard a priest say one time he said that we used to lock our animals. Now we’re locking
ourselves up and the animals are out running loose, just the opposite of each other.

�HK: Mmm. That’s true.
TR: I remember a priest saying that one time.
CB: Yeah.
TR: And they, you know, all the houses, everybody’s putting fences all around them like that.
Fencing ourselves all in! And the animals are out running loose! No, but those, but those were
hard, hard years. Yeah, I was picking potatoes at the age of 10.
CB: We all did.
TR: We were picking potatoes at the age of 10 out in that hot sun.
HK: Was that for the Heck farm?
TR: Yeah, Heck farm. Uh…
CB: Used to take a truckload of us, uh, Mexicans, Mexican families.
TR: All Mexicans, yeah.
CB: 50 cents a bag of, um, potatoes. You know, that’s all they paid us, 50 cents.
HK: Was that those great big huge gunny –
CB: Great big huge gunny sacks.
TR: Yeah, yeah, we had gunny sacks.
CB: Pick ‘em up, pick ‘em up, yeah. I mean, we would, our backs were –
TR: I mean, we were out in that hot sun I mean all day, man, at the station, probably, long, way
on the other side of the church. Could barely get one in, the tractor gonna come around and
you’re picking up on the other side. All damn day long. Bending over in that hot sun all day.
CB: That was the only way we could make money.
HK: Some of the other people said that there were, like, older people out there doing it too, just
all ages –
CB: Oh, it was all ages.
TR: Oh, yeah.

�CB: Even people from Topeka came to –

TR: Yeah, uh-huh. Yeah. And then we used to get, uh, hauled, you know, when the fiesta was
going on in Topeka?
HK: Uh-huh.
TR: You know, we used to haul in, to get in that same truck, same truck, get all dressed up and
man, we went to those fiestas down there. [laughs] But we had a lot of fun. We always looked
forward to it too.
HK: Uh-huh. Yeah.
TR: But it was hot. We had a good time.
CB: It was the only time we had fun.
TR: About the only time. I remember the years that I used to, uh, go down the alleys, down the
alleys, pick up cardboard, just to make a little spending money. I remember when I used to cut
wood, the big saw and the railroad ties, you know, for the winter months. I had to sit there and…
just a young kid, just to get about 50 cents or a quarter or something like that to go to the show,
get a candy bar and get a Coke.
HK: Uh-huh.
TR: Boy, that was hard work too.
HK: So these were the old distorted ties from when they did the, when they changed out the
ties?
TR: Yeah, well, they had all that creosote and everything on them too. Yeah, see, they used to,
this is what they used to heat the houses up with. I used to see the stoves, you know. That they
used to have inside the house. That thing just red as ever on the inside.
HK: That’s over at the Santa Fe apartments?
TR: Yeah. Uh-huh.
CB: My dad used to, um, uh…we had one of those potbelly stovesTR: Yeah.
CB: And, uh, he used to get up first thing in the morning to put our shoes next to it so when we
all got up, all of us kids would get up, we would get our feet in warm shoes, you know. I thought
that was great.

�TR: But you know at that time, we all only had so much. Nobody hardly had any more than
anybody else.
CB: Same thing.
TR: But those were the –
CB: Nobody was richer than anybody else. We just weren’t, none of us were rich.
TR: Nobody had no money.
CB: Nobody had – everybody was the same. That’s why we got along. That’s why we got along
up there. Like I said –
TR: No, you know, in those days you know, you were able to, uh, to just come up and visit
somebody. Now you got to make reservations every time you want to see them. [laughs] Now
you gotta call ‘em and says, “Are you out of bed? Can I see you?”
HK: Yeah.
TR: But I don’t know, that’s the way it is today. But it’s still some of it, still there, yeah.
CB: It’ll probably always be there. I don’t think it’ll ever really change. It hasn’t changed this
long, you know. But I think these, the kids nowadays, like my, my kids, they now are accepted
anywhere. I mean they can do anything, go anywhere, they get married with white people. I got
a, I got a brother and a sister, got a daughter who are married to white people now. And, you
know, when I tell them what went on in my life then, you know, they don’t believe it, they say:
“Oh, come on.” I say “No, it’s true,” you know. So, no, they’re, you know, they’re accepted –
and I’m so glad that they are now accepted in – probably the ones that are the most trouble are
the ones still from my age, from way back. Yeah. But there’s a lot of things now that are –
TR: I’m the same way, you know, the majority, all my son-in-laws are all white. And you know,
they go right along with us today. Yeah. My daughter-in-law’s the same way, she’s white too.
And uh, she – we get along as good as ever and they back us up and everything.
CB: Like I said, they – they don’t believe though, they don’t believe what we went through.
TR: They, yeah. I tell you, I about got my neck cut off one time coming in from the Santa Fe
yards coming over to, over to St. John one time to church one time. I stuck my head underneath
the rails, what’s the name like that, I didn’t know the train was pulling, I had just got my head
through there, when the doggone train went by.
HK: Oh, my gosh.
TR: That was an incident. I says, Oh, God, I…After I thought about that, man, I had a cold
sweat.

�HK: So, were you crawling underneath the boxcars?
TR: Yeah. Well, they – the wheels, you know, I didn’t know, it seemed it was sitting still, and I
just went and stuck my head and I just went right underneath it, you know. I had just got on the
other side and it doggone starts moving.
HK: Ooooh.
TR: But we used to walk all the way from the Sante Fe yards over there all the way to St. John at
church and also go to the high school at that time.
HK: Did anyone ever get hurt on the tracks?
TR: No, not that I know of.
HK: Well, except for you. Almost. [laughs]
TR: Almost. Close.
CB: But it was nice, so, now when I hear the trains, it reminds me because, you know, like, we
used to –
TR: See, we used to ride the trains all the time. My father had a pass since he had 50 years
working for the railroad. Well, we used to ride the train all the time. And I haven’t rode the train
for a long, long time. And I’ve had people tell me now that, ride, that Amtrak, they say it’s
beautiful to get on those tracks. I’d – I’d like to go on a trip on one of those trains one of these
days.
CB: I’d like to take my grandchildren –
TR: She likes to fly.
CB: Oh, I’d rather fly. [laughs] But my grandchildren, I would like to have them, you know, in a
train, you know, like we used to, yeah, so…
TR: Yeah.
HK: Well, where – how did you meet your husband?
CB: In the Air Force, he was in Topeka. At a dance, we went to Topeka. And that’s where I met
him, so he’s Filipino. But he passed away six years ago, so I’m by myself now. So I have my
children and they’re all, they were all born in the Air Force, so.
HK: How many children do you have?
CB: I have six.

�HK: Six. And do they all live around this area, or – ?

CB: No, I have one in Germany. He just retired after 20 years but his wife is still in the Air
Force, and she’s over there. And then I’ve got a daughter in California and then I’ve got a son in
Kansas City and then I’ve got a son here and two daughters. So I got three here, and three gone.
HK: So how many kids is that altogether?
CB: Six. Six. Three boys and three girls. And they were girl, boy, girl, boy, girl, and they went
like that. [laughs]
TR: And I –
HK: You had it planned all out, didn’t you?
CB: Yeah, my son – my young son said, “How’d you do that, Mom?” I says, “I’m not gonna tell
you!” [laughs]
HK: And, and, where did you meet your wife?
TR: I met her in Topeka. Yeah. Well, the way I met her was when I told you I was working on
the railroad, well we were working that extra gang after I worked on the sector with my dad.
Well her brother was working there on the extra gang and he kept after me week after week
saying, uh, “Tom why don’t you come on down to, uh, down to my house?” And he kept after
me and after me and he says, he finally, it finally got to me and I said: “Well, have you got any
sisters?” He said, “Yeah I got one named Josefina” and then another one. So I went down there,
and when I went down there I guess I fell for her right away. So,
CB: My husband was from Washington, D.C.
TR: And, so we’ve, we’ve been married 56 years. I got, I had four kids. I got a daughter, 53, that
I’m gonna go – I gotta go watch her graduate in Kansas City, Kansas at 5:30 this evening. She’s
been a teacher at the 205 Michigan. Up there, she’s a lead teacher there. Been 32 years now and
she got her own office and now she’s just graduated from KCK she been taking classes, and
she’s gonna go to St. Mary’s. She wants to work at the, uh, Children’s Mercy Hospital –
HK: Oh, yes.
TR: With the cancer kids and all that, things like that. But my, my son – uh, well, like I said,
she’s 53 and then I have a daughter named, uh, Cindy, she works for the city water department,
and then I have a daughter named Rose and a son named Tom Jr. and he works in, he’s in
Facility Operations at KU. In charge of 17 people up there at the university, in charge of all the
air conditioning units and all. I have seven grandkids and five great grandkids.
HK: Boy. Very neat.

�TR: So, see, I’m telling my age, you know. [laughs]

HK: How long did you work for the railroad?
TR: Me?
HK: Uh-huh.
TR: Uh, probably, uh, probably altogether probably maybe four or five years, probably. Cause I
think I only worked a year or so with my father, I think. But on the other ones I, I worked about
four years on those, stay on those trains. We used to, we used to go in there and used to go down
through Garnett, you know, out that way, you know, Ottawa, and all down the line that way.
That’s where…used to be there.
HK: And then you worked for, you said you worked for KU after that, or?
TR: No, well I worked – I worked at the – well, you mean the jobs that I had?
HK: Yeah.
TR: Well, I – I worked in the laundry. I worked in the laundry and then I went to working out
there where your dad, where, Bob - Bob Krische.
HK: Was that when he had the marble business?
TR: The marble business?
HK: Yeah.
TR: I worked for nearly 20 there.
HK: Oh, really?
TR: Yeah, pretty near. And then from there they closed up and then this friend of mine had just
left there and he says: “Tom why don’t you come down and work for the schools?” And, which
I did, and, man, I took a big cut in pay. I thought that first payment I got from the schools, I
said, “Man, I can’t make a living, I’m leaving.” And I ended up staying there 20 years. I retired
in ‘92, I retired for one week. I retired for one week and then I, for four – I been at KU for 14,
uh, part-time. I go in at 6:00 in the morning, get off at 10:00. I always keep saying, “I don’t
know what I’m doing up here.”
HK: So you just keep working.
TR: But to be honest with you, I enjoy the people that I work with, I think that’s one reason, one
of the reasons I stay on it. And second, no question, the money helps. And besides that, I’m kind
of gabby anyway, so…

�HK: That keeps you young.
TR: Well, that’s what they all tell me. [laughs] What they all tell me.
CB: I’m not gonna answer that one. You know, the radio you can kind of turn off and on.
TR: She, she says I talk a lot.
CB: Yeah, he does. We just talk –
TR: Yeah, we’ve always been a close family. When one hurts, we all hurt.
CB: We all travel together… We go on vacations together.
HK: Oh neat.
TR: We all travel together on trips. Sometimes there’s two, two vans full. Every place we go.
CB: We get together for birthdays, we get together and we each put in ten dollars, seventy
dollars for the person’s birthday, you know, and we go out to eat.
TR: We’ll go out to eat, and get together, yeah.
CB: It was sort of – my mother, my mother wanted us to stay together.
TR: My mother always kept us together.
CB: We stayed together. We used to go to her house every Sunday, she would have dinner for
us, you know, lunch, and that was, if you didn’t go there she’d be mad. She, I mean by early
morning she had it done.
TR: She had it already done.
CB: All we had to do was go over there in the afternoon. But she always wanted us to be
together, so we did. We’ve stuck together all these 20 years now.
TR: I remember we got her a microwave to cook stuff in, she wouldn’t cook in that microwave.
She used her stove. She, she wanted to cook everything on the stove. I mean, that microwave
didn’t mean a thing to her at all. We had good parents.
HK: What kind of a cookstove did she have in the Santa Fe apartments? Did she…?
CB: It was a regular, uh…

�HK: Was it a wood –
CB: It was a woodstove, like…what am I trying to say…oh, uh, she used to put coals in there,
stuff like. Can’t remember…the metal type.
TR: It was metal.
CB: Yeah.
HK: The big, heavy metal –
CB: The big, heavy.
HK: The iron and the –
TR: Yeah.
HK: Like on one side, it had a water tank or whatever, did it have one of those?
CB: No.
HK: And, oh. But did it have an oven?
CB: Yeah.
TR: Yeah, it had an oven and all. She used her oven like that. She wouldn’t use that microwave.
CB: Yeah, our refrigerator was one with the ice blocks. We used to put, you know –
TR: We used to put blocks of ice in there.
CB: We’d buy the ice.
TR: Yeah. But like I said, those were the good old years.
CB: It was.
TR: They were tough, but they were good old years. Good years. Like I said, everybody was just
happy. They didn’t have the heck of a lot, but for us –
CB: As long as you stayed over there –
TR: For us, it was good.
CB: As long as you stayed over there.

�TR: Yeah.
CB: We come over here and just kinda.
HK: Had to maybe pay more attention to, uh, relationships because, I mean, that’s all you had,
and, you know, since you didn’t have much money.
CB: No we didn’t. We had nothing.
HK: You had to depend upon your relationship with other people.

TR: Yeah.
CB: Well, everybody was the same. You know, like I said, nobody had more money than the
other person, so, you know. I’d say, six to eight people, tight little community, you know. We
were really happy there.
HK: What did you do for entertainment?
CB: Oh, played games. Oh yeah, there was a lot of games you could play, you know. Out there,
there was no cars, nothing you had to watch for, traffic or anything. Played ball and you know,
they had that dump, like I said, you go to look for the things, you know, just… people’d throw
away stuff and we go up and get it. You know, it just…we never had anything new, you know.
We used to get a dime for, uh, from my dad, each one of us. Then we’d go out and buy candy
with it, so…
TR: I remember when I worked in the laundry at – I was still young, well I had my, my twins
who are 55, I think - I used to get paid. At that time, I was making 75 cents an hour, can you
believe that? I had four kids, 75 cents an hour. The day I got paid, on a Friday, we used to go out
to that hamburger place, what’s the name of it, sis?
CB: Oh…
TR: Five hamburgers for a dollar?
CB: Yeah, I remember…
TR: That was a big day for my kids.
HK: Griffs?
TR: Griffs. That’s the place.
CB: You remember Griffs. They were good hamburgers, too.

�TR: Those were big days, those were big days for my, for my kids. They used to look forward to
it. Yeah.
CB: But like I said, it did take me a long time to forgive people, you know, just…I even got to
where I didn’t even want to be around them or nothing, you know, because of the way I was
treated. And so, like I said, when I met my husband and we went into the military, that’s where I
changed, because of all the people that were there. Like I said, there were so many different races
anyway.
TR: Yeah.
CB: So, in 26 years you meet a lot of people, you know. So it was kind of scary coming back, I
didn’t know what I was gonna – [laughs] I thought, “Oh, God going back up there,” you know.
But like I said, it’s changed.
TR: Yeah, it’s changed.
CB: It’s changed. Still there’s people, but still –
TR: Maybe some, maybe sometimes most of the older people –
CB: That’s what I’m saying, it’s the older people now –
TR: Most of the older people –
CB: Not the younger ones. Anymore, the younger ones accept anything.
TR: It’s like, we went to my brother’s in the hospital in St. Francis, and this older lady was up
there and we went to ask her, you know, where he was at, and man, she talked to us like, man,
she hated her job.
CB: And she hated us, probably, more than anything else.
TR: Like she hated her job, you know, like we forced her to talk to us. You know, all we asked
her, you know, where my brother was at, you know, for information. Man, I said to myself, “You
know, she don’t like her job. Why in the devil would she go up there in a back room back there?
Get somebody up here with a smile to the public.”
CB: So you still have ‘em.
TR: You still – but…I’m sure it’s there. I don’t think it’s ever forgotten, I don’t think. We’ve,
we’ve had to live with this. Yeah. And like I say, our kids can’t believe it actually happened.
CB: The old times. That’s the old times, you know.
HK: I think if they listen to this tape and they listen to some of the other tapes, they will find out

�that it was sort of, you know, universal, among the people during that time.
TR: Do the majority of the other ones, does this kind of, kind of, with the other ones, fit in pretty
well?
HK: Yeah, there were some that, some – [tape cuts off]

�</text>
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                  <text>La Yarda Oral History Project</text>
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                  <text>La Yarda (Lawrence, Kan.)</text>
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                  <text>La Yarda was a neighborhood of worker housing provided by the Santa Fe Railroad for Mexican-American railroad workers in Lawrence, Kansas; located near the Kansas (Kaw) River, the neighborhood was largely destroyed by a major flood in 1951. In 2006, Helen Krische, archivist at the Watkins Community Museum, began an oral history project to document the La Yarda and Mexican-American communities in Lawrence, Kansas. The project was resumed in 2019 by Nora Murphy and Emily Raymond. The interviews primarily feature the children of the railroad workers who migrated to Lawrence in the early 20th century; they describe daily life, social activities, and living conditions in the Mexican-American community in Lawrence from roughly the 1920s through the 1970s.</text>
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                  <text>These works are the intellectual property of the Watkins Museum of History, Lawrence, Kansas. The public may freely copy, modify, and share this Item for noncommercial purposes if they include the original source information. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s).</text>
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              <text>Bucia, Clara</text>
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            <name>Title</name>
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                <text>Clara (Ramirez) Bucia and Thomas Ramirez La Yarda Interview</text>
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                <text>Bucia, Clara</text>
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                <text>Clara (Ramirez) Bucia and her brother Thomas Ramirez were interviewed by Helen Krische in 2006 as part of an oral history project to document the La Yarda and Mexican-American communities in Lawrence, Kansas. La Yarda was a neighborhood of worker housing provided by the Santa Fe Railroad for Mexican-American railroad workers; located near the Kansas (Kaw) River, the neighborhood was largely destroyed by a major flood in 1951. Clara and Thomas lived with their parents and eleven siblings in the La Yarda neighborhood. They describe their family's migration from Mexico to Lawrence, and the living conditions and social activities in La Yarda. They discuss family foodways and healthcare, as well as their work experiences growing up. Clara and Thomas discuss their experiences attending Lawrence schools and as part of the congregation of St. John's Church, as well as their experiences of discrimination and segregation in Lawrence. Both Clara and Thomas served in the military, and share their thoughts about how their service shaped their understanding of their experiences with discrimination in Lawrence. </text>
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                <text>Krische, Helen</text>
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                <text>Raymond, Emily</text>
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                <text>Rumback, Ellie</text>
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                <text>Lawrence (Kan.)</text>
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                <text>1920s - 1970s</text>
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                <text>2006</text>
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                <text>Watkins Community Museum (Lawrence, Kan.)</text>
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                <text>To access the video and audio recordings of this interview, go to &lt;a href="https://archive.org/details/22-cbucia-tramirez-2006"&gt;https://archive.org/details/22-cbucia-tramirez-2006&lt;/a&gt;.</text>
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                <text>&lt;a href="https://archives.lib.ku.edu/repositories/3/resources/5295"&gt;Additional research on the La Yarda community&lt;/a&gt; is held at the Spencer Research Library at the University of Kansas.</text>
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                <text>Published with the permission of Sharon Villegas on behalf of Clara Bucia, and Josephine Ramirez on behalf of Thomas Ramirez. This work is the intellectual property of the Watkins Museum of History, Lawrence, Kansas. The public may freely copy, modify, and share this Item for noncommercial purposes if they include the original source information. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s).</text>
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                <text>La Yarda Oral History Project</text>
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                <text>La Yarda (Lawrence, Kan.)</text>
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                <text>Mexican Americans -- Housing -- Kansas -- Lawrence</text>
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                <text>Mexican Americans -- History -- Kansas -- Lawrence</text>
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                <text>Mexican Americans -- Social conditions -- Kansas -- Lawrence </text>
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                <text>Oral History</text>
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                    <text>Tape 23: Interview with Fidel Jimenez, Sr.
Interviewer: Helen Krische
Date of Interview: 2006
Length of Interview: 43:32
Location of Interview: St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church
Transcription Completion Date: November 16, 2020
Transcriptionist: Emily Raymond
Helen Krische (Interviewer): …Introduce ourselves, just for the tape purposes. And I’m Helen
Krische, and this is Heather Bollier, she’s the technical assistant. And would you like to
introduce yourself?
Fidel Jimenez (Interviewee): Uh, my name is Fidel Jimenez.
HK: Uh-huh. Okay.
FJ: Senior.
HK: Alrighty. And the – the first question I’m gonna ask you is about your parents. And, um,
what their names were, and where they were from.
FJ: Well, both of ‘em, they was from Mexico.
HK: Mm-hmm.
FJ: And, uh, my dad’s name, his name was Louis – Luis, another word – and my mother’s name
was Maria.
HK: Mm-hmm. And do you know what region of Mexico they were from, or what towns?
FJ: Well, my dad, he was from Guanahuato, and I never did know where my mother was from.
She never did – and I never did hear her say, I mean…
HK: Do you know what time, um, what time period they came to the United States?
FJ: Gosh, no. I have no idea. [HK laughs]
HK: Do you know, um…what brought them to the United States?
FJ: Never did say, I mean, that I know of. Just come on across.
HK: Did he get a job with the railroad or anything, or…?
FJ: Yeah, he worked, started, he worked at the…for the railroad for a lot of years.
HK: Mm-hmm. And how did he end up in Lawrence?

�FJ: Uh, well, he was working there in Billtown (nickname for Williamstown) and then there was
an opening here, so they gave him a transfer to work here.
HK: Mm-hmm.
FJ: But I guess, first time that he started working for the railroad was in McFarland, Kansas, for
the Rock Island.
HK: Mm-hmm.
FJ: And then he, I don’t know, wound up there at Billtown on the Union Pacific, and – and that’s
where he retired, on the Union Pacific.
HK: Okay. Okay. And what, where did you, where did your family live during the time that he
was working for the Union Pacific?
FJ: There at Billtown, and then we moved to Lawrence.
HK: Did the Union Pacific have any kind of special housing that they had for their employees?
FJ: Yeah, they used to.
HK: What – what type of housing was that?
FJ: It was uh, like, uh, these outfit cars that they have now.
HK: Mm-hmm.
FJ: That, uh, they made into so many rooms and that’s – that’s what you lived in.
HK: Okay.
FJ: ‘Cause like, you’re Santa Fe, they got, of course they have apartments here, you know. They
always had a better living arrangement for their workers and…No, and then we went and moved
to Lawrence and, they passed away and I’m still here.
HK: And that’s a good thing.
FJ: Wait for my turn. [HK laughs]
HK: Did your, did your parents speak any English when they came to the United States, or…?
FJ: No, I don’t think so. And my dad, he talked pretty good English, you know, that I can
remember, and then, uh, my mother, she never did learn too much of it.

�HK: Did – did your dad have any other jobs other than working for the railroad, did he have any
kind of side jobs that he did, or…?
FJ: No, no.
HK: No. Did he raise a vegetable garden?
FJ: Oh, we used to raise a big garden all the time.
HK: Did you?
FJ: Oh, yes.
HK: Yeah. Did, was that exclusively for the family, or – ?
FJ: Yeah.
HK: Or did they sell some of that produce to other people?
FJ: No, it was just for – for the family.
K: Did you have any, uh, livestock, that was, that your dad raised, too? Like chickens and
things? Stuff like that?
FJ: Chickens. Chickens, turkeys and, uh, goats. [laughs]
HK: Oh. Goats. Did you have goat cheese?
FJ: No –
HK: Did you make any goat cheese? No?
FJ: But I sure loved that goat milk.
HK: Was it good?
FJ: Yeah. Oh, yeah. [HK laughs]
HK: Yeah. And, um, so your mom did all the cooking, right?
FJ: Mm-hmm.
HK: And how many kids were in your family? How many children?
FJ: One, two…three…let’s see…four.

�HK: There were four children altogether? Which, um, were you the youngest, or were you the
oldest, or…?
FJ: No, I was, uh…well, the second one, I guess.
HK: Second.
FJ: Yeah.
HK: Did you grow up speaking Spanish, or…?
FJ: Both.
HK: Both.
FJ: Yeah.
HK: What schools did you attend?
FJ: Pardon?
HK: What schools did you attend?
FJ: Well, when I did, when I did go, I went to, uh, when I was in Billtown I worked, went there
to their grade school, then when I come to Lawrence, I went to junior high.
HK: Mm-hmm.
FJ: Went in the front door, and walked out the back door. And that was it.
HK: You didn’t like it, huh?
FJ: Well, I, had my mind on working, I mean…
HK: Oh. So you started at a young age, working?
FJ: Oh, yeah. Yeah. I was, had little odd jobs and, then uh, I started on the railroad I think when I
was about fourteen.
HK: Hmm. And was that the Union Pacific also?
FJ: Yes.
HK: What – what kind of jobs did you do on the Un – when you worked there?

�FJ: Well, I done regular section work, and I…went into, uh, they had a foreman job for eight
years, and then track patrolman. And truck driver, and…and I worked at that crossing in North
Lawrence watching the kids there for ten years, and…oh, just about everything, I mean…
HK: Mm-hmm. What were some of your job duties as a section worker?
FJ: Oh, laborer?
HK: Uh-huh. When you worked on the tracks?
FJ: Oh, putting in ties, and – and, uh…raising, uh, raising track and stuff like that, you know,
whatever was low, you’d jack it up, push a little rock under it, and…
HK: How many men usually worked on the tracks?
FJ: On the section?
HK: Mm-hmm.
FJ: Well, it used to be sometimes that, uh, there’d be as many as ten or twelve. That was back in
the good days.
HK: Hmm.
FJ: And then, one time I had that, uh, Billtown section of road, the roadmaster come by and he
says: “Hire some guys,” and we – I think we had eight then.
HK: Mm-hmm.
FJ: And hired eight more, we had sixteen, you know.
HK: Mm-hmm.
FJ: They used to have big gangs then…each gang had so many miles to take care of, double
track. And, uh…I, we double work it up there pretty good, too. I mean…check – you had to
check every day. No, that was the good days.
HK: How many, how many hours a day did you work?
FJ: When I first started, I was, uh, I was working, uh, ten hours a day, seven days a week.
HK: Wow. And that’s hard labor, too.
FJ: Yeah. I [seen?] many a day, I could just, I could have walked off, you know. And I’d say,
‘cause if I walk off, these old fellas, they’re gonna say: “He couldn’t take it.” So I’d stay right
there. [Both laugh] But you know, 70 hours a week, that’s a lot of hours.

�HK: That is, yeah, especially with that type of work. Yeah. How much – was the pay very good?
FJ: Uh, we was getting a great big old…73 cents an hour.
HK: So, let’s see, for 10 hours of work, that was what…seven dollars and thirty cents a day.
FJ: It wasn’t very much.
HK: Yeah. [laughs] Yeah. That’d be pretty hard to raise a family on that kind of wages.
FJ: Oh, yeah.
HK: And, uh, let’s see, you said you were a foreman?
FJ: Foreman, yeah.
HK: And what were your job duties then?
FJ: Just, like, uh, watching the guys, you know, telling ‘em what to do and where to put in ties
and mark the ties for ‘em, and…and, uh, put ‘em to gauge track, or, you know. Just made sure
you didn’t pull too much track loose, ahead of, in case of a train come up, and you know you had
to spike it back down.
HK: Mm-hmm. How much warning did you have ahead of time that a train was coming?
FJ: Well, that all depends on where you was at, yeah, how many miles you could see in one
direction.
HK: Oh. ‘Course they didn’t have any walkie-talkies or anything like that.
FJ: Oh, no, no. No, ma’am.
HK: So it was just what you could see.
FJ: You just, you just had to, uh, listen for a whistle, you know.
HK: Mm-hmm.
FJ: ‘Course then they went, uh, they – and they put these, uh, indicators up. [Coughs] Excuse
me. They’d go back so many miles, and if you was doing something that you need to, needed to,
some time to, you know, to repair the track before a train showed up, you could put a man on the
indicator and whenever that thing would mark some – something was coming, well, he’d wave at
you or holler at you if you was close enough, and then just straighten things up till it went by,
and then watch it again.

�HK: Yeah. Did you see any train wrecks during your time, working?
FJ: Did I what?
HK: Did you see any train wrecks?
FJ: I seen a lot of ‘em.
HK: Yeah. What were those like?
FJ: [Coughs] Well, it was terrible. Well, the worst one, well, I don’t know. I seen one…it was,
uh, what was it, this side of Manhattan somewhere. I don’t remember what town it was, but,
whether it was, between towns, I mean, uh…a freight train hit a passenger train and –
HK: Oooh.
FJ: Head-on.
HK: Oh, my gosh.
FJ: And, uh…then, I seen a lot of ‘em, but another bad one was up here this side of Lawrence.
This side of Edwardsville, when a train hit that, uh…they had a dump truck, loaded with sand.
HK: Hmm.
FJ: The couple had just…just hadn’t been married very long, each one of ‘em I think had, I
forgot, five or…six kids. And, uh, that was their first trip across the tracks with a load of sand.
And they pulled out right in front of a train. And it was, it was bad, I mean…It, uh, and they
couldn’t find them.
HK: Hmm.
FJ: But the first unit, when – when they jumped the track, the first unit went in the ground, it was
about…half, half-buried. Then the second unit. Uh, the…unit number two was about, oh, third, I
guess. And then the third unit wasn’t buried quite as much, uh, you know. Then, uh, when they
started clearing up all of the cars and everything…they finally found the – the couple that was
underneath one of them cars and…it was, it was bad. I think that’s about the worst one that I was
ever around, you know, people, where they got…well, got killed.
HK: Mm-hmm.
FJ: But no, I seen a lot of ‘em. Yeah, I seen a lot of ‘em.
HK: Did you ever, um, was there any time when there was, like, a flood or something like that,
that happened, and…?

�FJ: Oh, yeah, in ‘51.
HK: Yeah. You were, you were working on the railroad when the ‘51 flood hit?
FJ: Oh, yeah.
HK: What happened to the – the railroad, I mean, the tracks then? What kind of a mess was that?
FJ: We…it was me and four other guys, we was going out to Lawrence working, and we was
working the Billtown. And, uh…the, uh…water was real high. We was going to, about, Tee Pee
Junction and…water was pretty near, coming – pretty near ready to come in the automobile
‘cause it was my turn to, you know, my turn to drive.
HK: Uh-huh.
FJ: So…and it was really high. I mean, we got through there, and we got up to Billtown and it
was, it had been raining real hard and the highway was flooded this side of Billtown between
Billtown and [Bow?] Creek.
HK: Uh-huh.
FJ: And we finally got into Billtown, and, uh…they, uh, when we got up by the tracks, they said
that the levee had busted the [road?] over here at Tee Pee Junction.
HK: Oh.
FJ: And, it, the way I kinda figured out, it must have been just – just shortly after we went
through there, I mean. And then we couldn’t get home. We was up – we had to stay up there and,
and the last, that last day that we was up there, I think I made their day with a can of pineapple,
‘cause the farmers all come in there and had that one little old grocery store, and they just
stocked up on canned goods and whatever was in the store, you know, and the old man, they sent
us into Oskaloosa, and there’s some nice folks up there in Oskaloosa, they gave us all a place to
live.
HK: Uh-huh.
FJ: Next morning, when we got up…uh, we were, all five of us got back together, uh, till we
figured out we was gonna have to try to get back to Lawrence. So we left, uh, we come back into
Billtown and told that foreman we was working for, I said: “Well, we’re gonna try to get home.”
He said: “Okay.” So, we went, we went to, uh, Oskaloosa again. And then we went to
McClellan, we hit Tonganoxie, and then turned into Kansas City. And, uh, it took us, uh, well, it
took us all day to get to Lawrence. ‘Cause then when we hit Kansas City we got caught on that
Interstate, inner city Viaduct, that’s about the time the, all the high water was just barely getting
into Kansas City. And there was, we stood on that [bypass?], we look down and all them boxcars
just, all the things, see ‘em just come up, turn over and all that water was gettin’ in there,
and…And, no, finally we got through Kansas City and we come in, wound up at Baldwin

�Junction. And then from Baldwin Junction we had to go on, I, what…56, I think, end at Topeka
and then come in on Highway 40 and we finally made it home that evening. Took us all day to
get home.
HK: Geez.
FJ: Yeah, that was a pretty good flood. But after that, we could, uh, walk…in, uh, down the
railroad tracks and, and uh, well, we could…lot of the, some of the fellas would just straddle the
rails, you know, kind of pulling themselves across the deep holes and I’d – we’d all – a couple of
us, we’d walk down to the bottom, you know. And meet the rest of the guys over there and work.
And then the same thing we do in the evening, come back through there, you know. Walk back
into town. And they fixed it so we could just work out of Lawrence here, you know.
HK: Uh-huh.
FJ: Yeah, they cleared the roads up. So we just stayed in Lawrence for, I don’t know, a couple of
weeks before they cleared the roads and worked on one of these gangs here in Lawrence.
HK: How long did it take the railroad to fix the tracks?
FJ: Oh, gosh.
HK: From that?
FJ: It – well, to me it didn’t – didn’t seem like it took too long, ‘cause they, uh, they had, oh, they
had gangs, oh, my. They had men working. Yeah, and they had a lot of men working up here too.
Just, uh, east of Lawrence the place we call the Shoo-Fly that, where the river washed out that
great big hole underneath the tracks.
HK: Hmm.
FJ: And they had to, uh, drill the railroad around the, the, the farmers’ fields, uh, you know, to –
once it started trains running. And they had, uh, work train there that, uh…they uh, had, uh, well
I don’t know how many cars it was, quite a few cars, of ballast and big rock riff raff they call it,
and great big boulders and…and they had an en – they got an engine in there and they went out
so far, and then, and, uh…took the rails apart and headed right into that hole. And the engine got
wound up and took and pushed all them cars, and then cut loose, and all them cars, they’re –
they’re probably still down there in that big hole there, you know. [HK laughs] Then they had a
big, uh, sand pump that they’d pump sand out of the river and fill the rest of it up with sand.
Yeah, it’s, uh, it was quite a deal.
HK: Did they start using any kind of, um, other machinery to lay tracks while you were still
working for the railroad, or was it just basically manual labor?
FJ: Oh, yeah, they had a lot of machines, yeah. Yeah, they, uh…it used to be that we – we’d have
gangs, but, uh, they do every – all the surfaces by hand. And then they got, well, they got

�machinery and they had these, uh, trackers. They worked pretty good, but they’d only raise the
track where, you know, high enough. [Blasters? Glasses?] they’d call ‘em, they do the tamping
and…one of ‘em’s got, they use – they used one as a jack and he’s the one that, he’d lead the
pack and all the rest of ‘em followed behind and pick up the track a little more and they’d tamp
it, and, you know, and they got machines to do the lining anymore.
HK: Mm-hmm.
FJ: Oh, yeah, it’s…it’s really, it’s…they’ve come a long way out there, them guys. ‘Course they
don’t hardly have nobody working, but…
HK: Yeah. So…what was, um, going back to – I’m gonna shut this door. Lot of noise, traffic
noise coming in. [Door shuts] Um…what was it like for you growing up, um…did you…I don’t
know, did you…did you feel any prejudice growing up? From other people?
FJ: Well, not really. I mean, there was only one place in North Lawrence that, uh, that, uh, I’d
drive over there in my car and they wouldn’t sell me no root beer.
HK: Oh. [Both laugh] That would have been a tragedy.
FJ: Yeah. Well, they – they, they wouldn’t serve a Mexican over there.
HK: Huh.
FJ: No way. And I don’t know why, I mean…
HK: Huh.
FJ: That’s what I tell everybody, you know, now they’re eating our tortillas and tostadas,
enchiladas, and…
HK: Yeah.
FJ: That’s what’s funny, I think, you know. Back in them years you couldn’t even get a root beer
over there and now they’re eating all the tacos and…
HK: Yeah.
FJ: Tortillas and…refried beans.
HK: Yeah. What kind of meals did your mother used to fix for the family?
FJ: Food?
HK: Mm-hmm.

�FJ: Oh.
HK: What would be a typical meal?
FJ: Every day?
HK: Mm-hmm.
FJ: Oh, you could have, uh, fried potatoes with eggs and, uh, and then, uh, you have, uh, refried
beans and, uh…and other times if you wanted some, you could just eat the beans right out of the,
the skillet.
HK: Mm-hmm.
FJ: And, uh, then you chop up onion, chop up a hot pepper. And then go out and pick a bunch of
that, uh, cilantro.
HK: Mm-hmm.
FJ: Put it in there, oh, get a couple hot tortillas, just roll them like that, like a cigar, you know,
and eat away. Oh yeah.
HK: That sounds good. Yeah.
FJ: Chicken. Fried chicken.
HK: Yeah.
FJ: It’s – it’s pretty good.
HK: Did you have meat every single day?
FJ: Pardon?
HK: Did you have meat every day, you know…
FJ: Oh no, uh-uh. No.
HK: About how many times a week did you have meat?
FJ: Oh, couple of times.
HK: Couple of times. Yeah.
FJ: Sunday was always for sure.

�HK: Mm-hmm. Was that chicken day?
FJ: Mm-hmm.
HK: Fried chicken?
FJ: Oh. [HK laughs] I like the chicken breast, chicken legs, chicken thighs. Uh…nibble on a
wing or so…I’d rather have the ones that got more meat on them. [Both laugh]
HK: Good stuff. Yeah. Did she make any kind of special desserts?
FJ: No, just always had pies, cakes, all the time. No, that was the good old days.
HK: Yeah. Yeah. What kind of, uh, did you have any healthcare growing up?
FJ: Any what?
HK: Healthcare? The doctors? Did you –
FJ: Doctors?
HK: Did you go see the doctors regularly, or – ?
FJ: Oh, not very often.
HK: Like today, they have health checkups for kids and stuff like that.
FJ: Oh, no, not very often. Back in them days, you ate pretty healthy. Ate good and stayed
healthy.
HK: Well, what would happen if someone became ill?
FJ: Oh, you’d take ‘em to the doctor.
HK: Okay.
FJ: But, uh…I never remember being sick.
HK: Yeah? Did your mom have any special home remedies, like if you had an earache or
something like that?
FJ: Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. Mm-hmm. The older people had all these, they had some kind of stuff
that’d cure you.
HK: Uh-huh. Do you remember any, any that she did for you, or any of your brothers or sisters
when you were growing up?

�FJ: Uh-uh.
HK: Like if you had an earache, what would she do for that?
FJ: Well…I don’t think I ever had an earache. [HK laughs]
HK: You were just too healthy.
FJ: No, I don’t believe I ever had an earache.
HK: What about a cold? If somebody had a cold, was there anything special that she gave you
for that?
FJ: Well, I think that…if I remember right, all that we used to take was the 4-way cold tablets.
HK: Oh, okay.
FJ: Either that or it just wore off, you know…
HK: Um –
FJ: People didn’t get sick back in them days like they do anymore, you know.
HK: Yeah. Yeah. What year were you born?
FJ: Pardon?
HK: What year were you born?
FJ: Well, let’s see, I could tell you, say, like, what, uh, ‘57? [HK laughs] Oh, no, ‘29.
HK: 1929.
FJ: Yeah.
HK: Okay. When did you, uh, get married?
FJ: When?
HK: Uh-huh.
FJ: Forty-sev…let’s see…forty-eight.
HK: ‘48?

�FJ: Yeah, I think it was in ‘48.
HK: Where did you meet your wife?
FJ: Where?
HK: Uh-huh.
FJ: Uh, here in Lawrence.
HK: In Lawrence?
FJ: Yeah.
HK: Yeah. So you didn’t have to go outside of Lawrence to find –
FJ: No, no.
HK: To find a wife.
FJ: No.
HK: I know there were a – a lot of people that I talked to, that they had to go to Topeka or
Kansas City because they were re – they were related to all of the other [HK laughs] people.
FJ: Well, maybe that’s the reason I was lucky, ‘cause I didn’t have no relations.
HK: Yeah. Since you were from Billtown, you were… [Laughs] Did you serve in the, in the, uh,
were you – did you enlist in the service? At any time, did you serve in the Army, or…?
FJ: No, ‘cause second war I’d been married too long, so…
HK: Oh, okay.
FJ: But I was what you call right at the mouth of the gun and all that. Kept being called but, uh,
never did, so…
HK: Did any of your relatives serve in the armed forces?
FJ: Well, wife’s brothers, they did, yeah.
HK: Mm-hmm. Yeah. Well, you, um, I guess you were a child during the Depression, right?
FJ: Yeah.

�HK: You were a child. Did your family have, um, did they have it any harder during the
Depression than at other times?
FJ: Well…I don’t really remember. I mean, I know that [clears throat] I can remember that, uh,
there used to be a lot of people walking, you know, down the track and stuff. And a lot of ‘em
would ride the, uh, boxcars on the railroad, you know.
HK: Mm-hmm.
FJ: Lot of ‘em would stop by and they, uh, always want, you know, ask for a handout.
HK: Mm-hmm.
FJ: ‘Course, my mother, she’d always fix ‘em up a plate of whatever she had. Stack of tortillas,
and…and, they were just tickled to death, you know. She’d feed ‘em till they got full. And then,
most of them fellas, they, you know, they showed their appreciation. They’d get out there and
chop up big old piles of wood, you know, and…
HK: Mm-hmm.
FJ: And sometimes she’d tell me to go out there and tell ‘em, you know: “That’s enough!” So,
you know, they’d…some of ‘em would quit and then some of ‘em would just chop some more,
you know?
HK: Mm-hmm.
FJ: So I mean, they just picked up their little jacket or whatever they had and little towel or just
whatever and take off up the track. So no, I don’t – I don’t know, we didn’t have a lot of, lot of
different things either, but we did have enough to eat, you know. Always, uh, had plenty, I mean,
and like I say, you know, they used to share quite a bit with the people that used to come by.
HK: Mm-hmm. Well, after you – after you married your wife, where did you live here in
Lawrence?
FJ: Uh…on New Jersey Street.
HK: New Jersey?
FJ: Yeah.
HK: Have you – do you still live there or do you live somewhere else?
FJ: No, I, uh…when we went there we went on, uh…what’s the name, Garfield Street and
then…and then over, sold that house, and she wanted to move across the street to the little house
that was there. Boy, I told her, you know, those houses, you had to put a lot of money in it, and a

�lot of work, which we did, and she wanted that darn little house, you know? We finally got it all
fixed up and moved in, and…
HK: Yeah. That was in North Lawrence?
FJ: No, on Garfield. It’s over here, East Lawrence.
HK: Hmm.
FJ: It’s off of 13th Street.
HK: Okay. So did you live around that area during, um, during all of the – the stuff going on,
during the early ‘70s? When they had all those, those, um, problems with shootings and stuff?
FJ: Yeah.
HK: Did you live over in that area?
FJ: Yeah.
HK: What was it like at that time?
FJ: I don’t…I didn’t see nothing ever going on around there.
HK: Nothing going on.
FJ: [If there was?] something going on, I never did see nothin’. [HK laughs]
HK: Yeah, there were some – some people that I talked to who lived around, uh, New Jersey and
Pennsylvania Streets, said that they, you know, there were people who were shooting guns and
stuff like that. And, uh, I just didn’t know if you had experienced anything like that. ‘Course,
maybe you were a little bit further, um, south of where that was going on.
FJ: No…
HK: How many children did you and your wife have?
FJ: One. One son.
HK: One? Okay. Does he still live here in Lawrence?
FJ: Yeah, he lives, uh, well, you can say he lives out in the country, but the city’s pretty right
across the street from him now.
HK: Ah.

�FJ: He lives just that side of the bypass, and most of the town is right next to the bypass over
there. Right off Highway 40.
HK: Uh-huh. Yeah. Does he speak Spanish? At all?
FJ: Well…he was learning pretty good when, uh, he was home, but then he forgot everything he
– he knew. Well, he can…you can kind of understand what he says sometimes, you know, and,
but he can speak a little bit, but not – not like he used to when he was younger.
HK: Does he understand it, though, when somebody else speaks it?
FJ: Yeah. Mm-hmm.
HK: He can understand it really good? Okay. How do you think that, um, times have changed
from when you were a kid to today? Do you think that there, there’s a lot more opportunities for
kids today, or…?
FJ: Oh, yeah. Yeah. Nowadays there is, uh-huh…
HK: What do you think about the, uh, immigration thing going on right now? All of the
controversy?
FJ: Well, I just think about what – what, uh, if we send all them people back, in two or three
weeks we wouldn’t have any strawberries, we wouldn’t have no onions and…wouldn’t have
none of them vegetables to eat.
HK: Mm-hmm.
FJ: ‘Cause people, I don’t know. In this country I don’t think they go for that kind of work, you
know? ‘Cause I used to see that on the railroad, that, uh, we’d always send our truck driver into
Kansas City when they was short on help on them gangs. They’d come back with a bunch of
guys, they’d unload ‘em. By next morning, half of ‘em would be gone back to Kansas City. They
didn’t wanna work. Lot of ‘em would work one day, and then draw their pay and gone. They
didn’t care about working on the railroad.
HK: So you’re talking about the Anglo workers?
FJ: Yeah. So I don’t, I don’t know, it’s…them people, all they’re doing is coming over here
wanting to work, you know, make – trying to make a living, and…what I can’t understand is that
they bring these people from other countries over here and set ‘em up homes and jobs and…I
mean divorce, you get in-laws and outlaws and everybody you know, whatever.
HK: Yeah.
FJ: And…but uh, no, I don’t know. I – I don’t think them people doing any harm. Just trying to
make a living.

�HK: Mm-hmm. Going back to when your dad worked on the railroad, did he, um, did your
parents help, um, any of the new people that were coming up from Mexico to get established
here in the United States?
FJ: Did they what?
HK: If there were, um, new people coming in from Mexico to work for the railroads or whatever,
did, did your parents help them get established here?
FJ: Oh, there never was nobody would – stop there in Billtown, it was – it was just this little bitty
town, I mean. But most of them people that come over, they’d go to, like, Topeka or Kansas
City, some bigger towns, you know. No, this was just what you call a wide gap in the road.
HK: Okay.
FJ: There wasn’t really much there that would interest anybody.
HK: Mm-hmm. Okay. Well, can you think of anything else that you want to talk about, or…?
FJ: No.
HK: No? Okay. Well, I guess, I can’t think of anything else either. So, um, hopefully you’ll be
able to come when everybody else gets together and…because they’re, they’re gonna kind of
talk about, um, earlier days and…
FJ: The good old days.
HK: The good old days, yeah. [FJ laughs] Yeah. Well, okay. Well, thank you very much for –
FJ: Oh, you’re welcome.
HK: And, let me stop – [tape cuts off at 35:33]
END OF TAPE 23

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                  <text>La Yarda was a neighborhood of worker housing provided by the Santa Fe Railroad for Mexican-American railroad workers in Lawrence, Kansas; located near the Kansas (Kaw) River, the neighborhood was largely destroyed by a major flood in 1951. In 2006, Helen Krische, archivist at the Watkins Community Museum, began an oral history project to document the La Yarda and Mexican-American communities in Lawrence, Kansas. The project was resumed in 2019 by Nora Murphy and Emily Raymond. The interviews primarily feature the children of the railroad workers who migrated to Lawrence in the early 20th century; they describe daily life, social activities, and living conditions in the Mexican-American community in Lawrence from roughly the 1920s through the 1970s.</text>
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                <text>Fidel Jimenez, Sr., was interviewed by Helen Krische in 2006 as part of an oral history project to document the La Yarda and Mexican-American communities in Lawrence, Kansas. La Yarda was a neighborhood of worker housing provided by the Santa Fe Railroad for Mexican-American railroad workers; located near the Kansas (Kaw) River, the neighborhood was largely destroyed by a major flood in 1951. Fidel grew up in Williamstown (in Jefferson County, Kansas) and Lawrence. Fidel describes his family's migration from Mexico to Lawrence. His father was a railroad worker; Fidel also worked on the railroad, and describes the impact of the 1951 flood on the railroad. Fidel shares memories of his family's foodways, and his childhood experiences with healthcare. He also discusses his thoughts about immigration, and his experiences of discrimination in Lawrence. </text>
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                <text>To access the video and audio recordings of this interview, go to &lt;a href="https://archive.org/details/23-fjimenez-sr-2006"&gt;https://archive.org/details/23-fjimenez-sr-2006&lt;/a&gt;.</text>
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                <text>&lt;a href="https://archives.lib.ku.edu/repositories/3/resources/5295"&gt;Additional research on the La Yarda community&lt;/a&gt; is held at the Spencer Research Library at the University of Kansas.</text>
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                <text>Published with the permission of Fidel Jimenez, Jr., on behalf of Fidel Jimenez, Sr. This work is the intellectual property of the Watkins Museum of History, Lawrence, Kansas. The public may freely copy, modify, and share this Item for noncommercial purposes if they include the original source information. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s).</text>
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                    <text>Tape 24: Interview with Garcia and Garcia
Interviewer: Helen Krische
Date of Interview: 2006
Length of Interview: 47:45
Location of Interview: St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church
Transcription Completion Date: 2021
Transcriptionist: Emily Raymond
NOTE: The conversation seems to indicate that a second female in room is also part of the
interview, likely another family member; she is never addressed by name and is labeled in the
transcript as F (female). Identity might be “Irene.”
Andrew Garcia (Interviewee): Raymond and Gladys and Val and them. And we had somebody
else, I can’t remember who else was there. They wanted two of them. So we had a whole gang.
And then every payday we got together, and then, they paid us every payday, and then, uh,
Raymond sure loved to cheat people. [HK laughs]
Bob Garcia (Interviewee): He was always tight with his money. Yeah, Raymond was real – real
thrifty. Yeah.
AG: Every time you picked a sack of potatoes, they’d give you a token, you know, a chip, and,
uh…when it came time, Raymond wouldn’t count it. They’d pay Raymond, see, and then
Raymond paid us.
BG: Oh, my gosh.
AG: So, everybody, after we payday, uh, everybody’d say:
“Andy, come check my stuff.”
“What do you mean check it?” he says, “I don’t think he paid me right.”
I said: “How many did you have? So I says, “Well, let me count ‘em before you do it.”
And they had Joe, and they had – another one was there too, you know, and they couldn’t
do nothing: “What’s the matter with these guys?” I had to go through – after they paid us – well,
I had to go through the – go through all their chips and see how many they had and then I’d tell
Raymond:
“Hey. Hey, mi hermano,” I’d say, “You cheated people.”
He said: “No, I didn’t!”
“Yes, you did.”I said: “You owe this lady so much money, and you owe this other lady so
much money too.” I couldn’t [murmurs] do that Raymond, my God.
Well, he says: “Look, I furnished the truck.” [Laughter]
“I know you did, you furnished the truck.” Oh, I tell you. We had an awful time. And
then I don’t know what he paid me, ‘cause Dad made the deal with him, so I never did see no
money–
F: Didn’t see the money.

�AG: He was supposed to pay Dad, so I don’t know, I don’t know how they worked it out.
[Laughter] But, uh, I was interpreter for him and then I was in accounting too, so I got over there
and, uh, there was a whole bunch of girls from Texas. [Laughter] So – so this girl comes over,
said:
Helen Krische (Interviewer): [Unintelligible] girls.
AG: This girl comes over and says: “Are you the mechanic?” I says: “No, I’m not.”
BG: At that age, you know, what else is there? [Laughter] Make the world go ‘round.
AG: And my sister wants to go with your boy – with your friend. It was Joey. He was the oldest
one. He was the only one old enough to date. And my sister wanted to go with your friend.
I says: “I can fix that up for you. [Name?] I’ve got to have the prettiest girls around too.”
He says: “We’re a team!”
And he said: “You are?”
He said: “Well, which one do you want?”
I said: “Well, I have to look around first. I’ll let you know.” So the next day I says, uh: “I
found one.”
He says: “You did?”
“Who,” I says, “I have to take you, you’re the prettiest one around. We’re gonna go
Friday to –” They had a free movie outside in the park, you know; we all went every Friday
[murmurs].
I said: “You girls go to the lake and take a bath and brush your teeth and use Scope if you
can get some –” [Laughter] “And make sure you borrow some perfume from your mother so you
smell good.”
And she says: “What’s wrong with you guys? You guys don’t go around with Mexican
girls, do you?”
I says: “No, hon, where we come from, there’s no Mexican girls. They’re all white and
they have showers and they have toothbrushes.” [Laughter]
Says: “Are you sure you don’t want us to go to Mexico and get a clean bill of health?”
I says: “Well, that would help.” But then, when we went to the movies [murmurs].
She said: “Well, can you borrow the truck?”
I says: “No, the truck is not mine. The truck, it belongs to that guy.” I said: Tell your
sister to borrow the car.”
So she got the car from her folks and went to the movies and then we went uptown. We
bought some beer, and we had – we had a real good time. Brought some beer back home,
and…everywhere I went we had fun. Anyway, we did – we did pretty good. After we got [man
interrupts]. Everybody, we all bought a 100-pound pack of beans.
HK: Uh-huh.
AG: And a 100-pound bag of potatoes. So Mama was real happy when I got home. Yeah, 100
pounds of beans and 100 pounds of potatoes.
BG: And that’s quite a lot, yeah.

�AG: And we bought some onion, too – we bought, we were picking – we picked onions too. So
we brought back some onions and some sweet potatoes. Anyway, when we came back I didn’t
think the truck was gonna make it home, ‘cause we had it loaded so much – so heavy. I said:
“Oh, my.” It was a good thing it had dual wheels in the back, ‘cause if it hadn’t, we’d have – I’d
have ever made it home. We really had that poor truck loaded down. It was pulling hard coming
home, believe me, I’m glad it was downhill. It would have never made it uphill, I know that. But
we brought a lot of groceries home, and that – that sure helped a lot.
HK: How many kids were in the family, at that time?
AG: I didn’t have too many at that time. I mean, maybe I had five. Bob –
F: How many did Mom – how many did Mom [unintelligible] mother have? Together?
AG: We had, uh, Mercy and Tony. We had Mercy and Tony and Jenny.
BG: Jenny, yeah.
F: So it was about five?
AG: And Bob and – and Bob…
F: What about Sabina? Was she – ?
BG: I don’t, maybe – maybe, I don’t remember. I don’t know. I really don’t know. She –
AG: I don’t know what year she was born.
BG: She was probably born in thirty – ‘38, ‘36? Well, ‘36, ‘37 probably.
F: She’s about ten years older than I am.
BG: Yeah, her –
F: No, she’s not 70 yet. She’s 69, I think.
AG: Yeah.
F: It must have been five –
BG: In ‘37, yeah. She was born in ‘37. And what year was that in?
AG: I don’t know, but – ‘cause it was just me and, uh, my sister Mercy, and Tony, and Bob –
F: And Jenny.

�BG: And Jenny. Yeah. Jenny was little.
HK: Mm-hmm.
AG: Yeah, because Jenny used to play jacks – jacks with Jenny, ‘cause when we played ball, I –
I had to take care of Jenny, that was the one I took care of. And Mom says: “Don’t let her get
dirty,” so…everybody wore skirts and – and little dresses, you know, you couldn’t – so I always
tried to put her somewhere where it was clean. [Laughter] I’d tell the guys: “Don’t nobody run
over my little sister!” [Laughter] “‘Cause I have to take care of her.” Everywhere I went, I’d take
my little sister with me. Later on, I took Bob; after a while I took Bob?.
BG: I got dirty. [Laughter]
AG: Yeah, I let him go in the dirt.
HK: Didn’t care about you. [Laughter]
AG: He had a lot of fun, though, ‘cause I [overlapping voices] take him to the – buy him a bag of
popcorn and a Coke, and he’d be happy. Be riding around all over –
BG: She’d send me to school clean, I’d come back dirty every day, she says… [Laughter]
AG: Don’t you guys ever say anything about that.
F: That’s why he doesn’t want you to –
[Overlapping voices, laughter]
F: Interesting, isn’t it?
HK: He’s full of stories.
F: Uh-huh. Yeah.
BG: Get, like, pretty good interviews so far?
HK: Yeah, so far.
BG: Got all the information?
HK: It’s been – been really interesting.
BG: Yeah.
HK: Yeah. So, what do you all think about the, uh, uh, immigration issue today?

�AG: Everybody asks me about that, and I don’t know. I really have no way of looking
[overlapping voices].
BG: I think it’s kind of late, if they could put a stop to it now, then people would [unintelligible].
AG: My wife says: “Make ‘em stay in Mexico.”
BG: Years, how you gonna stop ‘em?
HK: Yeah.
BG: Tell Mexico to get their country built up and people get jobs and [murmurs]
AG: Yeah.
BG: There’s no way to stop ‘em.
AG: Well, you can’t blame the people. They’re making six dollars a week over there and they
can come over here and make six dollars in two or three hours. I’m – I’m over there catching the
bus on – on 31st Street, by Iowa Street there. There’s two guys, and they’re picking up trash
around all the…shopping centers.
HK: Mm-hmm.
AG: And, uh, they’re walking by where I was standing there, and the guy says: “I’m never gonna
go back to Mexico.” He said: “They pay us eight dollars and fifty cents an hour just for picking
up trash. Can you beat that?” he says. “We can’t make that in two weeks in Mexico.” So they –
they were picking up trash. Every day they’d go pick up trash. This guy takes ‘em in a pickup
truck and he – they load the pickup truck of trash –
HK: Uh-huh.
AG: And they’d go to another shopping center. That’s all they’d do. [Overlapping voices]
Shopping center.
BG: They pay ‘em eight and a half dollars an hour for doing that. You know, you can’t beat that
in Mexico.
AG: No wonder They’re not gonna stop, unless they do something different, a lot different.
[Unintelligible]
BG: This morning, stop the van somewhere, it was in Kansas – it was in Kansas here
somewhere, and there was, they, uh, sixteen people and the driver, another passenger. And they,
uh, give two of them a ticket for something or other and then let ‘em all go on their way. That’s

�what they tell you. You can come if you want to, you know. Government won’t send you back.
So they, you know, it’s the government’s fault. Let ‘em come over and don’t do anything about
F: Yeah, they never did anything about it.
BG: Kind of late now.
F: Now they want to do something, and…
AG: Mexicans –
F: [Unintelligible] I feel sorry for them.
AG: I know, you – you can’t blame them for coming over –
F: I know, you can’t.
AG: You can’t blame –
BG: Half a million people here, they’d cost you a thousand dollars to send each one back, that’s
a lot of money to send ‘em all back.
AG: You’re right.
HK: Mm-hmm.
BG: It is. It’s a lot of money.
HK: Yeah.
AG: It is. But yeah, I – I don’t know. I don’t think they’re ever gonna stop. I told the guys how to
do it, I says: “Let ‘em all come over here, we could send them to war.” [Laughter]. “Send ‘em all
to Iraq.” Yeah, yeah. [Laughter continues] Send ‘em all to Iraq. They – they’d – they’d pay
cheaper. [Laughter]
BG: Yeah, [unintelligible], something like that. [Laughter]. They laugh. Yeah, but when I think
about it, I says, that’s what I’d do. [Overlapping voices] The other day I was watching TV
[unintelligible?], and they were showing these, uh, people that, what do you call it, a minute
[man?]
AG and F: Minute [men?]
BG: They were, they had [got together?] fence across the Texas border there.
HK: Uh-huh.

�BG: And they got their poles and their wire and all that, and they had a barbecue and all that kind
of stuff, and they got done [unintelligible] fence. Lousiest fence in the world. Wire sagging, they
could have hired illegals [murmurs] to work and done a better job. [Laughter] Terrible!
AG: Saw that, yeah.
BG: Wire sagging? You don’t build a fence that way, my gosh.
F: They should have got those [unintelligible] hired those illegals to do it – [overlapping voices]
BG: Half the price.
AG: That’s the way the train is, Bob. [Overlapping voices]
BG: Lousy fence.
HK: Yeah, they could have stayed on the Mexico side and built it. [Voices in agreement]
BG: Right, yeah, my gosh. Guys –
F: It wouldn’t have been illegal then, you know. Right there in their –
AG: That guy says: “If we have war with Mexico, which side are you gonna fight on?” I said:
“I’m gonna fight on this side, one side, the other side, the next day.” [Laughter] Oh, I got
something funny to tell you. My grandson Cruz…
Interview Assistant: Just a second. Let me get a new tape.
HK: Okay. We have to stop for a while. [tape skips briefly]
AG: Yeah, Monday.
AG: Jobs? Now this boy, Cruz, he’s not a little boy anymore, but he’s older. He’s working for,
uh, Ace Hardware over in Mesquite, Nevada. And, uh, his boss says, uh: “Cruz, you’re not
gonna walk out on me, are you?” He says: “Well, tell you what,” he says, “I’m only half – halfMexican,” he says, “so I’m gonna walk out for half a day.” [Laughter] “Do you want me to walk
out in the morning or the afternoon?
F: Funny.
AG: And his boss says, uh: “Why don’t you just walk out in the morning, ‘cause we’re busy in
the afternoon.” He said: “Okay.” [Laughter] And my other, my oldest grandson, my older
grandson in Mesquite, Nevada, he – he, uh, he manages four restaurants in two different casinos.
So he says: “Grandpa,” he says, that day he says: “I had all my managers, cooks, and all
my secretaries are waitresses. Because everybody walked out, we couldn’t handle it. The
waitress – the secretary were all mad, but I said, ‘You have to do it. We don’t have no other way

�to do it.’” And he said when he got home, he told his dad, he says: “Boy, Dad,” he says, “just
about shut the whole – the whole works down.”
He says: “Well,” he said, “You’re supposed to walk out too.”
He said: “If I had walked out, this whole town – town would have shut down.” [Laughter]
“There’d have been nobody to run the place.” Yeah. He’s 24 years old and he runs the four
restaurants, manages four restaurants.
HK: Wow.
AG: But he says, “I have a good manager and a good crew [murmurs].”
HK: Uh-huh.
AG: “And one day a week, I go to this place, watch how they operate the, the next day I go over
here,” he says, “I go around and around. I have my own – my own office and my own secretary.
We run – run the place good.”
HK: Could you tell me a little bit about what it was like to live at the Santa Fe yards, the
apartments there?
BG: I was pretty young at the time, but, uh, we had a lot of fun. Families just, uh,
[unintelligible], how many rooms was it? How big was it? Eight on each side and different
families [overlapping voices], it was always full. Kids, young kids and basketball and
[unintelligible]. Ain’t gonna play basketball or football or whatever he’s – he broadcast at the
time.
AG: You know, we had our baseball court, we had our baseball court – basketball court.
[Overlapping voices] Only we didn’t have enough boys, so they had to get one of them girls to
play. [Laughter] Basketball was alright [murmurs].
HK: Uh-huh.
AG: And we also had a tennis court. We had a tennis court, too. We played tennis. It was nothing
but dirt [murmurs]. And we didn’t have racquets. We made some sticks out of wood. But we did
play pretty good. And we played the – we played the black boys from town.
HK: Uh-huh.
AG: We played the white boys from town, too. They came down to play. And we always beat
‘em, we played baseball and softball. We had a fence way out [murmurs] the fence was the home
run. They had, uh, Chino and Joe were pretty good baseball players.
F: Ball players.
AG: Yeah, they – they set the diamond out and everything, you know. And, uh, but we had
togetherness.

�F: Yeah.
AG: At noon, all the families get together and we’d all eat, like a picnic, you know.
HK: Mm-hmm.
AG: Everybody – some people would bring tortillas, and other people would bring a pot of
beans, and everybody would make different things. So we all got under the shade tree there and
we all ate.
AG: When we ate, the people going by on the train, you know. [Laughter, murmurs]
F: And a lot of you were related, that lived there in the –
AG: Yeah. Our cousins, yeah. The Romeros, yeah. Yeah, the Romeros.
BG: They had one, uh, one cold water faucet right outside in the, uh, in the premade house they
had one faucet where everybody used water from there.
HK: Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm.
BG: Go out, get a bucketful and take it back home.
AG: It was City water. too, believe it or not. It was City water, we had City water.
BG: Did it [murmurs] have electricity.
AG: We had a shooting, uh, we had a shootout one time, one night. Two men got out together
and got drunk and tried to blow each other away, but they were so drunk they couldn’t shoot
straight. [Laughter] One of them finally hit another one’s leg, you know. Had to get the cops
down there and arrest ‘em and all that. The next day they come and they’re looking down, we’re
looking out for, come the cops, come down. They had a, they had kind of a fence around it. Cops
came over, they wouldn’t come in, they were scared to come in, so they stayed over by the gate
and Mom said: “Go see what they want.”
So I went over there and I says: “Policias, what you guys looking for?”
Says: “Pistola .45.”
And, “Oh, we don’t have no pistola, no. My uncle, he has a .22. He shoots rabbits and
squirrels. No pistola.”
I said: “What does a pistola look like? Like this?” He showed me his big gun.
“No, we don’t have no pistola. What happened?”
He said: “Somebody shot somebody.”
“Oh, they did? Shoot the head off?”
“No,” he says, “shoot ‘em in the leg.”
I says: “Oh, my people blow head off, they don’t shoot people in the leg.” [Laughter] So
– so first, they shot a black man – they – we had gardens out – out by the railroad track

�[murmurs]. And the black guys come down and steal our – steal our stuff whenever we had, uh,
whenever we had [murmurs].
F: Vegetables.
BG: Ripe and ready for harvest, you know.
AG: We had watermelons and cantaloupes and we had corn, and we had tomatoes and peppers.
And they were too lazy to – to plant anything, so they’d come down and steal it. We had to have
guards out there, guarding it all the time. So I guess some black guy come down at night, and
somebody shot him in the leg. Knocked a hole in his leg. Anyway, they took him, he went, he
limped away from there, and his friends took him to a hospital in Ottawa. And the cops came
looking for him the next day, and I told ‘em, we didn’t have no, no .45. I said: “We just have a
.22.”
And he says: “Well, somebody has a .45.”
So I said: “Well, you guys wanna come see it? Come on, I’ll go with you and nobody’ll
shoot you.” But they wouldn’t go. [Laughter] So…so they went uptown and forgot about who
shot who. But these Mexican guys,
BG: Well, uh, Romeros…Mathew Romero, Raymond Romero’s father shot – shot that guy.
HK: Oh.
BG: Yeah. He shot Felix Bermudez.
F: He did? Oh, my goodness, you better not put that in there. [HK laughs] Don’t put that in there.
BG: Yeah, well, can’t do anything about it now, it’s too late. They’re both gone. [HK laughs]
Shot him in the leg.
BG: Did they mention the city dump was next to the, uh, section houses? Somebody mention
that? The city dump at the time was next to the section houses.
HK: No, uh-uh.
BG: You could – it was just right across the, uh, across the small field there.
HK: Uh-huh.
BG: Where everybody took – city trash went down there, you know, everyday.
HK: Uh-huh.
BG: After – we’d get in there, see if we could find bicycle pieces and pieces of this and pieces of
that. That was kind of fun. [Laughter] Kind of smelled.

�HK: Kind of like dumpster diving.
BG: Yeah, good stuff, you know, nowadays they, all good stuff. We’d go down every night and
dig through whatever –
AG: That’s what we did the last time.
BG: You could still smell that smoke, when they burn it, they burn it that time, they burned the
trash one time, too.
HK: Uh-huh.
BG: And they’d set it on fire and we’d [murmurs] over there. Didn’t smell very good, but, uh…
AG: We took home the bottles, and we used to get a nickel for – for, pick up a milk bottle.
Nickel for a milk bottle. We used to pick up all the copper wire –
BG: Wire, iron –
AG: And then we’d take [unintelligible] to the junk yard. Iron and…yeah. [Overlapping voices]
We’d pick up all that stuff.
F: How many rooms do you guys have?
BG: I think we had two or three; most of ‘em had two or three.
AG: Two bedrooms and one kitchen.
F: Oh, is that right?
AG: What we had. Yeah, the way they made it, the – [unintelligible] in the side they had two
rooms together, and then we – they divided, they didn’t make ‘em right. They divided the other,
it was made in twos.
BG: You had to go out of one door, you had to go out your bedroom door to get into the kitchen.
[Laughter]
BG: Outside, yeah. We had to go outside and – yeah.
AG: They should have made two bedrooms and a kitchen, but they didn’t. They made two rooms
here and two rooms
BG: They had to go outside, in twos.
AG: So everybody has two bedrooms and then they shared the – the other one, shared one room
for a kitchen.

�HK: Huh.
BG: They were concrete and they’d – every once in a while you’d take a hose and wash ‘em out
and, yeah. They [unintelligible] pretty regular.
AG: Well, they did have the walk in front of them,
BG: They had a cement walk. And they had a porch over the front of it.
HK: Uh-huh.
AG: And they had a roof over it. If you had a dog or a cat, you could put his house right under
the – the roof and wouldn’t get wet or something.
BG: But there was a lot of – at one time there was a lot of, we only had two rooms apiece at one
time. It was pretty crowded at one time. ‘
AG: ‘Cause we had, uh, Ramirez on one side and uncles on the other side and then we were in –
in between there. [Overlapping voices]
BG: Who else was – who was next to us? We had [unintelligible].
BG: Hernandez on the corner, [murmurs]. I remember that.
AG: Hernandez was, yeah, they were on the corner.
AG: And then, uh, Josephine and, uh, Rosa, they had the other one. [Unintelligible] They had
‘em together.
AG: Yeah, they had the other corner [murmurs]. Mm-hmm.
BG: And [Amado?] Contreras and his wife, they had [one or two?] Yeah, they went back to
Mexico. They were there about three years.
BG: Mm-hmm.
HK: How did they do the laundry?
BG: Washed up with one of them boards that we call a corrugated –
HK: Uh-huh.
BG: What was it called? Washboard, yes. Yeah, lye soap and water. Hot water. They’d cook the
water outside. Boil the water outside.

�AG: Boil the water outside.
BG: Over a – over a fire.
AG: And they used that real strong soap that smelled –
BG: Yeah, lye soap, yeah.
AG: Oh, God, yeah.
HK: Oh.
AG: Yeah. And they boiled ‘em, and they had to stick ‘em, clothes out…took ‘em out of the darn
thing.
BG: Rinse ‘em off, hang ‘em underneath the – the line somewhere, we had some clotheslines out
there.
HK: Mm-hmm.
AG: Had a lot of clotheslines.
HK: Did you have any, um, livestock around there?
BG: They’d, yeah, they’d raise pigs most of all. Pigs and this and that.
HK: Uh-huh.
BG: Mostly pigs we raised.
AG: We had a lot of goats.
HK: Oh. So you had goat milk?
AG: Don’t taste good. [HK laughs] You don’t wanna try it.
BG: I remember when the men used to slaughter a pig once in a while, you know, you hear that
pig squeal. Man, that was hard for the kids, you know, watch that. We all gathered around when
they – when they did that, and…Now the Romeros – Valentin and Raymond – they were – they
were a well-to-do family here. They had, uh, lot of pigs, lot of animals. Lived on the corner of
Pennsylvania there.
HK: Oh.
BG: And they [murmurs].

�HK: So they were well –
BG: Yeah, they were well-to-do…
HK: Huh. So what happened, uh, were you still living there in the ‘51 flood, or was that…?
BG: We was living on Penn – on New Jersey Street by then.
HK: Oh, okay.
BG: New York, New Jersey. Some people still living there, they got flooded out then, you know.
[Overlapping voices]
F: The flood came a little ways…
[Overlapping voices]
BG: Yeah, you could see the water on the tracks.
F: I can remember, uh, I can remember being like that or something.
BG: Yeah, on the tracks, yeah.
AG: It was up – it was up pretty high, yeah.
HK: So did they, how long after the flood did they still use the Santa Fe apartments?
BG: Everybody then, I think that was probably – probably ended right there.
AG: Moved out.
BG: I think it was after that, everybody moved out.
AG: I think everybody moved out then.
BG: Yeah, [murmurs] right there.
AG: Yeah, I think everybody moved out. In ’51 ‘cause Jenny [unintelligible] and, what’s his
name, Ralph. They lived there for a while [murmurs] I think they moved out [murmurs].
BG: I don’t think they used them after the flood. [Murmurs] I think about the end of the year.
AG: By then, by that time everybody had already got better jobs –
BG: Got better jobs –

�AG: And they all had jobs.
BG: Start moving to different parts of town and all that.
AG: They were starting to…get spread out all over town…
BG: Assimilate into society.
HK: Yeah. Did you both go to, uh, um, New York School? Did you both go to New York
school?
BG: I did [murmurs]. I don’t know if any did or not
AG: They had an old school and I went there for two years, when I went they had an old school.
It wasn’t – it wasn’t the school they have now, they had a smaller building.
HK: But was it still called New York School?
AG: Yes. It was still called New York School.
HK: The old one –
AG: It was a small building. I think it was kind of a two-story deal, and…up toward the corner.
Closer to the church over there.
HK: Uh-huh.
AG: They knocked it down and built the other one.
HK: Did you both, um, speak Spanish when you were growing up, or – ?
BG: At home, yeah, we did.
AG: We did at home.
HK: At home?
AG: Yeah, later on, later on, uh…we did away with it because, uh, the kids were having too
much trouble switching over to English so after a while we quit. After Bob started getting, uh,
two or three years we all spoke…Well, Dad, you had to speak to Dad in Spanish, ‘cause he
couldn’t – he never did learn to speak English. My mom could though, she went to school in El
Paso, so…she – she was my first teacher. She knew the – she knew the words and she…she
knew [murmurs]. I remember when I first came here, the – it used to scare me, they had these
toilets, you know, and they had the tank up there on top. Did you ever see them?

�HK: Uh…
BG: Yeah, where you had a chain. Pull the chain.
HK: Pull the chain.
AG: You had to pull the chain.
HK: Yeah.
AG: I guess they thought that the water had to drop [unintelligible] before the flush, so, you
know, they had – they didn’t have like they do now, they had the tank up on top. The first time
that I went – I went to school one day and then I wouldn’t go to school anymore. I was scared of
school, so…I told Mama I couldn’t go to school no more. The girls come and drag me to school
every day, so, and they – they told me to go with the boys to the bathroom, you know, and
[murmurs] boys told me to pull the chain, I pulled the chain, water coming down and I thought I
was gonna go down the hole, so I ran out and [HK laughs]. And the girls stopped me. “Come
back here!” So…
BG: That saying, “Don’t pull my chain,” that’s what that’s from. [HK laughs]. Yeah, “Don’t pull
my chain,” that saying’s from.
AG: So they told the teachers I’m scared of that, so the teacher showed me she went to the
board, you know.
“Andrew, come here,” he says, “I’ll show you.” She’d make two lines, says, “Water, lots
of water.” I didn’t know what water was. She said, she was telling me, the river, you know, I
didn’t know what a river was. Finally she says, uh, I said [murmurs] lot of water.
I says: “Oh, rio.”
“Yes, of course, the Rio Grande. You know – you know that, Rio Grande.”
“Okay, rio.”
“Look, see, rio. Water.” [Murmurs] I didn’t know what a sewer was, you know.
Finally I says, “Canal.”
She says: “Yeah, that’s good, canal. Okay, canal. I got a pipe going up here, see, pull the
chain, it goes down the pipe, down the canal, down to the river.”
I said: “Okay.” I got over there, told mom, “Hey, mom.”
“What?”
“I found out how those things work.”
She says: “What things?”
“You know, where you pull the chain and the water goes down the hole and goes down,”
I says. “And on the way home the girls showed me, they showed me the sewer.”
“Andrew, listen, water goes down there and goes to, see, Santa Fe stations. That’s where
the river is. The water goes all the way there.”
I says: “Okay.”
So then, uh, Mom says, uh, “I could have told you that.”
I said: “Well, why didn’t you tell me?”
“Well, you didn’t ask.” [HK laughs]

�I said: “I thought I was gonna go down the hole, pull the chain, all the water coming
down!” [Laughter] You know, it’s funny when you don’t know what a thing is.
HK: Yeah. Yeah.
AG: But they did, they had the tank up on high.
HK: Uh-huh.
AG: The tank up on high –
BG: Gravity, yeah.
AG: I guess they thought that you had to [murmurs] be right down there. Works good. Had a lot
of water pressure, yeah.
BG: Yeah. That’s gravity.
HK: Yeah.
BG: All the way down.
Unknown Male, possibly Interview Assistant: Did you have to…fill the tank up on top, or how
did it…?
BG: Well, the – that’s the way they made ‘em.
BG: It was made that way.
BG: They had water with real low pressure. It took forever to fill up the whole tank, then drop it
all at once. Otherwise it never get flushed.
HK: Did they have a water pipe running into the tank part?
BG: Yeah.
AG: Yes, they did. They had to.
HK: Yeah.
AG: Where else would they get the water? Rain?
HK: Well, I don’t know. [Laughter] Should’ve taken a bucket, fill it up or something.
AG: That’d be funny, wouldn’t it?

�AG: Yeah, they had to have it. You know, they had to have it. You gotta have a pipe to get
water. Well, this guy did tell me, he said, he said the Aztecs had a way of making water run up
the hill. Whether it’s true or not, I – I have no idea. But, you know, they had gardens up the
mountain.
HK: Uh-huh. Uh-huh.
AG: Terrace-like thing.
HK: Yeah.
AG: Okay, they had to irrigate those things some way.
HK: That’s right.
AG: Over here, we carried the water. We had, uh, a yoke you put around your shoulders, you had
a bucket on each side, you filled them with water and you run, take it down the railroad track
about a mile and half, two miles, water all those plants Yeah. That’s why I don’t garden.
[Laughter] . Bob does, Bob does.
F: Is that why you never had a garden, Andy?
AG: That’s why I never had a garden [laughter]. And Dad worked us to death. Hauling all that
water. You know how much water it takes to water [unintelligible].
F: And he had a big garden.
BG: Yeah. They all did, yeah.
AG: They didn’t have little gardens. They had, they had, uh, they had about a half-mile garden.
They had, one time we even planted peanuts.
HK: Did they grow?
BG: Yeah, they’ll grow here.
AG: Yeah, they did grow.
HK: They will? They’ll grow here?
AG: Well, it’s just like potatoes, you turn ‘em over, you know. And, uh, I told Mom, I says:
“Mom,” I says, “these peanuts, they’re real good, you can’t eat ‘em.” But, you know, you have to
put the darn things in the oven and cook ‘em and everything. You had to roast the darn things.
So…goes to a lot of work to make the darn things, Mom. To plant ‘em and water ‘em and all
that. I said: “We could just buy ‘em a lot cheaper than that.” Of course, we couldn’t buy anything
‘cause we didn’t have any money.

�HK: What kind of a cookstove did your mother have?
AG: What kind of a what?
HK: Cookstove. What did she cook on?
AG: Well, the first one we had was, uh, a woodstove.
BG: Yeah, a woodstove first. Wood – wood and coal. Then, uh, they went to kerosene and then
they went to, uh, gas.
AG: But the – the little woodstove didn’t have an oven though.
BG: Yeah.
AG: And Mama was good, she cooked bacon, made pies and cakes and everything.
HK: Yeah, those are hard to control.
AG: Yeah, but she could do it on those things.
F: Her mother would send her out, when she was little, to learn how to bake and make tortillas
and everything.
HK: Hmm.
AG: She could make candy out of watermelon rinds and – and pumpkins. She was, she was
really, I mean, she could – she could really –
AG: She could make and do a lot of things.
BG: Imagine cooking on a woodstove in the middle of August.
HK: Oooh, yeah.
BG: Oh, yeah. Good Lord, man.
AG: And those brick houses were hot.
BG: They – they, yeah.
AG: Yeah. Man, it was sweltering around there, they only had one window. Never had a – we
never had a fan or anything.
BG: Nuh-uh. We slept outside.

�HK: Uh-huh.
AG: ‘Cause it was so hot on the inside, those darn things. We slept outside, we’d take our
blankets. The mosquitoes would eat you up. And I sure was glad that Dad smoked all night long,
‘cause he’d sit up every five minutes, he was sitting up smoking a cigarette, I said, “Good,” get
close to Dad so the mosquitoes wouldn’t [murmurs]. [Laughter] I almost said: “Give me one of
those things, Dad!”
F: Let’s all light up.
AG: And he smoked Camels. He smoked strong cigarettes. He liked Camels.
BG: Camels, yeah.
AG: That kind of shooed the mosquitoes away. But I bet, I bet everybody remembers, ten
minutes, he lit another cigarette. [Pause] And you had to roll your own, too, that’s another thing.
HK: Yeah, yeah.
AG: You had to roll your own.
HK: Did your mom do any canning of the vegetables?
BG: Well, yeah. She canned all the time, yeah.
AG: First of all, we had such big gardens. [Overlapping voices] She would can mulberries. Made
mulberry jam out of those darn things. We used to go down to the railroad, pick ‘em up every
Sunday, put ‘em on the riverbank and pick mulberries. And there was wild grapes, too, we
picked them, too.
HK: Mm-hmm.
AG: She could make jam and jelly out of anything. Very resourceful person, Mom [murmurs].
And how she fed so many people that, every [Sunday?] I had no idea. She fed –
F: She always had a lot of food, so whenever anybody showed up, it was always in the oven.
HK: What about during the years of the Depression? Did you…
AG: I don’t know, I – I don’t remember too much about that. Seemed like we always – we
always had enough to eat.
BG: Yeah. [Murmurs]. I guess they used to [murmurs].
HK: Did you have very many of the…the homeless people come by?

�AG: Used to have the hobos.
BG: Yeah, Mom used to feed ‘em. And they come by all the time. [I’d hate it?] She’d give ‘em
something to eat all the time.
AG: We didn’t like that, ‘cause Mom fed every hobo that come by, Mom fed him. She – she had
a real soft heart, yeah.
AG: She’d put ‘em outside, put a chair outside for ‘em, and give a plate of beans and tortillas –
BG: And something to drink. And water, yeah.
AG: Uh-huh. And water, yeah.
HK: Uh-huh.
AG: Every one of ‘em come by. Well, we lived by – up by the railroad track.
HK: Yeah.
AG: So there was always somebody getting off the train. She’d feed everybody. Mom didn’t
care. She was, she was really good, she was.
[Pause, then overlapping voices]
F: Anything else? [Murmuring] Anything else, Helen?
HK: I think that’s about it. Um – well, have I asked you about healthcare? What kind of
healthcare?
AG: What was that? What – what was it? [Laughter]
F: When was this? [Laughter]
BG: We didn’t, in those days, uh-uh.
AG: We couldn’t afford a doctor.
HK: Yeah.
AG: Mom did everything.
BG: If you got sick, you called a doctor. But other than that, you [murmurs] real serious, yeah.
HK: Yeah.

�BG: If you couldn’t get out of bed, you know, then – then it was serious, you called a doctor.
They’d bring you a backpack and their black bag and come see what was wrong with you.
HK: Yeah.
BG: Give you some medication out of his bag and you got well.
F: Mother gave you the home remedies, right?
[Overlapping voices]
AG: She always had her home remedies. She had a lot of home –
BG: Herbs and stuff, this and that. Didn’t taste very good, but I guess it worked. We’re still here.
She even had –
[Overlapping voices]
AG: She even had a – a thing for, uh…prostate.
F: Is that right?
BG: Yeah, yeah. Lot of cures.
AG: She had, yeah, I remember she, lot of people – lot of men would come down and their wives
would tell Mom, you know, Mom would say: “Well you gotta take this for nine days, nine
mornings, before you eat breakfast.” I guess she cured ‘em, ‘cause they never – they were
always, somebody was always, somebody’s wife was always coming down and Mom would,
took some a pot of something, I don’t know what the heck it was. But I asked her one day, she
said: “[One?] that’s prostate trouble.” But at that time, I didn’t know what it was. Until later I
found out. I said: “Darn I wish I’d kept some of this stuff Mom made.” She had all kinds of little
things wrapped up in, like, had an eye of a deer, and – I don’t know, whatever she had. Oh,
yeah…
F: She, uh, was her mother a curandera?
BG: Yeah. [Murmurs]
AG: Yeah.
F: Which was a, um –
AG: Healer or something.
F: Healer.

�AG: Yeah, herb healer.
HK: Okay.
BG: But Daddy, when he was in Santa Fe, they did have, uh, they did have healthcare. ‘Cause he
– if he got sick he’d go to the hospital in Topeka.
HK: Uh-huh.
BG: The Santa Fe hospital. And – and, all the people from around the area come around down to
that hospital.
HK: Uh-huh.
BG: And they’d [get?] treatment there or whatever.
AG: That was only for the workers.
BG: Yeah, the workers, I –
AG: It was only for the workers.
HK: It wasn’t for the rest of the family.
AG: No. Only for the workers. If you worked for the railroad, you could go to that hospital.
BG: Yeah, yeah.
AG: ‘Cause I used to take Dad ‘cause I was an interpreter. Take him to the hospital in Topeka.
We’d get on the train and we’d go to Topeka. It took us all day.
BG: By the time you got there, got to see the doctor, you got back home again, yeah, it was an
all-day day.
AG: All day. All day.
BG: Dad liked it ‘cause he got paid, so…
AG: He was off.
BG: Yeah.
AG: Go see the doctor. Dad had a hearing problem, so he used to go, I’d take him about once a
month and they’d – they’d go through the routine of…They never did get him fixed up good, but
at least it got him by until he retired.

�HK: Mm-hmm. What about, um, like, eyeglasses and stuff like that, or…?
BG: I don’t remember.
AG: I don’t remember anything about eyes.
BG: They did have healthcare for Santa Fe, yeah.
HK: Mm-hmm. What about when, um, women had babies? Did they have the doctor come for
that, or – or were there midwives, or…
AG: Well, at first they had midwives. Later on, later on, went to hospital.
BG: Later on, I was born in hospital myself. Later, yeah.
HK: Okay.
BG: Later on, they went to the hospital.
AG: Yeah.
HK: Of course there wasn’t any dental care, either.
BG: No. We didn’t even have toothbrushes in those days.
AG: No, we didn’t. Couldn’t afford to buy a toothbrush or toothpaste. We used to use, um,
baking powder.
HK: Mm-hmm.
BG: Baking powder, salt
HK: Yeah.
AG: Yeah. Isn’t that awful, you can’t afford a toothbrush?
HK: Yeah.
AG: That’s how poor we were.
F: They had lot of fun, right?
BG: Had a lot of fun, oh yeah.
AG: We sure had a lot of fun.

�BG: Yeah, we didn’t know – we didn’t know we were poor.
AG: No, we didn’t know. [Overlapping voices]
HK: Yeah.
AG: Like Vincent said, when he was going to school, his, uh – they were talking about, uh, what
– what were they talking about?
F: Minorities?
AG: Yeah, minorities. And he says: “What – what’s a minority?”
And the teacher said: “Well, you’re a minority.”
He says: “I am not!” He got home and he asked his father, he says: “Am I a minority?”
He says: “No you’re not, tell him you’re a Mexican.” [Laughter] The next day he goes
over there, he says: “Teacher, I have something to tell you. I’m not a minority, I’m a Mexican.”
[Laughter] And this [unintelligible] That’s like, uh –
HK: How funny.
AG: That’s like my grandson, Cruz. He was…[murmurs, in Las Vegas?], but they moved to
Mesquite ‘cause he was getting in a lot of trouble at school. Well, he goes to school and they’re
talking about the Cinco de Mayo, you know. Have a celebration.
The teacher’s telling ‘em: “Does anybody else know anything about the Cinco de
Mayo?”
So, Cruz is in kindergarten. He stands up: “Yes teacher, I do.”
“What do you know about Cinco de Mayo?”
He says: “Well, my grandpa always says he fought with Pancho Villa Zapata. And he
helped win the war. That’s why we have a Cinco de Mayo.” [Laughter]. He gets home and he
tells his dad: “Dad, I’m famous at school. I’m the only one who has a grandpa who fought with
Pancho Villa Zapata.” [Laughter]
So my son says: “How old do you think your grandpa is?”
“Well,” he says, “he was 100 the last time he came to see us.”
HK: Oh! [Laughter]
AG: “He must be 200 years old.” [More laughter]
AG: He said: “He must be at least 200 years old by now.”
F: Still going.
AG: Oh, gosh, that kid’s something else.
HK: How funny.

�AG: But, uh, he was in kindergarten about, uh, a month when Larry said the teacher called him
and he says, uh, “Larry,” he says, “[murmurs] take Cruz over to…to, uh, college in Las Vegas.”
And he says “Why?” Run a bunch of tests on him. “Why?”
He said: “This kid’s a genius,” he said. [Laughter]
So Larry says: “Well, I’m, off – my days off are Monday and – are Sunday and Monday.”
He says: “If you can arrange it for Monday,” he says, “I can take him over ‘cause I have to go
[murmurs].” But he – he was already, he’d just started kindergarten. They took him over to the
school and he said they were there all day long, you know. They had lunch and then he says:
“What are you guys doing, Cruz?”
“Oh,” he says, “we’re playing a bunch of games. These people are not too good, Dad.”
[Laughter] “I beat ‘em at everything!”
F: Goodness!
AG: So when they got through with the day, they told him, he says: “Well, as I nearly can tell,
he can’t read or write…but, uh, “He’s about two points below being a genius.”
F: Oh, boy!
HK: Wow!
F: That’s good.
AG: So…but, uh…but if you see him in school now, [murmurs] he must have lost it all some –
[Laughter]. He did – he did –
F: He does well, though.
AG: He didn’t hardly go to school. He missed a lot of school. He – he was never there on time.
He won a scholarship.
F: Well, that’s good.
HK: Great.
AG: To some, to some trade school. So Larry says: “I don’t know, you must be doing something
right.”
HK: Mm-hmm.
AG: Because, he said, he missed a lot of school. I don’t know.
HK: He must take after his grandfather.
AG: Won an award.

�[Laughter]
F: Yep.
AG: Oh, and he has a lot of women too. He has a whole bunch of women. [Laughter]
F: Now there he’s probably thinking –
AG: Yeah, I tell you. He has [murmurs] Burger King, Kentucky Fried Chicken. Anywhere we
go. I was staying with him for a while, he says:
“Grandpa, when you get hungry, tell me where you wanna go eat. We can go eat steak or
Burger King or McDonalds, or…we can go anywhere you wanna go, just let me know, and we
can go.”
“Okay.”
We always go, some girl always comes over and waits on him, says: “What do you guys
want?” [Laughter]
I says: “Cruz, we gotta at least give her a tip.”
“Ah, give her a quarter, Grandpa.” [Laughter] And then if he wants steak, we go with
Christopher, he called Christopher: “Hey amigo, come on over.”
He says, “Okay, coming over.” He says: “How do you want your steak?” [Murmurs] You
live over there, you eat good. Go anywhere you want to go. That guy has a racket. My son ran a
casino – a hotel and casino.
HK: Oh, okay.
AG: [Murmurs]
HK: Yeah.
AG: So he’s happy, he gets a different woman about every six months. [Laughter] He gets tired
of that one, he kicks her out, gets another.
HK: Oo-kay.
[Laughter]
AG: Wonderful story, ain’t it? [Laughter] Yeah. I won’t tell you anything else. That’s good.
HK: Well, this has been delightful.
[Overlapping voices]
AG: We just hit a, we just hit a –
HK: Thank you so much.

�AG: Few high spots.
HK: And low spots. [Laughter]
AG: Oh, let me tell you one more thing.
HK: Uh-oh.
AG: [Murmurs] LA…over there, and some girl, you know, hit it off pretty good. She’s got an
apartment in LA.
Unknown: I bet she – [tape cuts off at 43:10]
END OF TAPE 24

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                <text>Brothers Andrew and Bob Garcia were interviewed by Helen Krische in 2006 as part of an oral history project to document the La Yarda and Mexican-American communities in Lawrence, Kansas. La Yarda was a neighborhood of worker housing provided by the Santa Fe Railroad for Mexican-American railroad workers; located near the Kansas (Kaw) River, the neighborhood was largely destroyed by a major flood in 1951. Andrew and Bob lived in the La Yarda neighborhood, and then in East Lawrence, with their parents and siblings. They describe the living conditions in La Yarda, as well as childhood pasttimes, social activities, and community conflicts. They discuss their experiences attending school and receiving healthcare. They share their thoughts about immigration. Andrew and Bob also discuss the impact of the 1951 flood on the La Yarda neighborhood. </text>
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            <name>Contributor</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="34812">
                <text>Krische, Helen</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="34813">
                <text>Raymond, Emily</text>
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            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
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                <text>Lawrence (Kan.)</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="34815">
                <text>1920s - 1970s</text>
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            <name>Date</name>
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                <text>2006</text>
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                <text>MP3 (audio recording)</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="34818">
                <text>PDF (transcription)</text>
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            <name>Identifier</name>
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                <text>24-AGarciaBGarcia.mp3 (audio)</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="34820">
                <text>24-AGarciaBGarcia.pdf (transcription)</text>
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            <name>Publisher</name>
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                <text>Watkins Community Museum (Lawrence, Kan.)</text>
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                <text>To access the audio recording of this interview, go to &lt;a href="https://archive.org/details/24-agarcia-bgarcia-2006"&gt;https://archive.org/details/24-agarcia-bgarcia-2006&lt;/a&gt;.</text>
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                <text>The &lt;a href="https://www.watkinsmuseum.org/"&gt;Watkins Museum of History&lt;/a&gt; also holds items related to this collection.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="34824">
                <text>&lt;a href="https://archives.lib.ku.edu/repositories/3/resources/5295"&gt;Additional research on the La Yarda community&lt;/a&gt; is held at the Spencer Research Library at the University of Kansas.</text>
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          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="34825">
                <text>Published with the permission of A. Bob Garcia. This work is the intellectual property of the Watkins Museum of History, Lawrence, Kansas. The public may freely copy, modify, and share this Item for noncommercial purposes if they include the original source information. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s).</text>
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            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="34826">
                <text>La Yarda Oral History Project</text>
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                <text>La Yarda (Lawrence, Kan.)</text>
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                <text>Mexican Americans -- Housing -- Kansas -- Lawrence</text>
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                <text>Mexican Americans -- History -- Kansas -- Lawrence</text>
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                <text>Mexican Americans -- Social conditions -- Kansas -- Lawrence </text>
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                <text>Oral History</text>
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                    <text>Tape 26: Interview with Erminia (Ermie) Gauna and Kitty Pacheco
Interviewer: Helen Krische
Date of Interview: 2006
Length of Interview: 52:01
Location of Interview: St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church
Transcription Completion Date: 2021
Transcriptionist: Emily Raymond
Helen Krische (Interviewer): I’m gonna ask you a little bit about, um, your parents and, um,
when they first came here, do you know a lot of information about that?
Kitty Pacheco (Interviewee): Did you get any of those dates? What dates did you come up with?
Erminia Gauna (Interviewee): Oh, just the dates of [murmurs] –
KP: Oh, when they were born –
EG: And died. Let’s see, well, Daddy was…let’s see, Daddy was, um, born in 1882.
HK: Okay.
EG: And he died in 1953. Then Mama came – was, uh, when she came, she was 18. In 1891.
HK: Oh, okay.
EG: And she died in ‘51. Those are the ones that I had in the Bible.
KP: But do you remember when they were – when they came here to the United States?
EG: Well, they came and – to the – uh, he worked on the railroad in Ottawa, ‘cause that’s where
Paulita was born.
KP: Okay.
EG: Our sister, Paulita.
KP: So, the one – the blind girl.
HK: Mm-hmm.
KP: So, she died in 1934, I think. Way back.
EG: She died in ‘41.
KP: Oh, ‘41? Okay.

�EG: ‘Cause I remember we were in grade school [murmurs]. She was older, so she would have
been, she was still living – well, she was born in Ottawa. So that’s when he was working, Dad
was working on the railroad.
KP: That’s when they first came.
EG: And then they – yeah, that’s when they first came into Ottawa. And, uh – no, I take it back,
‘cause – ‘cause he went to –
KP: They were in Michigan at one time.
EG: Michigan, where Harry was born.
KP: Okay.
EG: And then –
KP: Then came back to Lawrence.
EG: No – no, see, Paulita was first [murmurs] was the very first.
KP: No, Paulita was first and then Harry.
EG: And then, Harry, yeah.
KP: And then –
EG: Well, they must have been in Michigan after they went to Ottawa. And then they came to
Lawrence.
KP: That’s correct.
EG: ‘Cause they had this [unintelligible].
HK: Mm-hmm.
EG: They came from Mexico, and then Ottawa, as far as I knew. And then they went to work.
KP: In Michigan –
EG: For some reason, his job took him to Michigan. And, uh, then that’s when Harry was born.
And then they came back to Lawrence, and then we were born.
KP: We were born in North Lawrence.
EG: She just found out the other day that we were Sandgrass.

�KP: Sandgrass. I didn’t even know it [laughter]. Do you know about that organization?
HK: Yes.
KP: I would like to –
HK: Organization? I didn’t know there was an organization.
KP: Yeah, there’s an organization. A – a lady friend of mine, Vivian Commons, we work at the
church; we were working at a funeral dinner last week.
HK: Mm-hmm.
KP: And we were talking about it, and she says: “Are you gonna go to the – ” or, she said: “Did
you know about the Sand – uh, Sandgrass Reunion?”
And I said: “What’s the Sandgrass?”
And she says: “Oh, that’s for us people that were born in North Lawrence.”
I said: “Well, I was born in North Lawrence.”
And she says: “You were?” And we were born on the same block.
HK: Oh, my gosh.
KP: On Lyons.
EG: I can’t believe that.
KP: Vivian Commons.
EG: I can’t believe that.
KP: I always thought that was so funny, ‘cause we’ve known Vivian for years. Her – ah – her
daughter was married to her son.
HK: Oh.
KP: To Vivian’s son. So we, you know, we’ve just known her for many years. Well [laughs], and
then she was telling me that in June the 3rd, they have a reunion in North Lawrence at – at the,
um, what school? Lincoln?
EG: Lincoln.
KP: Lincoln.
EG: Well, it’s not Lincoln anymore.

�KP: The one that’s –
HK: Ballards?
EG: Ballards.
KP: The one that’s in Woodlawn, in North Lawrence. Woodlawn. And she said they have this
reunion every year, and it’ll be June the 3rd and she says people come from all over –
HK: I’ll be darned.
KP: And so, I planned to go, but, uh, she’s gonna give me some – some times and all that.
Because that’s the same day I’ve gotta be a hostess in Ottawa at the apartments [murmurs].
HK: So, do you have any idea, so when your parents first came to Lawrence, do you know what
year that was, or…?
KP: Well, it had to be before she was born. And you were born in ‘20…um…
EG: I was born in ‘27.
KP: You were born in ‘27. So they got here around ‘25 or ‘26 because Harry was born in ‘24.
EG: Yeah.
KP: And he was born in Michigan.
EG: Yeah.
KP: And you were born in, let’s see, in ‘27, so it had to be in the middle there.
HK: And Paulita was born…
KP: Well, she would have been born way before Harry, so…
EG: ‘Cause when she died she was 21 years old.
KP: Yeah. She had two children. She was – she was blind, and she married an older gentleman,
and he, um, had grown children. But she – they had two little children, a boy and a girl. And then
she died, and my mother took in the little girl and her – one of the older children of her husband.
Took the boy in Wichita, so they got separated, the two kids.
HK: Mm-hmm.

�KP: She was – when she died, she was very young. She died right after the little boy was born.
‘Cause Cecil was first and then Harry. So that would have been in – between ‘24 and ‘27. So I
would say about ‘25, ‘cause I know Harry always talked about coming as a baby, so…
HK: Okay.
KP: It had to be in between there and when they came back to Lawrence.
EG: I know we’ve been here all the time.
KP: And then we were, of course, born here, so we didn’t know of any other –
HK: Uh-huh. Do you know what region of Mexico they were from?
EG: Let’s see, Daddy was from [murmurs]. Daddy was from Durango.
HK: Okay.
EG: And Mama was from, uh, [Place Name].
KP: [Valles?]. Wasn’t she from Valles?
EG: No.
KP: ‘Cause I remember –
EG: That was her –
KP: I know that was her maiden name, but I thought that was a state or something.
EG: No. She was from [Place Name]. It’s in the Bible, I think.
KP: It’s in the Bible, okay, so…
EG: [Place Name].
KP: Alright.
EG: [Place Name].
KP: Okay. See, I don’t know if [murmurs] –
EG: And, uh, Daddy was from Durango, so…
HK: Okay.

�KP: When Daddy came here, he was a young man in the army in Mexico. And he actually was
upset with the Catholic Church. So, he just decided that he was gonna leave Mexico and leave
the church and came here and became a Baptist.
HK: Okay.
KP: So that’s all we know, is Baptist, because that’s what we were born.
EG: [Murmurs] the First Baptist Church of Lawrence. What was it?
KP: That one they destroyed. It’s gone now.
HK: Ah, okay.
KP: Was it on 9th and Kentucky, or…? I don’t remember.
EG: One-way street –
KP: There was a – there was an old Baptist Church and had the big white pillars.
EG: Well, let’s see, the Round Corner was up here, and – and…church was down the street.
KP: So that would be 10th.
EG: 10th? I always thought it was 9th. It was a Baptist church right on the corner.
HK: That would be 8th, I think.
KP: Was it 8th?
HK: 8th or 7th, probably 8th.
EG: It’s gotta be there.
HK: I think it’s 8th.
KP: Mm-hmm.
HK: Yeah.
KP: Maybe that parking lot. There’s a parking lot there.
EG: Yeah. Because I remember we used to walk from, we lived at 801 Pennsylvania. And we
used to walk to church all the time, so…It wasn’t very far. At least we didn’t think so; we were
young.

�KP: We didn’t – it wasn’t far for us.
HK: Did your dad speak, uh, any English at all when he came?
KP: No, not when he came. No. I don’t think. I don’t know for sure, but I don’t think so. Maybe
a few words, but –
HK: Uh-huh.
KP: He learned English, he more or less taught himself. [EG murmurs] Because he spoke pretty
well, with quite of an accent, but he spoke pretty well. Now Mother understood completely, she
understood well, because she couldn’t speak and say anything in English, not expect her to know
what you were saying, so…But she had a hard speaking the language.
HK: Mm-hmm.
KP: She would say a few words –
EG: I think she just didn’t want to.
KP: I don’t think she wanted to, right.
EG: ‘Cause I remember when we went to enroll in school, uh, Fanny Torres was one of the – the
young ladies in our neighborhood there. She was a young lady. And –
KP: Served as an interpreter.
EG: Served as an interpreter for all of the – all of the Mexican people.
HK: Hmm.
EG: And that’s when she enrolled us in school. She enrolled you as Elizabeth.
KP: She put my name down as Elizabeth – she translated my name to Elizabeth from Felicitas.
That’s quite a translation, but she did. And, uh, we – we got rid of that right away.
EG: And then she put mine as H-e-r-m-i-n-i-a. And my –
KP: Her-minia.
EG: Yeah, like Herminia. Or Mina or something like that. And, uh, of course it was wrong, and
Mom got home, see, she couldn’t – she could not speak, but she noticed that right now. She said:
“That is not right. That is not…” So she grabbed me by the hand and we go back to the school.
Change the name.
KP: You tell ‘em, that’s wrong. Change the names.

�EG: And then when she seen hers, Elizabeth’s [murmurs], for Kitty.
HK: Uh-huh.
EG: Felicitas [murmurs]. And she said: “Oh, no, no, no.” She was getting really angry ‘cause
that was wrong, see?
HK: Uh-huh.
EG: So she paid attention to stuff like that.
KP: And she, of course, could read and write. And she could read Spanish because she taught
Spanish when she was a young girl.
HK: Oh.
KP: She taught Spanish. In fact, she had little books and she tried to teach us. Well, I learned
something, but Ermie just refused. [HK laughs] She was rebellious.
EG: But I – I learned a lot.
KP: Yeah, later on. But she – but she had these little books like See Jane [EG murmurs], See
Jane Walk or See Jane Run and all those little books, well, they were in Spanish too.
HK: Oh.
KP: And she had some of those, I wish I had ‘em, those little books. But, um, I do have some of
Daddy’s, uh, Spanish hymnals, ‘cause we used to sing, you know, songs.
HK: Mm-hmm.
KP: Hymns.
EG: I’ve got some of them, of Daddy’s. But then when they stole the trunk, Daddy’s trunk –
KP: Oh, that’s when we lost those little books.
EG: Everything was in there.
KP: Somebody stole the – we went to Daddy’s funeral when he died.
HK: Mm-hmm.
KP: Uh, we lived on New York Street and Daddy was living with us after Mother died. And, uh,
we all went to the funeral, that’s when you didn’t lock the doors.

�HK: Yeah.
KP: And he had his room in the basement. He had a room fixed up with a shower. And we came
home and I didn’t even go down there, you know, when your daddy dies, we were so close to
him and – I didn’t even go down there, I don’t think, for days. And somehow, I went down there
and realized all his stuff was gone. So, somebody had come in while we were at the funeral.
EG: And why they would just target his things –
KP: Yeah.
EG: I don’t understand that.
KP: Just his things. So, we – we kind of had a suspicious of who it might have been, but you
can’t just go accuse anybody and I always thought maybe some day it would come up in a garage
sale, or, you know, ‘cause that trunk had – it had the little serapes, see Daddy was a – was a –
came from an Indian tribe. [Tribal name] Indian tribe in Mexico, up in the mountains. And when
he was born, they evidently couldn’t take care of him; they brought him down to this family and
their name was Garcia. That’s how we ended up with the name Garcia.
HK: Oh, okay.
EG: That’s why his middle name is Estrada.
KP: So his name, middle name is Estrada – Angel – and they just had Angel on there. Later on, I
guess they…
EG: Well, but…afterwards he always signed it Estrada.
KP: I know, but I wonder where that came from. I don’t know where that came from. But the
story was that he – they left him in this little serape. And that little serape was in that trunk. So
that would have been –
EG: And so was our grandpa’s, uh, Daddy’s – or Mom’s dad’s – little outfit that he wore.
[Murmurs] They were in there also.
KP: They were in that trunk and – and those things were gone. And I – I truly always had this
suspicion of Eddie.
EG: No, I thought it was Teresa.
KP: Teresa. So, see, you wonder where that would be – who that would be handed down to.
EG: Wasn’t even where it ended up at. And it had his Bibles.

�KP: And his Victrola.
HK: Hmm.
KP: He had this old big Victrola. See, when we were little we learned, um, the music that he
enjoyed was waltzes, Sousa, and – and, uh, classical music. He loved classical music. He had all
these records in this little – and all that was taken.
EG: That record, you know, the big fat one –
HK: Mm-hmm.
KP: They were real, uh, Paul Whiteman orchestra. I remember some of those. And some of the
waltzes. Strauss. And –
EG: Very, very little Mexican music.
KP: I don’t even know if I remember him having any.
EG: He had this [unintelligible] Chihuahua that Mom used to dance to.
KP: Well, that was a musical.
EG: Yeah.
KP: None – none of these, uh, what you consider Mexican songs.
HK: Mm-hmm.
KP: He never had any of those. But it was just music and mostly – mostly classical. And, uh, a
lot of waltzes.
EG: Mom would get around in – in our little house and she’d dance, and Daddy would say:
“Mija loca.” You know –
KP: Crazy woman. [HK laughs]
EG: ‘Cause he never, I don’t think, I never even seen him tapping his foot at anything.
KP: No, no.
EG: He just sat and listened and listened. But he, I never seen him tap his foot or anything.
KP: But he made noises. I remember sitting on his lap, when he made the noises of different
instruments.

�HK: Uh-huh.
KP: And entertained me that way.
HK: Huh.
KP: All these different instruments, he’d name them and say: “This is what this sounds like,” and
then he’d make all these noises for me. He did that.
EG: I never seen him tap his foot or anything.
KP: No, no. Not – not act like he wanted to dance or anything. But Mother did. She danced with
those little cas –
HK: Castanets.
KP: Castanets, and she would dance.
EG: She had this full skirt, I remember, seeing her dance around in it.
KP: In fact, we went to a party, I remember, one time at the Nunez house. I remember going to a
party there at the Nunezes. With what’s his name? What was his name, Pablo?…Pablo’s parents.
I don’t remember.
EG: Oh, Soledad.
KP: Soledad. We went to their house, and I remember we had food, and then there was dancing
and Mama was out there dancing with those things.
EG: That’s the only time I ever seen her out in public.
KP: She was performing for everybody. Yeah, I remember that. And – and we were just in grade
school. So she had to be in her – she died when she was 60 and I was 23. So, let’s see, she was –
she was in her what, forties? She was –
EG: Actually, she was young, but to us she looked old all the time.
KP: Yeah, well, to us.
HK: Yeah.
KP: You know, the kids. In fact, kids at school thought she was our grandma.
HK: Oh, really?
KP: Well, see, we were –

�EG: She wore her hair real severe. Well, you know, a little back like that and a little knot back
there.
KP: But she was older than all the other mothers. The mothers took the kids that we went to
school with. She seemed older.
EG: Well, yeah. Well, to us she seemed. She probably wasn’t really, because –
KP: Well, she was what – 39, I think, when I was born.
EG: She was only 60 when she died.
KP: Yeah.
EG: She was only 60 when she passed, so she couldn’t have been –
KP: That’s true. Yeah, she was.
EG: The way she dressed, I guess, and the way she kept herself, she just –
KP: When she was little, real little.
HK: What – which of the railroads did your father work for? Was it the Santa Fe?
KP: Santa Fe.
EG: No.
KP: Wasn’t it Santa Fe?
EG: No, uh, Rock Island.
KP: Oh, I didn’t know that. I don’t remember him working on the railroad, but I guess he didn’t
after we were born.
EG: He did.
KP: He did?
EG: Uh-huh. When we lived in North Lawrence.
KP: In North Lawrence? I just remembered the – the big garden.
EG: Yeah.

�KP: He had a big garden, ‘cause we lived in North Lawrence with a big yard.
HK: Uh-huh.
KP: He had this huge garden and – and I’d go with him in his little wagon and we’d sell
cabbages and all that stuff. I remember that.
EG: I never went.
KP: She wouldn’t go, ‘cause I was [HK laughs]. I used to go with him. He carted me around in
his wagon. And he sold, um, vegetables. And he worked for the WPA.
HK: Oh, really?
KP: You know, the WPA that was here?
HK: Mm-hmm.
KP: Well, I remember they’d come in a truck and pick him up early in the morning, there on 801
Pennsylvania, where we lived there, on the corner. And they would, ‘cause the men would gather
at that corner, and there was the Chavezes and, uh…Jimenez, I guess. Martinez. And – and
Daddy. And they all would come to the corner and – and they’d pick ‘em up there. And his mom
would fix him a lunch and he would keep on all day long and they went to Lone Star, and they
built all those, that dam and they built, um, those big tables and picnic tables type things.
HK: Mm-hmm.
KP: They worked there. At Lone Star. And for pay, he didn’t get paid, but he got this money
order type thing.
EG: One of those scrip – Script?
KP: They called them money orders at that time.
EG: I didn’t know that.
KP: ‘Cause that’s what he called them, money orders. And then we would take it to Lippman’s
Shoe Store, and we’d get our shoes, and this was in September.
HK: Uh-huh.
KP: But every month he’d get a – a money order that he could take to the grocery store, which
was Carter’s, right there by where we used to live, it was about three – what is that on 8th and
New Jersey?
EG: [Murmurs] New York.

�KP: 8th and New York, that used to be a Carter’s grocery store.
HK: Hmm.
KP: And we used to take that money order –
EG: They called them Mexican [murmurs].
KP: And then we would, and that money order lasted you for a month. You just left it there,
you’d order, you’d buy stuff and they’d just keep a mark of it somehow.
HK: Kind of like a debit card.
KP: Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm.
HK: Just keep taking.
KP: Yeah, so that’s how he got paid for his working in the – at Lone Star.
HK: Oh.
KP: But they never saw money. No, that was the WPA. But besides that, of course he always had
a big garden. Always. Our backyard was just garden [laughs] I remember there was a little path
to go to the outhouse, out by the alley.
HK: Mm-hmm.
KP: But other than that, it was garden. Well, Mother had flowers, so she had a lot of flowers for
the front part.
EG: The front was her part.
KP: But all the back was – was, it was just a path to go through the garden.
EG: Over there on [murmurs], on Pennsylvania Street.
KP: On Pennsylvania. 801 Pennsylvania
HK: So – so he basically made a living, like, selling fruits and – or, vegetables in the summer?
KP: And –
HK: And working on the WPA.
KP: And working on the WPA.

�EG: And we picked potatoes.
KP: And then we picked potatoes when we were little.
HK: Was that for the Heck – Heck farms?
KP: For Heck and Shoskey. Shoskey, what was the other family? I wanna say Shoskey. [EG
murmurs] Yeah, we picked for them, too, but Heck was most of it – Heck and his son, ‘cause it
was father and son, they both had farms.
EG: And they used to come pick us up, too.
KP: And they’d come in a big truck and pick us up.
EG: The whole neighborhood would go pick potatoes [laughs]. So that was a summer job.
KP: Yeah.
HK: Yeah.
KP: Little later than that, I remember the – the troops going through there with the big trucks, all
those German soldiers –
HK: From the POW camp.
KP: When they were staying at the concentration camp here, POW camp, and they would come
by our house there in this big truck with the wooden sides, and they’d be standing up, and they’d
be singing German songs. And I used to think that was so neat. They were real, they seemed real
happy.
HK: Uh-huh.
KP: And I dated one of the soldiers that worked, that was in the Army, that was one of their
guards.
HK: Uh-huh.
KP: And he would bring me those big fat sandwiches of ham on this homemade-type bread.
HK: Mm-hmm.
KP: And he said [murmurs] “They eat awful good there.” And so they were eating good, ‘cause I
ate some of that ham and it was good [laughs]. He used to bring me a sandwich of it. But…those,
the – the soldiers, they lived good.

�HK: Did you grow up at home speaking both Spanish and English?
KP: And English, yes. Well, we spoke, of course, Spanish when we were born, from our parents.
But we went into school, kindergarten, and you’re just nothing but English.
HK: Mm-hmm.
KP: So, we considered that our first language because that’s what we learned, English at school,
and then the Spanish just kind of faded out, because, you know, we spoke with Daddy and of
course we spoke it with each other all the time.
HK: Yeah. Did you, were you punished at all at school if you spoke Spanish, or…?
KP: Oh, no. We didn’t speak Spanish at school.
EG: No, just English.
KP: It was just English.
EG: They put us in [murmurs] Fanny Estrada. She’s the one that, uh, took us, Mom, to the school
to enroll in kindergarten and put us in there. And there we were, sitting there and looking around
and everybody talking up a storm. Then we could just speak Spanish, ‘cause that’s all we talked
at home [murmurs].
HK: Mm-hmm.
EG: And then we…
KP: And we picked it up fast, you pick it up fast.
EG: Before you know it, you’re talking English.
KP: Yeah, I don’t even remember the transition, because it was just English. That’s all I
remember.
EG: That’s all I remember too. And then we didn’t associate too much with the Mexicans
because…
KP: Everybody was Catholic.
EG: Everybody was Catholic but us.
KP: See, so that kind of made us different.
HK: Uh-huh.

�KP: And – and my parents wouldn’t let us go to their house, and they wouldn’t let ‘em come to
our house. Of course, we played at school together.
HK: Mm-hmm.
KP: And…but, we were just, were not allowed. There’s nothing about going to spend the night
with some friends, you know, like they do now, kids. You didn’t do that then. I don’t know of
anybody ever doing that. [EG murmurs]. But, um, we got along at school –
EG: Chores to do when you got home. But it – it was – it was strange, the way that children pick
up the language.
KP: Oh, a child can pick up that language easy.
EG: [Murmurs] You don’t even know how you…
KP: I grew up to – when I went and moved to California when my husband joined – rejoined the
Marine Corps, he was in the Marine Corps and got out when we got married in ‘46, but then
went back to Korea and all that, so he went back in and we went to California. And I found out
that, um, they needed interpreters over there, so I ended up taking some college courses.
HK: Oh.
KP: And I worked as an interpreter for years for the courts. Spanish interpreter. But that Spanish
that I learned at home when I was little, it helped a lot because you learn a lot of the idioms, you
learn a lot of the little things that you just say –
HK: Mm-hmm.
KP: And you know, that – that you just know. So that helps a lot, when you’re translating.
HK: Yeah. Um, your mom at home, did she make your clothes or did you purchase clothes,
or…?
EG: Made our clothes.
KP: Made our clothes.
EG: I remember the little flour sacks.
KP: She used to bleach ‘em. She had this big tub out in the yard, and Daddy fixed it for her out
there, and she would bleach these flour sacks, you know, that had – they were faded, but they
were on there, the letters were on there. [HK laughs] I remember I could see ‘em. But it didn’t
bother us, because everybody was poor.
HK: Mm-hmm.

�KP: At least it didn’t bother me. The only time it bothered me was afterwards, going to junior
high school, when the girls wore nicer clothes and, you know, and they were wearing, um, bobby
socks and, um…
EG: We had to wear those stockings, they’re made out of God knows what. I don’t know what
they were made of.
KP: Those brown stockings.
EG: Brown.
KP: Kind of brown stockings, and we had to wear those. And we would roll ‘em down, we’d get
to the corner and out of Mother’s sight, and we would roll ‘em down because we wore those
garters.
HK: Mm-hmm.
KP: And you could just roll ‘em down, down to around your ankles, and we had these donuts.
[Laughter]
EG: We probably looked worse than we would’ve if we would have just left the stockings up.
KP: We did that.
EG: Oh, boy. Had them big old donuts around our skinny legs.
KP: And I would have done anything for a pair of bobby socks. I thought, all, you know,
[murmurs], and Naomi.
EG: Yeah, all those girls –
KP: Those girls, they always wore these beautiful little white socks and – and little pompoms on
their shoestrings. I remember all of that, but I just envied it, you know, because I wished I could
have that. But we didn’t.
EG: Oh, well. We survived.
KP: We survived. And we didn’t get in trouble.
EG: Yeah, that was the main thing.
KP: You can’t get in trouble when you don’t get to go anywhere.
HK: Yeah. Yeah.

�EG: Mom was so strict.
KP: She was very strict. We couldn’t walk with the boys, coming home from school. We had to
cross the street and walk on the other side. And we’re coming home from junior high school,
going all the way down 9th Street to Pennsylvania to go home, and – and we’d have to walk
across the street, ‘cause she – she better not catch you, and you know, she would walk up and
meet us sometimes.
HK: Oh.
KP: So you never knew when she was gonna be there –
EG: No.
KP: At the corner, so we just always had to walk across.
EG: And those crazy boys, they’d throw smoke bombs at you.
KP: And they’d chase you.
EG: And what are you gonna do, you know, you know you’re gonna laugh, and –
KP: And you’re gonna have fun. We were having fun, but…
EG: Looking around to see where Mama was at.
KP: Yeah, we was always afraid Mama would see us.
EG: She was always, she was very strict with us.
KP: I always told everybody, there’s no way we could have gotten in trouble, ‘cause we didn’t
go anywhere, to get in trouble.
HK: Yeah.
KP: You went to school – we couldn’t even go to the ball games afterwards.
EG: No.
KP: You know, the parties you have after this, you go to the ball game and all that stuff. We
went to school, and you’d better be home a few minutes after. She allowed you so much time to
walk home.
HK: Huh.

�KP: And we even came home for lunch. From – from junior high school, which was over here on
Vermont and 9th.
EG: 9th.
KP: 9th and Vermont, you know, and – and –
EG: [Murmurs]
KP: Those three buildings, yeah. We walked from there to 801 Pennsylvania, so it was down…
HK: That’s quite a ways.
KP: Yeah. We went for lunch. We went home for lunch. That was – they didn’t serve lunch in
school, I don’t think.
EG: No. Some of ‘em would just bring sack lunch.
KP: Everybody brought lunches, but we never did. Don’t know how come. I don’t know. We
didn’t, we went home.
EG: I don’t know why we didn’t bring a sack lunch. Cause [murmurs], she stayed for lunch and
she was a well-to-do little girl. They had the cleaners here in Lawrence.
KP: [Name, murmurs] She was considered our rich little girl.
EG: Yeah.
KP: ‘Cause she had, like, I remember her – a snowsuit, she, you know, those one-piece
snowsuits you had. It was turquoise. Beautiful. And I remember she wore that with a bonnet to
match and everything, you know, in the winter.
EG: And she had a muff.
KP: And a little muff. Little white muff. And we thought she was just a princess. I wonder where
she is now.
EG: And then when we got older, uh, she used to invite us to her house. She had a playhouse her
dad built, a playhouse.
KP: Yeah. Her mom would fix Kool-Aid and cookies.
EG: And she invited us, I don’t know how come we got invited, ‘cause –
KP: Well, we were in the class. She invited the whole class.

�EG: Yeah, but they were, uh, the Mexican kids didn’t go.
KP: No, you’re right. I don’t know. We – we always got invited.
EG: We got invited.
HK: Hmm.
EG: Where we used to go. And, um, very nice, like I say, there was a playhouse, so cute.
KP: She had a little playhouse.
EG: And they served real food. [Laughter]
KP: Yeah, we got to eat all those good things, you know, that we didn’t get at home.
HK: Yeah. How did your family fare during the Depression years?
KP: Well, Daddy was buying a house in North Lawrence. And I think it was $900 or something
like that, but – the house. He got it down to $300, that’s all he owed on it.
EG: That’s all he owed on it.
KP: In ‘29 when I was born, and when the bank foreclosed on it. $300 and he lost his house. So
that was…
EG: That was a lot of hard work for him.
KP: It was a lot, and you know, $300, there’s no way you could find $300, you couldn’t beg,
borrow or steal it. There was just no place, and nobody that you knew that you could get $300
from. And so, he lost the house. So that’s what the Depression did to us, you know, and then of
course he went to [clears throat] come to – into Lawrence proper and, uh, rented the little house.
What was it, 801 Pennsylvania – $5 a month?
EG: Something like that.
KP: And 50 cents for the water bill, I remember that. Because we shared the faucet with two or
three other families.
EG: Other families.
KP: I think the Martinezes and the Chavezes, and I – and us. We shared that one water faucet.
HK: Oh, gosh.
KP: [Unintelligible] to have water.

�EG: Just the pipe would, you know, that little –
KP: Between our house and the Martinez house.
EG: Nothing fancy, just a…
KP: Did you ever hear of the El Tampico?
HK: Uh-uh.
KP: On 801 Pennsylvania Street, a little tavern? That was our house. Became a tavern and then
eventually they knocked it down and now there’s nothing there.
HK: Hmm. [Murmurs]
KP: They – they knocked down all those houses in there.
EG: [Murmurs] and the house was gone.
KP: Yeah, they knocked down several of those houses.
EG: Oh, and the Martinez’s house. Ours, Martinez and Chavezes were all knocked down.
KP: They’re still – it’s still vacant there now, I think, last time I drove by.
HK: Hmm. So, what – what did you do for, um, healthcare? Was there any health care available
at that time?
KP: The only thing we had, was at school, we had a school nurse.
HK: Mm-hmm.
KP: And I remember she’d look at our teeth and check our eyes or whatever, but nothing ever
came up, never saw a dentist. First time I saw a dentist, I was married and I was pregnant and I
had a – a…tooth that was giving me problems, and it created a – a bag, or cyst.
HK: Abscess.
KP: Abscess. And so I had to go in and have it, um, lanced. My doctor lanced it. Until after the
baby was born, which – my daughter – and then I went to the dentist, that was my first dentist
trip. So when we were little, we didn’t have, even though they did have these cards and I
remember they would mark –
[EG and KP overlapping voices]

�KP: Cavity or –
EG: Cavity or anything. Our teeth were pretty good though.
KP: I guess we were. You see, we didn’t have sweets.
HK: Mm-hmm.
KP: I mean, sweets were a treat. Maybe on your birthday you got a cake or a pie. Mother’s
favorite, uh, lemon –
EG: Meringue, raisin, lemon pie.
KP: Or lemon meringue.
EG: That was all she ever –
KP: But that was our treat, for maybe a birthday or a holiday.
HK: Mm-hmm.
KP: But, uh, we never had desserts. We never had salad dressings. We had this platter of
vegetables on the plate – on the table, and you just help yourself to radishes or green onions,
stuff that Daddy grew.
HK: Mm-hmm.
KP: And we ate a lot of – we ate very little red meat because if she got a pound of hamburger,
she made a stew out of it or something for all of us. We never had a hamburger. You never had a
steak. Well, steak, forget it. [Laughter] We never had an egg. We had, like, fried potatoes in a –
in a pot, and then she would break a couple eggs over it, and that’s what the whole family ate,
these potatoes with an egg on them.
HK: Mm-hmm.
KP: Or green beans, or…stuff with egg on them.
EG: [Murmurs] like they do nowadays.
KP: Yeah. That never happened at our house.
EG: We couldn’t afford ‘em.
KP: And never any desserts, so see, we grew up on all these good veggies and –

�EG: And then we had that whole milk from that – I don’t know – that man that used to come
around and sell Mom the milk [murmurs].
KP: Trying to think of his name. What was his name…?
EG: Mr. Cannon.
KP: Was that his last name? [Murmurs] He came around in a horse and buggy.
EG: Yeah. He dropped off milk. And he had that little tin container that Mom always had for the
milk. And –
KP: But at times, when we didn’t have that, we didn’t always have that. At times we had that
powdered st –
EG: Oh.
HK: Oh.
EG: We got – she got it from the commodities, that lady.
KP: The commodity. She used to give us things like –
EG: See, Daddy had the – the veggies all the time. So they would barter, I guess you’d call it.
And, so this lady next door, the Martinezes, and, uh, she always had cartons for some reason.
KP: She had cheese. She had cheese, and she had raisins.
EG: I forgot the raisins.
KP: Raisins.
EG: And, uh, those pies –
KP: That we’d trade.
EG: She would trade vegetables for – for what she needed, a little sugar. She’d trade –
KP: Remember during the Second World War when we had stamps?
EG: But they all [murmurs] like that.
KP: Remember that?
HK: The rations.

�KP: The rations?
HK: Uh-huh.
KP: The stamps? Well, we got our share of stamps, but we didn’t have the money to go buy the
meat or anything, so we’d give those – Teresa got a lot of those stamps, and the sugar, and, you
know, a lot of things that we didn’t really use a lot of. The only thing we used sugar, like Mama
would make, she made anything out of tomatoes. She made tomatoes, regular tomatoes, and
she’d jar, you know, she’d put everything up for the winter. And she would make tomato jam,
tomato ketchup, she made everything [laughs].
EG: She used ‘em all up.
KP: But she used everything up, ‘cause Daddy had all this excess stuff.
HK: Uh-huh.
EG: And we had piccalillis.
KP: And piccalillis, she made out of green tomatoes. She made a lot of stuff like that. They had,
Social Services, I think, had a kitchen.
EG: Yeah.
KP: And they had, I guess a place where she went there and – and they did –
EG: She taught you how to can.
HK: Hmm.
EG: And preserve stuff. She went. She was the only Mexican that ever went.
KP: That’s right, that’s right. ‘Cause she was –
EG: Mom was very…frugal.
KP: She was frugal.
EG: Frugal.
KP: Very frugal.
EG: And she would just make –
KP: If a blouse didn’t fit her any more, it was fixed for me [laughs]. I got, I was at the bottom. I
got all [laughs] all the leftovers. [HK laughs] Remember our winter coats? And she would – she

�would buy a winter coat, like at a – at a thrift shop, and she’d come home and redo it for us, you
know. Those were our coats. [Laughter] We – we must have been [laughs]…
EG: Looked like something [laughs].
KP: But she could sew. She was a good seamstress.
EG: I think I took after her. In fact, some of the ladies would ask her to sew.
KP: But she was –
EG: All they did was the embroidery stuff, and Mama didn’t. She just –
KP: She made everything from scratch.
EG: Made shirts, for Daddy and for my brother, and dresses for us and her aprons, her everloving aprons.
KP: She always had those aprons.
HK: She liked aprons, huh?
KP: She always wore an apron.
EG: She had one all the time.
KP: Out of those flour sacks.
EG: And, you know, we used to go – Daddy would go down here to the…[murmurs].
HK: Uh-huh?
EG: And that’s where they had [murmurs] the sacks. I remember when I used to go over to the
store, I call it the store, but it was to get our flour.
KP: It came in twenty-five-pound bags.
EG: Yeah, and you could see the sacks all packed up, and you could pick what color, and they
knew Mom, they knew she made dresses and stuff out of ‘em. So they let her pick out what she
wanted.
KP: She would have never bought anything that big a print. She always bought these little prints,
or little plaids.
EG: But mostly little prints, like rosebuds. Little flowers and things. I’m glad she didn’t like –

�KP: She didn’t like gaudy colors. She didn’t like bright colors. She liked – which is opposite,
because most of the Mexican population –
EG: Yeah, they all like –
KP: They like the big, bright colors. But she – not her, she – she wanted pastels, you know, pinks
and blues and greens.
EG: [Murmurs] looked like clowns.
KP: She would just, she was something else. She put rickrack around those aprons.
EG: Yeah.
KP: Remember the rickrack? I remember running away from her one time, she was after me for
something. And I came out – I came out of the house and she was chasing me, so I went around
the house. She was chasing me. Well, she chased me around once, and she was coming around,
and I kept on going. Well, she stopped and waited for me. [HK laughs] And all I remember was
all those flowers. When I hit her apron. When I hit her apron and she caught my head under –
under her legs here somehow, she beat me something terrible [laughter]. I never ran away from
her [laughter].
EG: [Murmurs] You big dummy, what did you stop for?
KP: I just kept running. My mistake. She says: “Are you gonna run from me again?” “No!” And
she – she would hit the – hit you in the back, you’d end up with wart – welts on your – on the
back of your legs.
HK: Uh-huh.
EG: She was the one that did all the discipline. Daddy never touched us.
KP: Daddy never touched us. He was so sweet. He was – he was just good. About the time he
came home, it was all over, you know.
EG: She wasn’t – she wasn’t one of these moms: “Wait till your dad comes home.” Uh-uh.
KP: She didn’t wait.
EG: She fixed it right, and then there.
KP: And if – and if we, the two of us a lot of times got it together, because if we didn’t tell on:
“She did it,” or she’d say I did it, well then we both got it. So it didn’t do any good.
EG: So, we both got it just in case.

�HK: Were you both born at home, or…?
KP: Mm-hmm.
EG: Uh…we had – she had a midwife.
KP: There was a midwife. She lived over on Pennsylvania Street, 800 block on Pennsylvania
about the middle of the block, her name was Petra. But I don’t remember the last name.
EG: No, that – that was for you. But for me, there was a…a white lady who lived a block from
where we lived.
KP: Oh, well, for me it was Petra.
EG: I know it was that lady.
KP: That Mexican lady. She was a real old lady. Well, I don’t know if she was or not, but
anyway, Daddy probably [EG murmurs] – but anyway, when I was born it was storming and real
bad rain in April.
HK: Mm-hmm.
KP: And Daddy walked all the way across the bridge down to Pennsylvania Street to pick her up,
to bring her back, so by the time they got there, I was born, but then she had to cut the cord and
all that. But, so that was a hard time for Mom. ‘Cause we couldn’t afford – couldn’t afford
doctors and stuff.
EG: And the only reason that they didn’t call this lady that – I forget, but I used to know her
name, but I don’t remember now. She passed away. When I tried to get my birth certificate, she
forgot – she forgot to record it.
KP: Record it.
EG: In Topeka and I had a [murmurs], and she’d already passed away when I was gonna go and
take a trip to Mexico. I was, uh, married, and of course had had [murmurs] no certificate. They
didn’t know I existed in Topeka. I said: “Oh, boy.” So I had to get Daddy’s Bible, and people
that she knew, and…
KP: It was just a mess.
EG: Finally, I got it. It took me about four or five years.
KP: My goodness, yeah…
EG: The people had already passed away.

�KP: Yeah, well, even Doña Petra had probably already died.
EG: She’d already passed away too.
KP: But – but they had mine. She had recorded mine, or somebody had recorded it.
EG: Had to be.
KP: Mine was in Topeka.
EG: But that lady in North Lawrence, she didn’t. And, uh…I tell you, I had a terrible time.
[Murmurs] but I finally got my birth certificate.
HK: Growing up in Lawrence, did you experience any prejudice?
KP: You know, I’ve heard that a lot, and we’ve discussed that. We’ve heard friends of ours, and
you know, even relatives now, that have – had experienced all of that. And we never did. I don’t
know why. Maybe somehow, I think maybe the fact that we were Baptists…we were kind of, we
were kind of away from the other Mexican families when it comes to, like, celebrations and all
this, all these church socials, fiestas and [murmurs] we didn’t belong to any of that. The only
thing I remember was that dance group. [EG murmurs] Some lady came and talked Mother into
letting us do it, and of course we were ecstatic, ‘cause it was – it was dance, you know, we loved
that. And so, but I – I like we’re not in the picture, so evidently she didn’t let us come [EG
murmurs] to get the picture taken.
EG: I remember we – she made skirts for us.
KP: And she made skirts and blouses, she made these beautiful blouses, embroidered all that
stuff on it. And, but, oh, I must have been five or six and you must have been six or seven. I
mean, we were little –
EG: Oh, yeah, Yeah, we were little. Well, it couldn’t have been too young, because I remember
that we –
KP: Who was there in our age group?
EG: ‘Cause I remember her making us the skirts, and –
KP: I remember the little – the little blouses.
EG: I said: “Oh” –
KP: And we went and – and we’d go to practice, she’d take us to practice. And, uh, and we
danced for a group. We either danced at KU or somewhere we danced. We went to dance.
EG: Well, someplace they took us to dance.

�KP: I think it was at KU. Like, for some reason…
EG: ‘Cause, see, there’s Theresa.
KP: Who was our age.
EG: Juanita. And…both Juanitas [murmurs].
KP: Well, I know we were in grade school.
EG: It was in grade school.
KP: Yeah, well, see, they’re grade school age.
EG: See, that’s about how old we were. About ten. There was Clara. [Murmurs] ‘Course, she’s
older than I am. She was older than – she was older than you, so she was older. But we were this
age, probably. Yeah, we were probably that age.
KP: But I remember those little skirts and that’s the only thing I can remember that we had
anything to do with the – with the other kids socially.
HK: Mm-hmm.
KP: ‘Cause we, of course, never had anything to do with them. But no – we, I didn’t feel any
prejudice. Uh, as I – when I grew up and got married, and I left home and went to Ottawa to live
with my husband for not even a year, ‘cause our daughter was born and then we came back to
Lawrence to live and Ermie was married and living here, and my brother. And we used to party
and go to different places and I – I don’t know if you knew of the Skipper Williams family.
HK: Yes, I’ve heard of them.
KP: Williams. Well, he was our best friend. And we went to the country club, you know, for
dinners and – and my husband and I were with him. And, uh, Jan, and we used to go to all these
– we’d get on the plane, he had a plane, and we’d fly to Oklahoma, or we’d fly to Nebraska,
we’d fly to Colorado. We’d go to these games, for the KU games.
HK: Mm-hmm.
KP: And with him, and we never felt any prejudice anywhere.
EG: He’d come to my house, and I’d cook for ‘em, and we had parties.
KP: We had parties at our house, we were always at our house. Other friends, we had a lot of, at
that time, of course he was, uh, already an alumni from KU. And he had all these, uh, uh, friends
that were, like, he brought Wilt Chamberlain to KU. And so, we were all just friends, ‘cause we

�all [murmurs] football players and…yeah. And we had a lot of fun. And this was…what, in the
50s?
EG: And we had that big bus.
KP: In the 50s.
EG: Uh-huh, yeah, in the 50s. Had that big bus [murmurs] like a party bus.
HK: Mm-hmm.
EG: I guess football players and Skipper Williams had it. Man, I’m tell you, these guys. Come
knocking on your door [mimics knocking sound]: “We’re here to party!” [Laughter]
KP: We lived on Massachusetts Street then. And Skipper would come to the door, and we’d
already be in bed. And he’d come to the door and he’d just stick his hand in with his empty glass,
ready for another drink. [HK laughs] And we’d get up, next thing you know we got busy going,
and we’re having a good time. And he had a, uh, a cabin out at the Lone Star lake. And we’d go
out there what he called “roughing it.” We’d go out there and he’d take the maid, and take the
kids, ‘cause they were – his kids were little. Shawn and [clears throat] Todd. At that time his
name was Odd. Do you know Todd Williams?
HK: Mm-hmm.
KP: He runs – works at the athletic club or something. Well, his – his name was Odd, like his
uncle Odd. But when they found out that he was retarded –
HK: Oh.
KP: They changed it to Todd. So, he used to be Odd. But when he was little like that, you – you
couldn’t tell – [Tape cuts off at 47:28]
END OF TAPE 26

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                  <text>La Yarda was a neighborhood of worker housing provided by the Santa Fe Railroad for Mexican-American railroad workers in Lawrence, Kansas; located near the Kansas (Kaw) River, the neighborhood was largely destroyed by a major flood in 1951. In 2006, Helen Krische, archivist at the Watkins Community Museum, began an oral history project to document the La Yarda and Mexican-American communities in Lawrence, Kansas. The project was resumed in 2019 by Nora Murphy and Emily Raymond. The interviews primarily feature the children of the railroad workers who migrated to Lawrence in the early 20th century; they describe daily life, social activities, and living conditions in the Mexican-American community in Lawrence from roughly the 1920s through the 1970s.</text>
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                  <text>These works are the intellectual property of the Watkins Museum of History, Lawrence, Kansas. The public may freely copy, modify, and share this Item for noncommercial purposes if they include the original source information. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s).</text>
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              <text>Gauna, Erminia (Ermie)</text>
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          <name>Original Format</name>
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              <text>MP4</text>
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              <text>01:01:31 (video)</text>
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          <description>Rate at which bits are transferred (i.e. 96 kbit/s would be FM quality audio)</description>
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              <text>83 kbps</text>
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              <text>3748 kbps</text>
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                <text>Erminia (Ermie) Gauna and Kitty Pacheco La Yarda Interview</text>
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                <text>Gauna, Erminia (Ermie)</text>
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                <text>Sisters Erminia Gauna and Kitty Pacheco were interviewed by Helen Krische in 2006 as part of an oral history project to document the La Yarda and Mexican-American communities in Lawrence, Kansas. La Yarda was a neighborhood of worker housing provided by the Santa Fe Railroad for Mexican-American railroad workers; located near the Kansas (Kaw) River, the neighborhood was largely destroyed by a major flood in 1951. Erminia and Kitty grew up in North Lawrence and in East Lawrence, and attended the Baptist church. They describe their family's migration from Mexico to Lawrence, and share memories of their mother and father. Erminia and Kitty describe social activities in the Mexican-American community, living conditions in East Lawrence, their father's work for the Works Progress Administration (WPA), their parents' gardens, and their experiences picking potatoes. They share their memories of the Great Depression, and of the German POW camp in Lawrence during World War II. They describe speaking Spanish as children. Erminia and Kitty describe family foodways, and their experiences receiving healthcare. They also discuss their experiences with discrimination and segregation as part of the Mexican-American community in Lawrence. </text>
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                <text>Krische, Helen</text>
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                <text>Raymond, Emily</text>
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            <name>Coverage</name>
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                <text>Lawrence (Kan.)</text>
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                <text>PDF (transcription)</text>
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                <text>26-EGaunaKPacheco-2006.mp4 (video)</text>
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                <text>Watkins Community Museum (Lawrence, Kan.)</text>
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                <text>To access the video and audio recordings of this interview, go to &lt;a href="https://archive.org/details/26-egauna-kpacheco-2006"&gt;https://archive.org/details/26-egauna-kpacheco-2006&lt;/a&gt;.</text>
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                <text>The &lt;a href="https://www.watkinsmuseum.org/"&gt;Watkins Museum of History&lt;/a&gt; also holds items related to this collection.</text>
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                <text>&lt;a href="https://archives.lib.ku.edu/repositories/3/resources/5295"&gt;Additional research on the La Yarda community&lt;/a&gt; is held at the Spencer Research Library at the University of Kansas.</text>
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            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="34859">
                <text>Published with the permission of Margaret Garcia on behalf of Erminia Gauna and Kitty Pacheco. This work is the intellectual property of the Watkins Museum of History, Lawrence, Kansas. The public may freely copy, modify, and share this Item for noncommercial purposes if they include the original source information. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights-holder(s).</text>
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                <text>La Yarda Oral History Project</text>
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            <name>Subject</name>
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                <text>La Yarda (Lawrence, Kan.)</text>
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                <text>Mexican Americans -- Housing -- Kansas -- Lawrence</text>
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                <text>Mexican Americans -- History -- Kansas -- Lawrence</text>
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                <text>Mexican Americans -- Social conditions -- Kansas -- Lawrence </text>
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                <text>Oral History</text>
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                  <text>Obituaries -- Kansas -- Douglas County</text>
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              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
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                <elementText elementTextId="156">
                  <text>The Lawrence Public Library began collecting a web archive of obituaries published by newspapers and funeral homes in and near Douglas County, Kansas, in 2019. The items in this collection are indexes of those obituaries. Indexing begins with obituaries published in late 2018 and continue to the present. </text>
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              <name>Creator</name>
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                  <text>Lawrence Public Library (Kan.)</text>
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                  <text>2018 -</text>
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                <text>Wilson's Funeral Home Obituaries</text>
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            <name>Description</name>
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                <text>An index of obituaries published by the Wilson's Funeral Home in Wellsville, Kansas. </text>
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                <text>Lawrence Public Library (Lawrence, Kan.)</text>
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                <text>2018 -</text>
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                <text>&lt;a href="https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1tGxtk1MkooCHl9ZbMTkQxekluRFOtiBeHTKE173qTnw/edit?usp=sharing"&gt;Click here&lt;/a&gt; to access this index.</text>
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            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="34882">
                <text>&lt;a href="https://www.wilsonfunerals.com/listings"&gt;Wilson's Funeral Home website&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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          </element>
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            <name>Publisher</name>
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              <elementText elementTextId="34883">
                <text>Lawrence Public Library (Lawrence, Kan.)</text>
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                  <text>Douglas County Genealogical Society</text>
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                  <text>Douglas County (Kan.) -- History</text>
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                  <text>This collection is comprised of the publications of the Douglas County Genealogical Society, including issues of The Pioneer (the quarterly newsletter of the Society) as well as directories, various indexes compiled by members of the Society, and other resources of interest to genealogists and researchers studying the history of Lawrence and Douglas County, Kansas.</text>
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                  <text>Douglas County Genealogical Society (Lawrence, Kan.)</text>
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                  <text>Lawrence Public Library (Lawrence, Kan.)</text>
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                  <text>1977 - 2013</text>
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                  <text>PDF</text>
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              <name>Language</name>
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                  <text>eng</text>
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                  <text>Douglas County (Kan.)</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="34884">
                <text>Complete Tombstone Census of Douglas County, Kansas</text>
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            <name>Subject</name>
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                <text>Cemeteries -- Kansas -- Douglas County</text>
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                <text>Douglas County (Kan.) -- Genealogy</text>
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                <text>1987 (Volume 1)</text>
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                <text>1989 (Volume 2)</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="34890">
                <text>Copyright, Douglas County Genealogical Society</text>
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                <text>Volume 1 contains the tombstone censuses for Oak Hill and Maple Grove cemeteries in Lawrence, Kansas, as well as historical information about Douglas County undertakers, a description of Quantrill's Raid and list of victims, a selection of territorial obituaries, and other miscellany. &#13;
Volume 2 contains information about all other cemeteries and burial sites in Douglas County, as well as a selection of maps, photographs, obituaries, and excerpts from other historical records related to Douglas County, Kansas. </text>
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                <text>&lt;a href="https://archive.org/download/complete-tombstone-censusof-douglas-county-kansas/CompleteTombstoneCensusofDouglasCountyKansasVolume1.pdf"&gt;Click here&lt;/a&gt; to access Volume 1.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;a href="https://archive.org/download/complete-tombstone-censusof-douglas-county-kansas/CompleteTombstoneCensusofDouglasCountyKansasVolume2.pdf"&gt;Click here&lt;/a&gt; to access Volume 2.</text>
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                <text>&lt;a href="https://gis.douglascountyks.org/portal/apps/sites/#/map-gallery/app/f941d817c45843de84d0a03bf4c0a23d"&gt;Cemeteries in Douglas County, Kansas&lt;/a&gt;: Searchable cemetery database including historical documentation where available. Maintained by Douglas County GIS. </text>
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                <text>&lt;a href="http://lawrenceks.maps.arcgis.com/apps/webappviewer/index.html?id=39ca98653f324f4b9d599720c54032fc"&gt;Searchable Cemetery Records for Lawrence, Kansas&lt;/a&gt;: &lt;span&gt;Maintained by the City of Lawrence, this resource allows researchers to locate burial plots within the City’s cemeteries&lt;/span&gt;</text>
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                    <text>LAWRENC E,

KANSAS

TELEPHON E DIRECTORY

NOVEMBER 195 2

OSMA ROOM

mur.
E&gt;\J

UBf\

r, KMY 'A~

SEE PAGES 1 and 2 FOR EMERGENCY CALLS
AND OTHER IMPORTANT L."'FORMATlON

SEE THE "CLASSIFIED"IN THIS DIRECTORY

SOUTHWESTERN

ITS YELLOW PAGES TELL
YOU " WHERE TO BUY IT"

BELL

TELEPHONE

COMPANY

�LONG DISTANCE CALL'S
GO THROUGH FASTER
••• in the early morning
••• in the afternoon
•. • late at night

LONG DISTANCE RATES FROM LAWRENCE
NIGHT and_ SUNDAY RATES APPLY. FROM 6 P.M. _TQ 4:30_ ~.M. and ALL DAY SUNDAY
Generally Ratea Are For 3 Mlnutea (On Some Calls to Nearby Polnta Ratea Are For 15 Mlnutea),
From

LAWRENCE

STATION-TOSTATION

PERSON-TO,
PERSON

to:

WEEK-I N~GNHJS WEEK- N ~~HoTS
DAYS SUNDAY DAYS SUNDAY

Ab11ene, Kan.......
Amarillo, Tex. . . . . .
Arkansas City, Kans..
Atchison, Kans. . . . .
Augusta, Kans. . . . .
Baldwin, Kans. . . . .
Bartlesvill~1 Okla. . .
Basehor, Mns. . . . .
Bonner Springs, Kans.
Burlington, Kans. . .
Centropolis, Kans. . .
Chanute, Kans. . . . .
Chicago, Ill. . . . . . . .
Clinton, Kans. . . . . .
Coffeyville, Kans. . .
Concordia, Kans. . . .
Council Grove, Kans..
Dallas, Tex. . . . . . . .
De Soto, Kans. . . . .
Denv~r. Colo.

$ .70 $ .55 $1.05 $ .90
1.20
.80
1.70
1.30
.85
.70
1.30
1.15
.45
.45
.70
.70
.80
.65
1.20
1.05
.2o--.2o--.3m.35.70
.45
1.00
.75
.25
.25
.40
.40
.25
.25
.40
.40
.55
.SO
.85
.80
.25
.25~40--.40
.65
.50
1.00
.85
1.20
.80
1.70
1.30
.15
.15
.30
.30
.80
.65
1.20
1.05
.80--.65--1.201.05
.60
.SO
.90
.80
1.20
.80
1.70
1.30
.20
.20
.35
.35
1.30
.90
1.80
1.40

From

STATION-TO·
STATION

PERSON-TO·
PERSON

LAWRENCE

to:
Lincoln, Nebr•..... $ .65 $ .40 $ .90 $ .65
Linwood, Kans. . . . . .15
.15
.30
.30
.70
1.45
1.10
Little Rock, Ark. . . . 1.05
los Angeles, Calif. . . 1.90
1.50
2.65
2.25
.50;---;,...__:·-:,90:-+-':::'8-:,0_
Manhattan, Kans. . . .60
Mclouth, Kans. . . . . .20
.20
.35
.35
Memphis, Tenn. . . . . 1.10
.75
1.55
1.20
Minneapolis, Minn. . 1.20
.80
1.70
1.30
Newton, Kans. . . . . . .75
.60
1.15
1.00
New York City, N.Y.. 1.80
1.40
2.50
2.10
Oklahoma City,-0~95:--i!--"-'.6,..;0,.......;;--;1.351.000iathe, Kans. . . . . . . .30
.30
.45
.45
Omaha, Nebr. . . . . . . .70
.45
1.00
.75
Osage City, Kans.
.45
.45
.70
.70
~Osa~w~
at~o._m~ie+.',K~a~ns~·~·~·~·A40-:c-+-•.40;---;,___:·~60=-+-~·6-:,0_
Oskaloosa, Kans. . . . .25
.25
.40
.40
Ottawa, Kans. . . . . . .30
.30
.45
.45
Overbrook, Kans. . . . .25
.25
.40
.40
Paola, Kans. . . . . . . .40
.40
.60
.60
Parsons. Kans.
.75
.60
1.15
1.00

CALLS PLACED BY NUMBER
GO THROUGH TWICE AS FAST
For example: "CHICAGO-EXchange 3-9800." Or, if you want to moke a person-to-person call,
place it like this: "CHICAGO-EXchange 3·9800, Mr. John Brown."
Dmo1t, M1ch. . . . . . 1.50
1.10
2.10
1.70
Eldorado, Kans. . . . . .75
.60
1.15
1.00
Emporia, Kans.
.55
.SO
.85
.80
Eudora, Kans. . . . . . .10
.10
.25
.25
~Eu:.:..re:.:.k;;ca•c,.;.:.Ka=;n;is.:...:...:.. .:·..:.·.:..;·
· ;.-.:·7.;.;0._~.5~5~77'
1.05
.90
Fort Scott, Kans. . . . .65
.50
1.00
.85
Garnett, Kans. . . . . .SO
.SO
.75
.75
Herington, Kans. . • . .65
.SO
1.00
.85
Hiawatha, Kans. . . . .55
.SO
.85
.80
H~o_lt~
on~·-~
~o~s;__
.._._·~·~.4~5~~.45~~·;
70~~·~
7~0Horton, Kans. , . . . . .SO
.50
.75
.75
Hutchinson',- Kans. . . .85
.70
1.30
1.15
Independence, Kans.
.75
.60
1.15
1.00
Independence, Mo. . . .40
.35
.55
.SO
I~o_la~,_K_an~s_
. _._._
.._._._
..+-~·6r.O~~.S~0-+~·90
.80
Joplin, Mo. . . . . . . . .65
.40
.90!1165Kansas City, Mo. . . . .35
.35
.50
.SO
leavenworth, Kans. . .35
.35
.55
.55
lecompton, Kans. . . .15
.15
.30
.30
lenexa, Kans. . . . . . .30
.30
.45
.45

.15
.30 1 .30
Perry, Kans. . . . . . . .15
Pittsburg, Kans. . . . .75
.60
1.15 ,1.00
Pomona, Kans. . . . . .30
.30
.45
.45
Richland, Kans.
{Shawnee Co.) . . . .20
.20
.35
.35
St. Joseph, Mo. . . . . .45
.35
.65
.55
St. louis, Mo. . . . . . .95
.60
1.35
1.00
St. Marys, Kans. . . . .50
.SO
.75
.75
Salina, Kans. . . . . . . .75
.60
1.15
1.00
~sa_lt~u~k~e~C~it~~-u~ta_h~1~J~o
•.,~1~.~~~2.~40~~2.~oo~
Seattle, Wash. . . . . 2.05
1.65
2.85
2.45
~prlngfield, Mo. . . . .
.70
.45
1.00
.75
Tonganoxie, Kans. . . .20
.20
.35
.35
Topeka, Kans. . . . . . .30
.30
.45
.45
Tulsa, Okla. . . . . . . .80
.SO
1.10
.80
Valley Falls, Kans. . . .35
.35
.55
.55
1.30
2.40
2.00
Washington, D.C. . . 1.70
Wellsville, Kans. . . . .25
.25
.40
.40
Wichita, Kans. . . . . .80
.65
1.20
1.05
Williamsburg, Kans. . .40
.40
.60
.60
Winchester, Ka_ns. . . .30
.30
.45
.45

Rates quoted do not include U. S. and States sales taxes which are computed as follows:
U. S. TAX 15% of the total of all calls under 25c, 25% of the total of calls of 25c and over {This tax Is
computed to the nearest multiple of Sc on each call from a coin telephone).
STATE SALES TAX 2% on calls to points within th~ state where aljplicable.

�KC

307.763
TELE PHON

Lawrence, Kansas Telephone Directory

1952
2-13-04

EMERGENCY CALLS
FIRE ·····-···-··- ···--- - - - - -·-··-----·····Call "FIRE DEPARTMENT'
POLICE ·····-····-····-····-···-···-···---··········-······Call "POLICE DEPARTMENT"
SHERIFF ·····-···------···-····-····--·············-·····-····--··········-···-···-·····Call ''88''
FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION
For the Telephone Number or Address .. Call "INFORMATION''

TELEPHONE SERVICE CALLS
Long Distance Calls ····-·····-····- ·-····-····-·-···- ·-··········-····-·-·-

·- · Call

"Long Distance''

Numbers Not in Directory -········-···-····-- ·-····-···- ····-···-·- - -····- Call

"Information"
When a Telephone I s Out of Order -··-····-··········-·-·······-···-·····-· Call "Repair Service''
To Report Difficulty • , •
With local service

---···-·········-··············· ·····-·-·······-··········- Call "Service Assistant"

With long distance -·---·····-···--··-····-···-·-·······-····-····-····--· Call "Long Distance"
Telephone Business Matt ers (To order a telephone,
hav' your telephone moved, or discuss your bill.)
Call "Business Office"

TO ADD VALUE TO YOUR TELEPHONE SERVICE
ANSWER PROMPTLY .••
When your telephone rings, answer
promptly. A delay may cause you to
miss an important call.
IDENTIFY YOURSELF •••
When you answer, identify yourself
immediately with some s uch phrat1e
as " 1732" or Smith Department
Store." Answering in this manner
eliminates needless q uestioning ••.
saves time

WAIT SEVERAL RINGS •••
When you place a call, give t he called
party time to get to his telephone
from another part of the house, o r
even from the yard. Wait sever a l
rings • . • about a minute.
SPEAK DISTINCTLY •••
Talk directly to the telephone. Your
lips should be about half an inch
from the mouthpiece. Use a natural,
pleasant voice. Don't whisper. Don't
s hout.

RECORDING OF TELE PHONE CALLS
If you hea r a short "beep" tone on your telephone about every 15 seconds,
1~ mean~ th:-'t the.pers on_ wi th whom you a re talking is recording your conversation. T his s1g na l IS provided by the t eleohone company for your protection. Use
of a recorde r wit hout this signal is unla wful. If you do not want a record made
of what you are saying, ask the person With whom you are ta lking to disconnect
the recording mach.tne. When he disconnects, you will no longer hear the "beep"
tone.
.

SOUTHWESTERN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY
734 VERMONT
Copyright November, 1 9~ 2 Southwestern Bell Telephone Company

i.AWRENCE PUBLIC LIBRARY
701 VEIWONT STREET

LAWReNCE. KANSAS 66044

�FACTS ABOUT LONG DISTANCE SERVICE
To assist you in choosing the service to use
STAnON-TO-STATDCN CALLS

PERSON-TO-PELlSON CALLS

!'he rates are lower on these

You talk to a particular person

On tbe lowe r-priced station-to-station
call, you talk to anyone who answers
at the number called. To make a station-to-station call:
Call '"Long Distance." Give operator
name of the town to which you want
to talk, and the telephone number,
if you know it. For example, say
"Memphis, Te nnessee, 9-8798," or
"Memphis," Tennessee, Mr. John
Ford's residence at 197 Court Avenue."
Be sure not to specify any particular
person, or the number or location of
any private branch exchange station
(such as Room 711, Hotel Excelsior, or
Shipping Department). Such calls
take the higher person-to-person rate.

On person-to-person calls, you call
for a particular· person, or a particular extension, such as "Room 711,
Hotel Excelsior." This service assure~
your getting to talk to the person you
want. To make a person-to-person
call:

Fads About Statoon-to-Station Cal~s
1. Rates are lower than person-to-person calls
except on some collect calls where the rate is
25 cents or less See rate table on inside
front cover of this directory.
2. They are usually mo;~ quickly completed
than person-to-person calls.
3. Generally the initial period oi conversation without additional charge is three minutes; on some calls to nearby points the initial
period is five minutes.
4. The call is timed from the moment the
called telephone is answered.

CGU~CT

Call "Long Distance." Give operator
name of the town, the telephone
number or address, and the name
of the person or department you
want. For example, say "Memphis,
Tennessee, 9-8798, Mr. John Ford,"
or "Memphis, Tennessee, 9-8798,
Extension 711."

Facts About Person-to-Person Calls
1. Charges begin when you start talking
with the called person or with anyone at
a called extension telephone.
Z. All initial periods are for three minutes. The
rate for person-to-person calls is somewha1
higher than for station-to-station calls.
3. We will make repeated attempts on the
same or a later day to reach the person with
whom you want to talk, at different telephones
or even in different towns. No add1tional charge
is made for this service.

CALlS •• •

You may reverse charges; that is,
have them billed to the called telephone. Simply tell the operator you
want to call collect. If the called
party agrees to pay the charges, they
will be billed to his telephone.

-..
.
· ,•

' · l•)tt~ •1. \

~ UA.)I .ii"M Jf, rlA l

FCR FASii:::&lt; S:E::VBCE • • • CAll
BY NUNH3ER •••
If you know the number of the
distant telephone, give it to Long
Distance. It will speed your call.

�LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Alphabetical T elephone Directory
A
Abbott Karl 1605 Tenn . . . . . ........... . : . . 2785- M
Abdullah Adnan 1037 Tenn ..... • ............ 3662-J
Abegg Klaus 1343 Haskell ....... . . . . .. .. . .. 3936-M
Abel Francis C &amp;21 Conn ... . .. . . • .. .. •..... . . 3034
Abel Paul 1204 R I .. . .. . ....•......•.... . 1767-R
Abele LeonG 1012 Tenn . . . ..... . . . . .. . . .. . 2911-M
Abels Edwin F 2032 Mass . ..... . .. . . . • .. .... . 2233
Abraham Eva Ward 832 N Y .. ... . ....... . . . . . 3893
Abraham R C 1607 Stratford Rd .. . • .. . .. .... 1237-J
ACACIA frat 1225 Oread . .... . . ... ........ . . . 3445
Acher E R 16 Winona .. ... .... . •. . .... . .... 3757
ACHER OIL CO 645 Locust ..... . : . ... .. ....... 37
If no answer call . .............. . . . ........ 3757
Achning Carl W 84-4 Ark .. ..•.... . •... . . . . . 1647-W
Achning R G 84&amp; Mo . . . ....••..... . .. . . . .... 2691
Achnings Hardware 822 Mass ............. . .. .. 679
Acker Vernon L 837 Tenn . .. ..... • .... • .... . 3157-J
Acker W J Capt 1914 Ohio . ..... . .... . . .. . .. 1952-R
Ackerman E F Mrs 945 Ky . .... .... ... .. .... . 3934
ACME BACHELOR LAUNDRY &amp; DRY CLEANERS
1111 Mass 646
Adair J A 543 Ind . .. .................... . 1187-W
Adams Curtis 920 N H .. ................. . 1859- M
Adams Donald E 920 E 13 . . .......... . ... . 2581 -W
Adams Em met C 217 N 6 . . .. . . ........ .. 1460-W
Adams Geo RFD 2 ..... . . ......... • ...... 4055-K-3
Adams Geo T 246 Maine .. . ........ . ....... 1743-R
Adams 0 L 635 Elm . . ......• . .. .. . . . . ... .3132-R
Adams Otto A Mrs. 917 Ohio ........ . .. . .. . . 3246-J
Adams Stan 827 Mich ... . .... . ... . ......... 2186-J
Adams W R 821 N v . ... . ...... .. . . . ...... 3078-J
Adamson Clarence R 1344 Ky .......... . .... 2461-R
Addy E P 2 209 Mass . .. . .. .......... . ... . .. . 1453
AOELANE'S ladies ready-to-wear 823 Mass ...... . 554
Adkins Boyd L 1725 lnd .. ..... ........ ..... . 3140
Admire L E 1912 Mass
.
. .......... 3674-M
AERO MAYFLOWER TRANSIT CO 731 N H . .. ... . 15
Aichroth Chas T 147 E 23 . .. . .............. 1291- M
Aiken Jas Sunnyside K U .......... . . . . . . . .. . 705-R
Ail Is Jas S 772 Maple . .... .. •• .... •• ...... 2933-W
Airport RFD 5 .. .... . .. . ... . . . ....... . ..... . 314
Airport Inn RFD 5 ...... . ..... . • . ... . . . . . .. 3058
Akin Tom 0 RFD 2 . ... ........ . . •.. ... . . 4084-N-3
Alamo Cafe 1109 Mass . ..... .......•....... . 3604
Albers John.A dntst 4 &amp; Maine .. .. •.. ........ . 3975
Residence 1505 University Dr . .......... .... 1681
Albert R W Rev 115 E S Park .... . ....... . . . . . 3381
Albert Wm Mrs 731 Ala ......... . ..... . . . 2306-W
ALBRIGH T C R chiropractor 102:3! Mass ........ 1531
Residence 1120 Miss . ... . . ............. . 1385
Albright Esther Mrs 1233 Vt. .............. . 3296-J
Albright G E 1809 Ala . . ....... . ..... . . . ... 2374-R
Alburty V R 1341 Ohio . . . ......... . ....... 4211-W
Alderson Donald K 809 Ala . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3184
Aldrich Norman W RFD 6 ... . ...... . .... . 4048-K-3
Aldridge C P 1305 Elmwood . ..... • ......... 1762-W
Aldridge Cornelius 1033 lnd.......... .. .. .
3390
Aldridge Jeanne 945! lnd ... ....... . .. . . . . . 3141-R
Alexander Arnold D 934 Miss . ... ....... . . . .. 3141-J
Alexander C J tlentist 1101:1. Mass . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4l1
Residence 612 Miss. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3277 -J
Alexander Dean RFD 4 . ..... . ... . . . . .... 4034- N-13
Alexander E E 345 Miss .. .. ............ . . 1183-M
Alexander Earle Jr 1635 Mass .... . • ........ . 3492-W
Alexander Edw E 835 Maine . . . . . ... .... .... 1505-W
Alexander Edwin A 333 Miss . . ..•.•... .. ... . 2778-J
Alexander Francis 768 Elm ... . . ....... .. ... 2576-M
Alexander Geo H 909 Conn .. .............. . 3151-W
Alexander Geo Jr RFD 4 . ..... • .......... 4034-K-2
Alexander Geo W 1108 Conn . ...........•. . . 2212-W
Alexander Herb 648 w 23 . ........... . .. . . . 1825-W
Al~xander Jas B 909 Conn . ... .. ......... . . . 3151-J
Alexander John D 1609 Tenn ... • ..... •.. ... . 2785-J
Alexander Le Roy 780 Elm . .... . .. . •...... 1130-W
Alexander Lottie 8 1731 Ala .• . .. .. • . .• . .... . . 3252

Alexander Robt RFD 3 .. . ......... . ..... 4057- K-12
. . .. . 2949-R
Alexander Robt B 105 N 9. . . . . . . . . .
. .. . . 3142-W
Alexander Verhn 1718 Ala. . . ..
Alford Don RFD 2 ............ . . ......... 4098-N-2
Alford Eugene Mrs 1420 Crescent Rd ........ . 3441- R
Alford Fred S RFD 3 ... . ... .... .. . ... ... 4043-K-11
All dredge Chas E 642 N 2 . ... . ........... . 1195-W
Allen Billie RFD 3 .. ................... 4071-N -13
Allen Br ice 1838 Mo . ... . ........... .. . . . . 2268- R
Allen C Roger 700 lnd . .. •... . ..... .. . . . . ... . 2660
Allen Ceci l RFD 1. ..... . ............ .. ... 4099-N-2
Allen Chas N 1144 R l ... . .. . .. . .•..•.. . .. 2162-M
All en Dean 1810 La .. . .. .. .... . ........ . .. 3224- W
Allen E B 911 Mo . . . .. .. .. . ...• . •.. . . .. .. .. 1809
Allen Elmer T 2201 La .. . . . . .... .. .. . •. . .. 2821-W
Allen Ethan 171 9 Miss ....... . ..•... . ..... 3489-W
Allen Forrest C Dr 831 La . .. . ...•. .. • . ••...... 300
Allen Fred R 1343 Tenn ..... .. .... .. .... .. . 1712-J
Allen Geo V atty 15 E 1 . .... . ................ 121
Residence 'RFD 1 . . .. ..... . ... • ........ 4030-N-3
All en Harold 1101 Ohio . . . . . • . . . . • . . . . . .
1211
Allen Hugh Mrs 501 Perry ..... •• ... . , .. .... 1139-R
Allen Jude 1202 N Y . ........ • • .... • . .. . . . 1091-J
All en L C Mrs 1729 Mass.
. . .. . • .. . . . 3583-J
Al len Leona L 922 Pa .. ... .. .. .... .. • .. ... 2317-W
Allen Milton P atty Court House .. ............ . . 559
Residence 2022 Vt . ...........••....•. . . . . 3783
Allen Nellie Mrs 1407 Ky .. ............. . . . . 2683-~
Allen Paul D Lieu t 1630 Barker ....•..... . .. . 2395-J
ALLEN PRESS 1041 N H . ..... . ... . .... . .. . . 1234
Allen Richard F ofc 8 &amp; Vt . ... . ....•.. ..... .. . 840
Allen Robt G 501 Tenn ... . ..... • .... .• . . .. 2101-W
Allen Willetta 1013 Del. . .. .. . ........... . . 1655-W
Allison Ellis J 1125 Vt. ...... . ... • ......... 2880- R
Allison Lucille E Mrs 704 Ind ....... . •... . . . . . 1978
Allison Morgan K 172S Ala ........ . ... . ... . 2411-J
Allison 0 E Rev 540 E 19
............ . .. . 3244-W
AL LISON- T HOMAS FLOWER SHOP 941 Mass .... 363
ALLPHIN WAYNE JR atty 704 Mass ........... . 431
Allphin Wayne Jr Sunflower Apts . ... . ....... . 3830-J
ALPHA CHI OMEGA 1246 Oread .............. 3437
ALPHA DELTA PI 1145 La ........... .. ..... 3450
Alpha Epsilon Pi 124 7 Ohio . . ......... , • . .. . . 3513
. . . .1315
Alpha Kappa Lambda 1127 Ohio . . . . . .
Alpha Kappa Lambda Annex 1128 Ohio .. . ...... .. 924
ALPHA OMICRON PI 1144 La ............. . ... 781
ALPHA PHI sorority 1332 La ............... . . 3735
Alpha Phi Ann ex 1232 La
.. . ..... . ..... . . 3236
Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity 1101 Miss ... ........ 2067
ALPHA TAU OMEGA fraternity 1537 Tenn . . ..... 565
Alt Dean Mrs 1246 Miss . . . . .. . .. . .. . . . .... . 3420
Altenbernd Elmer 1500 Haskell . ........... . 3263-J
A ltenbernd Herb RFD 2 . ........ .•...... 4076-N-12
. .... 4076-N-13
Altenbernd Homer RFD 2 . .
Altenbernd Lena 2000 Barker . . .. . . .•. ... . . . 3792- M
Altenbernd Otto RFD 3 Eudora .. .... • .. . . .. 4076-N-4
Altenbernd Wm Mrs RFD 2 . ... . . • ....... .4076-K-4
Althaus Carl B 702 La . .. ....... .. . . . . . ... 1324-W
AI tic Ralph A 1236 Conn .......• •• ......... 2637-R
Ambler A J 1045 N Y . . . .... . ..••.. ....... 2330-R
Amend J L 1116 La ... ........ . ..... .. .... 3231-W
American Leg 1on 7 E 1 .
. .... . ... .. 1.311
Amer ican Radio &amp; Telvsn Co 19 E 9 .. ...... .. . . . 480
AMERICAN SERVICE CO olt&gt; Vt . . . ... ... .. . .... 4tl
Amerine R W Williamstown ............ ... 4043-K-12
Ames Wm P Rev 946 Ohio . . . .
. . . .... 3269-W
Amidon C W Mr Haskell GroYnds .. .•. . • . . ... 1422-J
Amyx Billie E 715 Elm . .
. ...... .••... .. . . 4246
Amyx Carl B 2125 Barker .. ....••.. ...••... 2228-M
Amyx C D 845 R I. .. ... ... . .. . ........ .. 4087-M
Amyx S M 725 Locust
.... . .......... . 2.563-J
Andersen Harold E 1323 Conn ... . .. • ..... . .. 1039-R
Andersen Joyce 1216 Tenn .. .. .. .. ......... 3037-J
Anderson A J Dr 71 7 Vt
.......... . .... .. 124
Anderson A John Rev 605 Maine ..... • . . . . . .. 3589-J
Anderson A L Mrs 2331 Mass
... •• .. . ... . 940

�4

AND- BAN

LAWRENCE

Anderson Arthur C 1620 R I. ............... 2633-M
Anderson Arthur l 827 Ark .•••..••.•.•.... 2874-W
Anderson Bert 1028 N Y ••••.•••••.•.••.•.. 1295-R
Anderson B W 547 Mich . ....••....•.•...... 1117-J
Anderson C W RFD 3 . ... ...•...•.•..... . . 2344
Anderson Cyrus F Haskell Grds .•..••...••... 2190-W
Anderson D l Mrs 1120 W 11 ..• . . .. .. ...... .. 3955
Anderson E C Jr 1341 W Campus Rd .......... . 3835
Anderson Emma Mrs 616 Maine ......•....•.. 2896-J
Anderson Frank B Jr 1521 Ky . .. .............. 1305
ANDERSON FURNITURE CO 812 N H..... . . . . 252
Anderson Geo l 1702 University Dr .... . ... .. . 2363-R
Anderson Glenn RFD 2 . ................ . 4064-K-13
Anderson Glenn 226 N 4 . .••••••• ••••••••• . 2386-W
Anderson Harold 242 Perry ....... .. • .... ... 1357-M
Anderson Hazel A 1343 l enn. . . • • . . • . • . . . . . . . 2737
Anderson Hugo E 416 Maine ...•.•.......... 2203-M
Anderson John 1338 R I . .... ............. . 2149-M
Anderson Ju stin R 826 Ala . . . . . • . . . . • . . . . . . . . 1790
Anderson Kenneth E 1500 W 9 ..•••..•.••.. . 1894-R
Anderson l E 1635 Ala .. .................. 2229-M
Anderson l F 1112 Ky . .. .... • ....•.. ...... . 1493
Anderson lois Mrs RFD 1 ... ...... . . • •.... 4068-K-4
Anderson lowry F 1924 Mass .... . .. .•..... .. 3674-J
Anderson lucy Mrs 1729 Mass .•............ 3569-M
Anderson N K 1722 w 9 . . ...• • .••..•...... 2612-M
Anderson 0 E 1105 N Y ...... • ............ 1532-M
Anderson Raymond l 1008 Vt . ........••. ... 3029-W
Anderson Richard Trucking 2325 Haskell. . . . . . . 1321
Anderson Roy 511 lake . .. . .. • • .. •••...... 2776-W
Anderson Sam Follett 1236 La . . . . . • . . . . . . . . 1564
Anderson Verna 786 Walnut ...•....... • .... 3150-W
Anderson W l Mrs 118 E 11 .••••.•........ 2638-M
Anderson W T 634 Ill ..................... 1827-J
Anderson Willard 424 Elm ....••.•..••...... 1319-R
Andes Ammon S 1642 lnd ...•...•••.•.•.... 3453-J
Andres Chas R 2012 Ohio ...........•.. • .. .. 2497-R
Andrews Chas S 1912 La . ...• •.•.••....... 1543-W
Andrews John T 1500 Mass ...........•••.. 2803-M
ANDREW'S SERV STA 1846 Mass .......... .. . 4183
Andrews W H 641 Vt ..........•........... 1294
Angney Ray 143 E 23 . ..............•..... 3093-W
Annis Russell 2006 R I. ................... . 2937-R
Anthony E T 629 Ala .. ........•.......... . 1400-J
Apel Elizabeth 1028 Vt . .................. . 1168-R
Applegate Carl Capt Sunnyside K U .... .. ... . . 2435-R
Arbuckle l R 1110 Ala
. . .....•....•.. .... . 1496
Arch ung Arthur J 406 W 6 ... ........... ... . 3071-J
Argersinger W J Jr 1831 N H ............... 1971-J
ARMSTRONG BEAUTY SHOP 7231 Mass . . . . . . 567
Armstrong Fred A 746 Maine ..•............ 2279-M
Armstrong John G Sunnyside K U . ..• •.•.... . 1903-R
Armstrong l 0 RFD 2 . ... ·-~ · ............. 4052-N-4
Armstrong R C 424 lnd . . .. ...•. . .......... 2385-M
Armstfonq Sophia 1020 Mo ...• • ...•••...•.. 3084-W
ARMY SURPLUS STORES
Store No 1 935 Mass . ........•............ . 669
Store No 2 740 Mass ............ • ........ . 588
Arndt Edw F RFD 2 ... ... ••.• ......... 4055-N-12
Arnett Ernest G 516 lnd ........... • . ...... . 1537-J
Arnett John H 1228 La ..... .. •....•... ... . 2351-W
Arnold Chas 'lOS Ohio .......... ............. . 2276
Arnold E T 929 Tenn . ... .••..•.•....•.... . . 1482
Arnold Jim 107 S E Park .. . ......... . ..... . 2693-J
Arnold lewis Pat 427 lnd .................. . . 1858
Aronszajn N 1313 Mass . ...........• . .... .. . 2978
Arthur Edna F 503 lake ... ... • .... .... .. .. 2783-M
Arthur J H 625 Elm . ... ..•.. • •..•.•...... 3132-W
Arthurs David S 1620 Mass ..•.......•• .... . 1286-R
Ashby David C 2043 Mass . ....•....•....... 3667-R
Ashby Harry M 1335 Vt .. ...•.... .. ..... . 1131-W
Asher Alan F attorney Lawrence Natl Bk Bg. . . .
482
Residence 2010 Learnard . . . . • ... .. .. . ... . 1639-W
Asher Gorrill &amp; Asher attys Lawrence Natl Bk Bg . . . 482
Asher Henry H a tty lawrence Na·tl Bk Bg ........ . 482
Residence 2209 Vt . . . . ... ..•..••........ . 456
Asher Henry H Jr Mrs 2024 Tenn ....•....... 3055-J
Ashton C H Mrs 1200 Ohio ......•.•..•....... 1755
Assel Carl P 923 lnd
. . ..... .•••.•••. ..... 3301
Assembly of God Church 1242 Mass .•••••..•.. . 2112
Assembly of God Parsonage 1704 Tenn •..••... 1721-M
Atchison Donald P Sunnyside K U ........•... . 873-M
Atchison Robt W Mrs 1032 Ohio ............. .3718-J

Atchison Topeka &amp; Sanla Fe Ry Co
Passenger Depot 413 E 7 .....•..•...•.•..••. 32
Freight Ofc 413 E 1 ........................ 54
Car Clerk 413 E 7 ..• .•...•....•.. .. .... .. 281
Atchley John 1343 Tenn ............ • ....... . 766-J
Atha Quincy l 801 lnd . . . ................. 1426-M
Atkeson Geo l Mrs 1206 Tenn ... ..... ••.. .. . . , 1159
Atkinson Raymond 1413 Oakhill ...••..•.••... 2284-R
Atwood B M Jr lt Col 1432 La . .... •• ..... .. 2550-J
Atwood Floyd W RFD 2 . .. . ............. 400:&gt;-N-12
AUCHARD V M phy 209 W 8 •••.••.•. .. ....••. 354
Residence 2126 La .......• ..... .... ....... . 299
Aul C P 1515 Vt . ..•....• .....•.......... 3654-W
Austin A A 246 Ark ., . . .. . . . . ..•..... ..... 1254-R
Auto Glass Co 712 E 9 .. ............ . . . ....... 954
AUTO WRECKING &amp; JUNK CO INC 712 E 9 ...... 954
Avey C 0 1306 Oakhill: .........•....•..... 2494-W
Avey I 0 1229 Laura ...................... 3119-M
Axe H B RFD 2 .. ... ...... •......•..•... 1133-M
Axe Leonand H 1646 Ala ..................... 1334
Ax Ii ne Carl E 445 Ark . . ....•.. ..••....•.. . •. . 985
Ayers Solon G Haskell Grds .••....••....•... . .. 741

B
B &amp; G Hosiery Shop 917 Mass .•.•.•... .•....• .. 556
Babb Clyde A 812 W 8 ..........•.•...•... 3218-W
Babbitt Bert J RFD 6 . . .... ....... . • .. .. 4048-N-11
Babcock Eleanor 843! N H .......... ....... • . 3666
Babcock Wealthy 701 W 23 . .•••..•.•..•... . 1883-R
Backus Oswald P Ill 1709 Ala ........•...•.. 2229-W
Badger J 700 Ill . ..... . ...... ............. . . 2876
Baecker Anna V Mrs 2315 Mass ...• . ••.••... 1412-W
Baer Chas 11 Westwood . ...•......•...... . 3128-W
Bagby LaVerne 1007 R I ...............•... 1764-M
Baier Ruth Mrs Haskell Grds ..•..•.••...••.. 1546-W
Bailey A H 1819 Ind . ........ . ..... • .. . ... 2436-W
Bailey A R 1120 Ore ...•. ..• ••.... ... • ..... 1430-J
Bailey Everett 615 lake ..•. ... ........ . .. . 3122-M
Bailey Homer W 1643 Ky . ..... . . . . • ....... 2686-M
Bailey lowell E 2127 Barker ..... .... . .... ... . 2250
Bailey Ralph 1228 Prairie ...... • ........ . .. 2476-R
Bailey Scott N 715 W 5 ................... . .. 855
Bair Floyd 842 Conn . . . ....... . .. • .... ... . 1735-M
Baird Dave Signs 17 W 9 . .. . . . . .. • ...... . ... . 1501
Baird F l 1132 W Hills Pkwy ... . •• .. . • . .. . .3158-R
Baird Frank M Mrs 1409 Tenn ......... ... .. 1047-R
Baird Irwin l 1520 Ky .. . ...... . .. . . • ......3654-J
Baird Jas E 1138 Miss ............ . . • ... . . 4201-W
Baird Joe 1041 R 1 .•.•...••••.••.••.•••.. 1972-R
Baker C 0 930 Conn . ...... . ••..• . •.. .. ....1737-J
Baker Chas M 1655 Miss ... ....••..... . .... 2415-M
Baker 0 M Haskell Grds .....•........ • .... 2722-W
Baker Daniel 336 Elm ......................1538-J
Baker Geo 224 N 7 ......•.. .. •• ..... •. . 2179-W
Baker J F Mrs 921 Miss •.•....•.••.••.....•. 2688
Baker Jas E RFO 2 .... . . ................ 4037-N-4
Baker leo 1409 N J ........•..•• .... ••... 2878-M
Baker Maurice F 1414 Conn ..•............. .3590-R
Baker Oscar H 435 Maine ...... .... • ........ . 3260
Baker Ralph Virgil 628 La ... ........•.. ....2998-J
BakPr Rollin H 5 Westwood Rd ...• .• .. ... ... 1734-W
Baker Sue !Mrs 804 Ky . .• ..•... . •....•..... . . 1125
Baker Thomas 912 Maine ...•...••••....... 2671-W
Baker W S RFD 2 . .. ..............•..... 4083-K-4
Baker Warren A 829 Maine ... .. • .. . .. ..... 3106-M
Baldwin Alf red l 813 La ... ............. ..... 3887
Baldwin Clifford W 1602 Mass ... . ........... .. 225
Baldwin Ruth Mrs 1344 Maple lane ......... .3137-R
Bales BelleW Mrs RFD 1. ............... 4039-N-13
Bales E A 1300 N H . .......• .•.. ....•... 1697-M
Balfour l G Co 411 W 14 . .....•.....•.... . •. . 307
Ball M C 1224 Haskell ........ • . •. ••• ..... . 3283-M
Ball Virgil 417 N 9 . ......• .. . ... . .. ..... 3083-W
Balloun Gene 1547 Ky . .. . .. . .. .• .......... . 2685-J
8altzersen A W 532~ Tenn ...•.•..••.•..••. 2749-R
Balyeat Kent 643 Tenn .................... 2966-R
Bamber Wm H 1817 Ill .. ......... .........:3261-J
BAND BOX. BEAUTY SHOP 1144 lnd .•.•..•.... .430
Banker Bertha Mrs 1611 Tenn
. . . ... ..... 1405-W
BANKS CO THE abstrs First Natl Bank Bg •...•.. 984
Banks Frank E 801 Ala . .. . .. ..•..... • ...•. .. 2355
Banks Martha J Mrs 1135 Ore .............. 2148-R

�LAWRENCE
Banks Nellie Mrs RFD 6 . .... . . . .... . . . .. .4034-N-4
Banning Chas E RFD 6 .. .. ... ............ 4035-N-3
Banta John V Jr 1306 N H ..... . . .. . . . ...... 2579-J
Bantz W D 1905 Mass .. . . . .... . . • •... ..... 3702-W
Baptist Church First 801 Ky . • . • . • • • . . . . • . . . . 494
Barajas Juan Santa Fe Apts . .... • •. .. . . . . . . 1285-M
Barter J W 92b Ohio ... . ... . .•.•........... . 2993
Barber Oliver P 1020 Tenn ... .. .. .. . ......... 1283
Barber Richard A atty Lawrence Natl Bk Bg .. . . . . 332
Barber Richard A 92b Ohio .. .... . ...... . .... . 2993
Barker Herbert C 1132 Conn .... . ..•...•.... . . 2810
Barker Mattie Cabbell Mrs 812 Conn .....•... . 2428-R
Barkley Claire 730 Ky .. .....•••.•...... . . . 2583-R
Barkley Clara 110 Locust . . . .......... . • ... . 1585-R
Barland Raymond ofc 707 N H • • . . . • . . . . . . . . . . 540
Residence 2015 Vt .. . ... ...... . .. . . , .. . . 3259-R
Barlow Marion 835 Mich . . . . . . ...... . .. . . . . 2874-R
Barlow Marion A real est 723 Mass. . . . . . . . . . . . 473
Barnard Glenn l 328 Maiden Lane .. . ... • ... . 2nO-W
Barnard Harry R 1740 Mass ... .. •• . •. •..... . 3008-J
Barncord C F 2129 N H . .. . ... . .......... . 2329-W
BARNCO RD CY used cars 1846! Mass ...•.. ... . 996
Barnes Floyd E Mrs 1730 Mich . . . • .. .. .. . .. . 2564-R
Barnes Guy l 1531 Ky . . .... . .. . . .... . . . . .. 3025-R
Barnes Jeff RFD 3 . . . . .... ....... .• ... . . 4057-N-2
Barnes lena H Mrs 1512 N H . . . ............. . 2525
Barnes Nellie Eldridge Hotel ..•...•....•..... 2886
Barnes Ronald M 1100 La . .......•........ . 1916-M
Barnes Roy 1221 Pa . . .. .......... . . . .. . .. 1833-J
Barnett Donald H 1132 Pa .•.......• . ....... 3138-J
Barnett E l 839 Tenn . . ........... .. • . . . . . . 1611
Barnett Rosa B Mrs 1224 Del. ....••........ 3413-W
Barnhill Ellis 1652 Ill . . . . ........ .. ...... . 2415-J
Barr Harold G Rev 1300 Oread • • • . . . . • . • • . . . . 2795
Barrand R E 1530 Ky . .................... 24n-M
Barrand Warren 0 84b La ... . ............. . 1640-M
Barrett Glen D 1328 Vt . . . . . .. . . . • .. . .. .. . 3748-W
Barrett H W 1510 Meadow Lane .... ... . . .. .. 3505-R
Barrett Jas E 1107 N H .. . .. . .. .. . . .... . .. 2412-M
Barrett Maud 1111 N J .....••..•....•.... . 3149-R
Barrett 0 E 83b N Y . ... . .•.•....•.•..... 2115-W
Barteldes Ben 2135 N H ..................... 3758
Barteldes F T 703 lnd . • •..•...• • •.•.... . .. . . 662
Barteldes Otto A RFD 1 ..... . ... .. . ... . . 4030-K-12
BARTELDE S SEED CO
Warehouse 826 Pa . . . ....... • •...... • .....239
Wholesale 804 Mass . . . . . . . • . • • . . . . . . . . . . . . 92
Bartholomew D H Mrs 941 Mo .....•........ . . 3031
Bartlett Margaret Mrs 1810 La .... . ......... 3228-R
Bartley R H Jr 1810 La ....• . .... . ..... . . . . 3224-J
Bartz Ben 1637 N H .. .•............... .. 3401-W
Bartz Charlton A RFD 1. . . ..... . . .. . . . . . 4056-K-21
Bartz Clarence RFD 1•.. . .. ....... • . . . . .. 4070-N-4
Bartz F R 421 Maine ...•. ...•..••..... . .. . 2203-R
Bartz louis 1831 Ind . .. . ... . .• . • .. . .... . . . 2436-J
Bartz Melford 0 924 Ky .. . .... . ........ . .. 2513-M
Basso louis Rev 1045 Ky .... . . . ........ . .. 2557-M
Bates Paul Sunnyside K U . ..... •• • ... . .. . . . 1059-W
Bateson Cyrena 319 Lincoln . . .. . • . ... ..... . 1nB-R
Bateson Helen 328 Miss .. ...•.. . . . ..• •... ... . 3740
Battenfeld Hall 1425 La ..... . . ....•. •• .... . . 965
Batterson leland Mrs 816 E 11 ....... . ... ... 1910-J
Battese John 111 Pawnee ... . . .. . . . .. . .... . 2353-W
Baty Marcia S RFD 4 . ........•. • ... ... . . 2725-W
Bauersfeld Ruth 606 Ky ... . .. . . . .... . ... .. . 1798-W
Baugher Archie RFD 1 .. . . .. .. . . . ... . . .. 4063-N-13
Baugher Sheldon T RFD 4 .. .. .... . . .. .. . . 4088-N-4
Baumgart Raymond RFD 1 Oskaloosa . .... . . 4051-K-13
Baumgartner W J 1209 Ohio. . . . . • • . • • . . . . . . . 1601
Baur E J 1631 Ala . .. ...•..••.•••..••.... . 2229-J
Baxter Robt W 1905 R I. .................. 2308-M
Bayles C G 1&amp;47 Miss .. . ................. .. . 1530
Bayles E E 1408 Ky . ..•...•..•• . ..••.•. •.. . 787
Bayne Chas K 733 R I . ..••••..•••••..•.... 2753-M
Baysinger R R 1301 Tenn •.•.••.••...••.•.. . . 1145
Beach Edith 92'1 Ala
. ••••.•••• 1827-M
BEACON APPLNCE CO INC 709 Mass . . . . . . . . . . 253
Beahm Richard G 115 S Park ...... . . .. . • . .. . 1786-J
Seal Addie Mrs 832 Miss ................... .. . 293
Seal Geo J 738 Oh•o .. .. .••.••••••••...•. .. 1579
Seal Geo Malcolm 1624 Ind . .......... . ...... . 3064
Seal Ralph Mrs 932 Maine . . ............. . . 2279-R
Seal T Murl 740 Miss ...................... . 240.3

BAN-BER

5

BEAL T MURL ACCOUNTING AND TAX SERV
Lawrence t-4atl Bk Bg 34
Beale Betsy Althea 941 Ind . ... . .......... .. 1351-J
Beaman Oliver B 1121 N J ............. . . . . . 1622-J
Beaman Ruth 1046! R I. ... . . .... .. . . .... 3750-J
BEAMAN 'S RADIO &amp; TELEVISION 1200 N Y . . .. 140
Beamer R H 1000 Mo . . ... . .....•...... . .. .. 1365
Beasley Kenneth Sunnyside K U •• . •..• . .. .... 3112-R
Beattie W E Mrs 620 Mo . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . 340
Beatty Daniel D Sunnyside K U ... . .. .. . . . ... 2922-M
Beaty Harold Mrs 1006 N H ............. ... 3282-R
Beaulieu Wm 721 Miss . .......•••....... .. 3086-W
Bechtel Corp Sunflower . ... . ........... ..... . 3944
Bechtel Corp 9 &amp; Maple .... .•..•••.•....... .. . 898
Bechtold Thos 2012 N H , ••..•..•••..... . . .. 579-R
Beck Estelle S 1646 Ky . ...••••••...•... . .. . 3651
Beck Harold A i041 Conn ................. .. n3-M
Becker Ann Smith 800 Jnd .. .... . . . ..... .. . . 2873-J
Becker M D lt Sunnyside K U .••.••. . ..... . . 618-W
Bee lawrence S 1241 Ohio ...•.... . ........ . 2351-J
Beebe Billy 928~ Vt ... .. . .. ....... . .... . . . 2466-J
Beech Maxine D Mrs 1530 Vt . . . ..... . . .. . . . 3403-W
Beech 0 l 1322 Tenn . ...... . .... . • . • ..... 3897-J
Beech Robtl1530 Vt ... ..• • ••....•..... . . 3403-W
Beene Douglas 1330 W 9 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
680
Beer Orvel Earl 737 Lake . . .. . . .. .. . . .. . ... 2957-W
Beer Robt E Sunnyside K U . ........• • ... .. . 3472-M
Beers D M 245 Ala. . . • . . • . . • • . • . . . . . . . . . . 1743-J
Beers Glenn 547 Maple .. ..... .... .. . . . . ... 2259-M
Beers Walter F 606 Ky . . . ...... .... . . .... .. 1798-R
Beery Byron A bOO Ohio . . . . . . . . • . • . . . . . . . . 2790
Begando Jos S Sunnyside K U . ....••. . .... .. 4202-M
Beguelin Clifford J 1607 Learnard . . . . . . . • . . . . 929-J
Beguelin E C 1405 R I . . . . . . . . • • • . . . . . . . . . 1845-R
Beguelin Harry E 2136 R I. .............. .. . 2553-R
Behnke C R 125 S Park ....••....•... • .. .. 1490-W
Beisel D D 1023 Miss ..................... 2297-R
Beisel Paul B 2119 Ky .........•.•.... . . .. 2902-W
Belcher Lewis b33 N Y . . . .•.....•..•.. ... . . 2511-R
941
Bell Clyde Vernon 844 Tenn • . . • . • . • • • • . . . .
Bell Eleanor 1115 Ind .... .. ............ .. . 2766-W
Bell J R 1329 Del. . . . . . • . . . . . • • • • . . . . . . . . 2495-J
Bell M L 536 Maine . ...•..•.••.•.•.•. . . ... 3160- R
Bell Music Co 925 Mass............. . . ....
375
Bell Pauline 730 N J . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . 1285-W
Bell Queen Mrs 1009 N Y . . . . . . . • . . . .
2298-W
Bell Telephone Co See Southwestern Bell Tel Co
221
Belles Chas L RFD 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4058-K-4
Belles Howard RFD 1 .. . ... ... ..... . .. . 4039-N-22
Bellinger Electric 814 Mass. . . • • • . • . . . . . .
428
Bellinger l T 1019 Ala . . .. . ........ . . . . .. . 2547 -R
Bellinger Mildred Mrs 915 Ala .•.•..•. .. .. ... 1037-J
Belot Monti L Jr phy BOO Mass .•.•. ..... . ... . 1590
Residence 720 Miss . • . . . • . • • . . . . . . . • . . . . . . 803
If no answer call . . . . . • . . . • • . • • . . . . . . . . . . . 870
Belshe Jas 1400 N J . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1241-R
Belt C T 828 R I . .. . .. ...••........ •• . .. 1741-J
Belt Thos A E 1&amp;46 Mass . . . . . . . • • . . . . . . . .
843
Belt Wm T 1201 Oread . .. .. • •..•... .. . .... 1454-J
Benander Winifred 738 Ark . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . 2522-J
Bench Bobbie 1316 Ky . .. ... . ....... •. .. . 2656-W
Bench Otis 1821 Ind . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . 2269-W
Ben.edict Thelma Mrs 945 Vt . ... . . . • . ..... . 1844-M
Benham Alvin 1319 Elmwood ... .. .... . .• . . . 2284-J
Benham Betty Mrs 1228 La . ..•........ • .. . 3248-R
Benjaminov Benj S 1044 N H ..... . ... . .. .. 1972-J
Bennett Constr Co 2320 La . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4216
Bennett Delmer F 91&amp; R I . . • . . • . . . • . . .
1483
Bennett E S Mrs 309 E 19 . ......... . ,
1605-M
Bennett Zora E Mrs 130.3 Vt . . • • • • . . . .
1128-W
Benschoter M P 1304 Prospect. . . . • • • . . .
1762-M
Benson Donald R Sunnyside K U. . . . • . . . . . . . . 682-J
Benson F 0 2000 Mass . .....••.••..• . . . . .. 1419-M
Benson J A Mrs 1010 Ky. • • • • . . . . . • • .
.
3039
Benson R W 1810 La . . . . • • • • • • • • . . . . . ... 3261-M
Benson Robt 832 Ky . .. . . . . ... .. ... ... . . . . 1686-W
Bentley Annie C Mrs 1221 Summit . • • . . . .. 3298-R
Benz l F 2036 Ohio
. .. .. . .. .. .. ..
3195-W
Beougher W G 1317 Strong. . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3588
Berelter E H 1420 W 4 ...••..•.•.• . •. .. . .. 3194-J
Bereiter F E 316 N 8 ...•...•...•..... .... 3150-J
R•rQ Geo E H~skell Grds .. . •.•...... .. .... .. .. 919
Berger A W 937 R I. ................. .... .. .. 645

�6 BER- BOU

LAWRENCE

Berger Elvis V 1301 Ohio . . ... ........ ... .. 3336-W
Berger Hugh E Sunnyside K U . ............ .. 1903- M
Berger Klaus Sunnysu.le K u. . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . 931-J
Berger Robt A 1644 Barker . .......•....•.. . 2364-J
Berger Stanley Sunnyside K U ............. . . . 1148-J
Berkley Hal 2308 Vt ..................... . 3046-W
Bermudez Felix 810 N J ................ ... 1370-W
Bernett J l 141 Maple .. .................. 2666-W
Bernhard Alice V 1230 Miss . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . 1377
Bernhardt Glen 1243 Del. .........•. . ... ... 3658-W
Bermtz Howard 1222 Almira ............. . .. 2142-M
Berry Delmar W 212.0 Ky
. . .... .• ........ 3102-M
Berry Emma Mary 1838 Tenn ............... . 2686-J
Bertrand Glen 310 E 14 ......... . .... • .... 3652- M
Beta Theta PI 1425 Tenn .•. . .. . •. .... • ... .... 552
Beth Elmer F 1227 Ohio ...... ... .......... 3665-W
Betts Frank 814 E l3 ........•....••.. . . ... 3571-R
Beu John F 933 R I ....... .. •.. .... . ..... . 2315-J
Beurman Henry RFD 1 ........•....... .. . 4056-K-2
Beurman J C RFD 1 ... .. .. ............. 4099-K-12
Beurmann l A RFD 1 .. .... . ...... . .... . 4039-N-11
Beverstock Alice F Mrs CSP 1506 Crescent Rd .... 1583
Beverstock Fred 1506 Crescent Rd ......• . .... . 1583
Blce l E Dr 2117 Barker ..... . . .. .......... .. 1642
Bidwell Blaine 219 lyons ...... . .•........ . 1341-M
Bieber Clara E D RFD l. ...... . . , , .. . ... 4067-N-22
Bieri Ben 525 Tenn . . . .... .. . .... •• ...... . 1558-W
Bierman Carl Haskell Grds .. . ...• . ......... . 1983-R
Biery J J 2108 La ..............•... . ... . 2337 - M
Bigger Mabel W 731 La . . • .. •. . . . .• .. ... . 2929-W
Biggers l E RFD 3 . .................... 4071- N-11
Biggs l C 1324 Tenn .......... . ............ 1126
Biggs l J 1245 La .... ....... • ........... 3828-R
Biggs LeRoy 926 N H .. ..•....••....• .. . . .. 1297-J
Bignall Fred 1117 Conn . ......•...• . • . ...... 1446-W
Bigsby Ambrose RFD 3 .... ......... . .. . 4045-N -11

BIGSBY &amp; BANNING TRACTOR &amp; IMPLMT
CO 620 Mass 83
Bigsby Ernest 2045 Haskell . . . • . . . . . • . . . . . 1133-W
Bigsby Guy RFD 1 .... . . . .. ....... . . . . .. 4088-N-2
Bigsby Lloyd N 603 N 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3870
Bigsby Robt R 1321 R I ........ • .. ...... . .. 2663-J
Bill's Mch Shop 708 Mass ............. ... .... 1930
Bilyeu Wm J Sunnyside K U .. ..... . • ........ 656-M
Bing Ralph 806 Ark ... ......•....• • ....... 799-W
Bingham Joe M 1600 W 4 ...•. . . ............. 1014
Bingham Wi lma 616 w 9 . .......... . .. . ..... 3474
Binns Wm A 917 Tenn . ..••....•.... . . . . . .. 3269- R
Blnyon Kernie 2132 Tenn ......•........... 3659-W
Birch C E 2305 Yt . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . 487
Bird leo 1016 Ohio ........... .. ... . ...... 1946-M
Birdwhist ell R K Sunnyside K U . ............ 1449-M
Bishop B E 930 Ky . ..
1951-M
Bishop Edw K 2209 R 1 ......... .......... 2554 -M
Bismarck Grove Feed Yds Bismarck Grove ........ 1390
Bittenbender C R ch irpdst 729~ Mass .. ........ . 676
Residence 916 Ky ...... . ........... . ... . 2188-R
Bitzer Gi llette Mrs 1201 Oread .............. 2380-M
Bixby Abigail 1115 La .. ..... . .......•.. . . . 746-W
Blaas Karel H 1235 Tenn ...... .. .......... 2675-M
Black Bernice 233 N 4 ............ .. ... . ... 343b-R
Black C B 170'1 La . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2218
Black 0 F 50'1 North St .................... 1992-R
Black Emil Mrs 1104 N Y ........ . ...• . .. . .. . 3287
Black Fred C 1048 Stratford Rd .. ...... .. . . . 3517-R
Black Jas T 400 La ..... . . ......•..•..... . 2546-J
Black 0 T 1537 University Dr .•.......•..... 3522- R
Black W R 617 Maine . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . • . . 2677-R
Blackburn John W RFD 3 . .. ... ..... ..... 4058-K-12
Blackwood J M 1224 Ohio . . ....•. . ....... . . 2734-M
Blair AN 936 Ohio ........ ... ........... 3193-J
Blair Donald E 1b45 Cambridge .. . ..... . ... . 3508-R
Blakely Harry 839 E l3. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3571-W
Blaker R A RFD 5 ...... . .. ..... •• ..... 4028-K-11
Blaker Robt A Jr Mrs 1218 N Y ... • ...... .. 3670-J
Blank Bob 2133 Owens Lane .... . .... • ...... 2194-M
Blank Elaine 743 R 1 ..... .......... • .... . 1441-M
Blanke Bertram 501 Tenn .. ............ • . . .. 2385-R
Blankenbeker R C '117 E 13 ..............•. 3365-R
Bledsoe Roy 732 N 3 . ........... • ......... 3759-W
Blevins Anna 34 7 Elm .. . ...........•....... 2134-J
Blevins Bike Shop 701 Mich........ .. . .. ... ..
73
Blevins Ed 242 Ptrry . .. • . •.. . . .•....•.• . .. 2720-W

:r.. ......... ........

Blevins Lenore 1901 Ky . .. .. ...... .. ...• . . . 2269-R
Bliesner Bros typewriters 735 MAss ••• •• .••.. . .. 54B
Bliesner C A 735! Mass . .... . .. . .. .. . .. .. . ... 1935
Bilesner Fred F 2109 N H . ..•....•. .. . . ..• .. 1954
Bliesner Richard A 1724 lnd . . .. . ...... . .... 3011-R
Bloch Albert 1015 Ala .. .........• . ........ 2328
Blocker John G 742 lnd . . . . ......• .. ..•.•.. 1907
BLOSSOM SHOP T HE 326 W 9 ................ 998
Blough Clara Mrs 1324 N H .............. . . 2663-W
Blue Bucket Shop 828 Vt ... ........... .. ...... 794
Bl~e Mill 1009 Mass ... .... . .. . ..... .. . . .. .. 409
Blume Richard Mrs 1332 La ... .•... .. • ..... 4211- M
Board of Education
Art Director's Ofc 900 Ky .........,. ...... .. 950
Board of Education Ofc High School Bg . . . .. . .. 422
Clerk of Board of Education High School Bg .... 422
Elementary SuperVisor High School Bg . ....... 3400
Health Nurse 900 Ky . ...................... 681
If no answer call
... . ...•.... . ... . .•. . . 422
Speech Clinic 1400 Mass . . ..... . ....... . .... 263
Superintendent of Schools High School Bg ...... 422
Board Ernest RFD 4 .
. .. .. .. . . ...... 4041-K-2
BOARD &amp; MOORE MOTORS 11 W 7 ........ . . .. 161
Boardman Jack 2000 w 21 . .. .... . . .... . ... 2194-J
Boardman W C 803 w 21 .. .......... . ...... . 2981
Bob' s Trailer Ct 1311 W 6 ...... . .......... .. 3326
Bockhorst Dayle Sunnyside K U ........... . . .3112-J
Bodin Bill 1615 S Crescent Rd .•... . ....... . .. 1053

BODIN BILL INC

Sales &amp; Serv 9 &amp; Miss . ... . .. ............... 217
Used Car Lot 645~ R I ................... .. 801
Bodin Ed 1901 Ohio .... .. ... . ........... . 1440-W
Bodin Ed Motors 946 N H ................ . .. . 1083
Bodin W T 2000 Ky . .... . . . .•....••... . ... 2262-J
Boe John R 2022 Ky ..... . ........ •. .... . . . 3259-J
Boehle Edw 2128 Ohio . . .............. 1568- M
Boehle Gerald RFD 3 Baldwin . . . •• ....... 4084-N-12
Boehle Harold 1933 R I .. .. . ............... 3376-R
Boehle Henry 628 Mo ...... ..... ....... . . . 2896-W
Boehle Mary Mrs 1128 Conn . . • • . . . . . . . . . . . 1849-J
Boehle W 0 RFD 2 . .. .. . .. ..... .. . .. . .. 4084-N -4
Boehm Gus Mrs 1041 Tenn . ......... . ...... . 3110-J
Boese A Mrs 929 Miss
.. . .. .... •. ...... 2606-M
Boggs &amp; Albert Millinery 902 Vt ......... .. . . . . . 849
Bogii The 745 Ohio . . . ..................... .. 912
Bogue J A 1'147 Barker .. .......... .... . .. . . 2945-J
Bohlken Raymond RFD 5 . ..... .. ........ 4033- K-13
Bohlman Phil ip G 2039 R I .....• . ....... . .. 2353-J
Boles E E RFD 2 ....... ... • .. ..••. ..... 4084-N-21
Boles J E Mrs 1318 N H .... •.......... .... 2579-M
Boles Milo 917 R 1 ...... ... ... ... • ....... 1859-W
Bolton Grace 773 Walnut ............ ..... . 3189-M
Bolton R l 400 Locust .. .................. 2647-W
Bond Harry 743 E 13 .. .....••.•.•..•..... 1975-R
Bond Jas W 1915 Barker . .... . . ........... 2540-M
Bond Leona Mrs 827 Ky .. .... ..... ........ 3006-R
Bond Willis 715~ Mass .. ..... . ........... . 3888-J
Bone Martha E 746! Conn . ............ . .•. 3785-W
Book Nook 102H Mass
.. . ..... • ....•••..... 666
Bookout Forrest 830 Conn ..... ..• •......• . 1843-M
Bookwalter Lloyd E 72 6~ Mass ........... . .. .. 3878
Boone Daniel C 1045 Tenn .. ....... . . •. .... . 3176-W
Boo rem S 1139 N J ... .................. .. 3125- R
Booth Arden 508 La. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2499
Borer Louis C 515 lnd .
. ....•........ 1344-J
Borer's Cash Grocery 1101 N Y .... • ..... .... .. 1404
Borg Hilda E 905 Mich ... ....... ...•. . . . . . 1775-W
Borgen Roy G 221 w 22 .. .• ...•.•.... ..... . . 1576
Borland Earl 511 Tenn ........... •.. .... . . 4257-M
Borland Fred H 940 Maine ...... ••... ....... 1113-J
Borland W J 1812 Miss ... ... •. ....... .... 3144-W
Borst Bernard V 1015 Ky . ............ • .. . .. 3771-J
Boss E H 1029 Ala . .
. .........•... . ..... . 1258
Boswell Clella Mrs 637 R I. ....... ... ....... 1337-R
.. ............. .. .... 1798-J
Boswell R E 608 Ky
Boswell Wm F 909~ Ill . . .. . .... •• .. . . • ... . . 2371-J
Bosze Wm Mrs 111'1 Pa ... . .•.. . .......... .. 2472
Botts Andy 90'1 E l3 ...... . .. . .. ... . .... . 2823-R
Botts Howerton C 820 Garfield ... •. ........ . 2216-R
Botts Keith 315 Mo .. . .. . . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1840-W
Bourn Ed RFD 2 . ..............• • ...... 4006-K-11
Bouse Dale 428 Ala ... . ....... . .....•. . . .. 3795-W
Bouton Harry RFD 2 . .....•..... • ....... 4055-K-13

�LAWRENCE
Bowdish Frank W 2210 La . .•....•• . .•...... 2B21-R
Bowen Ben H 1810 La . ..•••.•.••....••. . .. 3225-M
Bowen C R 1135 Conn .. .......•........... 1393-W
Bowen Harry E RFD b ... .......... ... ... 4035-K-4
Bowen Jack 445 111 • ••••• ••••••••••• • ••• 2397-W
Bowen 0 E Mrs 730 Ash ...... . • ...... . .... 2179-M
Bower Gordon 1405~ Mass ........•........ . 2B58-R
Bower Jack 2112 Ohio . ....... . .•. ........ 3177-W
Bowers Alan 1701 Ohio . ....... .......... .. 1007-R
Bowers Doris Mrs 1317 N J .... ...•.. ...... 379B-W
Bowers Ella 920 Mi ss .... ......... .. .... .. . 2726-J
Bowers Ivan C 442 Ill ...........•...•.•.... 744-M
Bowers J C 440 Mich . ......... . .. • . ...... . 1539-W
Bowers Roy R 1810 La . .. ............•... 3234-M
Bowersock Mills &amp; Power Co
·
Office 54b Mass
. ... ..........•.... . ... 10B
Power Plant 54b Mass . .... ...•............ . 1B9
Sand Plant Ft of New York St ...•....•...... 376
Bowlin Dal e F 1717 Ill .. ............. ... . . 26BO-W
Bowlin F Parke 912 Ark . . . ....... .• •.... . . 1647-M
Bowling Warren E 308 E 19 ... .•...•.•.... . 2'l77-R
Bowman Bill 1744 Ky ... ... . .............. 1269-M
Bowman C R Sunnyside K U . ... ..•.... • .... . 1059-J
Bowman E M 82&amp; Vt .. . .........•... . ...... 138
Bowman Edw M 140 1! N Y . . . ......••..• •.... 2573
Bowman John RFD 2
... . . .... ... ... .4061-K-11
Bowman Radio &amp; Te lvsn Serv 82b Vt . .... .. .. . ... 13B
Bowser-Lee Mortuary 618 Vt . ............... . . . 160
Boyd Keit h RFD 3 . . . . ... ... .......... .. 4054-K-12
Boyden Mary S phy 4 &amp; Maine .......•........ 3975
Residence 621 Calif . . .... ..... .. • ....... . . 2997
If no answer call . . . ... ....••.•• . ••.•.... 870
Boyles F J Mrs 1540 Mass .... • ........ .... . .. 713
Boyles Lee 1946 Ky . .... . .........•.....•.. 3539
Boyles Robt 1031 Vt ... ...... . ..... • .. ..... .3943
Boynton Arthur J Mrs 1203 Oread .......... . 1454-W
Brackett Schl RFD 1 . . .... ... .. .. ....... 4063-K-21
Braden Arthur 1124 Del ...... ............ . 293B-M
Braden Robt 935 N H .... ............... . 1157-R
Bradley Clarence 1220 Oak Hill .... .. . .. . .. . 3669-J
Bradley Frank D Lawrence Natl Bk Bldg . . . .. ..... 34
Bradley Frank D 2204 Tenn ........ . . ...... .3659-J
Bradley H l 1038 Tenn ..... .... .......... . 3166-M
Bradley Wm C 1705 Ill . . .
. . .... ... .. 1526-W
Bradshaw G W 1641 Miss .
. ............ 1B26-W
Brady Agnes M 1201 Emery Rd . .. .... .... ... 3949-J
Bramble Albert F Rev 152 7 Mass . .. ..... . ...... 87
Brand John W ally Lawrence Nat! Bk Bg .. .... . .. 102
Residence RFD 1
.... ... .... . . . ..... .. 1329-J
Brand Snyder Mrs 1700 Ill ..• .••.••....... . . . 2352
Brand Virginia E RFD 1 . ... ..•. .. ...•..... 1329-W
Brandt Norman Rev 1538 Vt ... ............ .. .. 75B
·Brandview RF D 1 ..
. ....... ...... ... 1329-J
BRASS EDW B electrn 1919 R I ........... ... 3557
Bratton Irving 522 Tenn . .... ...•. . •.••..... 1993-R
Braun Wm J 1100 La . .. .• • ....•••........ 1916-R
Bravo J B Sunnyside K U . .......•.....•.... 3530-M
Bray H C 1925 Vt .......... ............. 3250-W
BRAY WM H optmtrst 919 Mass ....•....•... .. 191
Residence 915 Ohio .. ...... ... .. .... ... . 3246-R
Breazeal Jos D 1827 lnd .... ....... ........ 2436-M
Breese E F RFD 5 . .. .. ... .......... .. .. 4053-K-2
Breese W R RFD 5 ....... ....... . ..... 4053-N-12
Breithaupt Clifford C 1801 Ala ....••...•.. . .34BO- R
Breithaupt Don C RFD 4 .. .... .
. . ... .. 4009-K-12
Bremer Fred A 1417 Ky ... . ... . .... .. ... . . . 1427
BREMER INSURANCE AGENCY 21 W 9 • .... .... . 95
Brent Wm E Jr Sun flower Apts . ......... . . . 2596- M
BrPshears Helen Mrs 809 Garfield . .. ... ..... . 2178-J
Brewer Bill 1900 Ala .... . ... .. . ........ . 34BO-W
Brewer Ollie Mrs 2141 Learnard .. . •• .... . ... 2762-M
Brewster Albert H RFD 4 . ..... . ... . .. .... 4099-N-4
Brewster Arthur 814 Ala ........ .. .... ..... 1830-J
Brewster Ray Q 1720 Miss . . . ... • ....•...... 2631-R
Brickley Anna 1315 Ky . . .... . . • .....•..... 13B7-W
Brickner R l 730 Miss .. ........... . .. .. .3402-M
Bridge Edmund T 946 Ohio ..... . . ... . ... ... 1638-R
BRIDGE STANDARD SERVICE STA 601 Mass . 33BO
Briggs Cherry 1013 De l . .. . ... . ........... 1943-W
~right Harry W Mrs 729 Conn ...... . ........ 1353- R
right Ralph E 717 Mo .. .. . ... .... ..... ... . 2952
~rink Jackson Mrs 1920 R I ................ 2854-M
rink W J RFD 1 ........ . .. .... . •. .... . 4088-K-3

BOW- BRO

7

Brinkman H C 1602 Barker . ....•• . •. . •• . •.. _ .1652
Brizendine Clifton 1936 R I. ........ .. ..... .2721-J
Brizendine Mondell 2105 Ky . . ..... .......... 3109-R
Broat Elmer 2041 Barker . .. .. .. .. • .. .. • . .. . • 3156
Broat Henry E 334 Locust • . •..•• ....•• . .•. . 2255-J
Broat Robt 642 W 23 . .....•.......•..... . 2852-M
Brock Josephine WREN Bg ................. .. 1955
Brock W B 1224 R I .. ....... . .......•.... 3643-R
Brocke lsby Alice Mrs 1108 N J . . ..... ...• . .. 2555-W
BROCKWAY MARIAN chirprtr 10 E 9 ... • .... .. 4224
Resid ence 1423 Ohio .. . . .... . ........... 2396-W
Broekeme ier Dale F 1235 Ohio .... ... ....... 3828- M
Broeker Carl 0 843 N Y . ... ........... .. .. 1310-J
Broeker H B Furnace Shop 10.35 N H .••..• . • . .. 1368
Broeker J F C ~41 lincoln .....•... . . ........ . 1402
Broeker lena Mrs 1039 R I ..••..••.•.••... 3047-W
Broeker W H 835 N Y ............. . ... .. .. 2723-J
Broers Pearl Mrs RFO 2 .. .............. . 4005-K-11
Broers Vernon· RFD b ... ........ • .. .... . 4085- K-11
Brokmann A E 1345 N J .. .. •• .•..•••... ... .3281-W
Brooks Carl 816 Conn . . . .. ... ........ .. ... 2471-M
Brooks F D Mrs 941 Miss ..••.•........... . 247'f-W
Brooks Geo L 912 W 4 . ...... ........ . .... 3917-W
BROOKS J A CO beer 715 N J .•••• . .•.•• . .. . .. 273
Brooks Jess E Mrs 645 Ark . .... ......... .. . 4222-J
Brooks Jimmie 218 Park . ..• . •. . •.....••.... . 3927
Brooks Joe E bll North St . . •• . ••.••..• • ••. 3262-M
Brooks lucille Mrs 701 Ark ... .. • . .• . ••.• •. . 3482-W
Brooks R S 715 Tenn .....•••••••.•...... . .. 25&lt;JO
Brooks R S Mrs 1009 Ky .••.••.•..•• • . ..... 1207-ft
Broom C H 2007 Barker . .... • ......... . ... . 3497-J
Brotherson R J RFD 3 . .. ............. . .. 4045-N-2
Brouhard Edna 401 Perry . . ..... . .. • .... . . . 1591-R
Brouhard Kenneth 811 Elm ....... • ......... 1848-M
Brown Alberta 122i N J ................ . . .. 3853
Brown Burton 1131 Tenn . . •••.• .. • .. . . . • •. .2882-J
Brown Carl M 302 Maine ... . . ....... ... .. . 2867-W
Brown Chas E Mrs 2107 Ohio .... ... . . • ...... 2337-J
Brown Chester W 211&amp; Ky . •••••..• • •...••.. 134,....
Brown Dorance 1717 Ohio .. ... ...... .•.. .... 3694-J
Brown Edna Mrs 1225 Oread .. .... ... • ...... 3823-W
Brown F l 1301 N H .. . •..•.. . . ... . ... .... . . 362&amp;
Brown F 0 632 Ky .... ......•...••. •.. ... . 1347-J
Brown Fay IH 1019~ Mass .• ...•. . .......• . . 2326-W
BROWN FORREST 0 dntst 800 Mass .... .. ... ... 374
Re sidence 1502 Meadow lane ........ • ... . . 3505-J
Brown Foy E 1713 Moss . .... . .••...••. • •.. . 2697-J
Brown Frank A 517 w 14 ....... ......... .. 1296-R
Brown Frank L Prof 1515 Stratford Rd ...•..... . 1635
Brown Fred J 1232 Ohio ....•..••••..••.. .. . . 1273
Brown Geo E RFD 4 . .... . .... ... ..... ... 4014-K-4
Brown Glenn F Haskell Grds ..... . .. . ...•.... 1152-J
BROWN HANK 2019 Ohio . . ................ . . 4237
Brown Hank Custom Photographer 2019 Ohio . ... . 4237
Brown Harry A 937 Pa ..•.•..•.. . ...•• . ... .. 1462
Brown Harry B 1733 Vt .....•...•. • •....•• 2782-W
Brown Harry Jr 1328 Conn . . .... .... ..... . . 3!:154-M
Brown Henry M 2019 Ohio ............. . ...... 4237
Brown Howard H 1726 Ky . ............... .. 1248-J
Brown J Howard 1208 W 10 . ..... ...... ... .. 3537-J
Brown John H SOb Ill ........ ...... ........ 3290-J
Brown John H 812 La . .. ..... .. .. .... . . . ... 4252-R
Brown Josephine 512 W 9 ... .. •• •••••.•.. .... 1602
Brown Lenna W Mrs 710 Maine ..•... • . .• •• . 2671-M
Brown Leone Mrs 1713 Miss .•... •. . . ... . .. . 2697-J
Brown Lillie E Mrs 1308 Vt .••..•... ... .. . . 1514-W
Brown Marie 834 Ky . .•. • •••.••••.• •• •..•. . . 3304
Brown N N 1539 Mass ... . ....... • . . ...... 3723-W
Brown Nell M Mrs RFD 5 . . . . . . . • . . . . • . . . 107b-R
Brown Raymond RFD b . . ...... • . ...... . . 4034-K-13
Brown Shirley 1005 Del . . .....•.. •... ...... 2750-M
Brown Virgil T 1116 N H ...... ........ .. ... 2539-J
Brown W A 1343 Tenn ............ .. .. . . . . . 9'JO
Brown W M RFD 5 . .. . ... ...... . . . ..... 4033-N-21
Brown W W Mrs 1127 Ohio .....•........ .. 3554-J
Brown Willard 845 Ill .....• . •. . .....•.•... 2296-M
Browne Francis 1612 N H . .....•.. _ •• . •.... .3~2-W
Browne R Edwin Sunnyside K U .... . •• . ... .. 2922-W
Browning Arthur D 1405 N Y . ........... .. . 3286-R
Browning W B 1526 Ky .......... ..•. .... . 24 77-R
Brownlee Mary J RFD 2 .. . ...... .. . . .. .... 4069- 1&lt;-3
Brownlee W 0 1109 Ohio .. ...... ............. 1164

�a

BRO- CAR

L AWRENCE

BROWN 'S TOGGERY 830 Mass . . . . ....•..•... 389
Brubaker C £ 833 E 11 .••. . •.•. ....•.. . .. . 2473-J
Brubaker H C Mrs 93b Ky .............. . ... 1951-W
Brubaker 0 0 905 E 13 .. ........• .. ...•. 2Bn-M
Brubaker Raymond RFD 3 . .. . .... . .. • . .... . 1101-W
Brubaker Rosa Mrs 845 N Y ...••. . ...••.•.. 2474-M
Brubaker Vera Mrs 1937 Learnard ......... . . 2.362- M
Bruce R T 227 N 4 . . . . ..• . . . . . . . ... .. . ... ~992
Bruchmiller 0 M 1145 Ind . ..•.•.•.•••••..... . 1002
Brummett Melvin G 1102 W b . . .. •...... . . . . 1840-R
Brun Warren W 134H Mass .. .. .. •. .. .... .. 3417-R
Brune Albert RFD 1. . ............. . .... .4056-N-2
Brune Eugene 73b La ... .... . ...•........ ... . 1%9
Brune Frank RFD 5 ........ . . . ... .. .. ... 4033-K-11
Bru ne Gus 746 Locust .....••............. . 2934-R
Brune Harold RFD 3 ..................... 4046-N-4
Brune Paul RFD 3 . . .. .. . ...... . . . . ...... 4043-N-2
BRUNE PLBG HTG &amp; ELEC CO 545 Ind .•.... .. . 308
Bruner Cora Mae 621 Mame . ...•.. .. .• . ..... 723-M
Bruner Henry 501 Ohio .. ....••............ . 1187-J
Bruner V K Mrs 183b N H ................. . 1828
Brunk Betty 901 Ohio ..................... . 3693-R
Brunk D W RFD 2 . ..... . ............... 4075-N-12
Bruns R E 1b38 Barker .... . . .. . .. . .••. •..• .. 3531
Brunswick Billiard Parlor 714 Mass . . .•••• ..•. . 2048
Bryan Arthur 437 Ill .... ..... ....... . . ... .. 1744- R
Bryan C V RFD 6 . ...... .. ... . ..... ... . 4085-N-12
Bryan Richard 1300 Del ..... . ............. . 1975-J
Bryan Wm F 214 N b ... .. .... .. . .... . . . .. 3132-M
Bryant C C Mrs 1042 N Y . •••...•...• .• •.. . 2212-M
Bryant Fannie Mrs 1915 Ky . ... . .. ... ..•... 1034-M
Bryant H V Lt Comdr 1007 Ala ............. .3597-M
Bryant Jas 714 Ala ........... .. • ......... 3648-W
Bucheim Carl C 927 R I ... . .•..••.. . •• .. •. 1169-M
Bucheim R A 1201 Conn . .....•....•.••..•.. 1767-J
Bucheim Serv Sta 1901 Mass .. .. •. . ..•• .. .... .3063
Buchholtz Fredrck C 2109 Ohio .. . • ..... • . ... 2943-M
Buck Orner 1206 Almira . ...... .. ........... 2142-R
Buckminster Addie 544 N 3 .....•....••... . 2720-M
Budd Forrest 237 Perry .................... 2763-R
Budke Harry 1023 Vt .. .....••. ... •. ... .... 2236-J
Buehler E C 1105 W Hills Pkwy ............. . . . 1138
Buerman Ed 441 Elm .. ...........•.••.... 2912-M
Bullinger Chester E 1831 Ala ... ........ •.•.. 3014-J
Bullock E A 526 Tenn ..... ...•.......••.... . 2946
BULLOCK'S printers 2 E 7 . . ........•••••.... . 379
Bumgardner Edw Dr 1122 Ohio ........••.... 2002-M
Bunce R J RFD 3 ........ .. ............ 4058-N-3
Bundy Ira 1333 Ohio ... ........•....•...•. 1110-W
Bungalo Market 1900 Barker .... . . ............ .. 14
Bunton Kathryn J RN 2),)5 Ky ..... .•. .. ... .. . 3558
Burch G F 905 N Y . .. ... .................1533-M
Burcham Riley 2028 Mass ...... ... .. . ....... 1874
Burchett Edw 1128 Pa ..•• . •. .•.•...• . •... . 2241-J
Burchett 'Pau l 1204 Conn ..••.............. 2407 -W
Burchett Ralph E 1019 Pa ....•.......•. ... 3138-M
Burckhalter J H Sunnyside K U ... . ......... . 1957-J
Burdorff Arthur RFD 1. . . ............ .. . 4067-N-12
Bures Geo J 803~ Mass .. . ...... • ... ... .. . . 3706-R
Burge Boise 847! Mass .. .... . .. . .. • .. . .... 3345-M
Burge Frank R Sunnyside K U ..........•.. . . 3530-W
Burge Wm E 1030 Ala .... .........•...... 1830-W
Burger John M Sunnyside K U ......... • ..... 3963-R
Burgert Earlin R 1804 La ..... . .. . ......... 1202-R
Burgert Lloyd L 1505 Vt . .................. 1473-R
Burgert R 0 1321 N H ..... .•.. ••... .•.... 3444-W
Burgert Shoe Shop 1113 Mass . . . . . • . . . . . . • . . . . 141
Burgess Arden D 739 Ohio .................. 2349-M
Burgess Bill 1826 Mich ..........• . •• . ••. .. 3U36-R
Burgess Edwm T 2115 Leamard ..... ..•..... 2762-R
Burgess Ervin 1315 Haskell . . . . . . . . . . .... . 3755-J
BURGNER - BOWMAN-MATTHEWS LUMBER CO
308 w 6.81
BURK AWNING &amp; CANVAS GOODS MFG CO
7061 Mass. 1173
Burk Kenneth 608 La . .•.....•.... •..... .. 1%0-M
Burke Richard 919 lnd . . ........... .. ...... 1818-J
Burke Thos C Capt Sunnyside K U .•. .,........ .. .. 656-R
Burnam Bert I Jr W 21 . . ••....•....•.. . .. . 2368-W
Burnett Frank 534 La .. •.•.•..••••••••... . 2370-R
Burnett G R 1001 R I . . . . ........... . ..... . . 1303
Bu rnett Gene l200 Barker ..•• .••.••••..... 3204-W
Burnett Mabel Mrs 1320 Conn ..• •.•••.•.•• .4214-M

Burnham A D 933 Ohio ......•............. 2521-R
Burnham Josephine 1b52 Miss .... . .... • .... ... 1761
Burns 0 M 812 l nd ........••..••......... 1571-M
Burns T L 321 Lyons . .•.••.•..... • • ... ... 3415-M
Burns Tom RFD 2 .......... . ..... . . ~ · ... 4055-K-4
Burr J A 1345 Vt . . .. ............ •. .... .. 2461-W
Burris Bess1e P Mrs 1101 Mass ••.. .. .... . .... 3742
Burris N J Sunnyside K U. ................. . . 618-J
Burroughs Add Mch Co 102b Mass .... ...... . .. 1511
Burrus 0 E 832! Mass . ..............• .. .. . 1270-R
Burton J C Mrs 1240 N J ........ .. . .. ... . .. .. 752
Burton M C Mrs 1740 Ky ........ . . . ...• ..... 2208
Burzle J A 1224 La . . .................... . . . 1594
8usn Oessa Jane 74&amp; Miss •......•.. . . . ... . 3402-W
Bushey Roy E 410 Elm ... ..• ..... . .. . .... . 1319-M
Bushong 1 C 1321 Strong. ........ .... .. .. .. 3300
Busino Alice Mrs 842 lnd ...... . • ..... .. .... 2995-R
Buskirk Richard H 1b21 Oxford Rd . ....... . .. . 3820
Busse Edith Mrs 1220 Tenn ................ 3037-W
Busse Jas 1325 Pra1rie . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . 3528-W
Bussing E C RFD 3 . .............. . . ..... 4091-K-2
Busy Bee Groc 528 N 7 . ................•... . 2090
Butcher F 5 Mrs 824 Miss ..•• .•• . ... •. ..•... .. 892
Butler K E RFO 3 ............... • ... .. . ... . . 619
Butler Wm R Mrs 1200 Tenn . . . • .....•.. . ... 812-W
Button Olin Mrs 626 Ala . ..•...••...•. • . .. . 1929-R
Bysom Clyde L 2101 Ky .................. . 229.3-W

c
Cabe J C Sunnyside K U ............... • ..•. 1148-R
Cadle Jas H RFD 1 . ... . . ... ....••. ... • . .. . 3611-J
Cadle Jos Mark 2146 R I. .................... 4102
Cadwell G E 1712 Learnard ............. . , .... 3090
CADWELL HAT CHERY 1712 Learnard ..... • .... 3096
Cady H P 1534 Ky .. ... . . ....•....•....•.... 1600
Cain Billy 411 Elm ... . . ..... •....... . . . •... . 3164
Cain Dean 865 Oak ...........•••....••... 1428-W
Cain L L 405 Elm .... ....•••....•• : ..••... 1549-R
Cain Ralph R 546 La . .... ........ •• ....... .. 3549
Cain Wm E 646 Mo . .. ... . .. . . •• .......... 1989-W
Calderwood Robt 800 Ill ........... . ••.•.. ... 3115
Caldwell Kate 826 Ky .. .. ..•.•.•.•. .. .•.. ... 1523
('~II The 1422 Crescent . ........ . ..... ..... .. 2063
Callabresi Wm J RFD 6 .... . ............ 4014-K-11
Callicott Kenneth P 417 Maine .. . .... . . .. ... 2203-W
Calvert J W 627 Ill . .. .. ....... ... ... . ... . 2529-W
Calvert Jas W Jr 1229 Pa ..•..•..• •...•.. . 2161-R
Calvert Richard 1231 La ..... ......•...... . 2911-W
Calvin Clifton C rl est 1026 Mass .............. . 305
Residence 1504 Crescent Rd. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1420
Cameron Bruce 1640 Ill. .... .. ..... ....• . .. 1B26-M
Cameron E M loans 1021! Mass . • • • . . . • • . • . . . . 126
Residence 1501 Meadow Lane ...... .. ....... 2408
Camp Fred D 1142 lnd ....• • . .. ..... . . .•.... 3524
Campbell Earl A 11 w 9 .... . .... •. .. . ..... ... 830
Campbell Harry 317 Elm ... .........•...... 3414-R
Campbell Harry L used cars 304 W 6 .•.... ...... 923
Campbell Jas W phy 4 &amp; Maine ...... ...... . . .. 3975
Residence 1637 Ill ...... .... .... ... • . . . . .. 3423
Campbell Ralph 2235 E Drive . • . . . . . . • • • . . . 2154-R
Campbell Walter B 311 Miss .... ... ...... . .. 2388-M
Campbell's Refrigeration Serv 11 W 9 . . . . . • . . . . 830
Campos Decio Sunflower Apts ...••... . •• . .. . 3836-R
Campus West 1420 Crescent Rd ...• ..• .. ...... . 939
Canaday Granville 1316 Ky .. . . ... .. .. • . . .... 2656-J
Canady Ethel L Mrs 528 Elm...•....... .. •.. 3307-R
Canary John 1716 Miss .. ................ .. . 1292-J
Canavan John W 215 W 23 . .. . ••.... ..... .. 2687-W
Canfield Joe 748 Locust .... .. ..... • ...... . 2779-W
Cannon M C 1900 N H ....•.............. . 2559-W
Canuteson R I phy K U ............... . ..... .. 890
Residence 1638 Miss .... . .... ••.. .. •• .... . 1710
Capes Gordon M 604 Ky . . ................... . . 907
Capital Finance Co 935 Mass .....••......... .. . 313
Carey Bert 1744 Ark ....... ........ ... .. . . 2888-J
Carey Carl 1300 Oak Hi II . .. ............•.. 3528-M
Carey Orville H 1902 R I .. ...... ..... . .... . 2540-R
Carey Sheldon 2122 Owens Lane ..... •. ... ... 4226-W
Carl Owen 1503 Stratford Rd • ....•.. .. . . . .. . ... 94
Carlberg Oscar 940 R I. ................... 2346-W
Carleton E V 909 Ill . . . .. . . . ............ .. 2371-M
Carlos Don F 2025 N H ............... . ... . 1554-M

�LAWRENCE
CARL'S CLOTHIERS 905 Mass .• : •• . •..•.•... . 905
Carlson G A 2101 N H .. . .......... • ....... 2150-M
Carlson M R ins 845~ Mass .... .. . . •. . .. .... ... 170
Residence RFD 1 . . ..... .. . . . . . .. . . " ..... 828-J
Carman Ben 1125 W Campus Rd ...•.•... .•.. .. . 625
Carman J Neale 1020 Maine .. ..•••.• . •..... 3033-W
Carmichael Ogle Mrs 421 Forest ..•. .•.• • .•.. 2364-=R
Carmon Raymond R Sunnyside K U .•.••.•••.. 1449-J
Carney Gerald M 1621 R I. : ................ . . 1040
Carney Jesse Mrs 1101 Pa ..••.•..•....•.... 2555-R
Carney Mary L 1309 Ky . ...•.....• ..•.• . .. . 3466-J
Carney Minnie Mrs 1043 Del .•..•....••.•... 2451-M
Carney N M 2014 Ky . . .... •.••.•••••••.••... 1633
Carpenter Miller J 2136 Vt ...•.....••.•.... 2595-J
Carpenter 0 M 808 Mo .. ....... : • ....••• .. 3084-R
Carpenter Pearl 1321 N H ............ .•..•. 3444- M
Carpenter R L 1300 Tenn ..... ...... . ..•... . 2183-J
Carpenter Walter C 2233 Vt ........••.•.... 2862-W
Carpenters' Union No 2.279 719~ Mass .....•... . . 877
Carr Andoe 1900 Vt. ... . ..... . ..... . .. .... 2925-M
Carr Harry Jr 1810 La . .• .•....••..•.•.... 3230-R
Carr Louisa 8 712 Locust ......•....••..... 1585-M
Carr T DeWitt 1247 Tenn ... ...... •• .. • .•.. . . 3514
Carroll Earle C Mrs 838 Ark ........ . ..•.... 2535-R
Carrow Jack 932 Vt . ...........•.•.. . ... . . 2466-R
Carruth Hall 1345 La . ....... .•.......•.. .... . 164
Carson Jesse R RFD 2 .. . ..... . . . . . ..... . 4084-N-11
Carter A B 1724 Mass . ...................... . 874
Carter Betty Mrs 1333 R I. ...... ........ .. 1374-M
Carter E Russell 2309 Vt .......... .. ......... 1467
Carter Frances 722 Ky .....••...• ..... •.... 2583-J
Carter G W Mrs 547 Fla . . ... .. ........... ... 2768
Carter Jonathan B Mrs 17 W 14 ............ . 2743-M
Carter L G 1&amp;41 W 9 .....•••••••••••...... 1775-J
Garter M S 2116 Tenn . ....•.•• .••. •. . .... . 3109-J
Carter Richard 1245 N Y .... ..•.......... . 2733-W
Carter Statnry Store 1025 Mass .... . .......... 1051
Carter W Taylor 1526 Vt . ........... . ..•.... . B53
Carttar Donald M Sunnyside K U ...•......... 931-W
Caruthers R I RFD 4 . ..... . . ... .... . .. . .4088-N-11
Casady Dorothy Mrs 516 La ........ • .... . . . . 1187-R
Case Frank 2100 Tenn ..................... 2902-R
t.:asebier C C 922 Conn . ...... . • . . .... . .... 1934-M
Casebier S E 3.31 E 19 ......... .. .. . ...... 1605-W
Casey John 1921 N H . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 2639-W
Casey W M 808 lnd ...............•••..... 1771-J
Casey's Chip Co 418 Forest ..........•........ . 448
CASH STATNRY CO 9 E s .................... 967
Cashatt Donald 2221 R I . . ..... . ... • . ...... 2410-R
Cass Wm A Jr Sunnyside K U ...... • ........ 2900-W
Cassel Chas E 1825 N H . . . ... . ..... . ...... 1693-W
Casteel Ralph 912 W s ........ • ............. 3773
Castle Dale 20.3 W 22, . .. .• . . . . . • ..... • ... ... 3656
Castle Lloyd H 329 Elm .................. . . 2804-W
Castle Otis 2245 Mass . . .... .... .. ... . ....... 1268
CASTLE TEA ROOM THE 1307 Mass . . ...... . .. 149
Caswell A B 1201 Ky . . .. .................. . 812-M
Cathcart M B Mrs 2043 N H ... . ....... . .. .... 3663
Cathen Ada Mrs 112 Mo ........ . ..... . . .. . 1219-R
Catholic Church 1229 Vt ......... . ....... . .. .. 338
Catterson Donald Sunflower Apts .... .•• ..... 3830-W
Cattlett Geo W 1927 Learnard .... .......... 2362-R
Cattlett Wayne S 1927 Learnard ..... . .... .. . 2362-R
Cawley Tom Jr RFD 5 .......•.. .. .. .... . 4028-K-12
Cease Geo Mrs 924 N H ....... ....... ...... 1297-R
Centenary Methodist Parsonage 243 N 4 ........ 3421
Central Hotel 846! Mass .... . . ..•.•.....•.... 3318
CENTRAL LP-GAS SERV RFD 6 .... . ....... ... 686
If no answer call . . . . . .... ... .. .. . •. .. . . 784-N-3
Cent ron Corporation Inc 1107 Mass ...•....•...... 50
Century Real Est Co RFD 1 ......... . . ... ...... 3838
Cerf Raymond 1656 Jnd . .. . . : .. .... ......... 4196
Cerophyl Laboratories Inc RFD 3 ......•......... 350
Cerophyl Laboratories Inc RFD 1 ........ . . 4056-N-11
Cessna Denn is A Sunnyside K U ..... . ...... .. 1431-W
Chads Beric C 22.39~ W Drive .. .. ......•.... 2154-J
Chaffin H L 1657 lnd . ..... . .....••.••..... 778-M
Chamber of Commerce WREN Bg • •..••••.... • .. . 485
Chambers Dwight 1341 Mass .............. . .. 698-M
Chambers H L Dr 1415 Mass ................. . . 215
CHAMNEY DAIRY RFD 4 .. ... .... . .. . . .. . 4029-K-2
Chamney Edw H RFD 4.
. . . •. ........ . 4029-K-3
Chamney Harold RFD 4 ...... .. • ... . .• .... 4029-K-2

CAR--tLA

9

Chandler Elva 1401 N J .................... 838-W
Chandler H E 1320 Haskell .•.•..... • ...... . 2140-J
Chandler T H Mrs 2301 Ohio •.• ..•.. . . ..... 2687-M
Chaney Ernie J 817 Ind ... . ........ • ...... . 2274-W
Chaney John R ins SOb Mass. . . . . • • . . . . . . . . . .
. 44
Chaney John R 2222 La . ..•...•.••.•....... 3069-J
Channel Ross Mrs 2128 N H ............ .... 1902-W
Chapman Martin F 1344 Mass ... . •.....•.... 3223-J
Chappell E N b4b Calif ..••..•..•........ .... 1121
Chappell J W 639 Mich . ...........••...... 3459-M
CHAPPELL'S AUTO TRIM 646 Calif ......... . 1121
Charles F R 333 Johnson .. .......... . ...... 2618-W
Charlton Bob 82&amp; Mo . .. . .. .
.. .... ... 3636
Charlton Glenn E Mrs Country Club Terr .•....... 1527
CHARLTON INS AGENCY Insurance Bg . . . . . . . . . 689
Charlton Nannie B Mrs 54&amp; Tenn .... . , .. . .. . 1677-W
CH ARME BEAUTY SALON 935! Mass ... . ....
533
Chase V C 1312 Conn ... .. .. .............. 1932-W
CHATEAU DRIVE-IN 1802 Mass .•••.....•.. . 3387
Chavez Francisco 805 Pa .. .............. ... 3078-M
Cheek Jack 1119 N J .........•.•...•...... 2412-J
Chestnut Bill Sunnyside K U ...... .. . .. ..... 1823-J
Cheulakes Jim 1327 Haskell ...... ..•. ...•.. 2994-W
Chewning Bert 1510 Stratford Rd . . . . . • ...... 134&amp;
CHI OMEGA HOUSE 1345 w Campus Rd .. . . ..... 731
Chicago R I &amp; P Ry Ticket Office N 2 &amp; Maple ... . 282
Chief Lunch 2246 Barker . . . • • . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . 2059
Chieks Lawrence 537 Wis .•.. . ..•.•....... . 2510-W
Childers Clara 117 E 11 ................... 3047-M
Childers Harry M 1320 Maple Lane .. . .• .. . . . . 2814-W
Childs Jim 705 Ark . ... . .. .... •• .... ....... 2174-J
Chiles Ray W 310 W 14 ........•.......... . 1521-J
Chilson W H 245 Maine .................... 2665-R
Chinn Harry L 1500 w 4 ..••.••..•.•....•.. 3194-W
Christenson Co 400 E 23 . ..................... 710
Christenson Everett 400 E 23 .
. . . . . . . . . . . 710
Christian Church First Study 1000 Ky ... .. • ... .. . 790
Christian Harry 633 Ill ........ ......• ...... 1299-R
Christie Ray 905 Conn . ..•.......... •.•. ... 2758-W
Christine's Beauty Shop 941 R I . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . 657
Christy Jas A RFD 4 . . .. ........... . . ... ,4009-K-3
Chubb H B 2040 Vt . ... ... . • ....• •• ..... ..... 738
CHUCK WAGON THE RFD 6 .. . ... . •...... 4085-N-2
Chuck's Beer Place 716 Mass . ..... •....... . .. 3330
Church of Christ 1501 N H . ...... .. ........ ... 853
Church of Christ parsonage 1526 Vt .•• .... . .. . . . 853
Church of God Parsonage 1941 Barker ........ 2945-W
Church of the Nazarene Parsonage 1842 Vt . . . . . 124.3
Churchi ll R W 1313 Prospect ................ 1762-J
Ciochon Ralph 140 Pawnee ..... ... ..... .... . 2969-J
Cities Service Gas Co pipeline 1501 W 23 . . . . . . . 317
If no answer call .. : .................... 2n3-W
City Offices
Building Inspector Watkins Bk Bg ..•••...••... 460
City Clerk Watkins 8k Bg ...• .....•.......... 460
City Engineer Watkins Bk Bg .•.....•......... 460
City Garage 445 Miss . ... .. ........•.. . ..•. . 463
City Water Dept Watkins Bk Bg ... .. ......... 461
Fire Dept No 1 745 Vt. .................. .. . 4%
Fire Dept No 2 1839 Mass ...••....••....... 187
Health Dept Watkins Bk Bg ..•.. . ........ . .. 462
Health Director Watkins Bk Bg ................ 90
Lawrence Recreation Commission 115 W 11 .... 1814
Mayor Watkins Bk Bg . ..•..•.......... .. .. . 460
Meter Shop N End of lnd ...........•....... 897
Milk &amp; Food Sanitation Watkins Bk Bg ....... .. 462
Police Dept 745 Vt ....• .••.. ...... .. ...... 15.3
Pumping Sta N End lnd .•.. . .. • ....••.. . . ... 968
Clark Arley H 1941 Ky ..................... 1034-J
Clark C M Mrs 1640 N H . .. .•............. 1050-M
Clark Carolyn Mrs 1215~ N J ....... •. .... .. 3670-W
Clark Carroll D Prof 643 Ind .. .. .. ... . ...... . . 2615
Clark Chapin 907 Ark ... .. ... ... ... . . • .... . 3482-J
Clark Eugene T 444 Locust ................. 2314-W
Clark John Conrad 433 Lincoln ........•..... 1166-R
Clark John W Mrs 1325 Pa ..••..•..•....•.. .. 1015
Clark Johnnie W 1106 Vt .. ............ . . .. 1153-M
Clark Letha 1339 Pa . . ...................... 1495
Clark Margaret G phy 939~ Mass .••.•..... ..... 584
Residence 1125 Sunset Dr ..........•..... .. 3215
Clark Paul F 1021 R I .. : ..... . ....... .. . .. 1033-W
CLARK RAY A phy 939~ Mass .... .. . • ......... 584
Residence 1125 Sunset Dr . ....••.....•..... 3215

�lO

CLA-COR

LAWRENCE

Clark Thos 1925 Mass . .... . ... . .. . ... . . . , . . 1980
Clark Thos A Mrs 1145 La .......•..•••..... . 1027
Clarke Edith M 621 La .. ••.•..••.••••. • .. . 2873--M
Clarke Frank E 509 Tenn.. • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1507
Clarke Helen M 510 Ohio .... . . •... • . ..... . .4257-J
Clarke Mary P 510 Ohio ... .... ..... • . . . . .. . 4257-J
Clarke Saml G Mrs 1908 N H .... . .. ...... . . 2774-W
Clarkson Maunce W 93t&gt; Ky. . . . . • • . . . . • . . . . . 3351
Claude Marvin L 1041 Ky .... ... ... • ... ... . 3556-W
Claunch Geo Community Bldg ... ... ... ... ... 1668-W
Clawson L R 502 Walnut ... • •..•.•.....•.. . 2314-M
Clawson Paul RFD 2 . ... . ............... . 4064-K-2
Clem G M 1621 Vt ... .. . ... . .....•...... . 1477-W
Clemmons Roy K Sunnysi de K U . . .... • ...... . 3155-J
Clepper Bruce 1300~ N Y ................. . 1898-R
Cleveland E R 327 E 19 . . . . .... • ....•...... 1605-R
Cleveland Morris E 1701 lnd ...••........... 2470-J
Clevenger J M 612 W 17 .. .•............... . 2746
Clevenger John P 1631 Mass ... . .. . . ... ..... 1411-W
Clifford John W 811 E 12 .. . . . ..... , .. . .. .. 2626-W
Clifton Bessie 0 123 6 Laura ........• ..... .. 2180-W
Clifton Ernest K 1335 Laura ....... . •...•.. . 1272-M
Clifton J Carl RFD 6 .. . • .....•...•.•... . . . 3143-M
Cline Albert H 1035 Pa . ..•....• • .•.•..... . 1655-J
Clingenpeel Madelyn 800 La .....••..••..... 2270-W
Cli nton Dale 2028 R I ..... . .. . .• ... •.. ... .. 1999-J
Clodfelter Scott R 945 Ill . ... . ..... .. . . .... 1887-R
Clodfelters Appointment Barber Shop 729~ Mass . .. 926
Cloepfil Kieth S 11 &amp; Mo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 908
Cloud Victoria M Mrs 807 Maine ........•... 1636-M
Clubb M D 624 Ky ........................ 2187-J
Clymer J C 538 Mich . .. . . .. ....•.••.....•. 1134-R
Coate Arthur D Sunflower Apts . ... .... ... . .. . 3836-J
Cobb B G RFD 4 .. ........ .. .. ... .•.. ... .. 2104-J
Cobb C C 1346 Vt .... . • ....•.....•....... 1361-R
Cobb Eugene H 1805 Ky ... . ... ... •. .... • . . 2685-W
Cobb's Serv Sta 644 Ark . . ............••..... 2038
C.O.CA COLA BOTTLG CO 646 Conn . . ...... .. . . 3529
If no answer call . .... ........... . .... . .. . 3140
Cochran Beatrice 821 E 13 .....•.. . ....... . 2216-J
Cochrun Christine M 814 Ala • . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2164-W
Coe C G 2301 Mass . . . .................... 2224-W
Coe J H Mrs 127 E 17 .•••••.•••• , •••••••. 2364-W
Cofer Harry 1338 Ohio ......•..•.••..•..•. .2955-R
Coffin Warner A Haskell Grds .•..•...•••••. . 2520-M
Coffman Alfred RFD 3 . .. . .. . .. • ••..•••... . 3219-M
Coffman Charley L 115 E 19 ............. • . . 3235-R
{off man Earl 745 Conn . . ... .... .. ..... . .. . .4234-J
Coff man Fred 534 North St . ... . .. ... .. ..... 3262-J
Coffman Fred D 838 La . . . . .
. .. , ... . . . . . 2915-J
Coffman Gene Mrs RFD 3 .......... , • .. . .. . 3219-R
Coffman Geo RFD 1 .... ., ...... .. ...... .4097-K-2
Coffman John 746 Elm ... .. .. . . ........... 1592-W
Coffman Lee 813 Garfield . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 854-J
Coffman Lloyd W RFD 1. ...... .. ..... . ... 4097-K-4
Cogan Paul 942 N H . . .................•. .. 1169-J
Coglizer Bill 646 La ..... . ...... . . .. ... .. . . 3722-W
Cohen Herman 2228 Given Ct •. . •.•.••...•.. . . 2338
Cohen J W 1417 R I. .. ....................1845-J
Cohen M 1636 Learnard ... . . ...••.•... • . . ... 2616
Cohoon Chester H 1846 Ohio . ••. .• • • • .•.. • .... 4089
Coil John B 1229 R I ..... . .... . . ... . .. . . ... 3851
Coker A B 1530 N H . .. . . ... ..... . ........ 1146-M
COKER A B &amp; SON candy wholesale 1337 Mass ... 558
Coker C B 618 R I ......................... . 3185
Coker Paul A 21 37 Tenn . ........ .. . . • .... . 2320-R
Colbert Anna 438 Locust . . ............ . ... 2613-R
COLBURN ARTHUR R chiropractor 1024 Vt . .... . 115
Residence 1024 Vt. . . . .... .. . . ....... . ... . 3593
Colburn Glenn T 2028 Ky .. . ..... .. . . . ... .. . 3245-R
Colburn H L 2136 Ky . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . .3102-J
Colburn Lyle 716 Elm • . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . 2587
Cole J R 721 N 3 . .. . . .. • . .... • •....• . .. .. . 1991
Cole 0 L 1240 R I .. . ...... ..... .. .. . . .. .. 3945-R
Cole Ross W 2201 Tenn ....... •• ....• • . • .. . 1604-J
Coleman Abigail 1808 Tenn . ........•....... 1721-W
Coleman Chas 7)0 Elm . . . . . .........•...... 1592-R
Coleman Grace F 739 Conn .. . .. .... . ....... 1857-R
Collard John E Capt 612 Miss ........••..... 3277-R
College Inn 1344 Tenn . ..... . . .....••.•••... . 2005
College Life Ins Co of America 604 Ky . . . ... ..... 907
Collins Beverly 118 E N Park .. ... .. . . ...... 2850-M
Collins C C 910 E 13 . . ..... .. .. ....•.. . ... 1457-R

Collins Gailya 935 N H .. . .. . . ....... .. .... 1157-M
Collins Henry 501 Calif .. .. . .. . ..... .. . ~ · ... 1581-J
Collins Henry V Rev 1941 Barker .. . ..•.. . ... 2945-W
Collins J R 1039 N Y . .
. ••••••••.•.•• 2336-J
Collins Pearl M Mrs 906 Maine ... .. . . ... .. .. .. 3266
Collins Ralph K Mrs 1604 University Dr . .. .. . . 4253-M
Collister E Gordon 1647 lnd . . . .. . .. ... ..... . 2470-R
Colman Asa R RFO 4 ... . ............ ... .4009-N-2
Colman Merle L RF D 1. ... . .. .. .. .. . .. . . 4068-K-11
Colman Ralph L RFD 4 ..... • ..... • .... .. .4009-N-3
Colman Willis R RFD 1 .. . .. . . . ......... .. 4088-N-3
Colonial Hotel 744 N H . . .. .. .... • .... . . ... .. 2055
Colson Glenn L lOll Tenn . . . . .
.1386-W
Colton J 2316 Vt . . .. .. . .. ... .. ........... 3523-J
Columbia Ins Co of N Y Insurance Bg .•..•• • .. .... 40
Colyer John B 1126 Tenn . ..... . ....••..... 3028-W
Combest Riley 927 E 11 . . . ........•..•..... . 1542
Combs Wm Vaughn 408 w 13
..
. . .•... 2984-M
Combustion Engrng-Superheater Inc RFD 1 .. .... . 3821
Comfort H D 741 N Y ... ... ......... . .. . .. . 3785-J
Commons A B 1706 Learnard .. ...•.. • .•. .. . 1865-W
COMMONS BAKERY 816 Mass . ......... . .... .. 291
Commons Phillip baker 81b Mass ...•.•.•....... 291
Residence 1702 Learnard .. .. .. ... .. . . . . . 2302-J
Commonwealth Lawrence Theatre Corp ofc 1020 Mass . 946
Compton R F 1601 W 9 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 3391
CONBOY &amp; CONBOY REAL TORS 1012 N H . . .... 942
Conboy Grace E 1110 Vt . ................. 1668-M
Conboy Ida M Mrs 1110 Vt .••...•••.••.•.. 1668-M
Conboy R P 1301 Ky . ........••..•.••..... 1387-J
Conger Allie Merle 1300 La ............ , . ... .. 1309
Congregational Church
Study 925 Vt. ......................... : •. 475
Kitchen 925 Vt . . .......•....•.......... .. . 193
Conkey H B 818 Ky ...... .... •....... • . .. . 3104-R
Conklin Ted N Ha.skell Grds ......•....•..... 1854-R
Conley Fannie Mrs 2117 Vt .. . . ......... . .. ... 1653
Connelly Raymond 718 Ky ..•••..•.••..•.... 3216-M
Conner Addison 747 Elm .•.......•..•...... 1246-R
Conner H B 2133 Vt .................. . ... 1965-M
Connett C A 100U N J .•••..• . •• . •..•..... 1364-J
Connor V E 1823 Ill . ...•.....•....••..... 2424-W
Conrad Mason R 644 Ky ..•.•....••.•........ 3092
Constant C H 1847 Bar&lt;er . . .. .....•.••........ 564
CONST ANT CONST R CO 201 Perry .......•.... .. 89
Constant J L 1001 Moch .... ....•• • ....•..... 1499
Constant Tommy 1001 Mlch . . .. . .. ........ . • . 1499
Continental Oil Co Bulk Agent 9 &amp; Del ... ...... .. 573
Continental Trailways Bus Depot t&gt;38 Mass ....... . 707
Cook A R 1706 Barker ..................... 2830-J
Cook Donald A 644 Mo .... .. . . . ... ....... . . 3402-R
Cook Ethel Mrs 1137 Ky . ........••.... • .... . 3285
Cook FA Mrs 1304 Ohio ..... ...•••••..••... . 1817
Cook Paint &amp; Varnish Co 919 Mass . .... .. .. . . ... 846
Cook Vernie 1103 R I. . . . . . .. . ........ . .. .. 1924-J
Cooke Byron F 1508 Vt . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2155-W
COOKE'S HELP YOURSELF GROC 844 Mass ..... 609
Cooley Jos C RFD 1 . ...... . . ..... . . .. . .. 4067-K-4
Coombs Madison 1512 Ky . ............ .. ... 1473- W
Cooper Carl 1920 Mass ... ....•. .... • .. . .. . 3674-W
Cooper Dale 912 Maine . .... , ...... . ....... 2759 -M
Cooper Elmer R 1238 R I . . .. . . ...... ...... . 1350-J
Cooper Jas W 2013 R I .... .. . .... ... ...... .. 579-J
Cooper Lurue Mrs 1314 N J . .. . . .... .. .. ... 3016-W
Cooper Orrin H 1317 Mass .. . ....... . ... . .. .. 1614
Cooper Ray 0 Rev 1417 Elmwood . . .. . •. .. . .. 2140-M
Cooper Vernon 1511 Vt. ... .. . .... .. . . . . . . . 1473-M
Cope Victor C Jr 800~ Mo ..... .. .... .. .. ... 1665-J
Copeland Mary Lee 640 ~ Ohio . ....•........... 3873
Copenhaver Ellen Mrs 1025 R I ... ......... . 1033-M
Copp Wm W 1211 R I. . .. . .. . .. . .. .. . ... . . 2149-W
Corbin Hall 420 W 11 .. . ..... ... ... . .. ... . . . . 860
Corbin J F Mr-s 81 0 E 14 .......... .. , • ..... 2114-R
Corbin Lawrence W 912 LaSalle ............. 3418-R
Corbin Pearl Mrs 800 Garfield ..... •... . . ... 2180-M
Corcoran Edna Mrs 1537 N H ....... . . . ..... 1619-J
Corcoran Geo W 638 Ala . .. . . . ... . ... . . ... . 2529-R
Corcoran Kathryn Mayme 1045 Ky ...•• • •... . 2557-W
Cordell F A 2151 Mass . • • • ...••• . •.••..... 1667-J
Cordley Schl 1837 Vt ... . ....•...•...•...... . . 373
Corel Betty Lou 1313 Haskell •••• •. .•••. . .•. 1026-R
Corel Chas Jr 1604 Mich .... ..... . . .. . ..... 2888-R

�LAWRENCE
Corel Eugene RFD 2 ...... . . ..... . ..... . .4024-N-4
Corel J H RFD 2 .... .. . .... .• .. ... • .. .. 4024-N-3
Corey Erna R Mrs 833 Ark .......... ....... 2874-M
Corl C E 1000 Ata .. . ... ... . .. . ........ . 2809-W
Corn Geo D 727 Ala ... .. . .. ...•....... .. . 2306-M
CORNER GROC RFD 2 Baldwin . . .. . ..... .4037-K-21
Cornie L J 615 lnd .
. .. . .... . .. . ... 3684-W
CORN'S STUDIO OF BEAUTY 23 W 9 . .. ........ 709
Cornwell Albert 1336 1 enn ........•...... . . . 3407
Corp Clyde Mrs 917 NY . .. . .•.•...••..... .. . 1976
Correa 0 H RFD 3 . ... .. . ......... .. ... 4091-K-13
Corwin E F 1701 La .. .... .. .. .... .. . ..... 2680-R
Corwin Robt A 1340 Vt . ............••..... . 698-J
Cote L H 40 Winona
. . . .. . ............. . 747
Cottle Charline Mrs 115 E 17 Terr ...•....... 3653-J
Cottle Wm C 73 6 Mtss
....... .... •. ... 2650-J
Cottom Clyde W 1308 Conn ............... .. 3855
Cotton Corlett J ins Lawrence Natl Bk Bg . ..... . . 133
Residence 645 Miss .... ... .. ........... . . 2910
Coul son Marion Mrs 1531 Ky .. .............. 1602-J
Council R R 2013 Tenn
. . ....... . ... ... 3255-J
Country Club 1 ml Won highway 40 . . • .......... 404
County Offices
Attorney Court House ..... .•.. . ....... .. ... 559
Budget &amp; Accoun ting Division 1100 Mass ....... 478
Clerk Cou rt House
.
. . ... . .••.......... 359
Clerk of Di strict Court Court House .•. . .. . ..... 543
Commissioners Court House .. ... . •..•........ 359
Conva lescent Hospital 1004 W 4 .............. 988
Cou nty Judge Cou rt House ........•.•... . .... 961
Dist Judge Court House .. ....... . • .. .. • .. . .. 889
Engineer Court House .... .•.•..••. . .. . .... . 371
Farm Bureau P 0 Bg ..... ...•.•.......... 2502
Health Dept Watkins Bank Bg ........••...... 462
Probate Judge Court House ........•........ 393
Production &amp; Marketing Administration 641 Mass. 652
Regi ste r of Deeds Court House .....•......... 671
Sheriff County Jail .. . .. . .......••... . . ..... . 38
Shop Yard E 23 . ..... .................. .. 971
Superinte ndent of Schools Court House ... .• .... 329
Treasurer Court House
. . ......•......... .466
Welfare Director Court House • . .. .... . .. ... .. 975
Couper Maxwell Haskell Grds . . • • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 743
Couple' s Co-op 940 l nd . . . ........... .... .. 2464
Court House Tavern 1105 Mass ... . .. ... .. • . .. . 2034
Courter P E Upholstering Co 8.37 Vt .•......... . . 143
Courtney F L 2103 Barker . .... .... ........... 1336
Courtney Harry 634 R I . . .....•.•.. • .. .. . 2753-W
Courtney W T Mrs 17 W 14 ...••••........ . 2743-M
Cowan Cora 1810 La . .... . ... . . • ... ..... . . 3230-W
Cowden B L 1237 Vt ... ................. 1171-M
Cowles Ethel RFD .3 Baldwin . . ...... ... . . 4061-N-12
Cowles F S 44 7 "Pl easant . ..•. ..•.... . ..... 1193-W
Cox Byron T 1640 Ky ... ......•........ •. . .. 1852
Cox Chas R RFD 2 . ..... ... .... . . • .. ... 4075-K-11
Cox Clifford A RFD 2 . . ...... . ..... • . ... 4076-N-11
Cox Eldon W 1817 La .. ................... 2685-M
Cox Elizabeth 711 lnd ... . .......... . . .... . 3578-W
Cox Ellen 711 lnd . ... . .. .•... . • • ........ . 3578-W
Cox Elmer E RFD 6 ..... . ............... 4048-N-3
Cox F H 1244 Ky .. . ...... ....• . •...•... 1786-W
COX F V vacuum cleaners 1904 Barker •. . ... . .. . 454
Cox John H 210 1 R I . .... •.. • .••.. . . .. .. 2554-W
Cox John R 21.35 Mass ........... ... . . . ... 1961-M
Cox Lee 2100 Ky .. ....................... 1343-M
Cox Ted J RFD 6 .... .....• . .•.•. .. ..•... 3143-J
Cox W A 1209 Conn ... ....•.. • . . .... • ... . 22'75-W
Coy E J 1421 Ky .. . .. ....... .... . .. . ..... . 1345
Coyne Donald 1040 Ky . . . ....... .... ..... . . 1550-J
Crabtree Jim 1032 Ky .. ............ . . ..... 2236-M
Craddock Wm E 1001 Miss ...•.••.•........ 2210- R
Crady Harold 2320 Vt .. .....••........... . 3523-R
Crafton Allen 2202 N H ................... 2266-M
Craig A A 1026 N J . ......••...• ••...... . 1942-M
Craig Arnold 1212 N Y .. .. ...... . . .. . .... 2878-W
CRAIG &amp; COLBURN CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC
1024 Vt 115
Craig D H 1601 E 23. . . . . . . . . . .... . .. 4080-K-12
Craig E E 1716 La ...... . . ..•.••.••.. ..•. 2199-R
CRAIG H W ctliropractor 1024 Vt .•.. . .. ••.•... 115
Residence RFD 5 .... ......... ..... . . ..... 4264
Craig Harry T 2234 N H ..•. ....•....... ... 1739-J
Craig L E RFD 2 ... .... . .. ••. .. . . .. .. .. 4084-K-11

COR- DAL

Craig Pearl I 1137 Del .. ................ .. 2241-W
Craig Willard 1110 N H . ............. . ... .. 2638-l't
Crall A Terry 908 Maine .. ..... ............. 2759-J
Cramer Elmer 731 Lake . . . .. .. . . .. . . ..... . 2347-W
Crane &amp; Co Inc stationers 64.3 Ma$$ .• .•• ...... .. 501
Crane Geraldine Mrs 927 Del . .. . ..... . .... .. 1370-J
Crane J Don 1145 W Hills Pkwy . .. . .. . .. . ... . 1452
Crane Wm F 1005 R 1 ......•........... .. 3282-W
Crary Chas 1004 N J ............... . . ..... 2609-M
Crawford C C 1538 Ky ..... ..........•. ..... 1926
Crawford Hugh W 1745 University Dr • ... •... 1175-W
Crawford l rvtn 0 415 ~orest . . ..••...••..... 1821-J
Crawford J E 1025 N J . . .............•... . 2884-W
Crawford Jack 1830 Ark . . .. . ... .... .. .... . 1719-M
Crawford John 1743 University Dr . . . . . • . ... . 2643-W
Crawford Samuel T 421 Ohio ..... .... .... . . . 1388-J
Creamer J W 808 Miss . ..... ......... . ..... . 3067
Credit Bureau of Lawrence 719~ Mass . ....... . . . 467
Crews Raymond E Jr 645 N 3 ............... 3159-J
Cripe Ira D 718 N 3 . .. . ................. 2.3 45-R
CRIPE'S GROCERY 442 Locust . ••.•..••.•.... 3094
Crisp A Mrs 802 Lincoln .. . ......•....•... . 2195-M
Crisp H R 726 Locust . . ... .. . . ... . . ...... . 3953-W
Criss Geo RFD 2 . .. . ....... .. .•..... . ... 4080-K-4
Cri ss W M 835 E 13 . . . ........... ... .... .. 2448-J
Criss Wilbur M 1625 Mich . ....•...• ... • . . . 2888-M
Crissman Ethel Mrs 1132 R l ...... . •. .. . .. . 2117-R
Crockett Harry J 846 E 1.3 ................ . 3365-W
Cropp Clarence 1719 1 enn .. . •.. .•.•... • . .. . .. 1608
Crosier Clayton M 508 lnd .. .•...•.••...... 1537-R
Cross Anna Ranktn Mrs 921 Ill . •.••• • ....... 1887-W
Crossley D A Jr 625 W 16 . . .............. . 3646-W
Crosswhite R H Mrs 1501 R I. .... .. ........ . 858-W
Crouch Ralph 704 Ash . . . .
. . .. .. .. 2757 -W
Crouch Roy E 809 W 6 . . .... . . .. . .. . .. ... . 1970-R
Crown Drug Co No 23 747 Mass ................ 166
Crown J P 1239 Ohio . . ... . . . . . ... 1 ••• • • •• • •• 3709
Crum John P 735 Lake .. . . ........ .. .. .... . 2347-R
Crumet D E 773 Hickory ..... . . . ... . ...... . 3082-W
Crumet Earl R 1316 Tenn . .•... . ...•. . ..... 1436-R
Crumet Edw 1446 Elmwood . ..•..• .. •...... . 2994-J
Crumet LeRoy 1202 Laura . ............. . ... 3119-R
Crumpley Lorena Mrs 707 W 12 .••.•..••... .. . 964
Crumrin e Lillie B Mrs 920 Mo .. •... . ... . . . . 1322-M
Crystal Cafe 609 Vt ... . ................... 3350
Crystal Motors Trading Post used cars .304 W 6 .. . 923
CU LLIGAN SOFT WATER SERV 1.330 W 9 ... . .. 680
Culp Russell L 1709 Lear nard ... . . .. .. ...... 1865-M
Cummings H E 1901 R I ... ............... 3235-M
Cummings Myra Belle 125 E 19 ..... • ....... 2170-W
Cummings W J 2225 Barker . ....• . .•..•.. .. . 1455
Cummins Thos 325 Lincoln . . . ........•...... 1166-J
Cunningham W A 775' Walnut .. . ......... . . . 3189-W
Cu rby Emma Mrs 700 Ill .. . .......... • ...... . 2876
Curd John C 1507 N H ..... . ... ... ..• .... . . 1888-J
Curl Earl C RFD 3 .. .. . . .. ......... .... . 4054-K-4
Currier Helener Kane 1201 Oread .......• . .. . 2380-J
Curry Don A 1620 Mass . . ... ..... . . .... . .. . 1286-W
Curry J ustine 1401 Mass . ........ . .. ... ... . 2789-M
Curtice Chester 1946 R 1... ... ........... .... 986
Curtis Pau l I 232 N 6 ................. .. .2920-M
Curt is Roy RFD 6 .. . ........ .. .... .... 4034-K-11
Curt is W J Mrs RFD 6 .. .. .. • ..... • . ..... 4034-N-2
Curtiss F J 1145 Del . .. .................. . 2609-J
Curtiss Marvin R 744 R I ................ . . 2983-W
Custer Oca Mrs 1247 Ky ...•. .• • . •• ..•.. ... 2341-J
Cutler House The 1215 Dread ..... .. ...... . .... 3952
Cut-Rate Groc &amp; Mkt 734 Mass .••••....••. .. .. 987
Cutter Fred Mrs 1604 Tenn ...••.•.• . .••.•.... 1161

D
Dabbagh You nis 1134 Ohio . . .. .. .... •• ... . . 2299-M
Daeschner Geo G Sunnyside K U.... • ...... ... 1431-J
Dahlene Danl E 94H 111 •• •••••• . •••• •••••• 2371-W
Dai gh Richard A 193 1 R 1.. .... ......... ... 3376-M
Dailey Calvin Haskell Grds. . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . 864-J
Daily Belle Mrs 1137 Conn ...... ....... .... 2117-W
Dairy Qu een l&gt;rive-ln 1835 Mass . . .. . . • ... .. .. . . 539
Dairyland 2245 Ohio .. . ..... .. . .... .•.. .. .. .. 3362
Dalsing John 624 N 5 .... . ... .. . . ..... ... . 1193-M
Dalton-Brown Studio 1403 W 7 . . . ... .. ... ...• . . 701
Dalton Curtis .315 Miss .•....• • .... . ....•... . 3731

�12

DAL- DIE

LAWRENCE

Dalton Jack 441 Ohio ...... . . . ..... •. . . ... 3744-M
D'Ambra Duke 1700 Ala .....................1443
D' Am bra Photo Service 644 Mass .......•.•.... . 934
Damm Wm J 1345 Maple lane ........•. .... 3669-W
Dando Edw C 937 Ala . . ..... .. . . .. • . . . . . . 3962-M
Daniel T M 716 Miss .. . . ....... . • ......... . . 1150
Daniels A E 1&amp;27 N H......•.•.•...•••.... 2639-M
Daniels Chas E RFD 1. ........... ... .. ... 4067-N-2
Daniels Clarence E 308 Ill . . . ... . ... ......... 2437 -J
Daniels Clinton E 131li N H ..••.•..•...... 1831-M
DAN IELS J S INS AGCY 222 W 9 ..........
.972
Daniels John Mrs RFD 2 .. ......... . . . .. . . 4007-K-3
gan!e:s L ~ Jr RFD 3 . . ....... ....•. .... 4051-K-3
an1e s Lev1 Sr 1037 N J ....... •• . • ....... .3075-J
Daniels lloyd C 413 Mich .... .. ..... . ...... 2104-M
Daniels Neal 933! Mass . . . ..... •• .... ... .. 2130-J
Daniels Robt RFD 3 . .. ..... .. . . . . . . ... . 4054- N-11
Danilov Victor J Sunnyside K U . .. ... ..... . . 2953-M
Dann Wm 1656 Ind . ............... • . .. .. . .. 4196
Darrow Gail 1724 Vt . .......... . •• . .. .. ... 2802-R
Dauberman Harry 1220 Summit ............. 3426-M
Daugherty F L 841 N H . . .... ....... .. ..... 1735-J
Daugherty H M Mrs 1141 N J . ..••..• . • .•••. 1764-R
Dau m Bessie 1801 Miss . ...•... • .. . ........ 3206-R
Daum C E 941&gt; Miss .... ......... ..... .... 1160-J
Davenport C A 802 Oak .... .••.......•.... . 2360-R
Davenport C W RFD 1 . .......... .. .... . .... . 699
Davenport Cora 1&amp;21 N H ..• ...• •..••.•.. . . 2273-M
Davenport Harley A 835 Lyons .............. 2146-W
Davenport Howard 226 N 6 ...... .....•.... .. 2920-J
Davenport Wayne 744 N 8 .......•.......... 3082-R
Davidson A F 941 Ind . . .. .. . .. . . .. ....... .. 3268-J
Davidson Arthur W 9 Winona .. ........••.•.... 1754
Davidson Florence RN 312 Maine . .. .. . ....... . 2427
Davidson Wren 828 Elm . ....•.•.•.•••....• . 2398-R
Davis Alex 1331 N Y ..• ..•...•........ . ... 3256-J
Davis Alice A 1032 Conn . . . . . . . • . . . • • ...•. 2263-J
Davis C l 742 lyons .......... . . ... .. . .. .. 3242-W
gavis Carrie E 1201 Oread . .. ..... . . . .... ... 2380-R
avis Claude 734 Mo ... ....•... . ........... . 1017
Davis Clifford T 2017 Tenn . . . . .. .. ... . ... .. . 772-W
Davis Donald E 1820 Maine ..••. . ........ . .3014-M
Davis E Minerva RFD 5 . . ........ ... ..... 4078-K-11
Davis Eddie 715 Maine . .. . .. . ...... . .•.•.. 3796-M
gavis ~dmond L Sunnyside K U ............. .. 705-M
avis dw RFD 2 ... . .... . ......... • ... . 4003-N-4
Davis Eldon N 1421 Prospect . .. ........•.... 2311-J
Davis Eva 102H Mass .....•..•• ••••• •.••. 1168-M
Davis F S 1325 Strong ........ .......... ..3493-W
Davis Gary W 1o14 Vt .. ...... •.••••••.. ... 2326-J
Davis Genevieve 1100 Ky .... ... .. . . . .. . .. .. 1756-M
Davis Gerald V 1926 Barker.~ ............... 2308-W
Davis Glen Warren 702 E 19 . . . . . • • . . . . .... 2459-R
Davis Glenn E 1046! Tenn ........•...... . 3556-R
Davis Gordon F 519 La .. ........ ... ....... 1433-W
Davis Harry Jas 1340 Tenn . .... . ........... 1245-M
Davis J R 1401 Prairie .......... • .... ... . . 1829-R
Davis Jess 1810 La ..... ....... . ...• ... . .. . 3273-R
Davis John Harold 1005 Ky . . . . . . . .. . .... 1779-M
Davis Johnny 877 Lyons..... . . . • . . . . .......2146-M
Davis Jos E RFD 5 ........•• . .•...•• . ...•. 2851-J
gavis Kathryn A 200 w 12 . . ....•....... ... 2641-M
avis l C 1009 N J . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1364-M
·Davis Lucius L 916 E 13 ....... • . •• . . •. .. .. 1457-W
Davis Lula I 1643 Ky . . ........ . . . . . . . . .. 2686-W
Davis 0 T 1805 Maine ...... ... ........... .1210-M
DAVIS PAINT ASSOCIATE STORE 931 Mass .. . 1078
Davis R E 1820 Ala ................. . ..... 2458-M
Davis R G 446 Maine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . : 3160-J
Davis Ralph 2125 Lea.rnard . . . ...... ........ 2597-R
Davis Raymond 1425 N J ..•.... .....••..... 1870-R
Davis Raymond 860 Elm . ..•....•...•...... 2175-W
gav!s Robt McNair 2210 N H .....•...... ..... 2151
av1s Sarah 415 Elm .... ........ .. ... .... 2613-W
Davis W W 706 W 12 . .. . ....••• •.•••...... . 1114
Davison E E 312 locust ... . .....•...... . ..• 2134-R
Davison John 1018 Ky .....•.... . . ......... 1447-J
Davison Leslie 740 N 1 . . . . . . ............... 3367
Davison Lorene 700 Ash ... .... . . • .. ..... . .. 3221-M
Davison Vernon 322 Elm .... • .............. 1042-M
11awes Glenn A 1225 R I. .................. . . 2885
.Dawson I l 906 Conn .• ...•.•...... • ...... 1666-R
.Day Bert 716 N 4 ................. ... .... 2578-J

Day E G 946! R I. ....................... 3629-M
Day E P 751 Lake ..... ................... 2347-M
Day Earnest 414 Elm ...................... 1319-J
Day Howard N 933 R I ........••••.... .... 2315-M
Day W J W 21 .. ......... . ............... 4226-R
Deal Jack 1826 Ill ............•..••••.••.. 3272-W
Dean Clifford D ins 1130 Tenn : . ..• • . • . • . .. ... 1812
DeArmond Frances 1423 Ohio ..... ••.•. ..... 2989-W
Deatherage J B 940 Tenn .. .....•. • . ........ 798-J
Deay Margaret Mrs 2116 Ohio .. . .......... . 2497-J
Deay Oliver 1337 Ky ................... .. 2683-M
Deay Roy RFD 2 .... ... ......... .. . .... . 4007-K-2
Deay Walter J 1028 N H ........ .. ......... 1618-J
Decker A I 826 Ala .. ....................... 1790
Decker Chas E 705 Tenn . .. ......... .. . ...... 2825
DECKER- COY REAL EST &amp; INS AGCY 7 E 8 . .... 450
Decker Donald 1601 Tenn .. . . . ..... ...... . . 1398-W
Decker J W Mrs 1208 Haskell .. . ..... . . ... .. 2555-M
Decker W E 1022 Ohio ..• •••• . •••••.•.•.... 973-M
Deckwa Wesley 1121 R 1. .•.............. . . 3455-W
Deeble Chas T 154H Mass ...... .. .. .• ..... . 3723-R
Deem F S 1108 Tenn ... ..................... .455
Deemer Kenneth C Sunnyside K U . ......... .. 3155-M
DeForest L H 2145 Mass . ................. . 2687-R
DeGraw Evelyn 1323 Ohio .....•..•.. . • ....• 1110-R
Deichert B P Mrs 1231 Oread • •.•••• . •...... 3823-R
Deiter John B 1912 R I. ..... ............. . 2540-W
DE LONG H K sanitrm 1515 W 7 ............. . 3126
Delong H K 1515 w 7 • ..... ..•..•........ .. 3126
Delozier Fanny Mrs 1325 Tenn .. ... ... ...... 1547-R
Delphia R E Sunnyside K U ... ... ....... .... 2861-W
DELTA CHI tratern1ty 1245 W Campus Rd ....... B68
DELTA DELTA DELTA 1600 Oxford Rd .... . ..... 537
DELTA GAMMA 1001 w Hills PkwY •..•..•..... 768
ge:ta Tau Delta 1111 w u .................. 1106
eta Upsilon 1025 w Hills ... ................ 2903
DE LUXE CAFE 711 Mass ..... ...... ...... ... 2045
Demeritt Fred 310 E 11 ............. .. .... 2412-W
Demeritt Leslie J RFD 4 ............ Call Clinton 3453
gempewolf lyle 1810 La ... .•.•. .. . ... . . ... 3228-M
Denewi ler Harry 727 N 3 ...•....•... .. .. .. 2345- M
enham D I Mrs 1144 La ...........•...•.. . 1916-J
Denham Jas RFD 2 .. . . ...... .....• . .. . . . 4037-K-4
Denlinger F B 131 E 23 ................... 2113-W
Denny Ed 1137 Vt ..................... . .. 2641-J
Denny Ed Serv Sta 1002 N H . . ........ . .... .. 2092
Denny l M Jr 1134 Ohio .... ....••..... .... 2299-W
Denton Francis 946 Mo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2272-W
Denton linda Mrs 1403 Tenn .... ......... . ." . 1047-J
Denton Norman C RFD 6 . . . . . . ... . ..... . 4048-K-2
Dcplue Adolph 1543 Ky . ...................1599-W
DERBY GRAIN INC 301 Locust ............ .... 370
DeShazo John M 433 Ohio .................. 1694-R
Detlor A W 1244 R I ...... .. •...... ..•. .. 1350-M
DeVinney Robt E 743 R I .... . .. • . •• .. .. .. . 1441-W
DeVore 0 E Mrs 1105 Vt ................ .. . 3127-J
DeWalt Greeta F 833 Ohio ...... ... • .. ..... 2781-W
DeWalt S E 10252 Mass ... ....... . ... • . . .. 1959-R
DeWatteville C L Mrs 920 Ohio .. . .....•. ... . . 2538
DeWeese F W 321 Elm .....•.... .•... ..... 3398-R
DeWeese lester L 1211 Almira .............. 2289-M
DeWitt Aida Mrs Haskell Grds ............. .. 1340-J
DeWolf H F 704 Ohio .. . .......... . ....... 2536-W
Dial Stanley 1700 La ........ . .... ....... .. 3694-R
Dibble R E 1240 Tenn . .. . ................... 1029
Dibble's 1401 Mass ..... .. ....•........ . .. .. . 288
Dicker A J :318 Johnson . .................. . 1616-J
DICKER A J &amp; SONS grocers 646 Locust •.... . . . 142
Dicker Alice 815 Ind .................. . ... 3589-W
Dicker C S 543 Walnut .. ...................1282-J
Dicker Donald 718 locust .. . . .......•..... . 3953-M
Dicker Harry T Mrs &amp;34 Ind ............... . 3585-J
Dicker Josephine 718 Locust . .. ....... .. ... . 3953-J
Dicker Myron 1311 R I . .... .. . . ... ... ..... .3545-J
Dicker Ralph W 815 Ind .. ....... . ... ...... 3589-W
DICKER &amp; SKINNER LIVE STOCK soo Maple .... 145
Dickerman Dan 85&amp; Lyon . ............... .. 1709- M
Dickinson S T 1029 Conn .... ... ....... ...... 773-J
Dicks Edw T Mrs 1528 Tenn ..... . .......... . 1378-J
Dickson 0 A 1016 Ky ....... ..... ...... ... . 1844-J
Diehl P A 301 W 23 ............ . ... .. ... ... 2237
Dieterich Dale N RFD 3 . ........•..... • ... . 2434-J

�LAWRENCE
Dietz Bernard V Sunnyside KU .. . ....•...... 2348-R
Dietz Linas 819 Ark . ... ... .... .. . .. 1 . . . . •. 2186-W
Dillard Mary J 520 La .... ....... .. ....... 2370-W
Dillinger J Paul 1145 lnd ........... . ..... . 2766-R
Dillon Laverne RFD 2 . . .. . ... .. • ..... ... . 4006-K-4
Dimery Lizzie 817 Pa ... . . .... • . .. . ... . ..•. 1370-R
Di mery Stephen A 1309 N J . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . 3931
Dimick E H RFD 3 . . . . .. . . . .... ... ... . . 4058-N-11
Dimond Merill R Mrs 1602 La ... .. .... . .. . . . 2914- R
DINE-A· MITE INN 23 &amp; La . .............. . .. . 845
Dingman John C Mrs 1803 Mass ........ .. .. 1469- M
DINGMAN'S FURNITURE &amp; UPHOLSTERY
1801 Mass 1503
Dinsmore Jas C 717 Ohio . .. .... .... .. .. .... 2797-M
Dinsmoor Paul A Mrs 1324 Strong . ...... . .... . 2290
Dios Zoltan S 1240 Ohio . . ..... . .... .. . .. .. . . 3857
Dirk Henry RFD 6 . . . . . . . .
. .. . . . .. . 4048- N-2
Disciple Student Fellowship 1300 Oread . . . ...... . 2582
Ditmars Geo 917 Ark .. . . .. . .. . .. . . .. . . . . . . 2592-M
DIXIES CARMEL CORN SHOP 842 Mass ........ 1330
Dixon Don 1640 Stratford Rd . . . . ... .. .. .. . .. . . 3968
Dixon Gussie 1234 Miss . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 580
Dixon Jas V 544 Michigan ... . . . .•... . . • . ... 2719-R
Dixon Lloyd J 547 Mich . . . . . ..• • .... • . . . .. . 2719-M
Dixon M H 713 Mo .... .................... . 3171
Dixon Nelle Mrs 4 12 W 6 ................. . 2749-W
Doane Eugene 1945 Tenn .......... . ••..... 2619-W
Doane Gene Agcy 6 E 8 . .. . ............... .. .. 236
Dobbins John W 1206 W 23 ......• • . .•.... . 1154-M
Dobson Earl 1222 Miss . . . . . • • . • . . . . . . . . . . . . 495
Dobyns Frank P Sunnyside KU ....•. . ...... . 2435-W
DOCKERY CLARENCE T liquors 1014 Mass . .. .. . 703
Dockery Clarence T 621 Ill. . . . . . . . . . . ..... 1100-M
Dockery Raymond 1810 La . ........... . .. ... . . 649
Docking Geo 1604 Stratford Rd ..•....... . . ... 1181
Docking Robt B 1701 Ala . ... . . . .. .. .. . . . ... 3489-J
Doctor Ben H 2108 Mass .... . .... . ..•...... 2962-J
Dodderidge Kennet h C 620 Ind ..... . .• . .... . ... 816
Dodds Caryl J 734 lnd ........ • ..... . ....... . . 306
Dodds F B 903 Ala ... . ... .. .... • . .. . . . .... 945-W
Dodson J R Mrs 913 Tenn . .. . •......•.. . ..... 2586
Dodson Orva Mrs 1131 N Y . . .. .•..•........ 2136-W
Doering Kathleen 1319 N Crescent Rd . . . •. . . . 2363-M
Dohner Ast rid Mrs 1014 Miss ....... . ....... 1160-M
Dolan Dallas 836 Ohio ...•.•• . .•.....•. . .. . 1371-W
Dola" Edgar T 809 Vt ... . .......•.•• . .•.. 2566-W
Dolan Thos 825 Ohio . . . .. ..•.....•..•..•.. 2ns-w
Dol bee E M 1301 R I . .................... . . 2625
Dolbier John 1606 Tenn .... .. . . ... . ...... . . 2402-J
Dolifka Walter J 649 N 6 . . .. .. ..•. .. .. ... . 1974-M
Dolman C L 646 Ill .. ..................... 2690-M
Dolyak Fr.cnk 1932 Ohio . . . .. . . . .. • ...... .. 2943-W
Dome AI 1330 Mass ......• ... . . . .......... 3223-R
Don Henry Co-op 1420 Ohio .. . . • .. . ..•. . . .. .. . . B6
Donoho Raymond 500 Locust . . . .. . . . •. . . . . . . 2387 -J
Dooley Dennis J 719 Ala . . .... . .... • . . ..... 2690-W
Doores R W Sunnyside K U .. .. .. . .. • . . ... .. 2834-R
Dorffeld Chas 1941 Mass . ..... . ..•.. . ... ... 2155- M
Dorsey Frank 909 lnd .. .......•.. . . •. . . . .. . 2794-R
Doty F H dentist 927! Mass . . . . •• .. . . .• . .. . ... 795
Residence WREN Bldg . . .. .... . . .. • .. . . . .. 3077-J
Douce W T 1909 Vt . .. . . .. . ... ... . .. . . .. ... 1339
Dougan Arthur W 1215 R I . . . . . . . ..... . .. .. 2149-J
Dougan Elmer L 1536 Barker . . .. . . . .. . . .. . . 2395-R
Dougan John RFD 3 ........ . .. . .. . . . .. . 4051-K-11
Douglas B F Mrs 308 W 12 . .. . .. . .. .. . . .. . . 1043-J
Douglas County of . . . . . . ... . . ... . See County Offices
Douglas County Artificial Breeders Assn
1308 Prospect .238
DOUGLAS COUNTY BLDG &amp; l OAN ASSN 737 Mass . 79
Douglas County Farm Bureau Assn 1008 Mass .... . 344
DOUGLAS COUNTY HAT CHERY 812 Vt . . . . . . .. . 442
DOUGLAS COUNTY IMPLMT CO 560 W 23 . . . ... 4225
Douglas County Medical Serv Court House . .. .. . .. 146
Douglas County Republican 1005 Mass . . . ...... . . 542
DOUGLAS COUNTY STATE BANK 900 Mass .. .. . 3200
Douglas D B Mrs 1300 KY ... . ... . .... . . ... 2518-M
Douglas Lloyd 1944 Barker . . . . .. . . . . . .. . . . . 3792-W
Douglass Clarence RFD 4 . . . ..... . . .. . . . . 4096-K-12
Dove J A 1304 Mass . . .. . .. .• . ... . ....... ... 1945
Dowd Dana 180H Ill .. . .... · ~ .. ...... .. .. . 1645-J
Dowdell Frank 534 Mich . .... •• .... •. . . .. .. 1134-W
Dowers D E 1708 Ill ...... .. ........ .. .... 2330-M

DIE- EAS

13

Dowers John 0 1306 N H .. ... , . .. ..... . .. .. 1697-R
Dowers L M 1900~ La . .. .. ... . .. . .. . .. ... 1.568-W
Downbeat The 1031 Mass . . ..... .. . . . • . .. ... . . 2085
Down Town TV Serv 620 W 9 . . ... . . . . • . . . ... . . 280
Downing Elmer 2247 Mass . .... . .. •. . . .. . . . . 1883-M
Downs Cora M RFD 2 .. . ....... .. .... .... 4005-K-4
Downs Travel Serv 1015! Mass . . ...... . ..... . . 3661
DR PEPPER BOTTLING CO 815 N H ..... .... .. 198
DRAKE BAKERY 907 Mass ................... . 61
Drake Carl 307 W 23 . ........... . ........ .. 1074
Drake Jay 910 Vt. . . . . . . .. ... .. .• . ... . .. 2640-R
Drake Joe C 2234 Tenn ... .. . . . .. . .... . .... . 2404
Drake Wm A 645 Calif ......... . .. . .... . ... 1689-J
Draper Henry F 1827 N H. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1941
Dreher Otto H RFD 2 . . ... .. . . ...... .. . . 4093-N-12
Drennon Ed 831 Ky .... ... . . . . . . . .. .. . ... .. 2191-J
Drennon H C 23 &amp; Haskell . .. . .•.. .. . .... . . . 3679-R
Drennon W M Mrs 944 R I .. . ••........... . 2346-J
Dresden M Sunflower Apts . •.•....... . .•.• . 3831-M
Dresser Jas 0 1220 R I. .................... .3647
Drew L L 1316 Summit • . •• . •... . •. ....... 2284-W
Dreyer C E ofc 8 &amp; Vt ..•. . •• . . . ....... . ..... . 840
Dreyer C E 2016 N H . . . .. . .. . ........... .. . 2504
DRISCOLL BEAUTY SHOP 943 Mass . ... . . .. . . . 603
Driscoll Julius 1014 Vt ......... . .......... 2326-M
Drumright J E 935 Conn . . . .. .... ... ...... . 3629-W
Drury J W 1648 Miss .. . . .......•.. . . ...... 2661-R
DUCK 'S SEA FOOD TAVERN 824 Vt ........ . . 2098
Duffee Lloyd Mrs 927 On1o ..• . .•.•........ 1463-M
Duffy J A 1446 Ky ......................... 3443
Du la Alfred H 1333 Tenn •.••.•.•••..•..•.. .. 3566
Dulaney W P 2245 Tenn .. . . .......... . .. . . 2829-W
Dumas Archie P 1119 Oregon ....... • .... • •. . . 4239
Dumler Marvin J 1723 Tenn . . . . .. . ... • . ... . 2631-M
Dunakin T E 447 Ohio . ...... . . •. .... . ..... 1394-W
Dunaway Agnes 941 lnd .. ... .... ••.. .. .. ... 1788-R
Dunbar Emma 1113 W 10 . . ........... . . . .. 2543-R
Dunbar W A 445 Mo ... . .. . .. .. . . .. . . . .. .... 3463
Du ncan Clark 1135 Ohio ...... . ....... . .. . .. . 1787
Duncan Don 1931 Tenn . . . . . . . .• .. . . . • . . . . . 2603-M
Duncan E H 721 R I . . . . . . .... . . . . .. .• . . .. . . . 318
Duncan Jas R 704 Mo . .. . ... .. . .. . . .. . .. . .. 1810-J
Duncan Lewis E 1827 Barker . . . . . . •.... . . .. . 1628-W
Dunham Joe T 831 Garfield
854-W
Dunigan C E RFD 6 . ......... . .......... 4052-N-2
Dunkerley H L Mrs 1206 Tenn ••••....••.... 1632-M
Dunkley Geo B 628 Maine .. . . .............. 3671-J
Dunkley Mary H SOH Maine .. . .• • •...... . . . 1636-J
DUNLAP R L phy 4 &amp; Maine .... ... ... • ...... . 3975
Residence 1508 N H . . ...........••....•.. 3202
Dunn Ben J 1114 Miss . .. .. .. . .• .. ... ... . . . . . 4112
Dunn Clara 638 Walnut . . ..•..... . ... . .... . 1194-J
Dunn John Mrs RFD 6 ... . ... • ... . . .• . . . . . 4034-K-4
Dunn Paul J 742 N 5 ................ .. .. . 2776-J
Dunn R E 310 Funston .................... 2345-W
Dunn Ralph D 404 E 10 .. .. .. .. ........... 2243-W
Dunn W A 745 Locust .. . .... .. ... . .... . .. . 3885-W
Dunn Willis RFD 6 . . ... . . . .. ..• . . . . . . . . 4035-N-12
Dunne C R 1140 La . .. .. .. • . .... . .. . ... .. . 3685-M
Durr F C 1008 Maine . . . . .. . • . .. . . . •. .. .... 3597 -R
Dusch! Marilyn 615 Ohio .... ..•. . ..... ... ... 3675-J
Duver Chas G 218 Perry . .................. . 3049-J
Duver Tom 109 E 17 Terr ...••••..•..•... . . 3580-W
Duver Walter 2015 Mass .• .••.••.••...•.•. 2358-M
Duver Wilbur 1400 Conn ..• . .•..•• . •• . •.... 2217-M
Duver Wm 1416 Conn ...... •. , ••• • .••..... 2431-R
Dyche L L Mrs 1617 Mass . ... .. ... .. ...... .4227-R
Dyer A H 929 Pa .. ........... • .....•..... . . 3178
Dyer Jas C 1519 Ky . . .. . .... .. .. ..• ...... 2294-W
Dyer l PP A 11 05 Ky ............ .. . .. .... . .. 2359
Dyer Robt 1020 Ill . . . . . . . . ... . . .. . .. .. . . .. .. 2219
Dyer Rowland S H 1324 Oh io . ... . . . .. • . .. ... 2738-J

E
Eacock G C 2112 N H .. . .. . . . ... . ...... .. . . 579-M
Eads C T 2233 E Drive . . . ... . . . . . . . ... . . . . 2154-W
Eads Lucy T Mrs 1705 University Dr ..... . .. .. 2363-J
Eagle Lodge 15 E 9 .. . .•...... . ... . ... . .. .. . . 641
Earlenbaugh F B 922 Ky .•...... . .......... 3916-J
Easley L H 705 Conn . ... . .... . .. . . . . . . . ... 3175-M
Easley Roberta Mrs 200 Mich ....•......•.. . 1563-M
Eastman Glenn R 524 Lake .. . . ... . . . ... .. . . 2783-W

�14

EAS- EVA

LAWRENCE

Eastman Jack 645 Ohio ................... . 3378-R
Easton M E Bill 81 8 Mo . ......... . . •.... . 1567-W
Eastwood Raymond J lb09 La .. . .. . ........ 3453-W
Easum Allan C 1304 Conn
. ....... .. ... .. 13B2-W
Easum Allan C Jr 93b La Sal le ... .... . ..... . 3418-M
Eaves S M Mrs 500 Fla . . ............... . . 3448-M
Eberhard A RFD 3 ... . ... . ... .. .. . • . ... 4057-N-4
Eberhard W 1101 Ky . .... . .. •....... . ..... 3454-R
Eberhart C L 121 E 19 .... ............... . 2170-.J
Eberhart Geo 348 E 12 . .. . .. . . ..... . . .. ... 2796-W
Eberhart Harold 21 41 N H . ............... .. 2329-J
Eberhart I F 945 l enn . .... ......... . .... 2251-W
Eberle Byron T Sunnyside K U ............... 598-W
Eberth Olga Frances 1309 Tenn ......... . . . . 3148-W
Eberwei n Chas 0 RFD 2 ..... ....... . .. .. 4037-K-13
Eby Lisle 1120 lnd .. .... . ....... . ....... . .. 2740
Ecke Geo 830 Ill .
. ........ .. • ... .. . . .. 3580
Eckelberry W L 1042 Ohio ... .. ... ... .. .. .... 2584
Eddy Carl Mrs 84b Al a .. ................... . 301
Edgar Alyce M 220 Lyons .. .. .• . ... • .. . .. .. . 4262
. . . ..... . ..... • .... . 3751-W
Edgar C C 825 R I
Edgar Eliza Mrs b24 Ala . .... .. .......... .. 1929-M
Edgar Owen 220 Lyons . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4262
Edge Norman C 1304 W 19 .. ... . •. .. . . .. ... 2564-J
Edmonds C S 1901 Moen .................. 1772-R
Edmonds Earl J 520 Maine .. .. .. . . .. . ..... 3160-M
Edmonds Freezer Lockers 1903 Mass ....... . ..... 605
EDMONDS GROCERY 1903 Ma~s ............... 605
Edmonds J R 154o R 1 . .... ..........•.... .. 916
Edmonds Jack 93H Mass . . .......... . .... 2466-M
Edmonds Jonn Mrs 1322 Mass ...........•.. 2530-W
Edmonds Kenne th 2012 La .. ............ . . . 3177-M
Edmonds Norman S l ~20 Vt . . ....•....•...... . 735
Edmonds Orville 8 Westwood Rd .. . . .... .. .. .. 3128-J
Edmonds Ray RFD 1 .
. . .. .......... . . .4088- K-4
Edmonds Robt E 1304 Tenn . ......... . ..... . 3466-R
Edmondson Chas D 'IJ9 N Y .• .•.•••••••••• ••• 809
Edmondson Donald K 222 2 Ohio .......... . .. 1604-M
Edmondson H w 93b Pa . . . . ............ . . 1370-M
Edmondson Will RFD 5 . .... ......... . .. 4053- K-12
Ed's Plumb ong Shop b45 Ill ............•...... 1565
Edwards A C RFD 4
. . ...... •. ... . . ... . 4041-K-3
Edwards Arthur 740 Walnut . .... . •......... 1674-M
... ............... 2383-M
Edwards Burk 1705 Vt
Edwards Cl ifford 1239 N J ... . •.... •. ....... 2414-J
Edwards Foster 1911 Ky .................. 1406-J
Edwards Karl D 1o4 5 Barker ........ . .... . . 2830-W
Edwards Lyman F 937 Ill . . ...........•... 2996 -M
Edwards S R Mrs 190b Tenn ....•.•..•..... 2402-M
Eggert Carl D 1004 Conn .. . . ....•........ 2761-W
Eggert Kat he nne Mrs 1004'-tonn ...... .. .... 2761-W
Eggleston A D 620 Ky
.. .......•...... . . :l653-M
Ehrman Richard L 1812 Vt ............... . . 2771-M
. . . . .. . .. • .... 3310-R
Eichhorn Grant 338 Ill
EIGHTH STREET TAVERN 117 E 8 . ......... . 4193
Eisele Delbert A 1246 Ky . . ............... .. 1904-J
Eisele Harold RFD 2 . .. . ............... . 4083-N-13
Eisle W K RFD 2 .. ........ • .... . • ...... 4080-K-2
Elam Ed b33 Conn . ... . . ..... . .............. 1262
Elbel E R 821 Mi ss . . . ... . . . ............•... 2367
Eldridge Barber Shop 701 Mass .....•......... . 2019
Eldridge E Mabel 51 8 Tenn . . . . . . .. . •. .... . 1677-M
Eldridge Gift Shop 707 Mass . . ..•.............. . 88
Eldrid9e Hotel 7th ~ Mass
. . ............. . . 807
ELDRIDGE PHARMACY 701 Mass .••.......... . 999
Eldridge Seba 150 1 Crescent Rd
. . ..... . . ... . 2570
ELECTROLUX VACUUM CLNR AGCY 1904 Barker 454
Eliot Bevah F Mrs 631 Ohio . . . . . . . . .
2209-J
Elkin W F RFD 1 . . .
. .. 4068-K-2
Elks B P 0 E lodge 725 Vt ........... . .... . . .. 595
Eller Leo L 2029 Learnard . ................ . 1639-J
Elliott A E 1208 Pa . . ... .. . • ..... • . .... . 1654-W
Elliott C J 332 Locust. ............... • ...... 1937
Elliott Harold 1131 Ky . . . . . . ... .. . . • .. . . . . 3028-R
Elliott Harry H 1511 Haskell ...•.. ... ...... 2664-W
Elliott M C RFD 1 .. . .. . . .. . . . • . . .. . . .. 4068- K-12
Elliott Sam S 1416 w 7 .................. . . . 2944
Elliott T G 1004 N Y .. . ..................1364-W
Elliott U B 1924 R I . ............ . ....... 2322-R
Elliott Ward M 1132 Tenn .... . .. . ........ . . . 3869
Elliott W C Mrs 755 N 7 . .. . .. • ..... • ... . .. 1423-J
Ellis Chas H 2017 R I. ........... . ........ 3791-W
Ellis Glen 1307 Conn ........ . ......•...... 2288-J

Ellis W C 1516 Mass ... .. .. . . .......•.. . . . . 1516
Ellis Wm G 1b07 Tenn Terrace . ...... • ..... . . 736-R
Ellsworth Fred 1325 w Campus . .... .. ...... , . . 2954
Elm Gladys V Mrs 934 Tenn . ..... . ......... 2413-W
Elms Walter 514 Lincoln . ..... . .. . ........ 1582-W
EL NAVAJO COURT RF O 1 ... .. .. ...... .. .. . 2030
Elphick Neil 2044 Tenn . ......... . ..... .. 2747-M
Elston Bi ll 1143 Pa . .. . ... ..... . ... .. .... .. 3732
Elston Clyde 1306 Laura . . .. . . . . ........... 3137-J
El ston Jeannette Mrs 71 2 Locust ............ 1585-M
Elswick Robt R 1324 Ky . .. . . .. .. .. . ...... . . 3462
EL TAMPICO CLUB Bul Pa . ... . ........... .. 3373
Elvig F H 1511 Stratford Rd .. ......... . ... . .. 2544
.. ... . . .. ...•........ . . 829
Elwell Chas 1111 Vt
Elzea Bill M Haskell Grds ... . . ... .. •. .... .. . 864-R
Emerson Clara Mrs 83.3 Ark . ..... . ..... . ... 2874-M
Emery Agnes 627 La .. ....... . ....... . ... 3585-M
Emery Edit h l30o E 13 ... ... .......... . .. . 3426-J
Emery Jerrie 1017 N Y ............ .. .... . .2298-J
Emick H W 545 La .. .. . ... ... ...•... • •.... . 1215
EMI CK JOHN C abst racter 737 Mass ........ . .. . 396
Residence 1104 W 4 . . .. . .. . ........ . .... . 1084
EMICK JOHN H phonogs 1014~ Mass . .......... . 343
Emock John H 1200 W 6 ... . ............. . .. , 1866
Em mett A G RFD 1 .. . ... ..... . . ....... .4056-N-4
Em mett L H 1832 N H . ...... . ........... . . . 391
Emmons Fred R 728 Maine ..... . . . ........ .3930-M
Employment Security Div 1035 Mass. . . . . . . . . . . . . 67
Endacolt Jas A 9 4b~ Ala . . . . . .. .. . ........ 1730-M
Endacott John 1425 Ky . . .. . ....... . ...... 1580-M
Endacott Norman mnumts 810 E 13 ...... .. ... .. 449
Endacott Norman 845 Tenn . . ................ 3499
Engel E F 1bl 9 S Crescent Rd . . ..... . •.... . 1620-M
Engelberger Geo 527 Lake . . . .............. 2776- M
England Kenneth 1618 Tenn ....... • ....... . . 3271-J
Eng les R J Jr 612 Ill ... . .... . ... . ....... .. . 3843
Episcopal Church 1011 Vt . ........ .. . . .. . ... . 1111
Episcopal Rectory 1o11 Vt .. . .•.... • •..•..... lOll
Epley H P b24 Mich .. . .... . .. .. . . .. . ..... . 2951
Equitable Life Assurance Society of U S 2009 N H .. 57
Erhart Albert J 800 Ohio .. .. .............. 3017-R
Erhart Delbert 213b Tenn . ... .......•... .. . 2369-R
ERH ART FLYING SERV RFD 5 . ............. . . 314
Ericksen E Goroon Sun nyside K U ............. 682-M
Enckson Arvtd E 1532 Mass . .... . . .. . ....... . 2261
Erickson C E 730 Conn
. .. . ............. 2249-R
Erickson C E Jr 1243 Almira ... • .. . ........ 3999-W
Ericson H E RFD 1 .. ... . . .. . .......... . 4049-N-2
Ericsson H C 1635 Mass . . .... . ... .. • ...... 3008-W
Ericsson Theodora 823! Mo ... . • •. .. . •• .. . .. 3490-J
Eriksen C J Mrs 1017 N H .. .. ........... . .. . 2956
Ermenc E D 731 Tenn . . . .. ....• • .. . . • ...... 2251-J
Ernst Ph ilip 913 lnd . ... ............ .. .... 1520-W
Ernst Philip Jr 1ol7 R I ............ • ...... 1690-R
Ernst &amp; Son hardware 82b Mass .. . ..... • ...... .341
.. . .. . . ........... 1693-R
Erwin E C 410 Forrest
Erwin Howard R 1040 Conn . . . . . . . .. .. . • ... .. 1560
Erwin L E 2242 Barker . ... . . .. .... • . . ..... 2654-R
Esch Joy 1213 Ohio .... ......... . .. . ...... . 2917-J
Eson J R Mrs 39 Winona . . . .. .. .. . ........ 2969-W
Essick Wm R 1507 Stratford Rd .•..... • .... .. . 2863
Estelle Howard M 629 N 4 . . . . ..... . ....... 1379-W
Esterly Geo A Or 221b Mass ....• •. . .. .. . .... . 1204
Estes John K 1921 Ky . . . . . ... .. ... . ....... 3433-W
Estes M J 2328 Vt . . . . . . . .... . .. ..• • . .. . .. .3088
ESTES STUDIO 927! Mass . . . . • .............. 151
EtchRite Photo-Engraving 5 W 14 ...... • ..... . .. 114
Etscheid Francis Mrs RFD 2 . ... .. .. . . • ... . 4060-N-3
Eubank Abbie Mrs 1016 Tenn . . ... .. ......... . 2872
Eudaly E L 1331 Vt . .. . ... ... • .. ... • ..... 1129-M
Eudaly Harry 938 Mo .... . .. ..... .. .. . .... 1847-W
Eudaly 0 0 Mrs 818! Mass ........ . ..... . .. 1270-J
Eudaly W A 2015 Learnard . .. . . . .... • ........ 3072
Eudaly Will fred liquors 1906 Mass ... • . . ....... 3518
Residence 191 3 Barker . .. . . . .. . . . . .... • . . . . 3570
Eustace H E osteo phy 1021! Mass . . . . ... . . . .. . .499
Residence 1033 Vt . ... . .. .. .. ... . .. . .. .. . . . 465
Evangelical United Brethren Church The 1501 Mass . 2508
Evangelical United Brethren Church The Parsonage
1009 Conn 1331
Evans Agnes U Mrs 643 Tenn ................ 2793-J
Evans Annagale 604 Ky . .. ........... .. . ... 1557- R
Evans Auto Supply 918 Mass ... . .. .. • .....•.... 200

�LAWRENCE
Evans Clifford L 1323 Oakhill. . . ............ 3755-M
EvaRS D H 1834 Vt ... .. . • •.. ... ..... . .... .. 1728
Evans Dale 900 Ill . ... . . .. • ..... • .....•.... 3479-J
Evans Floyd E 917 Del . . . . . . . • • . . • • . • . • . . . . . 3756
Evans Gene E 9 13 N Y . ....... • .......... .. 1934-J
Evans Jack Jr 800 w 8 ... ...... ... .. .... . . 3218-M
Evans Jennie 765 Locust .............. . .. .. 1936-J
Evans John C 713 w 6 . ... .. . . . .... . .... .... . 3335
Evans John Cl in ton RFD 1. ..... .. .. . ..... 4039-K-22
Evans K C 704 l nd . . . . . . . . • . . . . . • . . . . . • . . 1978
Evans Ken H 1345 Ky ... . . ..... . . • . . ...... 1124-W
Evans M B 1323 Ohio . .... . .. . ...• . • .... ... 4211-J
Evans Maude M Mrs 2202 Mass ..... . . . .. • ... . 2357
Evans Murray 71 3 Locust • . . .. • .. . ..•.... . . 3181-M
Evans Wm Jr 227 N 8 . .•... ... . . . . ....... . 23E&gt;O-M
Everett J P RFD 6 . . . . .. .. . . .. . .. . •.. . .. . 2368-M
EVERLEY ROOF ING CO 617 Vt . ........... .. .. 511
Ewart Flora K 114 w 13 . . . .... . .•......... 1448-J
Ewers Sybil 81 8! Mass .. . ....... . ... . ..... . 1270-J
Ewert Fred Sunnyside K U .. . .• . . ........ .. .4202-J
Ewing A B 703 N 3 ... . .... . .. .. ... . .. . . .... 1589
Ewing Chas W 1411 Haskell . . . .. • . • . . . .. ... 1026-M

F
FACK LAN DUTCH lksmth 32 0 Mi ll..
. . .. 360
Faculty Womens Club 1300 La ... .. . ..•....... 1309
Fairbanks Ike 300 N 8 . ...... . .. . .... .. .. . . 1130-R
Fairhurst Donald P Sunnyside K U . ..... . .•• .. 3249-J
Faith John 712 Ohio ... . . ..... • . • •••.... • .. 1413-R
Faler Geo 640 N 6 ... . . ... . .•... . ...... .. . 1974-J
Falkenstien E L 546 E 19 . ....... . .. .... .... . 2591
Falls Paul A 335 Ark ... ... • ..... • .... • .. . 1254-M
Fambrough Don 2223 Tenn . . . ••. . ..•. .• .. . . 3238-M
Fant E F Rev 818 N Y .. . • .....•....•.•... . . 1897
Faringer N E 1836 Learnard . .•... . ..•• . .. • . 2444-W
Farley E B 1041 NY . .......... . ... ... ... . 1995-R
Farley J T 21 35 Tenn . .. ....... ..... . ..... 1747-M
FARM BUR MU TUAL INS CO 1008 Mass . ... ... . 344
Farmer Everett 1104 Pa .. ......... .. ...... . 2750-J
Farmer Ollie 837 Conn .... .. . . . ...... . .... . 2130-R
Farmer Ralph S 845 Ala .. . . ...... . ... . ... .. . 945-J
FARMER S &amp; BANKERS LI FE I NS CO 806 Mass .. . . 44
FARMERS INS GROUP 21 w 9 . . . . .. . ........... 95
Farnsworth Theron · R 800 Ohio .. .. .. •. ... . . .. 3017 -J
Farr Edgar H upholsterer 646 W 23 .. .. . .. .. .. . 1290
Farrier Fred 1 &amp; Miss .... . .. . ............... 1366
Farrier Fred K 401 Mich .... . .... . . . . . .. ... 3613-M
Farris Earl A RFD 4 ...... ... . .•.... ... . 4041 -N-4
Faulconer Joyce Mrs 820 N H ..... . ... ...... 2833-R
Faulcon er Rubin 820 N H .. ... .. ... .. .... .. . 2833-R
Feari ng Albert H 1622 N H .• ..... ••. .. •.... 1690-J
Fearing Bascom C 2036 La .. ..... ....•... .. . 1568-R
Fearing Florence 8j2 N Y . .... .. ....•.. . ... .. 1142
Fearing Sherman 633 N 3 ..• . .. .• • .. . ..•.. . 3190-M
Feaster Gene R 1343 Tenn . ... ... .... .. .... . 1547-J
Federal Offices . .. See United States Government Offices
Feist John P 2101 Ohio . . . .. . ....... . ..... . 2337- R
Feist Raymond 1810 Ill . ....•..•. • •.• • ••.. . 3048-R
Fellers E E 1734 Maine . . . ..... . ..... ..... 2374-M
Fel lman J H Sunnyside KU .. . .. . . ... . . ...... 2841-J
Felt Wm W 1339 Vt . . ... . . . ..... ..... . . 1793-W
Fenstemaker Stanley T RFD 1 .... • ...... . . 4008-K-3
Fenst emaker T S 1724 Ky . .. . ............. . 2383-W
Fenton Robt M 12 19 Ohio . .. .. • •• . •••.•• .•. 2235-W
Fergus Richard W 1300 N Y . ... . ... .... .... 1898-M
Ferguson Sam W 124 W 13 . ..•..... •.... .. . 1490-R
Ferguson Wm G 721 Ill . .... . ... . .....• .. . . 2108-W
Ferre ll Donald L 1231 Oread .. ...... ..•... .. 2309-R
Fessler Max 2035 Ohio . . ... .. ..• ......... . 2320-J
Fetty Ethel N Mrs 1627 Learnard ............ . 3660
Fetty Hattie E Mrs 1533 R I . .... . . ... •.. ... 2252-R
Fetty Herb 1018 N J .. . . ... .. . . .. . . . .. .. .. 2241-R
Fevurly Jas R Sunnyside K U .. ..... . ... .. ... 3226-M
Field R G 1826 Mass . ........ . .... • . ... . .. 1693-M
Fields J Eldon 2216 N H . . . . .......... . ...... 1079
Field's Serv Sta 1826 Mass .. ... . .•.• .• •• . .... 2091
Fields W L 624 Walnut ..... • ••... • •.. . . •. . 1194-W
FigQ ins Kate 1036 Mi ss ............. . ... .. . 1137-R
Figgins L 0 140 Mich • •...•.••••.. • .• • . . .. 1539-R
Filkln R S 1800 lnd .. .......•• .. ..•.... ... . . 1066
Filkins Fred 8201 Mass ...••.... • . •. ... . . .. 2865-M
Filley Allie 1417 Pa .. .. . . . . .. ... ... • . .... . 3286-J

EVA-FOS

.1!:&gt;

Finch Neal C 641 Tenn . ...... •. ..... . . .. .. 2966-W
Fincher Chas E 428 E.lm .. . ...... . •... . . . .. 1631-W
Fincher J D 545 N 8
. . ...... . ....... ... . 3243-R
Fi ndley Frank F 1720 Vt ... ... .... . ... ..• .. 2802-J
Findley Jas S Sunnyside K U . . ......... .. . . . 3425-J
Findley W R 413 M1 ss . .. ..... ... .... .. ... . 1183-R
Finley R W 1140 N J . . . ................. .. 2473-R
Finley ftobt B 1515 w 9 ...... • .. . ..... • .. . 1894-W
Fire Chief 74 5 Vt. ..... .... . . .... .. .. .. . .. . . 3509
Firn er H W RFD 4 .. . . .. . .. .... . .. .... . .. ... 1232
FIRST NATIONAL BANK 746 Mass . .. . . . . • ... . . . 30
First Presbyteri an Parsonage 843 La . ... .. .. .... . 876
First R M Baptist Ch urch 41 6 Li ncoln . .... ... .. 3536
Fischer Frances Mrs 1831 Barker .. . .. .... . .. 2242-M
Fischer Otto A 743 lnd ..... .. .. . . ... . . .. . . . 2507
Fishback Florence Mrs 1819 Ky . ... ... . .. ... . 1421-J
Fishback Walter 1730 Oh1o .. .. .... .... ... . . 1679-W
Fishel V C 1656 Ill . .. . .. . . . ... .... •.. .. . ... 3343
Fisher Allan C 1309 W 4 . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . 220
Fisher D L 1220 E 15 ................ . .. .. 1075-M
Fisher David L 101 2 Ky . .. .. . ... ......... • 1447-M
Fisher Donald E 54 7! lnd . . . . . . .. .. . .... ... 2124-W
Fisher Harold C 1121 Vt . . ... . . .. ........•. . . 3664
Fisher Lester 226 E 18 . . . . . ... ...• .•.. •... 2444-R
Fisher M C 1655 Stratford Rd .... • .... . . . ..... 3799
Fisk Chas R 1420 Crescent Rd . .. . .. • . .. .. . . 3484-W
Fitch Henry S RFD 3 . . ... .. .. .. . • ...... 4046-N -12
Fitch T G 705 Ohio . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . 1082
Fitz G H 1141 N J ... .. ..... . ...... . . . ... 2263-W
Fitzgerald Jim 1423 Ohio . .... . . .. . .. • ... . . . 2519-R
Fillpatrick Edw F Sunf lower Apts .... . . .•.. . 2n3-W
Fitzpatrick Frank G Mrs 926 l nd ... . . . .... . . . . 2417
Fitzpatrick R M Mrs 1515 Meallow Lane . ... .. .. 1873
Fitzsi mmons Wm W 1338 N H . . .... .. . . .. .. 2335-W
Flamingo Club RFD 3 .. .................... . 2028
Flanders Harold 1328 N H . . . . . .... .. .... .. 2663-M
Flanders Sada 1328 N H . ....... • • ... .• .. .. 2663-R
Flannery L S 2325 Mass. .... .. . . . .. . . . . ... .. 2571
Fleagle E A Mrs 1026 Ohio . .. . .. . ... .. . ..... . 2223
Fleer Bessie Mrs 922 Ky . ........ . ... . .. . . . 3916-R
Fleer Lucas 436 Mo . . .. ... . .. .•• . •. .. • .. . . 3191-J
Fleer Rose 1020 Vt . ...... .. . ........... . ... .. 31
Fleming Flower Shop 20 E 9 . .................. 278
Fleming Howard E WR EN Bldg .... . ...... . .. 3938-M
Fleming LeRoy 1009 Maine . . .. . .. •.•.. ..... ... 749
Fleshman Chas 810! N H . . .... .... . .... . . .. 1962-R
Fletcher Alfred 800 N Y . . . . .. ... . . . .. . ... 2443-W
Fletcher Capitola 1013 N H .. . . . . .... ... ... 3568-M
Fletcher Hattie Mrs 633 Maine .. .. ... . .. .. .. 1989-J
Fletcher Sherman 8~6 R 1. •..•..••.. . .. . ..... 3133
Flint L N 1603 La .. . . ............. .. . ... .. . 2897
Florance Geo 2125 Ky . . ... . . .... •.. . . ... . . 1965-W
Florea Donald 1012 Ill . . . .. ... .. • .... . • .... 2438-M
Floro AS 1933 Learnard . .. .. . .. . ... ... .. . 3447-M
Flory C E 2234 La . . ... .. . .....•. . .. .. ... . 3922-M
Flory Frank H RFD 6 . . . .. . ....... . ... . .4034-K-12
Flory I S 913 N Y . . ....... ...... . ...•... . 2482-W
Flory Orville C 2006 Learnard ....•...•.•.... 2103-J
Flory Roy 2009 Vt ... ... . .. . .• . . •• • .. .• . . .. 1213
Flory Warren C RFD 4 .. . . . . ... .. ... • .. . . 4096-K-3
FLOWER BOX 20 E 9 ....•• .. ..••• .... ... .... 278
If no answer call .. . .. . • .........•.... . . ... 749
Floyd Vern 945 Ala . .... . .. . ... . .......... 1116-W
Fluor Corp Ltd RFD l .. .. .... ... . ....... . ... . 894
Foley Joe Jr RFD 1 Lecompton . . .... .. .... 4099, K-2
Folks Guy M RFD 4 . . . .. .. . . .... .. ...... 4063-N-3
Folks John 813 R I. .... .. . ......... .. . .. . 2456-W
Foote Paul W 2134 Ma ss . .• .. .. ..... . . ... . 1151-W
Forbes Robt J Mrs 1336 Pa ... . .... . ........ . 2215
Ford August RFD 1 ... . . . . . . . . . • ... . . . ... 4044-K-3
Ford El la Mrs 812 R I. . . . .. ..... . . . . .. ... . 1313-W
Ford Joe RFD 3 ... . .. . . ....... . . • ..... . 4058-N-4
Ford Loren C 1218 Miss . . .......... • ...... 3899-W
Ford W M 731 N Y . ....•..... .. .. .... . .. . 1795-W
Ford W T 626 Ohio .. . • . . •• •• ... .•• .. . . .. . 2442-J
Fordice Bernard RFD 1. . . .. . . ... .. . . .... 4056..-K-13
Foree Eugene C 2144 Ohio . .... . ..... . ..•... 1'1..9-R
FOREE PRNTG CO 9 E 8 .... .. . • • . ..... . . . .. . 967
Forsee Hulen 1138 N Y . ...••..... . ..... ... 3125-M
Fortson Hattie 809 Maple ....•...... . . . .. .. 2125-W
Foster Bert T 1037 Conn . ... ... ........ .... . n3-R
Foster Bess 1036 R I. .............. . . . .. . . .. 3984
Foster Fred 739 Lake . . . . ...... • . . ... ... . .. 2957-R
Foster Geo 0 905 Maine ..•...•. • .......... . 3106-J

�16

FOS-GAU

LAWRENCE

Foster Hall 1200 La ... ..................... . 257
Foster Ina Mrs 1301 Vt ... . ••.. .....•.. •.. 2518-W
Foster Jim 1101 Tenn . . . . . . . . . . . . • . • . . • . . . 1996-J
Foster John RFD 1 . . . .......... •.... .•. 4099-N-22
Foster Paul C 1901 Barker . • • • . . . . • • . • . . . . . 777 -R
Foster Robt G 1140 Ohio. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... 1603-M
Foster S L 940 Conn . . . . . . . . . ..•...... . . 1058-W
Foutz Homer 1016 Ohio ..........•......... 1946-M
Fowler Allen 425 Lincoln .•.•••........•.. . 2301-W
Fowler Lillian J 122 Grant. .•...•.••••.••.. . 2119-J
Fewler Mary 1317 R I ..... ............... 3545-R
Fox C Maynard 1000 Ohio .. •.••.•••••.•... 1120-M
Fox Frank ins 1st Natl Blc Bg ................ . 510
Fox Frank 1903 Barker ....•• .•......•..•.. . 2724-J
Fox H E 1116 N J
...... ..•..•. . ... •... 2581-J
Fox Harold Jr 2231 Learnard ...•.••..•••... 1815-W
Fox Harry L 1227 Prairie .•. ..•..•••.•••.•. 3719-W
Fox Terrence 1200 Tenn . . .. .....•.. •....... 1632-J
Fraker Geo 803 N Y ......•....•...•••... 2484-J
Frakes Robt F 736 N 3 . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . 2999
Frame Jas Horace 646 N 5 ......... ........ . 2783-J
Francis Geo W 900 Ohio ..• ....•........• .. 1947- R
Francis Gilbert 935 Ill
.................... 2426
FRANCIS SPORT GDS 128 Mass • . . • . • . . . . . . . . 640
Frank Kenneth 742 Ark
•••.••••••••• 2549-M
Frankenfield Richard L 530 E 19 .••.•.. .•.... 3244-R
Franklin Emma 1324 Pa ...•.. .•......... . 1081-R
Franks C E Sunflower Apts .....•.••..••..•. 3836-M
FRANK'S FURNITURE CO 834 Mass ...•.•..... . 834
Franks Kenneth 2134 Learnard ........•...... 2139
Franz Herbert RFD 3 ......... .. .... .. .... 2973-W
Franz Melvin H 714 Ill .. . . .. ... .... • ........ 3703
FRANZ SERV STA 900 N H ................ ... 867
Franzen Ruth E 1203 Oread .. ....•.•••...•. 2380-W
Fraternity Management Inc 1026 Mass... ... ..
66
Frazier Cedric 1939 R I ...•.. ........•.... 3239-W
Frazier Geo R noo N J ..... ................ . 1512
Frazier Helen 537 Mich . ................... .. 3485
Frederich J W 121 W 14 .......• •..••.•. • .3829-W
Frederick A B Mrs 904 W 4 . ....... .. ..... 3917-J
Fredrickson Richard W Sunnyside K U. . . ...... 682-R
Free Methodist Parsonage 404 E 12 ........... 2136-J
Freed Ralph B 819! Vt .•..•.•..••• .•... . 3673-W
Freeman Arnold 1315 N Y ................. 2624-M
Freeman Glen E 123 E 19 ................. 2170- M
Freeman Glen E 1922 Barker ....•.....•.... .2391-J
Freeman Willis H RFD 5 .....•.... . ••. • .... 3639-J
French Lenore 1735 W 9 .................. 1049-W
Frenger Kate 1305 Haskell ..•••......•.•... 2994-M
Frey Fred 1021 Ill . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3208
Frey Pearl S Mrs 1108 N Y ........•....... 1622-R
Frick Edwards L 1235 Ky .•.•...•..•.•....... 3085
Friend C E 1500 Learnard .. ,. ...•••....•.... 1087
FRIEND PAU L H lUMBER CO 1030 Mass . ..... .. 42
Friends Church 1601 N H ...... ........... 1419-W
Friends Church parsonage 1205 N Y . . . . . . . . . 2624-J
Fries H A 1201 Tenn ... ....•••....•...•.. 2372-W
Fries Harry Rooms 1201 Tenn . • . . . . . . . . . .
3312
Frieze C I Jr 1529 Ky ............. •• ..... 1673-W
Frink Lloyd H dntst soH Mass . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 571
Re~dence 2145 Vt ............ • .... • ...... 1715
FRINK RUSSELL phy 7 W 11 .............. ... 275
Residence 29 Winona . .... .... • •. ...•.. . ... 4209
It no answer cal l ...... ... ............. ... . 870
FRI TZ CO tires 14 E 8 .. ....................... 4
Fritz E A RFD 1. .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 4039- N-3
Fritz Hazel Mrs 845 Maine ... .. •...• . ...... 2283- R
Fritze! A J serv sta 1900 Mass .. ....... . .. . . . 3399
Fritze! Albert J 2233 Ohio .
. ... ......... 1251-M
FRITZEL FROZEN FOOD LOCKERS 546 Miss .... 1280
Fritze! Jack RFD 6
. . .• •... . 1682-W
FRITZEL- JAYHAWK DAIRY PRODUCT S 834 Vt .182
Froeliger Anna Mrs 1044 Conn .....•••.... . 1995-M
Frost Clayton L RFD 4 .•. . .............. 4096-N-12
Frost,Dale E 711 Conn ................... 1963-J
Frc* Wm Mrs 1924 La . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . • .2537-M
Frye Alberta 17&lt;43 Ohio . . • ..•.••.••.••..... 2246-W
Frye Grace Mrs 810 Garfield .••..•.•........ 1850-M
Frye J E Mrs 420 Ind ........ .•.••.. •.•... 2385-W
Frye John C Sunnyside K U ....... .•........ 3232-J
Frye Robt 416 Wis ..•..•.•..••..•.••.•... 3194'-R
Fuel Matthew 434 Ill .•..•.....•.•...••••.•. 744- R
Fugate J B 1310 Tenn ...••...••.•.••..•... 2183-R

Fuller H R 822 Ala ....................... 2164-R
Fuller Norman E 205 E 18 ..... ..••........ . 3492-R
Fullerton Katherine E 1122 Ky . ......•...... 3127-M
FULTZ J LEE sht metl wk lOll Mass ....•....•. 249
Fultz Jas L 815 E 11 ....•.....••••..•.... 1910-W
Funk Lena S 701 La . . . . . . . . . . . • . . • . . • . . .
25~8
Funk Richard RFD 2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . 4052-K-2
Funk T D ofc 940 Mass . .....•............... . 774
FUNK TALMAGE 0 701 La ... .•..•.....••... 2528
FUNK'S MORTUARY &amp; CHAPEL 940 Mass•...... 119
Fyne Jas 407 Maine . .. .......... .. .... .... 2777-J

G
G I Joe's Serv Sta 601 Vt.............. .
.3315
Gable Robt 1621 Ky .. ...........•........ 1414-R
Gaddis Don H 946 Ohio ................... 3269-M
Gagliardo Domenico 1108 Ohio ..•...•......... 2696
Gaines Lloyd L ins 927 Mass . ......•....••.... 1438
Gaines Lloyd L 1900 La. .. .. .. .. . .. .. . . 1606
Gale Stanley 726 Ohio . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1144-W
GALLAGHER BUDDY MOTORS 634 Mass .•••. .. 1000
Gallagher E T 621 Tenn .... .. ... •......... 3827-W
Gallagher Rose Mrs 1139 Tenn .••..•.••.•... 2734-R
Gallion Virgil 1138 Ky .. . .. ...•............. . 3937
Galloway Althea Mrs 1505 Ohio •.••.....•...•. . 3174
Galloway Chas A 2245 R I. ...... ... ... . ...... 1708
Gallup Alfred F ins Lawrence Natl Bk Bg ••....... 133
Residence 1212 Ohio ..................•.. 746-M
Gallup G A 1022 Ohio . .. .... . . . ............ . 973-J
Gambles 930 Mass .. . .............. . ......... 528
Gamer J G 1144 Ky . . ....................• 1269-M
Gamma Phi Beta 1339 W Campus Rd .•.•..•.... 3510
Gammon Jas R 1637 N H ................... 3401-J
Gano D R 2220 N H ..............•..•.• . ... 2980
Gantz Jacob RFD 1 Williamstown .......... 4043-N -12
Garber Floyd 1221 N Y .. .......... .. . ..... 3286-W
Garber 0 H 929 Conn .........•.•...••.... 2568-M
Garcia Julio 932 N J ...... ....•........... 1934-R
Garcia Leon 813 N J .........••........... 2243-J
Garcia Patricio 819 N J .................... 2126-J
Garcia Thos 616 Lake . .... ... . •....••.•.... 3122-J
Garcia Thos Jr Santa Fe Apts ... .• .......... 1285-R
Card Howard E 1420 Crescent . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3441-J
Garden R B 413 Maine .. ............... ... 3917-M
Gardner A M 1312 Vt .•..•..•.••..•.••..•. 1514-R
Gardner E T 1344 Mass .......••...••••..•. 2530-R
Gardner JosE 810 W 8 .................... 1492-W
Gardner May 1500 Crescent Rd . . . . . . . . .
3227
Gardner Raymond E RFD 5 . . . . . ........ 4028-K-4
Gardner Roderic 530 La . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . 1408-M
Garland S J 217 Moss .....•••.....•..•.... 2388-W
Garner Earl 700 Ala ......... . ............ 1610-M
Garner Harold 915 E 12 ..........•....... 4260-M
Garratt V W RFD 2 ... ...... .. . . . ...... 4003-K-12
Garrett Glenn 219 N 7 .....•..•.....•... ... 2179-R
Garrett Jack 643 Tenn . ... .................. 266
Garrett John 918 Pa ... ..... ... ... • ....... 1310-W
Garrett Margaret Zeller 643 Tenn . . . . . . . . . . . .. 266
GARRETT MKT RFD 5 ... ... . .. ........ 4081-K-4
Garrett Marvin 2240 Barker ............... .. 2950-J
Garrett R B 2018 Vt . ... ..• .. ..... . . ... ... 1667-W
Garrett Robt Mrs 327 E 19 .. . ............. . 1605-R
Garrett Wm C 705 E 19 .. ....... . .••...•.. 2459-W
Garrison Robt H 1200 Miss ................... 3915
Garrison Verne 1105 R 1 . . .. ..... •....••.. .•. 2524
Garvin Martha 517 Wise ...........•...•... 2510-M
GAS CO 733 Mass .............. . ............ 315
After Ofc Hours Call Manager's Rts ... .•.... .. 306
If no answer call . ..... ................... 1031
If no answer call ... .. ..•...•............. 2885
Gaskill Terry Mrs 1603 Mass ... . .•....•.•... ... 188
Gasper Arthur D 828 Ark ......... . ......... 1271-J
Gaston E Thayer 1804 Miss •..••....• . .•..• . 1721-J
Gaston G I 941 Tenn . ..................... 3193-W
Gatewood Chester 701 Elm •..•.•...••..... . 1585-W
Gauck Emil 826 N Y ................ ...... 2482-M
Gauck H C 620 Ala ....•. .•.......... .•...... 927
Gauck Truck Lines 237 Ark ...•.•••.•.•••.. •... 927
Gaugh Ronald W 1141 Vt...... ... .. . ..... 1756-J
Gaumer C S furniture refinishi ng 1025 Miss ....... 286
Gaumer C S 1025 Miss ..................... . 286
Gaul Robt T 1700 La ..... ............... . 1007-J

�--------------------------~LAWRENCE
Gaw Helen 114 W 13 . . ... .............. .. 1448-R
Geis lawrence 1801 Maine .. ................ 2330-J
Geltch Waldemar 1026 Colonial Ct .. ...... . .. 2127 -W
Gelvin R H llOH Mass . ......... . .... ..... 1153-R
Gemmell R B 1329 Mass . ...... .... .•....... 3417-J
Gemmell's cafe 1241 Oread . ................. . 2004
GEMMELL'S CAFE 117 Mass .. ... ... . . ...... . 2072
GENERAL APPLIANCE CO INC 1103 Mass .... . . . 19
Gene's Mkt 1301 Del . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 248
Gengler Phil J RFD 5 . ..... ........... .... 1876-M
Gensler Mary Mrs 1005 Ky ...... . ... . .. .. . . 1779-W
Gentry M E 338 Elm . ......•....... . .... . 1298-W
Gentry Ralph 821 N H .... .... .. . . . ...... .. 2865-J
Gentry Robt 402 Elm . . ... . • . .. .. • .. .. .. ... 2386-J
Gentry Seymour 0 RFD 1 . . . • . .. .. • . .. .. .. 4039-K-4
Gentr~ f•d 1008 Miss .. ........•.......... . 2393
Gentry W A W 2 . . ................ • ... . 2225-W
George Billie 941 lnd . ...... ... . . . . ..... .. . 1788-R
George Ernest W 1329 Ohio ..• . ... ... • .... .3337-W
George Odeal F Mrs 1041 Vt ..•........... . . 2926-R
George Walter RFD 2 .... ...... . .•....... 4098-K-2
George' s Pipe Shop 727 Mass .. . ... ••. ...... . 2401
Georgia Archie 519 Mich . .. .. .. .•..... . .. . . 4250-R
Georgia Tracy 181 4 Mo ....... . . .....••. .. 3408-M
Georgie Chas 824 lnd . .... ..•. • ........... . . . 3655
Georgie Gladys 302 Ark ................ . .. . 1254-J
Gerhart T R 2043 Tenn ... .. . ............. .. 1252
Gerstenberger Delbert C 2000 R I . ..•..••. .. 2937-M
Getker B l 732 R I . . ...... .......... ..... 1857-J
Getto M J 1021 Maine ........ ..... ........ 12bb
Getto Paul H dentist Lawrence Natl Bk Bg . .... . 3b92
Residence 10 Westwood Rd. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3728
Getty Richard N 1810 Mich . . .. . .. ..... .... 3036-M
Gibbens Chester 1732 Tenn . . ..... ... . • ... .. 2281-W
GIBBS CLOTHING CO 811 Mass . ....• •.. .. . . . .459
Gibler Ivan 1035 N J ... . ............ .. ... . 1295-J
Gibler Ivan T 81&amp; Garfield . . . ....• • .... ... . 2495-W
Gibler Robt M 1701 Mo .. ....... . .......... 2453-M
Gibson Carl 841 M1ss . .... ...... .. ....... .3251-R
Gibson Hilden R 1629 Barker ...... • ..... ... 2506-W
Gibson L M Mrs 1035 N Y .. ..... •. ... .• . .. .3149-J
Gibson RichardT 1112 Conn . ... . . .. .... . .. . . 3136-J
Gibson W H Sunnyside K U ................ .. 3226-R
Gibson Walter R RFD 2 ..... .. .... • . .... . 4055-N-4
Gieseman Rose 2208 Mass ... ..... • . . ..... ... 2441
Giesy Veta S Mrs 1800 N H . ... ..•.. • . .. . . . 2689-M
Giffin Kenneth 1134 Ky ....... ..... ...... . 3103-W
Giffin Kim 1832 University Dr ....... . ... .. . . 2643-J
Gifford Grace l Mrs 1340 Ky ... • ...•. •• ... . 1131-J
Gifford Kenneth W 2021 Vt. . . ...... • .... . . .3245-M
Gilbert lottie Mrs 1531 Ky . ...... .. ... . .. . 3025-M
Gilbert Wm 1201 Dread . .. .. . ........•.... .4201-J
Gilbreath Ed RFD 5 . .... ...... ... .. . . . ..... . 1264
Gilchrist Mary F-A15 W 6 ... . . .• . •.. . •• . . . . 3827-J
Gilchrist S W 44 Winona ... . •. ....••.. .... .3093-J
Glle Walter 1304 Oakhi ll. .. . . ..... • •... •... 2494-R
Gilkerson leon J 1033 Tenn .. .......... . . ... 3718-R
Gilkerson's Cafe 912 Ma ss .
. .. .. ..... . .. . . 3389
GILL M R REAL ESTATE &amp; INS AGCY 640 Mass 111
Gilles Helen phy 4 &amp; Maine ... ..• .......... ... 3975
Residence 1831 University Dr .........•.. .• . 3b02
If no answer call . .. .. ...........•...... ... . 870
Gilley lizzie 701 Mo . . . . . ..•... .. • ..... •.. 1056-J
Gillihan Robt 8 dntst 4 &amp; Maine .. . .. . . ....... . 3975
Gilliland Glenn E 1912 Vt .... • ........ • ... . 2925-R
Gillispie Jas W 1728 Mich .........•....... . 2682-J
Gillum G C 2123 R I. ......... .... . ..... .. 1554-W
Gilmore An nie 0 RFD 3 Eudora . . . . ..•.... .4076-N-3
Gilmore Gertrude 700 Ohio . . . . . . . . . • • . . . . . . . . 3954
Gilmore W J Mrs 319 E 7 ........ .... ..... . 1441-R
Gimblet John 709~ Vt .. . . . . .. . ... .. ........ 1994-J
Gimblet Ral ph E 915 Maine .• ........... .... 1322-J
Girl Scout Hdqtrs 729~ Mass .........• • ... .. . . 3429
Givan Mattie 718 lake .......... . • .. .. . ..... 3714
Givens Belle Mrs 820 N Y ..... . ...•......•. 2126-W
Givens E C 163 7 learnard ... ... • . ....•... . . 2327-R
Givens E W 642 ~ W 23 ............ .. • . .... 2852-W
Glahn Gene 2200 Vt . .. • •....•......•.... . . . 2815
Glasgow Jas 630 Mo . .. .. .. . • ...•..... . ... 1400-M
Glasgow Lane 1229 N Y ......•....••.... ... 2217-J
Glasgow T J 121 E 17 .....•.•...• . ...••. . 2633-W
Glass Mab..l N Mrs 905 Tenn •..•.••..... ... 2813-W
Glass T E 11 E 11 ... . ...... . ............ .. . 1698
Glass Wm Haskell Grds .. ... ............ . . .. 3607-J

GAW-GRA

17

Glasscock C E 707 Elm .. . ... .. ... . ..... ... 158~
Giassmire Zoe Mrs 1319 Crescent Rd . .. . . . . .. 2363-M
Glathart A B 638 La ....• . . . . .. ..... .. .. .... 1070
Glatthaar R K RFD 4 .. ... ... ......... . . 4096-N-11
Glenn Martha Mrs 1245 Pa .... ... .. . .... .. . 2161-W
Glick Chas 1745 Barker .... . .. ...... • ... .. . 3108-M
Glidewell Calvin Capt 22 31 Barker . . . ....... . 1249-M
Glinka John l 1911 Tenn . . .... .. .. • ....... 1396-M
Glover Barbara 2001 Vt .... ............. 1780-.J
Glover Herschel! l 763 Ash .. . . .•.. . .. • ..... 1736-M
Goble C C 1536 Tenn . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . 36::.9
Goble Chas R 533 Elm ................ ..... 3181-R
Codding A H 1004 Ill . . . . . . .... .• •. .... .. .. 2210-J
Godding Frank E 437 Maine ......... .. .. .. .. 3042
Godfrey Everett 635 N 6 .. ....... ...... .. . .. 1974-R
Goebel E D Sunnyside K U ............. ..... 3472-J
Goering Vic. 736 Maine . . . . . . . .
. . ...... 2306-J
Goetsch Jean 1746 Vt . . ...... • ...• . •..... . 1796-R
Goff Frank RFD 6 .. . ... . . . .. • ..... • .. . . . 4048-N-4
Goff M W 1423 Ky. . . . . . . . . . • . . . . • . . . . . . . . . 3841
Goff Raymond RFD 4 ............ .. . .... 4009-N -11
Goff Roy L 2045 Mass .... ... ... . . . . ...... 1835-W
IOolden Billie 8 442 Forest . . . . . ... . . ....... . 1813-J
GOLDEN CREST DAIRY 2016 Learnard .. .. .. . . 3162
Golden Gate Chocolate Shop 713 Mass ...•. .. .. . 3395
Goldman W E 1020 Pa . . ...... .... . . . . . ... 3793-W
Goll Kenneth S 1841 Maine .............. .. 3408-W
(:cod J R 1045 Vt.. .. .. .. . .. . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 620
Good Jas 1101 N J . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1472-M
Goode Jos rooming house 1245 Oread . .... ...... 1504
Goodman Marvin l 1107 w 6 ..... . .. . ...... 723-W
Goodrich 6 F Co 929 Mass . .. . .... . ...... . . .... 21
Goodrick Dorothy 111 S Park . ...... .. .... .. 1448-M
Goodrick Rebecca Mrs 1119 Del .... . .... . . .. 2598-W
Goodrum A C RFD 1 ...... ... ... . . . .. .... . 3797-M
Goodwin Guy 916 Vt. .. ... .. ....... • ... .. . 2982-W
Goodwin Robt M 220 lincoln .. .. • .... . • ... . . 2331-J
Gorbutt J K 436 Maine ...... . .• . .... •... .. 3477-R
Gordon Donald 915 Mo . ..... .. .. ..... •.. .. . 1647-J
GORDON H R excvtg RFD 4 .. ...... •. ... .. ..... 791
Gordon Kelley 2227 Ohio ..... . ... . .. . ...... 1251-R
Gordon Lucrecia Mrs 2227 Ohio . .. ..•.. . . .•. . 1251-R
Gordon Phil 1209 E 13 ....... .. . ........ . . 1272-W
Gorrill Barr 1101 Tenn ... . .... ...... ... . .. 1996-M
Gorrill Clarence M atty lawrence Natl Bk Bg . .. .. . 482
Residence RFD 1 .. . . . ... . .... ... .... . 4068-N-11
Gorrill Galen A ofc 200 Locust . •.••.. . ...... ... 387
Gorrill Galen A 2109 Vt . .. ... . ... .. ...... ... 2673
Gorrill Will R dntst 845 Mass .. .. ...... . • ..... . 399
Residence 841 Ala .. ..... • .. •• . . . ... ... . .. 1399
Gorrill &amp; Winter Serv Sta 300 Locust ........... 2064
Gorton Thos 831 Ill .. .......... . .. ... . . .. . .. 3276
Gosper E E Mrs 1318 R I ................ . . 2288-R
Gough P F 1729 Mass ....... ... ..... ........ 2509
Gould W l RFD 3 .. ...... . ....... . ...... . . 2157-R
Government Offices .. See City, County, State,
United Statts Government Offices
Gowans R E Mrs 1510 University Or ......... .. 1914
Graber Ralph E 1620 Crescent Rd •.. . ......... . 1450
Grace Bernard 1040 Pa .. .... .. .............. 3625
Graeber C H 1100 W 23 . ....... . .. . •. . ... . 1154-R
Graham C A Shuck 1740 Ind .... ... . ... • .... . 2745-J
Graham Ethel 825 Conn ... ... . .... • ....... 1032-W
Graham Findley P 800 Ky .... . . ..... .. .. .... . 3199
Graham Garland RFD 6 .. . .. .. . ...•.. . ... . 4085-K-2
GRAHAM STUDIO 211 W 8 ...... . ......... . . 3199
Grammer l G 421 Elm . ..• ...... .•.. . .. .. . 1549-M
Grammer Sam RFD 3 ............... ... . 4062-N-11
Grammer Walter RFD 3 . ...... .. ••. . ... . . 4074-K-3
Granada Cafe 1022 Mass .........•. .. . . ... ... 3349
Granada Theatre 1020 Mass . . .. . .. •. ... . . . . ... 946
Grant Arthur R 900 Ill . . . . .............. . ... . 3846
Grant Dabney 1130 Ky .... ................... 1063
Grant Mary A 1620 S Crescent Rd ...•. •• ..•. 1620-R
Grant ham W P RFD 5 ..•......•. .... .• ..... 1465-J
Grant's Pet &amp; Gift Shop 1218 Co1111 ..•. .•.. . • . •• 418
Graves Alfred J 300 W 14 .................. . 1966
Graves Dan 107 S E Park ..... . .......... .. . 2693-J
Graves Harold H 1810 La .... .. ... ... ... ... 1202-W
Gravitt Delmar 1004 R I. ..... . .. ...... .. .. . 3455-J
Gravitt's Automatic Laundry 916 Mass .......... 1630
GRAVITT'S TIRE &amp; HOMI SUPPLY 916 Mass .. 1630
Gray Agnes C 1236 N J . . ... ....... ........ 2431-J

�18

GRA- HAL

LAWRENCE

Gray E S 2232 Mass ..........•.......... 1249-W
Gray Frank R 718 w 4 ................... .. . 1383
Gray Hazel 1225 Ky .............. .... .. . 1733-W
Gray Neil C Haskell Grds . ...... •• ..... • .... 3607 -W
Gray Robt T Sunnyside KU .......•..... .... . 2958-R
Gray Theo J 1931 Learnard ....... ......... . 3447-J
Gray Walter 801 Miss . ..................... . 2169
Grayson Lila M 829 Ark ... ........... . • .. .. 1049-R
Green A A 500 Ohio . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1738
Green B A RFD 4 .... ..... ...... ....... . 1979-J
GREEN B A CONSTR CO 1300 Oread . ......... . . 884
GREEN BROS haroware 633 Mass ........ .. ... . 631
Green Bruce Mrs 711 Conn . .... .. ........ .. 1984-M
Green Ceci l 1703 Orchard Lane ...... .. . .. . . . 2725-J
Green Cut Rate Groc 309 E 12 ..... • .. .... . . . . 2839
Green Delbert R RFD 6 . . .......... .... .. 4004-N-11
Green Eugene 1744 Barker . .... .......... . . 3108-R
Green Frank R 2137 Ohio . ..... .. ....•... . . 2821-111
Green Gable Cafe 514 E 8 .......... • .... . .... 2022
Green Harry 700 Calif . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1868
Green Kenneth J 1125 Vt . . ...... . ... • .... . 2880-M
Green Lantern Cafe 745 Mass ............ ... .. . 484
Green Nelson 933 R I . . ............... .... 1169-W
Green Patk 2023 Barker ... ........ . .... .. .. 1999-R
Green R B 2121 Tenn . .... . ............... 2~97-M
Green Robt 2025 Barker ........... .... .... 3497- M
Green Verna S Mrs 1117 N Y ............... 3027-M
Green W R 636 Ohio . ............... • .. . . . . . 1182
Green W R Jr 1928 Ohio ............ . .. .. . 1747-W
Greene Mildred 1532 Mass ............. . .... . 3628
Greene R T Mrs 1045 Conn ..........•...... 3750-R
Greene Wm W 1842 Tenn .......... ....... . 2628-J
Greene's Ready-to-Wear 845 Mass .. ...... . ..... 687
GREENE'S RETAIL LIQUOR STORE 806 Vt ... .. 1060
Greenman Nancie B RFD 4
. .. .. . ..... .. 1175-J
GREENWOOD TAVERN &amp; CAFE 804 Vt ....... . 2032
Gregg John R 701 R I. . . ................... 2381-J
Gregory G C b1B W 12 .................... 3929-W
Gregory Howard RFD 1 .. ................. 4070-K-2
Grems Jack 441 Ill .... . ............•...... 1744-J
Grey Jimmie 501 Tenn ........... • ..... . ... 2940-J
GREYHOUND LINES 638 Mass ............ .... . 707
Gribbin W J Sunnyside K U ....... • .......... 993-J
Grider Richard L 1400 La ......... • . ....... 3784-R
Griesa Wm S 401 Mo ...................... . 440
Griffeth Ida 1013 N H . .................... 3047-R
Griffeth Ray W Mrs 1029 Del .......•.... .. .. 4070
Griffin Eugene 1511 R I.. . . ....... . ... . .. 2232- M
Griffin John P 1609 Tenn Terr . .... •.. .. . ... 736 -W
Griffin Seth RFD 2 .... ..... ............ 4061-N-22
Griffith Evan G RFD 2 ... ......... • .. . . . 4003-K-13
Griffith Geo T Mrs 917 La . . ·: •............. 3120-W
Griffith John W 306 W 12 .... ....... ...... . 2234-R
Griffiths Tom 913 Miss . ... .. . . . ........... 3086-J
Griggs E E 1328 Ky ......... .. • .......... . 2656-M
Grimes Evelyn C Mrs RFD 3 .. .. .. .. • ..... 4012-K-22
Grimes Gordon RFD 3 ... .......... • ..... 4012-K-22
Grimes Jas L Jr 1343 Tenn ............. ... . 1547-M
Grimm Clark 2221 Ohio .. .... . ..... . .... .. . 1251-J
Grist Geo E 746 Ala . .. ..... • ............ .. 1887-J
Griswold C W 1115 Ohio ....... ... ......... 1671-R
Griswold Carl 944 Ky . .................... .. . 3708
Griswold Ernest 2217 Mass ... ........ • .... 3338-W
Grob D A 1817 La . .. . ... .. ........ . ...... 2425-J
Grob Fred University Dr . . ................. . 1979-R
Groebe W F 1230 Oread ............... . ... . 2988
Gross M E Dr 125 E 23 .. .. . ............. . 1291-W
Grosshart Lottie Mrs 1042 R I ............ . . . 1260
Grover I L 2113 Ky ............. .. .. .. .... 2293-J
Grover W E 109 E 19 ................... . . 2170-R
Grunder Bertha 942 Miss . ...... .... ... • .... 1788-J
Guenter Richard 1307 N H .. ............... . 1831-J
Guffin C R 2136 Learnard ................. . 3244-J
Guffin Emma Mrs 724 Conn . .. . ......••.... 3465-M
Gufler Joe 1014 N J ...................... ... 754
Gufler W M 1022 N J ..................... 3608-W
Guiles L A 1428 Pa .........•• . •• .• •.•..... . 3879
Guist J E Mrs 919! Mass .................. 2758-R
Gulley Allen 821 E 11 .......•..• ........ . 1430-W
Gulley Clarence 504 Mechanic ........•...... 2990-R
Gulley Harold E 511 W 4 ......•• .. .•..... ... 3940
Gulley Jas L 230 Perry ... . ..... • . . . ...... . 3049-W

Gulley Orval 408 Lincoln . . .. ......•........ 2552-W
Gulley Otis 822 Elm . .............. . ...... 2398-J
Gulley Otto 622 Locust .... .••.... • •....••. 1460-R
Gulley Ralph 602 Ky ... ................... 1557-J
Gulley Tobe 779 Locust .. .... . ............ 1936-R
Gundle Sigmund Dr 1700 Vt ...... ........... . 3782
Gunn Eugene 445 Wis
. . ....... . ........ 1134-M
Gunn Ewing Ketchum 829 lnd . .........••... . 1968-J
Guntert Emil E 719 N 4
. .. ............ 1196-W
GUNTERT PLUMBING &amp; WIRING 1337 Mass .. . . . 963
Guntert Robt 312 Maid en Lane .............. 1196-J
Guntert Wm F 716 N 3 .................... 1354-J
Gurley Jas 1524 Vt. ................. .. ... 3486-M
Gurtler F E 935 Pa ... . ... . .. ..... .. • .. . . .. 2482-J
Gustafson B G jeweler 809 Mass ............. ... 911
Residence 1642 Tenn . . . ................. 3440-R
Gustafson Gordon 1616 Stratford Rd .. .. •.. . . 3517-W
Guthrie Marvin J 818 E 13 . .......... • . .... 3413-J
Gwin Ethel M WREN Bg ................. ... 1242-J

H
Haas Charley W RFD 4 . . . .. ............ . 4099-N-31
Haas Dollie Mrs 1205 Pa .... ......... .. . . . . 1932-J
Haas Harold 602 Elm ..........•......... . 3307-J
Hack Alan 2013 Vt. .... . . .... • ............ 3250-J
Hack Henry RFD 1 . ............ . ........ 4044-K-4
Hack T H 2001 Tenn . ... .. .. . . . ......... . . 2603-W
Hack T H Woodworking Shop 807 Vt ........... 1381
Hackley Chas L 408 lnd . . ... ................ . 1742
Hackman C W 1423 Ohio . .............••.... 1853
Hackman Geo W 1100 Tenn . . •..•............ 1770
Hadel W F 2017 Barker . .. .......•........ . 3497-R
Had! Albert Mrs 1920 Mass .........•...... 1888-M
Had! Bob 1801 W 9 . ... ... ... . •....•. ..... 1175-R
HADL BROS MOTOR CO 318 E 17 ............ . 785
If no answer call ... . . ......•........... . 1821-R
Had I Elsie Mrs 2033 N H .......••...... . .. .. . 796
Hadl Ernest 1113 R I. .. ...... .. ........... 1794..1
Had! Eve lyn M 1429 E 15 .. . ... .... .... . . .. 2311-M
Had! Glenn 90H Ill . .......... . ..... . .... .. 2939-J
Had! Gus P RFD 6 ... ........•......... 4072-N-12
Hadl Jess Mrs 417 Forest. ..........•. .. . . . 1821-R
Had! Otis 1236 N Y .. .. .... •.•......•.... . 2422-M
Hadl Richard 80M Mass ....•.....•.....•. . 1918-R
Had! Wm J 401 La ....... .. ....••....... 2546-M
Hadley Bob 642 La .... .............•. . . .. 2998-W
Hadley John 775 Elm .... .. •... .. ••.... ... 2601-M
Hagan S E 1800 Tenn . . . . . . . . . . . ....... 1421-W
Hag&lt;;~n Theodore 1745 Tenn .................... 784
Hagen John W RFD 6 . .... . ... ... .. . .. . .. 4008-N -4
Hagen Robt P 1800 IIi ....... ..... ... ...... 2415-R
Hagenbuch F G Dr 2025 Vt ... . .. .. ........ 2735-J
Hagerman C S 1215 Tenn ................. . .. 2107
Haggart R A 724 lnd . ... ............. . ....... 274
Haglund F A Mrs bOO Ind .... . .............. . 3213
Hahn Marcus E 1605 Tenn .•..•............. 1405-J
Haider Andrew 2212 Ohio . ........... ·...... 2971-R
Haight G P Jr Sunnyside K U ... . .... • . ..... 2941-W
Hail Wm C 905 Mo . ...... ......... • ...... 1763-R
Haines 0 Don 1514 Stratford Rd ......... . .. 1089-J
Halberg Leslie L 1447 Vt ... . ... .. •..... . . 2731-M
Haley E W 1423 Ohio .... ............ ... .. . 587-M
Hall A E Jr 909 N Y . . . ......... ....... .. 2126-R
HALL BROS TRUCK LINES 1045 Pa. . . . . . . . . . . 936
Hall Chas Wm 506 W 6
. ........... ..... 1344-W
Hall Clarence C Jr 2246 R I ....... . .. . . .. .. 1333-M
Hall E R 1637 W 9 . . .. .... . . . : .......... . .. 2231
Hall Earl E RFD 3 .. ........ . ..... .. ... 4071-K-11
Hall Effie Mrs 1909 Ohio ................. . 1543-M
Hall Eugene 839 Miss . . . .. .. •... . .• • ..... . 1789-M
Hall Gene 1934 La .... .. . ..... • ..... • ..... 2135-W
Hall H G 924 R I . . ............ • .......... 2982-J
Hall John W Sunnyside K U ...... • ..... . .. . . 2348-J
Hall Lloyd 2029 Ohio .......... . ...•....... 2927 -M
Hall Lon 909 Tenn . ...... . ........ .. • .... . 1413-J
Hall M 0 712~ Mass .. .. . .. •. .... • .......... 3926
Hall Robt 1246 N Y ... .... .. ... • ..... • . ... 1654-R
Hall Russel A 1228 R I ........... . ... .. ..... 1617
Hall W F Mrs 1702 Mass .. .. ... ........... 1419-R
Hallenbeck Dorothy 1340 Vt .. . ..... .... .. .. 3748-M
Hailer J L 625 Ind .... . ...... . .... . • . . . ... 1391-R
Haller John Mrs 639 Elm . ...... . .. ....... .. 3789..1

�LAWRENCE
Halley Dee 1810 Ind . . . . . . . . . . . . . • • . . . . .. 2866-M
Hallman J A 1032 Vt. ... . ................... '4113
Hallmark Alvin 1407! Mass . .. .. .... • . .. ... . 2858-W
Hallmark Leslie 1417 W 4 . .... ............. 3498-R
Hambleton Wm W Sunnyside KU ... • ....... . 2816- M
Hamil l A R 1144 N J . . . . .... ...... •• . . .. . 1430-R
Hamill R H 1246 Prairie . ........... . ...... 1465-W
Hamilton Jess 0 2115 N H ...... .. . .. . . ...... 1551
Hamilton John W 1826 Tenn ..... • ..... • , ... .. 3919
Hamilton Theodore 1333 N Y .....••.. . ..... 3256- M
Hamilton W 0 121 W 14 . .. . . .... .. .. ... ... 3829-J
Hamilton Wm RFD 3 . . .. . ..... . ...... ... . 4057-N-3
Hamilton Wm 717 R I . .. . .. . . .. .. . . . ... . . 2416-J
Hamilton's Dress Shop 943 Mass ...... . ..... . 1717
Hammer L B Jr 1810 La . .... .. ............ 3230-J
Hammig Carrie Mrs 311 Johnson ............ 1616-R
Hammig E M Jr 334 Locust ................. 2942-J
Hammig K K 2000 La ...................... 1031
Hamrnig L E 1813 lnd .. .......... .. ...... .. 3222
Hampton May Mrs 1320 N Y . . .. . .... .. .... . 1898-J
Hampton R A Mrs 219 Ill ......... .... ..... 1184-M
Hancock C W 613 w 6 . .................... .. 3640
Hancox V E 1232 Almira ... ........ .. .. .... 3999-J
Handicraft Tailors 905! Mass ... • • . ... • • . . .. .. . 157
Handy Man 1033 R I . .. . .. .. ... • .. . . • .. . .... 1325
Hank's Delivery Serv 1211 Vt . .. .. . .... . .. . ... . 797
Hanks Roy L 2224 La ... . .. . .. . . ... ... .. . 3069-R
Hankins John E 805 Tenn . .............. ... 2921-M
Hanna Hovey H 2244 Vt .............. . .... 2829-M
Hanna Hovey J 800 La . . . .. ... • ... .. • ...... . 1875
Hanna Muriel M 1017 R I. .... ....... . ...... 3618
Hanna Rad io Shop 933 Mass . . .. • ..... . . .... ... 303
Hanna W B 1728 Mass .... ..... ... • . . .... . 2242-J
Hanschu David 1145 Ind . . . . . ..... •. . ... ... 2505-W
Hanselman J W 1104 N J .. . . ....... • .. . .. . . 4260-J
Happy Jack M 1510 Univ Dr ... .. ............ . 1914
Happy Paul M 200 W 13 .................. 1904-W
Harbeson Nora E 837 lnd .............. . .... . 1481
Harbison G G 738 Ash .. ..... .. . .. . ..... ... 2757-R
Harbour Lottie Mrs 1246 Tenn ..... •. ..... .. 1436-W
Hardesty Edw N 928 Maine .... . ... , .... . ... 3930-R
Harding Danl E 1827 Ark ... . ........... ... 1719-W
Harding Horace Sunnyside K U ............ . . . 875-W
Harding Jack 1845 Maine ... . .. . .. • .. . ..... 1210-W
Harding Temp le 543 Mich . ... . . . .......... . 1134-J
Harding Truman C 820 La ... .... . ......... .. 3163
Harding Walter J 2113 Tenn . ............... 4240-M
Hardman Mary M 1423 Oh io .. . . . .. • ........ 2989-J
Hardtarfer C F 932 N H .. ... .............. 1297-W
Hardtarfer G H 1846 Maine ................ 1005-R
Hardy 0 K 939 Ind . . . .. . .......... . ........ 3752
Hargett Virgin iCf Mrs 1420 Ky ........... . .... 1162
Hargrove Howard 1225 Prairie ............. . 2476-J
Hargrove Marvin 0 1806 N H ....... • .... . . . . 2830-R
Harkey Elizabeth Mrs 120 Ill .. .•..... ....... 3086-R
Harlan R L 1200 N J .. ........... .. ....... 4242-J
Harmon Lula 1208 Almira . ... .............. 2289-J
Harmon Merle Sunnyside K U . .... ........ . . . 656-W
Harmon Merton J 1545 Haskell ... .... •..... 3263-M
Harnar Auto Supplies 836 Mass .... .... . . ... . .. 337
Harnar H B 1216 Tenn ............. .. ..... 2531-M
Harnar Paul 1025 Ky . .......•... . . ..... . . . 3168
Harp Richard F 2019 Ky ................... 2798-W
Harper Arthur 765 Lyons . .. . ... . ............. 3396
Harper Clifford 123 E 17 St Terr ............ .. 1920
Harper Geo 1203 Oread . . ... .............. . 1454-R
Harper Irvin Ted 546 Lincoln . ....... • ...... . . 3319
Harper Iva Belle 2001 Vt . ................. 1780-W
Harper Nellie Mrs 1924 Ky ......•......... 1780-R
Harper R E 743 Ash . . ........... •••...... 2177-W
Harper Wm T 1924 Ky ........... •........ 1780-R
Harrell Jas M 1329 R I ................... 2868-M
Harrell John E 1810 La ....• . . ..•......... 3224-M
Harrell Ray 919 Conn ............... .. .... 3449-M
Harrell Robt E 709 Vt .. .... . ....... . ...... 1994- R
Harrell Vernon 204 w 13 .. ................. 1171-R
Harrell Warren 1113 Conn ... . .. ...... . ..... 2423-J
HARRIS-BARNARD SIGN &amp; NEON 10 E 8 ...... . 810
Harris Claude 2001 N H . . . ................ 1711-R
Harris 0 L 332 Maiden Lane ..••...•....•... 2770-R
Harris Dave 636 N 5 .....•...... . ...... ... 1193- R
Harris Earl E 750 Maple ................... 3032-R
Harns Eddie 1102 E 13 ......•.....•...... 2142-W

HAL- HAS 19

Harris Ernest 1440 Prairie ................. 3528-R
Harris Fred H 1715 Learnard ................ 2302-R
Harris Fred J 1725 Barker ........... • ..... 3409-M
Harris Geo W 1248 Conn .. . ................ 2932-J
Harris Glenn L 1645 Learnard ... ........ . . . .. 1257
Harris Goldie R RFD 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4051-N-11
Harris H H 1904 N H . ................... . .. 1940
Harris Hallie 828 Miss .......... . .......... 1426-R
Harri s J L 1915 N H ...................... 1888-W
Harris Jay 310 Maine .. ...... . ............ 1566-M
Harris Jesse L 1741 N H ..........•........ 3586-J
Harris John B 1645 Mass... , ............... 2222-J
Harris L G 1332 Conn .. . . ..... .. . ...• . ... 3275-W
HARRIS L T CO INC 802 Mass .... .. .... . ..... 324
Harris Laurence T 802! Mass . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .386
HARRIS LEROY E atty 743 Mass .. ........ .. . . . 802
Residence 1216 N J . . . ........ . .... .. ... 3894-J
Harris Mayme 1332 R 1.. .................. 2514-R
Harris Neil M 2121 Barker ....... • ..... • ... . 2228-R
Harris P P 1005 Miss ... ...........•.. .. .. 2210-M
Harris R W 304 Ind ..... . ............ • .... 1407-R
HarrisS H 1746 N H ..................... 1672-M
Harris Stanley W 739 Ohio .. ....... • . ..... . 2349-W
Harris Vernon D RFD 2 . .... .... .. ..... .. 4080-K-11
Harris Wayne B 2020 N H .. .. .. ......... . .. 1777-R
Harrison C E 1545 Learnard ................ 2327-J
Harrison Drug Co 1851 Mass . ..... . . .. .... .... 4213
Harrison Edgar A 806 w 8 . ............. : . 3297 -M
Harrison Robt 1521 Stratford . . .. . .. . ..... . ... 3989
HARSHA WM N phy Lawrence NatI Bk Bldg. . . . . 392
Residence 934 Ark ................ .. .. .... 2634
If no answer call .. . .. ......... .. ..... . .. ... 870
Hart H D 1541 Mass .. . . ...... ... .. . .. . .. . 3723-M
Hart Lyle E Haskell Grds . ................. . 2722-J
Harte John A 121 Pawnee .................. 1152-M
Hartell Keith 900 Ohio .. ..... • ..... • .... .. 1927- R
Hartig Emil Mrs 843 Conn ................ . 1741-W
Hartley I W 164!/ Ala ................... 2676-W
Hartman E F 1519 Barker .................. .. 3471
Hartman R B 1932 Ohio .... ....... ... ...... 2619-J
HARTMAN STANDARD SERV STA 1300 Mass . .. 3303
Hartranft Edw 1934 La ... . . ... ... . .. ..... . 2135-W
Hart wick M E RFD 2 . . ... .. . ..... . .. ... 4061-N-13
Hartzell Helen A Mrs 1500 N H . . . . . . . . . . . 3542-R
Harvey Allen H RFD 2 . . ..... ..... .. .... 4098-N-12
Harvey Ed S RFD 2 .. ... ........ • ..... .. . 4084-K-2
Harvey Harold 1423 Ohio . .... ...•.. ........ 2989-R
Harvey Helen Mrs Haskell Grds ......... . .... 1340-M
Harvey J W 1206 N J .. . ........ • . . .. . ... . . . 3990
Harvey Nellie Mrs 6 27 Conn . . .............. . 2784-J
Harvey Pat Miss 1126 Ky ........... • ...... 3127-R
Harvey S R Mrs 1906 R ! . ........ . ... . ..... 2724-R
Harvey Wm 1046 Miss . ...•................ 1137-J
Harwood Emma Mrs 910 La . ... .... ........ .. 1656
HARWOOD'S MARKET 846 Ind .......•........ 226
Harwood Ruth Mrs 832 La .. .. .............. .. 3564
Harwood Winston B 832 La . .. .. .............. 3564
HARZFELDS ladies ready-to-wear 1144 Ind ....... 190
Hase Arthur A RFD 4 . ...... ... ...... .. .. . 1175-M
Hase Esther 1008 N H . ................... . 3282-M
Haskell Institute S City limits
Assistant Boys' Adviser's Ofc Osceola Bg . . .. .. . 3041J
Asst Boys' Adviser Keokuk Hall ..... : . ... . . . 128
Assistant Boys Adviser Tinker Hall . . ..... .. .. 4210
Assistant Girls Adviser Pocahontas Hall . .. ... . . 2106
Assistant Girls Adviser Ti nker Hall ..... ....... 3496
Assistant Girls Adviser Winona Hall . . ........ . . 470
Athletic Office Tecumseh Bg . . . ......... .. .. 1480
Business Office Administration Bg ... .. . ... ..•. 118
Haskell Bakery Curtis Hall ... ................ 230
Haskell Cafe Haskell Grds • .. .. ,i . •• . • . . • • . .• . • 527
Head Student Advisers Tilicum Lodge .. .... . .. . 589
Home Economics Bu ilding Sacajewea Bg ... ..... 693
Hospital ... ............................. . 56B
Power Plant . ............ . .... . .. . ... .. .. 2109
Principal's Office Sequoyah Bg .. . .......... .. 557
Printing Departm~nt .. ......... .. .... .... •938
School Office Sequoyah Hall ... . .... . •• ... ... . 298
Student Dining Room Curtis Hall . .... ......... 695
Superintende nts Office .. . . . ... ............. 304
Teacher's lidqtrs Haskell Grds . ......... . .. .. 3323
Test ing &amp; Evaluation Serv Curtis Hall ......... . 162
Visual Aids Office Haskell Grds . .... ..... . .. . 3469
Vocatnl Training Dept .. . ... ...... .. ....... . 2772

�20

HAS-HIA

LAWRENCE

Hastert Mary Mrs 639 Vt ........... ... .... 1347-R
Hastings A J 524 Fla . ..... .. ......•..... . .3848-W
Hastings Jack 728 Ohio . ..... • ..... • ...... . 3375-R
Hatch Frank 800 Pa . ............•........ 1819-W
Hatchell Vance 843 N 3 .. .. . . . ... . . . • . ..... 2157 -J
Hatcher Everett A 420 Ala .. . . ............. 3477-M
Hatcher Russell 1113 Conn .. .. • ........... . 2423-W
Hatfield A T 1116 Ky ... . ................ . 2138-W
Hatfield-Jackson Oil Co 6 &amp; Locust ..... , .. . .... 1009
Hatfield Otha 2131 Mass ..... , .••.... . . . ..... 1021
Hatfield W W 1539 Vt .................... 3425-M
Hathaway Harold C 2138 Vt . . . . • • • . . . . . . . . . . 953
Hattin Donald 2301 Mass ..... •. ..... . ..... 3523-W
Haug W L 1800 Miss . . .........•.......... 2685-R
Haugh Oscar M 2043 Mass ................. 3667-W
Haun Richard M dentist SOli Mass . ..... . ..... . 204
If no answer call ...... .. .......... • ..... . 2892
Hausherr Bernard L Sunnyside K U ............ 814-W
Hausler W J Jr 1203 Oread . ............... . 1057-R
Hausman Jas J 2341 Mass ..•.............. 2487-M
Hausman Paul 2042 N H ....•....••... . . .. 2266-W
Haverty A A 2024 N H ... . ... ....•... ..... 1554-R
Haverty The lma D Mrs 1937 Ky .. . ... . .. . .. .. 3433-J
HAVERTY'S NINTH STREET MARKET 406 W 9 380
Hawbecker E A Mrs 1625 Edgehill ...... . . . .. 2914-M
Hawk H M 810 Ala .. ..................... 2143-W
Hawk Ralph 2145 N H . .... ...... . . ... . ... 2329-R
Hawkins Archie L Haskell Grds ......... • ..... 2520-R
Hawkins Edw 733 N Y . .... .. ....•......... .. 3007
Hawkins John F 1733 Mass . ......•. . ...... 2802-M
Hawkins W J 1818 Tenn .. . ..... .. ......... . 3440-J
Hawkins Wm 1834 Tenn ................ . .. 3440-W
Haws J L :314 Maine .. ............... . ... . 1743-W
Hay M A 1104 Miss ...................... 1544-W
Hayden Albert C 213 Lincoln ... . ...•... ... .... 3713
Hayden Charlie RFD .3 . ... .. ...... . .... . . .4045-K-3
Hayden Ellis R 1810 La . .. ................. 3228-J

HAYDEN MOTOR SERVICE 612 N 2 ........ ... 346
Hayden Ralph 908 Conn .. ..................1666-M
Hayden Wi ll H RFD 5 . ....... . ...... . .... 4053-K-4
Haydt H M Sunflower Apts .......... ....... 3831-W
Hayes Audrey 820 Ind .... .... ..•. .. ....... 2995-M
Hayes Rutherford W 1306 N J .. . ........ .. . 3016-M
Haynes E L 728 I nd ......................... 1226
Haynes Eugene M 1846 Maine . ...... . .. . ... . 3206-J
Hayaes &amp; Keene Shoe Store 819 Mass ... ....... .524
Hays C M 1238 Tenn .. ...... . ..•.. . ........ . 1220
Hays R Arnold 10.36 N J .. .....•..••..•. ... 2750-R
Hays Russell RFD 1 .................... .. . 1894-M
Hayter Mamie 245 Ill ......... . •..••. ....• . 2867- R
Hayworth Lee Sunflower Apts ............ . .. . 3834-R
Hazlett E E 812 Ill ... ;', ..•............... 2282-M
Head J D 608 Ky .. . ..•..•••.••..••...... 2187-W
Headen Bertha 826 N Y ....•.....••....... 2482-M
Health Bd of-Div of Sanitat ion K U. . • • . . . . . . . . 2700
HEARTH TEA ROOM THE 17 E 11 .. . . ..... :-:-:-1036
Heath Alan 707 w 4 . ... ..... . . .. ..... . .. .. 3521-R
Heatherly Jas K 832~ Mass ........ ........ 1270-M
Heck Alfred RFD 5 . . . . .. .. .....•... .• . . .. 2792-W
Heck Arthur A RFD 5 . . .. .. ......... • .... . 2792-M
Heck Emil Jr RFD 3 .......... ..... ...... . 2434-M
Heck Emil W RFD .3 . .... . ..... ... . ...... . 2434-W
Heck Fred RFD 1 Williamstown .... . . . . .. .. 4043-K-4
Heck Howard F RFD 3 . . ... . ... . ..•..... . 4054-K-2
Heck 0 B 2016 Mass ..................... . 2120-W
Heck Walter F RFD 5 ...................... 2792-J
Heckman Nellie Mrs 10.34 Penn ............. 2241-M
Hedrick A W 1542 Tenn . . .. . . .. .... .... . . .. 1599-J
HEDRICK GEO INVESTMENTS 806 Mass . . ..... . 44
Residence 11.3.3 Emery Rd . ....... . .. .... ... 2961
Hedrick R L 1108 Oregon ..................1910-M
Heeb L J 617 lnd . . .... . ......... • . .. . .. . . .. 3864
Heffner Daniel 1750 Mass .................. 3108-J
Hegeman Alfred RFD 6 ... .. ..... . • ...... . 4072-K-2
Hegeman Harry cafe 411 E 7 . ........ .. ... .. . 3320
Hegeman Lee H 817 N H ...... • .......... . 2865-W
Hegeman Lloyd RFD 2 ... ....... • ..... . .. 4005-K-2
Hegeman Roy .305 W 23 ................... . . . 3826
Hehn Forast V 1942 Learnard ............. .. 341.7 -W
Heider Fritz 505 Ohio . . ... . ..... ... • . ..... 2105
Heilman David H 923 Ohio .... . ... . . . • .. . . .. 2797-J
Hein C J Sunnyside K U . ... .... . .. . .... ..... 873- R
Heine Oti s L 1200 Tenn ... . .. . . . .. ..... . .. . 1632-W

Heinen Agnes 740 La ................ . .... 2349-R
Heinrich Louis 1231 Pa .... • .... .• ........ . 2161-J
Heins Elsie 1325 Ky . .. . ........ .• ... . . . . .. 3897-R
Heitholt Bill 1633 Vt . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . .. 2889-R
Helm J B 1610 E 15 . ....................... 369
Helmstadter Geo A 1125 Vt .. .... . .. . . . . . . . . 2880-J
Hellstrom Walter 527 Perry . . .. . .. . .... • . . . . 2259-W
Heltzel L B 400 l nd . ............. • ........ 1197-R
Helwig Earl R 803 E 11 . . . . . . . . . . ....... . . 1910-R
Hemming Lyle F 1245 R I ... . ..... •. ....... 1699-J
Hemphill Arthur C RFD 5 . ........... • .... 4033-N-3
Hemphill C W Mrs 543 E 19 ............. . ... .3370
Hemphill Chas 1525 Vt . .. ; ......... . .. . ... 2477-W
Hemphill Chester 1741 Ky ......... . ........ 2425-W
Hemphill J C 1241 Tenn . ... .. .. . .. .. . .. ... 2675-R
Hemphill Land &amp; Jnvstmt Co 704 Mass ... . .. ... . . . . 6
Hemphill Thornton A 1900 Learnard . .. .. .... . 2391- M
Henderson Chas L RFD 2 . . . . . ....... . . ... 4006-N-3
Henderson Clarence Leo Jr 646~ W 23 . ....... 1825-R
Henderson Elizabeth 945 Maine ............. .2272-J
Henderson Katie 1305 N J ..•.......••...... 3798-R
Henderson L D 1609 Barker ... . .. • ... . .. . .. 4243-W
Henderson M C 812 Ky . ......•...•••........ 2172
Hendrix Lloyd E 714 Miss .. . ............... 3578-J
Henick Jos 205 E 12 .. .......... .... ...... 2679-W
Henley House 1236 Oread ................... ~
Henriksen Arthur J 120.3 Oread .............. 1057-J
Henry Donald W 925 Mo .... .. ............. 1647-R
Henry Frank E 223 N 4 ... ..•............... . 2257
Henry J B Mrs 815 Mo .. . ... . •...•........... 184
HENRY L LEW atty 729 Mass ................ 1725
Residence 528 Walnut ... . ...•......... . .. . 2366
Henry Martin E 1121 Pa . .. .................. 3123
Henry's Shoe Box 815 Mass .... .••... .. • .... . . .481
Henson Claude RFD .3 ....... . ............. 2354-W
Henson Clifford RFD 5 . .. ..... ............ . 3263-W
Henson J W 1328 N J. . . . . . • . . • . • • . . . . . • . 2624-W
Henson Millie E Mrs 828 Ind .•..•... ... ... : 1312-M
Henton John W 608 w 6 .•.•......•... ..... 3744-W
Hentsch Frank J 1812 Ill .... . ..... .. ....... 1826-J
Hepner Roy J 111.3 Ky ..•.•................ 3997 -J
Hepner Virgil RFD 6 . .. . .. . ... . ... . • . . . . . 4036-K-4
Herbage Dean Mrs 1224 N Y ... ... ... ... . ... 3720-W
Herb's Cafe 730 Mass ........ . ..... .... ..... 2003
Herd Addie Seal Mrs 832 Miss .....••......... 293
Herman D B Jr Sunnyside K U ....•...•..... 3473-W
Herman Geo Sunnyside K U ...... . ......... . 2841-R
Hermes R L phy 4 &amp; Maine .... ... . ..• . . ...... 3975
Residence 1001 W 4 . . ........... . ...... .. .. 398
If no answer call . . . ............•.. . . .... . . 1435
Hernandez Candelaria 808 R I . . . .. • .. ..... .. 2533-W
Herren Cloyd G 3.39 Maple ................. 3254-M
Herren H H 429 Forest .................... 2780-M
Herren Harold 121 Oh io ..•.. . .......••.... 2158-W
Herrington John 832~ Mass ...... . . . ....... . 1424-R
Herriott J C 1701 La ..................... 3142-M
Herschel! C J 710 N 5 . ................•... 2783-R
Hertzler H B Mrs 811 E 11 •........ . •... .. 2148-M
Hess A Lee 920 La . .. .. . . ...... .. . . .. . .. .. 2781- M

HESS ANDY C REAL EST &amp; INS SERV
Standard Life Bg .457
Hess Andy C 1518 Meadow Lane ..... ... ..... . 1620-J
Hess C H 1514 W 9 ............ .. ......... 2744-W
Hess Carl F 503 Ala . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3795-R
Hess Chester RFD 3 . .... . .. . ... . .. • . ... 4023-N-11
Hess E R 718 Ohio . ... . . .. . . • ......... . .. 2536-M
Hess Henry G 938 La . ........ • ...... . .. .. 2521-W
Hess Ora D 914 Ky . .... .. .. ........ •• .... 2695-W
Hess Ralph J 1230 Laura . . .. . .. . .. . .. . . . . . 2216-W
Hess Robt W 1518 Meadow Lane ............ . 1620-J
Hess Wm G 1729 Ohio . . ...... .... .. . .. ... . 3107-M
Hesse C G 1005 W 4 . ............ • .. ...... . . 1746
~esse Florence E Mrs 1027 Miss . .... .• ..... . 763-W
ester Nina 733 Tenn . . . ........ .. • ....... 2251-M
Hetzel Beverage Co 735 N H ................... 158
HETZEL ENTERPRISES 735 N H ..... . ........ 158
HETZEL HEAVY HAULERS 7.35 N H ............ 158
Hetzel Park Jr RFD 2 ........ . . ..... . .. . .4024-K-4
Hetzel Park Sr RFD 2 .. . .. . .... .. .. .• . . . . 4024-K-3
Hetzel Park JIJ 730! Mass ....... • • .. . .. .. .... 3928
Heysinger J D Sunnyside K U .. . .•.... • •... . .. 835-R
Hiatt Pearl Mrs 1142 R I. .. .. . . .. ... . . . .. . . 2162-J

�LAWRENCE
Hibner Don 1510 E 13 ...... ~ · ... .. .. ..... . 3062-R
Hibner S R 645 N 9 . ... .. ............. .... 2146-R
Hicklin Wallace ofc 7 W 8 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 668
Hickock Elizabeth F 724 N Y . .... . . .• •..... . 2482-R
Hickock Herbert 332 Ill ......... ....... .... 2437-R
Hicks Arthur A 730 Walnut •... .. .. ...... .. 1674-W
Hicks Bert E RFD 5 . . . . . . . . . . ... ...... 4073-K-21
Hick~ Chas H 303 Elm ........ • .............. . 310
Hicks G B 210 W 7 .• .. ...• .............. . 1347-W
Hicks Omar Mrs 407 E 10 .... .. .............. 1944
Hicks Walter Jay 1406 Tenn . . .
. . . . . 3770-R
Hiddleston Dewayne G 745 Maine .. . ......... 1804-W
Hiers Gene D Sunnyside K U .. ......... .... . . 835-M
Higginbottom E E 623 Ala ......•..... • .... 1400-W
Higginbottom Lorita 830 Ala ............ .. . 2532-W
Higgins David L paintr 1202 Almira ...... . . . .. . 1456
Higgins Ernest 305 Mills ...............•... 1298-J
Higgins Lewis 1334 N Y . .................. . 3467-J
Higgins Richard 220 N 4 ................... 2386-R
Higgins &amp; Son Decorative Serv 1202 Almira ...... 1456
High Ethel Mrs 938 Ky ..•...... .... ......... 1104
Highsmith R H 739 Ohio ................... 3693-W
Higley Duane 2115 R I ...•. ......... • ........ . 742
Hilburn John D Jr 1142 lnd .. . .....•..... . .. 3929-J
Hildebrand Geo R 700 Ala .................. 2532-R
Hildebrand Glen 2105 Vt . .. ........... ..... 3659-M
Hildebrand Pearl D Mrs 704 Ala ............. 2108-R
Hill A A 303 Lincoln .....••................. 3895
Hill Bernard J 431 Elm .....•••..•. .. ...... 2613-J
Hill Betty Jane Mrs 1345 N Y ............. . 3256-W
Hill C E 1135 Tenn .......•• .....•........ 2602-W
Hill Chas 1230 N J .......... .............. 2271-J
Hill Clifton 1541 Ky . ... .... ... ... , . .... ... 1599-R
Hill Co-op The 1539 Tenn ....••.•...•.•..... . 3691
Hill Creta Mrs 1233 R I ................... 3121-M
Hill Edna A 1423 Ohio ......•...........•.. 2396-R
Hill Howard R 617 W 4 . .... . ............. . 1570-J
Hill Irving W 8 . ........ ........... .. .... .... 116
Hill Jack E 930 Oak .. ... ...•.....•.. ...... 1428-J
Hill Jas G 1933 Ky .. ..................... . 1685-J
Hill John H 536 Locust ... . . ....•.....• •... 2563-M
Hill Justin W 1 ... ..... ................. . .. . 2607
Hill Lawrence D 1715 Vt ................... 2383-J
Hill Leo J 74 7 ~ N Y ............ • ......... 2416-M
Hill Ray 1546 N H ... . ...... ............... . 1221
Hill Rendering Serv 500 Locust. . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . 197
Hill Robt L Sunnyside KU ..........•... .... . 618-R
HillS E 1124 N J ...... ... . .. . .. • .. . .... . 3283-W
Hill Thos 432 Mich ........• .. ............ 1277· W
Hill Wm J Jr 1304 Tenn .. ....... . ... ...... 2183-M
Hills B L RFD 1 . ............. . ... . ... .. 4049-K-3
Hills Leonard RFD 1 . ..... . . . .. .... • .. .. . 4049-K-2
HILLSIDE PH-ARMACY 616 W 9 .... .• • ...... . 1487
Hilner Clarence 190 N 1 . ................. . 3189-R
Hilner Frances A Mrs 1116 Conn .. ......... . 1295-W
Hiltibran Robt C Sunnyside KU .... .......... 1281-R
Hilton Willard 0 516 Ohio .................. .. 1216
Hines Archie 506 N 8 ... •.....•......... ... 2325-R
Hines Blanchard 901 Oak .... .. .. ......... .... 1485
Hines Hugh 918 E 13 .. ......... .. .... .... 2277 -W
Hines Robt 945 R I ... ......•..... ...... . .. 1169-R
Hinkson Guy G 923 Maine ....•....•...... .. 3024-J
Hinshaw S C Mrs 1205 Ky • .................. . 2627
Hinton W H 111 E 23 ... ....... . . • .... . ... 1291-R
Hipp Marjorie S Mrs 105 W 11 ........ ...... 1668-R
Hird Arthur 1101 N H . . .................. . 2850-W
Hird Carl Jr Haskell Grds. . • . ..... .. ...... . 1546-R
Hird Carl Sr 304 E 23 ......•...... ... ..... 2353-M
Hlrd Harold 1142 Conn . . ............ •... . . 2594-M
Hird Homer 337 Johnson .. . .... . • .... • ..... 2657-M
Hird Howard 2021 R I. ......... ..... . .... . 1973-M
Hird Otis Eugene RFD 4 . ..... • ........... 4070-K-3
Hird Robt W 742 Maine ..... .. ......... .... 2306-R
Hirst Warren L 825 Ill. . ......... ... .. ..... 2939-R
Hilt Jas K 1014 Mo ... ..... . ...... . ....... 30B4-J
Hixon Orval M 72H Mass ........ • ..... .. .. 3105-R
HIXON STUDIO 721 Mass . ................. ... 41
Hixson Danl L 708 Ash ..... ..... .....•.... 2177-R
Hixson Ralph 742 Walnut ......... •.. . .. . ... 1180-R
Hladik W B 1929 Ky ............... • ...... 3433-M
Hoar Richard M 1816 Ala .........• • . .. ..... 3142-J
Hobbs E M 1129 Conn ... ...... .. .. • ......... 2976
HobsoA Cloy S 1 Westwood ......... .. ... . .. 3128-M
Hlldder Hall 1115 La .................. ...... 4200

HIB-HOO

21

Hodgden F B 2104 Barker .................... 3023
Hodge Carl 316 Locust .. .... . .... ....... ... 3398-J
Hodge Clarence 737 Elm ..•..........••..... 2601-J
Hodge M R 801 Locust .... ............•... . 2934-J
Hodge Murray 1144 N Y .•....•........... . 3125-J
Hodge W H RFD 4 ........ ..... • . ...... 4096-K-13
Hodge Willard H 818 Locust .. .......... .... 2175-R
Hodges AT 1211 E 13 .. ...... •..... ..... . 3669-R
Hodges Clara Mrs 825 Ky . ...... .. . . .. • .... . 3006-J
Hodges Maurice E 1130 N J ................. . 1093
Hodgson Paul E 1345 Vt ...... •• ...... .. .. . 2912-W
Hodson C N RFD 1 . ............ • ....... 4099-K-21
Hodson Lester L RFD 1. . ... .. ... • ..... . . 4099-K-31
Hoecker Frank E 1503 Haskell ....... • ....... .. 3009
Hoecker Norman W 745 Ill ..... ... . ........ 1395-M
Hoefer Geo 1126 Tenn .. ........... .. •... . .2894-W
Hoertsch ·Jas 322 lnd ..... .. . . . • ..... • ..... 3348-R
Hoffecker G M 629 Mo .... ......•.... .. .... 1505-J
Hoffine E S 1822 Maine ................... 1005-M
Hoffman C W RFD 2 .. . ........ ... .... . . 4064-K-4
Hoffman Effie May Mrs 4'10 Locust . • . . . . . . . .. 3596
Hoffman John A RFD 2 . ..... ........ .. .. 4064-K-12
Hoffman Ralph E 930 Mo ....•..............1811-J
Hoffmann Harry W ofc Insurance Bg . . •......... . . 40
Residence 1540 Barker ...... . .............. 2202
Hoffmann Herbert 938 Conn .•.. ..•••...... . .. 13B4
Hoffmann Selma Haskell Grds ................ 1546-J
Hoffmann Wm E 945 Vt . ........... ....... . 1844-R
Hoffman's Garage 2300 Haskell ..... ........ ... .497
Hogan Alma Mrs 1409 R I. ................. 2670-R
Hogan J M Jr 512 W 8 ......... • .......... 2521-J
Hoglund Barton M 7'11 Miss ...... ••. ... •.. .. 3297-J
Hoglund Harold M 343 Ill . .... ... ....•..... 1566-R
Hogue Norman 1400! La ... .. . . . •. .... •.. . . 2519-J
Hoham John C 1308 R I .. . ..... • .......... 2860-W
Holbeck Carl 1210 R I .... .... .. .......... 1767-W
Holcom A E 924 E 14 . ......... ... ...... .. 3936-J
Hoi com Louie RFD 6 . .. . .. .. ..... . ..... . 4052-N-11
Holcom M B 2133 R I ............ .... . . . . . 1333-J
Holey W E Jr RFD 3 . ..•. ..... . ........ . 4058-N-13
Hollabaugh H E Mrs 1500 N H .. . ... .. .•. ... 3491-W
Holladay Eugene E 507 Elm .......•......... 3221-J
Holladay Gilbert 819 Maple .............. .. 2325-W
Holladay Henry 1300 R I ................... 3121-J
Holladay Jas M RFD 2 ....... • .... . • . ... . 4084-N-2
Holladay John 718 Ash .................... 21n-M
Holladay John E 1222 Conn .......•......... 2465-J
Holladay L M 734 Walnut . .. .............. . 1180-M
Holladay Leonard 424 Locust ....•.....•.. . . 1923-W
Hollands E H 1530 R I ......... .. ......... 3207-R
Holliday Wm L 701 Conn .......•........... 2319-W
Hollingbery H 1512 Vt. ........ .. ............ 1471
Hollingsworth J I Mrs 1645 Tenn .......••... 2490-W
Hollingsworth L R 318 E 23 ................. 1561-J
Hollingsworth R F 928 E 19 . .. ..... ....... .. 2384-J
Hollingsworth R J 1339 Tenn . .... • . .... .... ,2955-J
Hollister Bill 1013 N H..... . ..... . ..• ..... 3568-W
Holloway Fred 1809 Ky ...•......... ..•.... 2866-W
Holloway H H 831 Tenn . .....•............. .. 1392
Holloway Margie 1345 Del ................ .3894-W
Holloway T K 1929 N H .. . . ...•........... 3527-M
Holloway's Pool Hall 7351 N H ...... • ........ . 2097
Holmes C B 741 Tenn .............•••...•... 3581
Holmes J W 1505 Ky . . . ................... . . 1004
Holmes Jas R Mrs 1729 Mass ....... . ....... 3546-W
Holmes John S Inc E 23 .. . .................. . 582
Holmes John S 801 Miss ........•. ... .•.... 2210-W
HOLMES &amp; PECK ins 1 E 7 ........... ..... ... . 35
Holmquist Bus 1237 Del ... ..... .... .. . ... . ... 181
Holt John J 1347! Mass.... ... . ..... . ... 3417-W
Holton Gloria 615 Ohio... . . . . . . . ......... 3675-J
HOLT'S PHARMACY 1347 Mass .......... . ..... 234
Holtzclaw Henry F 2207 N H.......•........... 734
Holuba L G 2139 Learnard .................. 2762-J
Holyfield Jas 1226 Conn ...... ..•... .••. ... 1241-W
Home Management House K U Campus .......... 1535
Hood Geo J 1505 Crescent Rd . .......•..... . 2409-M
Hooke J A Mrs 1025 W Hills .....•...• ..... .. 759-R
Hooper E R Mrs 1443 Alumni Place Dr .... . ... 3960-R
Hooper Viola Mrs 1029 Tenn ..... .. ... . •. .. . 2299-J
Hoopes Helen R 1801 Miss ...... ........... .. . 1882
Hoover C M 33&amp; Johnson ........ . .....•... . 2657-R
Hoover Gerald 2020 Learnard ... . . .... • ..... 2362-W

�22

HOO- HUT

LAWRENCE

Hoover Kelvin 2240 Vt .. ....... . ......•..... 2121
Hoover Lloyd E 1515 R I .. ........ . •. . •. . .. . 858-J
Hope Jos Mrs 1233 Or~ ad . . ... • ............ 2309-W
Hope Lela M Mrs 1900 Vt ... .••.• .. • .... . . 3338-M
HGpe Mildred B 725 Conn . .... .. . ... . ...... . 1353-J
Hopkins E C 1521 N H .. ..... . .. . ..... .. .. 1619-M
Hopkins Ednah 7 32 Ky . . . . .. . •• ........... 2583-M
Hopkins Hall 1011 l nd . .. .. .... ............ . . 1768
Hopkins Luci lle 831 N Y . . . . . . . . . .. . ...... . 3002-J
Hopkins Robt L 321 Maiden Lane . .... • ....... 3759-J
Hopkins Ruth 1927 N H . .... . .......•.... 3527-W
Hoppe Mary L 181&amp; Mai "e .... . ... .. . ..... 1005-W
Hopper C F 2115 Barker
. . . .. ......... . 659
Hopper's Tune-Up &amp; Elec Serv 512 E 9 .. . ..... . . 779
Horacek Leo 1845 Ill
. . ... ... . . . •.. . 1526-J
Horak Henry G Sunnyside K U . .. .. .... . . . . .. 3232-M
Horkmans 0 M 1317 Ky . .... . . .. . ... . . . ... .. 692
Horn W 0 60 1 Walnu t . . .. .. .. .. .. . .... .. 3243-M
Hornberger Henry RFD 3 . . . ... ....... . . . 4062-K-11
Hornberger Kenneth H 1801 Ky ......•..... . 2281-M
Hornberger Wm L 767 Grant . . . . ....•....... 1751-W
. ...... . ...•... . 3033-J
Horr W H 1030~ Mai n~
Horrell Frank RFO 3 Baldwin .. . . • ...• .. . . 4084-K-12
Harten J E 521 Li ncoln .. .. . . . .. . . ... .. ... . 1778-W
Horton W A Dr RF O 1 . . .. ...... • ....... 4067 -N-2
Hosford C B 2245 Learnard .. .... . • .•........ 1458
HOTCHKISS AGCV 23 &amp; La . . ... •• .... . . ... .. . 520
Hotchkiss Geo C 633 l nd
.. . .. ...•....... . 2870
Hot ton Nicholas 2224 Barker . . . .. ..... • .. .. 2228-W
Hough C T 945 Ohio
. . ....•. •• ... . ..... . 1289
Hough N M Mrs 742 Ohio ... . . .• . .. • .. .... . 2921-R
Hough W T 941 Ky ..... . .. . ............. 1723-W
Houghton Edna A Mrs 815 Ar k .. ... . .. . .... . 2612-J
Houghton H W 940 La
. ...• . ......•..•. .. 712
. ..• .. .•....... 2669-R
Houghton R N 1738 Mass
Hougland Sherman F 1309 Del. ..•........ . .. 2180-R
Houk Clarence 2150 Vt . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2931
Houk H P 1146 Tenn ... . .. . . .. . .......... 2234-M
Houk Harry 1618 R I . ....... . ...... . ..... 2506-M
Houk Jack A 1338 N H ....... . .. . . . . . ..... 2335-R
Houk Jas W Mrs 161 5 S Crescent Rd .......... . 1053
Houk Mary Mrs 211 6 N H
.... .. 1625-J
Houk's Barber Shop 9 24 Mass
... .. • ...... 3603
HOUSE OF CHINA &amp; GLASS 906 N H .... . ... .. . 660
House Elizabeth E Mrs 3 4~ Lyons .. . .... ...... . 274l
House Ernest E 444 Lincoln .. . . . ... • ...... . 1139-W
House J W RFO 3 .. .. . . .. ...... . . ..• .... 4062-N-2
House L C 407 Elm . . . . .. . . . • . . .•..•.... 2613-M
House May Mrs 628~ ~2ss . .. . .... . •.... .. • . . 3867
House Robt E Mrs 800 Oh•o . • ... . •. .•. .. . .. 3017-W
House Stanley T 1911 R 1 .. .... • ...• • . • • .. . 29n-J
House T E 228 Locust . . . . . ...... ..•. •..... 2134-M
Houser El son 439 Elm . ... . . .. .... . . . .... . 2314-J
Houser Leroy 616 W 17 . . ... ...... .. .. ..... 2661-W
Houston L H 1347 N H .. . . ..•..•..•.••. .. . . 2558
Housworth Lloyd 632 N H . .....•...•...... . 2983-R
Housworth N L 1339 Del .. . ..•....•...... . 1081-W
Howard Alfred 1835 Tenn . ... . .... . .... .... 3241-M
Howard C F 1023 Vt. . . . . ...... . ... . ...... 1447-W
Howard Esther Mrs 7 46 N Y . .......••.•.... 2443-J
Howard Harold 445 lnd .
. . . •.. .... ... . . 2128-R
Howard Imogene Mrs 1916 Barker .......... .. . . 3777
Howard J E RFO 2 ........... . .. . .. . . . . 4069-N-2
Howard John 521 Wis . .. ........ . .•...... . 2510-J
Howard Lonni e 223 N 7 ... .. . . • . ..•..••... 2179-J
Howard Marie Mrs 1943 R I . ..........•... . 3239-J
Howard Mildred Mrs 420 Mich .. . ....• .••. .. . 1539-J
Howard Nelson E 1105 La . ....• . ........ .. . . 1062
Howard Paul E 641 Mai ne
. ......•....... 3671-W
Howard Ralph R Mrs 643 Tenn . ..... . .. .. . . . 3267-W
Howard Robt C Bismarck Grove .... . ..... . .. 1709-W
Howard Walter Jr 500~ Mo . ..... . ..•.• . . . .. 2867-M
Howard Wm A 1701 W 6 .. ..•.............. 3577-J
Howe C F 1038 Tenn ... .. .. .. • . .• . . • . . . . ... 4269
Howe Chas RFD 6 . . ... . . . .. . .• .. . .. • . ... 4008-N-3
Howe Chas D 639~ Mass . ..••... .... •. .. . . . 2226-M
Howe J L Rev 1700 Tenn . . . . • .. • . . .•. .... .. 1474-J
Howe Lloyd R 946 N J . ........... . ...... 1737-R
Howell Jas D Jr 213 W 14 .. . .. . ........ .. . 2972-M
Howell Jas P Haskell Grds ......•....•..•.. . 2642-R
Howell John RFO 6 . .. . . .. .... .. . ...... . 4048-K-12
Howey R S 917 Ky . .... . ..•...........•. . 2166-W
Howie J L Mrs 13'12 Ky . .... ..•.. •.•. ....• .. 1889

Howsmon H W 1234 N H ..... . ......•.•.... 3121-R
Hubbard Chuck RF D 1 . . . . ..... .. . .. . ..... 4044-K-2
Hubbell R 219 Lincoln ... . . .... .. . . . . .. . . . . 3190-J
Huckaby Jewel J 1313 Conn .. ... . .... .. .... 1024-J
Huddleston Arthur E Mrs 1516 N H ..... . ... . 2232-R
Huddleston E F 735 Ohio .. .... .. ..... . ..... . 2211
Hudson M F 220 7 Barker . . .........•• . •...... 2207
HUDSON M F CO soo N H .•..... . ....... .. . . . 825
Hudson Merlin 1932 Ky . • •.••.••••••.••.• . 3250-R
HUDSON OIL CO 740 N 2 . ... . ......•.•..... . 2015
Hudson Ret a 1046 R I. . . ... . . . . .. . ... . .. . . 1841-M
Hughes A M 1312 Mass . . .. . .. .. . . .. ..... . . . 3849
Hughes 8 Q 21 06 Ohio . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1543-J
Hughes Benny H RFD 1 . ... . .. . . . ... ... . 4099-K-13
Hughes Francis G Mrs RFO 2 . . .... .. ... . .. 4075-K-3
Hughes J E 1208 N J .. . .. . ..... . . .. • . . .. .. . 3526
Hughes J W 227 Perry . .. . ............ .. .. 2331-M
Hughes Leth na 732 Al a . ... . . .. . . ... • . .. . . . 1610- R
Hughes LouisE 642 La . . .. . . . . . •. .. .. .. . . . 1960-W
Hughes Thos W 1032 Ky ....... . ... . . .. . ... 1190-R
Hulce I rvin 330 Mich . . . ......... . ..•...... 2227-J
Hull E C 806 E 14 .. ... . ....... . . ... ..... 1069- J
Hull John G 919 N H .. . . .. . .......... . . ... . . . 148
Hull M V Mrs 40 6 E 12 ................. . . . 2539-R
Hull Robt 1423 Ohio .... . .. . ........... . .. 2396-M
Hull V E 1308 Ky .. .. .. . .. .. . . . • . ... . .... 1552- R
Hulteen A Geo 1710 Learnard . . . ...... ... ... 1865-J
Hult L loyd Sunnyside K U .. ... . . . . .... . . ... . 705-W
Hults D S atty Jayhawker Bg . . . .......• • . . .. .. . 16
Residence 2124 N H .. . .. ........ .... . . .... 1367
Hults &amp; Postma attys Jayhawker Bg ..... . .. ... . . . 16
Hultz Calep 416 Mich
... . . .. . . .......... 2104-W
Humfeld Neill H 91 9 lnd . . . . ... . ...... . .. . 1818-M
Hundley Chas 1412 Oakhill .... ... .. . .... .. . 2286-M
Hundley 0 E RFO 4 . . .. .. .. .. ..... . ....... 832
HUNDLEY'S CAFE 838~ Mass . ....... • . . ..... 3038
Hungerford H B 1503 Crescent Rd . .... . .... . ... 1863
Hunn Harry L 2027 Ky ... ... ... . . . . .. . .... 1540-J
Hunn Herman Jr Sunnyside K U .... .. . • .... . . 3632- R
Hunn Wess Mrs 1400 Prairie . . ... .. . . • . . . . . . 2432-R
Hunsaker Lloyd E 1915 Barker ...... . ... . . . . 2854-W
Hunsinger Chris 1021 Tenn . . ... ... ......... .. .585
Hunsinger Fred 612 Ky . ...... ... ......... 2653-R
Hunsinger Geo Mrs RFO 2 ... . . . . . . ...... . 4037-K-3
Hunsinger Guy C 309 Maiden Lane . . ...... . . . 3759-R
Hunsinger Harold 1304 N Y . ..•••• •• .• •..• .. . 2449
Hunsi nger Lucy Mrs 1132 N Y . . . .• •... . . ... 3149-M
HUNSINGER MOTOR CO 922 Mass .....•........ 12
Hunsinger W C 1136 lenn ......•. .. ...•.... . . 2871
Hunsley Perry 1231 La . . . ...... . ... . ... .... 2917 -R
Hunt A G 824 Ark . ......... . .. . .. . ....... . 799-R
Hunter A F 1609 Vt ....................... 2173-J
Hunter AI 808 Ala ......• . . .... . ...... ... . 1730-J
Hunter Albert 2106 Barker . ...... .. .. .•. . . . .. 2964
Hun ter Anna L Mrs 1217 R I ..•..•.•....... 2514-W
Hunter Elmer F 1741 Mass • ..•..•....•..... 1469-R
Hunter H M 523 Elm ... .. .. .•.. •...... ... .969-W
Hunter Lauren A 614 E 12 ............• . ..•.. 2864
Huntsman Ted ofc 646 Mass .•... ... .•.•. . ... . .. 10
Hunzicker Carl J RFD 1 . • . . .. ....•.• . . •.. 2847-M
Hunzicker Otto H 2045 Vt . . ...••.•.. • ...... 2735-W
Hurlbert Victor C 1140 Ohio . .. .. . .... .. . .. . 1603-W
Hurlburt Earl R 1319 Summit ..... . •........ 2284-M
. . 3461
Hurley Earl R 184 6 Ala. . .
Hurley LeaRoy RFO 4 . . . .. .. ... . • . .. . . . 4041-K-11
Hurrelbrink Milton Mrs 832 Ohio ... .... .. . . .. 1371-R
Hursh Frank W 1205 Oread ... . . . . .. • ....... 4201-M
Hurst Hattie 1725 Tenn . .. .. .. . . . . .. ..... . . 2246-J
Hurwitz S W 1745 La ..... . ..........•..... . 3657
Hurwitz Saml 815 Ky .. . . ......... • ..•.... .. 1464
Husband M W 1419 N J .. . .. . • .. . . . . . . ... . 2828-W
Husted C G RFO 3 ......... • ... . .. .... . .4091-N-3
Husted Clyde RFO 3 . . ...... • . . .... . ... .4012-N-12
Husted Elmer RFD 1 ... ... .... .... . . . . . 4039-K-11
Husted Geo W 16 W 14 . ..... . ...... . ..... . 698-W
Husted R F 202 N 5 .. . . .•. . .• . ..... .. . .. .. 2171-J
Huston John C 2008 Vt . . . ...•............ . 2358- R
Hut The 5 20 w 23 .. ... . .. . ......... . . .. .... 3601
Hutchinson R B ocu list 917 Mass .. .. .. .. .. .... 1235
Hutchinson R B Dr 916 Ohio .. .........•...•. . 2621
Hutchinson Willard 1005 Ky . . . .. ....•. .. . . . 3946-W
Hutchison Geo I 1332 Mass . ...•..• .. • .... . . 3223-W
Hutchison Mildred 1018 Vt . . . .. ........ . . . . 2326-R

�LAWRENCE
Hutson W G Eldridge Hotel ................ .. .. 906
Hutt Ed F 1420 Tenn . . . ...• . • .. ..•. ...... .. . 902
Hutton Josephine J 2028 La .. .....•....•... 3195-M
Hutton W Weeber Jr 2229 W Dr . ....•... .... . . 3098
Huxtable M J Jr WREN 69 . . ....... ..... ... 3077 -R
Hyatt Gladys Mrs 1101 Mass . . ..... . ..... . . 1153-W
Hybskmann E W 1915 R I . ....... . • ........ . 2774-J
Hyder Clyde K 2201 N H .. . .. .. ..... .... .. 2150-W
Hyre Edith 1145 R I. ................ . .... 2786-W
Hyre F E 10)2 Tenn . . . ..... . ........... . . . . 1373

Ice J T 1204 N Y .. .... .. ........ . ........ 3281-R
Ice Martin F 1157 E 15 .. . ....... . .. ...... . 1075-J
Ice Robt 1705 Bullene .. . ...•. . . ..... . .. • .. 2384-R
ICE &amp; STORAGE CO 616 Vt . ........ ...... .... 48
Ice W A 1817 Ark . . . ... . . . . .... . . • ..... . 2682-M
Ice W T 12 &amp; Brooks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .. 3131-M
l eks Glenna 1541 Ky .. . . .. . . . . ... . . ...... . 1414- M
leks Malvin W Mrs 1217 Pa .. . .. ....... • ... . 2271-R
leks Wm 1100 w 6 .. . ............. . ...... 2147-J
Ihrig Howard 1231 Dread .................. 3427-W
Iliff Jessie 914 La . .... .... . ... . . ....... . . 2915-R
l mel 0 B 2200 Ohio . . ......•............. 2971-W
!nee E L Mrs 9 45 E 19 ..... .... . .. .. . .... . 2664-J
!nee J W oil 1729 Vt . . . .. .. . . ... . .. . .. . ... . 2486
INDEPENDENT LAUNDRY &amp; DRY CLEANERS
Cash &amp; Carry 19 0.3 Mass ..........•... . .. . .. 886
Downtown Plant 740 Vt . . . .... ...... ..... ... 432
INDEPENDENT MARKET 1000 N J ............. 577
India Elevator E 23 ... .. . ....... .. .... . . .... . 117
India Schl 400 E 23 . ......•............... . . 3961
Ingalls John 1714 W 6 ............... • .. ... 1581-R
Ingalls Leta A 913 Conn ...................1648-M
Ingels Paul 1535 Vt ..... ..•.. . .. ........... . 1524
Ingham Harold G 1714 Ill ........ ......... . 2330-R
Ingle Orville E 1201 Prospect . ..... . .. . ..... 2806-R
Ingle Oscar 810 Ky . ...................... 2566-M
Interstate Transit Lines See Greyhound Lines .. . ... 707
Jnverarity Nell 908~ Mass . ... . .. ..... . • .•... . 1837
Joerger L W Haskell Grds ... .• •• .... . ...... 1422-W
Ireland B C auto agcy RFD 3 .. .... . . ... . .. .. .. 3005
Ireland Edw N 7 . . . . . ......... .•. ..•. . •... 1101-R
Ireland H A 1341 Strong ..... .............. 3493-M
Ireland Irma 1035 N Y . ...... . ... ...... ... 3149-W
Ireland Jas 231 Perry . . . .. . . . ... . .......... 2331-R
Ireland Nannie Leffard 809 N Y . . .. . . . .. .... . 1819-R
lrland Lawrence W 925 Del. ...... . ..• .. .... 2428-W
Irving Lula Mrs :323 Conn
. . .... . 2698-R
Irving N G 1323 N Y . ... .. ...•.. . ....• . .. . 3054-R
Jrwin •C E 622 Ohio . ......... ..• .......• .. 2209 -M
ISAACS FRED R pny 715 Vt ................. . 180
Residence 1600 E 23 . ............ . ........ 1824
If no answer call ........ ...•.............. 870
Isaacson Lee E 2241 Tenn .............. . ... 2629-J
Jse John 1208 Miss .... .. • ..... •... ....... . . 1595

J
Jackman Franklin C 71.3 La ...........•.... .. . 1621
Jackman R C 625 Ohio . ........ . . ..•..... .. . 490
Jackson Andrew 901 Mich . .. .. . . .. . . . . . .... 2643-R
Jackson Bonnie 212 W 7 .... . .. . . • • ......... . 3868
Jackson Carrie Mrs 711 Maple ... ...... • .. .. 1751-M
Jackson E N 1700 N H .... . .. . . . . ..... ... . 1380-W
Jackson Eugene RFD 5 . . . . . . . . .. ..... .. . . 3790-M
Jackson Forrest A atty Lawrence Natl Bk Bg ... . . . 327
Residence 1917 Ohio .......... ....... .... . 1349
Jackson G N Mrs 901 Mo . . ... .. ... ...... .. 1763- M
Jackson Harvey 1229 Haskell ....... . . • .... . .. . 3295
Jackson Jas M 905 R I ... .. .. . . . . .. • .. ..... .. 909
Jackson L M Mrs 44 7 Ohio .. . . ..• . ... .• .. . . 1537-M
Jackson Pearl 782 Maple .... .. ...... . ...... . 1177
Jackson Prisci lla Mrs 746 N J . . .. • . ........ 2471-W
Jackson Rose Mrs 1320 Ky .. . .... • . ... . .... 1552-W
Jackson Ryland 832 Mai ne .. . . ........ • . . . . 2307-M
Jackson Thos R 603 Li ncoln . .. .... • . . . .. ... 1 282-W
Jackson Thos R Jr 420 N 9 ............. . ... 3083-R
Jacob Steve 507 La .. . .. ..• .. ... • • ... •. . .. 143.3-J
Jacobs Arthur R 850 Maple ............... . 2990-M
Jacobson Arvid D 2033 Ohio .. ..... • .. .. .... 3698-R
Jacoby Kenneth H 1809 Mass ..... • .. .. ... .. 3460-W
Jacques B E real est 1945 Ky . ....... • ... . . .. . 1444

HUT-JOH

23

JACQUES REALTY CO 927! Mass . ••........... 414
Jaedicke Francis Mrs 638 Ohio ..... . .. . • .... . 2966-J
Jaeger Robt W 1535 N H .. . . .............. 1906-W
Jah ne Mabel 1137 Pa . . ... .. ...... . . .. . ... . . 3623
Jahns F H 221 N 5 .................... . .. 2171-M
Jaimes Joe 509 E 12 .. .................... 3467-W
James A C 440 La . ... . .................. 1593-W
James Arthur E RF D 3 . . .............. . .. 4012-K-3
James B F 91 6 Conn ...... ....• .•. ..... .. 3890-W
James Bonnie 925 N Y . ...........•..•.... .. 3124
James Clarence W 914 Vt. . ... ... . .. . ...... 2568-W
James Clifton 821 M1ch . ................... 1049-M
James E L 501 N 2 . ................... .. 2134-W
James Elmer J RFD 3 .......... . .. . . . . . 4057-K-11
James Lafe 1500 ft I. . . .... . ................ 3089
James M H 821 R 1 .
. . . . .....• .. .• .•...• . 1641
JAMES RADIAT OR SHOP 300 Locust . ..... . ..... 888
James Vernon D 642 La . ...... ........ • . . . . . . 3787
James Wm 715 Mich . .. . .. .. .... ... ... . .. . .. 1077
Jameson Ed 1202 Ky . . .. .. .. ............. 2848-M
Jameson Lloyd 637 Vt . . .. ............ . .... 3117-J
J amison Ethel C 535 Maine ... . . .... • ....... 1799-R
Janeway Ag nes Mrs 931 La . ............... . 1068-M
Janeway Earl F RFD 3 . ..... . ......... . . . 4046-N-3
Janeway Marlene ll05 Ky ........... . .. .. . . 3454-J
Jason J ulius J 1201 Pa . . ....... .. .. . ..... 4242-M
Jayhawk Billiard Parlor 719 Mass ..••. . •....... 2044
Jayhawk Cafe 1340 Ohio
. ......... .. ... 1156
JAYHAWK CLEANERS 626 W 9 . .. . .. .• .. . . .... 123
Jayhawk Constr Co RFD 1 ...... .. ..... • . .. ... . 251
Jayhawk Co-op 1014 Ky . ... . . ......... .. ..... . 205
Jayhawk Court RFD 3 . . .. ............ . ....... 619
JAYHAWK CREAMERY 834 Vt ... . .. .. .. ... .... 182
Jayhawk Grocery 1342 Ohio . ....••.•...... . .... 242
Jayhawk Motors
Sales &amp; Serv 702 Vt. . .............. • .. .. ... 639
Used Car Lot 10 &amp; N H . .. .. .. ... .........•. 294
Jayhawk T-V &amp; Applnce Serv 18 E 9 ..... ..... .. 745
Jayhawker Theatre 646 Mass . .. ........ .... .. .. 10
Jefferies W D 9 46 La .. .. . .. .. ........ .. . 3246-M
Jeffrey Grace 908~ Mass . ...• • . ....• . ..... . 3641-J
Jeffrey H W 714 N H . .. .. .... ..... . ...... 2511-M
Jeffries Rollo 630 N 5 . .. . . ...•.... . ..... .. 119.3-J
Jeffries Russell 843! N H ..................1735·R
Jeffries W R RFD 4 .. ..... . ............. 4096-N-3
Jell a Leonard 412 W 9 •. .... . .....•.. .. . . . 2921-J
Jellison D J RFD 2 . .. . .. .. .. . . .. . . . ... . . 4055-N-3
Jellison Earl 1205 R I .. ..........•..•..... 2149-R
Jeltz Chas 1304 Pa . . . .. .. . .. . ...... ... ... .. 1261
Jenkins E 821 N J . .. .. ... .... . .. . ...... .. 1666-W
Jenkins Earl R 307~ W 23 ................. 1883-W
Jenkins Frank 815 N J ......... .............. 2333
Jenkins H W Mrs 1301 W Campus Rd . .. .. ..•. .. . 885
Jenkins Irvin 1201 N Y . . . ....• . .. • . . ..... . 2407-J
Jenks Geo F Sunnyside K U ................ 1957-W
Jennings A K 1222 R I . . .. ...... . ....... . . . 3643-J
Jennings Douglas F 533 Ohio . ..... .... .• .. ... .,2992
Jennings E Geo 1528 N H .................. 1146-J
Jennings Kenneth 223 7 R I. . ................ 1902-J
Jenny Wren Sales Co RFD 1. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 699
Jensen Andrew 1120 R 1 ....... ....... .... 2893-W
Jensen Jens P 600 La .. ........ .. ...... .... . 2883
Jensen Vera Mrs 1931 Tenn ..... ... ... . ... . 1747-J
Jenson lngvart 806~ Mass .. .... . ... . . ... . .. 1918-M
Jerome Case 805 R I ... ........ .. .. ... .... 2456-M
Jerome Newton E 916 Ill . . ............ .. ...... 815
JEROME PIANO CO 91 6 Ill .. . .. ............. . . 815
Jessepe Lester L 1220 N Y . ..... . . •• ..... .. . 1654-J
Jessip Roger L 1929 N H .. ..... .. .... . .... 3152-W
Jester L E Mr s 927 La . .. .. . . .. .. . • ....... . 1068-J
Jeter Lest er Mrs 1043 l nd . ... . . ..... .. .. .. .. . 1342
Jetmore H A 1126 N H . ................. . .. . 3309
Jewell Margaret E Mrs 1023 Ky ...•......... 2911-J
Jewell Ross L Sunflower Apts . .. . . . • .. . ..... 3832-R
J ewett B C RFD 6 .. ... .. . .. . . . .... ... . . 4048-N-3
Jewett J M 529 Ohio . . . . .. . .. . .. . ... .. . . . 2370-M
Jimenez John 1415 N J . ..... . .. ... . . . ..... 2828-M
Jimenez Luis 1224 N J .. .. ... •. . . . . .• . .... 2271-M
Jim's Dog House 627 Mass . ........ . ...... .. .2096
Jim's Drive-In 732 N 2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2046
Jochim Kenneth 1644 Stratford Rd ..... . .. . .. 3511-M
Joerg Ernest M ll31 R I . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3455-R
Johanning Otto L RFD 4 .. .. . .. ... .. •• . . .. 4070-N-3

�24

JOH-KAN

LAWRENCE

John's Novelty Co 1014 Mass ..... . . .. • ..... . . 1099
Johns Sanford 2226 N H . .......••........3791-M
Johns W H Mrs 615 Ohio .. ... . .....•.....•. 3675-R
Johns Walter A 1846 Barker .......•......... . 2248
Johns Walter T 1036 Conn . ........•....... . 2575
Johns Will Jr Mrs 1946 N H .....•.....•.... .777-J
Johnson Albert E 23 E 11 . ...•.. • .... • .... 3568- R
Johnson Arthur Mrs 438 Elm . . . ............ .. 1136
Johnson Arth ur T 1008 Conn •....••• • . . . . .. 2298-M
Johnson Birdie Mrs 642 N H . .. . •......... .. 1.335-R
JOHNSON C B phy 1 w 11 . .. . . ........... . ... 275
Residence 1616 S Crescent Rd ...••....... . ... 833
If no answer call ... ....... . .............. . 870
Johnson C E 510 w 6 .... .........••..... . . . 1731
Johnson C E Mrs 1111 Ky .. ...... . ... • .. . . . 3454-W
Johnson Chas E Sunnyside K U ......... . .. . . 1997-M
Johnson Claudine Mrs 1615 W 5 .. . ..... . .... 1086-R
Johnson Clyde RFD 2 .. .... . . . ...... .... . 4061-K-4
Johnson Don 306 Maine ...... ... ..•...•... . 1566-W
Johnson Ed RFD 2 ..... ...... ... . .. . . ... 4061-K-3
Johnson Erma 1108 Pa .... . .. . • •....... .. . 3229-J
John son Ernest M 1810 Ala ............ . ... 2418-M
Johnson Eugene 717 Maine . ..........••.... 1567-J
Johnson Fred E 808 Maine .. . . .. • •.•.••..... . 935
Johnson Fred Eugene 524 Lincoln ... • . . .. ..... . 1403
Johnson Fred W 1724 Barker .. .......•..... .3409-W
Johnson H D 1325 Mass .. .. .. .. . . ........ . 3355-M
Johnson H T 319 E 19 .. . ... . ..... . ...... . 1605-J
Johnson Harold C 160H Tenn . ........ . . ... 1398-M
Johnson Herbert G RFD 6 . ....... ..... .. . . 4052-N-3
Johnson Irving S Sunnyside KU .. . . .. . . . ....... 705-J
Johnson J M 1001 R I
. . . . . ...... .. . 1:303
Johnson Johannah 1341 W Campus Rd . .. .... . 3695-M
Johnson Kenneth N 630 lnd
.. . . . . ...... 3585-W
Johnson L R arch Lawrence Natl Bk Bg • . . . . . . . . . 82
Residence 1017 Ala ..... . ... . .. .. . .... ... 2547-J
Johnson Len nis RFD 2 . . . . ... . ... . . .. ... . 4061-K-13
Johnson Lewi s Eldon 1735 Leamard . ........ . 2780-J
Johnson Lincoln 741 Grant . . .. . . ........... . 1751-R
Johnson Max E 2001 Ohio ... .. ...... .. .... . 3177-R
Johnson Mildred Mrs 1100 E 19 .... . .... .. . 2851-W
Johnson N C Mrs 1211 Ky .. . ............•.... 3428
Johnson Norman 421 Mich . . . ............. . . 2104-R
Johnson Oscar 946 Pa . . ................. 2484-R
Johnson Perry Mrs 719 Mich . ........... . . . 2970-R
Johnson R A 941 Tenn
.. . .. .... ... . .. .. . 2251-R
Johnson R E Mrs 21 Winona . . ..... • ..... .. . 2266-J
Johnson R R 610 Ohio ... ....... . .. .. . . . .. . 3378-W
Johnson Ray T 633 Mo ... ... . . •• ... . • .. . .. 1505-M
Johnson Rex L 917 R I. .. .. ..... . .. .... . . .. 1859- R
Johnson Robt E 601 W 23 . ... ... .... .. • . . . . 2629-M
Johnson S A 815 Elm
. . . . ........... . ... 2460
JOHNSON SERV GROC 41'6 E 9 . ... . . ... .. . . .. . 167
Johnson Sidney M Sunnys•de KU . .. • ......... 2958-J
Johnson Stanley L 1045 Ky . . . . ... • .. . ..... 1658-R
Johnson Vernon 1518 W 6 .. . . . . ... . . ..... .. 2719-W
Johnson Wm R RFD 6 .. .... . . .. . . . . . .... 4035-K-13
Johnson Wm Savage Mrs 1509 Crescent Rd. . . . 2116
Johnston AT Mrs 914 N H • . ..•............ 2833-J
Johnston Earl 1324 Del .• •. .. .• . ........... . 1314
Johnston Gertie K Mrs 1112 N J . .. . •• . ... ... 255&gt;J
Johnstone Quintin 1740 Vt .. . ... . . .. ..... .. . 1881-J
Jolliffe Hall 1505 Ohio ..................... .. . 994
Jolly F G Mrs 1920 Tenn . ............... •. 1034-W
Jones Arthur 811&gt; E 14 . .................. . . 854-R
Jones Arthur 615 Ohio ...... • .. . ......... . 3675-W
Jones Bess B Mb R I .. ......... . ......... .. 2678
Jones Byron L 1141 Ky . . ..... • . . ....... ... 1043-R
Jones Chas E RFD 2 ............ . ..... . . 4061-N-21
Jones Chester G 1729 Mass ... • .. . .. ... .... 3583-W
Jones Chuck RFO 1. .. ...... ..... . •. .... . . 1774-M
Jones Eli 637 N 3 . . . ... . . . .. . . .. . . • ..... . 3159-W
JONES FARM SUPPLY E 23 . ..... . .. . ... .. .. .469
Jones Frank E 1140 E 13 . . .. . . ...... . .... . .. 1958
JONES H PENFIELD phy 4 &amp; Maine .. ..... . . . . 3975
Residence 721 Tenn .......•... . •.. . • ... . . . . 235
If no answer call . . .. .... . ............. .... 870
Jones Haydn E 1705 Ky ....... . .. . .. .• .... . 2817-R
Jones- Henry Lee 515 Fla . . . .....•....•.... . 1572-R
Jones Herbert L 1242 Prairie .........•..... 2476-W
Jones I J Mrs 1328 Ohio . ... . ..... • ....••... . 3741
Jones J D 715 Ark .. ... .. ................. 2744-R
Jonts J 0 1642 Miss . . . .. ...... • ........... 778-R

Jones Jessie A Mrs 1037 Tenn . .. . • .. .. . . ... 2734-W
Jones K R 1041 Tenn .. ... . ........ . .... .3110-M
Jones L Martin 1704 Miss ... . ...... • . ... .. . 3107-J
Jones L W 945 ~ Ky . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. • .... 2166-M
Jones Lena G 1113 Vt . . ...... .• . " . . . ...... 2481-W
Jones Lucille Mrs 218 Ala . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 737 -J
Jones M E 1323 Ky . . ..... .. .. . . . . ..... . 3897-W
Jones Maggie Mrs 1220 N J .. . . .... . ..... .. 2271-W
Jones &amp; Manahan phys 4 &amp; Maine . ..... • ... . ... 3975
Jones Mary Mrs 1223 Prairi e .. . .. .. .... .. ... 2806-J
Jones Margaret N 815 Ala ... • ... . .. .. . .. . . 1417-J
Jones Ogden S 22b Park ...... . ........ .. .. 2293-M
Jones Oren 1810 La ... ... . .. .. . . •• ... .... 3225-W
Jones Pearl Mrs 715 N Y .• . ... •• . ... • • . . . .. 1691-J
Jones Peter 1841 Ky , .. . ....... . .. . ...... ... 2213
Jones Quentin S Haske ll Grd s... . . . .... . .... . 2440-M
J ONES SERV ST A &amp; OIL CO E 23 ..... . .... ... 2086
Jones Stanley S 1201 Ohio . . . ... .. ..... . ... . .. 1745
Jones Verle 801 Conn . ........ . ... • ...... .3576-M
Jones Ward 2110 Tenn .. . .. .. .. .. . . ........ 2902-J
Jones Wendell W 938 Vt. . ..... .. . . . . . ...... 1313-J
Jones Zelma Mrs 820 E 14 ......... . ....... 1069-M
Jordan E L Su nnyside K U .. . . .. .... . • .. . ... 1823-R
Jordan H E 1b00 Ky . .. . .. . ....•.......... . . 1509
Jordan M R 1532 Mass . . . ... . .......... . .. . . 3678
Jordan Pearl Mrs 133b N Y . . ..•... . ....... . 3281-J
JORDAN ROBT A phy 4 &amp; Maine . .... .• .. . . . . . 3975
Residence 310 Oklahoma .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. 2222-M
Jordison Richard R Sunflower Apts ....... . . . . 2272-M
Jorgensen Elin K 1604 N H ..... • ... . ..... . . .. 1434
Josselyn H W 1625 La . . ... . .............. 3476-M
Jost Edgar 2101 Learnard . ... . • ..... ••. . . .. 3686-W
Jost Frank Mrs 947 Miss .. . . ... .. ... . . . ... 2935-W
Jost Henry J 912 Conn . . . ................. . 2192-J
Jost Martin 1745 Vt . ..................•. . . . 3958
J OURNAL-WORLD 722 Mass ............... .. .. 22
Judson F L 1729 Mass ..... ............... 1881-W
Juergensen Hans Sunnyside KU .............. . 835-J
June Nellie Mrs 1124 R I ................. . 3292-M
June Raymond RFD 2 ..... .. .. . . . . .. ..... 4003-K-3
Junior High School 9 &amp; Ky .. . ...... . .......... 3003

K
KLWN radio sta RFD 6 .....•.•............. .3431
Kahn Fred W 1728 Ky . .......•.....•.•.. .. 1498-J
Kahre Roy Mrs 1532 Tenn . . ... ... ... .. . .. . 3579- R
Kallis Louis RFD 2 .. .... .. .. ... . .. . . . .. 4084-K-22
Kampschroeder Clyde 1400 W 23 ..... . .... 4014-N-11
Kampschroeder Effie Mrs 1923 Barker ...•... . 2854-R
Kampschroeder Herbert H 2038 Ky .. . ....... 32,59-M
Kampus Photo Serv 1316 Ky . .. . .... . .. . .. . ... 1096
Kane Lawrence W 637 lnd . . . . . ... . ........... 1782
Kane Vesta 1511 Crtsctnt Rd ..•..•.. . ...... .. 2812
Kaneubbe Victor 1639 lnd . .. .. . .... . • , ..... 2661-M
Kann Ellen 1700 Tenn .. .•...• • ....•....•.. 1474-M
Kannenberg Chris 828 La . . .• ...... . ..••... 1640-W
Kansas Assoctn of Schl Boards 927! Mass ..... . . . 297
If no answer call ... . . .. .. . . .•..... . ... . 1324-W
Kansas Bible Chair 1300 Oread ................ 2795
Kansas City Star Distributor newspr 801 Mus ..••. 17
KANSAS CLEANERS 12! E 8 . . ... . ............ 420
Kansas Color Press 2201 Haskell .. .. . ..... . .. . . . 488
Kansas Highway Patrol County Jail . ...... . ...... . 38
Kansas Laundry &amp; Dry Cleaners 1001 N H ........ 383
KANSAS MFG CO T HE 623 Vt . ..... ......... . .411
KANSAS POWER &amp; LIGHT CO 700 Mass ....... . 880
After Office Hours call
Eng ineering ... ... .. . . .. ... . .... ...... . 1284
Service Calls .............•..... . ...... . 1240
Local Office .... . ................. . .... 1276
General Office .. . ... ... .. .............. . 1263
KANSAS PUBLIC SERV CO INC
Gas Co Ofc 733 Mass ... . ...........•....... 315
After Ofc Hours Call Manager's Res .... • ...... . 306
If no answer call ... .... . ....... .. ........ . 1031
If no answer call ........•.............. . .. 2885
Kansas State Employment Service 1035 Mass . .. . .. .67
Kansas State of . . . . .. ..........•. See State Offices
KANSAS UNIVERSITY ..................... . 2700
Athletic Office K U ...•.•..• • • . ...••.... . . . 913
Health Service K U . .. . ............. . . . . . .. . 890
Nursery School No 1 1100 Mo .........•.. . ... 254
Kanza Hall1006 Miss .... ... . . . . . . .. . .. . . .... 3544

�LAWRENCE
Kanzig Jas M 222 6 Ohio ... . .• .•.. . ....... . 3238-W
. . . . .. . . 2532-J
Kapfer Chas 710 Ala . . . . . . . . . . .
KAPFER CONST R &amp; ENGINEERING 1605 W 19 3630
Kapfer H J 620 Vt . ...• ..... ... .. . . . . . .. . 3083-J
Kapfer John 1607 W 19 . . .. . ....... . .. . .. . . 3635-J
Kapfer John F 1605 W 19 . .. . . . .. .. .. . ...... . 3630
KAPPA ALPHA PSI 1134 Miss .. .. ••.. .. . .... . 3353
KAPPA ALPHA THETA 1433 Tenn . . .. . .... . . . . 295
KAPPA ETA KAPPA fraternity 1653 lnd .. • • •.• .. 322
Kappa Kappa Gamma Gower Place .... . ..... .. . . 718
KAPPA SIGMA fraternity 1045 West Hills Pkwy . 1700
Kappleman Cart C 1530 Tenn . .. .. ... .... . . .. 3579-J
Kappelman 0 L Mrs 1447 Mass . ... . . . . .. . .. .. . 3130
KAPPELMAN'S GUEST HOME 1447 Mass .•. .. . 2031
Kames M C 20 21 Mass . . . .. . . ... . . . .. . .. . 2595-W
Karr Donald L 525 Tenn . ... . .. .. . . . . . . . .. . 2546-W
Kasberger John 2224 R I . .. . • •.. . . . . . •... . 2'l50-W
Kasky Leonard 312 lnd . ... ........ . .. . .... 1993-W
Kas.singer Chas 1927 Ohio . . . . . . . • . . .. . . . . . . . 789
Kassinger Chas W Jr 321 E 17 . . .•.. . ..•.. . . 2689-W
Kasson Wendell 427 Elm . . . .. . . . .. .. ... .... 1923-J
Kaster Geo W 646! W 23 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1214-J
Kauffman LeRoy L RFD 6 .... . . ..• . . . ... 4005-K-12
Kauf man Norma 1104 W 6 . . . . • . . ... • . . . . . . 2147-M
Kaull Geo M 627 Ohio . . . . .. . . .... .... .. . . .3470-W
KAW GLASS CO 124 N 2 . . . . . . . . . . . . .. ... . 1397
KAW MOTOR &amp; SALVAGE CO 72 4 N 2 ... . . . .. 1397
Kaw River Valley Fertlzr Co 6 &amp; Locust . . . ... . . . 2787
Kaw Valley Oil Co 1318 W 7 . . . .. . ..... . ..... . 2061
Kay Adam 122 5 Tenn . . . ... . . . . . ... . .. . .. . . 1603-R
KAY'S BAKERY 412 W 9 ..... ............. .. . 716
Keeler Book Store 939 Mass .. . . ...•... . . . .. . ... 33
Keeler G V 1706 Jnd . . . . . ........ .• .. . .• • .2620-W
Keeler J A 111 Mi ss . . ..... ... ......... . .. . 2433
Keeler Walter J 1617 Ky . .. ...... •... .. • .. . 2589-M'
Keenan Larry 615 La . . .. . . ..... . . ... . .. . . . 3057-M
Keene H W 1637 Barker ... .... • .. . . . . •• •.. . 3116
Keith L V 328 Elm . .. . . . •. . •. . . .. • .. • .. • . . 1298-R
Kell J F 1520 Crescent Rd . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1044
Kellen Wm A 1336 Conn •. ... .. ....... .... . 3275-R
Keller Bill L RFD 5 . ... . . .... . . .. ... ... . 4033-K-12
Keller Leland E 905 Tenn . . . . • ... • ..... • . . . 1413-W
Keller Marvin 615 La . . . . ...... . . . • . . .... . . 3057 -M
Kelley Clifton 1346 Ohio . . . .. .. .. . . .. . ..• . . 766- R
Kelley J L Sunnyside K U . . . .• .. .. .• ... . . . . 3187-M
Kelley W K Haskell Grds ... , . •. . . .• . . . . . .... 1055
Kellogg Jos M 936 Ky .. .... .... • . ... • .. . .. 2188-J
Kelly Ethel Mrs 1333 Ky . .. .. . .• . .. • ..• . . . . 1124-M
Kelly H D 1013 N H .. .. ... ....• . • ....•.... . 2699
Kelly Joe 313 Johpson . .. .. .. .. . . . .. •. .. .. . 2242-W
Kelly M E rl est 112 Mass . . . . . . . • . ... ... .... . 878
Residence 1116 Del. . • . . ... . . . .. • ....... .. 1222
Kelly W B 840 Maine . . ..... ... . .. . • ... . . . 1239-W
Kelson Ke ith R Sunnyside K U . .. • ..... •• .. . 1903-W
Keltz H L 602 E 15 . . . . . . . . . . . . . • • . . . . . . . . . 1067
Kemberling Zora Mrs 739 Ohio ... .. . .• . . . .. . 3172- R
Kemp Sarah Mrs 1033 N J .. .............. . 2212-R
Kempl er C J 916 Tenn . ... . . ... ... ... .. . . .. 2166-J
Kempler Harry 1620 Tenn ... . • . . ........... . . 674
Kendall Jack Mrs 806 Mo . .. .. ..• ... • . ... .. . 2488-J
Kennedy A R dntst 927A Mass.. . .. .. .. . . .... . 551
Residence 943 Ohio ...... . ... .. . . • .... . . . 3172-J
Kennedy B R 2101 Tenn . .. . . . .. . ... .. . . ... . 2603-R
Kennedy Joe D 2029 Mass . . .. . . . . . •• . . ... . . 1961-W
Kennedy John L 769 Maple .. . • .... . • . . . .. .. 2933-J
Kennedy John R 350 La ... . .. ... ... ... ... . . 2546-R
Kennedy L W RFD 2 .. . .. . .. . . . . • . . . . . ... 4075-N-4
Kennedy Max D 2022 R I . . .... . . . • . . .. . .. . 1999-W
Kennedy Mi lbern B 1134 Ohio . .. . . . .... .. ... 2299 -R
Kennedy Onn 0 93 H Mass . ........ ... . .... . . 1362
Kennedy Plbg &amp; Elec Co 937 Mass . . .. .• ... . .. . . 658
Kennedy R1chard M 708 R I . . .... .. .. . . . . . . 1963- M
Kennedy T A dntst 927A Mass . . .. ... .. . ..... . . . 551
Residence RFD 2 . .. . .. ... . . . • .... • .. . . 4072- N-4
Kennedy Thos J 1023 ~ Vt. .. . ... . •. . . . ... .. 1550-M
Kennett Tom Sunflower Apts . .. .... . . ...... . 3831- R
Kenney Ruth 1042 Tenn . ...•..... .. . . .. . ... . 1508
Kenton Lucile WREN Bg ......•.. . . ... . ... . 3938-W
Keplinger Don 838 La .. . . .. . . ... . . . .. . . .. . 2775-M
Kern Lutie 1905 Mass . . . . . .. . .... • • . . . . . .. 292 5-J
Kerns C E 1121 Vt .. .. . . . .. . . . .. . . . .... . ... . 1293

KAN- KIS

25

Kerns Ralph W 736~ Mass ... . . .. ... . ...... 1893-W
Kerr Dale 0 Mrs 1028 R I . . . .... .. . .. • ... . . . 3700
Kerr Geo H 1624 Mich . .... . ..... . .. . . ... . 2688-W
Kerr Ollie Mrs 1235 N Y . . . .... .. . .... • .. .. 2932-M
Kesler Richard W Mrs 1105 N H . . ... . . .. . .. . 2850-J
Kesse Victor 730 Ark . . ... . .... .. . • .. . ... . . 1596-J
Kester Frederick E 1612 La . . . . .. . .•....... . . . . 289
Ketchum Chas 1025 l nd .. ... .. .... .. . . . . ... 1351- M
Ketchum Ewing 829 lnd . ....... . . .. • . .. . .. . 1968-J
Kelter Francis L 1229 Conn. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3840
Key Richard 311 Mo . . . . . . ... .. .. .. • . . . . . 1799-M
Keys Maurice C architect 8471 Mass . . ... . ... .. 3525
Residence 215 W 14 .... .. . .... . . .. . .. . .. 2652-W
Kib ler H B Mrs 936 Ky ... . .... . . . ... . . .. . . 2247- M
Kidd King S 644 Elm . . . . .. . . .. . . .... . . .. .. 4218-J
Kidwell Guy .C 19 w 11 .. . . . • . . .. . . • . . .. . . . 3481-J
Kiefer Dale 332 E 19 . .. .. . .. . . ... . . ... ... . 2308-R
Kiefer E E Mrs 332 Miss . . . .. .. . . . ..... . .. 2778-R
Kief er John P RFD 5 ... . .. .. . .. .. . .. .. . . 4033-K-3
Kief er W L Mrs RF D 2 . .. . . .. . . ... • .... .. 4055-K-2
Kieffer Fred H 1933 Ohio .. . . . . . .. . . .... . . .. 2619- R
Kieffer J Don 1821 Maine . . . .. . . .. .... . . . .. 3408-R
Kilburn Rosy 847 Pa . .. .... . .. . . .. ... . ... . 2474-R
Kilby Ralph L 1532 Tenn ... .... .. ......... . :3060-J
Kilgore C W 1336 Vt . ... . .• ..... • .. .. . . . . . 1361- M
Killinger E G 420 Mi ss ... . ..• . . . ... . . .. . . . 2658-M
Ki lworth John L 1233 Mass . .. . .. .. • .. . ... .. . 1688
Ki mball Harold 928 N J ..... •• .•... ... . .. 1909-W
Kimball Leslie 52 7 Calif . . . . . . . ..... ...• . . .. 1689-R
Kimber Ronald E 1716 W 9 . .. .. .• . .. . • . . .. . .. 1781
Ki mmel Walter J 1329 Vt . .. . ...... . .. . ... . 2656-R
Kimsey Cliff C J r 2210 Ohio ..• ...... . .. .. . . 2971-M
Kincaid Flossie W 625 R I . . . .• ............ . 2857-R
Kincaid M Blaine 304 l nd . . . . . . ..... .. . .. . . 1407-M
KINCAID PAUL K dntst 839! Mass . . . . .. . ... ... 989
Residence 50 Winona . . . . .. .. . ... ..... . . . 2730-W
Kincaid Thos B 2246 Mass . . . • • . • . . .•.... . . 2553-W
Kinder Ira 1046 N J . . .. . .... . . . . • . ... , .... 1410-J
Kindlesperger Electa 1026 Tenn .•.. • .. . .. . . . . . 3073
Ki ng Allen A 1914 Tenn .. .... .... ......... 1685-M
King Billie Mrs 802 N J . . ... . • .... •. .. . .. • . 3078-R
Ki ng C E 519 Walnut ..• .•.. •• . .. . •.... . . . . 2517-J
King E L RFD 1 .. .. .. ... ......... ...... .. 1329- R
King E W RFD 4 .. .. .. . . .. . .. . . • .. . .. . . .4009-K-4
KING HAROLD H firs 1722 Ky .. . . . .... .. .. . ... 541
King J D of c 1020 Mass ......... • . . .... . .... . 946
Residence 941 Maine . . .. . .. . .. • . .... .. . . . 3188
King J Homer 10 Winona .•.. . . . • .. ... . . . .. 1561-M
. . . 2972-R
King J W 1402 Ky. . . . . . . . . . . • . . . .
King Jas 122 N Y . ... . ... . •. . • . ..... •. ... . 1306-R
King Jos C Capt 2112 Vt . . . . . . . • . .. . . •• . . . . 2487- R
King L C 729 Elm . ... . ...• .. . . .. .. • ...•. . 2576-W
King L J 425 Wi se . ... . ..... . .. . . . .. . .. . .3498-W
King Myron L 1703 Learnard ... . .... • . . .... . 929-W
King Norman 643 Tenn . .. . . . .. . . . • ... . . .. . 2793-M
King Ralph H 1641 Oxford Rd . ...... •. . . . . . .3508-W
King Thos 1529 Learnard . . . . .... . . . • .. . •. . 2332- R
King Thos C 824 Ohio . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . 3101-W
Ki ngery Lonzie E RFD 2 . .. .. . .
. . .. .4007-N-21
Kingsbury W F of c 719j Mass . •......... . . .. . . . 467
Kingsbury Will 2136 N H .. . .. . .......... . .. 1038-J
Kin nett Gertrude Mrs 1310 Ky . . . .... . . . . . . .. 1128-J
Kinney E D 1430 La . . . . . . .. .. . . ... .. .. . . . . . .729
Kinney Helen Mrs 713 R I. .. .... ... . . . .. . . . .. 1577
Kinney Michael H 816 Ohio . . .... . ... . .... .. 1371-M
Kin slow Eulon 819 Conn ..• . ... . .. . . . . . . . ... 1313-R
Kiosow Ivan 900 Oak . . . . . . .. • .. . . . ••. .... . 2949-J
Kipp John A 738 Maine .. ... • .• .. . . . . . . .. .. 2547-M
Kipl ing Chet 1545 R I . ... .... .. . ... . .• . . . . 3565-R
Kirby Allan RFD 1 . . . . . .. . ... ... . . .. ... . 4097- N-2
Kirby Harold D 1124 Conn ... .. . .. ... .. .. . .. 2884-R
Ki rby Ralph 71 0 Mo . .. .. . ... . • . . . . • . . .. . . . 3796-J
Kirby Wm B RFD 1 . .. ... ... •. . . . . . .. .. 4097-K-11
KIRBY'S LUNCH 616 Mass... . .. ... . ........ . 3612
K~rchhoff A L 830 Ala . ..... • .. . ........... .. 1279
Kirk Robt 1235 R I .. .. .. . . .. ... .. .. ... . . 3121-W
Kirkham Mi ldred WREN Building ... . .. . .... . . 1242-J
Kirkpatrick Pau l E 623 l nd .. .. . . . . ... . .... . 1661
KIR KPATR ICK SPO RT SHOP 715 Mass .. .. .. . . . 1018
Kiser Blanche Mrs 1018 Miss. . . .. .. ..... . . . 1351-R
Kiser Frank P RFD 4 . . . .... .. . . .... . . . .. 4036-N-2
Kiser Garage 904 Vt . .. . . . . . ..... . . . . .. . . ... ... 65
Kiser Louis RFD 5 ....... ... .. .......... . . 2221-J

�26

KIS-LAU

LAWRENCE

Kiser Percy 623 Maple . . . ............... 2799-M
Kite Chas 1205 Conn ... . . ....•.••.•...... 2608-J
Killen Ralph W 1809 Miss ............ . ..... 3048-J
Kitsmiller Elva 920 La ......•......•... .. . 2781-R
Kitsmiller Pearl 1345 Ky . ......... . .• . ..... 1124-R
Kitsmiller Perry 1406 Tenn ... .. .. • ....•.... 3770-M
Kilt Roy 1144 N Y .. ................... .. 1659-R
Kitlrie Nick Emery Rd . .... ... ......... .... 1774-J
Kitty Clover Potato Chip Co 1810 La . . . . . . . • . . 649
Kitzharber A R Sunnyside K U .... ... .. ..... . 814-M
Kizer Amelia 820 Maine ... ................ 3597-W
Kizer Wilma 837 R I .. .•..... . ... . •. . . .... 1921-J
Klahr Herbert 341 I nd . ........ . . ... .. . ... .. 1191
Klein Camilla 941 Tenn .. .. ......•..... . . .. 3193-M
Klein Ed Mrs 809 Mo .......•... . . • ....... 799-J
. ... . ... .. ..... ... ... 3248-J
Klein Kurt 1216 La
Kleinberg Jacob 1019 Ill . .. .. ... . ... . ..... 2143-R
Klempnauer Lawrence 1526 Vt .. .......... 3486-J
Kliewer John P RFD 5 &lt;Toll Cam Tonganoxie -29-F-02
Klingenberg K L RFD 6
... ............ 4035-K-11
Klinkenberg P H Mrs 938 Ky ..... ·.... . ..... 2247-W
Klock Mildred 905 La ........... • ... .. . . . 3120-J
Kloepper Fred 649 w 23 . .. .. . ......... .. .. 1214-R
Klooz Ernest 821 La . . ..... .......... •• ..... 3874
Klooz Karl 1119 w Campus Rd ................. 711
Klopfenstein Sob 2006 Tenn
. ............. 1540-R
Klopfenstein Laura Mrs 1101 Vt . •......•.... . 2901
Knapp Clarence 1817 Ala . .. .... ..... ...... 3206-M
Knight Donald 312 Lyon . .. . ..•...•....•.. 3190-R
Knight Geo W Mrs 320 Maine ........•.. . ... .. 937
Knisal Helen 709 Ark
................... 2174-R
Knop Albert Mrs 2014 Vt . .... ... • . ... ..•. . 2358-W
Knott Maurice H Haskell Grds ...•.. ........ . 864-M
Knotts C W 1709 Vt . .. ............ •• .... 1248-M
Knowles Ivan 816! Mass . ......•.....•••.. . 1424-W
Knowles Vans Inc 11 E 9 ........... .. ..... .... 46
Knowles Wayne 1309 Ohio .................. 1534-R
Knox C J Rev RFD 1 .... ..... • . ........... 3611- M
Koch Jas 1308 Mass . .... ..... • .......... 2693-W
Koehler Henry F RFD 4 . ...........•..... 4041-N-3
Koehler Paul 1211 Ky . ... . ............... . 1985-R
Koehler Wm A RFD 2 . ............ • ...... 4098-N-3
Koehler Wm P RFD 5 . ... ............... . . 2221-M
Koerner Arthur 819 N 3 . . ... ...... . ....... . 4256-J
Koerner Louie 750 N 3 . ... .......•... .•.. 2379-M
Kohler Lucille T 1729 Mass . .........•..•... 1881-R
Kohman E Jas 1237 Dread . ....• • ....•...... 2309-J
Kolars Joe G 745 Lyons . . .. . ... • . ...... . ... 3242-R
Kollender Wm 202 w 15 . . ......... .. ... .... . 1212
Kollmorgen W M 1625 Ala ...., ....•....•. . .. 2676-R
Kolsky Geo 1028 Tenn ... . .. ............. .. 3166-J
Kolterman A D 1045 Ky
. ............... 1658-J
Koon Jackson L Lt 1029! Ala . . ...• . • ...... . 3962-W
Koonu M D 1908 Vt . .......... .. . . .. . ... 2925-W
Koppes Robt 1024 N H. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . 1033-J
Korbel Wm 1633 Ill .. ....•..... • ......... 2674-M
Kosakowski Alfred 1107 Conn ..... .• ...•. .. 1623-W
Kowing Ben RFO 1 ......... . .......... 4056-N-21
Kraber Pat 1046! Tenn ... ........ . ... .. ... 3556-J
Kraft Chris 2101 Mass
.... . .... ..... 3689
KRAFT TRUCK &amp; TRACTOR CO 1818 Mass ..... . 244
Kramer Chas L 643 Tenn . ... . ............. 3267-R
Kramer Wm RFD 6 . . . . . . . . . ... . ... .4072-N-22
Kreamer J H Mrs 1621 Edgehi ll Rd .. . .. .... . ... 3998
Krehbiel Clayton H 701! Ill . . ....... • . . . ... 2532- M
Kreider Karl M ofc 109 E 8 ...... . .... .... ... 134
Residence 1109 W Hills Terr ....•.......... 2156
Kress S H variety store 921 Mass ....•....•. .... 583
Kreye Geo W 1215 Oread .. .. . ..... • .. .. . . 3712-W
Krimmer J J Rev 1704 Tenn ...... ..... .. .. . 1721-M
Krimminger H B 1423 N Y .•• ... . •....•.• ••. 3854
Krival Arthur Sunnyside KU ........ • . .... .. 1957-R
Kromminga Louis U 1231 Del ............... 3658-R
Krone R W 501 Rockledge Rd .. ............ . 1256-J
Krull Mary Frances 1819 Maine .. ............ 3408-J
Krum C C vinegar 810 Pa . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 335
Krum C C 809 Conn ......... ............. 1032-R
Krum J J 432 Elm . .............••....•. . . 1631-M
Krum R D 738 R I . . .............. . ......... 2541
Kruse F R 1206 R I .. . . . . ...... ............. 2457
Krutzsch Philip H Sunnyside K U . ......•..... 3416-J
Kubik J Fred 1232 La . . .... ...... ...... 2351-R
Kuch ler A W 2152 Owens Lane ... . .......... 4226-M

Kueker Harold Jr 501 Ind .•. ..•. •. .. •.• .... 1344-M
Kuester H C RFD 2 ....•. .•...... - .•..•.. 4061-K-2
Kuhn Louis W 1605 Vt .••................. 2173-M
Kuhne Geo W 801 Ill . ....... .. ...••....•... . 1807
Kump Lorna F 817 La .... ... ..... . . .... . . . 2614-J
Kumpe E F Col 1104 Tenn . .. ....... . ......... 3547
Kunkel Florence Mrs 1029 Miss ....•......... 2438-J
Kunkl e Dwight E 1428 Tenn
. . . .. ........ 1378-M
KUNZ SOL F REAL EST &amp; INS AGCY 908 Mass 214
Kunz Sol F 308 W 16 .............. .. .... 1599-M
Kurata Fred 1410 w 9 . . . ...••..... •. .... 2744-M
Kurath Paul Sunnyside K U . ...• . . .. •• .... . . . 993 -M
Kyle Lyle C Sunnyside K U . ....•..... • .. . .. 3112-W

·L
Laborers &amp; Mason Tenders Local1290 719! Mass .. 688
Lacey Chas E 2030 Barker . .. . ......... . . ... 3792-J
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2542
Lackey R B w 9
LaCoss Wm Mrs 1301 Ky . ..•............... 1387-J
Ladd Carl E 912 lnd .. ............... . ... 1834-R
Ladd Forrest E 916 Ohio . ...... ......... . .. 1638-M
LaDuke A M 1742 Ark . .. .............. 2682-W
Lady Katherine Mrs 535 Elm . . ........... 2563-W
LaGree Richard 1117 w Hills Pkwy ... • ...... 3721-W
Laing Jas A 809 Ark .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. ..... 1049-J
Lai ng Osa G Mrs 723 Ark . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... 3567-R
Laird Sara 1715 I nd
.. ......•....... . 1679-M
Lake View Club House RFD 1 .............. 4056-K-4
Lakey Paul 1320 Ohio .
. . . . ... ... ..... . . 3148-R
LaIicker Cecil G 1520 Stratford Rd .. ......... 1089-M
Lamb Beu lah 709 Ohio
........•. .. ••.... 2752-W
Lamb John Sunnyside K U ................... 682-W
Lambda Chi Alpha 805 Ohio .. ......... .• ... ... 3410
Lambert Bernard 1529 Ky ..........•....... 1673-M
Lambert E J 2115 Tenn .... ..•.•..••...... . 772-R
Lambkin Fari nda Mrs 1111 Miss ......•.... . . 1789-J
Lamont E F 7 &amp; North ................ . .... 3262-R
LaMont J R 1319 Vt ... . ......... . ..•..... . 2534
Lampe John W 934 Conn . . ........ •.... ... . 1306- M
Lan caster Walter W o39 Ala ..... . .... .. ... .3402-J
Landis Armin V RFD 6 . .. . .. . ......•.. .. . 4072-K-3
Landis Davis Paint Store 931 Mass . . . . . . . . . . . 1078
Landis V A RFD 2 ..... ......... . . •. ... . 4006-K-3
Landis W E RFD 6 . .. . ..... ..... .... . .. 4072-N-11
Landis Warren RFD 6 ... . ....... .. • ..... 4008-K-12
Landon Claude Jr 1829 13arker . .. .. .... .. ... 1628-M
Landon Genevieve Mrs 846 Maine ............. . . 844
Landrith G S 16 16 lnd
..... ......... 2827
LANDRITH' S FINER FOODS 1007 Mass .. . • ..... 173
Lane H H 1745 lnlf
.. . .. .. . .. . .. .. . 1112
Lane 0 J Mrs 2203 Mass ................... . 1724
Lane Ray 615 Miss
. .. . .. .....•......... 3962-J
Langrell J M 1210 Ohio .... ................ 2372-R
Langston Pol lie B 629! Vt. ..•.....•. ....... .. 3972
Lanning Geo B 1217 Tenn .....••... .•. .... . 3662-M
Laptad Cora Mrs 1212 Pa .. .. • ............. 1870-M
Laptad Max RFD 3 . ... ... ....• . ... ..... . 2434-R
Laptad May E RFD 3 ... .... • .. . . . • ..... . 4012-N-3
Laptad Richard 941 Ala . ... . • .....•.. ..... . 3779-M
Laptad Robt P 1010 Ill . .... ............ .. . 2438-W
Larcom Len N 345 Mich ................ ... .. 2258
Lardner Denis B 717 Miss .. . . • .... •• .. ..... 3690-W
Lareau Robt J 2032 Ky . ..... • ..... • ....... 2735-R
Large Jas H 745 Ala .. ................... . 2547-W
Larsen Neil 1726 Ala .. ... ... .. . • ......... 2745-M
Larson John A 433 Ohio . .... •. ............. 3744-R
Larson Mary E 122 5 Ky ....................1733-R
Larson Rachel RFD 5 . . . .. .... . •... . • .... 4073-N-4
Lash Sinclair Serv 725 N 2 . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . 2069
Lassman Wm E 1806 Mich . ................ 2268-W
Laster Grace Mrs 841 R I ....... • ... . . .... 1921-W
Latcham Ernest C 811 E 12 ..... .. .. ... .. . . 2626-M
Latham Geo Mrs 945 lnd .............• . ... 1788-W
Lathro m Lydia 841 Ohio .. ... .............. 1640-R
Lath rom Viles 1245 R I .................... 1699-R
Latimer H B 820 Mo . . .................. . 3687-W
Laughlin Clinton 902 La . .... •....•......... 1871-R
Laughlin Fred D 1631 Ill ................... 2674-J
Launderaide 813 Vt
.. ................... . 2515
Laurencelle Patri cia RFD 4 . ..... ... .... .... 1175-J
Lauter Alfred A 2042 Vt. .. . . .............. 3046-M
LAUTER JEWELRY 411 W 14 ..... .. .......... 307

�LAWRENCE
Lavery B W.ofc 5 W 14 , . . . ........ • ....•... .. 114
Lavery Burns W 1810 La . .•...........•.... 3234-J
Lavery C H 1:&gt;18 Ohio . ..... .. .... . .. . .. . . .. 3378-M
Lavery J A 618 Ohio ..... . . .... • .... .... . 2209- R
Lavery J J RFD 1:&gt; . . . . .................. 4085-N-3
Lawrence Arthur 809 La . ....... .. . .. . . . . 1571-W
Lawrence Bldg &amp; Constr Trades Council 719! Mass.688
LAWRENCE BLDG &amp; LOAN ASSN 800 Mass ... . .. 55
Lawrence Bldg Materials Co 1834 Mass ....•.•. . . 264
Lawrence Cider &amp; Vinegar Co 810 Pa .. . . ........ 335
Lawrence City of . . .
. .. . ....... See City Offices
Lawrence Dennis 2035 Barker . ... .. . ........ 3497-W
Lawrence Dental Labs 84 1 ~ Mass . .. ... . .. . . . . . 3279
Lawrence Drive-In Theatre 62S W 23 .....•.... . . 260
Lawrence Egg &amp; Poultry Co 832 Pa . .......... . . 500
Lawrence Free Public Library 845 Vt .... •• ..... 574
Lawrence Geo 2101 La
......•...... ... .. 848
Lawrence Geo Homer 1346 N J ... .. . ..... . .. 1833-W
Lawrence Hdw &amp; Home Applnces 724 Mass ........ 178
Lawrence Homebuilders 1621 Oxford Rd .... . .... 3820
Lawrence Housing Inc 80&amp; Mass . . . .. ...... . ..... 45
LAWRENCE IMPLM T CO 518 W 23 ............ 647
Lawrence Iron Wks Ft of N J .. ............. . . 106
Lawrence John P 2245 Lear nard
. .. .. . . . . .. 1561-R
LAWRENCE LAUNDRY &amp; DRY CLNRS 1001 N H . . 383
LAWRENCE LOAN &amp; FINANCE CO 8 E 7 ........ 101
LAWRENCE MEMORIAL CO 810 E 13 . . .. . ...... 449
LAWRENCE MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
Office 325 Maine . . ..... .....•....•...... 870
Nurses Home 345 Maine ........ . .......... . 232
Lawrence Motel 624 N 2 . . .. . .......... . .... 4189
LAWRENCE NATL BANK 647 Mass .............. 70
Lawrence Optical Co 1025 Mass ..•••.......... 425
LAWRENCE PAPER CO Ft of N H . .. . ...... .... 129
Lawrence Roy 1213 Ky
. .. .. . . . .. . .•..... 2531-J
LAWREN CE ROY MARKET 90&amp; Mass . . ......... 272 -"'
LAWRENCE SANITAR Y MILK &amp; ICE CREAM CO
202 w &amp; . 696
LAWRENCE SURPLUS
Store No 1 935 Mass . ............ . ..•.. . .. 669
Store No 2 740 Mass . . . . .
. ... ......... 588
LAWRENCE TRFR &amp; ST ORA.GE CO INC 731 N H . . 15
If no answer cal l. . . .
. . ... . ... 1777- M
Lawrence Typewriter Exchange 735 Mass ........ . 548
Lawrence Wornans Club 1941 Mass . ......... .. . . 209
Laws Duane 2233 R I . ................. . .. 3791-R
Lawson Albert 732 Locust. ...... .. .. . . . .... 3956-M
Lawson Jas E Mrs 728 R I ... . .......... ... 1337-M
Lawson Paul B 2215 Vt .... . . ............... . 1172
Lawson Ralph 1013 Conn . ... . ..... .. . . . .. . . . 1061-J
Lawton R K 2236 E Drove .... .... . ......... 2862-M
Layton J W 1113 Conn . .. . 1•••.••••.•••.•.• 3568-J
Leachty E W WREN Bldg . .. .. . . . . .. .• .. ... 2895-R
Leaman Geo R 1020 R I ... ...... ..... • ... . . 1891-J
Leapher E D 1708 Ky .. ...... .. ......... .. 1809-M
Lear Veta B 1224 Miss . . . . .. . .. • . . . ........ 3899-J
Learned Martha 942 N H . . ..... . .... .. . . . . . 4087-J
Learned Robt E 739 Ala ................ ..... 1332
Leary Ernest RFD 2 . . . ..... ....... . .... 4098-K-11
Leary Eugene M RFD 2 . . ........ .. ...... 4098-N -4
Leasure T J ole 809 Vt . .... .. .... •. • . • ..• • . . 240
Residence 1&amp;10 Barker . . . . . .
. . . . .... .4258
LEASURE VETERI~AR Y HOSPITAL 809 Vt .... . . 240
Leavitt Mary Mrs 1228 Pa .. . .. .... . . .. . ... . 1230-J
L'Ecuyer H K Sunnysioe K U . ... . ........ .. 3187-W
Lednicky Ray 1329 Mass . ... . ..•.......... .3417-J
Ledom Claude M 1810 La . ....... .. ....... . 3261-W
Lee Andrew N RFD 6 .. . . ...•. . . .. . .. .. . .. 3143-W
lee Ed 845 Mo ... . . .. . ....... . . . . .. . . . .. 3490-M
Lee Everett 423 Miss . .. . ... • ..... • . .. .... 2645-W
Lee Howard J 425 Miss .............•..... . 2645-J
Lee Jack 804 Maple .. ........ .. • ......... 2325-M
Lee L W 1709 111 •. ...... •• • .• • •• • • ••• • • . .. 1680
Lee Mary K Mrs 71 5 w
2906-W
Lee Raymond H 793 N 7 . . .. ..... . .... .... .. 3780
LEE RAYMOND PLUMBING &amp; W IRING 906 N H . .660
Lee Thos 716 Elm . . . .. . . .. ... ......... .. . 2587
Lee Virgil M &amp;38 Ark . .. . ................ . 2488-W
Lee Wallace 701 Oh io .. . .. ..... ............ 2375
LEE WAYMAN SERV STA 700 Locust . ... .. . ... 2083
Lefferd Russell S 1s 17 N H. ..... . ....... ..... 2493
Lefholz Larry RFD 2
..... . 4076-K-21
Lefmann Jessie 133&amp; N H .................. .. 1513

a:... .. ........ ....

L AV- LIN

27

Leggitt Robt E 847~ Mass ....... . ........... . 3845
Lehew Leonard 2023 Ky ..... . .... . • .... . . . 3055-R
Leib Robt 1229 Tenn
. . .. ........•....... 2675-J
Leibengood C E Mrs 1008 Tenn . .. . ........... . 1244
l eibengood Dan 734 Moss ...............•.. 1224-M
Leibengood Don 800 R I . ................ . . . 3576-J
Leigh C V 342 Mo ss . .. ..... . • ... . .• .. . ... 1183-J
Lemesany Wm L 1512 w 9 . . ... ..... . ....... 759-M
Lemmerman L V 1:&gt;1:&gt;2 W 23 ................ . 1154-J
Lemon Chas H RFD 2 . . . .. . ... • ......... 4D86-K-4
l emon J M Mrs 310 w 14 ... .... . .. . . .... .. 1521-J
Lemon W T RFD 2 . . . . . . ....... •... .. . . 4086-N-2
Lemon Wm Walter 330 John~on ............. . 2483-J
Lenahan Thos 2121 Vt . . ............. . .... 2293- R
Lengel Ralph E 1237 Ohio ..... . .. .... .. . ... 3828-W
leonard A B 1911:&gt; La
. . . ... ... .. ........ 2339
Leonard Bros Transport Co 820 Vt .. . .. . ..... . . . 311
Leonard C 1034 N J
. . .. ..... .... .. . . 1410-R
leonard R E 735 Mo ... ... . .. . .. .. ... ... .1596-M
l eone Chas A 1809 Tenn .. . . .....• . ....... . 2402-R
Leonhard F H RFD 3
.. . .... . . • . .. ... . . 4062-N-4
Leonhard Lawrence H RFD 3 . . .. • . .. . .... . 4062-K-4
Leonhart Doris Mrs 1823 Ky . ............... 1414-J
Leonhart W M 2016 Learnard . ... • .. .. ... ..... 3162
Lesch F W RFD 5 . .. ........ . .. • .. ..... 4033-N-13
Lesch J F 909 R I ..... , ............. ... .. 2456-J
Lesch J H 2101 Vt . .............. • ....... 1343-W
l escher Chas W 1036 Ky .......... • ....... 2236- R
lescher Harry W 1237 Del . ............... .. , .181
Lescher Naomi Mrs 1215 Del ..... •• ..... .. .3281-M
Lescher Shoe Shop 812! Mass . ...... . . • • ....... 256
lesh Lottie 1720 Ill .. ........... .. ........ 2635-R
lesh W N 2129 Ohio . . .. .. .
. .. .. . 2936-W
LESH WARREN N acct Lawrence Natl Bk Bldg ... . 667
Lesher D J Lt Comdr 1632 Tenn . . ... .... . . . . 1706-M
Lessenden C M Mrs 1309 Ohio . ......... .. . . 1534-M
Lester P P Mr~ 401 Ind. · .. ... . . .... .. . ... . 2128-J
LeSuer J Marvm 709 Ohoo . ................ . 2752-W
LeSuer N M 1704 Ky . . .. .. .. .... . ....... 1498-W
Levens leonard 2000 Learnard .....•.. .. ... .. 1639-M
Levitt Raymond J &amp;11 W &amp; . . . .... • •.. .. . .. . 2614-M
Levy Edw 1401 Mass . .. . . .. ... .. . • .. ..... 2789-W
lewis Arth ur 418 Lincoln .. .... .. . . ......... 1139-J
Lewis Benj G Sunnyside K U ... .... . • ... . ... 3155-W
lewis Chas 1746~ Ohio ................. ... 1461-J
Lewis Cora l RFD 1 . .. ..... . .. • ..... . .. 4056-K-11
Lewis F V RFD 3 .. .. . .. . .... ... . . . . .. . 4012-N-11
Lewis Frances 516 Colo . . ..... • . . ...... .... 3577-R
Lewis Harold R 1335 Pa . ............ .. .... 3256-R
Lewis Herbert 82&amp; Conn . ...................1843-J
Lewis L N Mrs 723 La ...... . ........ . .... .. 172
lew'• J ulu Mrs 1013 N J . ................. 1849-R
lewis Robt L 915 La . ... . ....... .... ..... 1818-R
lewis Robt W 1915 Tenn. .. .. . .. . .• ..... •. . 1952-W
lewis Valeria 2007 Ky . ......... .. ..... . . 1540-W
lewis W W Jr Sunnyside K U .. .... • . . .. .. . . 1148-M
Lewton Carl 1029 Del . . . . . . . . . . . .
.19~2-W
llanos John Mrs 933 Vt
. .... . . ..... 1951-R
liberty Memorial High School 1400 Mass ........ 3000
Lickteig Henry ofc 1211 Vt . . : . ............. ... 797
liggett Geo E 1105 N J ........... ........ 2336-M
l iggett J E 1221 Conn .. ...••............ 2405-R
liggett Minni e Mrs 1008 R I . .. . .. . . . ...•. . 1061-W
light H M Mrs 1419 Mass . . . . .. •• ........ . .. . 2256
Lirnbacher Karl F 1008 Ala ....... .. • ...... . 2164-J
Lincoln C S 1831 Barker ......... .. ....... 2242- M
lincoln School 708 Elm . ....... • .. . .......... . 728
lind l R 1714 l nd
...... ........ .. ... . 2620-J
lindberg Chas 923 Ohio . . . . . . .
. . .. 2797-W
Lindell Chas E 1004 w &amp; ..... ... . ..... . . . . 2147-R
Lindell El mer 2223 Learnard . . .. .... ....... . 1815-J
Lindell Mattie A Mrs 1928 Ky ............. . 2262-R
Lind ley Estella 1911 Barker . ... ............ 2724-W
lindley Howard T 2045 N H .. ...... . . ...... .. 3738
. .. .. . . . . .. . .... 2292-W
Lindley Max Mrs 938 R I
LIN DLEY MAXINE dancing studio 819 Vt .. . .... . 100
Lindley Maxine 938 R r
.. . .• ..••••••. . 2292-W
lindley's Kansas Cleaner 12~ E 8 . ...... .. ..... . 420
lindquist G E E 7 Winona . . . .. . ... . .. . . . . 2120-M
lindsay Ma ttie Mrs 1300 Tenn ..... .. . ...... 1387-M
lindsay Robt Sunnyside K U . . . .. . ........ . 1801-M
lindsay Soft Water Scrv 613 Vt . .. . . .... . . . . ... 623
l indsey Adrian H 2239 Mass .. ........ . .. . .... 1071

�28

LIN-MAN

LAWRENC:::E~-------------

Ling Danl S Jr 1650 Cambridge .. .. . . . . .. . .. .4253-J
. 4217 -M
Li nkenhoker W D Sunflower Apts . . .
Linn John RFD 2 .... . . .. . .... . ... . . . .. 4064- N-13
Linn Paul D 103 Mich ..... . ...... . ........ 2847-W
Linville Ralph 1703 l nd .. .. . . .. . .... .. ... . . 2470-M
Lipovsky Louis J 905 Tenn .. . ... . ... . •• . . .. 1927- M
Lipp H W 612 Elm . ....... . •. . .. . ..... . ... 1363-R
U pp Marvin L 421 Pleasant .... . •• ......... 1379 -M
Lipps Gene H 515 W 14 . .. . .•. . . . •. ... ... . 1296-M
Usher Fred RFD 2 • . . .......... • ..... . .. 4093-N-2
U sher Lewis 214 N 8 . .. .. . . . • .. . .. • ... . . . . 2751-J
U sher Ralph H 1012 Ala ....... ... .... . ... . 2143-J
Liska Jos 1805 La .. . ... • .• . ... . • . ...... . . 3563-M
Liston G R Mrs 925 Ind ... . ..... ... . . . . ... . 3141-M
Litchen Ruth E 1934 La . ... . . • . • • .•• .. .... 2135-J
Little Art hur H Mrs 1100 lnd ... ........•. . . . . 1484
Litwin Mayer S 2116 Mass ..... . •. . . . ....... . 1917
Litwin's 831 Mass . .. . . .. •• . ...•........ . .. . 1088
Livingston Robl 711 Conn . .... ... ........ . .. 1984-J
Livingston Wm D 901 Tenn ...... •.....• .. .. 3157-R
Lobb Edit h Steele 800 Ind .. .... . ... .... . .. . . 2873-J
Lock C R 643 Tenn . . .. ......... • ...... . ... 3267-J
Lock H F 643 Tenn . .. . .. . ........ . ..... .. 3267-J
Lock John W RFD 2 .. . . ... . ..... .. ... .. 4084 -N-22
Lockard H Arthur 1125 Ky .. .. ....••• . . .. .. .. 3217
Lockhart Marion Mrs 1245 Oread ......... . . . 2309-M
Locksley Hall
No 1 1125 Miss ...... . . . ... .. ..•. . . . . .. . 3534
No 2 712 McCook . ... • .. . ... . . . . . . ... . . . . .. 921
No 3 71 4 McCook . . . ....•. • • .. •••• • ..•. .. . 836
No 4 716 McCook . ...... ... .. . . .. • .. . . . .. .. 504
No 5 1112 Ill . .... .............. • ..... . .. . 837
Lockwood Lloyd 833! Mo .. . . .. . .. • .... . . .. 3490-R
Lockwood Robt H 1813 Ala . .. .. . ..... .. . ... . 1806
Loewenst ein Christian 813 Maine . . .• .. ...• . . 2739-W
Loewenstein Elizabeth 707 Conn ... . . . • . ... ... 3175-J
Lofflin W Henry 1711 La ...... ... .. . .. ... .. 3011-J
Lofgren Hilda 710 Ky ... ...... . . .. • .. . . • . . 3216-R
LOG CABIN MARK ET 1827 La.. .... . .. . . . .. . 910
Logan Minnie 836 Conn
.. . .... . .. .. • . • .. 3002-W
LOGAN- MOORE LU MBER CO 627 Mass... . . . . . 113
If no answer cal l . .. . .. . .. ... . • .. .. . .... 1344-M
l ogan Ru ssell Mrs 726 Mo ... ... . . . .. • .. .. .. 1567-R
logan Saml 177 N 7 ... ..... . . • . . .. • ... . . . 2177-J
Logan Walter 1747 Tenn ... ..... . .. ... • . ..... 2632
Logsdon E J 729 I II . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3863
Lohman J D 1922 R I. .. .. ........ . ..... .. . 2721-R
Lohman J H 753 Elm .. . ..• . ..•. . ..••.•. . • 1246-W
Lohman W H 1515 R I. . . ... . ... .. . ... ... .. . 858-J
lohr Helen 2046 N H ... ... . .... . . ..... . .. . . 3134
Lonborg Arth ur C 1729 Mass .... . ......... . . 3583-R
London Guarantee &amp; Accid~.!'t Co ltd Insurance Bg 40
Long Alvin 319 Johnson . ....... . •. .. .. .. •.. 1672- R
Long Chas C 1009 ~ Mass . .. .... . . ... . ... .. . . . 2875
Long Geo V 705 w 4 . . .. . .. . .. . . .. ... ... . . 2645-R
Long Helen 1009 ~ Mass... . . . . ... . . . . .... .. .. 2875
Long John F 533 La . . ..... .. .•.. . . • .. .. . .. . 3584
Long L F 1045 Ky . . . . . ... , ...
. ..... 2557-J
Long W N 1721 Learnard . ... . • ..•... . ..... . 1865-R
Longacre Ray RFD 5 .... ..... . .. ... • ... . 4064-N-3
Longanecker H F RFD 2 .. .. .............. 4093-K-3
Longfel low Dean 749 Locust . ... .•.... . . .. . . 2934-W
Longfellow Delbert 826~ Mass ..... . ... •. ... 1424-M
Lonnecker Alta Mrs 1104 N H . .. .• . .. . . . . . . " 3100
Loofbourrow G N 1140 Miss ... . .•. . .. . .. . . . 2766-M
Loomis Richard 8 Sunnyside K U ........... . 2834-M
Loop Jas A 1729 La .... ....... . . . ... .... . 1645-W
Lopez Captolia 837 E 13 . .. .... ......... . .. 2814-M
Lothrop E W Jr 1640 Cambridge . .. • ... . . ... 3949-M
Lott Clyde W 1414 N Y .... .. .. .. ... .. ... . . 2878-J
Love Fred 1037 Ky .. .. ...... . . . . .. . . . ... ... . 1253
Love H W RFD 3 . . .. . ... . . . . .. . . • . . .. . . 4054-N-2
Love Ray 1700 Ky . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . 3982
Love Ruth Mrs 11 W 9 .. . ....• . . ... .... .. . 2640-M
Lowery Elnora 62 9 Vt . ...... . ..... . • ..... 3240-W
lowery Eva 419 Perry . . .. ... . . .. . .. .. ..... 1591-W
Lowman Geo 1145 Emery Rd . . .. . . ... . . .. . .. ... 974
Lowman W K 1100 W 23 .. .. . . . .. .. ... .... . 1154- R
Lown Etta 315 Johnson .. . . .... ... . . . .... .. 2618-J
Lowrance Winnie D 1609 Stratford Rd .. .. .... 1237-W
Lowry Oscar 1810 Te nn ... . ....... . .... . ... 2281-R
Lowry Ruth 1601 R 1 ... . . . .... . . . .... .. .. 1845-W
Luallin A W 643 R I ..... . .. . .... . ...•.... 1857-M

l ubach John Sunnyside K U ...... . ...•.... . . . 598-J
Luber T E 1136 Conn . . . . .
. . .. . . . 2594-R
Lucas J K Pete 1810 Ill .. .. . . .... . . .. . .... 3048-M
Lucas Minnie M 706 N Y . . .. . ... • ......... . 1533- R
Lu ckan Otto E RFD 6 . .... .. . ~ · . . ..... . .. 4008-N-2
Lu ckf ield W R 1343 Tenn . . . . . . . . . .
. . 1712-W
Ludlam Geo 2121 N H .. . .... ... ...... . ... . 2950-M
Lukens M E opt omet rist 1025 Mass ........ . .. .. 425
Residence 833 Mo . . . . . . . . . ... . .... • .... 1271-W
lukert John F Jr 1423 Ohio.... .
. . ... 587-R
Lumley Walter 1133 Vt. .. . .. . . .• .... • .. . . . 3103-M
Lundquist Chas A 1400 Ohio .... • ... . .• . .. . . 1047-M
Lundy A L RFD 2 . . . ..... ... . ..... • ..... 4060-K-3
Lupton E H 701 Mass . . . . . . . . . . .
529
Lury H K 508 N 7 . .. ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 2119- M
lutheran Church Immanuel parsonage 1538 Vt ..... 758
Lutheran Church Trinity 1245 N H . . ......... . .. 624
Lu thi Jacob 1525 N H .. . . ... ........ . . . . .. 2985-J
Lutz Gordon 706! Mass ....... . .. . . .. . . ... 3749-J
l utz Harold RFD 2 . . .. ......... . ........ 4084-K-3
Lutz J F 1218 Tenn ..... ..... ... ....... . . 2531-W
Luzier' s Cos metic Consultanl19-'0 Ky ...•... . .. 3739
Luzzio Anthony J 1106 Ohio ..... ... .... .. . . 3543-W
Lydic Murray E RFD 2 . .. .. .. ... . . . . .. . . 4086-K-12
Lyle Jessie A Mrs 1225 Pa ....... . ... . .. . .. . 1833-R
Lyman G C Mrs 935 N H . ................ . 1157-J
Lynch Albert RF D 6 . . ..... . ...... , ...... 4036-N-3
Lynch Howard E RFD 2 . . . . . ........ .. . . . 4052-K-21
Lyness Richard N Sunnyside KU .... . ........ . 1059-R
Lynn Margaret 1224 Miss .. . •. .. . .. •....•... . 1247
Lyons Ida 1012 R I . ... .... . .. . . ... . . . . .. 2585-W
Lyons Paul C 2124 Mass ....... . ............ . 1360
Lyons W F Joe 601 N 1 .... ~ .... • ..... . . ... 2965-J
lytle Rose Mrs 947 La . . .... ••. ...•.... . ... .. 2960

M
M &amp; H TRAILER CT 1505 E 15 .. . .. . ........ 2081
Maag Ed 1345 W Campus Rd .. . ... ..... . ... 3695-R
Mabe 0 D 1521 R I. . . . . . . . . ... . . .. . . . . 1690-W
Mace John S Capt 1209 Dread ...• . . .... .. . . 3899-M
MacGibbon AD Sunnyside KU . . . . ........... 2947-W
MacGregor Helen 1201 Oread . . . . .. .. . ...... 1454-M
Machado Luiz 937 Mo ... .. • . . ... .• . . . ..... . 739-R
Mack J B 701 Tenn ... . .. . ....• .. ........ . .. 1675
Mack L J 1114 Ky . . .. . ................
.523
Mackey Schl RFD 5 . .. ...... . .... .. ... . .4053-N-21
Mackie Geo 11 25 W Campus Rd ... . .... .. .. .... 625
Macleod Don M 939 lnd . . .. . .. ........... ll60-W
Macpherson Cullen H Sunnyside K U .. •.. ... . . 3416-R
Madden Harrison E 1316 Ky ......... • ...... 1129-J
Maddox W R 1101 Mi ss . ... . • ... .. . .. . .. . . 2697-M
Maffet Geo W 1708 Haskell . . ... . • . .. . .. . . . . . 1651
Magnus Arne 1231 Ohio . . ..... . ...... . . . .. .3665-M
Magruder H W 1517 R I .. ... . •.. . ....... . .. . 2948
Mahieu R G Prof 1420 Crescent. ..... . . • .... . 3484-J
Maiden H E Mrs 1031 Mi ss . . . .... . .. • . . . .. 3251-W
MAILHIOT A A DR 729! Mass ............ . .. . 1318
Residence 1516 N H . ... .. . ... , ... .. , ... . 2232- R
Majors Earl 2016 La . ..... . ...... • . . .. . ... .. 1304
Malin Jas C 1541 University Dr .•........ .. .... 1575
Mallory Mabel 530 Ohio ..... .. .... .. . .. .. .. 1558-R
Malone Jack W RFD 1 . . ...... . .. . . .... .... 3611-R
Malone Jas B 1108 Ky . . ... ....•. . .... . ... . 2481-R
Malone John R 1829 University Dr . ... . . .. ... 2643-M
Malone Paul E 1&amp;38 lnd . .. . •.•. .. .... . ... .3476-R
Malone Walter 514 Wal nut . .. . . ......• . ... . 2171-R
Malone's Grocery 1201 E 13 ... ... ......... .. . 1229
Maloney J 0 830 Mo .. .. .. ........ , . . . . . . 1636-R
Maloney John RFD 2 . .. . ... ... . .. .... . .. 4005-N -3
Malott Ruby Mrs 734~ Mass .. ... . ...... . .. . 1586-W
Malott's Hardware 736 Mass . . ... . ....... . ..... 615
MANAHAN G E phy 4 &amp; Maine . . . . ............ 3975
Residence 1107 N H. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . 2310
Maness Harold 62 5 Vt. ...... . .•. . . •. .. . •.. 2653-J
Maness Junior A 1116 R I ... .. .. . • . . .. . .. . 3292-W
Maness Melvi n C 1919 Tenn . . . .. .. .. . • .. . .. . 1720-J
Manion . Marion 415 Forrest ... .. . . .. • . ...... 1821-M
MANLEY INS AGCY 840! Mass . . . • . . . . . . . . .
250
Manley Nellie Mrs 814 Ky . ... . . . ..... • .... . 3104-W
Manley R C Mrs 62 4 La . . . ... .. . .. . .. . . .. . .. 1250
MANN C J REPAIR SHOP 839 Ky .. .. . .. . .. . . . 2611
Manning Patk 1744 Ky . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..... 1269- M
Mansfield John 532 Tenn .... • •... . .. . . .. . . 2749-M

�LAWRENCE
Manuel Janice 1339 w Campus Rd .. ... • .. . . .. 3695-J
Manweiler Larry 1529 Ky . . .... .. .. .. . .. .. 1860-R
Marburger Grant C 1814 Mich ....... • .. . .... 3036-J
Marcellus F D 2228 Ohio . . . ... . .. .... . .. . . . 3238-R
March Geo M 941 Ky . .. . .. .. . ... .. . . • .. . .. . 4197
Marckley R R 1801 Learnard ............... . 1813-R
Margrave Merle 912 l nd . ... . ....... . ...... 1834-M
MARINELLO BEAUTY SALON 1119 Mass .... .. . 493
Mark Albert 900 N J .. .................... 1758-W
Mark Robt R RFD 5 . . . . ........ . . ... .... . . 1076-J
Markley Oscar G RFD 2 . . . . . . . . .
. ... . 4007 -K-4
Marks Julius 726 La . . . ...... . .............. 1522
MARKS SOL &amp; SON Jewelers 817 Mass ........ . . b54
Markwilh Grace 308 E 8 ..... .... ... ..... .. 4234-R
Marlowe John A 1342 Conn . . .........•... . . 3275-J
Marquardt Richard Mrs 1606 Tenn .. . .. .... . . 1406-W
Marquette John 2 Winona . . . ...... . ...... . . 1815-R
Marquette Robt 925 Ill. . . ......•. . .......•. 1610-J
MARRIOTT CAFE 832 Mass . ......•..•....... 3018
Marriott Ethel M Mrs 1040 Ky . ............. 1190-W
Marsell J L 1731 Ohio ... . • .•......•....... 2240-J
Marsh Everett E 900 Mich . . . . .
. . .. . 1775-R
Marsh Wm 1032 Ohio . ... . .... .. . ... ... . . . . 3543-R
Marshall Dorothy Mrs 1219 Prospect ......... 3298-W
Marshall Eva 1403 Pa .. ...... .... .. . ... . . . 2465-R
Marshall H C 1214 Haskell ..•.......... . ... 3283-R
Marshall John A 1810 Haskell .............. . 2311-R
Martens John E 2146 Ohio .... . ........... . 1919- M
Marlin Armstrong RFD 2 . • • ...... .. • ... . 4076-K-12
Marlin Chas E 726 Ark .......... . .. . ...... 2193-J
Marlin Chas H 1333 Conn .. . ..... . . .. . ..... 3652-J
Martin E E Mrs 1343 Tenn .. ...•........... 2955-M
Martin Earl P 1336 Spencer Dr. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3970
Martin Edw B 1642 Barker ................. 1821-W
Martin Gladys 912 R I . ..•...•• . ..•. . . . •... 3151-M
Martin Henry 900 Maine .................. . 2671-J
Martin J Edw RFD 2 .. . ... . • ..... • .... . .4060-K-2
Martin May 1200 Haskell . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . 2646-J
Martin R G RFD 3 . . . . .. .... . . . . . . . .... .4091- K-3
Martin Ruth Mrs 1600 R I ................. 4243-R
Martin Virginia B 309 Elm .......•... . .•... 3414-M
Martin W Roy 715 Ill . .... . . . . . ... . . . . . . . . 2636-W
Ma.rtin Wm H RFD 4 .. ... . . . . . . . . ... . .. 4041-K-12
Martin Wilson Mrs 118 w 15 .. . . ..... . ..... 2731-W
Marvin Burton W 224 4 Tenn . . . .. . . .. .. ...... . 3839
Marvin's Hillside Beauty Salon 847 Mass .. ... . . .. . 997
Masden Horace RFD 3
.. . 4012-K-12

MASDEN'S WATCH SHOP &amp; BIBLE SUPPLIES
Mason
Mason
Mason
Mason
\ Mason

.
I

~

I

12 E 9 .. 47
Bessie Mrs 622 N 5. . . . . . .• . ..... . 2301-J
E G 936 Ill . . . ... . . ... .. . . • . . ... 3479-M
Eleanor Mrs 1139 R I. ... ... ........ . 2786-J
Ernest L 771 Locust ........ . .. . .... 1936-W
Grate M 1139 R I . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . 2604

~=~~ ~aMJr~ ~o~ t.,-i3: ::::::::: ::::::: J~tro
3

Mason Lewis E 1329 W 9 .. . .. . ... . . . . . .. .. 3567-J
Mason T E 9 40 Ala . . . . .. . . . . • . . . . .. . ... . . 1730-R
Mason T S 1130 N H . . .. ... . .... .. ...... . 2539-W
Masonic Temple 1001 Mass . .. . . .......... . . . . 333
Massey Jack Mrs Haskell Grds .. ......... .. .. 1854-M
Mast Herman 208 W 15 . .. . . . . .... . . ..... . 2748-W
Mast Mary M 128 W 13 ....... .. .. . • ... ... 1490-M
Mast Mildred 190 4 Vt .. ... . .... . . .. .. . . .. 3338-R
Malhae Laurence D 1739~ Mass . .. . . . . • . .. .. 3631-W
Matherly W R RFD 2 . .. .. .. ......•...... 2384- M
Mathews C F 43 Winona .. .. . ... . ..... . .... . 3154
Mathews Helen 1318 Pa ......... ... ..... .. 2180-J
Mathis L E Mrs 539 Elm . . .. .. ..... . . ... . 2920-W
Matthews M H RFD 3 . .. . . . .... . .. . .. .. . 4023-K-3
Matthies Orville F WREN Bldg ... ... • .. ..... 3077-M
Matulis Jos 94 6 Ill .. . . . . ... .... . ..... . ... 2606-R
Maxwell A R Mrs 425 Maine .. . ......... . .. . .3310-J
Maxwell E W :.024 Ky
. . . . ... . . . .. .... . . 2408-J
Maxwell Jack C atty Lawrence NatJ Bk Bldg . . . . . .332
Residence 804 W 8 . .. ..... .... . . . . .. .. . 3218-R
Maxwell Kenneth D 646! W 23 . .... .. .. . . . . 1214-W
May C R 746 Conn
. .. . ........ . ... . .. . 2381-R
May Don l 2327 Haskell. ... . . .... .. • ... . . . 3679-W
May Ernest H 939 Tenn . . ... . ..... • ........ . . 2152
May Kenneth D 816 W 8 ... . .. . .. . ..... . . . . 3218-J
Mayer Bill 646 W 23 . . .................. 1214- M
Mayes J L Sunnyside K U . . ... . • ... ...... .. . 1997-J
Mayher R A Mrs 1111 W 11 . . . . . ... . ... . .. . . . . 464

MAN- MeG 29

McAiearney Nancy 2018 Tenn . .. .• . .. ... . .. . 2747-W
McAIIaster School 1428 R I . . . . . . .. .... ..... .408
McArthur H J 408 Utah . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3460-M
McBeth M V 1733 Miss...... . ....
1664
McBride Dale J 1046 Ky . ... . . . . . . . . .... ... 2926-W
McBride Edw J Sunnyside K U .. . . ... . .... .. 1431-M
McCabe Derwood E 1545 R I .... ... ~ · . ..... . 3565-J
McCaffrey M 1400 Tenn . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... . . 1521-R
McCall Delbert 1042 Ohio ....... • ... ..... . . 1996-W
McCall T 1109 R I . . . . . ....... • .. . ..... .. 2638-W
McCall T M 909! Mass ...........•...... . . 2568-J
McCall Una A Mrs 932 R I .......... .. ...... . 2551
McCalla Wesley 937 Ohio . ...... . . • . • •...... . . . 922
McCalmon S L 1339 Ohio .. . .. . . ..... . . . . .. . 1110-J
McCanles J C 207 E 14 . . . ........ . ........ 2916-J
McCanles J M 1926 Tenn .. . . . . ....... . .... 1685-W
McCartney Jesse E 1639 Lear(lard .......... . 2302-W
McCarty Philip N 1734 Vt . . . ...... . . ..... . 3642-W
McClain Evelyn C Mrs 1100 Vt .. .. . . . . . ... . ... 1328
McClain W A 2027 N H . . .. ... ... . .. . ........ 1170
McClanahan A F 1520 University Dr . . . . . • . . . . . 3321
McCleery Elizabeth Mrs 624 Lincoln ....... . . . 2799-J
McCleery R R 1910 Mass . . ....... . ....... .. 3152-J
McClellan Kathleen 121 W 14 . . . . .... . •. . ... 3696-M
McClelland Adelle 1200 La . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1095
McClendon Louise 1120 Del. . . . ... • ...•.... . 2938-R
McClintock Mabel Mrs 316 Lincoln .. ......... . 1357-J
iv'lcCiuggage Marston 1709 lnd. • . . . . • . . . . . . . . 778-J
McClung Carl 1521 Vt . .. • •......••...... . 2748-J
McClung Crawford RFD 4 .. .... . .. • ....... 4063-K-4
McClung Norvel M 929 Mich . .... . . .. . .. . . . . 2592-W
McClure Betty 1002 w 4 ..... . . . . . ..... . . . 1988-W
McClure Bruce 1810 La ........ • ... . . . .... ..323.3-J
McClure C I Col 2020 Ohio . ....... • ...... . . .3255-R
McClure Earl E 23 . .. . . ...... . .•. . . ..... .. 3790-R
McClure Fred 1200 Pa . ... .. ....... .. ...... 1425-R
McClure R W 1635 lnd . ........••............ 865
McCoin Chas F 1337 N H ••.. . ..•........... . 2214
McCoin Lee Mrs 1601 R I .. ........ . ....... 1845-W
McCoin Walter 1815 Maine •................ . . 1475
McColloch F B 825 La . . .........••.•...... 1312-J
McCollum Paul M 1508 Crescent Rd . ..•.. . .. . 3493-J
McConnell Donald H 2145 Ohio .......... . .. . 3996-W
McConnell Howard 1600 Vt . .. • .....• . ........ 2245
McCONNELL LUMBER CO 844 E 13 ...•...... . . 576
McConnell W C 045 Conn .............. . ... 3465-W
McCook Hall-North K u Stadium . ........ . ..... 2042
McCook Hall-South K U Stadium .. . . . .... . .. . . . 2039
McCorkill Walter 225 E 18 . ............... . 2618-M
McCoy Bessie Mrs 425 Ohio ................ . 1388-R
McCoy Ed 1120 N J .. .... ... .. . ...... . ... 2581-M
McCoy Jas A 1346 N H . .... .. .. . .......... 1.308-J
McCoy Orville L 901 Tenn . .••............. . 1947-M
McCoy Robt C 1'&amp;20 Ala . ........ .. ........... 2462
McCOY'S SHOE STORE 813 Mass ......... • .. .. 259
McCracken Anna 1623 Ky ....••........... . 1706-R
McCrary Marlin 333 Elm. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2255-W
McCreath David G RFD 1. ... .. .......... . 4056-K-3
McCullough B G 1311 N H .. ... ... . .. . . . . .. . 1831-R
McCune Ehzabeth 740 La . ...........•... .'. 2349-R
McDonald Sevrg Co 1124 Emery Rd .. .. . . .. . . . . 663
McDonald Clifford 936 Mo . . ...... .. . ... . . . 1847-M
McDonald F J Mrs 2136 Ohio . ..... . ...... . . . 772- M
McDonald Frank W 1124 Emtry Rd ........... . . . 663.
McDonald Lelia J Mrs 1011 Ala . . . ... . . • • . .. . 1573-R
McDonald R C 307 E 8 ... . ........ . .. . .. .. 2533-R
McDuff A R 1824 Tenn . .. . .. . ....... . • .... 2628-W
McDuff Esterine 316 Elm .. . .......... . .... 15.38-W
McElhinny J G 1133 Vt . ............. . .•. . . 3103-J
McEIIiott Richard 746 Miss . .. .. . .... .. • . . . . 2650-W
McEnulty Bernard 906 N H ... • ..... . . . ... .. 2577-J
McEwen W E 1947 R I . ....•. •. .. .. .... . .. 3239-R
McFall M D 1109 Conn . ... . . ..... . .. .. .. .. 1446-M
McFarland E A 712 Maine . ... .. •• . .. . . .. . .. .. 1670
McFarland F M Dr 1613 Vt . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 944
McFarland R R RFD 2 . ... . .. . .... • . . ... 4075-N-11
McFarland W G Mrs 700 Miss . • .... .. . . . .... 1224-R
McFarthing Stella 1032 N Y .. . .... . . . . ... . . 2111-J
McGee Lester G RFD 3 . ..... . .. . . . . .. .. . .4023-N-4
McGet N B 520 Colo . ... . . . ....... . . . ..... • . 1288
McGehee W R 745 N Y .... . ..... . ... . •.. .. 2416-R
McGhee Josie Lee Mrs 930 Ill. ............ . .. . 1727

�30

MeG- MIL

LAWRENCE

McGregor Ronald l 1345 Vt .... . ... . .• . .. . 1129-W
McGREW INVST MT CO 806 Mass . . .. . .. .... . . .. 45
McGrew M Conrad 34o l nd . . ... .. . ........ . .. 2492
McGrew W M 17 E 11
.. .. . ..... . • .. . ... . 1036
McGrud er Russell 737 Mich ... ..... . . . • ... . . 2744-J
McGruder W M 735 Mich ... . . .. . .. • . . .. ... . 3822
McGuire Clair A Sunflower Apts . .. ..... . •.. .. 1804-J
McKay Andrew Mrs 945 Emery Rd . .. .. . .... . . . 3442
McKee B E 21 41 Ohio . . . . . ... .. . . . . . .... . . 2821-J
McKelvey H 812 N Y . ... .... . .... . ...... . . 3886-J
McKelvey Jacob 42 6 Perry . . . . . . . .. . ... ... . 1123-M
McKenzie Elizabeth Mrs CSP 046 Ky . . .. . .... . . 3594
McKenzie Wilma Mrs 1930 R I. ........ .. . . . . 2322-J
McKessor I W 906 E 13 . ... .. .... . ...... . . 282.3-W
McKinley J R 909 w 6 . . . ...... : . . .. .. . . . . . . 3891
McKinney Esther Mrs 516 La . ........ .. ... .. 2805-J
McKinney M K 1633 Vt .. .. .... .. .. . ... . . 3288- M
McKin ney Merle ins 840~ Mass .. . .. • . . . . ... ... 250
McKinney Merle 2133 Ohoo ." . . . . ...... . ..... 1251-W
McKinney Robt J 1913 Ohoo . ........ . .. . . •. . 2537-J
McKissack B Mrs 446 Fla . . . . . . . . •• . . . . • ... . 3725-J
McKissack Geo 412 Mich . ... . . . .. . . • . . .. . . 4250-M
McKissack S M G Mrs 1038 Pa .. . • . ..... ... . 2756-J
McKissack Ulysses 754 l ocust . ....... • • . . ... 2779- R
McKitrick Edw 617 Walnut . . . .. ......... . .. 1194- M
McKitrick Wm J 721 Elm . . .. .. . .. . . . . . .. . 1592-J
McKittrick Arthur L 705 N H . ..... . .. . .. . . . 3749-W
McKi ttrick Fiorella C Mrs 616 Ky . . . . . . . • . . . . 2187-R
McKnight Jean 1205 Dread . . . . . .. . ........ . . . 4233
McKone S A Major 500 La . .. ......... . ... 1433-R
Mclachlan Eugene 1411 Haskell . . . . .. . .•. . .. . 1026-J
Mclaughlin P B Mrs 102 W 13 . .. .. . .. . .. .... . 3506
Mcl ean l S 1001 Pa ... . ... ... .. . ...... . . 2609-W
Mclees Harold 916 Ky .. . .. ..... .. ..... . . . 2188-W
Mcleod Jas I 631 E 23 .. .... ...• . . .. . .... . 1291-J
Mcleod Joyce 1203 Dread . . .. .. . . . . . . .. . . . . 2278-W
McMahon T F 6 Westwood . .. .... ... ..... . . 3505-M
McMannes J D 501 North . . ... . ... .. . ....• . . 1992-J
McManness N S 14 16 Ky . . .. . .. ... . ....... 3209-W
McManness R A 1116 Ten n ... . . . . .. . . .... . . 3997 -M
McMichael C S 1336 Ky . . ...... ... . .. . .. . . 2287-J
McMillin Clyde 3 11 lincoln . . .. . .. . .. • . .. . . . 1166-W
McMillin John S 1046 Ky .. . . ......•. .. ... . . 3651
McMullen Lester C 1500 Oak Hill ..... ... .... 2806-M
McNabney Chas 1619 Vt . .. .. . . . . ..•. .. .. . 2173-W
McNair Geo T Mrs 1624 Ala .. .... . .. • .. . .. . 2674-W
McN amara Merle 1219 Ky . . .......... . .... .. . 1986
McNamara Minnie 630 R I . . ...... . ..... . . . 3620- R
McNees l W RFD 6 . .. . ... . .. . ..•..... . 40.35- N-4
McNei ll F L 1146 Del .. . .. . . . .... . ... .. .. .. 3041
McNei lly Ruth 925 Ala . .. ... . . . . •. ... • .... . 3930-J
McNish Fred 1945 Vt .. ..... . .. . •.... . ... . 3250- M
McNown W C 1734 Ill .. . ..J • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 3043
McPeak R I( 1810 La .. ............. .. . . .. 1202-J
McPeak Studio 730 Mass . .. . . .. . . . . . . . . .. . . .. . 302
If no, answer call ... .. . . ... . • . .. . . • ... .. 1202 -J
McPike C W 746 Mo . . .... . ... ..... . . .. . . . 1665-M
McPike W H 735 Ark . ....... .. .. . . .. ...... 2970-J
McRoy's D-X Serv Sta 23 &amp; Haskell . . . . . . . . . . . 2071
McWilliams Li llie 1300 N J . .. .. . . ... . . .... . 2869-J
Meade I J 1630 111 • • • . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 1223
Meader Margaret 1032 Ky . .. . . ... .. • .. .. .. 2468-M
Meairs Wm R RFD 2 . .. ... . .. .. • . . ...... 4093-K-2
Means Hugh SOl La . . . . ..... ... . . ... . . .. 2548
Means Viola Mrs 161 Lincoln . . .. .. . .... . . .. 1195-J
MEDICAL ARTS CENTER 4 &amp; Maine . . . . • .. . . . 3975
Medical Arts Pharmacy 4 &amp; Maine .. ..... . .. . .. 3975
Mee John F 1508 Unoversity Dr ... .. . .. . .. ... .. 2811 ·
Meeker Bruce P RFD 6 . ... . ... . . .. .. ... . 4004-K-21
Meeker Ronald RFD b ... .. . . .. . • . .. ... .4004-K-21
Meier Phyllis 1104 W 6 .. . ... . .... • . . . . . . . . 2147-M
Meier Wi lbur J 128 W 13 .. . ..... .. . . . .. . . . 1904-M
Meis Rut h 910 N H .. .. ...... . .. . .. . .... . 1962-W
Melton H T 2102 Barker . . ....... . ... . . . . . . 1773-J
MELVIN GEO K atty Jayhawker Theatre Bldg . .. . . 951
Residence 2239 W Drive . . . . .. . ... . . _. . . . . 1722
M~ l vin laight on R 737 Maine .. . ... .. ... . . . . . . 1003
Melvin R E 300 W 23 . . . .. ... .... .. ... .. 2687-J
Melvin's Serv Sta bOO W 23 . .. . .. . . ....... ... 2017
Memorial Park Cemetery E 15 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1459
Menchet t i Don 615 La . .. ....... . .. .... . 3057-M
Mendenhall Geo l 1234 Dread . ... .. . ..... .. 2917-M
Mendenhall House 1234 Dread . . . . . • .. . . .... . . 2129
Mendoza Pablo 735 Pa . . . . .. . .. .• . •. . .. . . . . 2471- R

Menger L H 743 La . . . ... . ... . . . . . .. .. .. .. .. 2239
Menzies John L RFD s . .. . . .. .. .. . . . . . . .4062-K-12
Mercer J E 1045 Ky . . . . ..... . . . . ...... .. . 1658-M
Meredit h Hotel 708 Mass. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2316
Merkel Bernice 1512 Oakhi ll . . ..... ••. .. ... . 2286-R
Merriam Daniel F Sunnyside KU . ... . •• . . .... . 3530- R
Merriam F M 536 Ohio
. . ... .. ..... ... . .. .3559
Merriman Wm R Rev 243 N 4 ..... . . .. • .. . . . . .3421
Merriott John W 823 Ark . . ..... . . • .. . . . . .. 2612-R
Merri tt Eugene 446 Locust . . ... . . . • .. .. . . .. 2912-R
Merritt I H 0&lt;43 Tenn . .. .. . . .... . .... . .. . .. . 2389
Merritt J E 1304 Tenn . . . . . . . . .
. . .. . .. 3466-W
Mersey W H 2125 Tenn ... . . . ... . . . ...... .. 1952-M
Mertz Geo Mrs 1320 N H ........ . .. . . .. • . . 3545-M
Mervine I W 709~ Mass ... . .... .. .... • . . . . 3105-M
Meserve Walter J Jr Sunnyside KU . ...... . ... . 598-R
Messenheimer Clara M ~s 2045 N H .... . .. . ... .. 3738
Messenhimer Kenneth E 923 Ala . . . .. •• . . .... 3779-J
Messer J A 1605 R I. . ... . .. . ...... . .... . . . . 1028
Messer N D 1736 La . .. .. . . . . . . . . . . ... .. . . 2240-R
Messinger Eugene 1036 N H .... . .... . .... •. 1972-M
Met calf. T G RF D 6 .. ...... . . . .. . •• . . . ... .3724-R
Methodist Church First 946 Vt . . . .. . .. .. . . .. . . 1908
Metsker J F 721 Mo ... ... . .. .. . . .. • . . . ... . 2975
Mettner C W Jr 2108 Ohio .. .. ... . ........ 2135-M
Mettner Furnace Co 1851! Mass. . . . . . . • . . . . . . . 476
Mettner John R 600 W 23 . . .. . . . . .. . ... . .. . 2829-J
Metz J M 1525 R l . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . • . . . _.. . 2252-J
Metzger M H 1339 Vt .... .. . . .. ..• •. .... . . 1793-R
Metzler Dwight F 937 Maine ...... •. ... . . . . 1811-W
Metzler l M 637 Oh io .. . . . ... .. ... . . . ... . . 1960-J
Meuff els Lewis C RFD 1. . . . . . ... . . . ... . .. 4068-N-2
Meyer H R 1200 Almira . . ....... .. . .. ... . . . 3131- R
Meyer Herman E 1446 Maple Lane . . ... .. .... 1272-R
Meyer Joanne Mrs 61 0 w 4 ..... ..... •.. . . . . . 2760
Meyer Norman 725 Miss . .. . . .... .. ... ... . . 2935-R
Meyer Sanitary Milk Co 304 Locust . .... . . . . . . . .. 262
Meyers lee J 1333 Conn ... ... . . .. ..... . . . 3652-W
Meyerson Beverly Sunnyside K U . .. . .. . . .. . .. 2900-R
Michael J H 1029 Ky ... .... .. ... . .. .. . .. . 1207-M
Michael V D 212 E 14 . ..... . .... .......... 2868-J
Michaelson Emma Louise 1420 Crescent ...... .3441 -W
Michener Chas D RFD 4 . _ . ... . .. . . . . . . . . . . 2225- M
Middlekauf f Wm 1031 Maine . . . . .. . . . .... .. • . . 1267
Midwest Mf g Co 2205 Haskell . .. ...... . .. . .... . 394
MIDWEST MOTORS RFD 3 . . .. .. ... . . .. . .. . . 3005
Midyett 0 H RFD 5
.. . . .. .. . • . ... . • . . . . 2973-M
Mignot Garage 628 Mass . . . .. .. • . . .. •• .. . .. . 1820
Mignot 0 l 1930 N H . . . . .. . . . .• ....... . 3376-W
Mikols Walt er J '100 Ohio . .... • ............ . 1947-J
Milburn Earnest 928 Oh io . ..... . .... . .... .. 1144-M
Miburn Jas L 907 E 13 . . . .... .. ... .. .... .. 1081-J
Miles H E 512 l nd .... . .... . ........ ... . . . . 3763
Miles Oscar 122 3 Del .. ... .. • ... . • . ... . .. . 1230-R
Miles Sadie B Mrs 1140 Ky . .. ... . .... . ... . 2641-W
Mil ell Marvin C 1125 R I. ...... . ..... ..... 3455- M
Millar Wm A Wren Bg . . .. . ........ . ... . . . 1242-R
Miller Ann Mrs 1324 Vt . .. . ...... • ..... . . . 1361-W
Miller Barbara 740 La .. .. . ... . ... .. . .. . . . 1871-W
Miller Barbq RFD 5 ... . . . . .. . . .. . .. . . .. 4081-N -4
Miller Bernard L 1o04 W 5 . ....... . . . . . . . . 3448-W
Miller Bruce l 802 Miss . .. ........ .. .. . . . 2274-R
Mill er Carl RFD 1 . . . . .. . .... • .. . . . . . . 4039-N -12
Miller Carl 0 1106 Ohio .. .... . . . ..... . ... . 2882-R
Miller Carol barbq RFD 5 .......• .. .... . .. 4081-N-4
Miller Ceci l 1310 Oakhill . ...... .. ••. . ... . .. 3755-R
Miller Chas V 2033 Mass. .. . ... . . . .. . .. .... 2595-R
Miller Clarence A 1820 lnd ... .. . ... .. . ... . . 2589- R
Miller D A loll Ky .... . . .... . ..... . .... 1406-M
Miller E Lee lOll w 9 .. . .... .. . ....• . .. . .. 2769-J
Miller Eugene R 414 Forest ... • . . . . • . . . ... . . 1693-J
Miller F 0 645 Maine
.. . .... . . .. . . .... . 1400-R
Miller Fred C 830~ Tenn .. .. . ... . .. . . . • . . . . .3006-M
MILLER FURNI TURE CO 741 Mass . . .. • . . .. .... 246
Miller Galen G 1008 N Y .. . . . . ... . .. • .... 2446-M
Mi ller Grace l Mrs 1033 Vt . . . . .. .. .. .. . . . . 2468-W
Miller H M Mrs 345 Ill ... ... .. . . ... . ... . . . 3310-W
Miller Hall 1518 lilac Lane . ... . .... . .. .. ..... . 980
Miller Harlan W 2025 R I .. .. . . . . ...... . . .... 1149
Miller Harry R RF D 5 .. .. . ... . . .. . . .. ... . 4033-K-4
Miller Howard E RFD 2 ... . .. ... . .. . ... .4061- K-22
Miller Howard l 1231 Dread .. . ..• ... . .. . . .. 3823-M
Miller J C 833 Conn . .. .. .... . .... . ..... . . . 1741-R

�LAWRENCE

Miller J F Mrs 2146 Mass .•...... .•. •...•.. 2553-J
Miller J W 1101 La . . .............. . .•..... 1418
Miller Jack 1350 Strong . ............ . . ..... .. 2600
Miller John W 817 lnd .. ... . .... .. . ...•..•. .. 1864
Miller-Jones Shoe Store 829 Mass ....•..•. ... . .. 503
Miller Kenneth 722 Locust .....•...• .•.•.... 3956-R
Miller Melvin 2005 N H . .. . ..... .. •..•. .. . 2554-J
Miller Nellie Mrs 1612 W 5 . ..........••.. .. 1086-J
Miller Print Shop 821 Vt .. ........... •... ... . 518
Miller R C 1545 University Dr . ...•... • .•.••. . . 2824
Miller Ralph 536 Tenn . . . ...........•.... 1677-R
Miller Ralph W 2113 Ohio . . ...... .... • .... . 2936-M
Miller Robt E 601 W 23 . .... . ..... . ... . ... 2629-R
Miller Roffle 731 Hickory . .. . .. • .. . . . ..•.•. . 2354-R
Miller Su san H Mrs 817 lnd ....• • ...•.•.•.. . 1864
Mill!r Vanroy W 1101 E 19 . ...........•.... 2851-R
Miller W 0 1220 La . . .. ....... . .... • ..... 3248-M
Miller Wm D 1032 Ky . .... . ........ • . .... 2236-M
Miller Woodrow W ofc 8 &amp; Vt . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . 840
Miller Woodrow W 14 Westwood Rd . ... . ... . . . . 3520
Milleret Geo RFD 5 . . . ................ .4028-N-12
Milleret Louie J RFD 5 . . . . .. ... • . .. . .... 4053-N-4
Milliken J C 622 lnd . ................•..... . 2399
Milliron B D 1224 Del . . . . • • . . • . . . • . . . . . . . 3413-R
Mills E F RFD 5 ... .. . . . ..•........ . ... 4078-K-22
Mills J S 910 Tenn . . . . .......... • .. . . ... . 3294-W
Mills Jim Garage 229 Elm . . .....•.....•.... .. . 653
Mills lawrence 2040 Ohio .. . ..........•.... 2927 -R
Mills R C RFD 4 ... . . . . ...... .. .. . ... .. ... 1867-R
Milroy Dean J 1629 Ky .... .•....... . ... ... 2686-R
Miltner Hugh F 1524 H I . .. ... . ............ 2916-R
Minden Dennis l 1230 Conn . .............. . 2217-W
Minges F Carl1717 Ind . . .. . . .. .. .......... 2631-W
Minor Elnora 639 Lyons .. . .... . ............ .. 1939
Mintier H W 806 R I. .. . .. .. .... ....... ... 3576-R
Minton Frank A Jr 1818 Miss .•....•......•. 3144-J
Miracle Andy 644 Walnut . . .. ..... . ....... .3956-J
Miracle Johnnie 825 Garfield ............... . 1255-J
Miskimen Howard 1016 R 1 . ...•.......... . 2585-M
Miskimen Phyllis 547 lnd ... ... . . ...•....... 2124-J
Mitchell A B atty Jayhawker Bg ........ . ...... . 525
Residence 603 Tenn . .... ...........•. .. .. . 3761
Mitchell Chester RFD 2 . . . . .... . ........ .4084-K-13
Mitchell Cordelia 1120 N Y .•................ . 3985
Mitchell D G 318 Locust . ......•.•......... 3398-W
Mitchell Franklin 1709 w 9 . .... • .. . .. ... .. 2612-W
Mitchell H W 21 ... . . . ..•.....•.... . ...... . 1766
Mitchell J Robt 548 E 19 . . ....•...•..••... 3244-M
Mitchell John W WREN Bg . •.......•........ . 3716
Mitchell Matthew H ~01 Ill ............. . .. 2809-M
Mitchell 0 Warren 2139 Ky ............... . 2369-W
Mitchell Owen RFD 4 . . .......... .• . . . . .4096-N-13
Mitchell Sam 1635 Mo . . , . ... .... . ........ 2268-M
Mitchell Stanley Mrs 1546 Mass .... ... ...... 1906-M
Mitchell Thos 758 Ash . ... .. .... ..•. . . ..... 1736-R
Mitchell Wiley S 2136 La . . . ............... . 3996-J
Mittelstadt Leslie P 1729 Mass . •.......... .. 3546-J
Mix A J 1134 La . .. . . ... ....... • .......... . 3278
Mize Dorothy Mrs 19 W 11 .... . .. . ... ... . . 3481-W
Mize W S 2109 Ky .... ......... .....•. .. . 2902-M
Mock Cynth ia 1524 N H . . . . ............... 11'16-W
Modern l P-Gas Serv 400 E 23 ...... • ...... .. 710
Mohler Albert L 1422 N Y ......•.. .. .•... . 2302-M
Mohler B H 720 R I. . . . ................... 1353-W
Mohler C Otto 2137 R I . .............. .. . . . 1038-R
Mohler Clarence 1313 Conn . ............ . . . . 2860-R
Mohler Ernest M 910 R I. ................. 2982-M
Mole Geo W 1140 E 13 .. . ....•....... . . ... . . 1958
Moline Grace 808 w 9 . . ...• • ..... ...... .. 2296-W
Moll Roy W 1401 w 7 . . ... .. ......... •.. . . . 3080
Monarch Life Ins Co 1415 R I. ................. 192
Monchonsia Hall 1o 14 Miss . . . . ... . . . .. •• ..... . 365
Moncrietf Al ice Mrs 1649 Edgehill .... . ........ 2836
Mongold R D 945 Conn . .. .. ......... ..... . .. 2599
Monroe Walter 400 Wis ... ......... . ..... . 3194-M
Montell Ralph RFD 2 . . .... ....... ...... 4061-K-12
Montgome1·y Frank 717 Conn . . .... ........•... . 599
Montgomery Fred S 2033 Tenn ............... . 2501
Montgomery J S 2236 Ohio . . . .... . •. .. • ... . 3794-W
Montgomery John A 1001 Conn ....•........ 1794-W

MONTGOMERY WARD &amp; CO

MIL- MOW 31

Retail Store 825 Mass . .. . . .... . .• ...... ... 195
Catalog Order Dept 825 Mass .......•...... . .. 58
Moody Glenn A 743 R I . . . ...•.......•.... ... 2567
Moody Harry F 909 Mo .... .. .. .... .... .... 2535-J
Moody Max D 1126 Tenn ..... . • ........... . 2894-J
Moomau E P loll N H . ...•••.•..••.••.• . 2.500-R
Moon Carleton E 94.3 N Y .. . ......... .. .•.. 1058-J
Moon Chester 500 I ll .. . .... . ... . ...••....... 4231
Moon I E 778 Grant ............. ......... . . 2376
Moon Jack 2340 Vt ..•. ......... .•. . . .... . 3645-J
Moon Ross 1012 Pa .. . .................. . 3229-W
Mooney Chas 316 Pe rry .. . ... . • . . ..... .... . 2552-J
Mooney Geo 717 N 4 . .... . ......... • . .• .. 2578-M
Moore Assocts 400 Iowa .................... . . 390
Moore Dinty RFO 5 . . ..................... 2574-J
Moore E H 302 Perry . .. ...... • • ... • ...... . 2720-J
Moore F Stanley 717 Miss ... . ... . • .... • ... . 3690-M
Moore G H RFD 5 . . . . . ..... . .. • . . . • •...... 25711'-J
Moore Gerald 2233 La . .. . ...•......•...... 2852-R
Moore Howard 2142 Mass . ...•......•...... . . 1855
Moore Howard G WREN Bg ..... ...... • .... 3077-W
Moore Jas S 710 lnd . . . . . . ................ 3299
Moore Jimmie elec applncs 1103 Mass ........ .. .. 19
Moore Julia Mrs 735 Ill .. ... . •.. .... . ..... .. . 1669
Moore Lynn R Lt Col 2 334 Vt ............... 3645-R
Moore Mark Q 930 Maine ...... . .. . ...... . . 3779-R
Moore Meribah 1300 La ..... . ................ 1309
Moore Milton 519 Elm . . .... . ....... ... ..•... 1519
Moore Raymond C 1513 Crescent Rd ... • . ...... . 3211
Moore Robt F Sunnyside K U ............... 3416-W
Moore Roy R 946! Tenn . .. ..•.............. . 1696
Moore W A ins 927 ~ Mass . ..........•... .. ... 1046
Moore W A 1818 lnd . . ............•....... . 3059
Moorhead Jas E 1904 Vt . . ..... . . . •• ... . .. . 3~38-J
Moorman Fred J 326 Miss .............. . . . 2778-W
Moorman Geo W RFD 6 . .. . . . ...... • .... .4052- K-4
Moorman Orville E 1941 Learnard ........ . ... 2362-J
Maranville B F 844 Maple .. . . ......... . : . . . 2990-J
Moreau Frederick J 194 2 La . .. .... ........ . . . 2909
Morgan Della E 330 Mich .. .... . ... . ... . .. . 2227-J
Morgan Gene E Sunf lower Apts . ............ .4217 -R
Morgan J D 1632 lnd ..................... 3453-M
Morgan J F Jr RFD 3 . . . . . ...... • ........ 4045-N-4
Morgan Jean W 1923 Tenn ... ..... . ... ..... 1720- M
Morgan L E 726 Miss
. . .. . ......•.. .... . . 2819
MORGAN-MACK MOTOR CO 714 Vt ..•....... . 3500
If no answe r call
. . .... ... ... .. 3755-J
Morgan- Mack Used Car Co 726 Vt ............. . 144
Morgan Mary Counts Mrs 616 Ky ............ 2187- R
Morgan Wm B 1830 Ill . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . 3272-J
Morgans Otis J Haskell Grds .......... • . ... . 1152-R
Morris A 1445 Laura . ..... .... ... ......... 2814-J
Morris Archie 1205 E lJ . . ....... . .... ..... 1272-J
Morris H l 1330 Brooks . . ..... . . . . . .... . ... 1829-J
Morris Homer Sunnyside K U ................. .3468
Morris John F 641 Mo .. . . . . .. . • . ... ..... . 2596-W
Morris Orvi lle 418 Forest . .. . ........ . ..... . 2395-M
Morrison E G 333 Ark .. •.. • ... .......... . 2323-W
Morrison Eva 1241 Tenn . ..... • .... . ....... . 766-M
Morrow Duane C 1016 Ill . ... ......• ...•...... 3762
Morrow Harry E 1208 Conn .................. . 1451
Morrow W M 619 N 2 . .. ...... . ......... . . 3159-M
Mortenson AI 2011 Ohio . ... . . . • ....•..... . 2497-W
Morton Clark 0 RFD 3 ... . .. ... . . ...... . . 4071-N-3
Morton Clark 0 Jr 1912 N H ..•... . .... . .. . 3198-M
Morton Harold H 918 N J ... ... . ......... . 2788-W
Morton Walter M 148 Pawnee . ... ......... 2969-M
Morton's Bldg Matrls Co 1834 Mass .. ... ..• .. . . . 264
Moser Don 1002 W 6 . . . . . . . . . ......... . .. . 1840-J
Moser Herbert 733 Maine ................ . . 2773-R
Moses Lewis RFD 2 .. .. .... • . ........ . . 4003-N-12
Mosley G E 2227 Tenn . . . .... . . .. ...... . . .. . 1760
Moss Robt M Sr 928 R I ........•......... . 1648-R
Mosser Russell 1701 K¥ . . .. .. ... . ......... 3440-M
MOSSER-WOLF INC 11.07 Mass . .. .. . ......... .. 50
Motley V 1030 N J
. . . . . . . . . . . . . ... . . . 1655-R
MOTOR IN ONE STOP STATION 827 Vt ..... .. . . 607
Mott Gayle 1700 w 4 .. ....... . ............. 1842
Molt Stables 1700 w 4 . ........... . ... . .... . 1842
Motta Glenn A 1023 N Y ... ... .. ...... . ... 1764-W
Mounsey Robt 1005 Maine ... . . .. .. ........ . 2543-J
Mount Hope Nurseri es Eldridge Hotel . .. .. . .... .. 441
Mowder Robt l 1118 Ore . .... .. . . ..... . . .. 1489-W

�32

MOW

NOR

LAWRENCE

Mowder Samuel RFD 4 ... . .... .• .... . ... 4014-K-12
Moys Fay 620 Ky .. ........ • ...... .. .. . .. 2653-W
Mrkonic Geo R 1521 Ky . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . 2923-J
Muilenburg Grace 1818 Ill . .......... . ...... 3014-R
Muldrow H D 208 Ark . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . 1703
Muldrow Lawrence L 505 Wis ... . ... • . . ..... 1086-W
Mulford Dwight J Sunnyside K U ..... • ...... . 3530-J
Mulkey Mary 817 Tenn .....•....... • ....•. 2356-M
Mull Bob 300 Elm .. .. . .. . ..... . . . . ..... 1042-W
Mull Chas 212 Lincoln .. . ....•...... • ... . .. .. 2526
Mull Mildred M 212 Lincoln ...••.... • ....... . 2526
Mullenix Stanley 2146 Ky .. •.. ....•.• ... ... 2238-R
Mullin Earl 619 Ill .. . ..................... 1299-J
Mullin Leroy H 539 Ala . .......•........ .. 2147-W
Mulvihill John RFD 1 Williamstown ... ... . . 4043-N-11
Mulvihill Mary 1047 R I. . . ............... .. 3047-J
Mumford Robt H 817 Walnut .............. . 2751-W
Murphree H C 835 Ill ................... . . . 210B-J
Murphy Baker RFD 3 . . .... .. . . . . . .. ..... 40116-N-2
Murphy Chas 934 Del ......... ..... •..... . 2428-M
Murphy E C Mrs 936 Ky . . . ...••..• . •.. .. . ... . 97B
Murphy Franklin 0 Lilac Lane .........•..... . . . 9B2
Murphy Harry L RFD 6 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4004 -K-3
Murphy John W A 626 Locust .............. . 1460-J
Murphy Keith 1308 E 15 . .. ... . . • .. . . . .. . . . 1465-M
Murphy M W 1339 Tenn •. . ....•.... • ..... . 2565-R
Murphy W M 747 N 6 . . ... ....... .. . .. . . . . 3122-W
Murray John F 1420 Crescent Rd .. ........ . . 3441-M
Murray Jos W 504 La ... . ...............•. . 1713
Murray L E 908 W 4 .. .....•. ........ ... . . 3917-R
Murray Millard RFD 3 . .. . ... ... .. .. ... . 4071-K -21
Murray Monroe D 1800 Ark .... . .......... . 2564-W
Murrill R 11925 R I. .. .. .... .. .. . ... .. .. .3198-W
~- Geo 1002 w 6 .... ... .... . ..... . ... 18110-M
Mus1ck John W RFD 6 •.. . . . . ... .. ...... 4005-N-11
Musselman Fred L 1023 N J .......••....... 2111-R
Muth Russell 601 Miss .. ..........•........ 3962-R
Muzzy M F Mrs 706 Ill ..... . ... . . .. ... .. . . 2935-J
Myer Elvin D 821 Penn . ... ...... ...... .... 2317-R
Myer Maurice B 801 Mo ... .. .. ..... . . . .. ... 2181-J
Myers C A &amp; Son grnhse 435 Mich. : . ....•.. . .. . 312
Myers Claude RFD 1. ... . ... . .. .. . ...... . 4068-N-3
Myers Graves T Sunnyside K U . • ....••....... 931-R
Myers Hall 1300 Oread . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . 2795
Myers leonard L 1629 Haskell • . • ..••....... 1275-W
Myers Mary Mrs 1201 Ky ..... ..•..... .•.... . 812-J
Myers S leroy 1140 Ohio .................. . 1603-J
Myers Wm F 941 lnd .•.. ......•. .. ....... 1788-M
Mzhlckteno leroy 532 Mechanic ...... • ...... 2254-R

N
Naff Philip 740 ~ Mass ....... .. .... ....... 1893-M
Nash Bernice 643 Tenn .......... . ......... 2966-M
Nash Bert A 725 Ohio ... . . ...........•...... 2692
Nash W W drugs 4 &amp; Maine ... ••.. . . . • ....... 3975
Residence 1046 N H .... . .. . •. .. . . • . .... . 3374
Nason Herbert M 121 W 14 . . . . .. .... . .. ... 3696-W
Nation 0 C 1106 La ... . .. . .. . .. . ..... . .. . . 3231-J
National Farm Loan Assn of lawrence 723 Mass .. . 446
NATIONAL MARKETING CO 920 Del. ..• •... . .. . 357
If no answer call .... .....................:3626
Natkln &amp; Co 1330 Miss . .................... 2728
Neal Harold L 1317 Ohio .. ................. 4211-R
Nease Arthur 1125 N J ................... 1472-W
Needels J R 311 E 11 . . ......... .. ....... 1532-W
Neff Kenneth WREN Bldg . ...... .. ......... 3938-R
NEFF KENNETH S ofc 940 Mass. . . . . . . . . . . . . 774
Nehrbass Herbert C 841 Maine . . . ... .. ..... .. 2283-J
Nehrbass Marl RFD 1. .... . . . .. ... . . .. . .. 4070-N-2
Neiswanger laura 1310 La . ....... . ...... . . . 1534-J
Nelick Frank C 705 Mi ss . . ... . ......... . . . .. 3609-J
Nellis Carlotta 1425 Alumni Place Dr .......... . 3405
Nelson C F 625 W 16 . . . .. . . .. . .. .. . •• ... . .. 1757
Nelson Carl E 1208 Ky ...... . ..... . ....... . 28118-J
Nelson Edw G 615 Tenn . . . ........... • ..... . 3382
Nelson Frank 1812 Tenn .................. . 1421-R
Nelson Grace S Mrs 1116 La .•..•.....•.... 3231-M
Nelson H C RFD 5 .... ..... . . . .. ...... .. 4028-K-3
Nelson Harvey 770 Ash .............. . .. . .. 1736-W
Nelson Homer D 1340 N H .... . ........... . 1374-R
Nelson J C RFD 2 . . . . . ...... . . • ..... ... . 4061-N-2
Nelson J H 1700 W 9 ... .. ... . ... .. . •. .. .. 3614-M

Nelson Jacob 1545 Barker .................. 2506-J
Nelson John M 1132 Tenn .. ... .. • ...... . ... 1587-W
Nelson lawrence 1005 lnd . ....•...•.....•.. 3268-W
Nelson Mildred Mrs 2216 Ohio ..... • ....... . 2971-J
Nelson R Wayne 428 Forest .•............. . 2395-W
Nelson Ralph 233 Perry . .. . ... . .... . . • . . . . 2763-W
Nelson Richard A 828 Ark . . . . ... .... .• .. . .. 1271-M
NELSON RICHARD 0 phy 201 W 8 .... • . . ...... . 110
Residence RFD 4 .... . ...... .. .... . ........ 290
Nelson Ruth 827 Garfield . ....•..... . .. . .. . . .. 3538
Nelson Truman 227 Lincoln ... ... .. .•.. . . . .... 3980
Nelson W E 241 Perry
......... . ........ 2763-M
Nelson W M lt Comdr 125 E 17 .. . .. . ... . . .. 4243-J
NELSON W 0 phy 201 W 8 .. . •... .• . .... . ... . 110
Residence 545 E 19 , ........... .. ......... 2651
If no answer call ... .•...........•..... .... 870
Nelson Walter 445 Calif ................. .. 1581-M
Nemecek Ivan 1328 Tenn . ... .. ... .. . . . . . ... 1245-R
Nesmith Dean D 1025 Ala ......... . ......... 3051
Netzer E J 1705 Haskell . ........ . .. ..... .. 1275-M
NeuenSchwander Elise 1324 La ........... .. 1534-W
Neumann Jas W Jr 2100 Oh io . ... . • . . . ..... . 1543-R
Neustifter Edw C 918 N H ......•.......... . .. 3993
Nevin H L 836 Mo .. . .. ................ . .. . . 2580
NEW YORK CLEANERS 926 Mass ....•......... . 75
New York Cleaners Annex 411 W 14 ........ . ... . 307
New York School 936 N Y . .. . . . .....•.... . .... 261
Newby Bessie Mrs 1316 Ohio ..........•..... 2738-M
Newcomb F A Dr 912 Ill ...... • ............. .3220
Newell Carl S 517 N 8 .. .. ............. .. 2125-J
Newfield John Sunnyside K U ... • . . .. .•..... 3963-M
Newhouse J L Mrs 938 Vt ........ . ......... 1032-J
Newman C V 1946 La ... . .... .... .. . . .. . ... . 3942
NEWMAN C V FARM AGCY 1946 La . . . ..... . .. 39112
Newman Edwin Haskell Grds . . . . .. ... . . .. ... 3607-R
Newman Jesse C 415 Ill. .......... . .. . ...... . 1949
Newman John F 922 Mo . .......... • ...... .. 18117-J
Newman Mildred 2120 Mass . ...•... . ...... . 2654-W
Newman Verner Jr 1112 N Y .......••.. . ... . 1472-R
Newman Verner M 122 Mo ..... . .. .• ....... . 3687-J
Newman Wm Edw 1909 Ky . . .... .. .•...... . 2402-W
Newman Wm N 1301 Summit. ... . . .. ....... . 3062-J
Newton Geo E 1107 N Y .. .. ........• . ...... . 1231
Newton Merle R 501 Tenn ..... .. .•.. .'.... . . 2101-W
Nicholas Harold J 515! w 14 .......• . ... .. . 1296-J
Nichols Clifford A 853 Elm ......•......... .2398-M
Nichols Lottie Mrs 830 R I ......... . ....... 3180-R
Nichols Raymond 1617 Alil .... • ... . ........ .. 2419
Nichols Wm T 2146 N H . ....... . ........... . 2220
Nicholson Georgia 1516 R I . . . ... •. . .... . .. 3207-W
Nicholson Jack Rev 216 N 4 . . ..... .. .. .. .. 2386-M
Nicholson R K RFD 2 ...... .. . ........ .. . 4024-N-2
Nickerson Jas F RFD 4 ...... ... ..•• ... . .. . 3635-R
Nicol Bert RFO 6 .. . . . . ....... . .. . ..... . 4008-K-2
Nicolay B G 615 W 9 . . . . . . . . . . . • . • . . . . . 1818-W
Nicolay Jas groc RFD 2 Baldwin . .. .. ... .. 4037-K-21
Nicolay Wilda Mrs 927 Ind . . . .... ......... . 2377-M
Niebrugge Bertha K Mrs 322 Johnson ........ 2483-W
Nieder Clifford C 645 R I . ... . ........ •. ... 3113-W
Nieder Gottlieb 1744 Ky . ................... 2889-J
Nieder lmplmt Co 520 W 23 ......... . .. .. ... . 385
Nieder Walter 1221 Tenn ...... .... .•...... .. 1375
Nieder Wm 1406 Conn . . . . ....•...... • ..... 3286-M
Nightingale Fred 1334 Brook .............. . 1829-M
Nightingale Richard 1404 Laura ... .. . .. ..... 3669-M
Nilges Marie E 913 Vt .... . .......... . . .. . 2695-R
Ninth Street Baptist Church 847 Ohio. • . . . . . . . .. 952
Nisely H F RFD 2 .. .. . ... .. ... . . . . . ... .. 4069-N-3
Nisely J R RFD 2 .. . . .. .. ....... . . .. .... 4069-N-4
Nitchals Harry E 1330 Vt . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3111
Nitchals Jas RFD 2 . .... . . .. . . ... .... . .. 4083-K-11
Nitcher Edgar RFD 1 . . .. ..... ...• . .. ... 4039-K-13
Nite Dean S Mrs 1116 lnd . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . 746-J
Nixon E K 1737 Miss ... ...... .• . . . . ... . .. 2374-W
Nixon G P Mrs 1312 Ohio .. ...... • ... . .... 3148-J
Noble Archie 819 Maine .... .. ........ • .. .. 3796-W
Noever Albert 1027! Mass ..... . .. . ....... .. 1959-J
Noever Kenneth 2111 Tenn . . .. . . ... . ..... .. 1720-W
NOLAND GEO INS AGCY 723 Mass . . . . . . . . . . . 473
Noland Geo W 1045 Sunset Dr ..... .. ........ 3186-J
Noll Fred 824 La . ........................ 2775-R
Norman Chas A 1222 Laura . ..... . • .. .. . . . . . 3131-J
Norman E Lee 1225 N Y ........ .. ... . . . ... 1241-J

�NOR- PAL

LAWRENCE
Norman Stanley B 112 W 15 .. .......••. ... ... 4115
Norrie Loretta W Mrs 202 W 13 ... • .•...... 3296-W
NORRIS BROS plbrs 500 Locust ..•.....•...... 1163
Norris Claude 515 Ohio ..... . . . .. .. .. ... .. .. 1394-J
Norris Donald B 749 Locust .......•........ 2934-M
Norris Everett L 215 E 18 .... ......•...... . 2618-R
Norris G K 704 Maine .... .......... • ....... 2690-J
Norris G R 500 Locust ........... ..... . ... . .. . 197
Norris G R Ins Agcy 500 locust ....... . • .. . ... . 197
Norris Jas P 922 Tenn .....• ......... . ...... . 2808
Norris Kathleen 547 Fla ... ................... 2768
North College Hall 11 &amp; Ohio ... • .....•.... ... 4280
North Eugene RFD 5 .. . ....... ........ ... 4028-1&lt;-2
North John D 340 Locust. . . .
. . . . 2804-R
North Lawrence Christian Church 647 Elm . .... 3789-M
North Lawrence Christian Church parsonage
216 N 4 .2386-M
NORTH OIL CO 624 N 2 .. . . ... . .. . . .. .. .... . 4189
NORTHWESTERN MUTUAL LIFE ·INS CO
Lawrence Natl Bk Bg 133
Norwood Helen 721 Ohio .. . . ...... . ........ 1463- R
Norwood Wesley M 1225 Ky ................ 1733-M
Notah Timothy 1111 Ky . .. ....... .. ..... . . . 3454-M
Nottingham J E Mrs RFD 3 . .... . ... ..... . 4071-K-4
Novotny E Dake Sunnyside K U .. ..... • .... .. . 993-W
Novotny E L 615 W 8 ........ . ........••..... 546
Noxon Jay A 2015 N H .................... 1625-R
Nuffer C W 1918 Vt ..... . ................ 1835-M
Nuffer L A 407 E 11 . ........... . .. . ... .. 2336-W
Nugent John M Sunnyside K U . ............... 875-R
Nunemaker Eugene Bismarck Grove ............. 1390
Nunemaker H C 64H Mass ................. . 2226-J
Nunez Juanita 736 N J .................... 1285-J
Nu Sigma Nu Frat 1241 La ........ • ........... 366
Nutting Otis S 406 E 10 ....... ..... • ...... 2443-M

0
0 K RUBBER WELDERS 790 N 2 .............. 255
Oak Hill Cemetery S E Limits ......•..•.•..... .491
Oakson Dale R 1519 Ky .... ..... . ..... ..... 2294-J
Oatman A C RFD 2 ......... . . .. . ... ..... 4080-N-2
Oberg Frank Mrs 1612 Crescent Rd .. . ....... 3727-W
Oberhelman Harley 1036 N H .. .. . ......... . 1972-W
OBERS LEADING CLOTH IERS 821 Mass ......... 203
OBrien F P 612 La . ........ . . ............ ... 12B7
O'Brien J J 527 Elm ... . ... ..... . ......... . 969-R
O'Brien Raimund 1927 Tenn .... .• ..... • .... 3255-W
O'Bryon C F dentist 19 W 9 .................. . 570
Residence 1332 Tenn .... ..................1956
O'BRYON STUDIO 1024 Mass . .. .... • ......... . 526
If no answer call ... . ..................... . 1956
O'Connell D C RFD 2. .
. .. .. . . . .... . 4086-N-11
O'Connell Elsie M 1825 La ......... • .... .. . . 3271-R
O'Connor Howard G 800 Miss ....... • ....... 196B-W
Odaffer Jos J 1000 Miss . . . . . .... ....... ... 326B-R
Odd Fellows Hall 205 W 8 . . ....•... .......... . 233
ODELL'S INSTRUMENTAL SERV 925 Mass ...... 375
O'Donnell Kathleen 1423 Ohio •.. ........ .... 2396-J
Oehrle Raymond W 1613 R I .... . ........... 3542-J
OFFICE MACHINES CO 710 Mass. . . . .
. . . . 13
Ogan A H 114 Pawnee . ........ . ... .. .•.. . . 1902-M
Ogilvie Wayne J 1109 N H. . . . . . . . . . ...... . 2850-R
Ogle C W 200 North . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . .4256-R
Ogle Duane 901 N Y .. .. ...... • ..... • ... . 2126-M
Oglesbee Dwight C 1506 R I . .. .. • .......... 3207 -M
Oglesby Dwayne K U Stadium . .. ....• . ... . .. . 1322-R
Okamoto Edw 645 Ill .. .. . .................. . 1565
OLD MISSION INN 1904 Mass .......... .... . . 2040
Oldfather C H Jr RFD 4 Clinton Kans &lt;Toll Call&gt; . 146B
O'leary R D Mrs 1106 La . . .. . ........... . . . 3231-J
O'leary Zelia 707 Conn ... .... .. ..... . .. ... 1963-W
Olinger Anna Mrs 1212 La..... .. .. . .. . ..... 3204
Oliphant John J 1732 Ky ... . . .... .. ... . . .. . 27B2-M
Oliver Archibald B 1747 Ky ...•............ 1803-W
Oliver Hall 1126 La .. ...................... .3551
Oliver Henry S 200'1 Vt ...... . ..... • ....... 1412-J
Olmsteid Marcella H 840! Ky ..... . ......... 1686-J
Olmstead P D 1904 Maine .................. 1772-J
Olmsted Chas 822 Ala ... .. .... •...... .... . 2164-R
Olmsted H W 829 Mo ..................... .. 3572
Olmsted Orley 818 Ala .... ... ... ..... .. . . .. 2164-M
Olmsted W P Mrs 1301 Vt. ......•.............127

33

Olson A E 2309 Mass ............... . ...... 2224-R
Olson A W 84H Mass ..................... 1905-J
Olson Axel 1634 R I . .................. . .. 1050-W
Olson Bros plumbers 934 Mass ........••....... 515
Olson H F 702 R I ...... .. . ............... 2319-R
Olson N 1136 Pa .. ...•...•••.... •• ....... 3138-W
Olson Oscar 919 Ala .. ...... .......... .... . 1239-J
Olson Walter 609 E 11 .......... .. .. ...... 1410-M
Oman Marguerite M 637 Ohio . . . . . . . . • . . . . . 3378-J
O' Neal Robt M 1225 Del ........... ... .. .. . 1230-W
O'Nei l E S 327 Mich ............... . ...... 1277-R
O'Neill J G 1410 N Y ...... • ..... . • ....... 1091-M
Oread Hall
Office 11 &amp; Maine ............ . . ....•.. ... .. 56
East Wing First 11 &amp; Maine .. .... .... •.. .. . 2051
East Wing Second 11 &amp; Maine .. .. .......... 2454
West Wing First 11 &amp; Maine ..... • .......... 1922
West Wing Second 11 &amp; Maine . . . .. . . . .... .. 2036
Orelup F Faye 721 Maine .. .... .......... .. 2739-R
Orender Goldie Mrs 1145 N Y .. . .. ......... . 2594-W
Organized Reserve Corps armory 609 Mass . ...... . 309
Droke Fannie Mrs 1229 Tenn ............... 3110-W
Orr Hazel 1315 W 4 .. .. . .. .. ........... . . 4250-W
Osborn Edger 521 Tenn, .•.......... •. . . ... 1197-J
Osborn K R 619 Lyon . .. ... .. ..•....... .. . 3146-W
Osborne R WREN Bg .. ....... . ........... . 2895-W
Osma Jose M 1001 Maine . .... ....• ........ .. 1307
Osmond Laurence 2239 Tenn . ...... .. . • .... . 1646-.J
Ostlund Leonard A Sunnyside K U .... • . ... ... 2941-M
Oswald Clifford 730 Ill .............. • .. . .. 2606-W
Ott Emerson J 1620 W 5 ............... . ... 3448-R
Ott Maud Mrs 809 E 13 . ....... • ..... . . . .. . 1850-R
Ott Pau l 1636 Oxford Rd ............. • ... . . 350B-J
Ott Rosa Mrs 940 Ky . .... ...... .... . • ... .. 1B44-W .
Ottinger Ray E Jr Sunnyside K U ............ 2B16-W
Ousdahl Arthur 2011 Ky . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2747-J
Ousdah l E W 601 Mo . ... ............. . ... . 2596-J
Ousdahl Guy RFD 6 ........ ... .... . ...... . 3253-W
Ousdah l leo E RFD 3 . . . .. .. . ..... •• .. ... 4045-N-3
Ou sdahl Wilford A RFD 3 . .. .. •. .... . ..... 4071-N-4
OUTLOOK THE 1005 Mass .................. . 542
Overbaugh C J 1141 N Y ....... . .......... . 2594-J
Overbaugh Phil 818 E 12 .. .. . . ...... . ..... . 282B-R
Overstreet Carl E 825 N H ...... .......... .. 1424-J
Owen E M physician 823 Ky ..... ...•••. ... .... 644
Owen Frank S 2145 Ky .........•..... •. ... 223B- M
Owen Jas A 1810 La ... . ..... .. .. . ....... .. 3225-J
Owen Leslie 1600 N H ................•.... 2916-M
Owen Marie D Mrs 1600 N H ... • .. . . . • ..... 2916-M
Owen 0 W 339 Elm .. .......... • ..... • .... 2255-M
Owens Eric liquor 7 E 9 . . . .. ... ..... • . ... .. .. . 627
Owens Eric D 626 Ky ............. ........... 1478
OWENS FLOWER SH OP 15 &amp; N Y . .. .• ...... , .. B20
If no answer call ... . . .... . ....... • . . ..... . 3550
Owens H J 232 Perry ...... . . ...... . ....... 3049-M
Owens Jas V 1101 W 21 ...... . " ' . . .•... . .... 3550
Owens M D RFD 5 .. .. . . .. . ...•....•..... 4046-K-3
Owens Miles 701 Locust .... • .... _..••..... 31Bl-W
Owens Ralph F 828 E 14 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 854-M
Owens S E RFD 3 .... ....... •.. ... • . .. .. 4023 -K-2
Owens S V 1533 Learnard . ................. 2332-M
Oyler Robt B atty 700 Mass ...... ....... . ... .. . . 53
Oyler Robt B 839 Mo ... .. .. . .. • .....•.... . .. 2967

p
Paasch Delbert 2009 Vt ......... • ....... ... . . 1213
Paasch E F 1200 W 23 . . ... . .... ... • ..... . 1154-W
Pacheco Jesse L 1417 Prospect . ....• • ...... . 3062-W
Padan F Lynn 1028 Mo . .... .. .. .. .... ... .. 2773-J
Paden W D 821 Ala . ........ . .. .. ..... . .. ... 2429
Paez Cornelio Haskell Grds .. ........... ... . 1152-W
Page RichardT 901 Maine ..... . . ... .... .... 3106-R
Page Robt A Sunnyside KU ........ .. .... ... 3646- R
Painters &amp; Decorators Local No 2 719~ Mass .. . 451
Pair Betty K Mrs 945 Mo ..... .... ..•...... 3537-W
PALACE CLOTHING CO 843 Mass . . ......... . . . 915
Palmateer Donald RFD 5 .. . . ........... . 4081 -N -11
Palmateer Perry 2213 R I. .............. .. . 1711-W
Palmateer Walter 404 Elm ................. . . 3135
Palmer Fred 345 Mich .. . . . .. ... ..... ...... 3613-W
Palmer W P Sunnyside K U . . ... ............ 1903-J

�34

PAL-PHE

LAWRENCE

Palmer W R phy BOll Mass ................... 352
Residence 918 Miss ... ..... . ............. . 1740
Palmerlee A S 1644 N H . . .... ............ . 3212-J
Palmquist Dan A Sunnyside KU .............. 3472-W
Pappas Wm 1141 Vt . ... .... .. ..... ...... . 2641-R
Paramount Processing Corp 1038 Tenn . . . . . . . . . 4269
Pardee Alice Mrs 734 Ark .......... ...•.... 2522-W
Paretsky D 1706 Vt .. . .. . ..... . ........... 2222-R
Park Albert L 612 Ind ....... . ............ 2873-W
Park Betty M Mrs 1339 W Campus Rd .... ... .. . 3013
Parker A L Rev 545 N 3 ...................... 776
Parker AT Mrs 1128 N Y . .... . ........... 1622-M
PARKER BUICK CO
Sales &amp; Serv 700 N H ........ .. ...... ...... 402
Used Car Dept 731 N 2 ........ . . • .......... 419
Parker C R 507 Mechanic ........•......... 3032-W
Parker Clarence 207 N 5 .......... . ........ 2165-J
Parker H S Mrs 761 Lake .................. 2957-J
Parker J C RFD 4 ...... .•.....••..•.... 4041-N-13
Parker Mary G 1529 R I ................... .. 1529
Parker Paul C 1729 Mass .... . ............ . 1881-M
Parker R W 833 Ind ............. . ......... 2529-J
Parker Robt RFD 6 . ..................... 4034- K-3
Parker Ruth S 1501 Vt ..... .... • ....... . . . 3654-R
Parker Thos B 2237 Mass .................... 1488
Parker Wesley M 814 Maple .•• ...... ....... 3885-R
Parkhurst Bob 603 Tenn .... .. ....•...... . .. 3722-R
Parkhurst Warren 743 R I. .. ........... ... . 1691-W
Parks G J RFD 1. ....................... 4097-N-3
Parks John D 1341 Ohio .. ..... ...... ..... . . 3336-R
Parks Matilda J 1401 Pa . ...••... ..•... ... 1241- M
Parks Wayne RFD 1 ...... .. • ............ 4063-N-2
Parkway Grill 106 W Park ...•.....•.......... 3610
Parnell E S ofc 8 &amp; Vt ..................•... . 840
Parnc!l E S 624 La ............•. •.. ........ 1250
Parr Ida 843~ Mass . . .. ................... 1905-W
Parr Noah 1322 Laura .................... 3137-M
PARSONS ED W Jeweler 725 Mass ..•. ...•... ... 717
Parsons Ed W 900 Ark ...••••....... . ........ 788
Parsons Groc 1828 Mass ........•.......•.... . 987
Parsons James H 2203 Vt ...•................ 1022
Parsons Olie R 1715 Barker ................... 1020
Parsons P F RFO 6 .... ...•... ...•...... 4035-N-22
Partridge Henrietta 1124 N Y .•..... ....... 1472-J
Paschal Wm D 427 Ala .................... 2913-R
Pasewark W H l028 Mo ..................... 2321
Passon David Mrs 638 N H ... . ................ 1500
PATCHEN ELECTRIC SERVICE 512 E 9 ......... 694
PATCHEN JOHN V antiques 720 Ohio .......... 2163
Patchen Tommy E 1924 Ohio ........•....... 2603-J
Patchen Thos W1.601 W 4 ................... 2907
Patee Theatre 828 Mass ..........•.......... . 321
Patterson A R 1423 Laura ......•.... ... ... . 3634-W
Patterson E K RFD 2 .. ... ............ . .4083-K-12
Patterson Ernest 1418 Maple Lane ....... . ... 3634-R
Patterson G Edw 925 Miss .. . ....•......... .. 763-J
Patterson Lester 0 Mrs 2112 Tenn ........... 3109-W
Patterson M J 1608 R I ........... •.... ... •.. 1218
Patterson Marion 1000 N J ................. 2451-J
Patterson Sara 517 W 14 .......... : . .. . .. . 2989-M
Patton Earle W 1324 Strong Av ............... 2290
Patton F S Mrs 1200 Tenn .................. 812-R
Patton John H ofc 1221 Oread ......•........ . . 804
Pau l Arthur N 1653 La .................... 1227-M
Pauley E B 717 Ohio .• ... • . •...•. . ........ 1463-W
Paulson H J 901 Ohio ..................... 3172-M
Paxton Dale 2001 Ky .........•..... •... . . 3055-W
Paxton E M 733 Miss ..... . .•.....•.......... 755
Paxton Oral 1035~ Mass ................... 1607-R
Payne Clarence 878 Locust ............ ..... 2990-W
Payne Jack 523 La ....... . ... . • .. . ... ... . 1388-W
Payne Jasper 337 Funston ..... • . ... .•... .. . 2770-M
Payne Paul 718 Walnut .. ... ..... ...... . ... 1180-J
Payne Robt 1120 Pa ..................•.... 2598-R
Payne Wm 926 Maine ..................... 1827-W
Peabody Frank E 1530 Learnard ........ • .... 2332-W
Peabody Irene 1647 Edgehill .•..........•... 1461-R
Pearce Eugene 1016 Ohio .. . . .. ... ... .. • .... 1946-R
Pearce L S 1807 Mass ....... ..•••...•.... 1469-W
Pearson A A 321 Miss ... ..... .. .... ...... .. 2385-J
Pearson Cecilia 740 Ohio ................... 2921-W
Pearson Gerald 708 Ohio .............•. . ... 3101-J

Pearson Hall 1426 Alumni Place Dr .. ......... .. 3865
Pearson John L 321 Funston .. .. ........... . 2301-R
Pease H W 1639 Ind ......... . ............. 778-W
Peaslee Roy C 2325 Ohio ....... • ..... . • . ... 3702-R
Peck Arthur S 512 Tenn .... ••. .. ... .....•.... 635
Peckham E S Mrs 936 Ky . .. .. ... . • • ...... .. . 1506
Peddicord J R 1424 N Y ..... . .... .. .•..... 1870-W
Pedrick Geo B Sunnyside KU ....• ...... •.... 1281-J
Peebles Steven D 120 W 13 ...... • ..... • ... . 1904-R
Peek Marian 2202 Mass .. . .................. 3317
Peet Edwin B Mrs Gower Pl ........•.......... 2845
Peete Don 424 lnd .... ..... .............. . 3183-W
Pegg LA 1309 Conn . ...... ......... . ..... 2288-W
Pendleton Hildred H Mrs 601 Miss ............ . 2853
Pendleton Raymond L phy 927! Mass ........... 2182
Residence . RFD 4 . .........•........... 4041-K-4
Pendleton Will 745 Tenn ..................... 1765
Penfold L E 417 N 8 .... .... •. ........... 3885-M
Peniston John M 121 Ill ... . . • ..... • ... .... 2108-M
Pennell Chas F 1315 N J .................. 1898-W
Penner F H 706 Conn ................... .. ... 2144
Pen ner Gertrude Mrs 829 Ala ............ ... . 945-M
PENNEY J C CO 807 Mass .. .............. . . . . 435
Pennock Guy M 1241 Del .. ....•....•...... 2365-W
Penny Carbon L RFD 2 .........•......... 4037-K-2
Penny Jas 733 Lyons ........... ........... . 3242-J
Penny M N 639 Tenn ............ ............. 949
PENNY M N CONSTRUCTION CO 730 Del ....... 1892
Penny Wm H RFD 3 Baldwin ... . ......... . 4098-K-4
Peppercorn Geo E 1946 Barker .... ........... •3991
Perdue Burton 639 Mich ........ .. . .... .... 1117-R
Perdue Geo R 786 Ash ...........•.•..•.... 1736-J
Perdue Melvin RFD 6 ..... • .... ......... 4036-N-13
Perdue S B RFD 6 . .. ..... ... • ..... .. ... 4036-K-3
Perez Laurna 1114 Ky ........ . ..•.... . . . .. 2138-M
Perkins C G 1512 Mass . . .... . ..... . •.... . . 2639-R
Perkins Carl C 1510 Mass .........•... .... . 1286-M
Perkins David S RFD 2 . ... . ...... . ....... 4084-K-4
Perkins E 0 400 Maine .................... ... 977
Perkins Margaret L 430 Maine .............. 3477 -W
Perky P 735 N 3 ...... ....... .... • •. ... . . 2157-W
Perry Carlos 817 Maine .................... 1567-M
Perry Eldon 932 R 1. ........................ 2551
Perry Henry C 040 lnd . . ......... .......... 2873-R
PERRY JAS I dntst 15 E 7 ...... •.. ........... 395
Residence 1602 Crescent Rd ... ....... • .. ... . 1911
Perry Jim 1301 W Campus Rd ..... • ........ 3484-M
Perry L R 1500 Barker ......... • .... .. .... .. 3856
Pessolano F John Jr 1032 Ky .............. . 1190-M
Petefish L H M(s 304 W 14 ................ . 1245-J
Petefish Olin K atty Jayhawker Theatre Bldg . .... .. 59
Residence 2105 R I. .... . ..... . ........ . . 1711-J
Peters Claude E Haskell Grds ..•........ . . . .. 864-W
Peters G W 941 Pa . . ...... .. .......• .... .. 1058-R
Peters Helen Mrs 1016 Ky ........... • .. . .. . 1447-R
Peters John P 2047 Barker ................. 1773-W
Peters R V RFD 2 . . ..................... 4069-K-4
Peters Wm Oliver contr 1629 Ark .••..•...•.... . 822
Petersen Earl 736 N Y . ........ ... .... ..... 3717-J
Peterson Carl G 1121 Tenn ................. 2882-W
Peterson Chas F 2352 Vt .... .. .... • ....... 3645-M
Peterson Fred 0 RFD 4 .... . .....• • .. . . .. 4049-N-4
Peterson Gai l French 1638 Ill . . . . • .... .. ..... 2411-R
Peterson H C 923 R I. ....... ............. . 2742-J
Peterson Harold 446 Ill ..................... . 3920
Peterson Hope Mrs 1138 Miss .............. . 1544-J
Peterson Julius W 1834 Learnard ............ 2444-M
Peterson Martha 1638 Ill ....... . ... ... • .... 2411-R
Peterson Robt V 1029 Tenn . ................ 3543-J
Peterson Rosemary 425 Maple ............... 3254-W
Peterson Walter 522 N. 7 ...... . ......... .. 2119-W
Petrie Chas A RFD 3 ................... 4051-N-12
Petrie Floyd RFD 1 .................... 4051-N-13
Pettengill N W refrgtn serv 521 Ind .. ....... . . . 3699
Petteng ill Walter 718 Ky .......... ... . ..... 1994-M
Petty Roy L Sunnyside KU .................. 2435-J
Pfantz Geo J 1817 Tenn . . ....... ... .. ...... 2628-R
Pfantz Wm H RFD 3 . .. ..... • ..... • ..... 4081-K-11
Phelps Donald 0 1730 Ind .................. 2745-R
Phelps E Rice 1701 Tenn .. . .................. 2729
Phelps Floor Sanding Serv 301 Miss ........... . 2755
Phelps Harry B Jr 2018 Ky ... .......... ..... 3245-J
Phelps Jas E 1343 Tenn ....... .... ... •.... 2984-W

�LAWRENCE
Phelps loan Co 8 E 7 ...... ....... ... .... .... 101
Phenacle M E Mrs 1708 Mass ... .. • .... . . . . .. 2500-J
Phi Beta Pi 1137 lnd ...... . ..... . .. ... . ..... . 817
Phi Chi 1233 Dread ..• ... . ................... 377
PHI DELTA THETA 1621 Edgehi ll Rd ... ...... . . 957
PHI GAMMA DELTA fraternity 1540 La ....... . . 443
Phi Kappa fraternity 1120 W 11 .......•...... 2122
PHI KAPPA PSI
House 1100 Jnd ...... ................... .. 284
Housemother 1100 Ind .. . .... •• ............ 1484
Kitchen 1100 lnd .. ......... ... ........ .... 472
Phi Kappa Sigma 1121 Ohio .... . ........ . .. . .. 155
Phi Kappa Tau 1408 Tenn ... ............ .. .. . . . 84
PHILLIPS A V PAINTING PAPERING &amp;
DECORAT ING SERV 605 Ala . 1206
Phillips A W 2130 Ky ...... ......... . .... . . 1965-J
Phillips Emory B 2015 Ky .............. ... . 2798-R
Phi llips F V 720 La ...... . .......... ..... . 2158-J
Phillips G H 1823 Mass . ............... .. .. 3653-R
Phillips H W RF D 4 ..... . . .... . ......... 4096-K-2
Phillips J D RFD 1 ................... ... 4067-K-2
Phillips Jessie Mrs 631 N 9 ..... . ........... 1709-R
Phillips R W 1643 R I ... .... . .. .. .. ....... 3212-R
Phillips Robt V 1717 Vt .. . .. .. ....... . .... 1809-W
Phoenix Assurance Co ltd Insurance Bg ........ . .. 40
Phoenix Indemnity Co Insurance Bg ........ . ..... .40
Physician!• &amp; Surgeons Exchange 325 Maine ....... 870
PI BETA PHI 1246 Miss ..... ... ....... . .... . 415
PI KAPPA ALPHA 1409 Tenn ... ... . ... .... . . . . 991
Pi Kappa Alpha Annex 1406 Tenn ........ ...... 3941
Pichelmann Edwin 721 Ala ..... .......... ... 2671-R
Pickel Earl 1416 Maple Lane ...... •... ...... 3634-J
Pickens Chas 220 N 6 .. .... ........•.. ... .. 3132-J
Pickens John 1931 N H . . . .. . .•.... . ....... 3527-R
PICKENS SERV STA 646 Vt . ................ 2066
PICKENS WELDING SHOP 623 Vt .... . .•..... .. 179
Pickett Calder M Sunnyside K U . .... .. .. ..... 656-J
Pickett Helen E Mrs 1022 Conn .. . ...•. ... ... 2263-R
Pickett R S 309 lnd ....... . ............... 1993-J
Pickett R W 1236 Mass .. .. . ... ....•....... 2693-R
Pickett Sam 740 R I. ......... ... ......... 1335-W
Pierce Don Sunnyside K U ...... .. .. . . .. .... 2348-M
Pierce Gloria 1345 La ....... . ............. 1108-W
Pierce Jacklin 812 R I . .......... . • . ....... 1313-M
Pierce leRoy 620 E 15 . ........ .. .. . .. .... . 2114-J
Pierce Paul 945 E 19 .... .................. 2664-J
Pierson August J &amp; Son candy 16 E 9 ... ....... 1792
Pierson C G Mrs 1246! N Y ... ....... . . . . . . 1425-W
Pierson Clarence N 429 Ala . . ..... .. . .... .. 2913-W
Pierson Elmer A 1632 Mass .......... . . .. . .. 2273-J
PIERSON I J vet 220.1 La ..................... 186
Residence 1746 Miss ... . ..• .... .. .... ...... 859
Pierson Tressa R 1046 Ky .. .. .•.. ...•.... . . 2926-M
Pinckney School 810 w 6 ............ . . . ... . .. 706
Pine Agnes 414 W 14 . .. ... .. . ..... .. . ..... 2984-R
Pine Albert R 765 N 5 .. ... . .. ....... .. .... 2354-J
Pine Arthur B 867 Lyons . ............. .. ... 2146-J
Pine Augusta 763 Walnut. . ....•.... .. . . .. . 1186-W
Pine Clarence RFD J .. .... . ............... . 1101-J
Pine Clifford A Mrs 603 Elm ............ . . . 2517-M
Pine Ed B RFD 5 ..... . ...... .. ........ 4081-N-12
Pine Elmer E RFD 5 . ............. .. . . .. . 4081-K-3
Pine Howard RFD 3 .. .. ................... 2379-R
Pine lawrence 431 Forrest .. .. . . ...... . .... 2780-W
Pine Lloyd E RFD 3 ....... ... .......... . .. 1101-J
Pine Ralph groc 718 Mass ............. ... ..... 550
Pine Ralph E 417 Ala .. ... .. .. • ... . . • ...... 2913-J
Pine Ralph E Jr 915 W 4 .. . .. . • ... .... .... 2777-R
Pine Raymond C RFD 3 .... ............ ... 4074-K-2
Pine Richard R llOO Conn . ................... 3775
Pine Roscoe RFD 3 . ....... . ..... .. ....... 1101-M
Pine Wayne A 1804 Maine . .. ... ...... •.. ... 3480-J
Pine Wilbur C 631 La ........... • ........... 2832
Pine Wm R 2029 R I .. .. . .. .. .. . .. ....... 1973-J
Pinel Frank 704 W 12 ........•. ... • . . .... . 3712-R
PINK ELEPHANT THE 706 Mass . .......... ... 2014
Pinon Wm J 842 La . . .......... . .. •• .... . . 1640-J
Piper Richard H 716 Ark . ........ . ........ 2549-W
Pipes G E Haskell Grds ..... • . .. . .......... 1854-W
Pipes H E Mrs 909 Ohio . .... . ...... . ..... . 2915-W
Pipes I H 1326 Mass .......... ... ......... 2530-M
Pippert Albert 1401 Laura ............. .. .. 2837-W

PHE- PRI

35

Pippert Albert Jr Mrs 1507 E 15 ............. 1876-J
Pippert Alton 331 Johnson ... . .. . .......... 2483-M
Pippert C W Mrs 112 R I. . . . . . ............ 2857-M
Pippert Elmer C 1701 N H ......... . . . .... . .. 1634
Pippert Frank M 314 Johnson ...... . .......... 1041
Pippert Harry C 1824 Barker. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1013
Pippert Henry 315 E 19 ... ......... ...... . 2977-M
PIPPERT'S AUTOMOTIVE PARTS CO 217 E 8 .. . .. 8
Pirtle Gerald C 2232 N H ...... .. .......... 1554-J
Pistorius G l 1729 Miss ... ....... .. .. .. . .... 3068
Pitcher Arthur 1829 Ky .• •.••••••.. •. . .... 2628-M
Pitman Wm C 1532 Mass ... . ... ... .... .... 1619-W
Pitts lee 1721 Ohio . .. . .... • ..... • ......... .3045
Pladium 901 Miss . ........••... ... . . .... .. . 3379
Plain Jack 1131 Del ..... • ..... . . . . .. • . . . . . 3608-R
Plaisted Wm 345 Mo . . . ... . •.. .. . • .. . ... .. 3289-M
Planck E B 224.2 Ohio . . .. . .... .. .... • . . .... 3794-J
Plank U S G Mrs 1015 Maine .. ............. 2272-R
Planz Edna Mrs 835 Vt . • ....... . ..... .... . 3104-J
Platt Calvin 728 Ohio . .................. . . . 3193-R
Platz Orville R 2034 N H . ..... ......... . . .. 1973-R
Plumbers &amp; Steamfitters local No 763 719! Mass 451
Plummer Norman 1400 W 19 ......... . . . ... 3635-W.
Podsiadlo E P 825 Mo ... . ..... . ....... ...... 2498
POEHLER MERCANTILE CO 701 E 8 ..•....• ... 591
Pogany Thos M 612 W 6 ... . . ..... .. ....... 3744-J
Poggemeyer H Maj 1729 Mass .. . . . ...... . .. . 3642-R
Pohl Ernest A 827 E 11 . . .. . •. .... , . . ....... 3592
Poland leo A Sunnyside K U .. .. ........... .. 875-J
Pollard Regina G Mrs 1116 Conn ....... . .... 3136-W
Pollock Bernard Sunnyside KU . ..... .... .... 3155-R
Pollom C W 1641 R I. ...... ......... ... ... . . 3825
Ponder J P 1727 Tenn .... .. . .... . .......... 1615
Ponder Wm Mrs 437 Ark .. .. . .. . . ...... . .. .. 744-J
Pontius Carroll H floor sanding 1313 Vt . .. ... . .. .331
Pontius Ernest 117 Park . .... .....•. ......... 2110
Pontius Harold A 505 Miss ... . .... ... .. ..... . . 1429
Poole Hoye RFD 2 . . .......... .. ..... . .. 4003-K-11
Popplewell T H Mrs 313 Elm .... • .... . •..... 3414-J
Porter Albert W 788 Locust ... . ..• . ..... ... . . 1389
Porter Jack 736 Ala . ........ ...•. . ...... . . . 2244
Porter Raymond 1919 Barker .....•• ..... .... 2854-J
Porter T W RFD 2 . ... . ...... .. ... . ... . 4075-K-13
Posey C J 1315 N H ........... .. ........... 1627
Posner Jerome 1322 Brooks . .... . ........ . . .3634-M
Post Neal A 2245 Learnard ..... . . . ...... . . 1561-W
Post Office . . . . .. See United States Government Offices
Post Wm l uther Dr 1309 W 4 .. .. ....... . .. . . . 220
Postma Jas l atty Jayhawker Bg .... .. . ...... .. . 16
Residence 723 La . . .....•. •••••. .. .•.... ... 172
Potter C C 1207 E 13 .... ....... .. ......... 2837-J
Potter Donald C 817 R I. . ......... ........ 2577 - M
Potter Earl 1130 Emery Rd .. • ......... .. . . 1089-W
Potter John B 917 Maine . .. . . • .......... ... 1847-R
Potts Wm 335 Elm ....•.. .. •. ... • .... .... 2942-R
Powell Charlie 824 Lincoln .......... •. . . .... 2195-J
Powell Dick 1016 Ohio ......... •..... ...... 1946-M
Powell 0 E 334 Ill .. ........ • .. . .. • ....... 1566-J
Powell 0 T RFD 2 . . . ................... 4075-K-12
Powell Orville 1321 N J .. .. . .. . •....••..... .. 1808
Power Elsie 1016 Conn . .......... . ...... . .. 2761-R
Powers E H 1108 R I. ... ......... . . ... . . . . 2893-J
Powers Robt E Mrs ll30 Ky . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1063
Prather Maurice 1145 l nd . ...... . ..... .... . 2505-M
Pratt F W Mrs rl est 2012 Mass . ... . ..•... ... . 2300
Prentice Edna l 1529 Ky . ..•.......... .. . . 1378-R
Prentice T D 1645 Ky ............... .. ..... . 2667
Presbyterian Church First ofc 901 Vt ............ 630
Preston H S 635 Maine .................... 2896-R
Preyer C A ll25 Tenn ......... . . ... .... . . .. . . 597
Price Bill 2301 La .. .... . ...... ........... 1646-W
Price Clyde C 2041 R I ..... . .............. 1333-R
Price Edwin F Rev 1209 Tenn ... .... .......... 1948
Price Ethel 1305 Ky .•... ...... •• . ...•.... 2341-R
Price G Baley 1520 Barker . ....... .. ........ 3590·J
Price G E RF D 2 . . ... .. . . .. •. .. .. . . .. .. 4024-K-2
Price Henry M 317 E 17 ....... . . ... ....... 2506-R
Price Ida Mrs 1027 Pa ............ .. ...... 2598-M
Price leslie 533 Walnut ..•. ... . ... •....... 2517-W
Price Norma Jean Mrs 758 Elm ..... . ....... 2601-W
Price R M 916 Ala . .... .. .. • •.... .. . ........ 1012
Price Robt H Capt 928 Ala . . . . . . . . . ....... 2371 -R
Price Susie Mrs 616 Mich . . .... • .... . ...... 3459-J

�36

PRJ- REI

LAWRENCE

Price W S Mrs 1709 Tenn .................. 2240-M
Price Warren 106 Indian Ave ...•.. .. ....... 4245-W
Priestly G F 1505 Ky . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1004
Pringle K D 1206 Haskell. . .. ...•.... • .... . 2646-R
Pringle Roberta G Mrs 1005 Pa . . ..... •..•.... 3552
Pringle Ruby Mrs 1736 Tenn . . . . . . . ..... 1803-M
Pringle W K Mrs 1206 Haskell . .....•.. •.... 2646-R
Pringle Wm H 1046 R I .....•.....•....... 1841-W
Pritchard L J 1725 Miss . . . • . . . • • . • . . • . . 3272-M
Pritchett B 0 617 W 4
• . . . • • . . . . • ••
3289-W
Pritchett J H 620 Elm ....•.. . ..•.•....... 1363-M
Prochaska Sam 1015 Ky
. . . 3771-R
Proctor Lester D 545 Ohio . . . . . . . . .
.
1408-J
PROSPECT PARK SANITARIUM 1515 W 7 . . . . 3126
Prosser Francis Jr 1343 Tenn... . . .
1712-R
Prosser Frank 1131 Ohio . . • . • • . . • . • . . . . 1784-W
Provident Mutual Life Ins Co Standard Life Bg
457
Puckett B Mrs 347 Maiden Lane
. 3759-M
Puckett Calvin G 1420 N Y ....... .. •.•..... 1870-J
Puckett Kenneth Mrs 538 lnd. . . . . . . • • . . . . 1694-M
2891-W
Puckett L E Mrs 826~ Mass . . . . . • . . • .
Puckett Lydia Mrs 513 Elm . • . . . . . . . • . .... . 969-M
Puckett Ralph 601 W 23 ... • .•. ... ... .. ... 2629-W
Puckett Wm RFD 5
. . . . . . . . . • . .4053-N-11
Puckett Wm Jr RFD 3 ......... • ....... 4058-K-13
Puderbaugh Perry 1400 Oakhlll. ............ . 1073-M
Pugh David 832 Garfield . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
1069-R
Pugh Noah 711 Walnut ...... ... .... .... ... 2387-W
Pulliam Ernest E 832 Ark .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . 1271-R
Pullin E P RFD 2
.
. ........... 4003-N-3
Purdy Wanda Jean WREN Bg ............... 1242-M
PUR-O-ZONE CHEML CO 714 Conn ....... . ... . . 96
Pursselley Glenn Sunnyside KU .... ........... 3473-R
Purvis G C 1745 Ohio . . . ............ . .... 1676-J

Q
Quade DonE 2219 Tenn . . . .. ............. 1604-W
Quakenbush Roger L 110 lndiiln Av .
. 4245-R
Quakenbush W H handwrtng exprt 725 Miss .
3918
Quakenbush W H Mrs 725 Miss ............. 2935-M
Quality Cleaners 539 lnd ..........•........... 185
Quigley E C 1509 Stratford Rd . . • . • . . .
3971
Quinlin W T Mrs 1042 Tenn ..... . ........... 1508
Quisenberry Jean 846 Maine . • . . . • • . . . . . . .
844
Qu isenberry Melvin 908 lnd • . . . • • • • • . • . . 2726-R

R
R &amp; W Mills Inc
Plant RFD 2
. • • . . . . . . . • . . . . . . 1800
Office 105 w 11 .....·~ ........••........... 60
Raber Morris H RFD 5 .
•. ....•
. 4053-N-13
Rabourn Rose M 1415 Ky • . . . . . • . . • . . . . • . . . . 925
Radcliffe Chas 2232 Vt . . . ................... 78b
Radovich V G Lt 2347 Mass ............. .. 2487-J
Raffety Louis 736 N 4 ..................... 2578-R
Ragan C C 312 w 16 .•.....•..•....•...... 1803-J
Ragan Harold G 1133 R I .... . .•........... 2684-W
Ragland J W 1320 N J ....... .. .......... 1932-R
Ragle Dan 1216 Summit ........•........ .. 3298-M
Ragle Esther 923 Tenn . . . . . . . . .......... ... 1352
Railway Exp Agcy Inc 407 E 7 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 120
Rains David C Sunflower Apts ....... : ....... 3834-M
Raines Dewey 620 R I .. . ................ . 2784-W
Rake H D 630 Elm ........ .. ... ... .. ..... . 1363-J
Rake Ralph 1921 Barker .......... . ........ 2322-W
Rake W D 2112 La ....................... 2337-W
Raley Frank 1845 Maine .... . .......•...... 1:.!10-R
Rail Ervin M Sunnyside K U . . . . . . . . . ..... 2861-J
Ralston Chas A 601 Ala . .... . . . . . . . . . . . 2677-M
Ramage H P Mrs 1404 Alumni Place Dr . . . . 3784-W
Ramirez Jessie 839 N J .................•.. 2115-M
Ramsey Dehyd rating Co 105 W 11 ............... 60
Ramsey J Clifton atty 105 W 11 . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . 60
Residence 946 Tenn
. .
.. ..
2655
Ramsey W A Shade Shop 818 Mass. . . • • . • •
. 606
Ramseyer Fred A RFD 3
.
. •. . •.
4046-K-2
Rand R H 1618 Ky •.......•........... 3288-W
Randall Hugh A 702 N 3. . . . . . . . • . • . • . . .
3090
Randall Ivan 0 719 locust. • . . • . . . . . . . . . . 2563-R
Randolph R N RFD 1
•• •. . . . .
4044-N-2
RANEY DRUG STORE 909 Mass •..•.• • .....•... 521

Raney Richard H RFD 5 ..........•....... 4078-K-2
Rankin Chas C 1847 Barker ...•.••....•...•.••. 564
RANKIN DRU G CO 1101 Mass ................. 678
Rankin Floyd V Mrs 846 Ky .•......... ..• •. 3743-W
Rankin Lewis C ins Standard Life Bldg ... ..... .. . 457
Residence 837 Vt . . . . . . . . . . . . ... . ... 3673-M
Rankin Paul C Mrs 1847 Barker .•..... .•. .... .. 564
Rankin Robt C 724 Ind ....................... 274
Ransdell A G 2108 N H . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . • . . . 3372
Ransdell 0 T Mrs 1742 learnard ....•...•... 1813-M
RANSDELL MOTOR SERVICE 623 Mass . • . . . • . 361
Ransdell Motor Service used cars 840 N H • . . . . . . 175
Rapid Transit Bus Co 1000 Mass. . . . . . . . .
388
RAP ID TRANSIT INC 1000 Mus . ..... ...... 1300
Rapp Jos 913 W 6 ........... ........... . 1100-W
Rappard Ivan W 1636 N H. . . • . • • . • • . . • . . . 2633-R
Rarick C S Mrs 711 Ala. . . . . • • • . . . . . . . . . 2759-R
Ratch Ray E 2023 Ohio . .. .. . .. .. .. . .. .. . 2390-W
Ratner Cliff W 1420 Crescent Rd . . . . . . . .
3484-R
Rattles Columbus RFD 2. . . .....• • . .... 4007-K-11
Ray John H 541 Mich . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . 3577-M
Ray Leonard RFD 1 . ............ •. ..... 4088-K-12
Ray Orville 1247 Prairie .....•..•...•..... 2476-M
Ray Wilbur 509 Mo .. ........•.......... . 3521-W
Ray Wm A 822 Garfield ...... .....•....... . 1255-R
Rayhill G W Mrs 2042 Mass ...•............ 1739-W
Rayl Eugene 1023 Pa .. .. .. .. .. . .. .. .. .. . . 1942-R
Raymond F N 808 Ill ...................... 2282-J
RAY'S GARAGE 1247 Prairie •. .... • ......... . 1613
If no answer call ...... . ..•............ 2476-M
Ray' s Truck Stop RFD 5 . . ...... . .......... . .. 3314
Read L B 445 Tenn ........................ . 1109
Read Lathrop B Jr 445 Tenn . ............. .... 1109
READ PAT INDIAN T RADER 11071 Mass ...... . . 947
Reade Glenn H 1409 R I ..... ...•.......... 2670-J
Ready Mixed Concrete Co 730 Delaware ........ . 1892
Realey Chas 8 625 W 16 .... • ..•..•... .... '3476-W
Reardon Wm A 1725 Ky •• .••.•...•••••• ••• 3563-R
Rebekah State Assembly Standard Life Bg. . . . . . . 367
Reber C D 547 Florida ...... .. ............. .. 2768
Reber Karl H 2010 R I ..................1999-M
Reber Lester J 1945 Ohio ...............••... 3637
Record Nook The phono rec 846 Mass. . . . . . . .
725
Recreation Commission 115 W 11 •.... •• ..• • .. . 1814
Red Cross Community Bg. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
405
After Office hours call Executive Secy .•..•.. 1668-R
If no answer call . . . . . . . • • . • . . . . . . • . . . . . 1713
Redding Dean F 1008 Ohio .•...•.... .... ... 1946-W
Redding Harlin 1000 Ohio . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1120-W
Reddoch Harold 121 R I.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 3465-R
Redford E J 1344 N Y . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 838-R
Redford Newton W 714~ Mass.. . . . . . . .
. 2197-W
Redmond C E 1215 N Y ... .......... ..... 1932-M
Redmond Sam B Mrs 812 Ind . .. . ........ ... 1571-J
Rednour Harold D 637 Mo .................. 2488-R
Redpath C W Mrs 707 Tenn ...•. . ... ...... 2536-R
Reed A R RFD 4............ . . . . . . . . . 4029-N-3
Reed ChasE 1426 Ohio . ..... . . . .... . . . . 3960-W
Reed Dan 912! Mass . ...... ..• ...... .. .. . 3641-W
Reed J A 1521 Ky ........................ 2923-W
Reed John 608 Elm . ...... .. ...... ........ 1363-W
Reed Jules 1225 Ky . ............. . ........ 2512-W
Reed Robt S 1501 Oakhill .... .• ............ 2286-J
Reed Ronald L 1532 Tenn .............•.... 3579-W
Reed W E 1315 Conn .................... . . 1024-R
Reedy H L 920 Ala .............. ....•. ..... 3638
REEDY PETE LUMBER CO 1846 Mass . .••.. . .. . 176
Reep E E Rev 1842 Vt .. ........... ....... .. 1243
Reese J Allen 1701 Ill ... ......... . ..... .•... 3932
Reese R A 1810 La .... ..... . .... . .... . .. . 3273-M
Reese Robt A 1121 Ky ............ .• ..... .. 1587-R
Reetz Elmer RFD 5...... .. .. .. . .. .. . .4053-K-11
Reeves Maude I Mrs 842 Ill ............. ... 2297-W
Reeves R M 1512 University Dr ...•.... ........ 339
REEVES R M GROCERY 900 Miss ... ..•. ...... 413
Reeves Wm 154 Pawnee. . . . . . . . . . . • . . . .
1625-W
Regnier Reginald 1315 Tenn . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2738-R
Regnier Weilo 838 Ill . .... ..........•..... 3251-M
Reich Wilbert 707 Mo ..................... 1056-M
Reid J Paul Rev 404 E 12 • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2136-J
Reiff Robt 1631 Mass ..... • ....•.•.....•.. 3492-M
Rein ken H D 907 W 6 . . . . • . . . . . . • . . . . . • . . . . . 866
Reisner H E 846 Ill . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . 1789-R

�LAWRENCE
Reiter Jas 18 &amp; Mich ... . .. . ... •. . . .. • ... .. 3635-M
Relph Kenneth 1117 Ala .. . . . ....•......... 2697-R
Remple H D 2107 N H . . .. . . .. • ..... . . . ... 1773-M
Rendina Geo Sunnyside K U . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . 2953-J
Renfrow Lucy Mrs 745~ Ill ...... . . • ..... . . . 1730-W
Renic k W C 1420 Crescent Rd . . .. .... . ... ... 3522-W
Reno Eveline Mrs 433 Ind ... .. .. . . . . .. .. ... 2128-M
Reorganized L D S parsonage 1642 Ind . . . .. .. . 3453-J
Replogle Wayne 1423 Ohio .
. . .. . ... . . . ... 3964
REUSCH-GUENTHER JEWELRY 824 Mass . ...... 903
Reusck H W 2230 R I. . ......... . .. . .. .... 2654- M
Reusch Sophia Mrs 524 La .. . ... .•• ...... .. . 2370-J
Reuter A 1500 Vt .. . ... ... • . .. . .. . ...... . . 2430
Reuter Lucile K 1500 Vt . . ...• .. .. . . . ... . . .. . 2430
REU TER ORGAN CO Ft of N H . . . . . .. ... ... .. . 320
REVENEW ROBT liquor 805 Vt .... . • .... .... . 1102
Revenew Robt 1202 R I . ... .. ...... . ....... 2275-J
Reyes Tiburcio L 745 Pa . ................... 2471-J
Reynolds W RFD 6 . . . . .... ... . ... .... . 4085-1&lt;-4
Reynolds Do1·a Dunakln 314 W 14 ..... . . . ... .. .. 691
Reynolds E Haskell Grds ...... .. . . . . . • . . .. . 2440-W
Reynolds Fred H 170b Barker . . .... . ..... .. . . 2830 -J
Reynolds Herbert 1401 N Y . . .. . • • .... ... .. . 2465- M
Reynolds S R Dr RFD 2 . . .. ..... . ..•.. .. . 4093-N-3
Rhode Henry 638 R I .. . .. . .. . .. • ....... . .. 2249-J
Rhod(!s Amos T 825 E 13 ........... . . .... . . 762-M
Rhodes Dusty liquors b4b Mass . .. .. ... ....... .3210
Residence 1924 N H . . ....... .. .. . .. . .... 3198-R
RHODES HEATING &amp; ROOFING CO 815 Vt . . . . ... 702
Rhodes R H 1905 Ohio . . , ..... . .. . . . . . . ... . 2320-M
Rhodes Roland L 1230 Haskell . ... . . . ..... . . . 2277 -J
RHODES &amp; TAYLOR SERV 319 N 2 . ... .. . . . . . . 508
Ricart Domingo 2011 N H . ......... . ....... 2120-J
Rice A D 2108 Vt .... . .. . .. . .... . ........ 3667-M
Rice Anna F Mrs 2141 Vt ... . . . ... . ..... . .... 1816
Rice E A 1402 N Y .... . . .•.. .... . . . ... ... . 2878-R
Rice J I 908 Mo .. . .. .. . .. .. .. . . .. . .. . ... . . . 3986
Rice Lawrence D 1809 La ...... .. . . ... . . .. . 1474- R
Rice Martin E 630 Ohio . . ..... . ......... . ... . 3118
Rice Oil Co 1305 W 4 . . .. ...•........... . ... 1174
Rice Ralph P 1304 R I .. ..... .. . .. • ..... . . 1699-M
Rice Raymond F a tt y 700 Mass ••.•...••.... . .... 53
Residence 2141 Vt. ... .. ........ . . .. . . .. . . 1816
Rice W M 42b Ala .... . . .. . .... . .... . ..... 3795-J
Richard John B 407 W 12 . .. . . ....•. ... . ..... 4293
Richards Ernest M 1735 Ill . .... ...... • ..... 2418- R
Richards Jack A 845 Mo .... . ...... . ........ 799-M
Richardson A R 334 Maiden Lane ... ...•... . .2770-J
Richardson Arthur E 1212 Conn ..... ...... . .. 4214-R
Richardson C F 73b Mo . ....... . .. . .. .. .. . . 1219-M
Richardson Crissie RFD 2 . . .. ......• .... . 4006-N-11
Richardson D J 1117 Vt....
. . 3127-W
Richardson Delbert C RFD 2 . . .. . ...... . .. 4064-1&lt;-21
RICHARDSON DELBERT C INS AGCY 927~ Mass . 509
Richardson E L 919 Ind ........ .... ... . . . .. 2794-W
Richardson Ewi ng S 1745 W 9 ... ... . .... .. . 2725-M
Richardson Fred A RFD 4 . ..... . .. • .. .... 4070- K-12
Richardson H J RFD 2 .... . . ........ .... . 4083-N-3
Richardson J C 924 N J . ....... .. • . . .. . . .. . 1909-J
Richardson M F 1027 R 1 ....... ... . .. ..... 1618-W
Richardson Mabel J 1505 R I . ... .. . • .......... 1624

c

c

RICHARDSON NASH CO

Sales &amp; Serv 617 Mass . ..... .. . . . . ... .... . . . 407
Used Cars b28 N H . . . . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. ...... 3995
Richardson Ray Mrs 918 La .. . . •. . . . .• .... . 2343-W
Richardson Ruth 1242 Pa . ...... ... ........ 2365-M
Richardson T W 528 N 3 ... . . ... • .... . • .... 2720-R
Richardson W C 933 Ind ... . ... .. . •. ... .. . . . . 1950
Richardson W W 1945 N H .. .... . ..... .. . . .. . 3406
Richardson's Constr Co RFD 2 . . . .. . ..• . . .. 4083-N-3
Richart Carl L 2013 Ohio . ..... . . . ...... . ... 1568-J
Rickabaugh Chas 1017 Conn ..... . . . . . . . ..... 2638-J
Rickard C M Mrs 1532 Tenn . . .... .. .. • . .. . 1860-M
Ricketts Beulah A Mrs 2135 Ky . .. . .......... . . 3558
Rickey J R 321 Mo . . ..... . .. . ... .. • .. . . .. . . 1320
Ridgway Hugh B 1141 Conn . .. . . . • .. . . .. . .. 2162-W
Ridgway Merle G 610 W 4 . . ...... .... . .. .... 2760
Ridley Robt RFD 4 ... . ..... . .... . .. .. ... 4063-K-2
Rieder Fred RFD 1 ........... • .. .... .. ... .. .3555
Rigdon Walter 831 Ky . . . .. • ... . ... . . . ..... 1085-J
Riggs Chas 711 N 4 .. . .. . .. • .. . . .... . .. .. . 1354-R
Riggs Ida Mr! 1724 N H .. . . .. . . . . • .. . .. ... 1380-R
Riggs John Mr! 920 Conn .. . . ..•..•.• .. .. . . .. 1203

REI- ROD

37

Riggs Kate 115 E 17 ............ . . . ... . .. . 1050-J
Riggs Richard L 818 Ky .. ..• . . ... • ..... . .. .3673-J
Ri ley Eveli ne L 1045 Ky .... . . .. .. ....... .. . 2557-R
Riley Jack 2044 Barker . ..... • .... . . • ....... . 2523
Ri ley John E 1647 Vt ..... .. ... .. • . ....... . 1269-J
Riley Richard R 32b E 19 ........ . ...... . .. 2391-R
Riling John J 1140 Tenn ........... . ..... . . .. .824
Ri ling L L 1224 Tenn . . . .... . .... . ........... 1217
.RILING &amp; RILING attorneys 906 Mass .......... . 137
Rinehart Wm G 1126 Tenn . . ......... . . .. ... 2894-R
Riner Robt W 1015 Ky ... . .. . .. . . . ... . . ... 3771-W
Ring Ralph S 1238 Miss ...... . .. . .... . ... . . .. 2303
Ring ler L 0 1654 University Dr . ............ . 3186-W
Rinkenbaugh R E RFD 1 . . .... . . . .. . .... .. 4049-N -3
Risk Lowell 1828 Ind . . . . ........ . ..... .. . . 2269-J
Risk's Help Yourself Laundry 613 Vt ....... .. .. . 623
Riss Walter 808 W 9 . . . .. . .. .. . ...... • .... 2296-R
Risser H E 1714 Miss .... . . . ... . . . . .... . . . 1292-W
Rist Neal 761 Elm . ... . . ... . .• ..... • . ..... 1592-M
Riverside Sch l Lakeview Rd . . . . . .. . .. • .... 4039- N-21
Roach Dana E RFD 3 .. .................. . . 2574-R
Roark Jim R 65b W 23 ... ... .•. ... .. . . .... 1682-tv~
Robb J E Mrs 1001 Ky . . .. . . .. . .. • • . . ....... 1851
Robb Ronald RF D 5 .. .. .. .. • ..... • , . .... 4053-N-3
Robb W S Mrs 1316 Ohio . . . • • .. ..... .. ....... 547
Robbins Earl 804 La .... .... .............. . 3147
Robbins Edwin 709 w 12 .. ..... • . . ... • • . . .. 2766-J
P.obbins John D 345 Ind .. . . . ... • ..... .•. . .. 1558-J
Roberman Chas 1824 N H . .. . . • ..... ••. . . .. 3212-W
Roberman Harold 1336 Pa . .. .. ... • . .. . .. . .... 2215
Roberson Donald 1244 Tenn . . . . . ...• . ...... 1436-M
flcberson Frank 1902 Tenn ... . .. ..• . ...... . . . 2340
Roberts D F 1b16 N H ... .. . .. . .. . . . ... ... 3491-M
Rnberts D M 2124 Ohio .. ........... .. .. .. . 1396-R
Roberts Earl E RFD 3 ..... .............. 4023-N-3
Rnberts Effie Mrs 1235 N Y .... . . . . • ... . . . . 2637-i'JI
Roberts F H jeweler 833 Mass ..... • ....... . ... . 827
Residence 114b l&lt;y. . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . ... 2890
Roberts G A 2214 La .... . ...... . . .... . . . . 3922-W
Roberts Ivan 500 Rockledge Rd .......... . ... 1256-R
Roberts J Leon 1123 Ore . ................ . 2148-W
Roberts John L 433 Ill .. . . . ... .. ... .. .. .. . . 2397-R
Roberts Jos C RFD 3 . ... .. . ... ...... • .... . 4256-W
Roberts Louise Mrs 1308 Ohio . .•.. .... • ..... 2565-J
Roberts M C 838 La . . ..... . ... ... ...... . . .. . 2378
Roberts R M Mrs 1129 Oregon ...... • ....... 1445-M
Roberts Ray B Jr ofc 1026 Mass . .. .•. .. . .. . .. . .. 66
Residence 1901 N H . . .. . .................. 3422
Roberts Raymond 1010 E 19 . . .. . .. ... . • ... . 1073-R
Roberts Reed S Sunnyside 1&lt; U . .. . . . •. . .. ... 1823-M
Roberts Rex 30b Elm . . . . . . . ...... . .. .... 1538-M
Robert s RichardT WREN Bldg . .. . .. • ... ... . 2895- M
Roberts T J Sunnyside K U ... .... . . . ... . ... 3249-W
Robertson Fred W 710 E 19 .. . .. • . ... . .... .. 2459-J
Robertson H E RFD 6 . ....... . .... •• .... 4036-N-21
Robert son M G RFD 1 .. . . ..... . .. . ... .... 4030- K-2
Robertson Thos b22 Vt ........ . .. • .... . .... . 1890
Robinson E E 127 E 19 . ... . .. . •• ... ..•. . ... 777-W
Robinson E L 1025 R I ... ... . . .....•• .... . 1033-M
Robinson Edw S 1829 N H . . . .. . . .. . .. • .... 197l,W
Robinson Forrest T 153b Tenn . ..... .. • . .. .. 1421-M
Robinson J A 1545 E 15 ..... ... . .... .. .. .. 2311-W
Robinson Joe A Jr 1810 La . . ... •. .... .• . .. . 3234-R
Robinson John H 13 Winona .... .. . ...... . . . • .. 2838
Robinson Paul E 825 Maple .. .... . .......... 3885-J
Robinson Rose 928 Tenn ...... .. . . . . ..... . . .. 2455
Robinson W Stitt Jr 1739 Ala .. . .. • . ..... ... 2374-J
Robison E J 600 Mo . ... . . ... ... • .... .. .. . 2677-W
Robi son J R 1332 Vt .. .... ............... . 3417-M
Robison Josephine Mrs 933 N H . . . . . . . . . . . . .4230- R
Robison Lee RFD 4 . ..... . . .. ..... .. , .... 4096-N-4
Robson Ito 107 E 17 Terr . . . . ... . ..... . .... 3409-R
Robson Kathryn Mrs 2104 Ky .. . ... ..•. . .... . . . 813
Roche R G Mrs Miller Hall .. ..... .. ........ . . . . 384
ROCK CHALK CAFE 618 W 12 . . .. . .......... . 3020
Rock-Chalk Co-op 912 Ala .. . .. . .... .. ... . . . . . 1705
Rochdale Co-op 1244 Ohio ... . .. . ... . .. • . .. .. . 2200
Rockhold Lloyd 74() Walnut ...... . . • .... .. . . 1186-J
Rock lund Louis 1b10 Mass .. .. .. . ... . . • . . . . 2500-M
Rocklund Minnie Mrs 1530 Mass . .. . • . • ...... 2985-R
Rodenhaus J E 212b Mass . . . ...... • .. . . .... 1249-R
Rodgers L L Rev 509 N 7 . . . . . ... ... .• .. . . . 1791-R
Rod ina C W Sunnyside K U . .. ... . • . ....... 1281-W

�38

ROG- SAR

LAWRENCE

Rogers Albert L Jr 1401 Pa . ... .... . ... .... . 2637 -J
Rogers Bernard W Maj 640 Ohio .. . ..... . .... . 3519
Rogers Bertha Mrs 830! Vt ... .. . . • .. ...... 3345-W
Rogers Beulah 542 Tenn . ... . ........... .... .. . 367
Rogers C A 130 Mich ... . .. . . •. .... . . .. . . . 2847-J
Rogers Delmer RFD 5 . . ...... . .. . ........ 40B1-K-2
Rogers Earl 1321 Pa . . . . ... .... .. : . .... . .... 4232
ROGERS FASHION CLEANERS 8 E 8 .......... .498
IRogers H R 1309 Pa .. ......... ... .. . . . ... . . 2342
fR@!Iers Helen M 64H Mass ....... . . .... . ... 2226-W
!Rogers Jerry 612 W 7 .. .. . . . .. . ........... 1771-M
'ROGERS LAUNDER- IT 1407 Mass .... • ..... . .. . 243
Rogers Lottie 760 Elm .... . . .... . ..... . .... 2601-R
Rogers Paul E 1108 W Hills Terr .. .. ... . ...... 1846
Rogers R H 615 N 3 . .. .. .............. .. . . . 1~05
Rogers Roy 2132 Learnard ............... . . 2103-W
ROGERS TOPPS CLEANERS 1407 Mass . . . . . . . . 243
Rogers Ulus 917 E 12 ... .... . ... ... ....... 1489-R
Rogers Worthy 764 Elm . . . . .... .. ... ..... . . 2576-J
Rohe Henry Mrs RFD 3 Baldwin . ... • ..... .. 4098-K-3
Rojas Eva 601 N 2 . .. . . ........ . ...... . .. . 1195-R
Roloson Rollie 716 R I .. 00 00 00 00 00 00 . 00 00 .2857-W
Romero Gonsalo 920 N J . . . . . . .. . . .. . ..... 1934-W
Romero Ramon E 912 Pa .... ..... . ..... . .. 1310-M
Romine W P 624 R I . .... .. ...• . . . ..•..... 1441-J
Roney Roland E RFD 5 . . . . . • . . . . . . • . . . . . . 2574-M
Rood Gene 1134 Ore . .... .. .. . • .. .. . • . . .... 1445-R
Rood Ralph B 639 Miss ... . ......• . .... . . .. . . 1189
Roofe Paul G 1318 La ... .. .......•.. ... ... 3337-M
Rooney Dorothy A 940 Tenn .. . . . . .. . ..... ... 798-W
Roos Lucile 906 Ala . . . 00 . . 00 . ... 00 00 . . .. 00 00 2131
Root Wm W Mrs 816 Ky . ... .... ... ..... . . .. . 2648
Roper E L 1810 La .... .. ................ . 3233-M
:Roper Jane Mrs 737 Ark ...... . . ... . . ... . .. 2174-W
Roper Kenneth M 1222 Prospect .. . . ......... 3298-J
Roscoe Ernest J 838 La . .... 00 00 00 00 00 ..... 2775-J
ROSE BEAUTY SHOP 1020 Vt. 00 .. 00 .. 00 . 00 00 .. 31
Rose Kenneth E 1524 Barker . ........... . . .. 2332-J
ROSE L H PLUMBING &amp; WIRING 931 Maine ..... 513
Rose Lee Lunch 240 Elm ... .. . . .. . .......... . 2033
Rose May T 1109 N Y ...... .. ... .. ... .. . . . 1532-J
Rose Robt M 627 Ohio ........... . ........ . 3470-J
Rose Robt Milton Jr 1328 R I . ......... . ..... . 1442
Rosebough Ralph L Mrs 1433 Tenn ... . • ....... 1886
Rosenbaum John 2229 Ohio ... . . ............ 3922-J
Rosenbaum Roy E 1 341 R I. ....... . .... . . .. 2868-R
Rosenberg Leonard 1 1339 Ohio .. .. ..... . ... . 1110-M
Ross Chas Mrs 329 Mo . .. .. . .. . ........... 3404-W
Ross Clau de 1810 lnd .. ... .......... • . . ... 2866-M
Ross Clinton H 5~0! Ohio .................. 2940-W
Rothberger L L 737 Conn . . . . . .
. .... . 1335-J
Rothrock Carl 1012 N Y 00 00
00 . 00 00. 00 00 2446-W
Rothrock H D RFD 2 . . ... ... . .. ..•... . ... 4003-K-3
Rothwell Clarence 2001 Mass . ... . • ...... . . . . 3046-J
Rothwell Glenn F 808 N Y ................. 3886-W
Rothwell Howard 324 Miss ................. 2905-W
Rothwell W C 825 N Y . . . ....... ..... . . .... 1726-R
ROUND CORNER DRUG CO 801 Mass .. . ....•.. .. . 20
Rousey Dorothea M Mrs 1920 R I. . ........ . . 2854- M
Routh Jesse 1803 La ......... . . .. ... ...... 3563-W
~owe Ivan D 1532 Mass . . . . . .... • .....•.... 1528
!Rowe John 1812 Maine ... ... .• • ..... • . .. .. 3206-W
!Rowe TV 1530 Tenn . .... .... . .......•.... 3025-W
Rowland Frank 1316 Vt .. . .. ... ........•. .. 3355-R
Rowland leroy 820 Conn 00 . 00 .. 00 00 ... . 00 00 . . 1750
Rowland W H 826 R I. . . .............. .. .. 2130-W
ROWLANDS COLLEGE BOOK STORES
Main Store 1401 Ohio .... .........•.... . •. 1401
Annex Store 1237 Ore ad ... .. .... . .. . .. .... . 492
Rowlands Robt J Mrs 1401 Ohio . .. ..... . ... . 1401
Rowlands David L Mrs 610 Ohio . . .. .... ..... .. 1536
Rowlands Edwin R Mrs 2141 Ky ...... .. . .... 1928-R
Rowlands Robt J Mrs 620 Ohio .... . • ... . ..... . . 427
Rowlands Wm 2233 N H . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . 3388
Rowley B May Mrs 514 Miss .. ... •......... . 3165-J
Roy V W 705 Maine . • . . .... . ... ......... 2739-M
ROYAL COLLEGE SHOPS 8 37 Mass ........... 648
Rublee Mae 1745 Ill . ...............•.... . .. 1684
Ruddell Jas 923 Ohio . . .. .... . ..... . .. ... .. 4252-W
Rudolph Pauline 2236 Mass ... .. ......... .. .. 1179
Ruese W H 1611 Crescent Rd .... . . . .... . •.. . 2185
Ruge R H 932 N H .. 00 . ... 00 ......... 00 .. 2742-M
oo.

Rummer Dale Sunnyside KU . . ........ ...... 1801-W
Rumsey C B Mrs 601 lnd . . . .. . . . . .... •• ..... . . 672
Rumsey Fred W 1125 W Hills Pkwy ............ 1998
RUMSEY FUNERAL HOME 601 Ind .. . ..... . .... 672
Rumsey Oscar B 6 23 W 21 .. . . ..... .. .• ....... 2184
Runn Arnold cleaner 626 w 9 . ... .. . ..... . ..... 123
Ru nn lawrence Cleaner 626 w 9 ............. . .. 123
Runnels Jeanette M 1106 Ohio .... .. ...... . .. 2.475-R
Runnels R T 2038 Barker .. ....... , . ... ..... 1773- R
Russ W W Mrs 732! Mass . .. . . .. ..•........ 1893-R
Russell A L 1339! Mass . ..... ............ .. 3696-R
Russell C B 1620 University Dr ....... . •.. . . .. . 2659
Russell F A 1656 Ill . ......... . ..... • ....... . 1233
Russell F 0 1622 Ky .. .................. . . . 2807 -J
Russell Jean 700 Ohio ... . ........•....•... 1927-W
Russell Ralph ofc 1415 R I ...•...•. • ........ . . 192
Russell Roy E 928 La .... . ... .. • ..... •.... 3246-W
Russell Zelda Mrs 1346 Pa . .......... .. ..... 762-W
Rust Howard 646 N 3 . .. ... ....... • ....... ... 3161
Rusty's Food Market 1117 Mass . .. . . .......... . 397
Ruttan Gertrude 1012 Ky .................. 1550-R
Rutter R C 101 E 23 . ....................... 1176
Rutter's Shop locksmith 1016 Mass .....• . . ..... 319
Ryan Harry M Mrs 1541 Tenn ... ........... 1405-M
Ryther Thos C 1846 N H . . 00 . 00 . 00 . 00 . .. . .. 1376-W

s
Sabol A G Jr 2028 N H..... . .. ..•....••... 1739-R
Sabol Albert 930 Ohio ......... . ..... . . .... 3876-W
Sadler D M 2205 Tenn 00. 00 .. 00 00 00 00 .. 00 2943-J
Sager W E 1229 N J .... .. ...•. .... • ...... 3670-R
Sahn Freida L 121 W 14 ......... . ....... . . 3696-J
Saile Chas A S W Limits ..... ......•••..... 1682-1\
StClair John S 512 Ohio ..... . ..... ...... . 4257-W
St luke Methodist Parsonage 818 N Y . . . . • . . . . 1897
Sale Lewis 302 lnd ..... . ......... ....... . 3348-M
Salisbury Adam 832 Conn . ... .. ... .• ...... . 2723-W
Salisbury Albert 1508 W 5 . ..... . ...... ... . 1572-M
Salisbury Albert D Jr 1500 W 5 ....... .. ..... 1572-J
Salisbury Leatuschia 501 Wis ...••• . . .• .. ..... 2452
Sallee M L Haskell Grds. 00 00 00. 00 00 00 . 00 ... .. 1199
Salmons Betty 1023 Vt . . . . . . . . . . . .
1678
Salsbury Edgar 2049 Learnard . ...... ... . .... 1639-R
SALSBURY FLO OR COVERING 902 Mass ... .. .. . 3824
SALVATION ARMY THE 729 Vermont ..... . . .. . 633
If no answer call .... ................... . 4236-J
Salvesen Edyth M 812 Tenn .....• ... ....... .. 3788
Sample Edwin C RFD 2 00 00 00 , 00 00 .. 00. 00 4069-K-2
Sample Floyd 700 Mo . . •. .... . ...... . .... . 3796- R
Sample Harold 731 Maine ... .. .. ... ........ 2773-M
Sample Leo 816 Ky . .. . .................. . 2566-J
Samples Dan 2145 Tenn . ... .. .. . . . . .. . . . .. 2320-W
SAMPLES WATCH SHOP 914! Mass ...•.•...... 368
Sams Cora florist 326 W 9 .... . .. .. .•... . ... .. 998
Residence 936 Ky ... . .. . ... ...... ... . ... 2513-J
SAM'S PRODUCE CO 718 N H .. 00 00 . . 00 00 . 00 .. 206
Samson Fredrck E Jr Sunnyside K u ... ... . ... 2816-R
Sandefur Edwin A 1230 N Y .... . .. ......... 838-M
Sandel ius Walter E 1612 Crescent Rd ........ . 3727-J
Sanders A B 1719 Ala . ... . .... . . ...... . . 2635-W
Sanders C B' RFD 6 .. .. . ..... . .....•.... 4034-N-11
Sanders E E 913 N Y . ................... . 2482-W
Sanders F C 332 Johnson . ..... ....... ..... 2657-W
Sanders L B 908 R I . ..........•••...• .... 3449-J
SANDERS MOTOR CO 622 Mass . ... • .....•. . . . 616
Sanders R W 2120 N H .... . .•.... •••.•.•.. . 748
Sanderson Gladys Mrs '1015 Del . . . . . . . . . . . . 3793-R
Sanderson J M 411 w 6 . . ................ .. 3587
Sanderson Jim 828 Ohio . ..... . ..... . ...... 3101-M
Sanderson W C 1800 Maine •.. ... .... .. .• .. . 3209-J
Sankee E H 39 Winona ...•....••.•........ 2969-W
Santa Fe Ry Co
Car Clerk 413 E 7 . ...... . .....••.• . .. •. . .. 281
Freight Ofc 413 E 7 . . ... . ...... ..... ..... . .. 54
Passenger Depot 413 E 7 . .... .. .•. . .. .. . ... . 32
Santa Fe Restaurant 411 E 7 . . .... . ... .. ... . . 3320
Santa Fe Trail Transportation Co 610 E 7 . . .. ... .. 98
Santa Fe Trailways--See Continental Trallways
Bus Depot
Saricks Ambrose 2010 Tenn ....... •. . . .... . 3055-M
Sarlls Geo 1305 N Y ......... .... . . .. .. .. 1382-M
Sarlls Lester L 326 Locust ..... ........ .. .. 2942-W

�LAWRENCE
Sasse W C 401 Miss .... ... . .. . .. • . . .... . .118.3-W
Saunders Delbert J 1447 Vt .. .. . . .. . ...... .. 27.31-J
Saunders Gene 318 E 19 .. ......... • .... . .. 2.308-J
Saunders H K RFD 2 ...... . .. • . .. . ...... 4055-K-12
Saunders J H RFD 2 . ....... . .. . . . .... . . 4055-N-2
Saunders P M 811 E 11 . . . ... . . . ... . .. .. .. 2148-M
Saunders Will RF D 1 Eudora . . .. ... . .. ... 4076-K-11
Savage Edgar 1633 Stratford Rd ... .. . .. . . .. 1237-M
Sawatzky Gerald Joel 1646 Tenn .. . . ...... . .. 1414-W
Sawyer Harold 814~ Mass ... . . . .. ..... .... . 1918-J
Sawyer Leon 2113 N H .. . .. ..... . .. . ...... 2962-R
Saylor H A 2037 N H .. .. . . .......... . ... . . 235.3-R
Scales Guy 1414 Tenn . . .. . .... ... . .... . .. . .3060-W
Scales H H Lt Comdr 311 Okla . ..... .. ... . . . 2222-W
Scanlan Frank Mrs 1005 Ill ... .... . .. . ... . .. .. .3966
Scarborough Homer C Jr 1226 N Y . .. .• ..... . . 8.38-J
Schaake Albert C RFD 3 . ... . . ... . .. . ... .. 404.3-N-4
SCHAAKE C &amp; SONS 210 w 6 .. . ....... . .. . ... 152
Schaake Chas A 1100 W 21 ... .. . .. . . . . . .... 2.368-R
Schaake Chris 620 La .. . ... . . . . ... . .... . . . .. 2160
Schaake Clarence 1738 Barker . . ..... .. . ... . . .3409-J
Schaake G E RFD 2 . . .... . .. . . . . . . .. . .. . 4076-N-2
SCHAAKE M L stockyards W 23 . . ... . . . . . . . . . : . 6.34
Schaake M L 204 w 12 . . .. ... . .... . . . ... . . 1756-R
Schaake Raymond 2146 La . . .... . ...... . ... .3069-M
Schaal W A 1141 R I . ... •• ....• , •..•• .. . .. . 2727
Schaffert F W 1919 Vt . . . . . ... . ..•• .. .. . .. 2312-W
Schear Ralph 124 Mich ..... . ...•....•.... . 2847-R
Scheerer Martin 638 lnd . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1045
Schehrer Chas 1411 Ky .... .. . . ...•.. .. .... 1580-R
Scheid Delbert 1126 Ohio .. . . . ••... • •• . . .. . . 2602-R
Schelbar E 830 N Y .. . . .... .. . .. .... .... . 2192-M
Schelbar Emma 829 E 13 .... . ............ .. 762-R
Schelbar Joe 1409 N Y . . .. . •... . . .. •• . . . . . 26.37-W
Schell Jos H 1037 Ky ... . ... .. . . . . . . . . . . ... . 798-M
Schell Lillian Mrs 1229 Ohio . .• .. .. . •. . . ... . .3248-W
Schellack Fred Mrs 352 E 12 . .. . ... . .. .. .. . 2162-R
Schellhorn Hugo 1535 Mass . . .... • . . .•. . .. .. .. 26.30
Schellhorn Richard L 110 N 8 . . . ... . ...•. . . . 2.360-W
Schesser Dale 717 Ohio . . • • . •.. • •.• .. .•..•. 146.3-J
Scheurman Marion 1028 Vt ... .. . ·. .. •• . .. . . . 1168-W
Schick A D 1901 Maine . . .. . .... . .. .. . .. . . 1772-W
Schiefelbusch Richard 2120 La ......•• . ..... . 2936-J
Schild Alvin H 1327 N H...........• . .. . .. . 1839-W
Schiller Elmer A Trucking RFO 6 . . . ..... . .. ... 4266
Schimmel Raymond 1820 111 . . . . . . ...• •••.• . . .3272-R
Schimmel Walter 1637 Haske ll ..... . . .... .. . 1076-M
Sch indler W H 1808 Miss ... .. . . .. . .. .... . . 2817- M
Schlegel Don Sunnyside K U .. . . ... . .. • .. . . . . . 814-R
Schlegel Henry 325 E 19 . . .. .. ..... .. . • .. . ... 2361
Schleich~.r John Sunnyside K U . .. . .. . .. ... . . 36.32-W
SCHLEIFER BROS liquors 840 Mass .....• • •. . . . . 764
Schleifer Harry 2100 Mass .. . . .... . .. • .••. •. 2150-J
Schleifer Lloyd 1916 Mass . . ..... . . . • . . ..... 2803-R
Schloetzer Robt S 739 Ala . . . . ...... .. .... . 1970-W
Schmedemann Harvey 1228 Ohio .. .. .. . . . . • .. .. .3.364
Schmidt Harry RFO 2 . . .. . .. .. . .... . . . .. .4075-N-2
Schmidt Jerome 70 2 La . .. . . . .... . .. . . ... .. 1324-R
Schmidt Reinhold 12 Colonial Ct .. . .. . .. .. . . . 2127-J
Schmidtberger Virgil 1609 Tenn Terr .. . . .. ... . 7.36-M
Schmitendorf Dewey 910 Ohio . .. . . . .. . .. . . .. 281.3-J
Sch mitendorf Sheila Mrs 129 S Park . .... . ... . 3:?96-R
Schneck Eleanor Mrs 1205 Haskell . .. . ..... ... 2684-J
Schneck Gaylord M RFD 1 . . . . . . .. . . . . .. . . 4009-K-2
Schneider Elmer tourist camp RFO 1 . . . . . .•. . .. 2030
SCHNEIDER VERN used cars 1012 Mass . .. . .... . 424
Schneider Vern 745 Mo . . . . . ... . .. . . . .. . .. . . . 3258
Schnetzler Chas 1316 Ky . . . ... .... . .. . ... .. 2287-W
Schnider F C 1120 Tenn . . .. . • . . . . ... . . •.. . .3997~
Schocken Thos D 1940 R I. .... . . .. .. . . ..... 2945-R
Schoewe W H 1002 Tenn .. . ...... . .. .. ... .. . 1925
Schofield Ora 820 N H . ..... .. ........... . 1297-M
Schomer A J Jr 930 Oak .. .. .. .. . .. • .... . . . 1428-R
Schooley Leslie M 821 Maine . . . . . . . . ... ... . . .3687 -R
Schooling Fontaine 746 La . .. . . .. . .. .. . . . .. . 1871-J
Schools City . . . . . . . . . ... . .. . See Name of School
Schopper Frances 1246 N H .. . . . .. . .... .. . . . 2860-J
Schott Raymond 6 19 ~ W 4 . .
1570-M
Schowengerdt Ed RFD 3 .. ... . . •• . .. .. .. . . 4091- N-2
Schrader E E 520 Miss . . . . ... ... .. . .. .... .31&lt;11-W
Schrader R D 1016 Pa . .. .. .. . . . . .. . .. . .. . .379.3-M
Schroeder Carl W 114 Indian Av .. . . . ... • .. . . 4245-M

SAS- SEL

.39

Schroeder Geo B 1220 Ohio. .
...
. . 3662-W
Schroyer J C 1145 N J . .. .. . ..... . .. . . . . . . 1659-M
SCHUBERT FUNERAL HOME 1020 N H . . . . . . . 452
Schubert J F 1818 Vt . . .. ... . .... .. . ...... . 2771-J
Schultz C A 909 Maine . . • ....••.. . •• • ...... . 2445
Schulz Wm H tailor 9 24! Mass .......... . ... . . . 914
Schumacher Frank 933 Mo .. . .. • ..... .. • . .. . 739-W
Schumann Margaret ll4b Ohio . .. . . . .. • ...... . 2491
Schumann May 821 Ill .... . ....... . . . .. . .. . 1769-J
Schutz Kenneth RFD 2 ... .. ........ . .... 4069- K-12
Schutz Michael RFD 2 . . . . .. .. . . . ... .. . . . 4060-N-2
Schwahn S E 1124 West Hills Pkwy .... .. .. . . .. 1718
Schwanzle R T Mrs 2322 Vt . . . . ......... . .. 213.3 -R
Schwartz Frances G Mrs 1321 Tenn .• .. . .... . 1547-W
Schwa:o:z Ivan 1121 lnd. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . 1292-M
Schwarz Oscar RFD 1 . .
. .. . .... . ...... 3611-W
Schwegler R A Jr phy 4 &amp; Maine .. . ... • . .. .. . . .3975
Residence 2219 N H .. .. .... .. .. .. . .. . .. .. 1435
If no answer call ... . ... .... .. . . . ... .. .. . 1225-J
Schwegler R A Dean 805 Mo. . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . 2280
Schweitzberger A 1016 N Y . . . ..... . . .• • .. . 2111-M
Schweitzberger Harold RF D 6 . ... . . . . . .. . . .. .3253-R
Schweitzberger Norman 1330 R I . . ... . . .. . .. 1039-M
Schwinl ey Lee 8 w 8 . .. . .. . . . . . .. . .... . . .... 2305
Sconce J A RFO 2 .. . ... . . ....... . . . ... . 4093-K-12
SCOREBOARD tavern b E 9 ... . . . . .. ...... ... 2026
Scott Bertha J 751 Grant . ..... . . .. ..•. . ... . 1751-J
Scot t Constr Co 1641 W 9 ......... . . . . • .. . .. 3965
Scot t Earl D 923 Ohio .. . . .... . ..... .. .. ... 4252-J
Scott Edw 815 N Y .. ..... .. ........ ... . . . 2428-J
Scott Emory 1921 Vt . . . . ..... . . . .. .•. .•. . . . . 3170
Scott-Foley Studios 8 31 Mass . . . • • . . . . . . . . . . . .3889
Scott Frank RFD 5 ... .. .. . ....... . .. . . .. 4033-N-4
Scott Frank 727 Ark .... . ... ... . . ....•.... 2174-M
Scott Grace 808 Walnut . .. . . ..... • ... . . .. . 3150- M
Scott Grace 0 941 Ky .. . ... . . . .... • . . ... .. 1723-R
Scott H L Mrs 1025 N Y . ....... . . . . .. . . .. . •317.3
Scott Jas A 228 N 1 . .... .. . . ... ... .... .. . 3221-R
Scott Jessie 933 N Y ... . . .. .. .. . ....... . ... . .3091
Scott Joe 805 Maple .. . . . ..... . .... . .•. . . . .. 1517
Scott John 8 46! lnd . . .......... . . .. . . • . ... . 2844
Scott John R Mrs 1345 W Campus Rd ... .. ... .3695-W
Scott Lester 818 Tenn . . . .. .. .. . .. .. . ... . . . 2191-M
Scott Louis R 305 w 19 . .... . ..... . . ...... 1406-R
Scott Robt 1308 Oakhi 11 • ••• ••••.. •• • • •••• •• 2494-J
Scott Robt L 2121 Ohio . . . . . .. . .. ... . ... . . . 4240-R
SCOTT TEMP EQUIP CO 129 N H . .. . . . • . .. ... .326
Scott Vernon C 1735 Mass .. ... . .. . . • . • . ••. 36.31-M
Scott Warren 0 1537 R I . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3871
Scott Wm 1708 La .. . . . . .. . . . • .... . •• ... . . 1292- R
Scott Wm R 1117 La . . ... . . .. .. . .... . • .. . 2745-W
Scott Winfield Mrs 646 La ....... .. .. .. . .. .. . 1838
Scritchfield Floyd C Sunnyside K U . •.. . ..• . .. 2861-M
Scrugg R D Sunnyside K U . .... . .. .. . ..... . 1281-M
Seabaugh Max W 1545 Mass . . . . .. . .. , .. . .. . 3403-J
Seagondollar L W 1507 Mass . .. ........ ... .. 2155-J
Seaman Mildred 1321 Mass .. ... . .... . . .. ... 1361-J
Seamans G S 1000 Ill . . . . . .. . . ..• . .. .. • . .... .3284
Seamans Robt L 1830 Barker .. . ... .. . . ••.. . 1628-R
Seamans W J 92 5 Ky . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4259
Sears Wm 1045 Ky ..... ... .. ... .. .. . .... . 1658-W
Seaver Jas E 1629 Ala .... ...... . .. .... . .. 2676-M
SECURITIES INVSTMT CO 9 E 8 . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.34
Seeber John 1345 Vt ... . .... .. ••... . . ... . . 2652-R
Seele Alfred RFD 6 .
. .. . ... . . . . . . 4048-K-11
Sego Aubry 5 Winona . .. .. . .. . .. . .. . ... •. . 2410-M
Sehon Candace 1145 Ky .... . . . ... ... . .. .•. 1043- M
Sehon Russel L ins Lawrence Natl Bk Bg . . •. . . . .. 133
Residel)ce 1211 Ky . . .. .. .. . ... . .. . .. ... . 1985-R
Sehon Russell 2210 Barker . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1188
Seiler J 0 92b Miss ... . . . . ....... . •• ..•.. . 2377-R
Seiwald Arthur A 21 30 Learnard. . . . • . . . . . . . . . 1559
Seiwald Henry F 712 Ky . .. . . . .. . . • .. . .. . . 3216-W
Seiwald Herbert RFD 5 . .. . .... . . . . ... .. .4053-K-1.3
Seiwald Wm 431 Perry . . . . . . . . . . . .... . . . . .. 1591-J
SELICHNDW MARVIN tree trimmer 622 Ala . .. . 1479
Selig J E Mrs 1333 N H . ..... .. .. .. .. ...... . 1025
Selig John Jr 2130 Vt .. ...... .... ..• . ... . .. . 284.3
Sell Lester 220 E 18 . . .. . . . . . . . ... . . ....... . 1323
Sellards Hall 1443 Alumni Place Dr . .. .. • .... . . 4205
Sellars Amanda Mrs 509 Lincoln . . . . . . . . . .. . 1778-M
Sellers Roy 1007 W 6 . .... ... . .. . . . . ... . .. 3589-R

�40

SEL- SKI

LAWRENCE

Selzer Dorian C 766 Maple ..•. .....•..... •. 3D32-J
Semple R Mrs 901 Ind ... . .. .............. 2794- M
Semple W H 801 La .. . .... .............. . 1771-R
Sencenbaugh Leslie E 101 Pawnee ............ 1983•J
Sensint.affar Jack 530 La ..... ... . ........ . . 1408-R
SERVICE GROC 416 E 9 ..... ...•........... . . 167
Seufert Geo J Jr 2124 Ky ..................1965-R
Sexton Robt R 1801 La . ... ....... . ....... . 2425-R
Seymour Packing Co 820 Vt. .......... ........ 311
Shadley Marietta 1113 W 10 ....... • ..... . . 2543-W
Shaffer C R 533! Ohio .• ...... •.....•.... .. 3684-R
Shaffer Clifford 0 431 Mo . ................ 3191- M
Shafnacker Fredrck 925 Ky ........ . ..• .. ..... 1008
Shafstall Glenn 2233 La .... . ... .. . . • .. . .... 2852-J
Shahan J A 1120 La . . ....... .... •.. .. .... 2199-M
Shamrock Grill 508 Locust .................... 3392
Shanafelt Dick 1024 Pa ..... ...•...•..... .. . 3553
Shanahan Chas 1918 Ohio ........... • ... .. .. 1396-J
Shank C W 2000 Tenn .................... 2798-M
Sharp Margaret E 1545 N H ..... .... ..... .. 1419-J
Sharp W P RFD 2 . ... ............. . .... 4060-K-12
Shaver Odell 1731 Ind . . . .................. 1679-J
Shaw Arthur Alan 1231 Oread ........ . .. . . .. 3823-J
Shaw Etta Mrs 1248 Conn ..... ........ .. .. . 2932-R
Shaw Helen E 916 Ark . .. . • .......... • , . . .. .. 3099
SHAW LUMBER CO 701 Vt ................. .. 147
Shaw Nellie Mrs 1140 Pa .....•........... . 3138-R
Shaw P Don 1020 Conn . .. . .. . .. .. . ... . .. .. 1659-J
Shaw Richard L 530 La .... . ..... . ...... .. 3684-M
Shaw Russell D RFD 3 . ................. 4057- N-12
Shaw-Walker Co 643 Mass . .... . .............. 501
Shaw Wayne F Mrs 17 W 14 ....... .. .. . . . . 2743-M
Shaw Wilfred Mrs 1001 W Hills Pkwy .......... 759-J
Shay Thos M 2202 N H . ... ... .. . . . . .... . .. 2266-M
Sheard F E 1527 W 6 ......... ..... ....... 2719-J
Sheard Robt E 1046 Ohio ......•........... •3176-J
Shearer Kent 1547 Ky ... .. .. • .. ...... ... . 1803-R
Shedd Harriet 1100 La ... .... . .•. . ..•. ... .. 3685-J
Sheen Mabel 1009 Ky ... . ... . . . .... .. . .. .. 1207-W
Sh elley C E RFD 6 . . ... . .. ... ......... . 4036-N-12
Shenk Henry A 1235 Ky ....... ..... ......... . 3085
Shepard Albert RFD 5 . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . 4073-N-3
Shepard Rollie Eugene 741 N 7 ... . .. .. . . . .. 1423-W
Shepard Wesley 842 Elm . . . . . . . .. . .. ... ... 2175-M
Sherbenou Edgar L Sunnyside K U .. .• ....... 2900-M
Sherfy Luella Mrs 725 Mo ........ .. . . ...... 2193-R
Sheridan H M 1916 Ohio . .. ...... . ... . . .... 1396-W
Sherman H W 444 Ohio . .... . . ... • ..... . .. 2940-M
Sherman Jerry L 1027 Pa .. .... . .. . . .•. ... 1990-W
Sherrick's Acctg Serv 927~ Mass .• ... .. . .. . . .. .. 586
Sherwood N P Dr 1801 Ind ................. . 2732
Shields A E 831 E 13 ... ::. . . . .... ... .. . . 3936-W
Shields Oliver 0 1826 N H ................. 3212-M
Shields R L 1311 W 5 . . . . . .. . ... . . . • .... . 2227-M
SHIELDS STANDARD SERVICE STA 846 Vt .... 2021
Shimmons C C Mrs 712 La ........... . ...... 1324-J
Shimmons Fred B 1424 Ky ................... 3004
Shim mons Shop chinawr 906 N H .•...... . ..... . 660
If no answer call .. ... ...... ............. . 3780
Shipman 0 B 931 Mo . . ...... .. ..... . . ..... . 739-J
Shirar C L RFD 2 . . . . . . . . .... • . ... • . . . . 4086- N-3
Shirck Grace Mrs 739 N Y . ...... . .•.. . ..... 1795-J
Shirk Arthur 1739 Mass . ..... . .. ..•. ..... .. 3631-R
Shirk Fred RFD 4 .. . . ...... .. .. .. ... .. 4096-N-22
Shirk Harold 827 Mich . . .... .... . ... . ..... . 2186-R
Shirk Lawrence E RFD 2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 4080-N-3
Shmalberg Eugene F 2244 N H .. .. . . . . . . . . .. 2969-R
Shobe F W 806 Ohio . .. . . ..... .. . .. ... ..... 2356-R
Shobe Joe W 420 Lyons ... . . . . .. . . . . . . .. ... 1379-J
Shoberg A W RFD 2 ... ... . ..... . ........ 4037-N-2
Shockley W Everett 522 Ind . .. . . .. ... .. ... . 1537-W
Shoemaker Frank L 1120 Conn . ..... .. ...... 2884-J
Shoemaker Ted 728 R I. . ................ .. 1337-W
Shoemaker V G RFD 3 . . . . ... . .... • ..... 4091-N -12
Shoemaker W H 1726 Ind ..... . .... • . . .. .. 1676-W
Shook Earl RFD 5 ..... ........ .• .. . . . .. . 4053-K-3
Shook G W 1302 W 4 ......... ......... ... . . 1141
Shook J H 819 Ky .. .. .. ....•• . . ... .. . . . . 2191-W
Shore B B Mrs 421 Miss ....... • . . ... .• .. . . 3677-W
Short Chas 2100 N H . .. . ...... . .. ...• . .... 2554-R
Shreve J M 937 N H . . . .. . ... . ........ . . . . 4230- M
Shrikhande S S Sunnyside K U .... .... .. .. ... 2947 -J

Shriver Claude 745 Ark ............•..... •.... 549
Shulenberger Arvid Sunnyside KU ........ . ... 2958-W
Shull Ivan F 2038 N H . . ..... .. . . ... .. .... 1333-W
Shults Everett H Sgt Sunnyside K U ......... . 2900-J
Shultz G Reynolds RFD 3 . . . ... .... . ... . .. 4054- N-4
Shultz Guy E RFD 3 ........ . ..... . ..... . 4071-N-2
Shultz Herbert RFD 3 . ....... • .......... . 4071- K-2
Shultz J Don RFD 1 ... . .. • ........... . ... 1329-M
Shultz 0 R 16.39 Mass .. .. ... . ............... 3574
Sias R L 1335 Vt . . • ........ . ..•...... ... 2287-M
Sibert Victor J 636 Ky . . ...... . ..... • .... . .. 3939
Sickles D L ins Insurance Bldg . ... . . . . ... ..... . 689
Residence 826 Ill ....... . ..... • ....... . . 3609-W
Sievers Eugene C 329 Johnson ............... 1672-J
Sieweke Fred RFD 2 . . .. ................ . 4076- K-3
SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON 1301 W Campus Rd ..... 726
Sigma Chi fraternity 1439 Tenn . .•... .. .. . ..... 721
Sigma Chi Annex fratern ity 1416 Tenn ... . . .... . 4268
Sigma Kappa 1625 Edgehill ... .. •.....•. . . . .•. 534
SIGMA NU fraternity 945 Emery Rd .... . .. .. . . 3456
SI GMA PHI EPSILON
House 1645 Tenn . .. .........•............. 664
Housemother 1645 Tenn ... ........... . .. 2490-W
Sigma Pi frat 1325 Tenn . . ........... • .. . .. . 3540
Sigmund Merle H Sunflower Apts ............. 3831-J
Sikes J V 2526 Montana . . ...... ..... .• .... . 4227-J
Silkey Don 300 Ill .. .. .... .. . .. .......... . 3710-W
SILLIX DALE H optmtrst 839~ Mass ........ .. .. 979
Sillix Dale H Dr 1010 Maine . ..•. ..... . .... . 2307-W
Silva Margaret 814 N J . .. .. . .. .. ..... . ... 3078-W
Silvers Henry RFD 3 . . . . . . . . . .... • ...... 2574-W
Silvers Otis 1125 N Y . .. . . . ... .. ...... .... . 3027-J
Silverthorn Lee J 650 W 23 ............ .. ... 1825-J
Silvis J C Mrs 941 Pa. . . . . . . . . • . . . . . • • . .. 2243-R
Sim Alfred 1145 Ind ... . .. . . . .... ... • ...... 2505-J
Simmonds John J 2124 Vt. . . . ... .... .... .. ... 2264
Simmons E J 1145 W Campus Rd . . . . . . . . ...... 560
SIMMONS E J CO 824 Mass . . . . ..... ... .. . . .. . 330
Simmons Earl 415 Miss ............•.. ... . . 2645-M
Simmons Hazel Lee 1646 Barker . . . . . . . . . .. . 1050-R
Simmons Mary Ell en Mrs 941 Tenn .......... 1413-M
Simmons Ronald 1101 Tenn ..... ... .. ..... .. 1996-R
Simon Alfred RFD 3 . . . .
. .. ... . 4058-K-11
Simon Harold P 1132 Ohio . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2882-M
Simon J J 817 Maine .. ..... ... ...... . . . . 1219-W
Simons Dolph 1509 Mass .........•.......... 2835
Simons W C 2500 Vt ........ . .... .. .... . .. ... 353
Simpson C H 941 Conn . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . .2292-M
. Simpson Donald S 1304 Tenn . . • . ....•• ..... 3466-M
Simpson Eugene 1715 Mo . ... . ... . .... ... . . 2453-W
Simpson Genevieve 441 Ark ..... . .. . .. .. .... 1545-R
Simpson Harold 231 Ill .. .. ..... .. .. ... ... . 1184-R
Simpson Mamie Mrs 738 Mo ................3687-M
Simpson Richard 1618 Vt . ... ............... 3492-J
Sims E A 920 N H . . .... .. . .. ......... ... .. 2503
Sims Paul A 518 E 13 . . . . .... •• .... ... ..... . 3858
Sims W S Rev 1325 N Y ...•. ... . . ...... . . . 3054-J
Sims Wesley S Jr 1233 N J ..•......... . ..•. 2422- R
Sinclair Paul 1536 N H .. . . .... . . . .. ... . . .. . . 3859
SINCLAIR REFINING CO BULK AGT 623 Locust.l358
Singer Sewing Machine Co 927 Mass ............ 247
Sink Randolph M 611 w 6 .. .. . . .. .... . . ... 2614-M
Sinks Jacqueline 1201 Oread . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2278-J
Sinks W H 1015 N Y .. ....... ...... . .. . .. 2761-J
Sippel H M Rev 938 Tenn .......... . . . • .... .. 3153
Siroky Ralph 615 Mich ... .... . . ...... . ... . 1117-W
Siroky Rest Home 645 Mich . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4251
Siscoe Roy E RFD 5 .. .... • .... . ...... ... 4033-N-2
Siscoe Susie 414 Locust .. . . .. . . •.. .. • . .... 2647-R
Sitz Otto A 1425 N V . . .... .. . . . . .. .. ... .. 3590-W
Six Deal D 1732 Miss ..... ......... . . ..... .. 1895
SI X-FIVE CAB CO 904 Vt . ..... .. . . . .... . ..... . 65
Sizer G M 1346 N Y .. .. .. .. ... .... ..... 3467-M
Skaggs J L W 21 .. .. . . ... ... . . •. .. . .. . 4066-K-3
Skaggs Wm 1325 Ky ... . .... • . . ... . • . .... . 3897- M
Skeet Alfred 2200 La.. . .. .. . ........ .... 3069-W
Skeet Harold W RFD 3 ..... .. .. . . . ....... 4058-K-3
Skelly Bulk Plant E Santa Fe Yards .... . .... . ... 100
Skerchek Michael RFD 2 ... . . .. .. . ... •.... 4064- N-2
Skie John 1201 W Campus Rd . . . . ... .. .... ... . 1802
Skie John Sr Mrs 1537 Tenn ... . .. • .. ... . . .. 1398-R
Skiles Gertrude Mrs 631 N 3 . .... . .. •.. ...... 1064

�LAWRENCE
Skiles Jeannette Mrs 1128 R 1 .. ........... . 1393-J
Skiles Skillet 631 N 3 .. .. . ..... .... ......... 1064
SKILLET'S RETAIL LIQUORS 1906 Mass ..... . 3518
Skillman Joe 1016 Ala ..............•.... . . 1830-R
Skinner Chester E RFD 1 ............ ... .4070-K-11
Skinner Earl Mrs 324 Elm ... ......... .... . . 1042-R
Skinner Francis 433 Mich .... .. ..•........ . 1277-J
Skinner Harold 227 Miss . ....... ......... .. 2388-J
Skinner Harold R RFD 6 . . . . .. .. . .... ... .4008-N-11
Skinner Mattie Mrs 1229 Almira ............. 2289-R
Skinner R Jr 2026 Vt . . .. .... ... .•....... 1667-M
Skinner Ruth ~rs Haskel l Grds . . . . . . ....... 1259-M
SKINNER'S RADIATOR SHOP 1830 Mass ........ 271
SKYLINE CLUB 633 E 23 . .. . ... .......... .. 3339
Slack John G 618 W 4 . .
. . ... .. .... ..... 1570-R
Slagle Helen 800 Maine . . . .... _. ..•.. • . .. . 1417-W .
Slagle J R 800 Maine . . . .. •.. . . . • ......... 1417-W
Slagle Ross J 721 Ohio . .........•. .. . .... . . 2158-R
Slamin W F 746 Miss .. . .. . •. ...• ......... 2650-R
Sloan Harl T 503 N 2 . ... . .. ....• ......... 2666-R
Slough M C 9 Westwood . . .. .......•. • ..... 3128-R
Sluss A H 827 Miss . . ..... ... ......... ... 2282-W
Small W J Co The grain RFD 5 ........ . . ... .. . 750
Smallberg Eugene F 2244 N H ..... ...... ... 2969-R
Smart C A Mrs 18 E 13 . . .... ...•..... . . . . .. 2267
Smart-Form Corsetiere RFD 3 ... ........ . 4091-K-13
Smart Pau I L ofc 301 Locust ................ . . 370
Smart Paul L 1655 Ill. .. ..... . . .• ........... 3535
Smart Tom L ofc 301 Locust ... .... • ......... . 370
Smart Tom L 1341 Ky . ....... .. ....... ... .. 2145
Smelser Mary M 1310 La .. .. ........ •... . . 1534-J
Smiley Glenn M 1406 N Y . ................ 1654-M
Smith AI E 801 Miss . ..... ............... 2210-W
Smith Albert C 901! E 23 .. . . . • ..... . .. .4064-N-11
Smith Aida Mrs Haskell Grds . .... .. .. . .. . . .. 1422-M
Smith Alice E 1126 Ky . .. . .. ....•...... . . . ... 805
Smith Alice M M1·s 1227 Conn .....•........ 2405-M
Smith Anthony 1649 Ill ...•... ....• • ... .. . . 1227-R
Smith Ben L RFD 1 . . ...... ........ ... .4063-N-11
Smith Blanche 1301 Pa . ...•......••....•. . 2407-M
Smith Bob &amp;1&amp;~ W 17 ... ..•• .... •• ....... . 2661-J
Smith C E 928 Conn .. ... . ... ........... .. 1737-M
Smith Carl 0 1234 Conn ..... . ..... . . •..... 2217-R
Smith Carlyle H 1423 Ky .........•........ . 1580-J
Smith Carlyle S 2233 Barker . .. .. . . ......... 2950-R
Smith Claude 805 Miss ........ . ..... .. .. ... 3609-R
Smith Dan Mrs RFD 3 . .. ..... . .. . .. • ... .4051-N-4
Smith Dar! K 821 Tenn . ... . ..... . .. ... ... . 2356-W
Smith Dixie 921 Ky
, . . . . . ...... ...... 2313-W
Smith Dresmkng Shop 943 ~ Mass ....... ..... ... 683
Smith E P 1346 N H .. ..... . . . . . . •• . ...... 1308-R
Smith Ed S E Limits ..... ....... . ........ .... 491
Smith Eldon 1405 N J .. .. .. ......... .... . . 3670-M
SMITH ELDON SERV STA 946 Mass .. .... . .. . 3322
Smith Elec Co 615 Mass . ....... ... ... ..... . .. 163
Smith Elgar J 2200 Tenn ........ ..... . . . . . 2369-M
Smith Emmett Jr 641 Ill .. . .... .. . •...... . 1299-M
Smith Ethan A 333 Ill .... ... ... ......... .. . . 2100
Smith Ethan A Moving &amp; Transfer Co 11 E 9 .. .... 46
Smith Etta I Mrs 1634 Ala ......•....•..... 2458-R
Smith F R 1208 E 13 . . .
. ..... . . ... . . . 1850-J
SMITH FLORAL SERV E 23 .................1326
Smith Flossie Mrs 83~ Miss ............... . 1901-M
Smith G Luckett 800 Ark ........ . ........... 1356
Smith Geo Baxter 1140 w Hills Pkwy .......... . 1915
Smith Geo D Haskell Grds ............... . .. 2520-J
Smith Grant 825 R I. . . . .
. .. . .. 2833-W
Smith Guy W 1730 Ill .......... • ........ .... 2496
Smith H T U RFD 1. .. .... .. .. . .. . . • . .. .4067-K-3
Smith H W 2231 Tenn . .......... . ......... 3238-J
Smith Harris G Sunnyside K U . .... .. . .. .... 2958-M
Smith Harry L Rev 836 Ind ... .. . . . ........ . . . 1797
Smith Harry Thurston 1325 Vt ... . . ....... . . 1131- R
Smith Henry 501 Ark ... ............ • . .. ... 3521-J
Smith Henry P 837 Ark .... . • ... . .. • . . ..... 2874-J
Smith Howard 309 Lyon . .... • ...... •..... .. 3415-R
Smith J B 200 W 15 . . ... . , . . ... • .... .... c. 1030
Smith J 0 1021 Conn ... . ........ • ....... . 1891-M
Smith Jas E RFD 2 . . .. ..• ..... • ...... .. 2459-M
Smith Joe M 181 o La . .. ... . • .... .. • ... . .. 3224-R
Smith L B 1315 Ohio ....... ....... ••. .. .. 33.36-M
Smith L Lake 1022 Ala .. . ................... 2167
SMITH L LOKE CO 846 Mass . ... • ...... .. . ... 72.5

SKI- SOM

41

Smith Leland E 422 Elm .......... ....... .. 1631-R
Smith Leo K 720 Ark .......... .•. ... .. . . . 1596-W
Smith Loren E 614 Ala ....... .. . • ..... .. .. 1100-.J
Smith Maggie Mrs 1332 Vt .. .. . . . • .... .. ... 3748-J
Smith Mary 1502 Ky .... ....... •• ....... .. 1473-J
Smith Mary Mrs RFD 4 . . ..... •. ..... ... . 4036-N-4
Smith Maud 420 Ind ......... •• ..... • . . .. . . 2101-J
Smith Meredith M RFD 5 .... . ...... . • .. . . 4053-N-2
Smith Murry 1530 Tenn ................... 3060-M
Smith 0 E 529 Tenn . .... ........ ..... . .. . . . 3733
Smith 0 W 1003 Tenn .. ..... .... . •. .... .. . 1120- R
Smith Owen H ofc 734 Vt . .. ... •. . .. .• • .. .. . .. 224"'
~esidence 1730 Ala .. . .. . .......... .. .. ... 1080/
Sm1t h P K Jr 702 La . . . . . . .. . . .. .. .. . . .. . 1324-M
SMITH PAPER SUPPLY CO 737 N H . .......... 336
Smith R R 742 Conn . . ...................... 2168
Smith Rhoten A Jr lOll Ill .. ... .... .. .. .... 1769-R
Smith Robt N 1126 Tenn .... . .. • ... .. .•. . . 3028-M
Smith Rose Mrs 1100~ Conn ................ 1532-R
Smith T L 535 Lake . . . ..... .... .. •• ....... 2776-R
Sm ith TV 1320 Mass . . . .. . ........ .. . ..... . 2318
Smith Thos R 4 Westwood Rd .... ••. ........ 1734-M
Smith Thurston 1140 La . .......... . ...... . 3685-R
Smith Verner F 1821 Miss ...... • .......... 2635-M
Smith Vernon 719 Lyons . ..... .. • .. .. .. .... 3242-M
Smith Vernon C 904 R I ....... • ..... ........ .3293
Smit h Vernon H Bing RFD 4 ........ •• .. .... 1867-W
Smith W E 753 Lyon ..... ..... . ... • ....... 1709-J
Smith W M 1335 Vt . . . ........ • ....... ... 2287-M
Smith Wm P 1641 Ill .... ... . • ..... • .. .. .. 1227-W
Smith Willis RFD 6 . . .. ... . ......... . ... 4036-K-12
Smither Helen A 415 W 6 ............... .. . 3827-J
Smitherman Donald W 1609 Stratford Rd ..... 1237-W
Smithmeyer F H Mrs 1340 Ky ....... . ..... . 1131- M
Smithmeyer Fred C 1826 Ind ....... . ....... 1706-W
Smith meyer Fred P 2009 Mass ........ •. .... 2358-J
Smith's Service Sta 600 Mass .. ....... • ....... 2002
Smoke House Pool Hall 7.38 Mass ....... • ...•.. 2076
Smoyer Judson 1732 La . ............... • .. ... 3582
Smu II Chas W 1832 Barker .................. 1628-J
Snapp Nettie Mrs 241 Maple ................ 2899-J
SNAPPY LU NCH 1010 Mass ..... . ... ......... 2078
Snart Fred G 841 La ..... ...... . ... • ..... .2995-J
Snavely M R 1045 Tenn ... .... .... ........ 3176-M
Snead Elizabeth G 206 W 13 . ...... • ...... . 1171-W
Snedeger Chas E RFD 2 ....... ...... ... .4055-N-13
Sneegas B C 117 Pawnee ................•.. 1259-J
Sneegas Carl E RFD 4 . ........ .. • . . ....... 1979- M
Sneegas Owen 1301 Elmwood ........ • ...... 1762-R
Sneegas W B 1028 Ohio ....• . . ............. 1120-J
Snider Ada Mrs 925 Ky .................... 2313-J
SNIDER COAL &amp; HEAT SERV CO 200 Locust .... 1010
Snider Harold K 3.3 Winona ......... ...... ... . 3052
Snoddy Wm 1723 Ill ......... ................ 3257
Snodgrass L V Rev 733 Mo ............. • ..... .930
Snook Robt B 1343 Tenn ..... •. .... • ...... . 766-W
Snow A E 545 Tenn . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 282D
Snow Chas R 876 Oak .. . ................ .. 2949-M
SNOW CROP FROZEN FOOD DISTRIBUTORS
546 Miss .2
Snow E R 1041 Del . . . . . . .. .. . . . ... ....... 2754-W
Snow Florence L 711 W 12 .. .. . ••. • ...••... 1544-M
Snow Geo W 726 Ohio ........ • ...... • ..... 1144-J
Snow John 246 N 8 . . .... ... . . • .... • ...... 2751-R
Snow June Mrs 934 Ill . . . . . .
. . .. .. . . 2606-J
Snow Walter R RFD 3 . .... .. .. ..• . . ..... 4D12-K-2
Snowden Geo Mrs 1933 Tenn ...... . . ... . . .. 2619-M
Snyder Geo M 2140 Learnard ......... • ..... 2597-W
Snyder Grant A Sunnyside K U ...... . •• . . . .. 2841-M
Snyder Paul 1613 Tenn .
. .. .. . ... . . .... 2562
Social Serv League 905 R I. .... ... ... . .... . ... 9 09
Socony-Vacuum Oil Corp Agt 1940 N H . . . . . . . 1274
Soden Frank E 304 W 20 .. . . ............... 1034-R
Soden Jack Frank garage 1900 Mass . . . . . . . . . . . 292
Soden Kenneth P 1201 Oread .. . .... . ... .. . .. 2278-R
Soden W B 704 W 12 ..... .. .. ........... . 3899-R
Sokal Robt Sunnyside KU ..... ... • .. . ... . ... 3473-J
Sollner Wm .J Sunnyside KU . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . 1449-R
Sommer Frank 1219 N Y .. . ........ •• ..... . . . 1486
Sommer G A 16 E 13 ..... .. ....... . • ....... . 1884
Sommer Harry RFD 5 ... .................. . 2221-R
So mmers Grocery .1021 Mass . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 212
Sommerville C J Mrs 1800 La ..... . • ...... . . 2418-J
Sommerville Wm B 829 Miss ...... • ... ... . . . 2297-J

�42

SOU-STE

L AWRENCE

Souders Leo A 634 N 6 . ......... ... .. . . .. . 3146-J
Southard Helen 711 W 5 .. . .. .. .............. 2791
Southern Kans Greyhound Lines 638 Mass ....... . 707
SOUT HERN PIT BARBECUE 1834 Mass ....... . 2001
SOU THWESTERN BELL TELEPHONE CO 734 Vt .. 221
After 5 pm week days &amp; noon Saturdays &amp;
on Sundays &amp; Holidays call Chief Operator ... . 600
Telephone Service Calls:
To report a telephone out of
order . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Call Repair Service
For telephone numbers which do not appear
in the directory . .
. . . ... Call Information
To obtain assistance on calls or report unsatisfactory service on a call .. .. Call Chief Operator
Architects &amp; Builders Service 734 Vt .. .. . .. . 1200
Soxman E G 1645 R I. ... . .............. .. 1971-M
Soxman Fred G 801 Ill ........... .. ..... .. ... 1807
Spalding W E Mrs 701 Ohio .... . . .. .. . .. . . . . 2265
Spalsbury Ross L 1846 Learnard ...• .. . • .... . 2762-W
Spangler Irma B 644 Miss .................. . . 3877
Sparks Chas E RFD 3 . .... . ... .. ...... . . . 4051-N -2
Sparks Cl ifford C RFD 5 . . .. . ... . . ... .... 4053-K-21
Sparks Harry B 1305 Tenn . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52
Sparks Hattie 1239! N J ................ .. 2414-W
Sparks Jas L 924 La .. ... . ................ . 2781-J
Spaulding Elsie M Haskell Grds ... . . . . . . • .. . . 2642-W
Spear R F Rev 224 E 17 Terr . . ..... . •• .... . 2669-M
Spearman John H 503 Ark . .. ....•.. . .. • .... 2227-R
Spearman John L 439 Ark ...... • .......... . 1545-W
Spears Geo 1216 W 10 . .... .. ....•.... .. .. .. 2831
Spector Sol S 2004 Ohio ..... • .... • ......... . 3983
Speicher Frank 937 Conn .. . .. ....... • ... . . 2640-W
Spena Darryl D 520 Ohio ... •. .. . . • • . . .. . .. . 3183-J
Spence Alva G 2201 R I. . ................. . 2266-R
Soence Joel W 81 5 E 12 . . . .. ..... . ...... 2626-J
SPENCER BROS TRUCK LINE 342 Lincoln . . . . . 1822
Spencer Flavious 842 N Y .• .............•.. 2443-R
Spencer Irene Mrs 438 Ill. ............. . . . . . 2203-J
Spencer Lloyd 342 Lincoln. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1822
Spencer Millard C 1234 Dread ... . ... • • . .... 2917-M
Spencer Robt 438 Ala . . . .. .. . .............. . 3598
Sperry Kenneth L 441 Ohio . . .. . . . • ........ . 2124-R
Sperry P Everett RFD 1 .................... 1563-J
Sphar Robt A 611 W 9 . . .. .......... • .... . . . 2892
Spinning Wheel antiques 2201 La .............. . 186
Spivey Ora M 2132 Ohio ... .. . . . .......... 3698-M
Sprague Elizabeth H:&gt;09 Crescent Rd ... .• •... 1 620-W
Sprague Elizabeth Louise 1142 Ind ........... 2372-M
Spray Carl 102 Indian Av .. ....... . . .... ... 4245-J
Spray Chas RFD 3 . . .. . . . ... . ....... . . 4012-N -4
Spray Chester A RFD 1. .. .......... . .... 4056-N-13
Spreitzer Henry J 1244 J,.a .. . . .. ..... ...... 1900-W
Springer Chas A atty Lawrence Natl Bk Bg. . . . . . . 596
Springer Chas A 2127 Mass ................ . 2230
Springer Christy RFD 4 . .................. . 2225-R
Springer Clarris E RFD 1 . .......... . • .. .. 40'19-K-2
Springer Dan 900 Mo . ........ . .......... 2769-W
Springer Forrest 0 1809 Ill . ................ 1225-W
Springer Forrest J 2145 Learnard .•......... .. 2189
Springer Lizzie RFD 4 . . .. . ............. . 4041-N-2
Springer V C 2301 Ohio ......•.......•.•.. 2687-M
Squires G D 1736 vt . .................... .1469-J
Squires Jas R 1142 lnd .. . ................. 39:&gt;9-M
Squires Joan 1617 N H .................... 2273-R
Srulovitch Jos 933 Miss . ... .. • . ............ 3690-R
STAB LE THE 1401 W 7 ........ . ............ 3080
Stacey W A 1939 N H ... . ... . ... .. ..•...... 3302
Staden Nellie Mae Mrs 245! Ill . ........... . ... 3167
Stad ium Barber Shop 1033 Mass ................ 438
Stadium Beauty Shop 1033 Mass . . . . • . . . . . . . . . 438
Stafford Merrill 1925 KY .. ......•...••..... 1685-R
Stalcuo Max 823 Mo
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . 3913
Stalkfleet Harry 1501 E 15 . . ....... ... ..... 1075-R
Stallard C N 1310 N Y . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . 1649
Stallcup Wm B 1616 Vt . .............. . .. 2373-R
Starn Thos liquors 731 N H. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3507
Stanclift Earl 942 Pa
. . •............. 2484-M
Stanclift Laura A Mrs 913 R I . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3760
Stanclift Lizzie 759 Maple . . ........ ... .... 2125-R
Stanclift R E 227 N b
. • ....••••... 3621
ST.II~IIlARI"' I IFE A&lt;;SN THE 8 &amp; Vt . ......... . 840
Standard Oil Bulk Plant 846 Pa . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1644
If no answer call . . . . . . . . . . . ........... 2272-W

ST ANDARD RENDERING CO 1610 E 15 ..... .. . . 369
Standfield Arthur H 602 Walnut ......... . .. ... 1198
Standing John R 1810 Indiana .............. 1474-W
Standing R E 1911 Learnard . . .... . . • .... .. . 3447-R
Stanfill Wm E 421 Ill . . ..... . .. ..... . . .. .. 3795-M
Stang Ronald B 800 Ohio . . . .... •• . .. ... . .. 3017-M
Stankewsky Alex 625 Walnut . ... . .. ••. . . .... 1194-R
Stanko W M 1312 N H ............ • ...... . 2579-R
Stanley A F 1925 N H . . ... . ....... • . . . .. .. 2803-J
Stanley Elizabeth Mrs 714 McCook . .. . . . • .... 2297-M
Stanley Keith 1608 Vt .. ..... . . . . . .• . ...... 2373-J
Stanley M R 1030 Ohio . ... . ... . ... .• . . . . .. . 973-R:
Stannard Geo A Mrs 1709 Miss ............ . . .. 3197
Stansbarger Floyd 1415 N Y . . . ... .• . . . . . . . . 2431-M
Stanton A L 2045 Learnard .... .. ..... . ..... .. 578
Stanton Jack 1133 Ky . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . • . . . . . 3487
Stanwix C E 726 Walnut .. . .. .• .... . • .. . . . . 2387-R
Stanwix Clayton C 628 Ala ..... . ..... . ..... 2274-M
Stanwix Gene P 2146 Tenn . .. . .. . . ..... . . . . 1928-J
Stanwix R D 324 Lincoln ...... .. . . ........ . 1357-W
Stapleton F P 1147 Ohio . . . . . . • . .. . . • ... . .. 3685-W
Stark Robt E 1411 Mass . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . 2743-J
Starkey Geo 0 ofc 745 Vt ... . .... • ...... . . . . .. 872
Residence RFD 3 . . . . .... . . ........ . ... 4043-K-2
Starkey John E 650 W 23 . . . •. • ..... • .... . . 1825-M
Starkey W S 904 Ohio . .... . ........... . . ... . 2324
Starks Harry 400 Ala .........• . .......... 2777 -W
Starr J A 1711 Ala . ...... .... . .... . • ... . . 2453-J
STAT E FARM INS AGCY 845~ Mass. .
. . . 170
If no answer call
. . .. . .. . .. .......... 828-J
STATE FARM INS AGENT 2019 Ohio
4237
State Offices
Highway Comsn
Constr Dept 745 Vt .... ..... .. ••. . . . • ... . 626
Maintnc Dept 600 Lincoln . . . .. • . ..... . ... . 342
Matrl Dept 600 Lincoln . .... . . . • .. . ... .. .. 342
Kans Veterans Comsn 745 Vt ......... . . . . .... 872
States Dale R 1400 Ky .................. .. 2461-M
Stauffer Geo W RFD 6 ..... .. ... .. •. .... 4085-K-12
Staus A L 536 Elm . .. . ....... • ........... 3307-M
Stavros John 1213 Vt . ....... . ............ . . 819
Stayton F E Haskell Grds ....... • .......... 1983-W
Steck Earl E 829 Ohio : . ......... . ; .•.. . ... 2270-R
Steele Margaret C 615 W 8 ........... . ..... 1571-R
Steen Russell G 718 lnd . .......... • ....... . 2929-J
Steeper Harold W 900 Ala . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2887
Steffen Gertie Mrs 1713 Ala . .... • , ...... .. 2697-W
Stegmaier B F RFO 1 . .. . ...... • ... .. .. .4067-N-21
Stein Carol H 1245 Dread .................. 3427 -R
Steinbring Albert W 715 N Y .............. . 3620-M
Steinbring Louise 1313 R I . .. .... • • ... . . .. . 1697-W
Steinhardt Milton Sunnyside KU ..... . ...... .4202-W
Stellmacher E R 1520 Mass ................ 2985-W
Stemmerman A W 422 Miss . ................ 2658-R
Stene Edwin 0 1644 University Dr ............ 3340-R
Stephens Watson E 23 ... . ... . ...... . .. ... 3790-W
Stephenson Eugene A 1516 University Or ........ 2118
Stephenson Hall 1404 La ....... . ..... . .. .... 4203
Stephenson Jack R 926 lnd . ... . . . ........... . 2417
Stephenson Kenneth C 710 w 6 ... .. • ....... 1433-N
St ephenson Mary Mrs 1316 Ohio . . .. . .. . • . . . . . . 547
Stephenson Russ Sunnyside K U . ......... .... 875-r.r
STERLING FURN CO 938 Mass .. . .... .• . .. . . 1192
Sterling Glenn E 1820 Ark .. . . . . . . • ....... . 2564-11'
Sterling Hall 1129 La . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . 561
Sterfinq P S 820 Miss . . ..........•........ 2529-N
Stern Donald N 212 w 7 . .. . ......... . .... . 3117-IV
St ernfeld Robt 2136 Owens Lane ....... • .... . 4226-.
Sterrett C Scott 1131 Tenn . . . ............ . 3543-rl
Stettler Howard F 2210 Tenn . ............. . 1776-\1
Steuber Emil H 1105 w 6 ........ . .. . ..... . 723-.
Stevens Anna 454 Lincoln . ..... . ....... . ... . 2259-,
Stevens Bill 824 E 14 . ...... . ............. 1069-\1
Stevens &amp; Brand attys Lawrence Natl Bk Bg . . . . . 10;
Stevens E A 1445 Prairie . . .. . ... . ........ . 1076-Y
Stevens Geo Mrs 900 R I ............ . .. .. . 2758-A
Stevens Mac 304 W 14 . . . .. ..... . ... • . . ... 1521-V
Stevens P N dentist 815 Mass .............. .. . 151!
Residence 323 Ill ... ....... . . . ..... . . .. 2437-Y
Stevens R B atty Lawrence Natl Blc Bg . ......... . 16
Stevens R B 1123 La . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7'1
Stevens Russell 916 E 12 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . •
1489·
Stevens W C 1121 La ..... • ........ . ........ . 59
Stevens W F 707 Mo . . ........... . .. .. .... .. 307

�LAWRENCE
Stevens Wm N 2009 R I. . ... . . . . ... .... .. .. 579-W
Stevenson A E 2009 Tenn . . ... • • .... • . . . . . . 2135- R
Stevenson E K 1708 Tenn .. . . . ... • ... . ... . . . . 2467
Stevenson E K Jr 1423 Ohio . . . ... •• . .. . . . .. . 2550-R
Stevenson I C 825 Ind . ... . .... . .. . ... . . ... .. 2560
Stevenson L J RFD 6 •... . . . ........ . . .. 4093-K-11
Stevenson Leslie A 1508 Haskell . .... •. . ... . . 3263-R
Stevenson Sally 1529 Ky . . .. ..... . .. . .. . .. . . . 3898
Stevenson Sarah E 1115 Ohio ... . .. . . ... . . .. . 1671-J
Stevenson's Paint &amp; Wallpaper Store 1 J11 Mass
122
Stewart Alan J 936 Ala . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . 1395-W
Stewart Betty Rhea 1245 Ore ad . . .. . ... . .. .. 3427-R
Stewart Beulah H 2120 Tenn . .. . . . ....•.... . . . 3633
Stewart C C at ty Jayhawker The~ tre Bg . • . . . . ..... 59
Residence 814 Mo . .. . . .. .. .... .. . .... . .. .. 136
Stewart C M RFD 3 . .. . . .. . . . ... ..... . . . 4051-N-3
St~wart C R 705 R I ... .. .. ... . ..... . .. . .. . . 3129
Stewart Daryl R 1036 N Y ........ . .. . .. . . . . 2212-J
Stewart Edna M Mrs 1045 W Hills Pkwy ..... . 3567-M
Stewart Fred 828 Tenn .. .. . . ... . . • . ... . . . . 3026-J
Stewart Ida May Mrs 1029 N Y .... . .... .. .. 2263-M
Stewart Jack 917 Ohio . . . ..... . . . ...... .. . 2915-M
Stewart John B 834 Mo . . .... . . .. . .. • . . .. . 2283-M
Stewart Kenneth E 1809 Mass . . ...•. ... . . . .. 2771- R
Stewart L P 1019 R I . . . . .. .... ... ... • .. .. 1943-R
Stewart L W 1906 Barker . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . 2649
Stewart Leland L 1104 Conn . . .. . • .... . .... . 3075-R
Stewart M H 2003 R I .. ... . .. . .. . . . . .. ... 1625- M
Stewart Marian 1032 R I . . . . . . . . . .
. . 3750-W
Stewart &amp; Petefish at tys Jayhawker Theatre Bg . . .. . 59
Stewart Ray 1246 Del . .... . .. .. . .. . . . . . . . . 3413-M
Stewart Robt E serv sta 23 &amp; Barker ..... . . . ... 3397
Stewart Robt E 1815 Miss .. . . . . ... .. . . . . . . 2330-W
Stewart Russell J 1211 Del .. . . . ........ . . . . 3467-R
Stewart's Texaco Serv Sta 23 &amp; Barker ..... . . . .3397
Slickelber Merlin 1510 University Dr . . .... . .. . 3949-R
Still Robt M 18 24 Miss ... .. . .. . ........ .. 1706-J
Stillman Louis L 441 Perry ..•... .... ....... 1591-M
Stimpson Edwin C RFD 1 . .. .. .. ........ . . . 3797-J
Stiner W R RFD 5 .. . . .. . . . . .. . . • .. . . ... 4081- N-2
Stinson 0 F contr 1936 Tenn . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1663
Stipe D E 1017 R I . .. . . . ........ .•. .... . 2446-R
Stocker Geo R 1 339~ Haskell. .... . . . . . .. . .. . 3528-J
Stocker Harvey Mrs 1416 Pa . . . . . .. . .... . . . . 2448-M
Stockert W C 747 R I. .. . : .. . . . . ... .. . . . .. 3620-W
Stockton Frank T 720 lnd . . . . . . . • . • . . • . . . . . . 2159
Stoelzing Katrina 1145 Ky .. . . . . . ... . . . .. . . 1043-M
Stoffer M L 614 Ala . . . .. .... . . .. • .. .. . . . . 1100-R
Stoffer Milt tires 623 Locust ....•....• . .... .. . 1358
Stogsdill D K 321 Ind . . . . ..... .. . . . .. . .. . . . 1407-J
Stohs J E 709 Miss . .......• .. . .. . . . .. .... 2282-R
Stokely Foods Inc E 10 . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104
Stokes C A Mrs 1346 Cifnn . . . . ..... .. . . .. . . 2465-W
Stoland 0 0 1845 Learnard . . . • . . . . . • . • . . • • . . 2176
Stoltenberg H A 1710 lnd ..... . ....... , ... . 2680-J
Stone Bert L 425 Ala . . . . .
2913-M
Stone Charlotte 808 Lincoln .. .. . .. . .. . ... .. 2195-W
Stone Clayton L 1805 Ill . .. ...... ... . .... . . 1676-M
Stone H N potat o chips 732 Conn . . . ......•. . . .3600
Stone J M 1822 N H . . . . . . .... .... . . .... . . 2633-J
Stone L 0 1131 Ky . . ... . . . .. . .. .. . . ..... . 3028-J
Stone Louis M 18 21 Ala . . . ... .. . ...... .. .. 3014-W
STONE PRODUCE CO 304 W 6 .. . ... . . ....... .265
If no answer call . ... . .... .... . . .. . .•.. . . . . 985
Stoneback 0 H RFD 2 .... ..... .. ...... . . 4061-N-4
Stoneback H H RFD 4 . . . .. .. ... . . .. . ... 4096-N-21
Stoneback I J RFD 4 .. ... ... .... . . . . . ... 4096-N-2
Stoneback Ray G 2131 R I .. . . .... . . ..... .. 1973-W
Stoner Alice B Mrs CSP 1103 N H . .. . ........ . 2849
Stoner Art E plano t uner 1117 W Hills Pkwy .. . •. 1409
Stoner Martin 1103 N H. . . . . . . . . . . • . • . . . . . . 2849
Storer N Wyman 1724 Miss . . . . ......... . ... 2631-J
Storer Norman Wm 1407 Mass . .. . • .. ...... . 2858-M
Stork Haven The 8 41 Mass . . . . . . .. . .. • .. . . .. . . 3515
Stouffer E B 1019 Maine . .... . . . . . . . ... . .... 2767
STOUGH CHAS D atty Jayhawker Bldg . . ... . ... . 650
Residence 2120 Vt . ... ... . . . . .... . ....... 2593
Stough Jeannette Cass 1211 Oread . . . . . .... . .. . 3265
. . . . ........... .. 3424
Stout D L Mrs 716 Mo
STOUTS I G A grocers 80 0 N Y . .. . .......... . 1748
Stovall A L 812 Maine. . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . 3179
Stover Harold 1247 Ky .. .. . .. . . • ...... . . . . 1436-J
Stowe Harold E 600 North ..... . .. . .... . . . .3262-W

STE-SYL 43

Stowe Paul 312 Perry . . .. .. . . . : . .. . .. .. . . . . 3056-J
Stowell Floyd 1225 Haskell . ... . ..... . .. . .. . 2277-R
Stowits H W 1601 University Dr . . . . . . . .... . ... 3015
STOWITS REXALL DRUG STORE 8 47 Mass .... • . 516
St ow its Rexall Drug No 2 1851 Mass . . .. .. .. . . . 4213
Straffon C W 1602 Mass . .. . . . .. . ... . . . ..... . . 225
Strait Regi nald R 1346 La .. .. . ... . .. . . . ... . . . 1135
Stranathan J D 1510 Crescent Rd . . .. .. . .. . . ... 3573
Stratton Geo W 1616 La . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2253
Street Guy R 1231 Ky .. .. . ...... . ........ . 2341- M
Street J J 1340 Ky . . ......... . . • . . . .. . ... 2652-M
Streit H I 820 Ohio ..... . . ..... ... . .. . . .. . 3101-R
Strickland Jesse J 2132 Tenn. .
. . . . . . . .3659-R
Stringham R P 1609 R I ... . . . ... . ...... . .. 1845-M
Strode A E 868 Elm. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . 3192
Strong Carl 1228 Laura . . .. . . ........... . .. 3119-J
Strong Flora 1311 Del .. . .. . . .. .. . . ... .. .. .'2495-R
Strunk Clarence 619 W 4 .. . . . , . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . 1598
Strunk Don N 1517 N H .. .... . • ..... r . . . . . . . 2493
Stuart Donald 702 La . ..... • .. ... • .. . . . .. . . 1324-R
Stuart H C 2226 Tu m . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .... 2859-J
Stuart Norman 1201 IIJ J .. . .. .......... 1091-R
Stuart 0 C 1641 Haskell ..... ... • .. . ....... 2221-W
Stuart Thos H Mrs 805 Ohio . . . . .. ..... .. .. . . 3764
STUART'S TAVERN 17 E 9 .. . .. .. . ....... .. 3366
Stu beck J F 2245 N H .
. . . , . . . . ... . . . . 2329-M
Stubeck J Fred Jr 22 7 W 22 . . . •• . . . . •. . .. 2238-J
Stubeck Signe 12 Winona .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3308
Stucker Gene 941 lnd . .. . . . . . . . .. . ..... . .. 3268-M
Stucker H M Mrs 1135 W C.:mpus Rd . . .. . . . . . 1982
Stu cky Richard R 2004 Mass .. ... . ........ 1711-M
Stuewe Norman 633 Ala . . . . . .. . ....... . . 3578-M
Stuhl Raymond 1515 University Or . . ... . .. . . . . 1201
Stull Mary Ann 1405 Mass ........ .. . .... . 2789-J
Stultz Deao 1133 Pa . .. . .. . . ..... . . . .. .. 2646-W
Stu lt z Freeman W RFD 3 . . . . . . . • . . . . .. .4051- K-12
Stultz Helen 1821 Haskell . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . 1275-R
Stultz Ralph 2046 Ky . . .... . .. . .. . . . . ... .. 2735-M
Stumbo F K 313 E 17 . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. .. . . 2689-R
Stump Robt 1708 Miss ........... ..... .. .. 1007-W
Sturdevant L A 1515 N H. . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . 3139
Sturgeon Thos G 708 Miss......... . . • . . . . . 3578-R
Sturm E J 80 0 Ala . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1830-M
Suddock Hunter R 1701 N H . ... .. . . . . . .. . . . 3569-W
Sudler Mervin T physician 800 Mass ... - ~ · . . . . .. 1590
Residence W Campus Rd . . . . . . • . . . . . • . . . . . 622
Sullivan Carol B 1114 Ky .. .. . .. .. .. .. .. .. . 2138-J
Sullivan Frank T 809 lnd . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . 1861
Sullivan Patk 1547 Ky . . . . . . . . .. . • . . . . . . ... 3241-W
Sulzen Chas J 1742 Ala ....... . •... .. .. . . . 1645-M
Summers W C 1502 Mass ... • .. . .. .• .. ...... 2639-J
Sumner J B 1144 Pa .. . . . .•. . . .. . . ... . . . .. 2609 R
Sumner L H 1227 Almira .... .......... . .. . 2289-W
Sumter Cleo K Haskell Grds ....•.••. •. .. . ... 2190-J
Sundin Carl Maj 1817 Miss . . . . . ... .. ... . .. . 4236-J
Sunflower Apts ofc 11 &amp; Mo . .... . ...•• . . . . . •. . 908
Sunflower Ordnance Works DeSoto . .•. .• ..... . . 3800
Sunny's Grill 13 E 9 . . ..... ....... . . . .. . . .. . . 3324
Sunnyside Housing 16 &amp; Miss . .... . • • .. .... . ... 328
SURPLUS STORES INC 904 Mass . . • . . . .. • . . . . 1692
Suttles Rosa Mrs 726 Ala . . ...•••• . ••.•.. . 2996-W
Sutton Fred E &amp; Co 925 Mass . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4241
Sutton Fredrck E Jr 940 Ill . .... . .. . . . ... . .. 2479-R
Sutton Jack R 642 La .. . . . . ... . . ... . . .. . . . 2998-W
Svoboda Florence C Mrs 1115 Tenn . . ..•.. • .. . . 1035
Swadley J F 2145 R I . . . .. ..•. • .. . • • .•.•.. 1739- M
Swadley Paul 1115 Ohio .. . . .. .. .......... . 1671-W
Swank Roger H B44 Mass . . . ... . .• .... . . .. . 2530-J
Swain R C 712 Locust. ... .... .. ..... .. .... 1585- M
Swanson E A 821 lnd . . ....... . ... .. . . .. . . 1929-W
Swarthout D M 1605 Crescent Rd .• .. . ..• .... . . 1637
Swarts D F 433 Ohio . .. . .. .. • . .• . ... . . . .. . 1694-J
Swartwood Harold G 2014 Tenn . •.• • ••••.... 1540-M
Swartz H I 1911 N H . . . . . . . . ... . . .. . . . ... 3152-M
Swatta J J 8 23! Mass, ..... . . ... • .. . . . . ... 3706-W
Sweeney R D 331 lnd .. . .. . . . . . • . .. ... .. .. 3071-M
Sweeney T J Jr 153 2 Mass . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . 1872
Sweet Alex 1912 R I . . .. . .. • ... .. • .. ..•.. . 2540-J
Swif t Bill 706! Mass ........ .. . ...... . .. . . 3749-J
Swift Robt C Rev 1011 Vt . . . . . . • . . . . . . . • . . . . 1011
Swinchoski Al bert 1208 w 21. ... . . . . . ... . . . 3724-W
Swope Bernice Mrs 1617 N H ... . ... . • . . ... . 2273-R
Sylvester Allen Mrs 622 Maine . . ... . .. •. . . . . 3671-M

�44

SYL- TOP

LAWRENCE

Sylvester P W 1007 Tenn .............. .. .. 1386-M

T
T-N-T FOOD PRODUCT INC 826 Pa ...... . .... . 239
Taft Robt 1713 La .................... . ... 2620-R
Tait Ralph 827 Tenn ......... . .............. 3205
TALBERT APPLNCE CO 910 Mass ............ 3606
Talbert Jas 746 Ohio . .... . ... ..•..... • .... 1144-R
Talkington Robt 946 Ohio .. . .. ......... •.. .. 3269-J
Talley Harry Sunnyside K U ............. . ... 2941-J
Talley Helen 600 Calif . .... . ..... . • .. . .. . .. . . 3010
Talley Lloyd M 1800 W 9 ... ...•.. ........ . 2725-R
Tanner Dick 112 6 Ky ... . ... .............. ... 3969
Tanner M A 2228 Tenn . .................. ... 2736
Tanner Vivian A Mrs 809 N Y .............. . 1819-R
Tarpy A L Sr 235 Maple .. .. ... . . . ..... . . ·. . 1357-R
Tarpy Mary E Mrs 704 Ky ............. . ... 1994-W
Tarr Leonard 1823 Barker ................. . 2669-J
Tate Alvie 634 Walnut .. .. ........ • ....... 3221-W
Tat~ Frank L 1414 Prospect .............. .. 1073-J
Tate Raymond E 500 Mo . .... .. ........... . 2658-W
Tate T R 802 Oak . . .... ... ....•........... 2360-J
Tatham James R 711 R I. ...... . . . .. . . . ....... 270
Tau Kappa Epsilon 1541 Tenn . ... • .. .......... . 348
Taylor Anne 515 Wls ..................... . 1086-M
Taylor B D 836 Tenn ....... .......... .. . .. 1085-R
Taylor Bessie 1020 Ohio .. ....... .•. ... . ) .. 3118-W
Taylor Beuford R 112 Walnut . .... •... .... .. 1180-W
Taylor Chas B Jr RF D 1. .... ... ... ..... .. 4056-N-3
Taylor Chas B Sr Mrs 846 Ark ............. .. . . 831
Taylor E N 832 Tenn ..................... 3026-W
Taylor Elmer 847 Conn .... ...... .... . ... .. 1741-M
Taylor Ernest RFD 6 . . .. . .. .. . • .. . ...... 4093-N-11
Taylor Everett 636 Miss ....... •• . . ........ 3277-M
Taylor Franklin R 225 Elm ..... .......... .... . 1167
Taylor Gerald 1633 Vt ...• ............... . 2889-W
Taylor Grover 1530 Tenn .........•. • ........ . 3649
Taylor Harold L 2211 Ohio .......... . . .. . .. 3996-M
Taylor John C 717 Mich ...... . • • .... • ..... 2970-W
Taylor John E 328 Locust ... ......•... ....... 3270
Taylor John R 1316 Ohio ..... . • .. .. ....... 2738-W
Taylor John W 762 Locust .........•......... . 2572
Taylor Lulu Mrs 767 Maple .....•........... 2933-R
Taylor Pauline 328 Locust ...•.....•......... . 3270
Taylor Robt W 1227 Laura ... . .•. ........ .. 3119-W
Taylor Roy E 646 Ohio . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . 1048
Taylor Silas 1326 N J .. . .. . .. ... .. .•...... 4214-W
Taylor Wallace H 1806 Vt .. . ............... 3460-R
Taylor Wm Lloyd 1000 Miss . . ..... . . . ...... 1137-W
Tefft C E 1333 Conn ...... ........ ........ 2514-J
Telephone Co See Southwestern Bell Tel Co . ... . .. 221
Telfel Emil L 2117 Ohio ..... ............... 2936-R
Temmen J R 1810 La .. ................... . 3225-R
Temple Floyd 1627 Ky .. ... •.. ........... . 3271-M
Templin Hall 1407 La .......•......• . • .. ..... 358
Tennyson Geo 1810 La ................... . 3234-W
Te-Pee Barbq RFD 5 .. .. ....... .. .... • . . . . .. 2070
Tepee Serv RFD 5 . . . .... . . ....... .. . • ... .. 4187
Teplitz Morris 1715 Ill ... ............... . . 2680-M
Terrell Arnold R 436 Elm . .. . ..... . .. . .. . .. . 3436-J
Terrell Tulip 1308 N J . .. .. .. • ............. 3016-J
Terrell W R Capt 746 Ind .... . .•............. 3475
Terrill R C RFD 1. .......... .............. 1774-R
TERRILL'S DRY GOODS 803 Mass ........... .. 325
Terry Homer 1311 Tenn ........ ...... ..... 2565-W
Terry Marvin WREN Bldg .. . . .. ...... • .... . . . 1707
Terry Phyllis 134 2 Conn .. .... • ..... • ....... 3275-J
Teter Chas A 2120 Haskell ................ . 1133-J
Teter Chas Jr 714 R I. ................. .. . 3175-R
Teter Clyde Mrs 645 Tenn ....... . . .. .. . . .. ... 4198
iexas Co The bulk distribr 802 Mass . .......... .. 839
hayer Neil H 738 Elm . .................. . 1246-M
The Jay Shoppe 835 Mass. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 771
Theta Phi Alpha 1528 Tenn ... ....... .•... . .. 3697
Theta Tau 1b02 La ... ..... . ........ . ..... .. 651
Thies R J Capt 1900~ La ..... . ... .. .. . . .. . 1568-W
Thiry Clifford RFD 6 . ........ . .•...... . . 4005-N-2
fhiry Winford RFD 3 Oskaloosa .. .... .. . ... 4051-K-2
homas Albert 1009 N J ......... ..• . . ..... 1364-R
Thomas Arthur 834 Ind . . . ............... ... 3057. J
Thomas Betty R 941 Ind . .... • , . ... . • •. ... . 1788-R
fhomas C A Mrs 1540 La .. ..... . ..... ... .. 2914-W
homas Dale Mrs 1224 R I ..... .. ...... ..... . 3842

Thomas Dorothy 817 Ala ........ ... ........ 3597-J
Thomas Frances 1725 Ohio ......•.. .. . ..... .. 1626
Thomas French E 1112 N J ...... . .......... 2555-J
Thomas G T 2215 Tenn ......... ..... • ... .. 1604-R
Thomas John M 1406 Oakhill ......... • ..... 1073-W
Thomas 0 D auctioneer 1300 Haskell . ... .... . . . . 2928
Thomas R Dean 1343 Tenn .... ...... . ..... . 1112-M
Thomas R L RFD 2 .. ... ..... . .. . .. ..... . 4060-K-4
Thome Mary Mrs RFD 6 ... . .... . ...... . . 4035-K-12
Thome Walter E RFD 6 . ........ .•. . .. . . . 4035-N-2
Thompson Agnes 1100 La ................... . .471
Thompson Allen 414 W 12 . .. ...... . ....... . 973-W
Thompson Allen L 839 Ky ... . ........ ...... 1085-W
Thompson Anna Mrs 235 Ill. ...•. ........... 1184-J
Thompson Apartments No 1 1140 La .......... . 3331
Thompson Apartments No 2 19 W 14 ........... 2082
Thompson Apartments No 3 413 W 14 ........ .. 2099
Thompson Bertha Mrs 540 Colo ... .... . .. ... . 3448-J
Thompson Chester G RFD 3 ... . .. ........... 2379-W
Thompson Corinne 1220 Pa . ...... . .. ....... 1230-M
Thompson Donald L Sunnyside K U ........... 2947-M
Thompson E A 322 Ind . . . ................. 3348-R
Thompson Earl 523 La ..... . ........ ... •.. 1388-M
Thompson Emanuel 1113 N Y .. .. .... ... ... . 3136-M
Thompson Ethel Mrs 818 Ky . ..... ... .• ..... 2566-R
Thompson Fred 1635 Ala .. . ..... . .• . ....... 2229-R
Thompson Harry 2141 R I ... . .....• . ....... 1902-R
Thompson Joe 1800 Mo ... ..... ... • ........ 1210-J
Thompson John H Sr 733 Walnut . . .•........ 1674-R
Thompson M 0 1218 Miss .. ........ . ... ...... 514
Thompson Mary 0 Mrs 924 Vt. ................ 3933
Thompson Mayola Mrs 1833 Ky. . . . . . . • . . . . . . .3280
Thompson Neil 935 N H ..... .............. 1157-W
Thompson Obed E 2009 N H ... ................ . 57
THOMPSON PHOTO STUDIO 829 Mass ..•... . ... 614
Thompson R H Sunnyside K U . .............. 2861-R
Thompson Robt H 1526 Vt .... . ... ... . . .... 2487-W
Thompson T J 1837 Ky ............. . ...... .. 2991
Thompson W D 1725 Ill .................... 3142-R
Thompson W Kenneth 738 R I ..... .. ....... .. 2541
Thompson Ward 10"5 N J .................. 3075-M
Thorn F T 412 Fla . . ... .. .......•........ . 3498-J
Thornton D P 1244 Prospect ................ 1465-R
Thornton Homer D 310 Elm . .. . •. ... ....... 1298-M
Thornton Howard C 2000 N H .... . .....•... . 2410-J
Thornton Joe 1845 Tenn .. ........ . ........ . 2866-J
Thornton Lenora 1011 Ind ... . ........ • ..... 1351-W
Thornton Louise 711~ Mass
. .. ..... . 3105-J
Thornton R H RFD 2 .... . . . ..... • ..... . . .4086-K-3
Throp E D RFD 6 . . ... . ..... . .......... 4004-K-12
Thuman C H 1416 Tenn ....... . .. • .......... . 1555
Thurber Carrie B Mrs 1128 Del . ...... . . . .... 2938-J
Thurston Cheml Co 6 &amp; Locust ......... . ...... 2787
Tidd Leo H 943 N Y ..... . . . . . ...... . ... ... 1058-J
Tidd Walter RFD 1. . ...... . .. .. .... ... .. 4068- N-4
Tietjens Pleasant Grove Store RFD 2 ..... ... 4007-N-2
Tilton C Jason 641 Ohio. . . . . . . .
. ..... 1960-R
Timmons Don Mrs 930 Oak ..... ...... .... .. 1428-M
Tingle Edw 1015 Pa .. ...... . ..... • ....... 2756-W
Tingle Nelson 1200 Prospect .... . .. . ....... . 2806-W
Tingle 0 J 942 N J ....... .. ..... ... • ..... 2115-R
Tink John H 930 Ark ........ . • .. . .. .• ..... 1763-J
Tipton J H 742 Maple .. ... •. . .. . •. .. ..... . 2933-M
Tipton Jessie 22b Perry ... ... • .... .. . . .. ... 3049-R
Tipton Sam 625 Ash .. .. ........ . .. ....... 2757-M
Tisue Gilbert T RFD 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2379-J
Titsworth Helen A 1231 Oread .... • ...... ·. .. 3427-M
Titterington C F RFD 1 ......... • ....... 4099-N-11
Tobler Donald 1810 La ...... . ..... •• . .. . .. 3233-R
Tobler J S 1312 R I ... ...... . .... • .... ... 1024-W
Toby's Groc 900! Maine . . . . • . . . • . . . . . • . . . . . . .43
Todd Chester A 1137 N Y ..... . .. • . . ... . .. . 1849-M
Todd E R 1208 N Y . . .................. .. 1091-W
Todd Karl M 830 Ky .. ... • ..... • ............ 1584
Todd Roy 832 Maple . . ....... .. ... . • . . . .. . . 2254-J
Todd Susan 2112 Ky . .... . .. . . .. ... • ... .. .. 1343-R
Tolbert Clyde 700 Ark . .. .... . . .... • ....... 1056-W
Tom linson B L Sunnyside K U .......•....... 3425-W
Toms John H 908 La Salle ......... . ....... 3418-W
Tooks Kelly 438 ~ Elm .. . ... ..... •.. . ... . .. 3436-M
Toothaker Archie Rev 1520 Vt ... ...... . . .. .. 1412-R
Tooze Alice Mrs 9"0 Miss .. .. .......... .. .. . 23n..J
Topeka Rendering Wks 110 Kansas Topeka Kans
&lt;Toll Call) .8-8523

�LAWRENCE

TOP- VAN 45

Topping C J 813 Ill ........................ . 2856
Tutt Andrew 1918 Tenn .......•... . .... . ..... 2489
Topping Chas R RFD 4 .... .....•...... .. . 4009-N-4
Tuttle Chas 910 N J ....................... 1666-J
Topping Dick RFD 2 .. . . ... ....•.... . ... . 4086-N-4
Tuttle Geo A 1120 Tenn ............ ..•. ... 3997-R
Tordoff H B Sunnyside K U ............... . . 3187-R
Tuttle Marcella Mrs 342 lnd . ...• ........... 3071-R
Torkelson Selmer 203:3 R I. . . . . ..... . ...... 1038-W
Tuttle Marion E 1941 Ohio .............•... 3195-R
Torneden Elmer 1219 Summit .............. . 3426-R
Tuttle Mayme Mrs 1140 R I .. . .......... .. ... 1317
Torneden Julius H 1801 Ark .... . ••........ . 2682-R
Tweed A E 1215 N J .............•• . ........ 1981
Torneden Walter 627 Ohio ......•......... . 3470-M
Twente Esther E 2145 Barker ... .. ..•..... .. 2553-M
Torneden Wm 716 La .... . •.. . ••. ..... •.... 2797-R
Twente J W 934 Ind ..... ..........•...... 3120-M
Torres Fernando 534 Ohio . . .....•..•...... •3348-W
Twin Pines Co-()p 1537~ Tenn .. ................ 893
Torrez Juanita 829 Pa .. ............•..... 1843-W
Tyler Marshall Mrs 412 Locust .. ......•. . ... 1549-W
Towell leah Jane 924 Conn . ... ... •....•.... 2115-J
Tyree Alan 1729 Mass .......... , • ......... 3642-J
Towle Geo Father 1229 Vt ........•...... . ..... 338
TOWN SHOP THE 841~ Mass .... .. ......... . . 983
Townsend Ava Mrs 1108 Miss .....••...... .. 2505-R
US Engrng Co 19 &amp; La ..........•........... 3850
Townsend Ross 1819 Ky ................... . 1421-J
Ulm John Mrs 1327 Mass ..... ......•.•.... 1562-R
Toyne Jas 1100 N Y •... ..•..•.••...••.... 1622-W
Ulmer Gilbert 1836 Vt ... ...... . ..... . .. .. 365.3-W
Tracy l M Mrs 632 N 7 .......... . ... • ..... 3146-R
Ulrich Eldon ~FD 6 .. . . ....... . ... ......... 1682-J
Trailways Bus Depot 638 Mass ....••..... .. .... 707
Ulrich Hubert J 1901 Vt .. ...... .... ....... 2262 - M
Transmeier Albert 1239 Prairie . ......... .. .. 3062-M
Ulrich Paul R RFD 2 Baldwin . . .....• ..... 4037-N-13
Transue A A 640 R I ...................... 2249-M
Ulrich
Robt RFD 2 . .............. .. ... .. 4006-K-2
Transue Oliver H 1000 N J .......••. . ..•...... 577
Ulrich Russell ofc 1308 Prospect .... •.. ........ . 238
Transue Paul 714 N 6.
. . .... • .... . .. 3146-M
Residence 1308 Prospect . .. .. . . ..... .. .... 3719-J
Trapp Glenn E 1820 Vt ....... .... ......... 3460-J
Underwood Allyn J 200 W 15 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1030
Traul H K 16 W 14 .............. ..... ..... 698-R
Underwood
Art 623 Mo .............. .. .. . ... 1355
Travis Kenneth A 1622 Vt .... . .. ...... ..... 2373-M
Underv1ood C S Mrs 1246 Dread ...... . . .. .. .. 1931
TRAYLOR &amp; CALVIN INS AGCY 1026 Mass ...... 305 Underwood-Elliott Fisher Co Repr 643 Mass ....... 501
Traylor Joe 1601 High Dr .......••... . •.•... 3517-J
Underwood Emery 326 Ill .................. 2437 -M
Traynor Barney L 745 Elm ........•........... 1836 . Underwood J 2321 Vt ....... ....... . ........ 1094
Treece E L 1635 Miss .........•.•......... 2415-W
UNDERWOOD
J SONS grain 608 Mass .. .... . . . . . . . 7
Treece R F l 916 N H ............... • .... . 3792-R
UNDERWOOD METAL CO 730 Vt .. . ..... . ...... 403
Trent G W 343 Mich ........ . ... . ...•.. . . . 2227-W
Underwood Prescott 1628 W 9 . . .....•...... 1775-M
Treworgy Harry Mrs 921 Mo .....•...••..•.. 1763-W
Underwood Wm M 1209 W 6 . .............. 3106-W
Triangle fraternity 111£&gt; Ind ................ .. 3021
Underwriters Adjusting Co 1710 Ala . . . . . . . . . . . 1496
Trine Wilma Mrs 1146 NY . ... ............ . 1764-J
Unfred Frank RFD 1 ............ . . .... . .. 4039-rJ-2
Tripp Marvin M 511 La .. ...........•........ 3872
Unfred Lawrence 401 Pleasant . .............. 1379-R
Tripp Ralph 2116 Vt ........... . •....... .... 1732
Unger Harry E 741 Mo . . ... . .... .. . ..... ... 2522-R
Tripp Ralph Jr RFD 3 . .... ... •. ......... .4057-K-3
UNION BUS DEPOT 638 Mass .... .. ....... . . . . 707
Trivett R K 645 Ohio .....••....• ........ . 2209-W
UNION CAB CO Jayhawker Theatre Bg .. .... . . . . 2800
Trovillion J A 818 N H .. .... ... . •...•..... 2456-R
Union Pacific Ry Co
Truffelli Geo RFD 1 ....... . • ..... . ....... 1774-W
Passenger Depot N 2nd &amp; Maple .......... . ... 282
Tryon E A 1334 Pa . ....... .• ...•.....•.... 762-J
Freight Depot N 2nd &amp; locust . ......... • .. ... 28
Tryon Harry 1334 Pa ...... .. ..•............ 762-J
Roadmaster's Office N 2 &amp; Maple ........• . ... 356
Tryon Jas 713 Walnut ...... • . . ..•....•.... 1186-R
Unit ed Firemen's Ins Co Insurance Bg . . . . ......... 40
Tryon Paul RFD 6.
. .•.. ....... . 4036-K-11
United States Government Offices
Tuckel Ernest A RFD 6 . . .. ...••.•. ... . . 4035-K-22
Collector of Internal Revenue Post Offlc Bg ..... 531
Tuckel Robt RFD 2 . . .. . .. ..... • ..•...... 4006-N-2
Farmers Home Administration Court House ... .. 2450
Tuckel Russell RFD 1 . . . ....... . . . ...... 4039-K-12
Geological Survey Kansas University ... . ....... 852
Tuckel Wm H 1114 N H ....... . ........... 2412-R
National Guard 115 W 11 ....... . ............ 99
Tucker Bud Mrs 122 N 3 ............•.•.... 1196-R
Office of Rent Stabilization 8 W 8 ........ . ... 856
Tucker Cecil D 408 W 6 ......•.. .. ....•.... 3348-J
Organized Reserve Corps 609 Mass ......... .. . 309
Tucker Howard 1300 Conn ..•.....•......... 1382-J
Post Office 645 N H .................•. . ... 276
Tuggle Constr Co 845 Ind . . .. ....• •• ....... .. 3595
Production &amp; Marketing Administration
Tuggle J A 245 Mich ...........•...•.••... 2225-J
County Committee 641 Mass. 652
Tuggle Keith H 1247 Mass .............. ... 3296-M
Selective Service Local Board No 18 Courthouse . 1369
Tuller H Herbert 2301 Barker ............... 2730-M
Soil Conservation Serv 64H Mass ..... ........ 642
Tupy leslie T 729 Ohio . .................. ... 3772
USA &amp; USAF Recruiting Office 609 Mass .. . . ... 575
Turk H C 1605 Tenn ......... ..... ....... . 2785-W
University Club 10071 Mass .................... 512
Tu rkla Bernard Capt Sunflower Apts ......... .3830-R
UNIVERSITY MOTORS 707 N H ....... ..... . .. 540
Turner Azel 1216 Ohio ....... .... • ........ .. 746-R
University Place grocer 1801 Ill ....... ..... . . .. 2420
Turner Betty 933 Ala ...... ............... 1116-J
University Radio Recording Serv 925 Mass ....... 4241
Turner Dale E Rev 925 Vt ......•.•............ 475
UNIVERSITY SHOP THE 1420 Crescent Rd ... . ... 715
Residence 1332 Strong Av .... .. •• • ........ . 3169
Utility Conslr Co 201 Perry . ... ... ......... .. . . . 89
Turner David T 818 Ky ................. . .. 3673-R
Turner Ed Mrs 1121 Ohio .... ... .....•..... 3554-W
Turner Fredrck Leon 1214 N J ....•..•...... 1833-M
Valleroy Vincent V Sunnyside K U ............. 814-J
Turner Glen 1237 N J ...... . ...... . ....... 2414-M
VALLEY EXPRESS 3 &amp; Locust ... . ............. 970
Turner Harold RFD 5 ..... ... ...•...... .4028-N-21
VALLEY SECURITY CO 102U Mass . ........... 126
Turner Jas A 1712 Ala ... .......•....•... . 1526-R
Valliere Don D 406 Mo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 3289-R
Turner John H RFD 5 ..........••..• .... 4028-N-22
Van Bebber Ralph Mrs 1604 Tenn .... ... .. . .... 1161
Turner Lawrence 901 Pa ................... 1758-R
VanBuskirk Alice 1042 R I. . .... .... ........ 1841 -R
Turner leonard 2244 Barker .. . •• .•...... ... 2150- R
Vander Lippe John 1430 La .. . ....... .. .. . . . 587-W
Turner Mary Mrs 414 Mich .... • ...... ••.. . .4250 -J
Vanderslice Earl M 1001 Del ............... 2750-W
Turner Nettie Mrs 1915 Vt ..........•...... 2312-M
VanderWerf
Calvin A 2145 Owens Lane ... .. ... 2194-W
Turner Paul 2124 l earnard ...•...•......... 2597-J
Vandeventer Raymond 2201 Barker .... . ...... 3264-R
Turner Produce Co 836 Vt ...... ..••.....•• .... 287
Van Dyke Edw 1100 Ohio .. ............ . ... 2475-W
Turner Wm B 1133 N Y. . . . . . . . • . . • . . . . . . . . . 1348
Van Dyke Wm E 946~ R I . ....... .......... 3629-J
Turner Wm R 821 Tenn ........••.......... 1371-J
Van Eck Edw A 1940 Ohio . .. ....... • ....... 2537.:R
Turner's Grocery 700 Maine . . .• •..•.•.... •..... 563
Turney A H 1501 Pa . .. ........• .. ........ 2932-W
VanGaasbeek Arlen 615! lnd ..... • . ... ... . . .3684-J
Tusher H 1345 R I ........ .......... ..... 2868-W
VanGaasbeel&lt; L L 1750 Vt ... . .. ••. ......... 1796-W
Tusten Ralph W 1810 La .................. 1202-M
Van Gundy C H 2131 Tenn .... . ........ ..... 1747-R
Tusten Retail Liquor Store 10 W 9 ... •. .... ... . . 740
VanHoesen C E RFD 6 ..................... 3253-J

u

v

�46

VAN-WAT

LAWRENCE

Van Hoesen Carl 2028 Tenn .. ....•......... . 2747-R
Vanity Beauty Shop 1019 Mass .....•. . ....... . 1372
VanKeuren G P Mrs 922 Ky .... . .....•..... 2513-W
Vanliew Marshall 917 Ill .... .. .. .......... . 2996-J
Van Liew Walter 820 Tenn ............... . . 2191-R
VanMeensel Sidney RFD 5 ............... 4033-N-12
Van Meter W E 1112 Del .................. 2473- M
Van Natta Maxine Haskell Grds ........ . ..... 1340-R
Vann David H 246 Ala ... . .........•....... 1743-M
Vann Elmer 304 Ark .......
1545-M
VanNeste H G RFD 5 ... .... .. ......... .. 4033-K-2
VanNeste Harry 422 Iowa .....•.....•...... 1256-W
VanN ice T J RFD 5 . ....... . .... • . . .... 4033-N-11
Van Nortwick C L 1524 Vt ... .. •• ... .. ... . . 3486-R
VanNortwick H S 1232 Ohio ........ . •...... 2675-W
Van Nortwick Ivan 1237 Tenn ........ •• ..... 2984-J
VanNoy Bob 1205! Ky ............•....... 1985-W
Van Noy H E physician 747 Mass .. . ............ 594
Residence 2445 Mass .. .......... ... ...... . . 519
Van's Furniture Repair 311 E 9 ... . ............ 3599
VAN'S PRESCRIPTION SHOP 105 E 8 ..... . .... 601
Van Wert Chas R 2229 R I ... . .... ...•..... 2120-R
Varnum Drug Co sol! Mass ....... ............ 530
VMntnn Walter H 1115 W Campus Rd .... .... .. 1468
Varsity ~ouse 1043 Ind .. . . . ...... . .......... 2010
Varsity Theatre 1015 Mass ... ....... .......... 132
Vasquez Teresa 825 Pa .... .. .. ............ 1726-M
Vaughan Bill L 944 E 19 . ... . • ........ . .... 3418-J
Vaughn Chas E 2230 La ...•...... . ....... . . 3922-R
Vaughn Gilbert 835 Ala ............... . ..•. 2307-R
Vausbinder Elsie M 1033 Conn .............. 1891-R
Veatch Howard A 936 La •.•..... ... ........ 2349-J
Vehige A J RFD 1 . . ... . ......... . ..... 4044-N-11
Velvet Freeze Ice Cream Co 742 Mass ........... 720
Vequ ist David Geo 1935 Barker . ..... ....... 2721-W
Verburg John J 1023 Ill . ..............•. .. 1769-W
Verburg Wallace A Sunnyside KU ... .. ....... . 2816-J
Vernon E G 1908 Ohio .. . ..... . ..... .. ..•....2137
VERNON'S HARDWARE 1029 Mass ...... ... .. . . 107
Verrey Raymond W Sunnyside K U ........ . ... 1431-R
Vesco Bruno Mrs 921 N Y .......•.. . ..• . ... 1306-.J
Veterans Admnstrtn 745 Vt .................... 872
Veterans of Foreign Wars
Club Room 8 &amp; N H ...•............ . ....... . 51
Restaurant 8 &amp; N H.
3030
Vette Ida Mrs 1247! Ky ................... 2531-R
Vickers Gift Shop 1023 Mass ............•.... . 933
Vignery Toby 936 Maine ................... 3n9-W
Villee Wm B trfr 731 N H ..........•....•..... . 15
Villee Wm B 2020 Mass ............ • . ..... lm-M
Vincent V Jack 1131 W Hills Pkwy ............. 1753
VINCENT'S INC 724 Mass ................ . ... 178
Virgason W P 1501 E 15 ...... .... . ....... 1075-W
Vitt Walter 1123 Conn ...... ..•. ....•.... . 3292-R
Vogel John RFD 5 . .............. . ...... .4073-N-2
Vogler E E 1117 Del. ............ . ..• .. ... 1410-W
Vogler Dahlene Hazel Mrs 815 Tenn .... . ........ 800
Vogler Phil 815 Tenn .......... . ......... . ... . 800
Vogler Wm 940 N J ... . ............ • ..... 1737-W
Volk H G 325 W 9 .............. • ........ . 3294-J
Vonderschmidt Grant H 916 Vt ... .......... . 2568-R
Von Gunten Harold 1809 Barker ............. 1616-M
Von Riesen Lyle Sunnyside K U . .. ........... 2348-W
Vosper Robt Sunnyside K U ... ..... .... • .... 2941-R
Votaw Leslie W 432 La .. ........ .. ... . ..... 1593-J
Votaw Milo H RFD 3 ........ . .. • .. .. ...... 2973-R
Votaw Vernon 626 Elm ..... . ..... . . ...... .4218-R
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Wacker Albert 329 Mich ..... •. ... • . ....... 1539-M
Wacker Ted 1601 Barker ....... . .......... 4243-M
Wackerle Jayne 1941 Mass ........•.• ..... . 1412-M
Wackerle Jerry 1046 Ky .............. • ..... 2926-J
Wade Clinton 305 E 19 .................... 2977-W
Wade Frank W 1301 Conn .. .. ....•..... ..... . 2291
Wade J E 212 E 18 .. ......... . .......... . 2483-R
Wade Leroy G 1802 Vt ... ........... • ...... 1796-J
Wadkins Chas 1240 R I .......... . . ........ 3945-M
Wagenblast H R Or Sunflower Apts . ......... 3832-W
Wager R J 646 lnd . .. ...................... 1209
Wager Robt E 740 Ill ............. . .•...... 1492-R

Waggner Wilson 1037 Tenn ............. .. .. 3662-J
Waggoner Jas 908 E 14 ............. • ...... 3936- R
Wagner H C RFD 5 ............ .. .. ... .. .4080-K-3
Wagner Holly C 709 Ill ...... ... ......... , . . 2636-J
Wagner Ted Sunnyside KU .. ............. . . 3226-W
Wagner Walt Service Sta 550 W 23 ..... • ..... . 3385
Wagner WalterS 2045 Ohio ...... ......... .. 2927-J
Wagoner Chas W Mrs 1408 Tenn ............ 2683-W
Wagstaff R H 1 Westwood Rd ........ . ..... . .. 3065
Wah l Albert L 841! N H .... . ...... • ....... 1726-W
Wakefield W E 603 Elm ................... 2517-M
Walas S M 1735 Ala . .......•..... • ....... 2411-W
Walbridge J R 500 W 21 . ....... . .......... 2368-J
Waldo C H 547 Ala . ...... • ... . . • ... ...... 3404-M
Wales Groc 434 locust . . .. . .. .. . • .. .... ...... 661
Walker A T 1645 La ........... . .. . .. . ...... 1553
Walker Bob 918
1871-M
Walker Coral 0 Mrs 511 Ohio ............... 3165-R
Walker Cornelius 1220 Pa .........••....... 1230-M
Walker Eugene 1512 W 5 .....•.. ... ....... 1572-W
Walker Glen 512 111.. .• ••• •••••••••••.••• •3191-R
Walker Jas H 1837 Tenn ... .............. . . 3241- R
Walker Kenneth C 1027 Vt ......••.....•.... . 3711
Walker Leonard A 709 Maine .••....• • ....•.. 2739-J
Walker Minnie B Mrs 824 Tenn .... • .... . .. . 1085-M
Walker P F Mrs 1314 La .................. . 3336·J
Walker R S 645 Vt .. . .................•.. 3117-W
Walker Robt 1300 Pa ......... . ... . ..... .. 1975-M
Walker Will RFD 2 ..... . ... • ..... • .. . . .. 4083-K-2
Walker Wm A 531 Wis ... . . ................ 2510-R
Walker Wm 0 1033 R I ....... . .............. 1325
Walker Woodrow Haskell Grds .... . ........ . . 1546-M
Wallace Eugene M 446 Ark ......... • ......... 1541
Wallace John B 1411 Haskell .... •. .... . .. .. 1026~M
Waller R M 1311 W 6 .... ..... ..... . ...... 3725-W
Walling Lalia 1242 La .. .. ... . ... . ..... ... ... 2527
Walsh Phil 626 Maine ..... ... • ............ 1989-M
Walter Edwin 925 Ala ... .. .. .... • ......... 1116- R
Walter Geo 0 Mrs 916 Ky ... .••..... ...... ... 3305
Walter Lee Roy Sunnyside K U ....... . . • .... . 835-W
Walter Paull 231 La . . ......... ... • ... ... . .. 2569
Walters Byron W phy 10351 Mass . ... • ....... . . 1609
Walters Don Sunnyside K U .... •. , .•....... . 3232-W
Walters F 0 RFD 5 ....... .............. . 4028-N-2
Walters Kenneth 1820 Mich .... • . .. ... ... .. 3036-W
Walters R A RFD 2 .............. • ...... .4075-K-4
Walz 0 C 1741 Vt. ........ ................ 2782-J
Wampler S E 1305 Vt ..................... 2518- R
Ward Cecil H 709 Ala .•..... . • .•..... . .... 2759-W
Ward H G 933 Tenn .. ............ •. ....... . .. 956
Ward L F 933 Del .. . . ....... • ... .. .. . .. . . 2484-W
Ward Lawrence RFO 3 .... .. .... •• ....... 4057 -K-2
Ward Merle RFD 4 ............. .. ... .. .. 4014- K-2
WARD MON TGOMERY &amp; CO
-Retai l Store 825 Mass ....... . ... .. . .. . ..... 195
Catalog Order Dept 825 Mass ............. . ... 58
WARD MUSIC 908 Mass ... . ............... . . .. 91
Ward Owen F 725 Elm .....................1246-J
Ward Ralph 1638 R I . . . ..• ............•... 1376-J
Wardin Franees M Mrs 1711 Ky .............. 2817-J
WARDS FLOWER S 15 &amp; N Y.........
820
If no answer call ......................... . 3550
Ware Geo S 401 Maine ......... . ..... . ...... 2285
Ware Nellie 807 N Y .. . .... .. . ...... ..... . 1819-M
Warmuskerken Rachel 1343 Laura .......... . 3137-W
Warner F Vinton ins Lawrence Natl Bk Bldg ....... 133
Residence 2215 N H .... ... .... . . ......... . 1416
Warren C S 845 Ark .•........•............ 2592-R
Warren Don 8141 Mass .. . ..... .. .... • ..... 2865-R
Warren E E 933 R I ................. ..... . 2742-R
Warreh Mabel 222 N 8 ....... .... . ... ..... 1130-J
Warriner Chas K Sunnyside K U. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 873-J
Warrington C H RFD 2 ... .. . ............ 4061-K-21
Washington Eugene H 835 Garfield .... • ...... 1255-W
Washington Geo Haskell Grds ............... 2642-M
Washington Jas Levi 227 Ill ................ 1184-W
Washington Laveta 816 Maine ..... ......... 1573-W
Water Dept City ..... .............. See City Offices
Watkins Art Mrs RFD 4 ........ . .. .. .... .4099-N -3
Watkins Hall 1506 Lilac Lane .... • . . ........... 900
Watkins L E 805 Conn ............. . • .. .... 2533-J
WATKINS MEMORIAL HOSP
Nurses Home K U.... . .. . ........ . ......... 960
Office K U . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . 890

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Watkinson Carol 114 W 13 .................. 1448-J
Watson Annie M Mrs 10.32 N H .... .......... 1033-R
Watson Chas E 500 Mich . . . ... .. .......... 1277-M
Watson E A 824 N J . ........ .. . ......... ... 2545
Watson Mrldred D 1804 lnd .. ... .•.......... 1721-R
Wall Jennie 342 Mo . ...... . .. . ...... . . . .. .. 2979
Watts Frank 907! Mass . • . . ......• .... ..... 2292-R
Watts Wm 94b Conn . ..... ... . . ........... .. 1785
Wayman R P 1b24 Tenn .. .. ............... 3271-W
Waymire Olin E 1112 R I. . ................ . 1623-J
Weakley Ray R 721 Ind . . . . ...... . ....... . .. . 2485
WEAKLEY'S FURNITURE CO 729 Mass .. . ... .. . 932
Wears Roy 115 E 11 ................ •.. ... 2117-M
Weatherby E S 1011 lnd . ... ... .. ........... .3145
Weatherwa~ John T 401 Mo ................ . . . 440
WEAVER .II D department store 901 Mass ... . .... 636
Weaver A D 7'&gt;7 lnd ......•.•. . .. ..... ... .... 241
Weaver E l 320 Maiden Lane .... . .......... 1196-M
Weaver H A 2114 Barker . . . . ............... .. 1494
Webb Guy 406 E 9 ....• ........... • ... . ... 2474-J
Webb 0 L Sunnyside K U . . .. ...•.......... . 618-M
Webber Harold C 133 Perry ... .. •... . ..•.... 2965-R
Weber B A Mrs 1425 Tenn .... . ... ••. .... . .. . 2694
Weber Geo H Sunnyside K U ..... . ... . •• ... . 2922-R
Webster B B 408 Locust .. .................. 2647-J
Webster Bill 1234 Tenn ....... . . . . ... . .... . 2183-W
Webster Byron B Sunflower Apts ..•.......... 3834-J
Webster Frances Mrs 1206 R 1. . . ......... ... . 2457
Webster Lillran M 632 Miss .....•.. • ... . . .... 2295
Webster Lloyd RFD 2 . . ... . . ..... . ...... 4060-K-11
Webster R L 1311 W 6 .. . . . ............... 3459-W
Weckwerth Roy 944 Ala .• . .. .............. . 1395-R
Wedekind Robt 902 Mo ................•... 22B3-W
Weed Anna Mrs 1320 Ohio .. ..•. ... .•.. .•.. 2565-M
Weekly Herbert S Ill 1no Tenn ........... .. . . 1155
Weeks Arthur F RFD 2 .... .... . . . .... . . . 4084-K-21
Weeks G A RFD 4 ....... .......... .. . . .4'036-K-21
Weeks Glenn RFD 1 . .... ............... 4070-K-13
WEEKS GLENN TRUCK ING 1307 W 7 .. . ...... ... 72
Weeks Vernon 1004 Ala .. . .....•........... 2809-J
Weeks W H 710 N 2 . ..•...... ... ..... .... 3159-R
Weibel Lloyd RFD 3 . ................. .. . 4054-N-3
Weidlein Emma B Mrs 121 Conn ........ . ... 3175-W
Weinaug C F 1643 Stratford ...•........... 3340-M
Weir J A 2040 La .. ... ... . .... .. . .. . . . ... 3195-J
Welch G H 1208 Del ... ................ ... 2626-R
Wellhausen Edw l 211 E 10 . . .......•.... . . 2761-M
Wellman W A 1529 N H .... ... . ..... . ..... 1906-R
Wells C S 1545 Mass .. . . . .. ......•... ..... 3403-M
Wells Chas W Mrs 925 Maine . .... .• . . ...•.. 1811-M
Wells Ed J 845 Miss ... . ..... ...• ... . • ... ... 3768
Wells Elizabeth Mrs 1721 Ky ......... • ... . .. 3241-J
Wells Eugene T 1826 Ala . ....... . ....... ... 2424-J
Wells J H RFD 1 ..... ......... .. ..... .. 4030-K-4
Wells Jas F 1028 Conn .. ........... • ...... 3125-W
Wells Margaret Haskell Grds ........ . .... .... 2440-J
Wells Pearl Mrs 1201 R I .•.....•......... . 2679-J
Wells Robt F 903 E 13 ..... ........... .. .. 3365- M
Wells Victor 726 Locust ....... ....••....... 3953-R
Welsh Henry N 2246 Ohio .... . .• .... •...... 1646-R
Welsh Homer 435 Elm .... . ...•.•......... . 2314-R
Welsh John S 3 Westwood Rd ..... . .. . .... . . 1734-R
Welter Chas J 1424 Ohio . ................... . 3291
Weltmer L M 1301 La . . . ... ..•. ... .. . ... . . 1784-J
Weltmer W Keith 2100 La ........ • ...... . .4240-W
Welton Lewis D 749 Walnut .......•..... .. . 11B6-M
Wempe Francis R RFD 1 ....... . ........ 4088-K-11
WEMPE W W vet 219 E 9 . .............. . . ... 602
Residence 901 R 1 . . . .. • ..... • . .. .. ... ..... 602
Wendel R M RFD 3 .... ... . . . ... • •.. .... .4058-N-2
Wenger Byron S Sunnyside KU ........ . . .... 3963-W
Wenrich Chri:;tine 38 Winona ............... . 2113-R
Wentworth Chas H Mrs 1630 Oxford Rd ....... 4253-W
Wenzel Duane G 2346 Vt . •. . ...•.......... . 3667 -J
Wenzel l eone 1126 La .. .......... . ........ 3554-R
Werkenthin A M 1204 Haskell ........ ... ... 3131-W
Werling John 1810 Ind ....... . .... .. . .. . .. 2866-M
Werner A H 701 Maine .......•............1219-J
Werner Henry 943 La ... . .... ............. .. 3095
We.rtenberger Edith Mrs 904 La .... . . . ...... 3693-J
Wertzberger Melvon H 907 Ark . . .......... .. 2592-J
Wesley Foundation 1300 Ore ad . . ............. .. 532

WAT- WIC

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Wesleyan Methodist Parsonage 733 Mo ....... . ... 930
West End Market 547 Ind . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
West Geo W 205 Ill . ... ... . .. . .. .. . . ... .. . 2665-J
West J R RFD 5 ............•. .. . • ..... 4033-K-21
West John L 516 Fla ... ... . ... ... .. • .. . . .. 1117-M
West Robt A WREN Bg .. .................. 1242-W
Westcott Mabel G Mrs 917 La ......... •.... 3120-W
Westergren De lbert 40H Elm ...... . .... . ... 3414-W
Westergren Eugene 1637 N H ....... ... ..... 3401-R
WESTERGREN HARRY plbr 1145 Pa ... .... . ... 3644
Residence 1800 Learnard .. ... ....... . ... 1813-W
Westermeyer F A 917 Tenn . ................ 1638-W
WESTERN AUTO ASSOCIATE STORE 944 Mass . . 613
Western Union Telegraph Co 703 Mass
To send a telegram cablegram or
radiogram at any timeAsk Operator for . . . . . . . • . . . . . • Western Union
Westgate Earle 1400 Ohio ... ......... ... ... 3960- M
Westminster Foundation 1221 Dread ........... .. 804
Westminster Hall 1221 Dread . . . ........... . .. . 334
Westvaco Chern! Co Sunflower . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . 3950
Westvaco Cheml Div 9 &amp; Maple ......•......... 3880
Westview Hall 1138 Miss ........ .. ........ ... 41B2
Wetzel Donald R 715 w 9 .....• .. ... .. ... .. 2726: M
Weyermuller Geo Mr s 1129 Vt ....• .. .. ..... .. 1497
Weyermu ller Harry 2046 Mass ............ ..... 2826
Whaley Ralph C 757 Elm .. .....•...•. ...... 2576-R
Wheatley Q l 1739 Ky .. ....... • .. . ... . .... 3563-J
Wheaton Dana 1311 N Y .. . .••.. •.•.•.••... 2869-W
Whedon Chas A RFD 2 .... .. ......... . ... 40B3-N-2
Wheeler Albert 1309 N Y .... • . .. . .. •... ... 4242-W
Wheeler Dale F 1636 Ky .... ... • ....•...... 2807-W
Wheeler Dock 133 Pawnee . ..... .•.. . .. .. ... 1259-W
Wheeler J J 1024 Ala ... .........••.....•. 2143-M
Wheeler Jeannette T 2 Westwood Rd .•........ .. 2881
Wheeler Norris E RFD 3 ....... .. •... . .•.. 4051-K-4
Wheeler W P 613 W 4 .. ..... .. ....... .... 1570-W
Wheelhouse P J 829 R I ....••....••....... 2833-M
Wherry Neal M 1805 Miss .. . ... . .... ••• ... . 1005-J
Whipple F C 607 La ..... ........ .. ........ .. 1938
Whitchurch E E 2128 Tenn ....... . •...•. ... 2238-W
White Annie 825 Ala ...... .. .............. 1573-J
White Arthur H 600 Maine •••...•••......... . 2822
White Beatrice 220 Ala ......... . . ... ... . ... 737 -M
White Carl 1234 N J ...• ..••....• . .......... .3668
White Curtis 1243 N J ............... ... ... 2422-J
White E E E 19 ......................... 2851- M
White Earl H 1246 N Y .........•••....... 1425-M
Whit e F E 539 Tenn . .. . .............. .. .. 1558-M
White Geneva 176 N 7 ..................... 2757-J
White Geo 1447 Elmwood .................. 2140-W
White H W RFD 2 ........ ..... • . . ...... 4060- N-12
Whit e Harold B 2108 Barker ..... . .•. . ... ... 1151-M
White I N 301 Ark ... . ......... .......... . 1545-J
White Jack Haskell Grds .. . . .... ........ ... 2190-M
White John A Sunnyside K U • .. . .•... ... ... 3473-M
White John H 1800 Ala . ....•..... • ........ 2418-W
White Laura Mrs 1214 Ky ..•..•.•••....... 2848-W
White Monroe 530 Mich ........... . . ........ 3833
White Olin 501 Tenn . ....• . ...........•... 3183-M
White Oscar H 724 Ala ................. .. .. 2610
White P F 439 Ill .... . ...... ...... . . . ... .. 2397 -J
White Paul L 2146 Vt . ..... • ..... •..... ... 1667-R
White R G 1117 R I. .. ....... ....... ....... . 28n
White Rebeca 1337 R I. .... . . . .. . .. . ..... . 1374-W
White Robt 2110 Barker .........•..•..•... . 1151-J
White Roger l1722 Ala ...••••..••........ 3011-M
White W H Mrs 1308 N H .............. .'. .. 1697-J
White W M Rev 816 Miss . . . ........ ... ..... 1929-J
Whiteford Lela Mrs 1407 La ..•......... .• .. 1108-R
Whitenight G K 1700 Miss .......... .. • .. .. . . . 4238
Whitesell Omar P 1729 Mass ..•.. .. .•. ... . . 35B3-M
Whiteside C 633 Maple ...... ...... ...... . . 2799-W
Whiteside Henry 524 Mechanic ...•.••.... .. . 2254-W
Whiteside W R 837 R I ... . ..... .. . • ...... . 1921-R
Whiting ton W H 523 Maine ................ . 2905-J
Whitley Chas G 1501 Barker ...•. .... ..•....3542-M
Whitman Mildred N Mrs 1216 R I ........... 3643-W
Whitney W R 326 Ind ...... . .. . .....•...... . 2644
Whitsitt B M 424 Miss ....... .... .......... 2658-J
Whitten Etta B Mrs 1321 Ohio . ....• • ..... . . 3337-J
Whyte Kenneth M Mrs 1439 Tenn .. ... ....... . . n5
Wichman Carl 100 Pawnee . . .. . ........ . .... 1777-J

�48 WIC- WIN

LAWRENCE

Wickersham Enoch 867 Lincoln ...•....•. . ... 3243-J
Widner lillian 724 R I .... .... . ........... 1353-M
Wiebe A J 1300 Oakhill ............ , .... .. 3755-W
Wiechman Walt 1509 Vt ...•.... .......... . 3654-M
Wiedemann F Mrs 1947 Vt .......... • ...... 3245-W
Wiers Harold 1729 Mass ................. .. 3546-R
Wiggins Elwood A RFD 5 ... .. ..... ... ... 4078-K-12
Wiggins Geo RFD 5 ........... .. .. ....... 4078-N-2
Wiggins J B RFD l. .. ........ . .......... 4039-N-4
Wiggins Otis RFD 5 ........•.....•....... 4078-N-4
Wiggins Ray RFD 5 .... . ... . ..... . . ..... 4078-N-11
Wiggins Theo R RFD 3 . . . .............. 4045-K-12
Wigglesworth J H 1300 Ohio .....•.... . . .. . . .. 1588
Wight Phil H 2216 Tenn ................... 2154-M
Wigington R L 739 Miss .. ......... •. ...... 3297-W
Wiglesworth Virgil 1332 Ky ..... .. • ..• •.... . 2652-J
Wike Edw L Sunnyside K U .... • .... • ....... 1449-W
Wilbur Geo R RFD 6 .... .. ... ........ .. . 4072-N-3
Wilbur Robt D 1336 Vt . . . .
. ....... . ... 1562-J
Wilburn Byron 512 Locust .....• . ....•...... 1791-J
Wilburn Harold 1910 Ky . .......•........... 2312-J
Wilburn Jerome 1815 Ky .. .. .... ... ........ 2866-R
Wi lcox C E 224 Maine . ......... ..•...... . 2665-W
Wiicox H W Mrs 1601 R I ... .. .... •.... . . . 2916-W
Wilcox Philip G 1539 ~ Mass ....' • ............ 3723-J
Wilder Bes~ie E 1640 Mass ................. 1286-J
Wilder Edw A 729 R I . .................... 1691-R
Wilder Virginia C Mrs Haskell Grds ...•... ... . 1340-W
Wildermuth David H 1020 R I. ............. .. . 3852
Wilding Jas 2115 Mass .......... .. .. ... ... 3645-W
Wi ley Elza 645 Mo . . . . .... .. . ..... ....... 1636-W
Wiley Lyman 1635 Cambridge Rd . ...... . . . . .4253-R
Wiley Market 401 Elm .. ........•.....••..... .447
Wiley Millard Mrs 93-q Miss ....•............. 1832
Wiley Odell V 2211 Tenn ................... 2943-R
Wiley Raymond 2010 La . ...........•..... .. 3177-J
Wiley Richard E 1901 Learnard ..... . ....... . 2391-W
Wiley Russell L 519 Ohio .......... •... .... 1408-W
Wiley Theodore 219 N 5 . . .......... •.. . ... . 2165-R
Wilford Violet 118 E N Park . ........ ...... 2850-M
Wilhelmi Max seedsman 804 Mass ............. 1805
Wilhelmi Max 603 Ohio ...................... . 948
Wilkerson Fred 0 1730 Learnard ........... .. 2780- R
Wilkins Jos F University Dr . ...••••.••••••. .. . 3097
Wilkinson Paul N 908 N H ................. 1962-M
Wilks Rosa M Mrs 42 Winona ..•....•.... . .. 2113-J
Willard Julia Ames Lilac Lane ...•............ . 918
Willenbu rg Joe L 701 Lake ................. 1423-M
Willer Max Mrs 707 W 4 ........• . ....... . 3521-M
Willert Mary Mrs 924 N H ..........•....... 2315-R
Willey Elden E 1940 Ky ........... •• .... . . 2262-W
Williams Albert 1329 Conn, ................ 2514-M
Williams Alta Mrs 877 Elm .......•........ 2398-W
Williams Ann Mrs 727 Tenn ....... . ...... ... 3375-J
Williams Booker T 631 Miss .. . .............. . 3247
WiiPams Chris 1741 Tenn .......... • .. . .... 1461-M
Williams Cleo C 920 Ind ... ............... .. 1520-J
Williams Dave 1611 Learnard .. . .. • .... .. ... 2327-M
Williams Dick 1047 Mass ........•...•....... . . 704
Residence 1607 Crescent Rd ... •• .... . . . . ... 1967
Williams E E 1530 Barker . ... .• . •............ 1953
Williams Ed 503 Elm .... .................. . 2963
Williams Emmett 107 E 19 ....... • ..... . ... 2945-M
Williams Eugene V 444 La .... . ............. 1593-R
Williams Frank 1603~ Mass .. . ............ .4227-W
Williams Fred S 646 Mo ..... . . . . ...•..... . 1989-R
Williams Geo 1046 Tenn .. ................. 2911-R
Williams H N 2104 N H .. ..... ... .......... . 2421
Williams Homer L 1624 Tenn ............... 2269-M
Williams Jack A 833 Tenn . ...... . . .• . .. ... . 2536-J
Williams Jas E 539 Ohio . ..... ..... • ...... . 1344-R
Williams James R 1245 N J ........ • ...... . 2414-R
WiiFams Jay C 730 Maine .. ................ 1827-R
Williams L L Mrs 1245 W Campus ......... . .. 3974
Williams Leonard 114 E 17 St Terr ... ...... . 1380-M
Williams Minnie Mrs 1104 l&lt;y .............. . 2880-W
Williams Ora A 1511 Barker . ..... . . .•... ... . 3207-J
Williams R B l320 Vt ........ ...•. ••.. .... 3355-J
Williams Raymond A RFD 4 .....•........ 4070-N-12
Williams Rex E 1233 Pa ... ................ . 2733-J
Wi !Iiams Robt 1735 Ky . . . . ... ..•. .... .. .. 2425- M
Williams Robt B 1209 Haskell .......•....... 2277-M
Williams Roger M RFO 6 . .... .. .•. ...... . 4035-K-2

Williams Roy 2016 R I .......•......•... . . 2937-W
Williams S R 912 Ohio ................•.... 1638-J
Williams Skipper ofc 1047 Mass ..•..... . ... . .. . 704
Residence 641 La ..... .................. .. 1208
Williamson Bert L 723 111 • ••••••••••••••.•• 1887-M
Williamson I E 1002 Pa . ... .. . . ... . ....... 1655-M
Williamson Lula Mrs 1011 Del ................ 1054
Willies Grill 1017! Mass ...... ............. .. 2093
Willingham Ruby 904 La . ... . ......... •.... 3693- M
Willis Leone 525 Ind. . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . .. 1187-M
Willi• Mearl 1402 Laura .. ..... • . .. ....... 2837-R
Willits Harry L Jr 769 N 7 ................. 3219-J
Willman Fred G Mrs 725 R I . . ............. 2249-W
Willmann G 837 Ohio .. ............ •• ...... 2270-J
Wilmuth Wm A 1108 Tenn .. . .. •. ..... . .... .. .455
Wilson A A 312 E 23 .... ...... . ......... .. 3264-J
Wilson Alex H 836 Miss ..... ..... ..•. ...... 1901- R
Wilson Alphus Haskell Grds .. . ... ..• • ... .... 1422-R
Wilson Arthur H Capt 1804 Ill .............. 3048-W
Wilson Billy B 1729 Ohio ... ......•..... .. . 3107-W
Wilson C A 1108 Vt .. .. .. ............ .. ..... 1052
Wilson C E 804 Conn ...................... 1819-J
Wilson Clarence E 203 Lyons . . . ..... • ....... 1341-J
Wilson Clarence Mrs 642 Ky ..........•....... 1548
Wilson o S 1940 N H .................... ... 1274
Wilson Donald G 1630 Ala . . ...... . .. . ..... 2458-W
Wilson Dorothy Mrs 823~ Mass ....... ........ 1964
Wilson E A Mrs 156 Maple .. .. . ..... ....... 2666-J
Wi lson Earl 901 Ill . .................•.... 2939-M
Wilson Edna 1130 R I. . .............. •. ... 1393-M
Wilson Ernest T 443 N 1 ... ...... . ..... . .. 2965-W
Wilson Esther M 1609 La .................. 3453-R
Wilson Geo B 932 Ala . ........ ..... . ........ 216
Wilson Gertrude Mrs 1015 Pa ............ . . . 245l-R
Wilson Henry P 945 Pa . ...•............... 2243-M
Wilson Homer C 823~ Mass . ........ . . • ...... . 1964
Wilson Jmplmt Co 401 N 2 .... .•. .... . ..... . 3377
Wilson J J RFD 5 .. . .. .. . ... . . ........ . . 4045- K-2
Wilson Jas C 1526 Vt. .... . .. . ... • ........ 3486-W
Wilson Jos J 1001 Ala .. ........... .•. . ..... 1119
Wilson Juanita Mrs 215 W 6 ........... .. . .. 1557- M
Wilson Loyd M 401 N 2 .. . ..... ....... ...... 3377
Wilson Mary E 2146 Tenn .................. 1928-J
Wilson Oscar E 426 Florida ............ .. .. .3498-M
Wilson R H Mrs 1426 Alumni Place Dr ... .. .. 3784- M
Wilson R J Sunflower Apts ......... ... .... . 3084-M
Wilson Richard 19 W 11 .. . ... ......... .... 3481-M
Wi lson Robt R RFD 6 .... .......... . .... . 4035- K-3
Wilson Robt W 1428 Conn .................. 2733-R
Wilson Vernon E 111 S Park .. ... .. . . ....... 1490-J
Wilson W D Drilling Contr 520 Ohio ........ .. .'. 2968
Wilson W E 818~ Mass . ................ .. . 1918-W
Wilson Walter 923 Pa .... ........ ..... ... . 2192-W
Wilson Wiley Mrs 141 Maple . .....• • .... ... 2666-W
Wilson Wi ley C 746 N 5 .................... 3122-R
Wilson Wm D 736 Maine ... . .. ...... ....... 1970-J
Wilson Wm K RFD 2 .... ............... . 4007-N-4
Wilson Window &amp; Glass Service 512 E 9 .... .... 1052
Wilson Woodley B 846 N Y .... .. . ......... ... 3729
Wilson Woodrow W 2140 Tenn ...... . ... . .. . 1928-M
Winchell Arthur 526 Ind .......... . . . . • .... 2124-M
Winchell Frances Mrs 736 Conn ......•...... 2381-W
Winchell T A 714 N Y . . .................... . 1704
Winegar W W 2226 Tenn . ......... .•. ..... . 2859-R
Winger Norton 891 Walnut ......... ....... .. 2949-W
Wingert J A RFD 1 . . ................ .. 4099-N-12
Wingert Leo A 446 Ala ........... ........ . 1744-W
Wingert Nolan Eugene RFD 1 ....... .. .. ... 4039-K-3
Winkleman S E 743 Walnut ................ 1674-J
Wino Claude Jr 246 Ill .... .. . .. ... .. . ..... 2665-M
Winsler C C RFD 1 ...................... 4097-K-3
Wi nslow Jas R 1930 Ky ... . ...... .... ........ 3739
Winslow Jeanne cosmtcs 1930 Ky ...... • .... . .. 3739
Winter A J 1905 Tenn .. . ... .... .......... 2390-M
Winter Calvert J 1935 Ohio .. . .....• . ....... 1952-J
WINTER CHEVROLET CO 738 N H...... ... .. . .. 77
Winter M S 1116 w Hills Pkwy . .. .. . ......... 2617
Winter Maurus H 601 Ala .. .. . . ...... .. .. .. 2677-J
Winter Milton S Jr 1831 Miss ....... . ... . .. 4236-W
Winter Nolan 1233 Ohio . ............ ...... 3665-R
Winter Paul B 1606 Tenn ... ... ...•.. .. ... . 2402.J
Wintermote Richard 1519 Ky ....... , .. .. ... . 2294-R

�LAWRENCE
Winters C W 1241 Pa ... . .... ... • ... . .... .. . 35.32
Winters Geo 656! w 23 . . .. . . . . ... . • ....... 2829-R
Winters Harry 813 Conn .. . ..•. . .. . ... . .... . 2698-J
Winters Harry Jr 1810 La . . . . .. • .• . . .. . .. . .. . 3504
Winterscheid Mary 1100 Ky . . .....•.. . . . ... 1756-W
Wipprecht Henry RFD 3 . .. . ... . ..... • ... . 4058-K-2
Wise Chas A RFD 5 ... . . ... .••. ... • .. . .. . . 2792-R
Wise Dick A RFD 3 ... . . . .. ... . . .. . .. . .. 4062-N-3
Wise Elmer B RFD 5 . .. .. . . .. .. .... • . ... 4073-K-2
Wise Geo 2131 Ky . .. .. . ... . . .... .. . . ..... 3109-M
Wise L B 804 Ark . . .. . .. . .. . ............. 2181-W
Wiseman Gordon 1661 Stratford Rd . . . ... . . .. 3949-W
Wiseman Howard 1632 Ky . . . .. . . . . . ....... . 1477-R
Wismer Nettie M 342 Johnson . . ... . .... . .. . . 2444-J
Withers J 2041 Vt .... . . . .. . ... . .. .. . • ... .. . 1683
Witsil Donald R 1530 Tenn ......... . . ... . . . 1602-W
Witt Anthony 1206 Tenn . . . . ....... . .. . . . .. 1985-M
Witt lake Eugene B Sunnyside KU . .. . . . . . . . . . 2435-M
Woestemeyer A E 2104 Tenn . . ... .. . .. . . . . . 1776-M
Woestemeyer G H Rev 1534 Vt . . . . ..... .. .. . 3403-R
Wojcik Mitchell P M Sgt 121 W 14 .... .. . . .. 3829-R
Wolf Arthur H 1015 Ill . . . . . . .. . . .. .. . • . .. ... 3044
Wolf Ferris T 2227 N H . . . .. . .. . . . .. . . . .. . . 2654-J
Wolfe G Edgar 507 Maine .. .. .. ... . ... ... . . 3289-J
Wolfe John W 1336 Mass . .... . . .. . . . . . . . .. 3223-M
Wolfe Marion C 1242 La . . . .. . . .• •... . • . . .. . . . 756
Wolfe Vincent l1700 Barker .. . . . • . . ... . .. . 2830-M
Wolfe Wm 1535 N H .. ... ... . ... . .. .. ... . . 1906-J
Wolfe Wm 0 SCi Ark .. . .... . . ............. . . 3334
Wolfenbarger Keith A 1115 w 10 ......... . .. 2543-M
Wolfson Abe 821 Ohio . . .... . . . .. ... .• . . .. .. . . 237
Wolfson R N 2224 Mass .. . . ... .. . .. .. • . . . . .. 2974
WOLFSON'S 743 Mass . .. ...• .. . . . . .. .. .. .. . . 675
Wolgamott Edith 1223 Ohio . .. ... . . .. • . . . ... . 2382
Wolontis Vidar M Sunnyside K U . .. .. .. .. . .. 1957-M
Wood Barbara 1300 Tenn . .... . ... . ... . . . . . . 1.387-R
Wood Carol 901 Tenn .. . . . .. . .. . .. . .. . . .. . . 3157-M
Wood Clara F Mrs RFD 5 ... ... . . ... . ..... 4081-N-3
Wood Jas F 1600 Tenn ....... . . . . . . • . . . . .. . 2490-J
Wood Robt Eri 1639 Vt . . . . . .. ...... .. .. . .... 34.30
Wood Stephen Sunnyside K U . . . .... . . . ... . . . 1801-J
Wood Virginia M Mrs 300 w 23 .... .. .... .... 2687-J
Woodard Emery 1239 Conn . . .. . . . . ..... . .. . 1350-W
Woodard Parke H 1743 La .. .. .... . • .. . . . . . . 1676-R
Woodbury Blanche 817 Ill . ... . ... • .. . .. . . . . 2939-W
Woodfin K L lt Sunnyside KU .. . • . . . . . . . .. .. 931-M
Woodhead Gene 1339 Haskell . ............ .. . . 2463
Woodlawn School 508 Elm . . .... . . . .. . .. . .. . .. 714
Woodle Roy G Jr Sunnyside KU .... . ... . . .. . . 3112-M
Woodruff Laurence C 2 Westwood Rd . .. . . . . ... . 2881
Woodruff Marie 1722 La .. .. . . . . . . .. . .. .. .... 2516
Woods Chas ·T 2300 Vt .......... .. ......... 304;-R
Woodson A E 140 Mich . . . .. . . . ... . • . ... . .. 1539-R
Woodward Carl Mrs 1314 W 4 . . . . . . . . . . .... . 3613-R
Woodward D S 1025 Tenn . . . . . . ... . .. . . . .. .3176-R
Woodward Donald W 341 Lyons ....•.. . .. . .. 1354-W
Woodward Merritt RFD 6 . ....... . .. • ..... 4008-K-4
Woodward W R 1802 Mich .. . . . . ... •• . .. .. . . 2268-J
Woody Elgin 640 Ark ..... . .... ... . . . . . . .. 1665-W
Woody Elgin Jr 824 Maine . .... • .... .•...... . . 1569
Woody Hobart 0 716 Ala . ... ......... .. ... 1610-W
Woody Wayne 1524 Vt ............... •. .. . 3486-M
Woolard Allan 1940 Tenn . . .. . ... . ...... . . .. 3433-R
Woolfolk Wayne 1812 Ala . . . . . .
. . ..... 3273-J
Woolworth F W Co 915 Mass . . ..... •• .. . . .. .. . 962
Wootton A l 1244! Pa ..... . .. . .....• . .. . ... 3844
Worden Albert C 645 Ark . ..... . .•... . .... . 4222-W
Workman Harry 801 Lake . ... .. . .. . . . . • . .. . 3082-M
Workman Troy A 1446 Haskell . .. . • . . .. . . . .. 1026-W
WORLD CO 722 Mass ... ................. . .... 22
Worley Chas R 413 Ind ......... .. ... .. .. .. 1197-W
Worley Dora 829! R I .. . . . .. • ..... • . . . . . . . 3751-J
Worley Paul 835 La . . ..... • .. . .. .• . . . . . . . . 1312-R
Wortham Jas L 615 La . . . ... •. .. . •• ... .. . . 2614-W
Wray Floyd 924 Ala ... .. . . . • . . .. . .... ... . . 2996-R
Wray Harold M RFD 5 ... . . ... .. . . . . . ... 4078-N-12
Wray Mary F Mrs RF D 5 ..... . . . ..... . . . 4078-N-12
Wrench Otis 726 Ill .. . ... . .. . .. .. • . . . .. . . . 1492-J
Wright Albert Jr 203 Mo . . .. . .. .. .. . ....... 1799-J
Wright Daisy Mrs 1029 lnd .. . .. • . .. .. •. .. . 1137-M
Wright Elmer 418 Elm . . . . . . .. . ..• • ..... . .. 1631-J
Wright Erik M phy 1538 Tenn . . . .•.. .. .. ... 2817-W
Wright Faye Mrs 937 Miss ... . . ....... . .... 3479-W

WIN- ZIM

49

Wright Harry 924 Miss .. . . .. . • . . .. ... . ..... 3672-R
Wright J A 625 N 7 . ... .. .... . . .... • . . . .. . 1423-R
Wright Justice E 1232 La . ... .. . . . . ... • , . . . . . 2681
Wright Ray T ins Standard Life Bg . . . .... . ... . . 457
Residence 6 Colonial Ct . . .. .. . . .. .. . • . . .. ... 426
Wright Ted F 526 Calif .. ..... .. .. . . .. ... . 1581-W
Wright Wilbur 400 Ill . .. . ... . . . . . .. . . • .. . . .. 1065
Wright's Earl Mkt 1307 w 7 .... . .. . . . . . . . . ... 572
Wright' s Mkt 2245. Barker . . ..... . .. . ......... 2054
Wrightsman Dayrl E Mrs RFD 4 .. . . ... . .. . 4096-K-11
Wulfkuhle G 0 231 N 6 .. ..... . ... • . . . .... 3307-W
Wulfkuhle Harold C 512 La .... . . .. .• . . . .. . 2805-W
Wulfkuhle louis A 718 Maine . . ...... . . .. . .. 3930-W
Wulfkuhle RossE RFD 4 .. . . . . . .. .. . ...... 4009-N-2
Wustefeld L J 504 Ohio . . . ... . .... . . • .... . . 3183-R
Wuthnow Harry E 1923 Ohio . . .... . .. ..... . . . . 3988
Wuthnow Janice Mrs 2131 Learnard . . .... . . .. 2597-M
Wuthnow's Conoco Serv Sta 900 Ind .. . .. . .. . ... 3354

y
Y W C A Univ 123 6 Oread . . . . . . .
. . 400
Yahn W F 846 R I . .. . . ... .•. .... • • ..... . 3180-W
Yates H R Mrs 2004 N H. . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . 2410-W
Yates Wm E 1611 Mass .. . ... . . . . . . . . .• . . . ... 1759
Yazza Pahhe Haskell Grds . .... • . . . . . • . • . .. .. 1854-J
Yeh Chai Sunnyside K U .. . ............... .. 3419-R
Yewdall Chas 1235 Conn . .. . . . .. • .... .•. ... . 2405-J
Yockey Edna R Mrs 639 Tenn .. . . . . ..... . ... 2442-W
Voller Harley 2030 Ohio . . . . . . .. .• . .. . .. . .. 1440-M
Yoder Jona 1345 Prospect . . . ........ . . . .. . . 3719-M
Yoder Lee J 1312 Summit . . .. . ... .• ..... . . 2286-W
Yoe Tom 2304 Vt .... . .
. . . • . . . . . . . . 3523-M
Yohe D S 1428 Ottio . . . . . . . . . . .. ... . . ... . . 1398-J
Yohe Wm R 928 R I . . . . . . . .
. .. ... . ... . 2346-R
York 0 T RFD 3 Baldwin ... .. .
. .4061-N-11
Young Chas B 505 Tenn . . . . . . . . • . .. . . . . . . .. . 1578
Young Chas D Jr 2010 Ky . . . . .
. . . . 2312-R
You ng Chas D Sr Mrs 601 La .. ..• , . . .. . . ... . 1687
Young Edwin S RFD 4 . . . . . . . ......... . . . .. 3482-M
Young Ernest W 1215 W 4 . . .
. . . • ... . .. . 1987
Young Geo Paton 1205 Del. . . . .. . . .. . .. . . ... 2828-J
Young Guy E Mrs 928 Tenn . .. . .. ... .. .. .. . ... 2455
Young J B 601 La .... .. .. . .. .. . . ... .. . . .. 2614-R
Young leland H 1009 Conn . . .. . •. ... . •. . ... . . 1331 '
Young Mary C Mrs 920 Ark . . .. , ... . . .. . . . .. 35.37-R
Young Noah 1126 Ohio . .. . . . . •.....• . .... . . 2602-J
Young Otis Mrs 846 N J . . . . .. • . .. ... • .. . .. 1735-W
Young Robt E 1739 N 1i .
. . . .3586-M
Young Ruth Miss 1005 Ky . . ... . . . ...... . . .. 1779-R
Young V A 1340 Haskell . . . . ....•.. ... • . .. ... 1525
Young Wm C 3 Westwood Rd ... . ...... .. .. .. 1734-J
Young Y Y Mrs 1112 Tenn ... . .. . .. . .. . .. . .. . 1205
Youngberg Irvin E 1908 Barker . . .
. . ... . 2556
. . . . .. •. .. . .. . 1867-J
Yurash Bernard RFD 4

z
Zajic Wm E Mrs 1700 La .... . .. . ...... . ... 1007-M
Zannetos Zenon 1633 Vt ... . ..... , .. . .. . ... 1477-M
Zbranek Anthony D 1116 Miss ... . ...... . . .. .. . 1278
Zebb John G RFD 1 .. . . . . .. . . . ........ . 4067-K-22
Zeigler John E Jr 1733 N H ... ... . . . .. . . .... 1380-J
Zeigler Wayne ll139 Tenn . .. • .. . . . ....... . 2734-J
Zepp Raymond 1731 Ky .. . . ........ • ...... . 2281-J
Zepplin Marie 1205 Oread .. . . .... • . ... . .. . 1057-W
Zickefoose Paul Sunnyside K U . ... . ..... .. . .. 2922-J
Ziesenis C H 1627 R I . .. . .. . ... •....• . .. . .. . 1023
Ziesenis Kathryn 1114 Conn . . . .. . . • _.... .. . 2884-M
Ziesenis Roy G 1627 R I . ... . . .• ..... •• . . . ... 1023
Zilliox Rawlelgh C 1530 Tenn . .. . . . . .. . ... . .. . 1862
Zilliox Robt E 1529 Ky . . .. .. ..... . .... . . . . . 1860-J
Zillner Clement A 1804 Barker . . . ..• • .. . .. . . 2669-W
Zillner Geo F 1600 E 19 . ... . .. .. .. . .... 4078- N-13
Zillner Hilda 1304 Vt . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. .. 1562-M
Zillner J H 742! Mass . . . . . . . • . . . . . . • . . . . . 1893-J
Zillner Jerome 811 E 13 . .. .. . . . . . • . . . . . . .. 3571-M
Ziman Geo Capt 2120 Ohio . . . .. .. . . . ..... . . 3255-M
ZIMMER L K physician 207 W 8 . .. .. . ...... . . .. 437
If no answer call . . . . .. . ... . .... . . . . . .. . . .. . 870
Residence 621 E 15 . . . . ...... . ... . .. .. . . .. 1432
Zimmerman Bob 1741 Barker ... ... • . .... . . . 3653-M
Zimmerman C E 435 Ill . . . . . . .
. . . .. .. 2397-M

�50

ZIM-ZWI

Zimmerman
Zimmerman
Zimmerman
Zimmerman
Zimmerman
Zimmerman
Zimmerman

LAWRENCE

Christine 941 R I .. . ... . .. . .. ..... . 657
Ed 346 Locust . . . .. ... .. . . .. . . . 2942-M
Jack W 1716 La ... .. . . . • ...... . 2199-W
J ulian H RFD 6 . ...... • . . . .. .. 4004-N-4
Myrl 203 E 7 ... . . . .... . . . .... . 3113-R
0 0 817 Tenn .. . . . ....... . . . ... 2356-M
R G 2245 Vt ..... . ..... .. . .. . .. . 1338
ZIMMERMAN &amp; SONS hdw 1832 Mass .. . . ... . .. 429
Zimmerman Warren 2208 Vt . . .. ....... .. ... .. 3035
Zimmerman Will 1801 Barker .. ..... . . . . . .. . 1616-W
Zim's Snack Shop 200 E 7 . ... ... . . .. ..... .. . . 3053

Zink Guy 1632 Ala .
. . . .. .... .... . . ... . 4()q5
Zin ninger Jane M 1423 Ohio . .. . •. . . .. • .. . .. 2519-W
Zook Chas M 454 Perry .. . .. . .. • .. . ........ .3254-J
Zook E 0 1113 Pa ....... . .... . . . ..... . ... 2581-R
Zook E R 1807 Ala . ....... .. .. ... . .. . . . .. 2411-M
Zook Ruth Mrs 935 Maine
. . . . ....... 1811-R
ZOOK'S STANDARD SERV STA 23 &amp; La . .. .. . . 2020
Zullig F W RFD 4 . .... . ....... . .. . ... . .. 4014-N-2
Zvacek Rufus 612 W b . . .. . . ... .... .. . . . .. .. . 1132
Zweifel Wm 1132 w Hills Pkwy . . . .... . .... . . . . 1695
Zwicky Pearl Mrs 529 Walnut .. . . . • • . . .. • .. ... 1470

�Lawrence, Kansas

CLASSIFIED
TELEPHONE DIRECTORY
November, · 1952
For Information Concerning This Directory CaD the Business Office

Abstracters
Banks Co The
Over 70 Years Of Service
First Natl Bank bg ..••• • •••••••••• • ••• 984

EMICK JOHN C 737 Mass ........ . ... . • .. . . 396
(See Advertisement This Page)

Air

Conditionin~

Contractor&amp;

Beacon Applnce Co Inc 709 Mass .. .. . ... . .. .. 253
Scott Temp Equip Co 729 N H ... . . .... . ..• •32b

Air Conditioning Equipment
CARRIER AIR

CONDITIONING

Accountants, Certified Public
Bradley Frank 0 Lawrence Natl Bk Bldg .. . . .. .. 34
Lesh Warren N Lawrence Natl Bk Bldg ..... .. . 667

Accountants, Public
Seal T Murl Acctg &amp; Tax Serv Lawrence Natl
Bk Bldg 34
Sherrick's Acctg Serv 9 27 ~ Mass. . . . . . . . . . . . 586
If no answer call ... ... . .. ... .. .. .. . . . 1580-R

l"F'OR INF ORMATION CALL"
Wl!ATH E!RMAKERS

SCOTT TEMP EQUIP CO 729 N H .. . .. .. 326
(Continued Next P a ge)

Adding Machines
ALLEN-WALES ADDING MACHINE SERVICE-

NATIONAL CASH REGISTER CO 116 E 8
Topeka Ks (Toll Calll 3-6435

Burroughs Add Mch Co 1026 Mass... . . . . .. . 1511

BURROUGHS ADDING MACHINES-

BURROU GHS ADD MCH CO 1026 Mass ... 1511

J 0 H N C. E M I C K
BONDED

ABSTRACTER
COMPLETE
SET OF
ABSTRACT
BOOKS
TITLE
INSURANCE

Crane &amp; Co I nc 1&gt;43 Mass ..• .... . . .. .• . .••. 501
(See Advertisement This Page)
Lawrence Typ~wrlttr Exchanqt 735 Mus ...... 548

NATIONAl ADDING MACHINES-

NATIONAL CASH REGISTER CO 116 E 8
Topeka &lt;Toll Calll. 3-6435

OFFICE MACHINES CO

New Used &amp; Rebuilt
Sales Service &amp; Rentals
710 Mass .. . .. . ..... . .......... • ..... 13

737 Mass.
R~sidence

Adjusters

·--..- ·- ·- · - - 396
_ ...- ..... _ ..._.........-....- ..---·--....1084

U11derwrlters AdJusting Co 1110 Ala . •• .. . . . 1496

Advertising Telephone Directory
TEUPHONE DIRECTORY ADVERTISING- Prospects Will Find Your Product
or Service If You Tell Them
"WHERE T O BUY IT "
In the Yellow Pages of the
Telephone Directory

SUNDSTRAND
ADDING MACHINES
SALES
SERVICE
RENTALS
EXCHANGE

"WHERE TO BUY IT"

Exclusive Dealers

SOUTHWESTERN BELL TEL CO 734 Vt . . 221

Crane &amp; Co., Inc.
6U Masa.
CALL 501

Agricultural Implements
-See Farm Equipment

�2

AIR- AMBULANCE

LAWRENCE

Air Conditioning Equipment
(Cont'd)
FRIGIDAIRE AIR CONDITIONING _ _ __ _

for a ll airline
a nd steamship r eserva tions,
tours a nd cr uises.
Bonded, a uthorized agent for
aU national and international

airlines.
Open evenings and week·ends.
Prompt confirmations.
F r ee tic ket delivery.

Complett line of Frigidaire
air conditioning tqulpmtnt
- for homes, stores, Indus·
tries, off itt bulldln!IS. Also
dehumidifim,displaycases,
water coolers, rtach·lns,
food freezers, Ice maktrs.

~
Frigidaire

"W fJERlJJ TO OLl LL"
SALBS &amp; SP.RVICJ.l DEALERS

HANNA RADIO SHOP 933 Mass ..... ..... 303
PHILCO AIR CONDITIONERsHARRIS L T CO INC 802 Mass ....... .. .. 324
U SAIRCO AIR CONDITIONINGHARRIS L T CO INC 802 Mass .......... 324

Air Line Companies

AIR AMERICA_ ___:;_ __ --:-.:.___ __

Free s ervice, no booking fees.
FLY AIR AMERICA TO
ALL AMERICA
Fly t he experienced AIR COACH
system for low cost air trave l
everywhere.
Dependable "On Time" departures.

"FOR I NPOnJ!A 'l'I ON CLlLI/'

lOllSVz

Massachusetts~ ~

AIR AMERICA INC
Toll Areas-Call Collect
Fairfax Airport Kansas City Kans
&lt;Toll Calll Atwater 4809

Air Travel T icket Agencies
DOWNS TRAVEL SERVICE
24 Hour Air Reservations
1015! Mass . . ... .. . .. . .... . .... • . •• 3661
(See Advertisement This Page)
FIRST NATIONAL BANK 74b Mass .. ........ 30
LAWRENCE NATIONAL BANK b47 Mass .... ... 70

Airpor ts
Erhart Flying Serv RFO 5 .......... .. . ... .. 314
(See Advertisement This Page)

Alfalfa Mills
R &amp; W Mills Inc RFO 2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1800
SmaiiWJ Co The RF O 5 .•.... • .•• ..••.••.• 7.50

C. A.A. Approved School

DEAL ER F OR AIR P LANES 4 ENOINES
CROP OU STI NG • SPRAYI NG • SE EDI N G

Call 814

Box 167

Ambulance Service
Erhart Flying Serv RFO 5 .. ... . .. . .... . .... 314
FUNK'S MORTUARY &amp; CHAPEL
QUICK

CARl!PUt

A PRESCRIPTION
TO Fill?
You'll fmd a complet e list of druggists in the Yellow P ages.
Look there to find the store nearest your home.

EPPICIENT
Day or Niaht
940 Mass .•••••..• . . . .• •. .. . •••• •••• 119

Or .••....••.••••• . ••.••• . .•• • •• ••• 774
Funk's Mortuary &amp; Chapel 940 Mass . . . ... .•. . U9
(Ste Advertisement Following Page)
NEFF KENNETH S 940 Mass .............. 774
RUMSEY FUNERAL HOME b01 Ind .... .. . .. . 672
&lt;See Advertisement Following Page)
(Continued Page 4 )

No sellmg campaign is compiete
unless it makes " buying by telephone''
easy.

�LAWRENCE

PHONE

119

OR

AMBULANCE

3

774 PHONE

DAY OR NIGHT

,~

940-42 MASS-

REASONABLE PRICES

PHONE

672 PHONE

-I=UNI;RAL -MOM-E
601 INDIANA

�4

AMBULANCE-ARMY

LAWRENCE

Ambulance Service (Cont'd)
Schubert Funeral Home 1020 N H ••.•••••.•• 452
(See Advertisement This Page)

Amusement Devices
John's Novelty Co 1014 Mass ............... 1099

Antique Shops
Book Nook 102ll Mass .. .....•............ 666

PATCHEN JOHN V 720 Ohio ............... 2163
SPINNING WHEEL

ANTIQUES
B. PIERSON, Owner
HOURS 9-12 A.M., 2-5 P.M.
Sunday &amp; Evenifls by Appointment Only
RUBY

2201 La ............................ 186

Apartments, Furnished

452
DAY OR NIGHT

SCHUBERT
FUNERAL HOME
1020 New Hampshire

(

Thompson Apartments No 1 1140 La ......... 3331
Thompson Apartments No 2 19 w 14 ......... 2082
Thompson Apartments No 3 413 W 14 ........ 2099

Apartments, Unfurnished
Sunflower Apts 11 &amp; Mo ................... 908

Architects
Johnson L R Lawrence Natl Bk bg ••••••••••••. 82
Keys Maurice C 8471 Mass •••••••••••••••• 3525

Architects' and Builders' Service
SOUTHWESTERN BELL TELEPHONE CO

Architects' and Builders' Service
For in formation and consultation service in
planning for the installation of telephone
facihties in new residences and buildings, call
tbe Telephone Company and ask for ".Architects' and Builders' Service.''
734 Vermont .. .. . ..•..... •.....•... 1200

I

Army Goods

i--· a n d his ·--l
I telephone I
I number I
I
I
·------------..J
They're right here in the
Yellow Pages. Look first in
the Yellow Pages for
•.. emergency service
•.. special brands
••• the nearest dealers
... business telephone
numbers

ARMY SURPLUS STORES

Store No 1 935 Mass ...... ... ... ... . ... 669
Store No 2 740 Mass . ......... ....... .. 588

LAWRENCE SURPLUS
THB ORIGINAL AR.MY·NAVY STORBS
HAL KELTZ, PrDp.

CLOTHING- SHOES
Luggage- Sporting Goods
Tarpaulins- Tents
935 Mass ....•.............•••••.••. 669
740 Mass .•......•.....•..•..•.••••• 588

SURPLUS STORES INC
WHOLBSALB-RETAIL

Bunk Beds- Cots- Tents
Shoes- Clothing- Furnishings
ARMY &amp; NAVY
SURPLUS .MERCHANDISE
904 Ma.ss ••.....•..•.......••••••. 1692

Catalogue your products and serv·
ices in these YELLOW PAGES. II costs
little to be completely represented here.

�LAWRENCE

Attorneys
Allen Ceo V 15 E 7 . . . ................. . 121
Allen Milton P Court House . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 559
Allphin Wayne Jr 704 Mass ... . . ............ 431
Asher Alan F Lawrence Natl Bk b9 .......•••. 482
Asher Gorrill &amp; Asher Lawrencf Natl Bk b9 .... 482
Asher Henry H Lawrence Natl Bk bg . ....•••.. 482
Barber Richard A Lawrence Natl Bk Bg ....... 332
Brand John W Lawrence Natl Bk b9 .....•••.. 102
Gorrill Clarence M Lawrence Natl Bk b9 ...•... 482
Hams Leroy E 7 43 Mass . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 802
Henry l lew 729 Mass .....•...•.......•. 1725
Hults D S Jayhawker bg . . . . . . . . • . . • . . . . . . lb
Hults &amp; Postma Jayhawker b9 . . . . . . . . . . . 16
Jackson Forrest A Lawrence Natl Bk bg . ••• •.• 327
Maxwell Jack C Lawrence Natl Bk Bldg .....•. 332
Mel~1n George K Jawh&amp;wker Theatre bQ . . . . . . . 951
Mitchell A 8 Jayhawker b9 .........•....... 525
Oyler Robt B 700 Mass . ......... .. ........ 53
Petefish Olin K J ayhawker Theatre Bldg . . . . . .. 59
Postma Jas L Jayhawker b9. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
Ramsey J Clifton 105 w 11 ................. . 60
Rice Raymond F 700 Mass . ........•........ . 53
R1llng &amp; Riling 90b Mass
. . . . . . . . . 137
Springer Chas A Lawrence Nat I Bk b9 . .....•.. 596
Stevens &amp; Brand Lawrence Natl Bk bg ..•.•••. 102
Stevens R B Lawrence Natl Bk b9 . .. •••.••••. 102
Stewart CC Jayhawker Thutrt b9 . . . • . . . • . . . 59
Stough Chas D Jayhawker Bg .•. .• •••••••••• MO

Auctioneers
Thomas 0 0 BOO Haskell ................. 2928

Automobile Agencies, New Cars
BOARD &amp; MOORE MOTORS 11 w 7 ......... 161
Bod1n Bill Inc 9 &amp; M1ss

. . . . .......... . 217

634 MASS.

ATTORNEYS-AUTOMOBILE

5

Automobile Agencies, New Cars
(Cont' d)
BUICK AUTHORIZED SALES &amp; SERVICE
. ::----WHEH BETTER AUTOMOBILES
ARE BUILT

I!UICK Will

BUILD THEM.

1)

"'WHERE TO BUY IT',
PARKER BUICK CO 700 N H . . . . .. . . 402
CADILLAC SALES &amp; SERVICE
"STANDARD

•

Of THE

WORLD"

..

"JVHERF. TO BUY 11"'
DEALER
JAYHAWK MOTORS 702 Vt .. . ...•..•.•. 639
CHEVROLETAUTHORIZED-SALES &amp;
SERVICE
CHEVROLET
Out-Values...
Out-Sells .. .
All Others!

~

CH-EV1U)LET

"WHERE TO BUY IT"
nEALER
WINTER CHEVROLET CO 738 N H........T7
(Continued NextPage)

�6

LAWRENCE

AUTOMOBILE

CHRYSLER· PLYMOUTH

Automobile Agencies, New Cars
(Cont'd)

e

CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH SALES &amp; SERVICE-THE
BEAUTIFUL
CHRYSLER

SERVIC.E

"WHERE TO B UY THEM"
MOTOR IN OttE STOP STA 827 Vt .. .•.• .6lfl

We Service All Makes
WASHING - GREASING

Bat teries - Tires
Wheel Balancing &amp; Alignment

D DGE SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Specialize In
DODGE SERVICE
CARS- TRUCKS
MO PAR PARTS

•

"WHERE TO BUY THEM"
RANSDELL MOTOR SERV 623 Mass . . . .. .361

BRING YOUR
FORO
BACK HOME
FOR SERVICE

"WHERE TO B U Y IT"
MORGAN-MACK MOTOR CO 714 Vt ... . .3500
Gallagher Buddy Motors 634 Mass ...... . ... 1000
&lt;See Advertisement Preceding Page)

HUDSON AUTHORIZED SALES AND SERVICeNEW HUDSON
AUTOMOBILES
AND
HU DSON' S
PROTECTIVE
SERVICE

.

•

N

"WH E R E T O BUY T HElfl"
DEALER

HUNSINGER MOTOR CO 922 Mass . •. .. .. •. 12
Hudson M F Co BOO N H . ••••• • •••.• . • • •••. 82S
Jay~wk Motors 702 Vt .• .• • . •. . . • . •.• .• • . • ~

LINCOLN-MERCURY SALES AND SERVICr-

OR

USED CARS

Fully trained sales and service
personnel, plus the newest factory-approved equipment for your
convenience and satisfaction.

Lim:dA
ffiER(URY

"WHERE TO B UY THEM"
BODIN BILL INC 9 &amp; Miss .............. 211
MERCURY SALES AND SERVICE
Fully trained sales and service
personnel, plus the newest factory-approved equipment for your
con~nience and satisfaction.

738 New Hampshire

~
.

~

"WHERE TO B UY THEM"
BODIN BILL INC 9 &amp; Miss ......... ..... 211

�LAWRENCE

Automobile Agencies, New Cars
( Cont'd)
MORGAN-MACK MOTOR CO
t.IO"lan-Mack Usee!

car Co

714 Vt •••••••• 3500

726 Vt .••.••••••.• 144

MOTOR IN ONE STOP STA

827 Vt .......... 607
(See Advertisement Preceding Pagel

NASH SALES AND SERVIC
THE WORLD'S
MOST
MODERN CARS!
• IN 3 GREAT SERIES •

"WHERE TO BUY IT"
DEA LERS

RICHARDSON NASH CO 617

Mass . . ...... 407

OLDSMOBILE

AUTOMOBILE

Automobile Agencies, New Cars
(Cont'd)
PONTIAC SALES AND SERVIce--- -Protect your Pontiac with Pontiac
seiVice- your best assurance of
factory-trained mechanics, factory-engineered parts and factorydeveloped tools.

"POR SERVICI! CALI.1'
JAYHAWK MOTORS 702 Vt • • ••••••••••• 639
Ransdell Motor Serv 623 Mass •••••••••••• • •• 361
Richardson Nash Co 617 Mass . .. .... ........ 407
STUDEBAKER SALES AND SERVICE
CARS and TRUCKS
of Outstanding Styl•, Performanc•
and Economy
Exp•rt car and truck
service for Stud•baker

ROCKET!

and othor mal&lt;es

HYDRA· MATICI
OLDSMOBILE

HAS BOTH!

"WHERE TO O..tl.LL"
HUDSON M F CO 800 N H....... ... .... 825
PACKARD AUTHORIZED SAW &amp; SERVICrASK
THE MAN
WHO
OWNS ONE

"WHERE TO O..tl.LL"

A UTHORIZED SALBS A N D Sl!RYICB

SANDERS MOTOR CO

622 Mass •••••• . •• 616

University Motors 707 N H •• . ....•.•••••• . 540

WILLYS AUTHORIZED SALES &amp; SERVICE-

UNIVERSITY MOTORS 707 N H ...... . ... 540
If no answer call . .
. ... ... ..... . 3259-R

WINTER CHEVROLET CO 738 N H . ......•..• 77
&lt;See Advertisement Preceding Pagel

Let one call do the work of two!
Check business numbers first in the
YELLOW PAGES.

"WHERE TO BUY IT"
DEALERS
. .. . .. 540
If no answer call .. . .. .... .. . . ..... 3259-R

UNIVERSITY MOTORS 707 N H..
Parker Buick

7

THE DEAlER

Co 700 N H ....... .. .. . .. . .... 402

PLYMOUTH SALES AND SERVIC
Plymouth
builds great

cars.
... And good seiVice keeps them great!

"FOR INPOR.ILATI ON CA LL"
GALLAGHER BUDDY MOTORS 634 Mass .1000
RANDSDELL MOTOR SERV 623 Mass . • ... 361

A PRESCRI PTIO N
TO FILL?
You'll find a complete list of drug·
gists in the Yellow Pages.
Look there to find the store nearest your home.

YOU WANT
1--- a n d his -- - l
telephone
number

I
II

I
II

·- -----------..J

T hey're right here in the
Yellow Pages. Look first in
the Yellow Pages for
... emergency service
. .. special brands
• . . the nearest dealers
. . . business telephone
numbers

�8

LAWRENCE

AUTOMOBILE

Automobile Agencies, Used Cars

USED
CARS

Barncord Cy 1846! Mass .. ................. 996
BOARD &amp; MOORE MOTORS 11 W 7 .•....... 161
Bodin Bill Inc 645! R I ... .............•. . 801
Bodin Ed Motors 94&amp; N H . ..... ........... 1083
Crystal Motors Trading Post 304 W 6 . ..• ••• . 923
(See Advertisement Following Page)
Jayhawk Motors 10 &amp;. N H ... .••••••••••••• 294

KAW MOTOR &amp; SALVAGE CO

Always A Good Selection
724 N 2 . .. . ....... . ........ . .. .. . 1397

MIDWEST MOTORS
WE BUY- SELL- TRADB

USED CARS

A Bigger Selection
Priced Reasonably
Easy Terms

RANSDELl
MOTOR SERVICE
PHONE

175

840 New Hampshire

/

726 Vermont
I

~
·144·

ANY MAKB OR MODEL

RFO 3 ........ . .... ... .. .... •... •• 3005
Morgan-Mack Used Car Co 72&amp; Vt ....•••• ••. 144
&lt;See Advertisement This Paqe)
MOTOR IN ONE STOP STA 827 Vt. ..... . , .. 607
Parker Buick Co 731 N 2
........ . .. . . . .419
RANSDELL MOTOR SERVICE 840 N H. .. ... 175
&lt;See Adverttsement This Page)

RICHARDSON NASH CO

Sales &amp; Serv 6 17 Mass ... ... . .. ..... .. . .407
Used Cars 628 N H ............... ...... 3995

Here's a help to home managers:
These YELLOW PAGES are packed
with buying facts about things needed
to rtm a home. Consult them to find
11
W here-to-Buy-It."

Here's That
Good Used
Car '(ou've
Been Looking
For

�LAWRENCE

A UTOM OBILE

9

Automobile Agencies, Used Cars
(Cont'd)
Sanders Motor Co 622 Mass .. , •• , • , •••••••. 616
SCHNEIDER VERN 1012 Mass ........•.•••. 424

Automobile Axle Service
Pickens Welding Shop 623 Vt .... . .... ...... 179
!See Advertisement This Pagel
ALWAYS A BARGAIN IN
A GOOD USED CAR
We Buy Good Used Cars For Cash

Automobil e Bodies, Repairing
JAYHAWK MOTORS 102 Vt. .........••.•.. 639
MORGAN-MACK MOTOR CO 71 4 Vt.
... 3500
(See Adverti sement This Pagel

MOTOR IN ONE STOP STATION
Complete Body &amp; Repa~r Service
827 VI

.... ....... . 6/l7

UNIVERSITY MOTORS 707 N H ............ S40

He did a fine job ...

304

w.

CRYSTAL MOTORS
TRADING POST
8

1123

Pickens Welding Shop
823 Vermont

WHAT'S HIS NAME?

Call 179
Axle Frame &amp;
Wheel Aligning
Wheel Straightening &amp; Wheel
Balancing

The Yellow P ages can refresh
your memory and help you find
the repairman you want.
Look in the Yellow Pages for
. .. names ... addresses ... telephone numbers.

Front End Parts
For All Cars

.......... .................

• WRECKS REBUILT
• WRECKER SERV ICE
• GlASS SERVICE
• PAINT JOB DElUXE
• RUBBERIZED UNDERCOATING
• PORCELAINIZING

• LUBRICATION SERVICE
• BRAKE SERVICE
• WHEEL ALIGNING AND
BALANCING
• CUSTOM MADE SEAT COVERS
• COMPLETE MOTOR OVERHAUL

MODERN EQUIPMENT -

GENUINE FORD PARTS

714VERMONT

�10

AUTOMOBILE

LAWRENCE

Automobile Electrical Service
AUTO-LITE OFFICIAL SALES &amp;

Automobile Parts, New

SERVIC~

HUNSINGER MOTOR CO

Hudson Parts Exclusive ly

922 Mass ........ . ............ • ...... 12

Our 0 ff •cIa I Service Stations
are fully equipped and qualified

Automobile Parts, tTsPd

to render complete service on
starting, lighting, Ignition. "AutoLite- Life-Line of your Car."

Auto Wrecking &amp; Junk Co Inc 112 E 9 ••••. . •954

&lt;See Advertisement This Page)

KAW MOTOR &amp; SALVAGE

"WHERE TO BUY IT''
SMITH ELEC CO 615 Mass ..•....•••••.. 163

NEW and USED
FOR ALL CARS

HOPPER'S TUNE UP &amp; ELECTRIC SERv----j
MOTOR TUNE UP
_ I
Comfllltl

Gi~~~:SL ~;~~~;::Sv'~
IGNITION SERVICE
512 E 9 . . . . ....................... . n9

co- - - - - - ,

l
I

I
1

Smith Elec Co 615 Mass . ............ . ....• 1&amp;3
&lt;See Advertisement This Page)

Automobile Equipment
Evans Auto Supply 918 Mass ....•... . .. . •.•. 200
14 E 8 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • • . . • . . .
.4
Harnar Auto Supplies 836 Ma&lt;s . . . . . . .
'~'

FRITZ CO

KAW MOTOR &amp; SALVAGE CO 724 N 2 . .. ... 1397
Pippert's Automott~e Parts Co 211 E 8 . . . ...•. . . d
WESTERN AUTO ASSOCIATE STORE
944 Mass. 613

Automobile Painting
CHAPPELL'S AUTO TRIM 646 Calif . . ...... 1121

NEW AND USED -FOR ALL CARS

Auto Accessories -

Glass

WE SAVE YOU 25% TO iO%
ON NEW PARTS

We Buy Old &amp; Wrecked Cars
PARTS INSTALLED WHILE YOU WAIT

Auto Wrecking &amp;Junk Co., Inc.
Phone 954

712 E. 9th

GENERATORS
STARTING
MOTORS
REGULATORS
DISTRIBUTORS

·163·
Residence 1356

Authorized Auto-Lite
Parts and Batteries
Bendix Service

Authorized
Delco-Remy
Service Station

NEW PARTS &amp; REPAIR

615 MASSACHUSETTS

�LAWRENCE

Automobile Radiator Repairing

11

Automobile Repairing (Cont'd)
HUNSINGER MOTOR CO

JAMES RADIATOR SHOP
Cleaned Flushed Repaired
Re-Cored Any Make
300 Locust ...... . .. .... . .. .... .. .. . . 888

SKINNER'S RADIATOR SHOP 1830

Hudson A uthori6ed Sales &amp; S tl"'lic•

WRECKER SERVICE

Mass . ... . 271

Automobile Repairing

TEXACO PRODUCTS

922 Mass • .... • •.... • ..... •. . •• . . •.. 12

CHEVROLET AUTHORIZED SERVICE,...- - - Chevrolet Sup&lt;!r ::.ervoct means SKil l ful, efficient, courteous service . . .
priced fairly .• . p&lt;!rformed by Chevrolet-trained mechanics using Chevrolet parts and modern tools and
equipment.

JAYHAWK MOTORS 702 Vt . .. • .. • ••••••••• 639
KAISER-FRAZER SALES &amp; SERVICEBOARD &amp; MOORE MOTORS 11 W 7 •• .. •. 161

KAW MOTOR &amp; SALVAGE CO

By Experienced M echanics
724 N 2 . ........ . ................. 1397
Kiser Garage 904 Vt .. ..... .... ...... ....... 65

uprt 'f? &lt;
, Hl'THT Tf"YT? CA L L"
WINTER CHEVROLET CO 738 N H .• .. •••• n

FORD AUTHORIZED SALES &amp;

AUTOMOBILE

SERVIC~E-

-

-

BRI NG YOUR
FORD
BACK HOME
FOR SERVICE

MIGNOT GARAGE

• General Repairs
• Engine Tune.up and Rebuilding
• Brake Overhaul
• Valve Seat Rings- Grinding - Reboring
628 M ass • . . . ••...... . .. .. . ..... •. 1 820
. ..• . .. 653
Vt . . .. 607
&lt;See Advert isement This Page)

Mills Jim Garage 229 Elm . .

....

MOTOR IN ONE STOP STATION 827

"WHERE TO BUY IT"
MORGAN-MACK MOTOR CO 714 Vt ••••• 3500

NASH SALES &amp; SERVICE-

RICHARDSON NASH CO 617 Mass . ....... 407

OLDSMOBILE AUTHORIZED SALES &amp; SERVICEHayden Motor Service 612 N 2 . . ... . . • •.••• •346
Hoffman's Garage 230 0 Haskell. ... ... ..... . . 497

HUDSON M F Co 800 N H......•..... . .. 825

PARKERBUICK CO 100 N H ............ . . . 402
( ~ ntinued

Next Pag e)

YOUR CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH DEALER
WE SERVICE ALL MAKES OF CARS
Washing - Greasing - Batteries - Tires - Wheel Balancing a nd Alignment

SKELLY PRODUCTS
827

PHONE

Vt.

607

ONE STOP SUPER SERVICE

�12

AUTOMOBILE

LAWRENCE

Automobile Repairing ( Cont'd)

Speciali.zed

STUDEBAKER
Phone

SERVICE

616

And Parts

SANDERS
MOTOR CO.
622 Mass.

RANSDELL MOJOR SERVICE 623 Mass. . . . . .361
RAY' S GARAGE 1247 Praorae
... ........ 1613
RICHARDSON NASH CO 617 Mass ........... 407
SANDERS MOTOR CO
A ..thorued St ..debaker Slf'Vic•
Specaahzed Lubrication
Expert Wheel llalancing and Aligning
Motor Tune-up Specialist
Body • .Fender Repair

622 Mass .........................•. 616
Sanders Motor Co 622 Mass ..... ....••••••. 616
&lt;See Advertisement This Pagel
Soden Jack Frank 1900 Mass . . . . . . . ....... 292

WINTER CHEVROLET CO 738 N H ....•..... 77

Chappell's Auto Trim
e
e
e
e

Complete Auto Upholstering
Custom Made Seat Covers
Convertible Tops
Seats Rebuilt
e Auto Painting
GUARANTEED SATISFACI'ION

Phone 1121
646 California (At 1700 W. 7th)

Automobile Springs
UNDERWOOD METAL CO no Vt ............ 403
Automobile Tops
Chappell's Auto Trim Ml&gt; Calif ..•.•••.•.••• 1121

Automobile Upholstering
Chappell's Auto Trim 646 Calif . .. . . . ...... 1121
(See Advertisement. This Page)

Automobile W reeker Service
Hunsinger Motor Co 922 Mass . ..........•••• 12
(See Advertisement Following Pagel

MORGAN-MACK MOTOR CO 714 Vt . ...••.•3500
&lt;See Advertisement This Page)

. 'nf VERMONT

�LA "'R E '~C E

Automobile Wreck er Service
&lt;cont'd )

WINTER CHEVROLET CO 738 N H ..••••..•• 77

AUTOMOBILE- BAKERS

Power Wrecker

&lt;See Advertisement This Pagel

Awnings
BURK AWNING &amp; CANVAS COODS MFG C
AWNINGS POR EVERY PURPOSE
LAWN FURNITIJRE RECOVERED
TARPAULINS &amp; TRUCK COVERS
AWNING STORAGE &amp; REPAIRING
"P.stimii1ts CbtnjMIIJ c;;.,•"
7061 Mass .•...••.•..•.....•••..•.• 1173

Baby Shops
WEAVER A D 901 Mass •••. . .•..•• . •••••••636

Baggage Tran sfer
Handy Man
Experienced Workmen For Any Job
Good References-Bill Walker Mgr
1033 R I. ...... ... .... .. ........... 1325

Baker s
COMMONS BAKERY 816 Mass ..... .. .... .. . 291
&lt;See Advertisement This Pagel

DANDY BREAD-

DRAKE BAKERY 907 Mass ............•.. 61

Drab Balcery 907 Mass ... .•••.....•.•••••.• 61
&lt;See Advertisement This Pagel

KAY'S BAKERY 412

77
Day or Night

Winter
Chevrolet Co.
738 New Hampshire

w 9 . ................. n6

BAKERS

HUDSON SALE.&lt;:; &amp; SERVICE
920-22 Maas.

SP ECIALIZING IN

Wedding - Party
&amp; Birthday Cakes
ALL SIZES

Drake
Bakery
907 Mass.

!!~~!
-SPECIALTY BREADSWhole Wheat-Rye-French

COMMONS
BAI(ERY

PHIL S. COMMONS, Mgr.

816 Mass.

13

�14

BANKS--BARBECUE

LAWRENCE

DOUGLAS OOUNTY
STATE BANK
"The Bank of
FRIENDLY SERVICE"

•

With

COMPLETE BANKING SERVICE
* CHECKING ACCOUNTS
* AUTOMOBILE LOANS
* COMMERCIAL LOANS
* PERSONAL LOANS
* LIVE STOCK LOANS
* SAFETY DEPOSI T BOXES
* SAVING ACCOUNTS
*REAL ESTATE LOANS
CALL

3200

CALL

900 MASS

Banks

Douglas County State Bank 900 Mass . . . . .. . . 320C
(See Advert isement This Page)
FIRST NATIONAL BANK 74o Mass
.
03(]
&lt;Se~ Advertisement This Page)
lawrence National Bank 047 Mass •
70
o

0

o

o

.

•

Barbecue
Miller Barbq RFD 5 .
Soutnern Pit Barbecue 1834 Mass .
0

••

o

•

0

0

0

0

o

•

0

0

0

0

•

0

•

0

0

0

•

0

408li.-N-4
0

2001

1 he YELLOW PAGES are an important part of your telephone service,
Use them often. They help you fina
who buys, sells, rents, repairs.

He did a f ine job ...

WHAT'S HIS NAME?
The Yellow P ages can refresh
your memory and help you find
the repairman you want.
Look in the Yellow Pages for
. . . names . .. addresses • •• t elephone numbers.

COMPLETE BANI\JNG SERVICE
Complete Service

Interest Paid On

For

Savings Accounts

Business &amp; Individuals

Personal Loans

Capital &amp; Surplus- Over $650,000.00
O FFICERS
Geo. Docking, President
E. B. Martin, Vice-Pres. and T rust Officer
Kelvin Hoover, Executive Vice-President
Robert Docking, Cashier
George Dunkley, Asst. Cashier
Georgiana Graves, Asst. Cashier
H. D. Flanders, Asst. Cashier
Harold Voo Gunten, Asst. Cashier

Phone 30

o

••••••••

746 MASS

�LAWRENCE

BA RBERS-BEAUTY

15

Barbers
Clodfelters Appointment Barber Shop 729l Mass 926
Eldridge Barber ShOp 701 Mass .......... . . . 2019
Houk's Barber Shop 924 Mass .......... . ... 3603
Stidlum Barber Shop 1033 Mass .•.....••.... 438

Batteries
ATLAS BATTERIESHARTMAN STANDARD SERV STA

1300 Mass. 3303

ACMEAUTO-LITE
BATTERIES

AUTO-LITE BATTERIESSMITH ELEC CO blS Mass ............. .163
EXIDE BATTERIES

Complet e Se rvice
On All Makes

The honest, accurate advice
of the Dealers listed ~low
will prolong your battery's
life.

-=1J~obo·

WHEN IT'S AN EXIDE YOU START

"FOR SERVICE CALL"
Fritz Co 14 E 8 ........................ . 4
Gallagher Buddy Motors 634 Mass ... ....... 1000
&lt;See Advertisement This Pagel
GOODRICH B F BATTERIESGOODIUCH B F CO 929 Mass . . .
. ... . 21
GOODYEAR BATTERIES-

DISTRIBUTOR

STOFFER MILT 623 Locust •. . ••••• • ••• 1358
RAPID TRANSIT INC 1000 Mass . ........ .. 1300
Smith s Serv•ce Stauon bOO Mass • .. •• . • • •• 2002
U S BATTERIESRAPID TRANSIT I NC 1000 Mass ........ 1300

8udrly~

6ALLA6HER
=======Motors
634 MASS.

WIZARD BATTERIESWESTERN AUTO ASSOCIATE STORE
944 Mass .613

b earings
A d C ASSOCTD BEARINGS CO 2918 McGee
rrh•J

Mo &lt;Toll Call) Klln}AS
Cit y Valent•ne-5393
BEARING DISTRIBRS INC 1919 Baltimore
Kansas City Mo (Toll Call). Grand 0666

*

Kaosas C1t 7

Beauty Shops

•

Armstrong Beauty Shop 723l Mass .... . ...... 567
BAND BOX BEAUTY SHOP 1144 lnd ...•..... 430
Charme Beauty Salon 935! Mass......... . .. 533
(See Advertisement This Pagel
CHRISTINE S BEAUTY SHOP 941 R I . . . •.. . . 657
CORN'S STUDIO OF BEAUTY 23 W 9 .. . ...• . 709
(See Advertisement This Page)
(Continued Next P age)

RADI O W A VES

•

FOR HEALTH
AND BEAUTY

•

HOWARD CABINET V
BATHS GYRODUCI NG
TREATMENT &amp; MASSAG E

~---------------------------------------------1

Studio · I
i
of Beauty
23

w. 9th.

Personalized Haircutting &amp; StylinK
Helene Curtis &amp; Zotos Cold Wave
JtlR CONDI TIONBD-SOPT IVATBR

GEO. CORN, OWNER

Call 709

ALL TYPES OF BEAUTY W ORK
NETTI E l. WOLFE
(Owner)

�16

LAWRENCE

BEAUTY-BEER

Beauty Shops (Cont'd)
Hair Stylinc
Facials
Hair Tintinc
Manicuring

DRISCOLL BEAUTY SHOP 943 Mass . ........ 6C
(See Advertisement This Page)

MARINELLO BEAUTY SALON 1119 Mass .....41
!See Advertisement This P&lt;lge)

MARVIN'S HILLSIDE BEAUTY SALON

847 Mass. 9'
ROSE BEAUTY SHOP 1020 Vt ••••••••••••• l
Stadium Beauty Shop 1033 Mass ... . ..... .. .. 4l
Vamty Beauty Shop 1019 Mass . .. .. ...... 131
&lt;See Advertisement This Page)

Bedding

DRISCOLL
BEAUTY SHOP

Mr. and Mrs. Julius Driscoll
943 Mass. Street
BEAUTY aERVICB

Miller Furniture Co 741 Mass ••.•••••••••••• ~

Beer, Retail
Chuck's Beer Place 716 Mass .••....••...... 53!

DOCKERY CLARENCE

STRONG BEER &amp; ALE
OPI!N 9 A.M. TO 11 P.M.

PHONB

DOWNBEAT THE
Don Hunsinger-Qwner
1031 Mass . .. .... . . ... . . ... ........ 2tl
Green Gable Cafe 514 E 8 . ...........••.. 2«
Greenwood Tavern &amp; Cafe 804 Vt .••.••••••. 2a

·

REVENEWROB

.

AIR CONDITlONP.D

DRIVE-IN LIQUOR STORE

MARINELLO Beauty Salon

MALT LIQUOR

BEER

1119 MASSACHUSETTS

ALE

.. . . ....... 1101

805 Vt . . .

CALL

1372

CALL

STUART'S TAVERN 11 E 9.. .. ........... 3) •

Beer, Wholesale
Brooks J A Co 715 N J . ..... . ... . ..........%
BUDWEISER BEER
King of Bottled Beer
PREFERRED
••• Where Ever You Go

"FOR INFORMATION CALL"
McDonald Beverage Co 1124 Emery rd •••. 6
Heuel Beverage Co 735 N H . . . .. .. ..... . .. .1
McDonald Beverage Co 1124 Emery rd ........6

MUEHLEBACH PILSENER

If YOU NEED
A PLUMBER ...
No need to waste a minute!
Just look in the Yellow Pages
under "Plumbers."
They're all listed there. You
can locate one near your home
-quickly and easily.

"WHERE TO BUY IT"
DISTRIBUTOR

BROOKS J A CO 715 N J ...............!

Most dealers, services and produt
are listed in the YELLOW PAGES.

�BEER-BUS

LAWRENCE

Beer, Wholesale (Cont'd)
PABST BLUE RIBBON BEER_ _ _ _ __
33 FI NE BREWS
BLENDED INTO
ONE GREAT
BEER

I

"WHERE TO BUY IT'
DISTRIBUTOR
BROOKS J A CO 715 N J ............... 273

SCHLITZ BEERHETZEL BEVERAGE CO 735 N H........ . 158
Stone Produce Co 304 W '6 ..... ............ 26.5

Bicycles
Blevins Bike Shop 701 Mlch.
. ............. 73
Goodrich B F Co
Schwinn Bicycles Accessories
929 Mass .. . ........ .. ... . . .•.... .... 21
Rutter's Shop 1016 Mass ..........•...•.... 319

17

Books (Con't)
Rowlands College Book Stores
Main Store 1401 Ohio. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 1401
Annex Store 1237 Oread. . . . . . . . . . . . .. •• 492

Bottlers
Coca Cola Botlg Co 646 Conn
........ 3529
COCA COLACOCA COLA BOTLG CO 646 Conn
.... 3529
If no answer call
... . .. ... 3140
Dr Pepper Bottling Co 815 111 H ... ...... . ...• 198
SQUIRTDR PEPPER BOTTLING CO 815 N H ....... 198

Bowling Alleys

- - - - - - - - - - -1

PLADIUM
The Best In Bowling Pleasure

12 'MODERN LANES
Open Bowling Afternoons and
Fri.• Sat. &amp;: Sun. All Day &amp;: Enninc
Fru Instrwctwn1

901 Miss ... . ..................... 3379

Bicycles, Repairing
Blevins Bike Shop 701 Mlch .. ... . .... .. ...... 73

Boxes, Corrugated
LAWRENCE PAPER CO Ft of N If ........... 129

Billiard Parlors
Brunswick Billlard Parlor
Follow The Crowd Here
714 Mass ....... . . ...... . .......... 2048
Holloway's Pool Hall 735! N H.••...•.••••• 2097
Jayhawk Billiard Parlor
Half-Block South-Eldridge Hotel
719 Mass ..... . ........ . . ... ..•. . .. 2044
Smoke House Pool Hall 73B Mass ........... 2076

Boys' Wear
OBERS LEADING CLOTHIERS 821 Mass ... . .. 203

Breeding. Cattle, Artificial
Douglas County Artificial Breeders Assn
1308 Prospect. 238

Building Materials

Bird Supplies
BARTELDES SEED CO 804 Mass ....... ... ... 92

Blacksmiths
Underwood Metal Co 730 Vt ................ 403
Zim!!lerman &amp; Sons 1832 Mass ......... . .... 429

Burgner-Bowman-Matthews Lumber Co 308 W 6. 81
Friend Paul H lumber Co 1030 Mass ........•.. 42
LOGAN-MOORE LBR CO 627 Mass . .... ..... 113
Reedy Pete lbr Co 1846 Mass ..... .. .... .... 176
Shaw Lumber Co 701 Vt ........ .......... 147

Bns Compariies, City
RAPID TRANSIT BUS Co,- - - - -- - - ,
Leave Haskell-2·22·42 min. past hour

Boats
Francis Sport Gds
lonestar Aluminum &amp; Tomahawk
728 Mass ...... .. ....... .. .. ..•. ... . 640

Bonds, Surety
Charlton Insurance Agency Insurance bg .. • ... 689

Leave 4th &amp; Maine-2-22·42 min. past hour
Leave K.U.- 5·15·25·35·45·55 min. past hour
Leave 7th &amp; Locust (North Lawrence)-7·37
min. past hour
Leave E. Bth-22·52 min. past hour

1000 Mass . .......... . .... ...... .. .. 388

Bookkeeping Service
Beal T Murl Acctg &amp; Tax Serv lawrence Natl
Bk Bldg.34

Books
Book Nook 1021! Mass ........ . ... ... ..... 666
Keeler Book Store 939 Mass .. ... . . ... . .. .... . 35
Masden's Watch Shop &amp; Bible Supplies
Religious Articles &amp; Gifts
12 E 9 . . ........ ........... .. . . .. .. . 47
ROWLANDS COLLEGE BOOK STORES
"Book Seller$ to Ja:yhawlttrl''
SCHOOL &amp;: OFFICE SUPPLIES
Gifts -

Stationery

Fountain Pens
TWO STORES
1401 Ohio . .. ....... .......... ..... 1401
1237 Oread . . . .
. ... .. . . ..... .. 492
Nights-Sundays-Holidays Call . .. .3388 or 427

Are !hey open
evenings?
Look in the Y ellow Pages. Many
firms show their business hours,
products, services, and other
information.

�•-

18

BUS-CAFES

LAWRENCE

Bus Line!!!
CONTINENTAL TRAILWAYS
"To the next town
or across Am~rica"

" F OR T'NJi'()R'Ji f ATTON CALL"
UNION BUS DEPOT 638 Mass • •• .•••.•••7al

GREYHOUND LINE
Only By
• Greyhound

Yoo See the Real .America!
ConYenient low-cost travel to t'ltry one of the
48 States, Canada and Mexico
Ask about CHARTER SERVICE for groups

"FOR I XPORJIJ1TION 0.1LL''
UNION BUS DEPOT 638 Mass .... . . ... .. 70'

•
Serving
•
STEAKS CHICKENSEA FOODS
Specializing In

UNION BUS DEPOT 638 Mass. . . . . • . . . . . . . 70i

Cafes

BAR-B-Q
RIBS- DINNERS
SANDWICHES

Alamo Cafe 1109 Mass .... . •.. . ...... . •. . 360.:
Blue Bucket Shop 828 Vt . ..... . ...... . ... . . 791

BLUE MILL

STEAIG &amp; CHICKEN
CollPLETB DINNERS 01 SHOllT OaDBU

Cloud Sundayr

~~~/#}
~,[$~~~

e CHICKEN .,

e STEAKS

e SEA FOOD
DINNER-DANCING

ERNIB PUWAM-&lt;&gt;-•
1009 Mass ................. ......... 409

Call The 1422 Crescent ................... 206!
CASTL£ TEA ROOM THE 1307 Mass •. . ..•... 141

Chateau Drive-In 1802 Mass ....••••••• _ • • •3~
Chief Lunch 2246 Barker ..• ....... . . . . •... 205:

CHUCK WAGON THE RFD 6 ... . .•... . .4085-N~
College Inn 1344 Tenn ....... •... . .. • ..... 200!

Crystal Cafe 609 Vt .....•..... . .• ...... . •335

DE LUXE CAFE

New Private D i ning Room
Soeclallzlng In Di nner Partl ea
Hours: Tuesday thru Saturday 10 A.M. to
11:30 P.M. sunday 10 A . M. to 8 P.M.

Closed Mondaya
23 &amp; La.
Lall

845

Featuring
CHICKEN DINNERS
STEAKS - CHOPS
CHOP SUEY - CHOW MEIN
711 Mass . . ........ . ... . . . . . • . • .. . 2045

Breakfut
Lunch

Dinner
.Steaks

SERVING

CHICKEN - STEAKS - SEA FOODS
BEER &amp; DANONG

Spaghetti
Red

NO MIN IMUM OR COVER CHARGE

Ph one 2028
located 1 Milo North of Lawrence
On Hiwoy 24 &amp; 40
4 PM Till Midnight

~ Closed
--~~H-O~U-R~S-S
-u-nd-o-ys_Tuesdays
l_2-:00-N-oo_n_t_o_M-id-n-io-ht_ _ _ _ _l_9_04-

BEER

M
In
0 Id ission n
2040j

Mass. . . • • • • • . • . • . . . . • . . . .• . •.•..

�LAWRENCE

Cafes ( Cont' d)
Dine-A-Mite Inn 23 &amp; La ........ .. .... . .. .. 845
(See Advertisement Preceding Page)
DUCK'S SEA FOOD TAVERN 824 Vt ........ 2098
EL TAMPICO CLUB 801 Pa .. ... . . ........ 3373
Flamingo Club RFD 3 ...... .. ............ 2028
!See Advertisement Preceding Page)
Gemmell's 1241 Oread ..............•..... 2004
GEMMELL'S CAFE 717 Mass .......... .... 2072
Gilkerson's Cafe '112 Mass .. . ...... .. ..... . 3389
Granada Cafe 1022 Mass ........ . .. . ...... 3.349
GREEN GABLE CAFE 514 E 8 ............. 2022
Green Lantern Cafe 745 Mass ....... .. ..... . 484
Haskell Institute Haskell Grds .. . . . .......... 527
HEARTH TEA ROOM THE 17 E 11 . ....... . 1036
Herb's Cafe 730 Mass ............. ....... 2003

CAFES-CARPET

19

Candy, Retail
DIXIES CARMEL COR'u--- - - - - ROASTED NUTS
FRENCH FRIED POPCORN
&amp; CARMEL CORN
HOME MADE CANDY
ASSORTED CHOCOLATES

''We WiJJ Mail Your Order'
"WHERE TO BUY I T"
DIXIES CARMEL CORN SHOP 842 Mass .. 1330
STOWITS REXALL DRUG STORE
Russell Stover Candies
847 Mass ••••.•••.••••••••••••••••••516

HUNDLEY'S CAFE

OPEN 24 HOURS
DINNERS-SANDWICHES
SHORT ORDERS

8381 Mass ............. . ... .... ... 3038
Hut The 520 W 23 .................. . . ... :3601
Jayhawk Cafe 1340 Ohio ............ . ..... 1156
Jim's Dog House 627 Mass ................ 2096
Jim's Drive-In 732 N 2 ... ...... .... ...... 2046
Kirby's Lunch 616 Mass ... ...........•.... :3612
MARRIOTT CAFE 8:32 Mass .. .. ......•.... 3018
Miller Barbq RFD 5 . .. . ....... . ... ... 4081-N-4
Old Miss1on Inn 1'104 Mass .....••.. ..... .. 2040
&lt;See Advertisement Preceding Page)
Parkway Grill106 W Park .• . ••.• . ••••••••• 3610
Ray's Truck Stop RFD 5 . ........... . ...... 3314
Rock Chalk Cafe 618 w 12 .....• • • ..•.•. •. 3020
Rose Lee Lunch 240 Elm .................. 2033
Santa Fe Restaurant 411 E 7 •••••••••••••• 3320
Shamrock Grill 508 Locust ......... .......• )392
Skyline Club 633 E 23 . . . ... . ..•.....• .. •. 3'39
SNAPPY LUNCH 1010 Mass ........ . . .. • .. 2078
SOUTHERN PIT BARBECUE 1834 Mass . .... 2001
&lt;See Advertisement This Page)
Stable The 1401 w 7 .•......•••.•..••••••3080
!See Advertisement This Page)
Sunny's Grill1'3 E '1 ...... .........•...... 3324
Te-Pee Barbq RFD 5 ..................... 2070
!See Advertisement Preceding Page)
Willies Grill 10171 Mass .. . .....• . .•.•••• . 2093
Zlm's Snack Shop 200 E 7 .... . .... .. .... .. 3053

Cameras

Candy, Wholesale
COKER A B &amp; SON 1337 Mass .......••.••. 558
PlertOn August J &amp; Son 16 E 9 .•.•...• . .••. 1792

Canning
Stokely Foods Inc E 10 ................. .... 104

Carpet &amp; Rug Cleaning
NEW YORK CLEANER·~---=--------.
ORIENTAL, BRAIDED, WILTON
and AXMINSTER RUGS
ClllANED IN THB PLANT

•

WALJ...TO·WAU CARPETS
CLEANED IN THB HOMB
with BIGELOW SANFORD KARPBT KARl!
926 Mass ............ ........ .. .... . 15

Southern Pit
Fried Chicken
BEER

Barbecue
Ham- Beef
Rlbe

FOJ'
Reservation
CALL

2001

18!4 Mass.

HIXON STUDIO 721 Mass ................... 41
HIXON STUDI

CAMERAS
Eastman Kodaks - Bell &amp; Howell
Argus- Revere- Keystone

the

VIEWMASTER STEREOSCOPES
RENT A CAMBRA OR PRO/BCTOR
721 Mass ... .... . . ... . ......... . .... 41

MOSSER-WOLF INc·- - - - -- - - ,
Y DNr AlitbDrhtltl D111l" for
Eastman Kodak - Bell &amp; Howell

CH I CKEN and STEAK DINNERS
SANDWI CHES and BEER

Du Pont-Ansco-Argus-Revere
Leica-Leitz Microscopes
VIBWMASTER STEREOSCOPESRADIANT SCRBBNS
1107 Mass •• ••• ••.••.• ••• •• • ••••••• 50 .

Phone 3080

1401

w. 7th

�20

CARPETs-cHRISTIAN

LAWRENCE

Carpets

Co~erce
Chamber of Commerce Wren bg .............. 481

Cllanibers of

BEATTIE CARPETS &amp; RUGSSTERLING FURN CO 938 Mass . ....... .. 1192
FRANK'S FURN CO
Firth-Roxbury Rugs And
Downs Wilton Carpets
834 Mass .. . ..... . ............ • ..... 834
MILLER FURNITURE CO
.A.Ntbori::ttl Dtllltr f;w
MOHAWK-SMint KAB.AGHBUSIAN
MASLAND-.ARUOOM ROXBUllY CAllPETS
Wall to Wall lnstallabon•
by Experienced Competent Layen

Cllemicals
Pur-O-Zone Chemi Co 714 Conn. . . . . . . . . .. ... CJt
Westvaco Cheml Co Sunflower .... . . . . ...... .395(
Westvaco Cheml Div 9 &amp; Maple ............. 38&amp;:

Chicken Dinners
Dine-A-Mite Inn
Served on 25 minute notice
23 &amp; La .•••••. ••..••.•.••..•••.•..• 84!

741 Mass .... . ..................... 246 1

CJUadren's

VINCENT'S INC 124 Mass ................. 178
WEAKLEY'S FURNITURE CO
Bigelow Sanford Rugs
729 Mass .......•....••••..•.•..... 932
WEAVER A D 901 Mass ................... 636

Chinaware

Cash Registers
NATIONAL CASH REGISTERsNATIONAL CASH REGISTER CO 116 E 8
Topeka Kans. &lt;Toll Call&gt; Topeka 3-643.5

~ear

Stork Haven The 841 Mass ..•.•..•.....••• m
WEAVER AD
Teen Age Fashions For Girls
901 Mass .................... .... . . 63!

House of China &amp; Class 906 N H ...... ... ••.•MI
Shlmmons Shop 906 N H••..••.•••••••••••. 661
VERNON'S HARDWARE 1029 Mass ..•....... 101
VICKERS GIFT SHOP 1023 Mass ............ 93l

Chiropodists
BITTENBENDER C R 7291 Mass. . . . . . . . . . 671

Cemeteries
Memorial Park Cemetery E 15 ....... . ...... 1459
Oak Hill Cemetery S E limits ............... ~

Chairs-Renting
Anderson Furniture Co 812 N H ............. 252

CHIROPRACTOR

SPINAL, SACRO-ILLIAC &amp; NERVE SPECIALIST
Twenty-First Century
Chiropractic Ma~~s
Dally Treatment
Unnecessary
It Pays to Investigate

Chiropractors, DC

ALBRIGHT C R , - - - - - - - - -:
CHIROPRACTOR
Howe Calb Day or NigiU
Hospital Facilities Anilable
X-RAY - COLON IRRIGATIONS
Spinal, Sacro-IIIiac and Netve Specialist
1023~

Mass ...•....••...•..•.•..••. 1531
Residence ..........•.....•..•..... 1385

BROCKWAY MARIAN 10 E 9 .. ... .. . . .... . 4224
Residence 1423 Ohio ................. 2.396-11
COLBURN ARTHUR R 1024 Vt .... •.... .... lU
Residence 1024 Vt ..................... .3593
CRAIG &amp; COLBURN CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC---"!
COMPLETE
PHYSICAL EXAMINATION
X-Ray -

Florescopic

Lady Nurses

PHONE
Office or Residence

Call for Appointment
1024 Vt ......................... .. 115

1531

CRAIG H W 1024 Vt ........•. ..• ••...••.. lll

COLON

Christian Science Practitioners
Naturopathic Physician,
X-Ray Laboratory

Dr.
C. R. Albright
Office 1023! Mass.
Opposite Granada Theater

Beverstock Allee F Mrs r 1506 Crescent rd .... 158l
MIKenzie Elizabeth Mrs r 646 Ky .•••••••••. .3591
Stofter Alice 8 Mrs r 1103 N H ....... . ..... 284l

The YELLOW PAGES tell yoa
where to buy the products and serviceJ
you want. They also help you find tht
stores and tradespeople best fitted lo
supply your needs. Look in the YEL
LOW PAGES.

�LAWRENCE

Churches
Assembly of God Church 1242 Mass .......... 2112
Baptist Church First 801 Ky ............... .494
Catllolic Church 1229 Vt ........... .... . ... 338
Christian Church First StuCiy 1000 Ky ......... 790
Church of Christ 1501 N H ..... .. ......... 853
Church of The Nazarene Parsonage 1842 Vt •.. 1243
Co~~~~a~~~~v~h~rch ____ . ____ _____ .. _. __ . _475
Kitchen 925 Vt. . . .. . . .. ................ 193
Episcopal Church 1011 Vt ................. 1111
Evangelical United Brethren Church The
1501 Mass.2508
First R M Baptist Church 416 Lincoln ..... . .3536
Friends Cnurch 1205 N Y ................ 2624-J
Friends Church 1601 N H ..... . ......... 1419-W
lutheran Church Immanuel 1538 Vt. ....... .. 758
Lutheran Church Trinity 1245 N H ..... ... .. .. 624
Metllodist Church First 946 Vt . . . . . . . . 1908
North Lawrence Christian Church 647 Elm .. 3789-M
Presbyterian Church First 901 Vt .. ... ..... ... 630
5alvation Army The 729 Vermont ............ 633

City Offices
Building Inspector Watkins Bk Bg . . . . . . . .. .. 460
City Clerk Watkins Bk bg . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4b0
City Engineer Watkins Bk Bg. . . . . . • . . . . . . . . 460
City Garage 445 Miss ..................... 463
~ty Water Dept Watkins Bk bg ............. . 461
re Dept No 1 745 Vt ............... • .... 496
Fire Dept No 2 1839 Mass . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 187
Health Dept Watkins Bk bg ................. 462
Health Director Watkins Bk bg. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 90
lawrence Recreation Commission 115 W 11 .... 1814
Mayor Watkins Bk Bg .....•.....••.•.••.•. 460
Meter Shop N End of lnd .................. 897
Milk &amp; Food Sanitation Watkins Bk Bg ....•... 462
Police Dept 745 Vt ....... . ............... 153
Pumping Station N End Ind ................. 968

Cleaners

CHURCHES-C04L

Z1

Oinics, Medical
Medical Arts Center 4 &amp; Maine .. ........... 3975

Oothing
BROWN'S TOGGERY 830 Mass •...••••• ••• •389
CARL'S CLOTHIERS
BOTANY
STETSON HATS

"~00"

ARROW SHIJ.TS

INTERWOVEN SOCKS
Glu To Show Yo• • - -

905 Mass ••.•.••.••••••..•••••••••• 905

Gibbs Clothing Co
Where Cash Buys More
811 Mass
......... .. .... . ... ... 459
LAWRENCE SURPLUS
Store No 1 935 Mass ....................66'J
Store No 2 740 Mass .................... SE!IJ
Litwin's 831 Mass .................... ... 1088
OBERS LEADING CLOTHIERli

SOCIETY BRAND CLOTHES
DOBBS HATS
McGREGOR SPORTS WEAR
ENRO AND ARROW SHIRTS
821 Mass .................. .... ..... 20.3

PALACE CLOTHING CO 843 Mass ........•.. 915
TOWN SHOP THE 84H Mass ..... .. ... ..... ~
Wolfson's 743 Mass .•..•.•. • . •.••.••••.•• 615

Oothing, Second Hand
SALVATION ARMY THE 729 Vermont •••.•••US

ACME BACHELOR LAUNDRY &amp; DRY
CLEANERS 1111 Mass.646
INDEPENDENT LAUNDRY &amp; DRY CLEANERS
Downtown Plant 740 Vt ................. . 432
Cash &amp; Carry 1903 Mass . .. . ............. 886
JAYHAWK CLEANERS 626 W 9 ... . ........ . 123
KANSAS CLEANERS 12~ E 8 ..... . ....... .420
LAWRENCE LAUNDRY &amp; DRY CLEANERS
1001 N H.383
NEW YORK CLEANERS 926 Mass . ......... .. 75
New York Cleaners Annex 411 W 14 .......•.. 307
Quality Cleaners 539 Indiana ........•.••.... 185
ROGERS FASHION CLEANERS 8 E 8 ....... 498
ROGERS TOPPS CLEANERS 1407 Mass .. ... . 243

Cleaners, Drapery
NEW YORK CLEANERS 926 Mass .
. . . . . . . 75
ROGERS TOPPS CLEANERS 1407 Mass ...... 243

Clinics, Chiropractic

ALBRIGHT C R ~--------..
CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC
Complete X-ray &amp; Fluoroscopic Se"ice
Colon &amp; Rectal Disorders
Call For Information
Spinal, Sacro-IIIiac aRd Nerve Specialist
1023! Mass . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1531

Residence . ......... ...... .....•. .. 1385

CRAIG &amp;COLBURN CHIROPRACTIC CLINICCOMPLETE
PHYSICAL EXAMINATION
X-Ray - Florescopic
Lady Nurses
Call for Appointment
1024 Vt ........................... 115

Clubs, Country
Country Club 1 Mi W on Highway 40 . ......... 4lM

Ouhs, Social
Facuity Womens Club 1300 La ..•........... 1309
University Club 1007! Mass .....•.....•..... SU

Coal
BIG CHIEF COALSNIDER COAL &amp; HEAT SERV CO

200 lt\CIIst .1010
BURGNER-BOWMAN-MATTHEWS LBR CO
308W6.11l
JAYHAWK COAL _ __ _ ___;:..:.::;..::...:~

;";_~·f.'C~

A qualay coal that saves you _
money in heating service.
Every
ton washed to remove impurities.
A size for every purpose.

... ~

"WIJERE TO BUY IT"
SNIDER COAL &amp; HEAT SERY CO

200 Locust.lOJ,O

SCHAAI&lt;E C &amp; SONS 210 W 6 ....... .... . . .152
Snider Coal &amp; Heat Serv Co 200 Locust . .... .1010

Coal Stokers-See Stokers
HANDY-These YELLOW P.AGES
will tell you where you can buy mosl
anytbmg.

�22

LAWRENCE

CONCRETE

.. -.

Products

Vibrated
and
Power
Pressed

*

*

PreCost

--~
Dependable
. EXTRA STRENGTH
QUALITY

WffiE MESH • STEEL WINDOWS
REINFORCING STEEL

Accurate Proportioning
More Thorough Mixing

•

PHONE

1892

PHONE

Haydite Blocks "Light

Weigh~'

FOR FIREPROOF
PERMANENT CONSTRUCI'ION

•

CONSTRUC~ION

GO.

730 DELAWARE

Reinforcing Rods &amp; Mesh.
Steel Windows (all types)
MANUFACTURERS OF

CONCRETE, PUMICE, AND
HAYDITE BLOCKS
Phone

264
Morton's
BuJiding Materials (o.
SALES OFFICE: 1834 Mass.
PLANT: East 15th &amp; S.F. Tracks

Insurance agencies supply one of
the many services you'll find listed
in the Yellow Pages.
When you're looking for anything,
you'll find it quicker and easier in
the Yellow Pages.

�LAWRENCE

Concrete Products

Concrete, Ready Mixed
Ready Mixed Concrete Co 730 Del ......... .. 1892

Confectioners
Golden Gate Chocolate Shop 713 Mass .. . .•.. 3395

Contractors, Building
------

:ful Hrun ·~- Exqcisitdy o~..

signed, Erected Q•ickly. A Home
for Evt'ry Fanuly, for E1·cry '"'

GUJ-;fllSH}}
@ •

tom~. See your Authorized

o.

1
....,.

Mw~o

V

Attorney Court House .. ..................•. 559
Budget &amp; Accounting Div 1100 Mass .......... 471
Clerk Court House . . . .... .... .. ........•. S59
Clerk of District Court Court House ........... SU
Commissioners Court House ....•.....•..•• • • 3.59
Conva lescent Hospttal 1004 W 4 . .. . . ... .... . 988
County Judge Court House ........ . ........ 961
Dist Judge Court House ........ . . . ......... 889
Engineer Court House .............. . ....... Sn
Farm Bureau P 0 bg
..... . ............ 2502
Health Dept Watkins Bk Bg ........ .•• •.••.• 462
Kansas Highway Patrol County Jail .. .• .••••• • • 58
Probate· Judge Court House .......... ..... . . 393
Production &amp; Marketing Administration
641 Ma.ss.652
Register of Deeds Court House ...............
Sheriff County Jail . . . . . . . . . ............... Sl
Shop Yard E 23 .. . ....................... 971
Supt of Schools Court House .............•.. 329
Treasurer Court House . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 466
Welfare Director Court House ...... . . ... .... 975

6n

Crating Service

Dealer for Sales, Erection and Stll'Vice.

"ll'JlERB TO

nr·y

Tl/TiJJl"
lawrence Homebuilders 1621 Oxford Rd .. . 3820

Contractors, Building Repairing
Peters Wm Oliver 1629 Ark ...... .. . . ....... 822

Contractors, Concrete
Handy Man
Experienced Workmen For Any Job
Good Referencer--Bill Walker Mgr
1033 R I. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. ...... 1325
Penny M N Constr Co 730 Delaware ........ 1892

LAWRENCE TRANSFER &amp; STORAGE CO
INC 7.31 N H. 15
If no answer call ........ .. . ........ . 1m-M
Smith Ethan A Moving &amp; Trfr Co 11 E 9 ..••• • •46

Credit Reporting Bureaus
Credit Bureau of Lawrence 719 ~ Mass ........ .467

Correct telephone numbers save time.
Look in the YELLOW PAGES befM•
you call the store or repairman.

Contractor s, Drilling, Oil Well
Wilson W D Drilling Contr 520 Ohio ....•.... 296B

Contractors, General
Bechtel Corp Sunflower ......... ... • ...... . 3944
Bechtel Corp 9 &amp; Maple ................... 898
Bennett Constr Co 2320 La ... . . . ...... .. .. 4216
Constant Constr Co 201 Perry ... ... ...... .. . . 89
GREEN B A CONSTR CO 1300 Oread ........ 884
Jayhawk Constr Co RFD 1 ... . .............. 251
KAPFER CON STR &amp; ENGINEERING

INDUSTRIAL
COMMEROAL
RESIDENTIAL
BUILDING
1605

23

County Offices

lawrence Bldg Matrls Co 1834 Mass .... ..... 264
Morton's Bldg Matrls Co 1834 Mass ......... 264
(See Advertisement Preceding Pagel
PENNY M N COI4STRUCTION CO 730 Dela ... 1892
(See Advertisement Preceding Page)

GUNNISON HOMES

CONCRETE-CREDIT

w 19 ...................•••• •3630

Natkin &amp; Co 1330 Miss .. ....... ... .•..... 2728
Scott Constr Co 1641 W 9 . . . . . . . . .. . . .... 3965
Stinson 0 F 1936 TeM ............. . • .. .. 1663
Tuggle Constr Co 845 lnd . .. .. .... .. .. . .. . . 3595
Utility Constr Co 201 Perry . .. . ........ .... .. 89

Contractors, Land Clearing
Richardson's Constr Co RFD 2.

Look First
in the

YELLOW
PAGES
a
••. For a business teleph one
number
•.. For a business address

. .. 4083-N-3

Corsets
Smart-Form Corsetiere RFD 3 ......... 4091-K-13

Cosmetics
Luzier's Cosmetic Consultant
Jeanne Winslow
1930 Ky ........................... 3739
WEAVER A D 901 Mass .............. . . ... 636

. . . For the nearest dealer
... F.:&gt;r a special brand
.. . For emergency service

�24

DAIRIES

LAWRENCE

PASTEURIZED
AND HOMOGENIZED

GRADE " A" MILK

and
DAIRY PRODUCTS
Ask Your Grocer

Telephone

202 WEST 6TH

�LAWRENCE

Dairies

DAIRIES-DOG

25

Dentists (Cont'd)

CHAMNEY DAIRY RFD 4 .............. 4029-K-2
FRITZEL-JAYHAWK DAIRY PRODUCTS

834 Vt 182

GOLDEN CREST DAIRY 2016 Leamard ......3162

!See Advertisement Preced •no "aoe)
lawrence Sanitary Milk &amp; Ice Cream Co 202 W 6. 696
(See Advertisement Preceding Pagel

Dairy Products

Kincaid Paul K 839! Mass.
. •• . • ...... 989
O'Bryon C F
X-Ray - General Practice
19 w 9 ..........••...... . .••.••... 570
Perry Jas 1 15 E 7
.
. . . •• . • .......395
Residence 1602 Crescent Rd . . . . . . . . . . .1911
Stevens P N 815 Mass. . . . . . . . . ....... 1Sl5

Department Stores
Montgomery Ward &amp; Co
Retail Store 825 Mass ............ • ...... 195

FRITZEL-JAYHAWK DAIRY PRODUCTSFRITZEL-JAYHAWK DAIRY PRODUCTS

834 Vt 182

Lawrence Sanitary Milk &amp; Ice Cream Co
202 w 6.696
Me~rSanltaryMIIkCo 304 locust .....•..... 262

p Catalol grder Dept 825 Mass ............. .. 58
enney
• Co 807 Mass ...............•... 43S

WEAVER AD 901 Mass . . . . ..... ... ...... 636

Dictating Machines
OFFICE MACHINES CO

Transcribing &amp; Dictating Machines
710 Mass . .

Dancing Studios
LINDLEY MAXINE

Instructions-All Types of Dancing
819 Vt ..•...........•.............. 100

Dead Animal Removers
STANDARD RENDERING CO 1610 E 15 ..... 369

Decorators, Interior

. .13

Dies
Kansas Mfg Co The
Tools-Dies Manufactured Per Specifications
62.3 Vt ....••.••.••..••••.•••••.••• 411

Dish Wash ing Machines,
Domestic
WESTINGHOUSE AUTOMATIC DISHWASHER-

Handy Man
Experienced Workmen For Any Job
Good References-Bill Walker Mgr
1033 R 1 .
. . . . . . . . . 1325

HIGGINS &amp; SON DECORATIVE SERVICE
We Do AD Kinda of
INTERIOR DECORATING
Bllimlllll

Roll-Out WashWell gives
usable wort surface, top
loading; greater capacity;
perfect washing and drying;
easy, low cost installation.
You Can 8e SURE ••
If It's WESTINGHOUSE.

"WflERE TO CA LL''

p,,

DBALBRS
Beacon Applnce Co Inc 709 Mass

.. 253

1202 Almira ......•.•.....•....•..1456

Ditching Service

Delivery Service

ANDERSON RICHARD TRUCKING

2325 Haskell

Handy Man
Experienced Workmen For Any Job
Good References- Bill Walker Mgr
1033 R 1
........... .

1325

HANK'S DELIVERY SERVlC
Package Ddivezy
Merchants Delivery
Apartment Moving &amp; Light Hauling

Prom'l Slf,i&amp;l
1211 Vt •...•.•.••....•••••••.•••••797

Doctors
-See Specific Headings, aueh u Chlropractors, Dentists, Oculists, Optometn.ts,
Osteopathic Physicians &amp; Surceou, D.O.,
Physicians &amp; Surgeons, M.D.. Veterlaarians, etc:.

Dog &amp; Cat Hospitals
LEASURE VETERINARY HOSPITAL- - - - .
Da. T. J. Lx.uuu
Established Since 1930

Dental Laboratories
lawrence Dental Labs 841! Mass . ... . . . ... . 3279

Dentists
Albers John A 4 &amp; Maine . . . ....... • ...... 3975
Alexander CJ noli Mass . ........ . ....... 421
Bnr.m Forrest D 800 Mass •••••••••••••.••• 374
Doty F H 927 ~ Mass . ........... ..... ..... 795
Frink Lloyd H 801! Mass . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 571
Gttto Paul H lawrence Natl Bk bg •••••.•.• ,3(;q2
Gillihan Robt B 4 &amp; Maine .... . . ..... .... .. 3975
Gorrill Will R 845 Mass ........ ......... ... 399
Haun Richard M soH Mass •.••.•..•..•.•. 204
Kennedy A R '127~ Mass .................... 551
Kennedy T A 927! Mass .................... 551

1321

Complete Small Animal Service
Boarding, Clipping and Treatme.ut
809 Vt ......... . ................•. 240

PIERSON I J

Boarding-Batlling-Ciipping
large Outside Individual Runs
2201 La ...... . ....•.....•..........186

WEMPEWW

General Veterinary Practitioner
Modern Small Animal Hospital
With Complete Small An imal Service

219 E 9 ............................ 602

�26

DORMITORIES-DRUGGISTS

LAWRENCE

Dormitories

Dressmakers

Battenfeld Hall 1425 La .................•••965
Carruth Hall 1345 La ...................... 164
Corbin Hall 420 W 11 ............... ... ... 860
Don Henry Co-op 1420 Ohio ............ ... .. 86
Foster Hall 1200 La ........... . .. . ........ 257
Haskell Institute Tinker Hall .............. .4210
Hill Co-Op The 1539 Tenn .. . .. . . .... .......3691
~adder Hall 1115 La ...... ......••. .•. ... 4200
ifiopkins Hall 1011 Ind .... .............. .. 1768
.Jayhawk Co-Op 1614 Ky .... • .. .. .•..•..... 205
Jolliffe Hall 1505 Ohio ......•. ...... . ..... 994
Kanza Hall 1006 Miss ................. ... 3544
Locksle) rial!
No 1 1125 Miss .....•...••.•• •.••••••• 3534
No 2 712 McCook ....... • .. . ....... . . ... 921
No 3 714 McCook .....•... .•• . ••••••••• 8.36
No 4 716 McCook ... . . . .............. 504
No 5 1112 Ill . . ... . ........ . .......... . 837
McCook Hall-North K U Stadium . ........... 2042
McCook Hall-South K U Stadium ...... • ..... 2039
Miller Hall 1518 Lilac Lane ... .......•.•.... 980
Monchonsia Hall 1014 Miss ............••••• 365
North College Hall ll &amp; Ohio . ............. 4280
Oliver Hall1126 La .......... ............ 3551
Oread Hall
Office 11 &amp; Maine..
. .................. 56
East Wing First ll &amp; Maine ............. 2051
East Wing Second 11 &amp; Maine .... . •..... 2454
West Wing First 11 &amp; MaiM ...... ...... 1922
West Wing Second n &amp; Maine . .. ........ 2036
Pearson Hall 1426 Alumni Place Dr ......... 3865
Rochdale Co-op 1244 Ohio .... .. .. . . . ... .. . 2200
~ock-Chalk Co-op 912 Ata. .
. •.•• .••.... 170.5
Sellards Hall 1443 Alumni Place Dr . . ....... 4205
tephenson Hall 1404 La .. . ... . ......... . .4203
terling Hall 1129 La . . . . . . . . . . ..... ... . . 569
emplin Hall 1407 La ... ........ ....... ... 358
Watkins Hall 1506 Lilac Lane ......... .... .. 900

i

Sold at the Leading
Druggists &amp; Fountains

46

CROWN DRUG SERVICE----,-:....,..-,,----::
Over 25,000 Nationally Advertised
Items. Drugs, Electrical Needs,
Sundries, To II etr i es, Tobacco,
Fountain and Bottled Goods at
Deep Cut Prices.
Shop and Save.

'

t

·

I

,

,·

"WHERE TO GET SJi}RVIOE"
Crown Drug Co No23 747 Mass ••••••••••• U
Eldridge Pharmacy 701 Mass ... ... ...... ... . Iff.

FRITZEL-JAYHAWK DAIRY PRODUCTS

•

834 Vt.la
Harrison Drug Co 1851 Mass ....... . ....... 421
!See Advertisement Following Pagel

tii,LLSIDE PHARMAC
PRESCRIPTIONS
R11isttwJ Pb11rm11tisl

Drugs-Drug Sundries-Fountain Servia
W. H. SBMPLII

616 West 9 ••••••.••.•••••••• .•• • • 1481

L - - - - -- -- - - · - - - (Continued Page 28)

Who Buys? Sells? Rents? Repaitt
The YEUOW PAGES give youth
answers.

C~EAM

ICE

FORA TREAT
IN ICE CREAM
GET VARSITY VELVET
PINTS &amp; QUARTS

Smith Dresmkng Shop 943~ Mass ... ..... .... 68:

Druggists

PHONE

696

PHONE

�LAWRENCE

DRUGGISTS

PRESCRIPTIO
$pee~td.,

Exclusive Agent
For
!IARCELLE

"lVhere Pharmacy Is A Profession"

OOSMETICS

CALLED FOR AND DELIVERED

TELEPHONE

521
Sundries • Toiletries
Magazines • Photo Finishing

Try Our Fountain

RANEY
105 E 8 -·-··
Nights, Sundays, Holidays Call _

DRUG

STORE

801
3486-R

PRESCRIPTID~

SPECIALISTS ,
DRUGS
SUNDRIES

Biologicals
Hospital Supplies
Fountain Service

RANKIN DRUG CO.
1101 Mass. St.

• • • Call

678

&lt;Jit.e Ro.unJ etUne~~.
~IU«f

eo..

fJ.W~
PHONE

20

801 Mass.

e
e
e
e

PRESCRIPTIONS
SICK R~Ol\1 NEEDS
BIOLOGICALS
FREE DELIVERY SERVICE
PHONE

3975

PHONE

If No Answer Call 83'74

27

�28

LAWRENCE

DRUGGISTs-ELECTRIC

~sts (Cov-n_t'_d~)_ _ _ _ _
1
HOLf'S PHARMAC
PRESCRIPTIONS

Druggists ( Cont'd)
ROUND CORNER DRUG CO 801 Mass ........• 20
&lt;See Advertisement Preceding Page}
STOWITS REXALL DRUG STORE----'=----,

QWCK DBUVBRY SBRVICB

PRESCRIPTIONS

Across From High School
FOUNTAIN- LUNCHEONETTE

DRUGS • • • SUNDRIES

1347 Mass . . ....................... 234

lAWRENCE SANITARY MILK &amp;

IC~

Wlln-1 Your-Dollllf'-S T R B T C H B S

CR CO
202

847 Man . .................. . ..... 516

w 6.696

&lt;See Advertisement Page 26}
Medical Arts Pharmacy 4 &amp; Maine .......... 3975
(See Advertisement Preceding Page)
RANfY DRUG STORE 909 Mass .. ........ . .. 521
&lt;See Advertisement Preceding Page)
Rankin Drug Co 1101 Mass . .
. . ... . . ... 678
(See Advertisement Preceding Page)

Stow Its Rexall Drug Store 847 Mass ......•... 516
&lt;See Advertisement This Page)
Van's Prescription Shop 105 E 8 ............ . 601
&lt;See Advertisement Preceding Page)

Druggists Sundries, Wholesale
Varnum Drug Co 801! Mass ................ 530

Dry Goods
Terrill's Dry Goods 803 Mass .............. .. .325
WEAVER AD 901 Mass ................... 636

Duplicating Machines
Three Registered Druggists

Stow its
Rexall Drug Store

A. B. DICK MIMEOGRAPH PRODUCTs,--Complete stencil duplicating
equipment: Stencil sheets, Inks,
lettering guides, styli and other
A. B. Dick products are sold
only by the following authorized
distributor.

"WHERE TO BUY THEM'

OFFICE SUPPLY &amp; EQPMNT CO
521 Kansas Topeka Kans &lt;Toll

M'7 Mass.

Call)

;3..3259

OFFICE MACHINES CO 710 Mass ... .......... 13

Electric Appliances, Household
BEACON APPLNCE CO INC

--=i=iF""''."y

~ " ~"iJ

WESTINGHOUSE APPUANCBS
Refrigerators- Ranges - Radios-Automatic Washers-Vacuum Oeanen

fi£1; fiR.J

- I AndAdvertised
Other Nationally
Lines

SALBS 6 SBRVICB
709

Mass . .... . ... .. .............. . 253

GENERAL APPLIANCE CO INC
r_
General Electric Sales &amp; Service
1103 Mass . . . : ....................... 19
HANNA RADIO SHOP
Frigidaire-Zenith-RCA-Emerson-Hoover
933 Mass . ..........•..•......... ... 303
SMITH L LOKE CO

I

MAGNAVOX RADIO &amp; TELEVISION
KELVINATOR-EASY WASHERS
UNIVERSAL GAS RANGES
PHONOGRAPH RECORDS

846 Mass •........... ..•.• •.•...•••725
Talbert App!nce Co 910 Mass ........... .. . 3606
Vincent's Inc 724 Mass . .................. .178
&lt;See Advertisement This Page)
(Continued Next Pagel

Prospt.e:z e customers ''shop around'1
by telephone. Be sure they see your mes·
sage-classify all of your products and
services in these YELLOW PAGES.

�LAWRENCE

ELECTRIC

29

Electric Appliances, Household
(Cont'd)
WESTERN AUTO ASSOCIATE STORE·------,

WIZARD APPLIANCES
Teln-ision • !Udios • lUnges • Refrigeraton
Vacuum Oeanera • Automatic and Cnnnntional Washers. Hot Water Tanks. lronen
944 Mass .....•. . ... .• • .... . .• . .••. 613

WESTINGHOUSE PRODUCTS
Refrigerators, Ranges,
Dishwashers, Water Heaters,
Clothes Dryers, Laundromats,
Vacuum Cleaners, Wast&lt;·
Aways~Eiectrlc Bedcoverings,
Fans, 1able Applianoes.
You Can Be SURE ..
If It's WESTINGHOUSE.

"WHERE TO C.ILLL"
DEALERS

BEACON APPLNCE CO INC

709 Mass . .. . . 253

-FREE ESTIMATES-

Industrial &amp; Residential Wiring
Complete Line of Lighting Fi.'l:tures
CALL

Electric Contractors

1163

CALL

BRASS EDW B

Contracting-Repairing
1919 R I. . . ...... ... ............... 3557
Brune Plbg Htg &amp; Elec Co 545 lnd ....... • .. .308
(See Advertisement This Page)
GUNTERT PLBG &amp; WIRING 1337 Mass ...... 963
&lt;See Advertisement This Page)

LEE RAYMOND PLUMBING &amp; WIRING

Licensed &amp; Bonded
906 N H . ..•••..... . •.•.. • •••••••••• 660
If no answer call Raymond H Lee ••. • ••• 3780
Norris Bros 500 Locust ..... . ... .. . ... . . . .. 1163
(See Advertisement T his Page)
Rose L H Plbg &amp; Wiring 931 Maine ...... . . . . 513
WESTERGREN HARRY 1145 Pa . .. . .. . ... 3644

~~
Electrical
Contractor
SMALL ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES
TELECIIRON ELECTRICAL CLOCKS

~s~

LIGHTING FIXTURES
OOMPLETE LINE OF
LIGHTING FIXTURES

*

BONDED-LICENSED-INSURED
PHONE

936

P. 0. BOX230
PHONE 308

B ~Wm:BiNG
444W;Jfik·•
M. J. H UXTAB LE, JR., Owner
545 I ndiana

1337 MASS.

PHONE

�30

ELECTRIC-FARM

LAWRENCE

Electric Equipment
Kennedy Plumbing &amp; Elec Co 937 Mau •.•••.• &amp;58

Engineers, Combustion
Combustion Engrng-Superheater Inc RFD 1 ... . 3821

Engineers, Power Plant
Fluor Corp ltd RFD 1 . ... .... . .. ...... ... .894

t.ngravers, Photo
EtchRite Photo-Engraving 5 W 14. . . .

. .. . 11~

Envelopes
TENSION ENVELOPES-

TENSION ENVELOPE CORP 19th &amp; Campbell
Kansas City Mo &lt;Toll Call). Harrison 0092

Excavating
Gordon H R RFD 4 ...................... 791
(See Advertisement This Page)

Express
Railway Exp Agcy Inc 407 E 1 . ............. l2C

C1

Fsrm Equipment

BIGSBY &amp; BANNING TRACTOR &amp; IMPLMT
FORD TRACTORS
DEARBORN FARM EQUIPMENT
Sales &amp; Service

Complete Repair Sef1Jite
SOME DAIRY EQUIPMENT

620 Mass . .......•.•....••.......... 83

Douglas County Implmt Co 560 W 23 .•..... . 4225
(See Advertisement This Pagel

CASE

IMPLEMENTS
&amp;TRACTORS

Sales - Parts - Service

Phone

4225
Elmer Schneider

Elmer Johanning

Douglas County
Implement Co.
554 w. 23

NEW HOLLAND BALERS
Sales - Parts &amp; Expert Repair Work
DeLaval Milkers-Gehl Forage Harvester.
PIONEER HYBRID SEED CORN

Lawrence Implement Co.
Formerly Anderson Implement Co.
CALL 647

518 W. 23

AllisChalmers
FARM
MACHINERY
Genuine Parta
&amp; Service

Dealer New Idea Eqpmnt.
McCormick-Deering. Farmall Tractors
&amp; International Motor Trucks
1818 Mass•.........................•... 244

NIEDER IMPLEMENT CO.
CALL 385

520

w. 23rd

�LAWRENCE

Farm Equipment ( Cont'd)

31

Fire Departments

FERGUSON TRACTORS &amp; IMPLEMENTs-

JONES FARM SUPPLY E 23 ............ 469

FORD TRACTOR &amp; DEARBORN FARM
EQUIPMENT-

Fire Chief 745 Vt . ... .... .. .......... .... 3509

Fire Extinguishers

BIGSBY &amp; BANNING TRACTOR &amp;
IMPLMT CO 620 Mass .83

5REEN BRO
JOHN DEERE F.ARM IMPLEMENTS
Std11 l!r Sll't~itl

RICHARDS D D SUPPLY CO
Recharge Service On Co 2 Extinguishers

212 Quincy Topeka ... &lt;Toil Call) Topeka)-~

Fishing Tackle
KIRKPATRICK SPORT SHOP 715 Mass .... . .1018

Fix-it Shops

Complete Repair Stodt
Adequate SerTicc Dcpattmeut

&amp;3-' Mass • .• .•••••••••••••••.•••••• 631

Jones Farm Supply E 23 .. ................. 469
KRAFT TRUCK &amp; TRACTOR CO 1818 Mass .. 244
&lt;See Advertisement Preceding Pagel
LAWRENCE IMPLMT CO 518 w 23 ......... 647
(See Advertisement Preceding Pagel
NEW IDEA EQUIPMENTNIEDER IMPLMT CO 520 W 23 .. ..•• ... . 385

Nieder lmplmt Co 520 W 23 .......... ..... . 385
&lt;See Advertisement Preceding Page)
OLIVER IMPLEMENTSGALLAGHER BUDDY MOTORS 634 Mass .• 1000
Wilson lmplmt Co 401 N 2 . .......... .... .3377

Bill's Mch Shop 708 Mass ................ 1930
&lt;See Advertisement This Page)

Floor Finishers Supplies
Pur-O-Zone Cheml Co 714 Conn

.... . .. 96

Floor Machines, Renting
Malott's Hardware 736 Mass ..............• 615

PUR-O-ZONE CHEMICAL CO

RENT OUR
FLOOR SANDERS - FLOOR POLISHERS
And Many Other Kinds of Equipment

Largest Selection in Lawrence
Complete Stock of Janitor's Supplies &amp; Paints

Federal Offices
-See United State• Government
0/fice•

Feed

FARM-FLOORS

FEED-------FOR
POULTRY· LJVBSTOCK ~·:
RABBITS • DOGS
··
.
. ..

DERBY DIET

HI-SUGAR MOLASSES FEBDS
COMPLBTB MINERAL FEBDS

High111 p,.ices Paid

-

.
... m.l!D

/Of'

G,.ai,s antl S11Js
"WHBRI! TO BUY IT''
DERBY GRAIN INC 301 Locust ...........370

SCHAAK£..C &amp; SONS 210 W 6 ...•...••.... 152
UNDERWOOD J SON
SEBD - FEBD- GRAIN
Complete Line Oread Mixed Fccdl
Cane Molaues
GARDEN AND PIBLD SBBDS
Custom Grinding and Mixing
PBRTIUZBR
Prompt Dtlifllf1 Snflitt
608 Mass ...... ...................... 7

714

Conn ... . ........................ 96

Floor Maintenance
King Harold H 1122 Ky .......... .. • ....... 541

Floor Sanding
Phelps Floor Sanding Serv 301 Miss ... .. .... 2755
Pontius Carroll H 1313 Vt .................. 331

Floors
K.E N T I L J : - " - - - - - - - - - Moaern floors; beautiful colors,
un l imited designs, GUARAN·
TEED, inexpensive, 111gged, easy

to maintain-for horne.~ store,

KENTJLE
,.. =r.a~ ~

office, industry. Also KENCORK
and KENTILE RUBBER TILE.

"W FJ P. R /tJ TO BUY IT"
Anderson Furn Co 812 N H . . . ......... 252
Cook Paint and Varnish Co 919 Mass ...... 846
Salsbury Floor Covering 902 Mass . . . . . . ... . 3824

"I Can Fix It Mechanicall~'

Fertilizers
BARTELDES SEED CO 804 Mass ............. 92
DERBY GRAIN INC 301 Locust ...... ...•... . ,-ro
THURSTON CHEML C
MANUPACTURBRS
Complete Line of

I:ERTILIZERS
Por
Parms - Lawns -

Garden.

l?~
1930

6th &amp; Locust ...................... . ZTB1

Filling Stations
-See Service Stations

*

BILL'S MACHINE SHOP
708 MASS.

�32

LAWRENCE

FLORISTS

Flowers
of Distinction
-YOUR SATISFACTION
GUARANTEED -

Phone

363

941 Mass.

YOUR DOWN TOWN FLORIST

Free
Delivery

CALL-

820-

CALL

IF NO ANSWER CALL- 8550

()WENS FLOWER
SHOP
AND GREENHOUSES
(Formerly wards)

The Largest and Finest Floral Establishment in Lawrence
liSth and New York St.

Flowers Telegraphed Anywhere

�LAWRENCE

FLORISTS-FOUNTAIN

Florists
ALLISON-THOMAS FLOWER SHOP

Flowers Of Oistmction
941 Mass . . . . . . . . ....... •. . ..... 363
CS. ~ Advertisement Preceding Pagel
Blossom Shop The 326 w 9 ..........•.•... 998
&lt;See Advertisement This Page)
Flower Box 20 E 9
. . . . . . . . . . . . . 278
(See Advertisement This Pagel
MYERS C A &amp; SON

F1owers
By Wire

WEDDING &amp; FUNERAL DESIGNS
Potted Plants - Ornamental Shrubbery
JF/e T~ltgraph Flowen Anywhere
fREE DELIVERY

435 Mochigan

. ...........

312

OWENS FLOWER SHOP

15 &amp; N Y .
820
....... ...
. . 3550
(See Advertisement Preceding Pagel
Smith Floral Serv E 23 .. ................. 1326
!See Advertisement This Page)
Wards Flowers 15 &amp; N Y
. . . . . . . . . . 820
If no answer call
.......... 3550

If no answer call

Flour Mills
Bowersock Mills &amp; Power Co 5'16 Mass ......... lOB

Fountain P en s, Repairing
Rtwlands College Book Stores 1401 Ohio ••.. 1401

Let the Y ELLOW PAGES be your
shopping helper.

PHONE

SMART FLOWER STYLING
THE

BLOSSOM SHOP
Cora Sams, Owner
326 w 9

e CUT FLOWERS
e DESIGNS
e WEDDING
e PLANTS
e DECORATIONS

PHONE

1326
Nite Phone 2520-J

FLOWERS

TELEGRAPHED
EVERYWHERE

278

CALL
CALL
IF NO ANSWER CALL 749

20 EAST 9

33

�34

FRATERNITIES--FROZEN

LAWRENCE

Fraternities
ACACIA 1225 Oread .. . .........•....•.•• 3445
Alpha Epsilon Pi 1247 Ohio .........•.•..•.3513
Alpha Kappa Lambda 1127 Ohio .. .... .. . ... 1315
Alpha Kappa Lambda Annex 1128 Ohio . ....... 924
Alpha Phi Alpha 1101 Miss .... . ....•...... 2067
Alpha Tau Omega 1537 Tenn . ..........•.... 565
Beta Theta Pi 1425 Tenn ..•....•........... 552
Bogii The 745 Ohio .. ...................... 912
DELTA CHI 1245 W Campus rd •••••••.• .•. 868
Delta Tau Delta 1111 W 11 ...•.••..•.•••. 1106
Delta Upsilon 1025 W Hills ............ • .•. 2903
KAPPA ALPHA PSI 1134 Miss ............. 3353
Kappa Eta Kappa 1653 lnd .. .... .. ... . ..... 322
KAPPA SIGMA 1045 West Hills pkwy ........ 1700
Lambda Chi Alpha 805 Ohio . ... . .... . ...... 3410
Nu Sigma Nu Frat 1241 La .........•..•.•• •366
P~l Beta PI 1137 Ind ...................... 817
Phi Chi 1233 Oread ............•.......•.. 377
Phi Delta Theta 1621 Edgehili rd ..••..••••••• 957
PHI GAMMA DELTA 1540 La ..........•.. . 443
Phi Kappa 1120 w 11 .. . ...... . .. . ....... 2122

PHI KAPPA PSI

House 1100 lnd . . ......... . . . ..... . .... 284
Kitchen 1100 lnd .. . .........•.....•.•.. 472
Phi Kappa Sigma 1121 Ohio .. . . . . . . .. . . . . . 155
Phi Kappa Sigma Annex 1135 Ohio •••••••••• 3550
Phi Kappa Tau 1408 Tenn .................. 84
PI KAPPA ALPHA 1409 Tenn. . . . . . . . . . . . . 991
Pi Kappa Alpha Annex 1406 Tenn . . . ........ 3941
SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON 1301 w Campus rd ... 72b
Sigma Chi 1439 Tenn ... ..........•.....•.. 721
Sigma Chi Annex 1416 Tenn ... . . .. ... . ... .4268
Sigma Nu 945 Emery rd .... . .............. 3456

SIGMA PHI EPSILON

House 1645 Tenn ....................... 664
Sigma PI 1325 Tenn ..................... 3540
Tau Kappa Epsilon 1541 TeM ......•..•..... 348
Theta Tau 1602 La ..........••••.•••.••. . 651
Triangle 1116 Ind ..... . ................. 3021

Fraternity Management
Fraternity Management Inc 1026 Mass ... . .. . .. 66

Freezers, Food Locker Plants
Frltzel Frozen Food Lockers 546 Miss ....•... 1280
(See Advertisement This Page)
Lawrence Egg &amp; Poultry Co 832 Pa •••.•••... 500

Freezers, Food Storage Units
GENERAL ELECTRIC FOOD FREEZERs·--Save $120 each year with a General •
Electric Food Freezer • .. and have
~ ,· 1, ...
the convenience of a store in your own
home! Famous G.E. features and
~
dependability.

"IVJTRJ?!;

rn

CALL''

SA l.llS &amp; SERVICE DEALER
GENERAL APPLIANCE CO INC 1103 Mass .. 19

INTERNATIONAL HOME FREEZERS-

KRAFT TRUCK &amp; TRACTOR CO 1818 Mass.244

KELVINATOR HOME FREEZER
Safe-store foods for months~
ahead! Save money on food
1
1
bills! Get " A Home Freezer
· ,
you can Trust" ••• Kelvinator. 4 convenient sizes.

"WHERE TO BUY IT"
DEALERS

Goodrich B F Co 929 Mass . ............. .. 21
SMITH L LOKE CO 846 Mass ............ 725

Frozen Foods

FROZEN FOOD
LOCKERS
546 Mlu.

BEEF • POULTRY
PORK • FISH
Your Own
IndJvidual Family
Loeker Ia Your
"FOOD SAVINGS
BANK"
and at a Low Yearly
Rental You Can
Proceu Your Own
Frultat.. Vegetablea,
and tserrlea and
Conaerve VItal Fooda
Wild Game and Sea
Food Held at Zero Till
Ready to Cook.
Locker Plant
Me Mlu.
Call 1280

SNOW CROP FROZEN FOOD DISTRIBUTORs-FRUITS-VEGETABLES- FISH
CHICKEN - SEA FOODS
SHRIMP- JUICES
Deliveries Any Time
]. DON SHULTZ-Distributor
546 Miss ••.•••..•.••.••••••.•• .• •••• . 2

Every department of your business
should be completely represented in
these YELLOW PAGFS.

Who fixes

RADIOS?
That's a question the Yellow P ages
can answer quickly.
Just look under "Radio Service."
And you'll save time and steps.

�FRUITS-FUNERAL

LAWRENCE

35

Fruits, Retail

SAM'S
PRODUCE COMPANY

GARR£TT MARKE·...-------"Shop Us Firsf'
FRESH FRUITS &amp; VEGETABLES

WHOLESALE DISTRmUTORS
of GROCERIES and
FRESH FRUITS and VEGETABLES
Call 206
718 N.H.

Specializing in

GRADED SEED &amp; TABLE POTATOES
Wholesale &amp; Retail Mile.r N.E.

Ltu:at~d 2~

Only The Fines'

Delivery Service
40 &amp; 24 Hiqloway

011

R F D 5 .. ..... . .. ........... 4081-K-4

. Fruits, Wholesale
SAM'S PRODUCE CO

718 N H ... ... ... ..... 206
(See Advertisement This Page)

Fuel
-See Specific Kind, i.e., Coal, Ca.,
Oil, etc.

Funeral Directors
Funk T 0 940 Mass .••.••.•.....•.••..•.•. T14

FUNK'S MORTUARY &amp; CHAPEL

The Yellow Pages will help you find
a hairdresser near by.
Just look under"Beauty Shops" for
the address and telephone number.
You'll save time-and steps-when
you use the Yellow Pages.

LOWEST COMPARABLE PRICES
LIBERAL CREDIT
940 Mass ......................... 119
Funk's Mortuary &amp; Chapel 940 Mass ......•... 119
(See Advertisement This Page)
(Continued Page 37)

Liberal Credit
Air Conditioned

CHAPEL

SEATING 140
FAMILY ROOM Seating 24
PHONE

Since 1909
940·42 Mass.
AMBULANCE SERVICE

119

OR

77 4

Private Parking Lot
945 N. H.

�36

FUNERAL

LAWRENCE

A beautiful, quiet
home, completely
equipped. Ample
parking space
Operated by men
of long experience.
FRED RUMSEY- OSCAR RUMSEY

REASONABLE PRICES

..

Call

AMBULANCE SERVICE

601 INDIANA

A Complete Sympathetic
Funeral Service for Everyone
of Every Creed and Income ·

e

COMPLETELY AIR CONDITIONED

/f&gt;k•
-r~452·

NEW BALDWIN ORGAN

e

LADY ATTENDANT

SERVING TIDS COMMUNITY SINCE 1904

AMBULANCE SERVICE

1020 NEW HAMPSHIRE

�I

LAWRENCE

Funeral Directors (Cont'd)

FUNERAL-FURNACES

37

Furnaces (Cont'd)

NEFF KENNETH S 940 Mass . . .... . .. . ... 774
RUMSEY FUNERAL HOME 601 Ind ..... . . .. . 672

L.ENNOX WARM AIR HEATING SYSTEMs-More families buy LENNOX than 1 ~111/llnV
any other make! There is a ~lrlriiA
LENNOX Warm Air Heating Sys-...;;-.;;;,;;;.,;;,;;;.,;;;,;;;.;,
tem to fit your needs - large or small - for gas, oil
or coal. LENNOX dealers are trained experts - always
at your service for prompt installation, cleaning and
repairing.

&lt;See Advertisement Preceding Pagel
SCHUBERT FUNERAL HOME 1020 N H ...... 452
&lt;See Advertisement Preceding Page)

Funeral Directors, Colored
Bowser-Lee Mortuary 618 Vt .......... • • •••• 160

"WHERE TO BUY IT"
BROEKER H B FURNACE SHOP 1035 N H.1368

Fur Storage
INDEPENDENT LAUNDRY &amp; DRY CLEANERS
Downtown Plant 740 Vt ... • ......... . .... 432
Cash &amp; Carry 1903 Mass .. ........ . ... .. . 886
NEW YORK CLEANERS 926 Mass ............ 75
WEAVER AD 901 Mass .............. . • .. .. 6.36

Furnaces

Mettner Furnace Co 185U Mass .. . .. . .... . . 476
&lt;See Advertisement This Pagel

SECURITY GAS FURNACESKANSAS PUBLIC SERV CO INC 733 Mass .. 315
TEMPMASTER
FURNACES
SHEET METAL SHOP
CONVERSIOIII BURNERS
HOT WATER HEATERS
OIL BURNERS
BLOWERS
SALBS 6 SBRVICB

AMERICAN-STANDARD HEATING EQUIPMENrA complete line for radi·
ator, radiant, and warm
air heating-winter and
summer air conditioning.

T,EmPmiiST£11

---

" WHERE TO BUY THEM"
SCOTT TEMP ~~UIP CO 729 N H...... . . 3~

I

"FOR INFORMATlON CALL"
RETAILERS
Ed's Plbg Shop 645 Ill . .. ... . ........ . 1565
Guntert Plbg &amp; Wiring 1337 Mass
. . . . . 963

Broeker H B Furnace Shop 10&gt;5 N H..... ... 1368

BRYAICT FURNACES
COMPLBTE WlNTER
AIR CONDITIONING
(or the
NJIW OR MODBRNlZBD
HOMB

brqant

VINCENT'S INC 724 Mass ......... ........ . 178

For speed and convenience on business calls, customers rely on these YELLOW PAGES.

AUTONAT1C NEAn•o

CALL

~

249

CALL

"POR INPORMATlON CAll:'
RHODES HTG &amp; ROOFING CO 815 Vt .••••702
CHRISTENSON CO 400 E 23 ... . . .. .. . .. . . . 710
COLEMAN AUTOMATIC HEATING
EQUIPMENT

f

No matter what your home
heating need, there's a Cole·
,-. I
man Heating Appliance to heat (_~\,~!O=
•e=m=a=ft:..
It better with gas, oil or _
LP-gas fuels. Coleman dealers
are trained heating experts
ready to give yoo prompt dependable service.

1

We Install - Repair and Service
ALL MAKES
Deale rs For
WEIR &amp; ARMSTRONG FURNACES

J. LEE FULTZ
lOll Mass.

"WHERE TO BUY IT"
DBALBRS
HARRIS L T CO INC 802 Mass . . . .. . . ... 324

METTNER FURNACE CO.

Fultz J Lee 1011 Mass ...... . .......... . .. 249
&lt;See Advertisement This Pagel

GREEN COLONIAL-

HARRIS L T CO INC 802 Mass .. . .. . .. .. 324

JANITROL HEATING EQUIPMEN
Famous products of
Surface Combustion
Corporation. Gas or
Oil Fired Warm Air
GAS AND OIL FIRED
Winter Conditioners and Steam and hot water Boilers;
Gas Conversion Burners, Gravity and Floor Furn"es.

"W'FTERE TO BUY IT"
DBALBR

KANSAS PUBLIC SERV CO INC 733 Mass.315

•
•
•
•

Warm Air Permiter Heating
Air Conditioning
Sheet Metal
Engineering

PHONE 476
If No Answer Call 2135-M

1851Yz

Mass.

�38

FURNITURE

LAWRENCE

LAWRENCE'S
OLDEST
FURNITURE
STORE

•

To Suit Your
Every Need
At A Price
YOU Can Afford
To Pay

•

BUDGET
TERMS
•

• Englander Airfoam Mattresses
• Beattie Carpets &amp; Rugs
CALL -

~

RA•IrlinA

H.n••.lrA·r&lt;:

• National Living Room Suites
• Thayer &amp; Edison Baby Furniture
• Craddock Dining Furniture

1192 - CALL

938 MASS.

KUng Furniture
Johnson-Carper Furniture
Los Angeles Period
Furniture
Meier-Pohlmann Fnrnlture
Chrome Dinettes
EASY TERMS
WE DELIVER

Sealy Mattresses
Kenmar Furniture
Wnnda Weve Carpets
Abernathy Furniture

Complete Line of Electrical Appllances
72' MASS.

�LAWRENCE

Furnaces ( Cont'd)

Gaumer C S 1025 Miss ..................... 286
Mann C J Repair Shop 839 Ky .............. 2611

COAL
OIL
SHEET METAL WORK
FURNACE CLEANING &amp; REPAIRING

Furniture Renting

"WHERE TO GET SERVICE"
HARRIS L T CO INC 802 Mass ......... 324
~------------------

Furnaces, Oeaning
FULTZ J LEE 1011 Mass .....•............ 249

Furniture

ANDERSON FURNITURE co,- - - - - - COMPLETE LINE OF FURNITURE
and
FLOOR COVERINGS
Large Selection of Good
Used Furniture

I
I

812 N H ............ . ........ .. ~

carefully buill furniture priced {I)
suit your purse and planned to please
your pride. Traditional, Contemporary, or Provincial. The "By Drexel"
brandmark assures you of fine crafts·
111anship and true value.

@
fA
r

JL • ___ 1/

~

..

,
·

.

"WHERE TO BUY IT"
Miller Furntr Co 741 Mass .......•...... 246

FRANK'S FURNITURE CO
COMPLETE HOME FURNISHINGS
NATIONAL Livin~ Room Furniture
BTH.AN ALLEN Solta Maple Bedroom &amp;
Dining Room Furniture-Open Stock Exclusive
SEALY &amp; U.S. Foam Rubber Mattresses
Exclusive
COLUMBUS &amp; DIXIE Gu Ranges
a34 Mass ...... .. .................. 834

MILLER FURNITURE CO
e KROBHLER e SIMMONS e MBNGBL
e LAN1l e MOHAWK e ALEX. SMITII
• OSTERMOOR • AIRFOAM
• BEAUTYREST

39

Furniture Refinishing

WILLIAMS OIL-0-MATIC HEATING·- - -GAS

DREXEL FURNITURE

FURNACES--GAS

• DREXEL

Good Names to Remember

STERLING FURNITURE co--------,
By Week or Monthly
ROLL-AWAY BEDS - BABY BEDS
HI CHAffiS- PLAY PENS
BUGGIES - STROLLERS
938 Mass .. . . .. ..... . . . .. .. . . .. .. . 1192

Furniture Repairing
VAN'S FURNTR REPAIR

Repairing-Refinishing-Antiques A Specialty
311 E 9 .........•..••.....•..•.... 3599

Furniture, Used
ANDERSON FURNITURE CO 812 N H ... • .... 252
FRANK'S FURNITURE CO
We Buy Used Fumiture
834 Mass

834

. .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

STERLING FURN CO 938 Mass. . . . . . . . .

. 1192

Garages, Automobile Repairing
-See Automobile Repairing

Garages, Storage
INTERNATIONAL TRUCKS SALES &amp; SERVICE-

KRAFT TRUCK &amp; TRACTOR CO 1818 Mass 244

STUDEBAKER SALES &amp; SERVICE-

SANOERS MOTOR CO 622 Mass . .•.•••••• 616

Garbage Disposal Equipment,
Household
Norris 8ros 500 Locust. . . . ............... 1163

Gas Appliances
CHRISTENSON CO 400 E 23 .... . ..........110
VINCENT'S INC 724 Mass ........ . .... .. .. 178

No selling campaign is complete
unless it makes ''buying by telephone'
easy.

741 Mass ..... .................•... 246

STERLING FURN CO 938 Mass ........... . 1192

&lt;See Advertisement Preceding Page)
Vincent's Inc 724 Mass ..... .. . . . .. . ....... 178
(See Advertisement Preceding Page)

WEAKLEY'S FURNITURE CO
Theu Pamo11s Brands of P11mi111re
111 W ea.tlt7'1

Are they open
evenings?

Spring Air Mattresses- Flexsteel
Pullman- Abernathy - Cavalier

Bigelow- Willett- Heywood
Wakefield- Sprague Carleton

I

729 Mass ........... . . .. ........ • .. 932

Let the YELLOW PAGES be your
\\ shoppmg center.

Look in the Yellow Pages. Many
firms show their business hours,
products, services, and other
information.

�40

GAS--GIFT

LAWRENCE

Gas, Bottled
CENTRAl LP-GAS SERV
Both Bottled &amp; l arge Systems
RFD 6 . ... .

, .. .

.

. . .. 686

CSee Advertisement This Page)

Modern L P-Gas Serv 400 E 23
(See Advertisement This Page)

710

Gas Companies

BOTTLED GAS
PROPANE

CENTRAL LP-GAS SERV RFD 6 .... . ....... 686
Kansas Pubhc Serv Co lnc
,

Worlds Finest Tractor Fuel

If no anS'6'er call .... ........ ........ 2885
MODERN L P-GAS SERV 400 E 23. • • .. •• . • 710

DISTRI&amp;UTOR f OR

:~~~
CARSURETION

PHONE

686
IF NO ANSWER CAll
4084-N-3

Gas Co Ofc 733 Mass• • .••••••••• • • • • • • .• 315

After Office Hours Calf Manager's Res • •. . 306
If no answer call • . . .. . .. .. ..... . . . . 1031

Gas Furnaces
-See Furnace.

Gas, Propane

•

CENTRAL LP-GAS SERV RFD 6 . • ...... . ... 686
MODERN L P-GAS SERV 400 E 23 ..... . .. .. 710

Gas Refrigerators
-See Refrigerator•, Ga.

General Contractors
-See Contractor•, General
West 23rd at

Jet Hiway 10

&amp; 59

Gift Shops
Davis Paint Associate Store 931 Mus ••• •... 1078
ELDRIDGE GIFT SHO
A GIPT POR EVBRY OCCASION

PHONE

710
Use LP·Gas for the Five Big Jobs
COOK IN G- H EATI N G-WAT ER H EATI N G
REFR I GERATION-CARBURETI ON

Change your farm tractor carburetor
to burn Propane Gas for more power
and economy.

Cambridge Glass - Franciscan Ware
Kensington - China - Pictures
Brass - Russel Wright - Greeting Cards
lamps - Figurines
M&amp;rf &amp; Georce MaKh
707 Mass •.•.••• •• •••.•• . .•..•..• . .. 88
Grant's Pet &amp; Glfl Shop 1218 Conn . . . •• •.... 418
Masden's Walch Shop &amp; Bible Supplies
Religious Gifts &amp; Bibles
12 E 9

.

.

READ PAT INDIAN TRADER

.... ....... . .. . 47

Genuine indian Handicraft
1107! Mass . .. . . . .. ................ 947
Rowlands College Book Storts 1401 Ohio •••.• . 1401

VICK£R3 GIFT SHOP 102) Mus . .. . . •.•. . .. 933

IF YOU NEED
A PLUM BER •. .
No need to wa~te a minute!
Just look in the Yellow Pages
under "Plumbers."
They're all listed there. You
can locate one near your h ome
-quickly and easily.

H e d id a fin e job . . .

WHAT'S HIS NA ME?
The Yellow Pages can refresh
your memory and help you find
the repairman you want.
Look in the Yellow P ages for
•. . n ames . .. addresses .. . telephone numbers.

I

I

I

1

�GLASS-GROCERS

LAWRENCE

Glass, Automobile

GLASS

Auto Wrecking &amp; Junk Co Inc 712 E 9 .•..•... 954·
(See Advertisement This Page)
KAW GLASS CO 724 N 2 ................. 1397
&lt;See Advertisement This Page)
Wilson Window &amp; Glass Service 512 E 9 ....• 1052
(See Advertisement This Page)

For Every Purpose
WE DELIVER

Call 954

Glass, Plate
Wilson Window &amp; Glass Service 512 E 9 ..... 1052

Glass, Window
COOK PAINT &amp; VARNISH CO 919 Mass ....... 846

Government Offices

Auto Wrecking
&amp; Junk Co. Inc.
712 E. 9

-See City, County, State, United
States Government Officea

Grain
Derby Grain Inc 301 Locust ........ ..... .... 370
Underwood J Sons 608 Mass .................. 7

Grain Elevators
Oerby Grain Inc 301 Locust .....•....... . ... 370
India Elevator E 23 ....................... 117
Schaake C &amp; Sons 210 W 6 . ..... ........... 152

Greenhouses
Allison-Thomas Flower Shop 941 Mass . .. . ... .363
Myers C A &amp; Son 435 Mlch . . .. ............. 312
OWENS FLOWER SHOP
Formerly Wards
15 &amp; NY •.... ... .......... ....... . 820
SMITH FLORAL SERV E 23 ...... . ....... . 1326

Greeting Cards
Bullock's 2 E 7 ............ ..... .. ..... ... 379

Grocers, Retail
Borer's tash Groc 1101 N Y ...............1404
Bungalo Market 1900 Barker ....•......• •. .. .14
Busy Bee Groc 528 N 7 ....... ............ 2090
COOKE'S HELP YOURSELF GRO
Mus .... 609
Corner Groc RFD 2 Baldwin ........... 4037-K-21
CRIPE'S GROCERY 442 Locust ••••...••••3094
Dibble's 1401 Mass ...•.....•....•.....•.. 288
Dicker A J &amp; Sons 646 Locust ............... 142
Edmonds Groc 1903 Mass .•.••......••..... 605
Gene's Mkt 1301 Del ........••....•.•..... 248
Green Cut Rate Grot 309 E 12 ••.•......•.•2839
Harwood's Market 846 lnd •••••••.••.•.•••• 226

8_..

·GLASS
e

BLOCKS
e STRUCTURAL GLASS
Auto Glass Installed
While You Wait
Desk Tops 1\firrors
Window Glass - Store Fronts

PHONE 1397

KAWGLASS CO.
724 N. 2

For
Every
Purpose!
Window-Plate
Auto - Structural
Table Topa
Mlrrora - Scr""'
Storme
Sash Cords-Thermopane

WE DELIVER

WILSON WINDOW
&amp; GLASS SERVICE
512 E. 9 -----------------1~1

HAVERTY'S NINTH STREET MARK£
Complete Line of

HEATS -

GROCERIES -

VEGETABLES

BEER To Go By Cue or Bottle
Ddiv•r:.t Snwlic.-A,If'tnml Cw111
406

w9

Am.

...•.••.••.....•••.•....•.• 380

Independent Market 1000 N J ............... '517
Jayhawk Groc
Groceries-Meats-Vegetables
1342 Ohio . .. ...............•........ 242
LANDRITH'S FINER FOODS 1007 Mass ....... 173
LOG CABIN MARKET 18Z7 La ..•.......... . 910
Malone's Grocery 1201 E 13 . . • . . • . . • • . • 1229
Parsons Groc 1828 Mass ...........•. .... •. 987
Pine Ralph 718 Mass .. .... ............... . 550
(Continued Next Page)

41

Who fixes

RADIOS?
That's a question the Yellow Pages
can answer quickly.
Just look under "Radio Service."
And you'll save time and steps.

�42 GROCERS--HEATERS

LAWRENCE

Grocers, Retail ( Cont'd)

REEVES R M GROCER'v----'----.
SELECT
GROCEIU1!S MEATS VEGBTABLIS

PROSTRD I'OODS
Dlli•"1 S"•ic' -

Cillll'll Atc•••ls

Hardware (Cont'd)
•

Vernon's Hardware 1029 Mass ............... 107
Vincent's Inc 724 Mass ........... • .. . .... 178
Zimmerman &amp; Sons 1832 Mass ....... • . . .. :429

Hatcheries, Poultry
CADWELL HATCHERy-----~-.....

900 Miss .••.....••.•..••••.••••••• m

Our Sixteenth Year

Rusty's Food Market 1117 Mass ........•... 397
Service Groc 416 E 9 . .... .. ...•.. . ..... • .. 167
Sommers Grocery 1021 Mass ................ 212
STOUTS I G A
Free Daily Delivery
800 N Y .... . .. . .................. 1748
Tietjens Pleasant Grove Store RFD 2..... 4007-N-2
Toby's Groc 900! Maine •.......... .. ....... 43
TURNER'S GROCERY 100 Maine . ........... 563
UNIVERSITY PLACE 1801 Ill ............ . . 2420
Wales Groc 434 Locust. ............ .. . . .... 661
West End Market 54 7 Jnd . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 1
Wiley Market 401 Elm
.... .. .... . . ..... •447
Wright's Earl Mkt 1307 W 7 ................ 572
Wright's Mkt 2245 Barker .......... . .. . ... 2054

Custom Hatching
Baby Chicks
Feeds &amp; Supplies
1712 learnard ........... . . . ... .. . . !096

DOUGLAS COUNTY HATCHERY

U. S. APPROVED
BABY CHICKS
Custom Hatching
Poultry Supplies and Remedies
812 Vt ..........................•.. 442

Grocers, Wholesale

Poehler Mercantile Co 701 E 8 .........•.... 591
SAM'S PROD CO 718 N H . ..• .... ... ... .. . 206
Snow Crop Frozen Food Distribrs 546 Miss ....... 2

Gunsmiths
KIRKPATRICK SPORT SHOP 715 Mass . . .. .. 1018
Rutter's Shop 1016 Mass .... . . ..... .. ...... 319

Guttering
Fultz J Lee 1011 Mass .................... 249
Handy Man
Experienced Workmen For Any Job
Good References-Bill Walker Mgr
1033 R I ............ . ...... .. ...... 1325

Hair Removing
SAFFRAN BESSIE
Facial Hair Removed Safely Permanently
Medical References 103 E 11th St
Altman Bldg Kansas City Mo
., (Toil Call&gt;. Victor 4252

Handwriting Identification
Experts
Quakenbush W H 725 Miss ....... .. . .. .. ... 3918

Hats, Oeaning
Kansas Cleaners 123 E 8 ................... 420
NEW YORK CLEANERS 926 Mw ............'75
ROGERS FASHION CLEANERS 8 E 8 ........ 498

Hauling, General
ANDERSON RICHARD TRUCKING'- -- -....,
LOCAL HAULING
ROCK- SAND- DIRT- ETC.
VAN OR DUMP TRUCKS

Do~ing of All Kinds
Ditching Machine- Large &amp; Small Hi· loaders
Call Dar or Night
"N• Jo• Too Sm11/l or t'u

2325

r.,,, "

Haskell ....... .......•..•. .• 1321

Handy Man
Experienced Workmen For Any Job
Good References-Bill Walker Mgr
1033 R I . ......... . .........•. •. ... 1325

Hauling, Heavy
LAWRENCE TRANSFER &amp; STORAGE CO INC
731

Hardware
Achnlngs Hardware 1!22 Mass ...... • ........ 679
Ernst &amp; Son 826 Mass ...... . .............. 341
BRO

HARDWARE

&amp;

IMPLEMENTS

SHl!RWIN-WIWAkS PAINTS
DBXTER. W ASH.l!RS
DETROIT jliWBL GAS J.ANG!S
All BrJ.llds of Pine Tools - Piahina Taddc
633 Mass .••••••••••••••••••••••••• 631

Lawrence Hdw &amp; Home Applnces 724 Mass .... 178
MALOTT'S HARDWAR
PAINTS- W .AI.LPAPER -LINOLEUM
UNFINISHED FURNITURE
SPORTING GOODS- FISHING TACKlE
TOYS-.AND
HUNDREDS OF HOUSEHOLD NEBDS
736 Mass ....•...........•..•...•... 615

N H.15

Heaters, Gas
Vincent's Inc 724 Mass . . .................. 178

Heaters, Oil
Vincent's Inc 724 Mass .................... 178

Heaters-Uni1
JANITROL UNIT
Complete

HEATER'~----~

Size

Range, Suspended,
Duct and Floor
Models for Indus.

-f:r0.1
.'I

~·~n
'1.

AJJrowmc HEATING
trial-Commercial Space Heating. Quiet, Efficient
Propeller Fan and Blower Units. Easy to Install.
Economical Operation.
"WHERE TO BUY IT"
DEALER

KANSAS PUBLIC SERV CO 733 Mass .... .:us

�LAWRENCE

Heating Equipment

HEATIHG-IHSURANCE

43

Ice Cream

A ERICAN·STANDARD HEATING EQUIPMErrr-A complete fine for radi·
ator, radiant, and warm
air heating-winter and
summer air conditioning.

DAIRY QUEEN DRIVE-IN 1835 Mass •.•...•. 539
Dairyland 2245 Ohio. . . . . . . . . . . ....... ... 3362
FRITZEL-JAYHAWK DAIRY PRODUCTS
834 Vt.182
LAWRENCE SANITARY MILK &amp; ICE CREAM CO
202

w 6.696

VELVET FREEZE ICE CREAM_ _ _ __
"FOR INFORMATION CALL"
RETAILBRJ
CO 400 E 23 ....... ..... 710

CHRISTENSON
Ed's Plbg Shop 645 Ill ..... .. .. ........ 1565
Guntert Plbg &amp; Wiring 1337 Mass . . .. .. . .963

VELVET

"WHERE TO BUY IT"

Hosiery
B &amp; G Hosiery Shop 917 Mass ............... 556
WEAVER AD 901 Mass ................... 636

VELVET FREEZE ICE CREAM CO 742 Mass. 720
Velvet Freeze Ice Cream Co 742 Mass ......... 720

Hospitals
LAWRENCE MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
Office 325 Maine ........ ............... 870
Nurses Home 345 Maine .................. 232
Watkins Memorial Hospital
Office K U.............. .............. 890
Nurses Home K U ....................... 960

Hotels
Central Hot.el 8461 Mass .................. 3318
Colonial Hotel
Clean &amp; Comfortable-Free Parking
744 N H ........................... 2055

Eldridge Hot.el 7 &amp; Mass ................... 807
Meredith Hotel
Steam Heat-Modern-Reasonable
708 Mass .................... . ..... 2316

Hotels, Tourist
catering Only To Tourists
1447 Mass ............. ............ 2031

House Furnishings
VINCENT'S INr--- - - - - - - - r
Nationally_ Advertised
HOMB FURNISHINGS for
Bedrooms
Dining Rooms
Living Rooms
KitChens
VBNETIAN BLINllS CA8P'61'1
COMPLETE UNB OP .8LBCT1tiCAL hPPLIANCQ

Television- Ranges- Washing Machines
Vacuum Cleaners - Refrigerators
724 Mass .......................... 178

Housewares
724

Indian Goods
Read Pal Indian Trader 1107! Mass.•.•......947

Insulation Materials
LOGAN-MOORE LBR CO 627 Mass ........... 113
OWENS-CORNING FIBERGLAS HOMe-E~-­
INSULATION
Efficient, PiresaJe, Lasting
Glass Wool Insulations In
nwt.Ns.~on"'"c
Many Flcxibl~ and Rigid
FIBERGLAS
Forms for Htgb and Low
.• •
Temperature Applications;
Pipes, Ducts. Tankst. Boilen. Ovens, Refrigeration
Units and Rooms: ~:asily, Economicdly Applied.

"WHERE TO BUY IT"
Rhodes Heating &amp; Roofing Co 815 Vermont. 702

Insurance, Accident &amp; Health

Kappelman's Guest Home

VINCENT'S INC

FIRST QUALITY
ICB CR.BAM &amp; SHERBETS
B11y Di,cl 6 S""'
FREEZE
We Cater to Special
Party Otders
0PBN EVEilY DAY-CO.MPLBTB FoUNTAIN Slii.VJCI

Mass ........... . ..... 178

Housing Projects
Sunnysldt Houslngl6 &amp; Miss ............ •... 328

Monarch life Ins Co 1415 R l. ............ .. 192
Norris G R Ins Agcy 500 Locust ... . ....... .. . 197
PROVIDENT LIFE &amp; ACCIDENT INSURANCENORRIS G R INS AGCY 500 Locust .... ... 197
Standard Life Association The 8 &amp; Vt .......... 840

Insurance, Automobile
BREMER INS AGCY 21 W 9 ..... ......... . .. 95
Carlson M R 845! Mass .................... 170
CHARLTON INS AliENCY Ins bg ••••.•.•..••. 689
Daniels J S Ins Agcy 222 W 9 ....••......... 972
Noland Geo Ins Agcy 723 Mass .. ..... . . .... . 473
STATE FARM INSURANt

A

AU typ~ of automobile insurance,
Including the famous 80·20 coffi·
~
sion pioneefed by State rarm MU·
•
tuaf. All at low cost because Stale
~
..._•
F'arm aims to insure only cardul,
~ • ~
selected drivers- who have fewer
accidents! Also r~ldence liability, life and fire lnsutance.

"FOR TNFORlHA.TION CALL"

Ice
Vt . ....... ..... 48

BROWN HANK 2019 Ohio . ............. 4237
CARLSON M R 845! Mass .............. 170

The YELLOW PAGES tell you
where to buy the prodgcts and services
you want. They also help you find the
stores and tradespeople best fitted to
supply your needJ. Look in the YELLOW PAGES.

TRAVELERS AUTOMOBILE INSURANCETRAYLOR &amp; CALVIN INS AGENCY
1026 Mass.305

AMERICAN SERVICE CO

616

Insurance, Fire
CHARLTON INS AGENCY In$ b!1 ..•.......•.. 689
FARMERS ALLIANCE FIRE INSURANCENORRIS G R INS AGCY 500 Locust ....... 197
STATE FARM INS AGCY 845! Mass ......... 170

�44

LAWRENCE

INSURANCE

Insurance, Genero.l
BANKS CO THE First Natl Bank bg .••.•••••. 984
Barlow Marion A 723 Mass ................ , 47.3
Charlton Ins Agcy Ins bg •..•..•..•.••. ••. . 689
&lt;See Advertisement Fotlowlng Page)
DANIELS J S INSURANCE AGENCY ____:____:_ _,
J. S. and E. E. D.u&lt;ra.a
FIRE· AUTO ·CASUALTY
SUlU!TY BONDS- INLAND MARINE
All Lepl Reserre Rate "A" Co•paniea
Mutual or Stoclt
lJt Door Weot of Oty Library
222

w '·

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

00

0. 972

DECKER-COY RfAL EST &amp; INS AGCY

Robt.

Harrison

WAIUlBN DJtcua

3989

B.

J, COY

COMPLETE
INSURANCE SERVICE
Fire - Automobile - T1ae!t
Surety Bonds - Inland Marine
7 E 8 ... .. ..... ... ••.•••......••• . • 450

Gaines lloyd l q27 Mass ............ . .. ... 1438
Gill M R Real Est &amp; Ins Agcy 640 Mass ..• ..•. 1l1
CSee Advertisement This Page)
HESS ANDY C REAL EST &amp; INS SER'..----.

COMPLETE INSURANCE SERVICE
Written in Dependable Stock Companies
Standard Life Bg .... . ..........•.... 457
If no answer Call. . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . 1620-J

INSURANCE.
Old Line Stock And State
Approved Mutual Companies
"AU Non~1\.ssessable"

/f/lj)tJI/Hd
iNSURANCE

FlRE
AUTO

FARM

REAL ESTATE

BURGLARY

BONDS

MARINE

UABIUTY

GLASS

•
LOANS

DEL KlCllARDSON

For Complete Insurance Service

CALL

305

Phone

509RIGHARDSON
INSURANCE AGENCY
927~ ~lass.

St.-Professional Bldg.

1026 MASS.

CALL

�LAWRENCE

Insurance, General (Cont'd)

INSURANCE

Insurance, Life (Cont'd)
Sickles D l Insurance Bldg. . . . . . . . . . .
STANDARD LIFE ASSOCIATION TH..--

HOLMES &amp; PEC
INSURANCE

REAL ESTATE
7 £7 .... . .•............. .. . .... .... 55

Woodro" W. Miller
Prtaident

Ricltard F. All en
S eey. a. Gen. Counael

8tlt &amp; Vt . . . .. . . . . . . . .. . .. . . . ..

. . . . . . . . . 520

.

. ...••• . ... 878

KUNZ SOL F REAL EST &amp; INS AGCY

908 Mass . 214

--.

UFE
ACCIDENT and HEALTH
HOSPITAL

We Write Every Kind

Hotchkiss Agcy 23 &amp; La
Kelly ME 712 Mass. .

45

840

Thompson Oiled E 2009 N H ....... . .... .. .. • ST

Insurance, Title
EMICK JOHN C 737 Mass . . . . . .. . . . . . .. .•. -'96

M LEY INSURANCE AGC
MERLE AfrKINNEY- Mgr.

INSURANCE
Protection in Old Relisble Stock ComPAOies
Pue, Automobile, Surety Boo&lt;b, Accident
and Bwglary
840! Mass ....•.•.......... . . ... . . . . 250

McGrew Invstmt Co 80&amp; Mass., ....... . . .. . . . 45
&lt;See Advertisement This Page)
Noland Geo Ins Agcy 723 Mass . . ...... .. .. 473
(See Advertisement This Page)
Phoenix Indemnity Co Insurance bg ........... 40
Richardson Delbert C Ins Agcy 927! Mass.. .•. 509
!See Advertisement Preceding Page)
SIMMONS E J CO 824 Mass . ........ . .•. .. . 330
Traylor &amp; Calvin Ins Agcy 102&amp; Mass .... . .. . . 305
(See Advertisement Preceding Pagel

All Types of Insurance

Including Bonds and Aviation

Call 689

Nlghta, Sundaya a nd Ho tldaya Call.
Mra. G. E. Charlto n, 1!127; Bob Charlton,
3636{• I . W. Hartley, 26711·W: Roae
Rob naon, 245&amp;.

Ins. Bldg.

7th &amp; New Hamp1hlre

Insurance, Life
Barlow Marion A
Agent Massachusetts Mutual life
723 Mass .. . . . . .
. ....... 473
CARLSON M R 845! Mass
. . . . . . . . . . 170
College Life Ins Co of America &amp;04 Ky ....... 907
COTTON CORLETT J Lawrence Natl Blc bg . ..• W
Dean elffford D 1130 Tenn . . . . ..... ... . .. . 1812
Equitable Life Assurance Society of U S 2009 N H . 57

FARMERS &amp; BANKERS LIFE INS CO

John R Chaney-Generilf Agent
BOb Mass ...... . . .. ........... . .... 44
Monarch Life Ins Co 1415 R I. .............. 192
Moore W A 9271 Mass .... . . ..... .. . .. . 1046

NEW ENGLAND MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE-

DEAN CLIFFORD D 1130 Tenn . . . ...... 1812

e

e

INSURANCE
LOANS
REAL ESTATE

e

p;,()ft(J 45

M. CONRAD McGREW
806 MASS

NORTHWESTERN MUTUAL LIFE INS CO
LIFE INSURANCE nnd .ANNUITIES
CORLETT J. COTTON, Dist. Ar).
ALPR£0 P. GALLUP, Agt.

RUSSELL. SI!HON, Agt.
F. VrNTON WARNER., Aat.

Lawrence Natl Bfc bg

......... . . 133

PROVIDENT MUTUAL LIFE INS

co- - --r

LIFE INSURANCE - .ANNUITIES
FINANCIAL PLANNING
RAY

T.

\V IUG HT,

Gen. Agt.

Lewis C. Rankin, Associate
Standard life Bldg
. 457

GENERAL
INSURANCE
Auto- Life

Fire - Casualty
"For Personalized
SerJJke Call"

473
GEO. NOLAND INS. AGCY.
?23 Mass.

'

�46

INVESTMENTS-LADIES'

LAWRENCE

Investments

Iron Products

HEDRICK GEO INVESTMENT·~-----'---.
Eutero turuas Representative

BARRET, FITCH, NORTH &amp; CO.
A COMPLETE SERVICB IN .ALL

INVESTMENT SECURITIES

LAWRENCE IRON WKS Ft of N J .. ......... 106

Janitor's Supplies

PUR-O-ZONE CHEMICAL en--- - - - -,
JANITOR'S SUPPLIES &amp; PAIN'XS
Monubcturers- Wholesalers
Distributors

806 Mass •......•...•.•. . ..•• . • . • . •• 44

COMPLETE SERVICE
Plenty of Free Parking Space
714 Conn............. . . . .. . ....

9RNAMENTAL.

moN

Doors • Gates • Fences
Grills • Columns
Window Guards
Balconies
CALL

576

CALL

McConnell Lumber Co

96

Balfour l G Co 411 W 14 ..... .... ......... !07
Gu5Ukon B G 809 Mass . ... ..... .. . ...... . 911
Lauter Jewelry 411 W 14 ••••••.•• • •••••• •• 307
Marks Sol &amp; Son 817 Mass ............ .. .. 654
P~rsons Ed W 725 Mass
.. . .. .. . . .. . . 717
REUSCH-GUENTHER JEWELRY 824 Mass . .. . 903
(See Advertisement This Page)
Roberts F H 833 Mass . .. ... . . . ....... . . . .. 827

SAMPLES WATCH SHO

Nationally Known
DIAMONDS -WATCHES -JEWELRY
Highly Skilled
WATCHMAKERS &amp; JEWELERS
9141 Mass . • .• ...•. . •. ...••.. • .... . 368

8« E 13

WOLFSON'S 743 Mass .. . ...... .. . . ........ 675

Junk
AUTO WRECKING &amp; JUNK CO INC 712 E 9 . . . 954
KAW MOTOR &amp; SALVAGE CO

Good Prices Paid
724 N 2 ....•.•••..... .... .. . ...... 1397

Complete Jewelry Line
"All Work Guaranteed"

Call 903

Reusch - Guenther
Jewelry
824

Mass.

Keys
Blevins Bike Shop 701 Mich .............•....73
BOWMAN RADIO &amp; TELVSN SERV 826 Vt .. . . 138

FACKLAN DUTCH

24 Hour Service Calls
320 Mill ......•...... ........ . .. . . .. 360

Rutter's Shop 1016 Mass ...•.• .••.••.• • ..•• 319

Kitchen Equipment, Household
AMERICAN KITCHENS-DISHWASHERs-

FRANK'S FURN CO 834 Mass . . . . •• . .. •. •834

He did a fine job ...

WHAT'S HIS NAME?
The Yellow Pages can refresh
your memory and help you find
the repairman you want.
Look in the Yellow Pages for
..• names ... addresses .. . telephone numbers.

YOUNGSTOWN KITCHENS-

BELLINGER ELEC 814 Mass .•..•. • • •• •• 428

Ladies' Ready-To-Wear
Adelane's
Ladles Re•dy-to-Wur
823 Mass •.•••• . •• .•. . .. ••••• • • • • . 554
BROWN'S TOGGERY 830 Mass .. ..•.• . • ..•.. 389
Campus West 1420 Crescent rd .. . . . .... . ....939
Greene's Ready-To-Wear 845 Mass ...•••• • • .. 6111
Hamilton's Dress Shop 943 Mass •••••••••• ln7
Harzfelds 1144 Incl . • ••• •••• • •. .•.. .. • ••• • . 190
Litwin's 831 Mass •. . ••.• .••.... • .. .• .•. . 1088
Palace Clolhing Co 843 Mass .• •. . .. . .• •• • • .. 913
Terrllrs Dry Goods 803 Mass . •.....•• • .. ••• •.325
The Jay Shoppe 835 Mass . . .. ... ....... ... . 771
WEAVER AD 901 Mass . .. .. . ..... . ....... 636

�LAWRENCE

47

Linoleum ( Cont'd)

Laundries
ACME BACHELOR LAUNDRY &amp; DRY
CLEANERS 1111 Mass.646
INDEPENDENT LAUNDRY &amp; DRY CLEANERS
Downtown Plant 740 Vt . ................. 432
Cash &amp; Carry 1903 Mass .............. ... 886
Launderaide 813 Vt .... . .. . ...... . ...... 2515
LAWRENCE LAUNDRY &amp; DRY CLEANERS
1001 N H.383
RISK'S HELP YOURSELF LAUNDRY 613 Vt .. 623

Laundries, Self Service
GRAVITT'S AUTOMATIC LAUNDRY

916 Mass.1630
LAUNDERAIDE--- - - -- - - - 1

-,

MAYTAG CONVENTIONAL
AUTOMATICS
FOUR 40-LB. DRYERS
Lowell Risk, Owne.r
613 Vt ..... . ....................... 623
LAUNDER~IT

L.fNOLBUM -

co------.

KENTILI! -

AsPHALT TlLB

and RUBBER TILl!
Prompt mstallaJion ser11ict llflttilt~&amp;le
Phone for free estimate
919 Mass .......................... 846

GOLDSEAL LINOLEUMSTERLING FURN CO 938 Mass .. ... . .. . .1192
Malott's Hardware 736 Mass . . . . . . . . •. .. .. 615
RHODES HEATING &amp; ROOFING CO

LINOLEUM

a:

Pabco

Kentile &amp; Armstrong Asphalt Tile

Shop Whilt Your Cloth11 W41h And Dr1
Ralph B. Freed, Owner
Open 7:30 .A.M. to 6:00 P.M.
813 Vt ............ . .............. 2515

RISK'S HELP YOURSELF LAUNDRv----

COOK PAINT &amp; VARNISH

.Armstrong

21 .AUTOMATIC BENDIX WASHERS
MACHINE DRYERS
We will dry clothes washed at your home.

ROGERS

LAUNDRIES-LIQUORS

1407 Mass . ... • ...... 243

Libraries, Public
Lawrence Free Public Library 845 Vt ........ .. 574

Libraries, Rental
Book Nook 1021! Mass . ................... 666
.,

Light &amp; Power Companies
Kansas Power &amp; Light Co 700 Mass ...•..••.. 880
After Ofc Hrs Call
Engineering Offices . .. ............... 1284
Service Calls . . . .
. .... . . .. . .... 1240
Local Office ......... .. .... • ........ 1276
General Office . . . ..... . . .. . . ........ 1263

Lighting Fixtures
Guntert Plumbing &amp; Wiring 1337 Mass ...... 963
Norris Bros 500 Locust ..................1163
Olson Bros 934 Mass ...................... 515

Ot~r Experitnud Mtn Will Appl1
R. H. "DUSTY" RHODES-owner
815 Vermont .......................702

Liquors

DOCKERY CLARENCE , . - - - - - - - ,

BEER -

WINE -

LIQUORS

OPBN 9 A.M. TO ll P.M.

1014 Mass ............••••......... 703

GREENE'S RETAIL LIQUOR STORE
Open to .A.M. to 11 P.M.
Sat. Open 9 A.M.

BEERWINELlQUORS

806 Vt ..... ...•. ........... ..... .. 1060

Owens Eric 7 E 9 .. . . ........ . ............ 627
REVENEW ROB 1

DRIVE-IN LIQUOR STORE
Imported and Oo!Jle$tic
WINES .AND BR.ANDIBS
All Well-Known
UQUORS .AND BBBR
805 Vt ....•..............•........1102

RHODES DUST,

"Conveniently Located"
WHISKEYS
GINS
WINES
BEERS
Open 9 A.M. to 11 P.M.

646 Mass .. .. .................... ..3210

Linoleum
ANDERSON FURNITURE co--- - - -

ARMSTRONG LINOLEUM
ASPHALT TILE - KENTlLE
PLASTlC WALL TILE
COMPLETE LINE of WOOL CARPETS
Call For Free Estimate
812 N H.......... . ................ 252

ARMSTRONG LINOLEUMMALOTT'S HOW 736 Mass ........... ... 615

Schleifer Bros 840 Mass . ............... ... 764
SKILLET'S RETAIL LIQUOR
W!LLFRBD EtroALY,

Owntr

l.E.ADING BRANDS

WHISKEY-BEER-WINE
1906 Mass ........................ 3518

Stam Thos 731 N H............. ..... ....3507
Tusten Retail Liquor Store 10 W 9 . ... . .. .. .. 740

�48

LIVE STOCK-LOANS

LAWRENCE

Live Stock
Dicker &amp; Sklnnu Live Stock 500 Maple ••.•••• 145

Loans, Automobile
Capital Finance Co 935 Mass. • . . .•..••... . .313
(See Advertistment This Pagel
DOUGLAS COUNTY STATE BANK 900 Mass. 3200
FIRST NATIONAL BANK 746 Mass • . . ... 30

LAWRENCE LOAN &amp; FINANCE CO 8 E 7•.... 101
&lt;See Advertisement This Pagel

LAWRENCE NATIONAL BANK 647 Mass .•.. . .. 70
SECURITIES INVSTMT CO 9 E 8 ........ . . 134
(See Advertisement This Pagel

VALLEY SECURITY CO

aa~~

E. M. C..wuoN, Prop.

AUTOMOBILE • FURNITURE
&amp; HOME APPLIANCES
Quick - Confidential
FrimdJy Ser11ice
PHONE

10~

PHONE

LAWRENCE

LOAN &amp; FINANCE CO.
DON 0. PHELPS &amp; E. RICE PHELPS

8 East 7th St.
1ST DOOR WEST OF POST OFFICE

LOANS
AUTO - FURNITURE
QUICK. CONFIDENTIAL SERVICE
10211 Mass . • . . . . • . . .••.•••.•....• 126

Loans, Furniture
a E 7 ..... 101
Securities Jnvstmt Co 9 E 8. , ....... . .. . . .. . 134

LAWRENCE LOAN &amp; FINANCE CO

Loans, Personal
DOUGLAS COUNTY STATE BANK 900 Mass .. 3200
LAWRENCE NATIONAL BANK 647 Mass .... .. • 70

Securit ies lnvstmt Co 9 E 8 ................. 134

Loans, Real Estate
Dollglis Coumy Bldg &amp; loan Assn 737 Mass .. ..•79
&lt;See Advertlstment This Pagel

Les Halberg

Loans Are Available for the Purchase
Refinancing Building or Repairing

-

INVESTMENTS-

SAFETY OF YOUR INVESTMENT
INSURED UP TO $10,000.00

Call 79
JOHN C. EMlCK, PRES.

DOUGLAS COlJNTY
Bl:.DG. &amp; lOAN ASSN.
737 MASS.

Auto- Furniture
Equipment - Appliances
Hade Promptly on New or Used Can
Reflnanc:.
We will
reduce

your
payments
and alao
loa n you
extra

caab.

Telephone 134

�LOANS--MILLINERY

LAWRENCE

Loans, Real Estate (Cont'd)
FIRST NATIONAL BANK 74o

Mus ........... 30

Holmes &amp; Peck 7 E 7 ... . ............ ..... . 35
LAWRENCE BLDG &amp; LOAN ASSN 800 Mass .... 55
LAWRENCE NATIONAL BANK o47 Mass
.70

NATIONAL FARM LOAN ASSN OF LAWRENCE

Federal Land Bank Loans
John Rosenbaum Sec-Treas
723 Mass .............•...•......... 446

Locksmiths

49

Mattresses
.... . 252

Anderson Furniture Co 812 N H

ENGLANDER AIRFOAM &amp; INNERSPRING5-

STERLING FURN CO 938 Mass .. ... ... 1192

FRANK'S FURN CO

Sealy-U S Foam Rubber Mattresses

834 Mass . ........... . ............. 834
Miller Furniture Co 741 Mass ............... 2-46
SEALY POSTURPEDIC-

VINCENT'S INC 724 Mass . .. . .. . ... . ... 178

FACKLAN DUTCH

24 Hour Service Calls
320 Mill ........ .... ...... .. ........ 360
Rutter's Shop 1016 Mass ....... ............ 319

Meat Markets
LAWRENCE ROY MARKET

Fresh &amp; Cured Meats-Oellve,y
906 Mau
...... ..... . ..... ...
RIEVES R M GROCERY 900 Miss .•...•.•..•. 413

m

Lodges
Eagle Lodge 15 E 9 .. . . . ..... . .........•.. 641
Elks B P 0 E 725 Vt . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 595
Lake View Club House RFD 1. .. ........ 4056-K-4
Masonic Temple 1001 Mass ................. -'33
Odd Fellows Hall 205 w 8 ......... ......... 233
Rebekah State Assembly Standard Life Bg ..•.. 367

Luggage

Men's Furnishings
Carl's Clothiers 905 Mass ..... . ••. .•.•.••••• 90S

GIBBS CLOTHING CO 811 Mass . .... ........ 459
OBERS LEADING CLOTHIERS 821 Mass ...... 203
TOWN SHOP THE 84U Mass • ...... ...... 983
University Shop The 1420 Crescent Rd ...... .. 715

SAMSONITE LUGGAGEOBERS LEADING CLOTHIERS 821 Mass ... 203
Weaver A 0 901 Mass ..... ................ 6.36
WOLFSON'S 743 Mass .. ................... 675

Lumber
Burgner-Bowman-Matth~

lbr Co 308 W 6 .••.. 81

Metal Stamping
Kansas Mfg Co The 623 Vt . ...•.....•.. .... 411

Millinery
Boggs &amp; Albert MillinerY 902 Vt ............. 849
WEAVER AD 901 Mass ... .. .......... .. .. 636

FRIEND PAUL H LUMBER CO
BUIIDING MATEIUALS OF ALL KINDS

Insulation
Paints
Lime
Roofing Materials
Cement
Mill Vv ork and Tile

Let the YELLOW PAGES be your
shopping helper.

1030 Mass ... ......... ..... ......... 42

LOGAN-MOORE LBR CO 627 Mass .. . ........ 113
r,cCONNELL LUMBER CO 844 E 13 ......... 576
eedy Pete Lumber Co 1846 Mass .. .......... 176
Shaw Lumber Co 701 Vt ................... 147
(See Advertisement This Page)

Mac'hine Shops
Bill's Mch Shop
See Adv Fix It Shops
708 Mass ....... . .....•............1930

KAISAS llfG CO TH

BUILDING
MATERIALS

GENERAL MACHINE WORK
Specialty Hardware
Metal Stampinr

Truck and Railroad Car Seale

623 Vt ..................•....•...•. 411
LAWRENCE IRON WKS Ft of N J ... .. ...... 106

Market Places

•
•
•
•
•
•

Millwork
Cabinets and Shelving
Home Building
Paints
Roofing

Insulation

HawrtY's Ninth Street Market 406 W 9 ....... 380
Lawrence Roy Market 906 Mass .............• %12

Maternity Apparel
Stork Haven The 841 Mass •••••••••••••••• !515

Is that store open tonight? Many
businesses Jist the hours they are open
in these YELLOW PAGES.

CALL

147

SHAW

701 Vermont

LUMBER

co.

�50

LAWRENCE

MONUMENTS-MOVERS

Monuments
Endacott Norman 810 E U . ................ 449
LAWRENCE MEMORIAL CO 810 E U ........ 449

ROCK OF AGES FAMILY MONUMENTS

Motion Picture Projecting
Equipment
Hixon Studio 721 Mass .. ...... .....•.... . .• 41

Motore, Electric

look for this seal on your

PATCHEN ELEC SERV 512 E 9 ..•••••.•...• 694

Rock of Ages monum.nt or
mark~. It identifies all
Rock of Ages monuments.

Movers

Call or visit your authorized

dealer listed below.

"WHERE TO BUY THEM"

AERO MAYFLOWER LONG DISTANCE
MOVING SERVICE
America's fineatl 48-atate
..1

AUTHORIZI!.D DI!.ALI!.R

eet"Yice and into Canada.
Modem, company.owned

LAWRENCE MEMORIAL CO 810 E 13 ..... 449

Matvfikn¥eJfAl

una, and company-trained drinn. Und!Yided
responaibility. Standard I.C.C. ratea. Warehouse aa-ents enrywhere. Eaay and Safe!

Moth Proofing Service

"WHERE TO BUY IT"

New York Cleaners 926 Mass ••• . •...•..•.••. 75

LAWRENCE TRANSFER &amp; STORAGE
CO INC 731 N H ..................... 15
If no answer call ................. 1m-M

Motion Picture Cameras
-See Camertu

Motion Picture Film Libraries
Hixon Studio 721 Mass ...•.........•...••.•. 41

AERO MAYFLOWER TRANSIT CO 731 N H ... 15
If No Answer Call . ..........•........1m-M
GAUCK TRUCK LINE
MOVING
Local and Intrastate

Motion Picture Film Producere

All Loads Insured
PACKING

Centron CorPOration Inc 1107 Mass ............ 50

CAll Us An1 Tin"
OVJil 30 YIAJ.S l!xPBJJJNC&amp;

Most dealers, services and products
are listed in the YELLOW PAGES.

237 Ark ..... .•••.. .. ...•••. ...•••.•m

HALL BROS TRUCK LINES 1045 Pa ..... .... 936
&lt;See Advertisement Following Page)

~ocal and L!ong Distance
PACKING &amp; CRATING

Agent Knowles Vans Inc.
11 E. 9th St.

�LAWRENCE

Move.-s (Cont'd)
HETZEL HEAVY
HAULERs 735 N H ....... 158
!See Advertisement This Page)

MOVERS-NATIONAL

51

Heavy Haul•·ng

KING VAN LINES
Fir~Hl inclostd, padded,
van$. Estimates without
obligation. Advise number
rooms. Nation wide laclt·
oties. Special service to
California. Lowest avail·
able rates.

K;:JWG
VAN LINES

"FOR INFORMATION CAU/'
Smith Ethan A Moving &amp; Transfer Co 11 E 9 .46

LAWRENCE TRArlSFER &amp; STORAGE CO INC

731 N H 15

If no answer call ........•...........1m-M
&lt;See Advertisement This Page)

SMITH ETHAN A MOVING &amp; TRANSFER CO

11E9.46
(Set Advertisement Preceding Page)

~lusic
lltfl Mask Co '25 Mus .................... 375

Music Instructions
WARD MUSIC

Spedalizin~

In

House Moving - Raising
Heavy Maehinery - Boilers
Ste-el Erection
Derrick &amp; Winch Trucks
Low Boy
Flat &amp; Pole Traile-rs
WE RENT AIR OOMPRESSORS

Private Instruction On All Instruments

HETZEL

908 Mass .............. . ............. 91

Musical Instruments
ODELL'S INSTRUMENTAL SERVtcr!- - --,
Slll11 6 S#rri&lt;1

HEAVY HAULERS
735 N H

Phone 158

Coon-Pan Amerian
Haynes - Blessing - Bach
UPAm SEAVlCI- nEJI J!STDL\TES

m

925 Mass •••.••••• .•.•••• •• • • • ••...
It No Answff can .... .. ... . ...... 1679-J

WARD MUSIC

RENTALS-SALES-INSTRUCTION
.,ON ALL INSTRUMENTS
A ccordion Spetia/isu
908 Mass ............................ 91

National Guard
NaUonal Ciuatd

u.s w

11 ............ • ......!9

e MOVING
e STORING
e PACKING
e CRATING
JUSTr
CALL

Call

If no anawer call 1777-M

936

BILL VILLEE-Mgr.

INS URED

LAWRENCE TRANSFER

HALL BROS.
TRUCK LINES
1045 Pa.

&amp; STORAGE CO., INC.
731 New Hampshire

�52

LA WRENCE

NEON-ORGANIZATIONS

Oil, Fuel

Neon Signs
-See Sign Manufacturer•

AtHER OIL CO 645 Locust ............ . .. . .. 37

Newspap ers

HARRIS L T CO IN

If no answer call ...... . ..•..... . . , , .... 3757

JOURNAL-WORLn------- -- --,

THE HOMETOWN NEWSPAPER

of 8200 Families
Journal-World Ads Gel Results Quitk
722 Mass . . . •. . • .. ...••• .... .. • .• . • . . 22
Kansas City Star Distributor
Subscr ipt ions &amp; WAIIt Ads Taktn
801 Mass . .......... . .. . . .. . ........ . 17
Olltlook Tht 1005 Mus ....... . .. .. . .... . .. 542

Novelties
EMICK JOHN H 1014! Mass .............••. 343

Nurseries
Mount Hope

Nu~rfH

Eldridge Hottl .. . ...... 441

SMITH FLORAL SERVICE E 23 .•.. •• .•.. • . 1326

FUEL OIL
FOR ALL TYPE BURNERS
T rained Sen'ice Men to Senice All
Types Oil Burner Equipment
802 Mass . . . . .• . .......... ....• • . • .. 324
Nights- Sundays- Holidays Call .. • . •1101-W

NATIONAL MARKETING CO 920 Del. ........ 357

If no answer call .......... . .•.....• . ... 3626

Oil Marketers
Continental Oil Co Bulk Agent 9 &amp; Del. ...... . 573
If no answer call . . ....... . ..• . .. . . . ..... 867
Hatfi eld-Jackson Oil Co 6 &amp; Locust ..... .. ... 1009
lnce J W 1729 Vt . ... . ........... . ....... 2486
Jones Serv Sta &amp; Oil CQ E 23 .•.... . . . ..... 2086
Kaw Valley Oil Co 1318 W 7 ... • . . ... . ...• 2061
NATIONAL MARKETING CO 920 Del .•. •• •• •• 557
If no_ an~~~~ ..... .. . .. .. .... . ... 3626

PHILLIPS 66 PRODUCTs-

ACHER OIL CO 645 Locust . . .••.. . .. .. ... 37
If no answer call ....... . ........... .3757

Nurseries, Day
Kansas Unlv Nursery Scbool No 1 1100 Mo ••...254

Oculists

.

Hutchinson R B 917 Mass . . . ... .. ..... . .. . . ~

Office Supplies
Bullock's 2 E 7 .. ........ ..•. . .. . . .• . • • • .

CRANE &amp; CO IN

m

A Complete Line of

SHAW WALKER
Steel Files and Desks
For Your Office
643 Mass •.••••• :: • •• •••••••••••••• 501

uwf.nct Typewriter Exchange 735 Mus .. .. .. 548

ROWLANDS COLLEGE BOOK STORE$

1401 Ohio .1401

SCHOOLEY OFFICE SUPPLIE
"Everything for lhe Office"

QUALITY PRINTING
AND LITHOGRAPHING
STEEL AND WOOD
OFFICE FURNITURE

Rice 011 Co 1305 W 4 ....... .. ... ... .. .... U74

SINCLAIR REFINING CO BULK AIAT

623 Locust.1358
Skelly Bulk Plant E Santa Fe Yards .. . •. .. . .. . 700
Socony-Vacuum Oil Corp Agl 1940 N H •• . • .. 1274
STANDARD OIL BULK PLANT 846 Pa .•. .. .. 1644
If no answer call . ....... .. .. . • . •• .. 2Z12-W

TEXACO PRODUCTsEL NAVAJO CT RFD 1 ... . .. . .......... 2030
Texas Co The 802 Mass ... . ... .... ... ... ... U'J

Optometrists
BRAY WM H

Successor To B F Nanninga
91.9 Mass . . .... . .•. ......... •• .... •. 191
GUSTAFSON B G 809 Mass ... ........ .. ... 911
LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO 1025 Mass ••••••. •425
Roberts F H 833 Mass
. • .....•.. . ..•.. . . 'll2:1
SJLLIX DALE H 839! Mass .......... .. .... 979

Organizations, Business
Lawrence Wo11W1s Club 1941 Mass•••••• • •••• 209

Organizations, Farm
Douglas County Farm Bureau Assn 1008 Mass •• 344

Organizations, Labor
"FOR INFORMATION CALL"
Schooley Print ing &amp; Stationery Co 1434 Walnut
Kansas City Mo &lt;Toll Call). K C Victor 0511

Oil Burners
H.ARRIS l T CO INC 802 Mass...... .. ..... 324
WILLIAMS OIL-0-MATIC HEATING-

HARRIS L T CO INC 8 02 Mass ......... .324

Cvpenters' Union No 2279 719! Mass . . .. ....m
laborers &amp; Mason Tenders Locall290

7191 Mass.688

Organizations, Medical Relief
Douglas County Medical Strv CQurt HoUM . . .. . . 146

Organizations, Religious
Wesley Foundation 1300 Orud . .. .... . ... . .. 532

Every department of your business
should be completely represented in
these Y ELLOW PAGES.

Organizations, Veterans"
American Legion 7 E 1 .... . . ..... . .. . . .. . 13ll
Veterans of Foreign Wars
Club Room 8 &amp; N H . . . .• • . .• ..•.• • .. • .•. . 51
Restaurant 8 &amp; N H . • . .• . •. • . •. . ... ...•3030

�LAWRENCE

Red Cross Community bg . .•..••.•.... •••.•. 405
Salvatson Army The 729 1/t ................. W
Social Servl~ League 905 R I ..•............ 909

Organizations, Young People
Girl Scout HdqtrS 7291 Mass ••••••••••••••• S429

Organs
Reuter Organ Co Ft of N H ............•.... 520

DAVIS EVER-BRICHT

PAINT~-----

gjlni"A
•

DA-TEX
Paints, 1/arnlshes, Enamels for
every purpose. Full line Brushes,
Paint supplies, Large stock
Wallpaper, all prices. Complete
Housewares and Gift Department.

IWV.,

PAINTS

''WHERE TO BUY THEM'
DAVIS PAINT ASSOCIATE STORE
9&gt;1 Mass.l078

Osteopathic Physicians &amp;
Surgeons, D. 0.

DU PONT PRE-TESTED PAINT5-

Eustace H E 1021l Mass ...•...••.•.....•. 499
Residence 1033 1/t .....•.. .. • .......•. . 465

IIAJLHIOT A A 129i rAas:s. . . . . . . . . . . . . .

1318

Residence 1516 N H . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 2232-R

BURGNER-BOWMAN·MATIHEWS LBR CO
30B

w 6.81

DUTCH BOY PAJNT
PAINTS, VARNISHES &amp;

Outboard Motors

ENAMELS

Francis Sport Gds

Mercury &amp; Chris-Craft

728 Mass ... .................. ...... 640

Ove1·all Clean er s

MECHANICS OVERALL CLNG co,- - ----.
WHY BUY- WE RENT
COVERALLS- SHOP COATS SHIRTS &amp; PANTS
No additional charge for mending

ManulacLured by
NATIONAL LEAD COMPANY

" WHERE '1'0 J)UY THEM"
Ernst &amp; Son 826 Mass .................. 341
Ernst &amp; Son 826 Mass .....................S41

Pulup 1111d Dd1 ver1 Serrice Twice Wrd/1
1720 Wabash Kansas City
Mo &lt;Toll cam Benton 1656

FRIEND PAUL H LUMBER CO 1030 Mass •• 42

GREAT WESTERN COLORIZER PAINTS
"You Can Put Your Confidence in
Great Western Paint"

Package Delivery Service

COLORIZER PAINT$-1322 COLORS
IN ALL FINISHES FROM WHICH
TO CHOOSE

-Su Delivery Service

Paint, RetaiJ
BENJAMIN MOORE PAINT'r--- - - - -

"WHERE 1'0 BUY IT"
RAMSEY W A SHADE SHOP

Shades - Wall Paper - Paints- Llnoleu111
818 Mass ............•..•.••..•.. 606

COMPLETE PAINT SERI/lCE
LARGEST STOCK
PLENTY OF FREE PARKING
SPACE

Malott's Hardware 736 Mus ..•••..••.•• . ..• 615
McCONNELL LUMBER en--------,

"WHERE TO BUY IT''

A Co.,.pltll U1tt of

714 Conn .......

96

8 P S PAINT
Use FLATLUX
The Flat Wall Paint that' s
Made with OIL

For Years of Beauty

GLIDDEN PAINTs-

o.nd replacing of buttons

PUR-O-ZONE CHEMl CO

53

Paint, Retail (Cont'd)

Organizations, Welfare

.

ORGANIZATION$-PAINT

~
.·

.Q ',

One Coat covers Wallpaper
and other lnteriOI" Surfaces

ANTHONY PAINTS &amp; V.ARNISHES
BRUSHES and PAINTERS SUPPLIBS
BUILDING MATEIUALS
LUMBER-cEMENT-ROOFING
CUSTOM MADE WJ.NOOWS &amp; DOORS
844 E 13 .......... ... ............. 576

PRATT &amp; LAMBERT PAINTS &amp; VARNISHES -

Not a Water Pai nt

"WHERE TO BUY IT"
ZIMMERMAN &amp; SONS 1832 Mass •••••••• 429

COOK'S PAJNTS &amp; YARNISHfS
"Best Weather"
for Weru and
•
A complete line of decorative rna·
ttrlal$, 11\Ciudlng paints, varnishes
lacquers, enamels, linoleums, wall , •
ccmrlnQs and painting accessories.

"WHERE TO BUY IT"
Cook Paint &amp; Vamlsh Co 919 Mas ........ 846

PAINTS &amp; VARNISHES

FOR EVERY PURPOSE

"WHERE TO BUY IT"
Sllaw Lumber Co 701 Vt ................147

SATIN LUMINALL-

MALOTI'S HOW 736 Mass

............ 615

SEIDLITZ PAINTS &amp; VARNISHEsVERNON'S HARDWARE 1029 Mass •...... 107
(Continued Next Page)

�54

PAINT-PHONOGRAPHS

LAWRENCE

Paint, Retail (Cont'd)

PAINTING

SHERWIN-WILLIAMS

PAINTs--~--­

see the lll!l\' Paint aJid Color
STYlE OOIOE- aatllentk: color
schemes for every reom.
SWP "Weatherated" House Paint.
KEM-TONE, EcOAOI'IIyWall Finish.
KI!'M-ru.o, Miracle Lltstre Enamel.

Interior - Exterior
Residential
Commercial-Industrial

Call 1456

SUPER KEN-TONE, Ready-to-Use
OeJIIICil WaJ!table Wall Paint.

ESTIMATES FREE
NO JOB TOO LARGE
OR TOO SMALL

~'WHERE

TO BUT IT"

DBAU!R
GREEN BROS f&gt;33 Mass . ... . ..•.. • .... • 631

Member of ----l~
Pa in ting and
Decorating Contractors

Stevenson's Paint &amp; Wallpaper Store 1011 Mass.l22

DAVID L. HIGGINS &amp; SON
1202 Almira

Paint, Wholesale
COOK PAINT &amp; VARNISH CO CJ19 Mass . . ••. .• 846
PUR-O-ZONE CHEML CO 714 Conn . . .. . . . .. . . 96

Painters
Handy Man
Experience• Workmen For AnY Job
Good References-Bill Walker Mgr
1033 R I. ..... ... . .. . . 00 .... 00 . . . 001325
Higgins David L 1202 Almira .. •• •.•• • .•••• 1456
(See Advertisement This Page)
Painters &amp; Decorators Local No 2 719~ Mass . .. 451
PETERS WM OLIVER 1629 Ark . .. .. ...... 822
(See Advertisement This Pagel

(\•

PHILLIPS A V PAINTIMG PAPERIMG &amp;
DECORATING SERV 605 Ala 1206

EXPERT WITH COLORS

PHONE 822

Paper

OOMPLETELY INSURED

SMITH PAPER SUPPLY C O - - - - - - . ,

FREE ESTIMATES

1629 Ark.

Wrapping Paper-Bap-C•Cream Container&amp;-Pic:nic
Sttppli-Napkilu•-Towels
Scotch Ta-Twine and
Paper Szhool Slllltlliea
737 N H . .... ..... ...... . ......... . 336
Tissu~Ice

Paper Hangera
Handy Man
Experienced Workmen For Any Job
Good References-Bill Walker Mgr

1033 R I . ... ... . ..... .. .. . . .. .. . _.. 1325

CALL 511
~.rM.·~.;-IiefL ROOFING

Pest Control Service
Everley Roofing Co 617 Vt . . . .. ............. 511
(See Advertisement This Page)

~:/t[k_{f'l COMPANY
617 Vt.

611

PHONOGRAPHS
RENTED
For Your
Dances &amp; Parties
Used Records

PHONE

343
DAY OR NI'l:E

JOHN H. EMICK
1014Yz Mass.

SCHENDEL PEST CONTROL
Headed by a Graduate l'liolo&amp;Jst
TEI!.MITES, JtOACHES, RATS, MICB
Bl!DBUGS AND OTHER PESTS
Ho.-e SerYice- Monthly Business Service
Materiili &amp; Equipment For Sale
Member State and National Pest Control As.oc.
lOll E 6 TGpeka Ks . . ..... &lt;Toll call) 2-8102

Pet Shops
Grant's Pet &amp; Gift Shop 1218 Conn ......••.. 418

Pet Supplies
BARTELDES SEED CO 804 Mass •.••..•••..••92

Pharmaciste-See Druggiata
Phonographs, Coin Operated
EWCK JOHN H 1014! Mass ....... 00 ....... 50
&lt;See Advertisement Tills Page)

�LAWRENCE PHONOGRAPH-PHOTOGRAPHERS

Phonograph Records
Bell Music:

Photographers, Portrait (Cont'd)

Co

GRAHAM STUDIO

Victof---(olumbl~ltoi-Dec:ea

t25 Mass .....•.....•.............. m
EMIC1C JOHN H 10141 Mass.•• •• ••••••••••• S43
Re,ord Nook The

PERSONALITY PORTRAITS
You Will Love Yourself
In A Graham Portrait

33 1/3-'15-78-RPM-Records
B'lo Mass . .... ..... ......... ........ 725

Photo Engravers

211

-See Engraver•, Photo

w 8 .......................... 3199

HIXON STUDIO 721 Mm ................... 41

Photo Finishers
HIXON STUDIO,- - - - --

55

-=-....:..-_,

&lt;See Advertisement This Page&gt;
(Continued Next Page)

QUAIJTY PHOTOFINISHING
As1 for Alb11m Prints

COMMERCIAL PHOTOGRAPHY
721 Mass ........................... 41

Photographers, Commercial
Brown Hank Custom Photographer 2019 Ohio .• 4237
D' Ambra Photo Strv 644 Mus .. .•........ ... 934
Estes Studio 9271 Mass ... ........... ...... 15!

GRAHAM STUDIO 211 W 8 ............... 3199

Kampus Photo Serv 1316 Ky ............... 1096
O'Bryon Studio 1024 Mass ................. 526

Photographers, Portrait

f*e,.,i'IJ!As
Phone

41
MAKE AN
APPOINTMENT
FOR A SITTING
PORTRAITS

BY

PHOTOGRAPHY

DALTON-BROWN STUDIO 1403 W 7 ........ 701
Estes Studio 9271 M&lt;~ss ...................151
(See Advtrtlsement This Page)

PhotographsPortrait- Commercial
Wedding- Direct Color

Your Satisfaction
Is Guaranteed

927~

MASSACHUSEITS

�56

PHOTOGRAPHERS-PHYSICIANS

LAWRENCE

Photographers, Portrait (Con't)

CAMERAS

McPEAK STUDIO
PORTRAITS
WEDDIN GS
FAMILY GROUPS
"Spe(ialiJIS ;,, Child Photography
730 Mass .................... . ..... 302
If no ans call .................... 1202.J

Movie - Still Cameras
Photographic S upplies
24 Hour FILM Service

O'BRYON STUDio, -- - - - - - - - - ,

'a !Uill @!If"WI fill '« A»'I'm'i1 'W

M'OSSER-WOLF
8Vt.) ~t::OC:!1 ~i!.ll0
tJ \1 ~ c!.!::lt:l

110'7 Mass.

Ph. ISO

PORTRAJTURE

by Photography
Wedding.r-Children-Commertilll
1024 Mass .•..•. • ...... . ......•..• • •526

?l~te tpm

8'~~~:;
The Yellow P ages will help you find
a hairdresser near by.
J ust look under "Beauty Shops" for
the address and telephone number.
You'll save time--and steps-when
you use the Yellow Pages.

Scott-Foley Studios 831 Mass ..... , ........ 3889
THOMPSON PHOTO STUDIO

PORTRAITS
PORTRAI TS OF CHlLDREN
OUR SPECIALTY

Latest in Photo Frames
Prices Reasonable
829 Mass..... . . . . . ....... . . . ..•.•• 614

Photographic Equipment
&amp; Supplies
HIXON STUDIO•- - - - - - - - - •

IT'S

EA~Y.

TO FIND ••.

Headqualten Por
Factory Guaranteed Pbotogrspbic llqulpmeat
C.mer:u-Kodab-.Movie Camcoa
Projectors Chellllals Papa Pilma Btc•
.Authoriu d Dealer for
Viewmaster Scc:reoscopes
Quality Kodak P....ahlna
721 Mass .•...••••.• .....•.•••. •••• • 41

Mosser-Wolf Inc 1107 Mass •.. . ............ 50
(See Advertisement This Page)

Photographic Finishing
D'Ambra Photo Service t-44 Mass . ... ...... . •934
ESTES STUDIO 927! Mass ..... .. .......... 151
HIXON STUDIO
Expert Kodak Film Finishing

721 Mass . ••••• • •. • .••.•.•••.•.•••.• 41
Mosser-Wolf Inc

24 Hr High Quality Finishing
1107 Mass . . ..... ....... • ... •.. • . , ... 50

Physicians &amp; Surgeons, D. 0 .
--See Osteopathic Physiciam and

Surgeons, D.O.

WilEN YOU USE
THE YlllfJW PAllS.
Yell ow Pages tell who
buys ••• sells ••• rents ••• repairs.

Physicians &amp; Surgeons Exchanges
PHYSICIANS &amp; SURGEONS EXCHAHG
IF UNABLE TO LOCATE
YOUR DOCTOR
CALL - 870 - CALL
Da1 or Nipt
WE WILL LOCATE BlM FOR YOU
325 Maine .• • . •• . ••• ••.•••••••••••••17'0

�LAWRENCE

Physicians &amp; Surgeons, M.D.
AUCHARD V M 209

w a. ........... ....... 354

Residence 212&amp; La .....•...••.•...•..• 299
Belot Monlt L Jr 800 Mass ..........••.••. , }5q()

Boyden Mary S 4 &amp; Maine .•• . •• . ••.....•. 3975
Residence &amp;21 Calif ..... .•..•..•..... .. 2997
lf no answer call . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . 870
Campbell Jas W 4 &amp; Maine ...........•.... 3975
Residence 1&amp;37 Ill . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . 3423
If no answer call. ..•....•..•.•......... 870
Canuteson R I K u ..... .... .... . ......... 890
Chambers H L 1415 Mass ........... .•..... 215
If no answer call . . ... ... .•. . . • ...... 14&amp;
Clark Margaret G 939~ Mass ....... . ........ 584
Residence 1125 Sunset Dr . . . . . . . . • . . . . .3215
Clark Ray A 939~ Mass
.......... . .... 584
Residence 1125 Sunset Dr . . ............. 3215
Dunlap R L 4 &amp; Maine .. . .. ..... . . ... .. ... 3975
Residence 1508 N H .................... 3202
Frink Russell 1 w 11 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 275
Residence 29 Winona . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . .o\209
If no answer call . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . 870
Gilles Helen 4 &amp; Maine .... ... •.........•. 3975
Residence 1831 University Dr .••.•.••..•.. 3602
If no answer call . . . ......... .•.• ... 870
Harsha Wm N Lawrence Natl Bk Bldg . . . . . .
392
Residence 934 Ark ....... ...... .... . .. • 2634
If no answer call ..... .. ..... .' . . . . . . . . 870
Hermes R L 4 &amp; Maine ....... ....... ..... 3975
Residence 1001 W 4 ... .... ......... . ... 398
If no answer call ..... .......•...•...•. . 870
Hutchon5on R B 917 Mass ..........••...••. 1235

ISAACS FRED R 715 Vt. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 180
Resodence lbOO E 23 ... .. . ...•.••..•.•• 1824
Johnson C B 7 w 11 ..... .••.....•........ 275
Residence 1&amp;16 S Crescellt ~~~- •..•....... 833
If no answer call . . .
. . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 870
Jones H Penfield 4 &amp; Maine ...••.•..•..... 3975
Residence 721 Tenn .. ...•..•.... ........ 235
If no answer call . . . . . • . . . . . • . . . . . . . 870
Jones &amp; Manahan 4 &amp; Maine ............•. •3975
Jordan Robt A 4 &amp; Maine . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . 3975
If no answer call
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 870
Manahan G E 4 &amp; Maine ........... .. . .... 3975
Residence 1107 N H .. .......... • ... .... 2310
If no answer call ..... . . ................ 870
Nelson Richard 0 201 W 8 •••••..•.••.•.••• 110
Resilience RFD 4 .•........• . ........... 290
If no answer call •.••.•••••••••••.••••. 870
J~elson W 0 201 W 8 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110
Residence 545 E 19 ......... .... .. .... . 2651
Owen EM 823 Ky
...••• ••.•••••••••• •• 644
Palmer W R soU Mass .•• .•...•••....•.• . 352
Residence 918 Miss .......•.....•.•. 1740
Pendleton Raymond L 927! Mass ..... ... . 2182
Residence RFO 4
.
• ..••••..•• .o\041-K-4
Schwegler R A Jr 4 &amp; Maine. . • • . . . . • . . . . 3975
Residence 2219 N H . .................. 1435
If no answer call ....... ....•.• ..••.... . 870
Sudler Mervin T 800 Mass ...•.....•.•..... 1590
Van Noy H E 747 Mass
. . . • . . . . • . . . . . . 594
Walters Byron W 1035A MliSS. . . • . . • . • . . . . 1609
Wright £rik M 1538 Tenn .... ..•.. ...... 2817-W
Zimmer L K 207 W 8 . . . . . . . . . . • . . . • . . . . . 437
Resid !nee &amp;21 E 15 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 1432
If nn answer call. . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 870

Physicians &amp; Surgeons, M.D.
Eye, E&amp;J", Nose &amp; Throat
Dunlap R L 4 ~ Maine .••••. ..•• •.••••.•. 3975
Hutchon•JOn R B 917 Masos • .......•..•.. ... 1235
NeiSOII ' IJ 0 201 w a . . ••..•. ....•.• • ••.. . 110

Physicians &amp; Surgeons, M.D.
Gynecology
Herrne$ R L 4 &amp; Maine ........... •..•.••. 3975
Isaacs •:red R 715 Vermont. . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . 180
Pendle1on Raymond L 927~ Mass .....•••••. 2182
Schwesler R A Jr 4 &amp; Maine ..............• 3975

PHYSICIANS-PIPES

57

Physicians &amp; Surgeons, M.D.

Internal

~fedicine

Jordan Robt A 4 &amp; Maone
Residence 310 Oklahoma

............ m5
.. 2222-M

Physicians &amp; Surgeons, M.D.

Obstetrical
Hermes R L 4 &amp; Maine ....... .. ...•. .•... 3975
Isaacs Fred R 715 Vermont ...... .. , ....... . 180
Pendleton Raymond L 927i Mass ...•....... 2182
Schwegler R A Jr 4 &amp; Maine ....... ...... . 3975

Physicians &amp; Surgeons, M.D.
Pediatrician
Boyden Mary s 4 &amp; Maine ..•............ . m5

Gilles Helen 4 &amp; Maine ....•....•..•••.. .• 3975

Physicians &amp; Surgeons, M.D.
Surgeons
Pendleton Raymond L 9271 Mass .•••..... .. 2182
Zimmer L K 207 W 8 .........•.•... .....• 437

Piano Tuners
JEROME PIANO Co·- - - - - - - - .
NEWTON E. JEROME
PlANO T NER
and

TECHNICIAN
REPAIRING and REFINISHING
Frw Prompt o"d Bl~~n~l Snvin

916 Ill. ............................ 815
Stoner Art E 1117 W Hills PkwY . .......... 1409

Pianos
Bell Music Co
Mason-Hamlln-Knabe-Lester
925 Mass ...•••••••.••••• .•....•••• 375
Jerome Piano Co
New &amp; Used-Repairing.-Tuning

•n&amp; 111 ••.••••.•.••.•••••••••••• •••• 815

Ward Music
New &amp; Used-Re-Styliog
908 Mass . . . . . . .

. ..... 91

Picture Framing
HIXON STUDIO

Frames Made to Order
Lar&lt;Je Selectlon of Moldln11
721 Mass ..............• • •••••• • ••• • •41
KEELER BOOK STORE 939 Mass ....... ..... 33
THOMPSON PHOTO STUDIO 829 Mass ... .... 614

Pipe Line Companies
Cities Service Gas Co 1501 W 23. . . . . . . . . . . 317
If no answer ull . ..... ...... .... . .. .2773-W

Pipes-Smoking-Repairing
George's Pipe Shop 727 Mass ..•.......•.• 2401

HANDY-These YELLOW PAGES
will tell you where you can buy most
~nything.

�S8

PLUMBERS

LAWRENCE

ROOT MASTER
Cleans. Blocked- Sewers
Without Digging
Free E stl.mates

CLOGGED SEWERS
SINKS &amp; PIPES

THROUG+l AU. QOOTS
ANO OBSTRUCTIONS
NO DIGGING

Complete
Plumbing Service

LICENSED AND
BONDED PLUMBER

1337 MASS.

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

~i.l4i~S~

c..et)t~
•
FOR HOMES

BUSINESS - INDUSTRY

P.O. Box 230
1

ED S PlUMBING SHOP

AMERICAN METAL KITCHENS

CALL

3644

CALL

BONDED - liCENSED
INSURED

*

e

N e\V

Instanattons
• Repalre

e Servtoe

Phone 1565
EDW. OKAHOTO
Office 141 111.

�PLUMBERS-PRIN TERS

LAWRENCE

Plumbers

59

Poultry

Brune Plbg Htg &amp; Elec Co 545 Ind ... ....... 308
&lt;See Advertisement Preceding Page)
Christenson Co 400 E 23 . .. ... . . ........ . .. 710
ED'S PLBG SHOP 645 Ill . . .. .. .... ....... 1565
&lt;See Advertisement Preceding Page)
Guntert Ptbg &amp; Wiring 1337 Mass . . .. . .• •• •963
&lt;See Advertisement Preceding Page)

uwrence Egq &amp; Poultry Co 832 Pa .....•..... 500

TURNER PRODUCE CO

DRESSED POULTRY
OUR
SPECIALTY

LEE RAYMOND PLBG &amp; WIRING

Licensed &amp; Bonded
906 N H . .. . . . ........... ..•....... . 660
If no answer call Raymond H Lee .•••• ••. 3780

IORRIS BROS
PLLM~t:"'G.

WIRING and HBATING
Supplieo-Pixtureo-Waw Heaten
New hst.JI.att.,.,.._hpaua
ScwtJ SerTia:

5(10 Locust . . . • . . . . .
. . •.•• ••••.. 1163
Nights-Sundays-Holidays Call .... . . 1394-J
or Call ........ . ..... . .... . .... . . 2618-R

Olson Bros '34 Mass

. ..... . ............. 515

ROSE l H PLBG &amp; WIRING 931 Maine. . . . . . . 513
US Engrng Co 19 &amp; La .............. . .. 3850
Westergren Harry 1145 Pa . ...... . ... . .... 3644

836 Vt ............................ 287

Printers
Allen Press 1041 N H ..........• • . . . ...... 1234
Bullock's 2 E 7
. ...........•....••.•. 37'J
CASH STATNRY CO 9 E 8 . .. .............. 967

FOREE PRINTING CO 9 E 8 .............. 967
Kansas Color Press 2201 Haskell ........ . ... 488
M1ller Print Shop 821 Vt . .. . ... . ........... 518
OUTLOOK THE

Job Printing-Magazine Publishing
1005 Mass ... .......... . ....... . .... 542
WORLD CO 722 Mass .... . ... ... ...... . ....22
&lt;See Advertisement This Page)

(See Advertisement Preceding Page)

Plumbing Fixtures
AMERICAN STANDA R o - - - - - - - PLUMBING FIXTURES
A complete Iine for bath-

rooms, kitchens, laundries
-known for quality, sty...
and dependable swvice.

Here's a help to home managerJ.:
These YELLOW PAGES are packed
with buying facts about things needed
to run a home. Consult them to find
,Where-to-Buy-It."

"FOR INFOI?MA.TTON CALL"
RETAILERS

BRUNE PLBG HTG &amp; ELEC CO 545 Ind . .. 308
Ed's Plbg Shop 645 Ill . . .. .. . . . .... .. . 1565
Guntert Plbg &amp; Wiring 1337 Mass .... . .. 963
NORRIS BROS 500 Locust . ......... . .. . 1163
CHRISTENSON CO 400 E 23.

. . . . . 710

Plumbing Supplies, Retail
NORRIS BROS

Kohler-Crane-American Standard
500 Locust .........••...••... . ..... 1163

Pop Corn
Oixies Carmel Corn Shop 842 Mass ... ....... 1330
Paramount Processing Corp 1038 Tenn .... . .. 4269
T-N-T FOOD PRODUCT INC 826 Pa . . .... . . 239

~Everythtng In

Printing'

Telephone 22
Business Forms, Stationery, Ledger
Sheets, Loose Leaf Binders, Record
Books, Catalogs, Circulars.

THE WORLD CO.
722 Massachusetts
•

Potato Chips
Casey's Chip Co 418 Forest ................. 448
Kitty Clover Potato Chip Co 1810 La ••••••.•• 649

KITTY CLOVER POTATO CHIPS
POTATO CHIPS
FRIED POPCORN
SHELLED POPCORN
At Y ""' ,.,,.,,;,, l'otul,
Dr11g, "' B••~11g1 Sto,

"FOR SERVICE CALL"
Kitty Clover Potato Chip Co 1810 La •••••• 649
Stone H N 732 Conn ••••••• ••• •• • •••••••• 3600

Are they open
evenings?
Look in the Yellow Pages. Many
firms show their business hours,
products, services, and other
information.

J

�60

LAWRENCE

PRODUCE- RADIATORS

Radio Stations

P r oduce

KLWN RFO 6 ....... . ................... 3431

Seymour Packing Co 820 Vt ........ . ........ Sll
Turner Produce Co 83b Vt ....... • .... • .... .2II1

Radios

Public Libraries

Bell Music Co
RCA Radios &amp; Combinations
9 25 Mass.... . .
. .. ............ .. 375
GENERAL APPLIANCE CO INC 1103 Mass •• .• •19
Hanna Radio Shop
RCA - Zenith Sales &amp; Serv
933 Mass • .. ••• . . .. •• ... • • ••••••••••303
MAGNAVOX RADIO-PHONOGRAPHS
ALES AND SERYICE

-See Libraries, Public

Public Sch ools
-See Schools, Public

Pumping Equipment
KRAFT TRUCK &amp; TRACTOR CO

M

PUMPS IN VARIETY
PIPE VALVES and FITTINGS
Accurate Pump Service
Elmer Hunter, Pump Dept.
1818 Mass. .. .. . .. . .. .. .. .. .

Magnavox provides space for
television, too! Enjoy fine
aqftGVOJC
AM • FM radio plus 3 - speed
tl
record changer. Choose from
.
a wide ra119e of traditional and modern cabmets.

"WHERE TO BUY THEM"

. .. 244

Smith L l oke Co 846 Mass ..............725

Pumps-Centrifugal

MOTOROLA HOME &amp; AUTO RADIOs-

BEAMAN'S RADIO &amp; TELEVISION 1200 NY .140

M idwest Mfg Co 2205 Haskell. ....... • ...... 394

Radio Equipment
Radios, Automobile

SUTTON FREDE &amp; CO 925 Mass . ... . ..... 4241

Jayhawk T-V &amp; Applnce Serv 18 E 9 .... ~ .... 745

Radio Service
BEAMAN'S RADIO &amp; TELEVISION 1200 N Y•• 140

Radiators, Automobile, Repairing

BOWMAN RADIO &amp; TELVSN SERV 82o Vt . . .1.38
ZENITH RADIOS SALES &amp; SERVICE-

-See Automobile Radiator
Repairing

(See Advertisement This Page)

HANNA RADIO SHOP 933 Mass ..• . ...• . . 303

ALL WORK FULLY
GUARANTEED

EXPERIENCED MECHANIC

Telephone

·140·

RADIO &amp; TELEVISION
SALES &amp; SERVICE
1200 N. Y.

�LAWRENCE

RAGS-REAL ESTATE

61

Ranges, Electric ( Cont' rl)

Rags

WESTINGHOUSE ELECTRIC RANGESc-- - -

MECHANICS OVERALL CLNG CO

Wiping Cloths Rented And Sold
Pick-Up &amp; Delivery Twice Weekly
1720 Wabash Kansas City Mo
&lt;Toil Call) . Benton 1656

Rallroads
Atchison Topeka &amp; Santa Fe Ry Co
Passenger Depot 413 E 7 .................• 32
Freight Office 413 E 7 ........•........... 54
Car Clerk 413 E 7 ...................... 281
Chicago R I &amp; Pacific Ry Ticket Ofc N 2 &amp; Maple. 282
Union Pacific Ry Co
Passengl!f" Depot N 2 &amp; Maple ..•....•..... 282
Freight Depot N 2 &amp; Locust .... . .. . .. .... . 28
Roadmaster's Office N 2 &amp; Maple .......... 356

Ranges, Electric
FRIGIDAIRE ELECTRIC

RANGE~----

See Frigidaire Electric
Ranges with Radiantube
Units and Even-Heat Ovens.
Also Frigidaire refrigerators, food freezers, water
heaters, automatic washers1
ironers, dryers, air con·
ditioners, dehumidifiers.

~
Frigidaire

See famous Westinghouse
Speed Electric Ranges with
the new Super Speed Corox
Surface Unit - red hot in
30 seconds. Look at the
big Miracle Sealed Oven.
You Can Be SURE ..
If It's WESTINGHOUSE.

"WHERE TO CALL"
DEALERS

BEACON APPLNCE CO INC 709

Mass ..... 253

Ranges, Gas
CHRISTENSON CO

leading Brands Both
Natural And LP-Gas
•
4oo E 23. . . . . ...... .... .........

KAHSAS PUBLIC SERV CO INC
Roper &amp; Hardwick Ranges
733 Mass . ..•........•.••••••••...••

MONARCH BUll T RANGES-

no

ru

STERLING FURN CO 938 Mass .......... 1192
Vincent's Inc 724 Mass .................... 178
&lt;See Advertisement This Page)

"WHERE TO CALL"
SALBS 6 SERV DEALER
Hanna Radio Shop 933 Mass ...•....... . . 303

liUERAL ELECTRIC RANGES
Su~r-fast Calrod Units f1lr G-E •
"SPEED COOKING". Other famous
.• 1, ' 1 ·
G-E "firsts" - Built-in Pressure

""''· ,,,,.,,,,, '"•'·"'• ,,,.

1J1: .• .

A·Cook Lights, No-Stain Oven Vent.

Real Estate

BARLOW MARION A- - - - - - - - - ,

REAL ESTATE SERVICES
INSURANCE- All Types Protection
American Auto Assn. Memberships
NOTARY PUBUC
723 Mass ...... . .. .. .. ... . .. .. ...... 473

Century Real Est Co RFD l. . ......... ..... 3838

"WHERE TO CALL"

SALES 6 SBRVICB DBAI.BR

CONBOY &amp; CONBOY REALTORS 1012 N H ... 942
(Continued Next Page)

QEIERA1. APPLIAIC£ CO INC 1103 Mass ... 19
KELVINATOR ELECTRIC RANGE

=:

Amazing new "H~t-Up~
S~d!" . . . Starts cooking
1
1
faster! Automatic Cook Con·
trol . . . Colormatic Switches
.
. . . Fast Broilers ... Mammoth Ovens ... Beaut1ful
Styling!

REAL ESTATE

"WHERE TO BUY IT."
DBALBRS

GOODRICH B F CO 929
SMITH LLOKE CO B4b

Mass ..... • ....... 21
Mass ..... . .....•725

MONARCH BUllT RANGES-

STERLI~G FURN CO 93~ass ....... : .. 1192

T.IIPPIIR
RANGES

• Distinguished

Beauty
• Dep endable
Performa n ce
• Ample Capacity
OALL 178

724 Mass.

CALL
If n o answer call 3989 or 2589-R

REAL ESTATE
of All Types
RELIABLE AP PRAISAL
SERVICE

M. R. GILL AGENCY
REAL ESTATE &amp; INSURANCE
640 Maas.

�62

LAWRENCf

REAL ESTATE

Residential

•
•
Business
•
Rentals
•
Leases
Farms

Real Estate ( Cont' d)
DECKER-COY REAL EST &amp; INS AGcy----;
l&lt;EAL ESTATE
INSURANCE
CASUALTY • FIRE • INLAND MARINE
E.

WARRBN DBCJtn.

J.

CoY

7 E 8 ......... . ....•....•.....•.... 450
Doane Gene Agcy 6 E 8 ... ................. 236
f ox Frank lst Natl 8k bg
.. ....... 510
Gill M R Real Est &amp; Ins Agcy 640 Mass ...... 111
&lt;See Advertisement Preceding Page)
Hemphill Land &amp; lnvstmt Co 704 Mass ......... 6

HESS ANDY C REAL EST &amp; INS SER

Also
Farm Loans

REAL ESTATE
FARM LOANS AND
DEPENDABLE INSURANCE
Standard Life Bg. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 457
If no answer Call .................. 1620-J

HOLMES &amp; PEC

878
Residence • 1222

REAL ESTATE
INSURANCE

LOANS

ME KELLY
HOTCHKISS AGENC

712 MASS

REAL ESTATE
INSURANCE
LOANS
Personal and Neighborhood Service
2.3 &amp; La..... .. .. . . ..

CALL

214

CALL

IF NO ANSWER CALL
1599- M OR 2170- R OR 1189- R

REAL ESTATE- INSURANCE
LOANS- PROPERTY MANAGEMENT
908 Mass.

8

. ... . ........ 520

Jacques B E 1945 Ky ..... .............. 1444
Jacques Rlty Co 927! Mass ................ 414
CSee Advertisement This Page)
..
. . ..... 878
Kelly M E 712 Mass . . . . . . .
(See Advertisement This Page)
Kunz Sol F Real Est &amp; Ins Agcy 908 Mass ..... 214
CSee Advertisement This Page)
Lawrence Homebuilders 1621 Oxford Rd ...... 3820
McGrew Invstmt Co 806 Mass
. . . . ....... 45
&lt;See Advertisement This Page)
NEWMAN C V FARM AGCY 1946 La ....... 3942
PRATT F W MRS 2012 Mass .. ............ 2300
Simmons E J Co 824 Mass
.... . .. 330
CSee Advertisement This Page)

INSURANCE 0 LOANS
,_ REAL ESTATE

P!Jtme

45

LAWRENCE HOUSING, INC.
806 MASS

Phone 330

824 MASS

�LAWRENCE

REAL ESTATE-REFRIGERATORS

63

Real Estate (Cont'd)

ci&gt;Jv1PBE:LL:s

TRAYLOR &amp; CALVIN INSURANCE lGIIIH"v--- ,

REAL ESTATE
INSURANCE

REFRIGERATION

HOKE LOANS

1026 Mus ............. ... .... ...•• 305

SALES

Recording Equipment, Sound
MAGNECORDER PROFESSIONAL TAPE
RECORDERSMOSSER-WOLF INC 1107 Mass...

. ... 50

Recording Service
UNIVERSITY RADIO RECORDING SER'v--- - .
WB MAKE DISC-TAPE RECORDINGS of
VOICE - INSTRUMENTALS- RECITALS
PROGRAMS- SPEECHES
Recordings Made in or out of Our Studio
Piano Available

Located Downstairs in Bell Music Co.
925 Mass .......... .....•..... . ... . 4241

Reducing Treatment
Charme Be~uty Salon 9.35! Mass .. .. .. ..... . 533

Croaiey Franchised Dealer
Repaira On All Makes

Refrigeration Equipment,
Commercial

FOR SERVICE CALL
11

Beacon Applnce Co Inc 709 Ma:ss ............. 253

w 9th

8 30

CARRIER REFRIGERATION EQUIPMENt
For every commercial and ind~&gt;s&lt;rlal need- complete line of
automatic ice cube makers, fixtures, refrigerating compressors,
condensers, cold diffusers, and
food freezers. Built for dependable, low-oost service.

"FOR INPOR1f.1'1'TON CALL"
DBAU!.R

SCOTT TEMP EQUIP CO 729 N H....... 326

SER

Refrigeration Service
BEACON APPLNCE CO INC 709 Mass ... ..... 253
Refngerauon Service 11 W 9 . . ..•. 830

~mpbell's

(See Advertisement This Page)

KAW MOTOR &amp; SALVAGE CO
Domestic &amp; Commercial
724 N 2 .

. . .......... . .......... 1397

Petteng ill N W 521 lnd ... . .............. 3699
(See Advertisement This Pagel

Refrigerators, Electric
ADMIRAL DUAL-TEMP REFRIGERATORS-

TALBERT APPLNCE CO 910 Mass ..... 3606

FRIGIDAIRE REFRIGERATORS
New Cycla-matic Frigidaires
with famous Meter-Miser.
Also Frigidaire e lectric
ranges, food freezers, water
heaters, automatic washers,
dryers, ironers, dehumidi·
tiers, and room air condi·

DAY OR
NIGHT

e

COMMERCIAL

•

HOUSEHOLD

0 AIR CONDITIONING SYSTEMS

3699

SEALED UNITS REPAIRED
AND MAINT A INED

"You Can Be Sure If You

~

Frigidaire

tion-ers.

"WHERE TO C.tJ.LL"
SALBS 6 SERif DEALER
Hanna Radio Shop 933 Mass ..... . . . .....303

Call"

PETTENGILL

REFRIGERATION SERVICE
521 IND

�64

REFRIGERATORS--RIDING

LAWRENCE

Refrigerators, Eleet["ic (Cont'd)
New Space Maker Models give up to •
ooe-~lf more refrigerated food stor·
~
· 1 t''.
age 1n same floor space as old-style
·
ones. More than 3,500,000 G.E.
'lJ_
Refrigerators in service 10 years or
•
longer.

"WHERE TO CALL"

lrTUUTIONAL HARVESTER
REFRIGERATORS AND FREEZERS
~

~

~

Ill··

~

"WHERE Tn RTJY THEM"
DEALI!RS

KRAFT TRUCK &amp; TRACTOR CO 1818 Mass 244
STERLING FURN CO 938 Mass . . ... .. .. 1192
ICELVINATOR REFRIGERATORS
"MAGIC CYCLE"
SELF
DEFROSTING
NEW Self-Defrosting Kelvlnator uses no hot electric
elements to melt off frost. Automatic .. . Faster •••
Safer . . . Simpler . . • more economical.

"WHERE TO BUY IT"
GOODRICH 8 F
SMITH L LOKE

DEALERS
CO 929 Mass ............. 21
CO 846 Mass ..........•. 725

NORGE REFRIGERATORS
:oeii -O·frosting, low operating cost,
variety of freezer capacitjes. For
authorized sales of Norge Refrig·
erators, Electric Ranges, Home
Freezers, Gas Ranges, WJlter Heaters, Washers, see below.

PHILCO DAIRY BAR'-

VINCENT'S INC 724 Mass . ........... .

WESTINGHOUSE REFRIGERATOR
Westinghouse completely
automatic "Fro~:t·Free" Re·
frigerator means no defrosting ever again. No frost to
scrape, no water to empty,
no clocks to set.
You Can Be SURE ..
If It's WESTINGHOUSE.

"WHERE TO CALL"
BEACON

Before you buy, see the modern
motorless Serve! Refrigerator.
It staYs silent, lasts longer
because it has no moving
parts in Its freezing system.

"WHERE Tn rnry THEM"

SALES l'r SERVICE DEALER
GENERAL APPLIANCE CO INC 1103 Mass .. 19

See the "femineered" Refrigerators,
and I.H. Home Freezers, In sizes and
models to fit all families, kitchens,
budgets. More features--more value-5-yr. warranty on "Tight-Wad" Refrigeration unit.

Refrigerators, Gas
SERVEL GAS REFRIGERATORs·-----

GENERAL ELECTRIC REFRIGERATORS

DEALERS
APPLNCE CO INC 709 Mass ... .. 253

MERCHANTS and businesJ firms
11ppreciate being told that you found
them in the YEUOW PAGES.

CHRISTENSON CO

DEALERS

Both Natural And L-P Gas
400 E 23. : ................ ......710
KANSAS PUBLIC SERV CO INC 733 Mass.31S

Renderin~

Plants

HILL RENDERING SERV

500 Locust . ... ..• . . 197

~undaro Rendenng Co 1610 E 15 .••••••••• 369

STANDARD RENDERING CO SERVICE---We Pay For Dead
Animals--At Your Farm
Horses • Cattle • Hogs
If Not Skinned or
Decomposed
We Pay Telephone Charges

"FOR INFORMATION CALL"
STANDARD RENDERING CO 1610 E 15 ••• 369

Restaurants-See Cafes

Ri~~~~ta!~~~~~~es................. 1842

The YEtUOW

They can give you-quickly
and easily :
... the address and telephone
number of the nearest store
... the name of the dealer who
sells your favorite brand
...a list of products-from
"A" to "Z"
Look first in the Yellow Pages
for who
BUYS... SELLS ... RENTS ...
REPAIRS

�LAWRENCE

ROOFERS-SCHOOLS

65

Savings &amp; Loan Associations

Roofers
ASBESTOS ROOFINGEVERLEY ROOFING CO 617 Vt ....•••••• 511
&lt;See Advertisement This Page)

DOUGLAS COUNTY BLDG &amp; LOAN ASSOCTN
737 Mass.79
Lawrence Bldg &amp; loan Assoctn 800 Mass ....... 55

BARRETT ROOF
"Tb1 GruJ11I N••1

Rufi•c''

i•

School Supplies

DUBLB COTE
MUlTI ·SHJNGLES
ASPHALT SlUNGLBs-SIDING
"SINCE 1.,...

carter Stationery Store 1025 Mass ........ .. 1051

"FOR INFORMATION CALI!'
Rhodes Heating &amp; Roofing Co 815 Vt •••••• 702

Schools, Private
Haskell Institute s City limits

Assistant Boys' Adviser Keokuk Hall ......... 128
Assistant Boys' Adviser's Office Osceola bg .. 3040
Assistant Girls Adviser Pocahontas Hall ..... 2106
Assistant Girls Adviser Tinker Hall ......... 3496
Assistant Girls Adviser Winona Hall ........ . 470
Athleuc Office Tecumseh bg . .. ..•....... 1480
Business Office Administration bg ...... . ... 118
Haskell Bakery Curtis Hall .. .. . ..•..... . . 230
Head Student Advisers Tilicum lodge ....... 589
Home Economics Butldlng Saca)ewea bg ..... 693
Hospital . .......... . .. . ...... . ...... . 568
Power Plant ........ . . . .....•.... . .•.. 2109
Principal's Ofc Sequoyah bg ...... . ........ 557
Printing Department
......•........ 938
School Office Sequoyah Hall ............... 298
Student Dining Room Curtis Hall . .. . ....... 695
Superintendent's Otc Ha!ktll Grounds ...... . 304
Teacher's Hdqtrs Haskell Grds . . .. . ...... 3323
Testing &amp; Evaluation Serv Curtis Hall ....... 162
Visual Aids Office Haskell Grounds ..•..... 3469
Vocatnl Training Dept ................ . .. 2772

Handy Man
Experienced Workmen For Any Job
Good References-Bill Walker Mgr
1033 R I . . . . . . .... . ............ 1325
MORTON'S BLDG MATRLS CO 1834 Mass .... 264
Rhodes Heatmg &amp; Roofing Co 815 Vt •••••••• 702

Roofing Material
Everley Roofing Co 617 Vt ...•..•••••••••••• 511
Friend Paul H lumber Co 1030 Mass ........... 42
LOGAN-MOORE LBR CO 627 Mass .......... 113
MC CONNELL LUMBER CO 844 E 13 ...... . . 576
Morton's Bldg Matrls Co 1834 Mass .......... 264

Rooming Houses
Couple's Co-op 940 Ind .. ...... .. ......... . 2464
Cutler House The 1215 Oread ............. .3952
Fries Harry Rooms 1201 Tenn . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3312
Goode Joseph 1245 Oread . ............... 1504
Henley House 123&amp; Oread .. . ...... . ........ 400
ThumanCH 141&amp; Tenn .. .......... . .... 1555
Twin Pines Co-op 1537! Tenn ............. •893
Westview Hall 1138 Miss . .. . . ....•..... .. . 4182

Rubber Stamps

Kansas Bible Chair 1300 Dread .........•. . . 2795

m

Bullock's 2 E 7 . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
OUTLOOK THE 1005 Mass ................. 542

Rug ·Oeaning
-See Carpet Cleaning

Rugs, Domestic-See

Carpe~

Safes

For Free Eatimatea

CRAMER SAFE &amp; OFC EQPMNT CO 14lr9 McGee
Kansas City Mo &lt;Toil Call&gt;. VIctor 7949

PHONE

Sales Pavilions
Jenny Wren Sales Co RFD 1.

Bowersock Mills &amp; Power Co Ft of N Y ....•...~6

Sanitariums
Prospect Park Sanitarium 1515 W 1 . ........ 3126
SIROKY REST HOME

A home
comfort,
standing
care are

Home luulatiOil

.. . . .. . . , ... . 699

Sand

for men and women where
kindness and human undercombined with the finest
of foremost consideration.

&amp;45 Mich . . .. . .. ... . . . . .. . ... . .. . . .4251

511

e

RESIDENTIAL

e

COMMERCIAL

e

SHEET 1\IETAL

Johns-Manville Asbestos Roofing
Hex-T locks Thick Butt
Asbestos Built Up - Tar &amp; Gravel Slate-Tile - Tin
Furnace &amp; Sheet Metal Work

EVERLEY ROOFING CO.
617 Vermont

�66

SCHOOLS-SERVICE

LAWRENCE

Schocls, Public

Schools, Universities

Board of Education
Art Director's Ofc 900 Ky ................ 950
Board of Education Ofc High School bg ..... . 422
Elementary Supervisor High School bg •.•••• 3400
Health Nurse 900 Ky.................... 681
Speech Clinic 1400 Mass .......... .... . .. 263
Brackett Schl RFD 1 ................ 4063-K-21
Cord ley Schl 1837 Vt .•.•...••.•••......... 373
India Schl 400 E 23 ............ ... . ...... 3961
Junior High School 9 &amp; Ky ••••••• . ••••••••lOOJ
Liberty Memorial High School 1400 Mass ••••• 3000
Lincoln School 708 Elm ............... ..... 728
Mackey Schl RFD 5 . ................ .4053-N-21
McAIIaster School 1428 R I. ................ 408
New York School 936 NY .................. 261
Pinckney School 810 W 6 •••.•••.••••.. .... 706
Riverside Schl Lakeview Rd ............ 4039-N-21
Woodlawn School 508 Elm .................. n4

FRANZ Service Station
W aahing-Lubrication-Tirea-Batterlea

Scrap Metal
Auto Wrecking I. Junk Co Inc: 712 E 9 ••••••• 954

Seals
Kansas Mfg Co The 623 Vt ................. 4U

Seat Covers
Fritz Co 14 E 8 ..•...........•.•...••...••• 4
LUMITE FABRIC SEAT COVER
Tough, scuffproof seal covers of
durable saran plastic, ready made

l uMJTE

WOVIH SAIIIIJI
or tailor made to fit your car.
fABRIC:.
COMFORTABLE, COLORFUL, LONG·WEARING.

"WHERE TO BUY THEM"
DBALBR

CHAPPELL'S AUTO TRIM 646 Calif ..... 1121

PICK-UP &amp; DELIVERY
PHONE

Kansas University ... . .. .. ............... 2700
Athletic Office KU .................... . . 913

PHONE
BARTELDES SEED CO 804 Mass .......... . .. 92
Derby Grain Inc 301 Locust ...•••••••••••••• 370
UNDERWOOD J SONS 608 Mass ............. 7
Wilhelmi Max 804 Mass ••••••••••••• • •••••1805

Service Stations
ACHER OIL CO 645 Locust ................. . 37
Airport Inn RFD s . . .. .. ................. 3058
Andrew's Serv Sta 1846 Mass ... ........... 4183
BRIDGE STANDARD SERVICE STATIOII

1100 New Hampahlre

ARTHUR NIIASB

GAS

OIL

STANDARD SERVICE

•

•

WASH

GREASE

•

•

LUBRICATION-WASHING
POWSHING
ATLAS TIRES- TIRE REPAIRING
601 Mass ........................3380

TIRES • BATTERIES

PHONE 2069

~

SINCLAIR SERVICE
725N2

24 Hour Service
u. s. Tires - Mobilgas
Recapping · Washing · Lubrication

RAPID TRANSIT SERVICE

Bucllflm Serv Sta 1901 Mass .. ...•••.•..••. 3063
CITIES SERVICE PRODUCTsFRITZ COMPANY 14 E 8 .. ............... 4
Cobb's Serv Sta 644 Ark ...........•..•... 2038
CONOCO PRODUCTS

"Your Miled(ll M•rclt-1''
Conoco N-Tane
c.iaaoline

Conoco "N"th Motor Oil
Gr.asea
Tank Wa1on Delinriea

vo_

~

"WHERE TO CALL"
SERVICE STATIONS
Buchelm Service Sta 1901 Mass ..••. ..... 3063
Franz Serv Sta 900 N H . . . . . . . . . . . . 867
Wuthnow' s Conoco Serv SU 900 lnd •••••• 3354
L__ - - - - - -· -- ·- - - - - -

Crystal Motors Trading Post 304 W 6 • • • • • • 923
Denny Ed Serv Sta 1002 N H . . . •...•.•••. 20'n
Field's Serv Sta 1826 Mass ..........••.... 2091
Franz Serv Sta 900 N H
.........•.. 8b7
&lt;See Advertisement This Page)
Fritze! A J 1900 Mass .... ..... .... .... ... 3399
G I Joe's Serv Sta 601 Vt .. .. .. .. . ....... . 3315
QOI'rlll &amp;. Winter Serv Sta '00 Locust
. .. 2064

1000 Maso.

HARTMAN STANDARD SERVICE STATIOft

1300 Mass.3303

�SERVICE

LAWRENCE

67

Service Stations ( Cont' d)

Service Stations ( Cont'd)
HUDSON OIL CO

GAS FOR LESS
CANNED OIL
For Your Protection
740 N 2 .... . .... . ................. 2015

Tepee Serv RFO 5 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . 4187
(See Advertisement This Pagel
TEXACO PETROLEUM PRODUCTs,- - - SKY CHIEF and FIRE-CHIEF
Gasoline
Insulated Texaco Motor Oils
Custom Made Havoline
Motor Oils

Jones Service St.ltlon &amp; Oil Co East 23 ....... 2086
KVX PRODUCTSKAW VALLEY OIL CO 1318 W 7.
2061
Lash Sinclair Serv 725 N 2
. .. .. . .. .... 2069
&lt;See Advertisement Preced ing Pagel
LEE WAYMAN SERV STA 700 Locust . . ..... 2083
McRoy' s 0 - X Serv Sta 23 &amp; Haskell ....... . . 2071
Melvin's Serv Sta bOO W 23 . .............. 2017
MOTOR IN ONE STOP ST A
Complete Auto Repa.r
827 Vt . .. . . . ..................... 607
North Oil Co 6 24 N 2 . . ..... .. .. . ....... 4189
PARKER BUICK CO 700 N H . . . . . . . . . . . . . 402
PICKENS SERV STA 646 Vt .. .. . . . . . . . . . 2066
RAPID TRANSIT INC 1000 Mass . ... . . ..... 1300
(See Advertisement Preceding Pagel
RHODES &amp; TAYLOR SERV 319 N 2 ....... 508
(See Advertisement This Pagel
SHIELDS STANDARD SERVICE STA....:.__ _ _ ,

"WHERE TO FIND THEM"
CON SIGNEE

Texas Co The 802 Mass . . . .. .. . . . .. . .. 839
SER V ICE STATIONS

AIRPORT INN RFD 5 .. .......... . . .. .3058
EL NAVAJO CT RFD 1. . ...... . ...... . 2030
G I JOE'S SERV STA 601 Vt . . . ....... . 3315
HUNSINGER MOTOR CO 922 Mass ....... . 12
WAGNER WALT SERVICE STA :&gt;50 w 23 • .. 3385
WutMow's Conoco Serv Sta qoo lnd .....•.•. 3354
ZOOK'S STANDARD SERV STA
CHARLIE ZOOK, Owner
Wt Pick Up 4nd Dt/i.,r Your C11r

STANDARD PRODUCTS
ATLAS TIRE5-BATTERIES-ACCESSORIES
WASHING-LUBRICATION-TIRE REPAlR

STANUA I&lt;lJ OiL

23 &amp; La ......... ·. . . . . .......... . 2020

PRODUCTS
ATLAS TIRES &amp; BA fTERIES
Waslung and Vacuum Clean~ng
Lubrte&amp;tlon - Tire Rep&amp;lr8
846 Vt..... . . . .

. . . ........... . .. 2021

Most dealers, services, and products
are listed in the YELLOW PAGES.

SKELLY PRODUCTSANDREW'S SERV STA 1846 Mass . . .. .. 4183
SMITH ELDON SERVICE STATION

SINCLAIR PRODUCTS
CARE FOR YOUR CAR
JIOR YOUR COUNTRY
EXPERT LUJJRICATION
' 946 Mass ..... . .. . . . . . ............ . 3322

e

WASHING

o
e
e

TIRES
TUBES
BATIER IES

e LUBRICATION
CALL

Smith's Serv Sta

Mobilgas- Mobil 011 Products

. . . . . . . .. 2002

600 Mass

STANDARD OIL PRODUCTS

s;E:::E •

508

RHODES &amp; TAYLOR
819 N. 2

"WHERE TO BUY IT'
WHOLESALE

STANDARD OIL BULK PLANT
Francis Denton- Agent
846 Pa ... . . ..... . . . ........ . .. 1644
If No Answer Call . . ...... . .... 2272-W
DEALERS

BRIDGE STANDARD SERVICE STATION
601 Mass 3380
HARTMAN STANDARD SERVICE STATION
1300 Mass 3303
Miller Barbq RFD 5 . . . . . .
. .. 4081-N-4
PARKER BUICK CO 700 N H . .. . .. . . .. 402
SHIELDS STANDARD SERV STA 846 Vt .2021
STEWART'S TEXACO SERV STA

~3 &amp;

Barker. 3397

Bulk Agent Sam Fer guson 149 Or
Warehouse 700

EPEE
==service
LOCATED ON JCT. 59 &amp; 24

�68

SEWING-SIGN

LAWRENCE

Sewing Machines
BELLINGER

Sewing Machines (Cont'd)

ELECTRI-------~

AMift•,iziJ Dulw 011
DOMESTIC at NEW HOMB llOTAli.Y
-We Do Hem Stitchin l!' lt Button Hole.Duttonhole Attacllment.-Hematitchera
Pinkm~r Sheara
Pori$ ottd S~Nri&amp;~ for All Mal~$ Mochitsu
814 Mass •••••••••••••••••••••••••• 428

NECCHI SEWING MACHINES
ONLY NECCHI DOES
EVERYTHING

Sewing Machines, Repairing
BELLINGER ELEC
We Repair All Makes
Puts-Supplies-Buttonhole Attachments
814 Mass ..... ... ............. .. .... 428

Sheet Metal Work

Parts and Service
for All Makes

"FOR INFORMATION CALL"
TALBERT APPLNCE CO 910 Mass ...... 3606
Singer Sewing Machine Co 927 Mass .......... 247
SINGER SEWING MACHINE

Broeker H B Furnace Shop 1035 N H........ 1368
EVERLEY ROOFING CO 617 Vt ............. 511
FULTZ J LEE lOll Mass . .......... ... .... 249
HARRIS L T CO INC 802 Mass . . ••.... . ••.. 324
RHODES HTG &amp; ROOFING CO
Complete Sheet Metal Shop
815 Vt ............ . ................ 702

Shoe Repairers

CAUTION
SINGER sells its machines ONLY through
SINGER SEWING CENTERS identified by
the famous Red "S" on the window. NEVER
through dealers or depanment stores.

"WHERE TO BUY IT"
SBWING CBNTER
Sln~er

WHITE SEWING MACHINESEMERY BIRD THAYER CO 11 &amp; Walnut
Kansas City Mo !Toll Call) Harrison-3500
PECK'S OF KANSAS CITY 1044 Main Kansas City Mo (Toil Calf) . Baltimore.{)6()()

Sewing Mach Co 927 Mass ..•..••.. 247

Burgert Shoe Shop 1113 Mass ... . . ..... ... •. 141
LESCHER SHOE-SHOP 812~ Mass .. ... ... ... 256
McCOY'S SHOE STORE 813 Mass ..•.•••••.. 259

Shoes
BOSTONIAN SHOES FOR MENOBERS LEADING CLOTHIER.&gt; 821 Mass .... 203
BROWft'S TOGGERY 830 Mass
. .. 389
BUSTER BROWN SHOES FOR BOYS &amp; GIRLsMcCOY'S SHOE STORE 813 Mass ... . .. . .. 259
Gibbs Clothing Co 811 Mass .•... .. ..... ... . 459
Haynes &amp; Keene Shoe Store
Massagic Shoes For Men
Vitality &amp; Connies For Women
819 Mass .......................... 524
Henry's Shoe Box 815 Mass .. . ....... ...... . 481
(See Advertisement This Pagel
Litwin's 831 Mass ......•.••••••••••••••• 1088
McCOY'S SHOE STORE 813 Mass ••••••••••• 259
Miller-Jones Shoe Store 829 Mass ••••••••••• 503
ROYAL COLLEGE SHOPS
Por Mtn-

PHONE481

NUNN-BUSH- FREEMAN

JARMAN FOR MEN
ENNA JETIICKS FOR WOMEN

~?6~:tJ~~T 1 FOR CHILDREN
815 MASS

For WomenOE LISO DEBS -

OLD TOWN TROTTER

Por ChildrenLAZY BONES -RED GOOSE- JUMPING

JACK

837 Mass .................... ....... 648

WEAVER A D
Ladies Shoes
Rhythm Step-Air Step-Sandier-Paramount
901 Mass ... . .... .. ..... .......... . . 636

Siding
10 E. 8th

Handy Man
Experienced Workmen For Any Job
Good References-Bill Walker Mgr

1033 R I. .......................... 1325

OF ALL

KIN OS

HARRIS-BARNARD

Sign Manufacturers
Baird Dave Signs 17 W 9 ... .............. . 1501
BOWMAN RADIO &amp; TELVSN SERV 826 Vt . . .. 138
HARRIS-BARNARD SIGN &amp; NEON 10 E 8 .•.. 810
&lt;See Advertisement This Page)

�SLAUGHTERER~STOKERS

LAWRENCE

Slaughterers, Cu stom

69

Stationers

Fritzel Frozen Food Lockers 546 Miss .. •.. . •1280

Slip Cover s

Allen Press 1041 N H ... ... • ...... • ... .. .. 1234
Bullock's 2 E 7 .... .. . . ... . . . . ... . ..... . . . m
CRANE &amp; CO IN

Courter P E Upholstering Co 837 Vt . .. ..... . .. 143

OFFICE FURNITURE
OFFICE MACHINES

Sororities
Alpha Chi Omega 1246 Oread • ...•.• . . , •.• 3437
Alpha Delta Pi 1145 La . . .. . . .. . . . .. ... .3450
ALPHA OMICRON PI 1144 La ..• . • • •..• , • • . 781
Al pha Phi 1.332 La . . .. . .. . .. .. .. •...•.••. 3735
Alpha Phi An nex 1232 La ..... . .. . . . , . . .. . 3236
Ch1Omega House 1345 W Campus rd . . . ..... 731
DELTA DELTA DELTA 160 0 Oxford Rd . . .. . . 537
Delta Gamma 1001 w tiills pkw)' . . ... . . . . . .. . 768
Gamma Phi Beta 1339 W Campus Rd .•...•.. 3510
KAPPA ALPHA THETA 1433 Tenn . .. . .. . .. . 295
Kappa Kappa Gamma Gower Place .. .... . .... 718
PI BETA PHI 1241&gt; Min .. .. .. . . ... . .. . . .. . 415
Stgma Kappa 1625 Edgehlll .•. . . .. .• ..•. .• . 534
Theta Phi Alpha 1528 Tenn .. . . . . .. . . . ... .3697

OFFICE SUPPLIES
643 Mass . . .• •. ..••.• . •• . ..• . .••• •• 501
Foree Prntg Co 9 E 8 .. ... .. . . .. .. ... . .... 967

Steamsh ip Agencies
Downs Travel Serv 10151 Mass .... . . . .. . ... 3661

Steel Reinforcing
Morton's Bldg Matrls Co 1834 Mass . .. .. .... . 264
Penny M N Construction Co 730 Delaware • .. . 1892

Steel, Str uctural

Sporting Goods
Francis Sport Gds 72 8 Mass .. .... . . ...... .. 640
(See Advertisement This Pagel
KIRKPATRICK SPORT SHop- - -- - - .
COMPLETE UNE OF SPORTING
GOODS
" Evt•ything Po• T ht Spo•tsman"
Fishing T ackle-Guns- Ammunition
Baseball-Softball-Tennis-Football
&amp; Basketball-Bowling-Golf
Uniforms For All Sports

715 Mass . . . . . .. .. . . . ........... . .. 1018
Malott's Hardware 736 Mass ..... .. . . •. .. . . . 615
OBERS LEADING CLOTHIER

Zimmerman &amp; Sons
Angles-Channels-Sheets-Rounds-Flats

1832 M&amp;SS ... . . . . ............. .. .... 429

Steel W indows
-See W indow•, Metal

Stock Yards
Schaake M L W 23 • . • ••••••••• • ••••.. • •.• 654

Stokers
0 P AUTOMATIC STOKERs-

SNIDER COAL &amp; HEAT SERV CO

200 Locust .1010

WILSON and SPALDING
ATHLETIC EQUIPMENT
Uniforms &amp; Ath let ic Shoes for Every Sport

Spuilll Diu •""' T•

r,,.,

821 Mass ••• • ••••• • •••••••• • •• ••• .• 203

Springs; Automobile
- SeeAutomo bile Springs

Stables- See R iding A cademies
Stamps, Rubber
- See Rubber Stamp•

CALL

640
GUN$ -NEW - U SE D
GUN R EPA I R I NG· RE BLUJNG
AMMUNI TI O N
FI SH I NG E Q UIPMENT
OUTBOARD M O T ORS
Mercury &amp; Chris-Craft
TEN NIS· B ASEBALL.

FRANCIS SPOR
TING GOODS
728 Ma...

State Offices
Employment Security Div 10.35 Mass .... . ..... 67
Highway Comsn
Constr Dept 745 Vt . . .. . .. . . .. . ... .. .. . . 626
Maintnc Dept 600 Lincoln . . .. .. . . ... . ... . 342
Ma.~l Dept 600 Lincoln . . .. ... .. . ... .. . .. 342
Kansas State Employment Serv 1035 Mass •••.. . 67
Kans Veterans Comsn 745 Vt . . ....... . . .... . 872
Veterans Admnstrtn 745 Vt .. . ... .... ...... 872

Y ou can sell more nationally adve1'·
tised goods by listing the brand names
in these Y ELLOW PAGES and identi·
fying yourself as a dealer.

Wh o fixes

RADIOS?
T hat's a question the Yellow P ages
can answer quickly.
Just look under "Radio Service."
And you'll save t ime and steps.

�70

STORAGE-TELEGRAPH

LAWRENCE

Storage
LAWRENCE TRANSFER &amp; STORACE CO INC
Two Furn•ture Storage Warehouses
731 N H . · . . .
. ....... ..... 15
Smith Et~n A Moving &amp; Trfr Co 11 E 9 .•••••. 46
&lt;See Advertisement This Page)

HOUSEHOLD GOODS

Local And Long Distance
Moving

ETHAN A. SMITH
MOVING &amp; TRANSFER CO.

Sweepers
-See Vacuum Cleaners, Dome•tic

Tailors
HANDICRAFT T A I L O R s - - - - - ----,
fORMALS &amp; WEDDING GOWNS TAILORED

udies' &amp; Men's
Made to Measure

11 E 9 . . .......................•...••••. 46
If no answer eall 2100

WEAVING &amp; ALTERATIONS
CLOTHING REPAIRING OF ALL KINDS
905~ Mass . ......................... 157

Schulz Wm H 9241 Mass .............. ..... 914

Tarpaulins
Burk Awning &amp; Canvas Goods Mfg Co 70bl Mass .1173

Taverns

CALL

RADIO
CONTROLLED

Court House Tavern 1105 Mass ............. 2034
Eighth Street Tavern 117 E 8 ...•.......... 4193
Flamingo Club RFD 3 ...• ........... . . ... . 2028
Old M1ssion Inn 1904 Mass . ..... ......... .2040
Pink Elephant The 70b Mass • .....• • .....•. 2014
SCOREBOARD b E 9 ........... . ......... 2026
Stuart's Tavern 17 E 9 ... ...... . ......... •3.366

Tax Return Preparation
Beal T Murl Acctg &amp; Tax Serv Lawrence Natl
Bk Bldg 34
Lesh Warren N Lawrence Natl Bk Bldg . ....... 667
Sherrick's Acctg Serv 927~ Mass ............ . 586

Taxicabs
Six-Five Cab Co 904 Vt ... .... ........ .. .... 65
(See Advertisement This Page)
UNION CAB CO Jilyhawker Theatre og .• .. .. 2800
(See Advertisement This Page)

Tea Rooms
Castle Tea Room The 1307 Mass ...•..•.•.. . 149
Htarth Tta Room The 11 E 11 . . . . . . ....... 10.36

UNION

C~B

CO.

JA YHAWKER THEATRE BLDG.

Telegraph Companies
Western Union Telegraph Co 703 Mass
To send a telegram cablegram or radiogram
ltany timt-Ask ootrator for
Western Union

TAXI
CALL

65

TheYellow Pages will help you find
a hairdresser near by.

RADIO CONTROLLED - WE NEVER ClOSE

Just look under "Beauty Shops" for
the address and telephone number.

SIX-FIVE CAB CO
904 Vt

You'll save time-and steps-when
you use the Yellow Pages.

�LAWRENCI

Telephone Companies

For information and censultation ..,.,.ice in
planntnl for tlae iaatalla tioo of telcplooae
facilities in new reaideac9 and build .... a, caU
the Telephone Comp&amp;ny and aak for 'Aruitc:&lt;:U' and Builders• SerTice."

734 Vermont ......... . ... .. . . ...... 1200
SOUTHWESTERN BELL TELEPHONE CO
734 Vt 221
After 5 PM •nd on Sund•ys and
holidays ctll .... . .••• •. ..•..• .. •... . 600
Telephone Service C•lls
To report • telephone out of
order
...... ... Call Rtpalr Sttvlc:e
For telephone numbers which
do not appear In the directory
. . ........... ~n InformaUon
To obtain asstsunct on catls
or report unsatisfactory servIce on a call .....•.•••. Call Cllltf Operator

Television Parts
American Radio &amp; Telvsn Co 19 E 9 .......... 480

Television Receiver•
ADMIRAL MAGIC MIRROR TELEVISIOKTALBERT APPLNCE CO 910 Mass

3606

BENDIX TELEVIS IOKSTERLING FURN CO

1192

Mass

CAPEHART TELEVISION

MagAaSCOpe big-pictu~ telnl•·
ioo systtmS ha~ built·in f•lter
to eliminate eyestrain, give
clearer, sharper pictures. Traditianally fine Magna•ox cabinets.

MaqnavoX
.J

"WHERE TO BUY THEM"
AUTHORIZED DEALER

Smith L Loke Co

84o

Mass .... .......... 725

MOTOROLA TELEVISION SALES &amp; SERVICEThe TV with
easy-on-the-eyes
GLARE-GUARD!
Filtered-Clear pictures,
TV
Insunt "Target" tuning,
high fidelity "Golden Voice" tone, famous for Dependability-a model for every home and priced
for every budget.
"WHERE TO BUY THEM"
BEAMAN'S RADIO &amp; TELVSN 1200 NY .. 140

Motoro a
1

PHILCO GOLDEN GRIDVINCENT'S INC 724 Mass .......... .... 178
R C A TELEVISION RECEIVERsBELL MUSIC CO 925 Mass ........• .. . ..375
TRUETONE TELEVISION AND RADIGWESTERN AUTO ASSOCIATE STORE
944 Mass 613
WESTIICHOUSE TELEVISION
Features the exduslve Sl1&gt;9le
Dial Control on table &amp; console
models In popular screen sizes.
New automatic circuits provide
greater picture clarity and bril·
liance.
You Can Be SURE .. If It's WESTINGHOUSE

"WHERE TO RTTY THEM"
DBALBRS

BEACON APPLNCE CO INC 709 Mass .. . .. 253

"IVnERE Tn RTTV THEM"
DISTRIBUTOR

UNIVERSAL TELVSN SYS TRAINING
DIV 1029 E 31 Kansas City Mo &lt;Toll
cam VAlentine 0080

w9

MAGNAVOX TELEVISION RECEIVERS
SALES AND SERVICE

*

Suptrb Television with Cape·
hart Symphonic-Tone System.
Luxurious Master-crafted CabInets. 8e Distinctive-Own a
Capehart!

Down Town T V Serv 620

......... .

2BO

GENERAL ELECTRIC TELEVISION

YELLOW PAGES are always nearby
when you wa111 to look up the name or
address of a business or service.
It pays to advertise in this YELWW
PAGE section.

I

fllg " ill~
dear as I··~ ,,,
tul'l:s. Bl9 •cr'en v.cwing, 12
channels, automatic sound, G~E
Dynapowor spedkers, simplified
tuning, co"'tant focus, hand·
rubbed cabinets.

"W IlERE TO BUY THEM"
DEALER

Are ihey open
evenings?

GENERAL APPLIANCE CO INC 1103 Mass .. 19
Goodrich B F Co
Motorola Television
929 Mass .
.. ................. 21
HALLICRAFTER TELEVISIONTALBERT APPLNCE CO 910 Mass ....... 3606
HANNA RADIO SHOP
R C A·Ztnlth S•les &amp; Servlce

71

Television Receivers ( Cont'd)

SOUTHWESTERN BEU TELEPHONE Ca---'"1
Architects' and Builders' Service

938

TELEPHONE-TELEVISION

t.3l Mua •.••••.••••.••••.•••••..••. 303

Look in the Yellow Pages. Many
ftnns show their business hours,
products, services, and other
information.

�72

TELEVISION- TERMITE

LAWRENCE

Television Service
American Radio &amp; Telvsn Co
G 0 Schmitendorf Jr
Professional TV Service
19 E 9 . ... .. ... . . ... . .. ........ . .. 480
Beaman's Radio &amp; Telvsn 1200 N Y . .... . .... 140
BOWMAN RADIO &amp; TELVSN SERV 826 Vt. .. . 138
Down Town T V Serv 620 W 9
......... 280
(See Advertisement This Page)
Jayhawk T-V-Applnce Serv 18 E 9 . . ........ 745
(See Advertisement This Page)

Termite Control
ANTIMITE TERMITE CONTROL_ _ _ _ _ ,
liCENSED BY THE ANTIMITB SYSTEM
OF TERMITB CONTROL
Pt~l/y lfJJMWI

SCHENDEL PEST CONTROL
Headed by a Graduate Biologist
1018 E 6 Topeka Ks ...... . &lt;Toll call) 2-8102

RAY'S EXTERMINATING CO
TERMITE CONTROL

I

~ Year Warranty Bond
Experienced Applicators of
"PENT A" WO(ld Preservative

For Pree [fiSpection Call Collect

CALL 745

4209 Oak Kansas City
Mo . &lt;Toll Calll Jefferson-5261

Guaranteed Service

0-~~~J'Jmk T-V tiAPPLIANCE
(/Wf'v...--·
,S~

18 E 9th St

-*

Many widely advertised products are
listed in the YELLOW PAGES.

SERVICE

*
SERVICE

SALES-

PICK UP &amp; DEUVERY

PHONE

PHONE

280

280

620

w 9th

620

w 9th

�LAWRENCE

T ermite Con trol ( Con't)

TERM ITE-TIRES

73

Tires (Cont' d)

TERMINIX TERMITE IHSULATIONw---

-

TER.MITE

GOODRICH B F TIRE~------THE NEW
PUNCTURE SEALING
TUBELESS TIRE

CONTRO[,

EXCLUSIVELY
OVER 100,000
STRUCTURES
TREATED
Fru Inspection

TIRES &amp; TUBES · RECAPPING· TIRE SERVICE

"FOR INFORMATION CALL"

"WHERE TO CALL"

EVERLEY ROOFING CO 617 Vt. .... . .... 511

GOODRICH B F CO 929 Mass ......... . ... 21

Theatres
Granada Theatre 1020 Mass ............. . . . .946
Jayhawker Theatre 646 Mass . . . . .......... . .. 10
Lawrence Drive-In Theatre 625 w 23 •.... . . . . 260
Patee Theatre 828 Mass .. . . . ............. 321
Varsity Theatre 1015 Mass . . .
. ....... 132

GOODYEAR TIRE~-------More people ride on
Goodyear Tires than on
any other kind.
Let the Goodyear dealer
be your Tire Service
Headquarters.

"WHERE TO BUY THEM"

T ile, Asphalt

DEALERS

ARMSTRONGRHODES HTG &amp; _RO_OFING CO 815 Vt ..... 702
COOK PAINT &amp; VARNISH CO 919 Mass ...... 846

T ile, Ceramic
SALSBURY FLOOR COVERING 902 Mass . ... 3824

T ires
DAVIS TIRESWESTERN AUTO ASSOCIATE STORE
944

Mass 613

FIRESTONE TIRES
ROAD SERVICE
Pauea~tt-Truck-Tractor
~

DEALERS

Jones Farm Supply E 23 ................ 469
Stoffer Milt
Wholesale Distributor
623 Locust. .. . . . . ..... . ... . ... 1358
Gravitt's Tire &amp; Home Supply 916 Mass . ..... 1630
MOTOR IN ONE STOP STATION 827 Vt • • . 607
&lt;See Advertisement This Page)
RAPID TRANSIT INC 1000 Mass ........... 1300
SEIBERLING TIRESHUDSON M F CO 800 N H.............. 825
Smith's Service Station 600 Mass ........... 2002
US TIRES
QUALITY TIRES
QUALITY RECAPS
QUALITY REPAIRS

r

Trucb To Sen'e Yoa

Men With "K.oow-How"
Complete Stocb

"WHERE TO BUY THEM"
FRITZ CO 14 E 8 ..................... •4
FRANZ SERV STA
Goodrich B F Tires
900 N H ............................ 867

FriU Co 14 E 8 .........•.•..••......•••.. 4
Goodrich B F Co 929 Mass .................. 21

"WHERE TO C4.LL',
Dl!AU!R

RAPID TRANSIT INC

1ooo Mass ........ 1300

Tires, Recapping
0 K Rubber Welders 790 N 2 ..... .. .. • ..... 255

Rapid Transit Inc 1000 Mass ............. . .1300

Who fixes

~
"400"

RADIOS?

18 1\lon ths Guara n tee on
P assenger Cars Only

TRUCK &amp; TRACTOR TIRES

That's a question the Y ellow Pages
can a nswer quickly.

Tire Repairing
Wheel Ba lancing
Aligning

J ust look under "Radio Service."

MOTOR IN

And you'll save time and steps.

Call 607

ONE STOP STATION
827 Vermont

�74

LAWRENCE

TITLE-TRUCK

Toys

Title Service
EMICK JOHN C 737 Mass ...... . ........... 396

Tobacco, Wholesale
COKER A B &amp; SON 1337 Mass .......... .. .. 558
Patrson August J &amp; Son 16 t: 'i ......... . ... 1792

Tourist Courts
AIRPORT INN RFD 5 ...... . ..... • ....... 3058
EL NAVAJO COUR

ALLIS-CHALMERS TRACTOR$N!EDER IMPLMT CO 520 W 23 . ..•.. ..•385
FORD TRACTORS SALES AND SERVICEBIGSBY &amp; BANNING TRACTOR &amp;
------~IMPLMT CO 620 Mass.83
JOHN DEERE TRACTORS PARTS &amp; SERVICEGREEN BROS 633 Mass . . . . . . . . . . . . . .631
MASSEY-HARRIS FARM IMPLEMENTsLAWRENCE IMPLMT CO 518 W 23 . ...... 647
MCCORMICK-DEERING FARMALL TRACTORsKRAFT TRUCK &amp; TRACTOR CO 1818 Mass 244
OLIVER IMPLEMENTsGALLAGHER BUDDY MOTORS 634 Mass .. 1000

---

18 MODERN CABINS
CLEAN-COMFORTABLE
Cool in Summer-Warm ia Winter
Senoice Station in Connectiooa
Y.i Mile Wcat on H~!nray 40

RFD 1 ............................ 2030
Jayhawk Court RFD 3 .......... . ..... . ..... 619
(See Advertisement This Pagel
LAWRENCE MOTEL

LAWRENCE

MOTEL
FIREPROOF -

KIRKPATRICK SPORT SHOP 715 Mass . ..... 1018

Tractors

NEW

Trailer Parks
uob' s Trailer Ct 1311 W 6 . .... . .. . . .. .... 3326
M &amp; H TRAILER C

-

MODERN-

City Conveniences - Country Comfort
Close to Bus Line
Laundry Facilities - Clean Rest Rooms
Trailer Accessories
12 Blocks East of the High School
. ... . 2081

1505 E 15 . .

Highway 40-24
624 N 2 ........ . . • ......... . ... 4189

Most dealers, services, and products
are listed in the YELLOW PAGES.

Transfer, Moving-See Mover•
Travel Agents
Downs Travel Serv 1015! Mass ............. 3661

Tree Trimming, Commercial
Selichnow Marvin 622 Ala •..•••. .• ... •... 1479

Truck Lines
Andtrson Richard Trucking
Local Hauling Of All Kinds
2325 Hasktll . . . . . . . • • • • • • • • . . . •

. .1321

Gauck Truck Lines 237 Ark ....... . ..... .... 927
HALL BROS TRUCK LINES 1045 Pa ... . . .... 936
LEONARD BROS TRANSPORT CO

DAILY FREIGHT SERVICE

NEW and STRICTLY MODERN
AT CITY LIMITS
NORTH OF TOWN ON HIWA Y 40

&amp;

59

16 UNITS

K. E. Butler, Owner and Mgr.
FOR RESERVATION

Call 619

Between
Lawrence, Topeka, LeaYenwortk, Lalaaaa,
Atcloiaoa and SL J oseplt
Connections for all points in XaaiU.

820 Vt . . . .. . .. .. . ........ . ........ 3U
SanU Ft Trail Transportation Co 610 E 7 ..... .. 98
Schiller Elmer A Trucking RFD 6 . .......... 4266
SPENCER BROS TRUCK LIN

PAST SERVICE DAILY

Who fixes

RADIOS?
That's a question the Yellow Pages
can answer quickly.
Just look under "Radio Service."
And you'll save time and steps.

KANSAS CITY-LAWRENCJ!
INTERMEDlATB POINTS
342 Lincoln .... ..... .... .. ......... 1822

VALLEY EXPRESS

DAILY FREIGHT SERVICE
Between

Kansas City-Lawrence-Topeka
and lnteJ:mediate Points
) &amp; Locust ••.•••••••• •••••• • ••.••.•970

�LAWRENCE

TRUCKS-UNDERTAKERS

75

Trucks, Motor
CHEVROLET ADVANCE-DESIGN

TRUCK~S-

-

Oi!pendable

p~rformance!

Low cost per mile!
Wide choice of models!
There's a Chevrolet truck that's just right for your
business.

"WHERE TO BUY IT"
WINTER CHEVROLET CO 738 N H .... . .. . 77
DODGE-JOB-RATED TRUCKS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
Fast Truck Service
Factory Approved Parts
And Accessori&lt;s.
D&lt;pendablt--"R&lt;ady to Work"
Used Trucks

Crane &amp; Co., Inc.
AGENCY FOR UNDERWOOD,
ELLIOTT, FISHER

Phone 501

RIBBONS, CARBON, SUNDSTRAND
ADDING MACHINES

REPAIRS -

RENTALS

643 Mass.

"FOR SERVICE CALLn
RANSDELL MOTOR SERVICE 623 Mass . . . 361

It

AND ADDING MACHINES
New
All
&amp;
Makes
Used

SEJlVICll

SALES- SERVICE- RENTALS

FORD BONUS BUll T TRUCK
SALES

"WHERJ! TO BUY THEM."
MORGAN-MACK MOTOR CO 714 Vt ..... 3500

Phone 13
OFFICE MACHINES CO
710 MASS

INTERNATIONAL TRUCKS SALES &amp; SERVICEKRAFT TRUCK &amp; TRACTOR CO 1818 Mass 244

Kraft Truck &amp; Tractor Co 1818 Mass . . ....... 244

SANDERS MOTOR CO
STUDEBAKER TRUCKS
SALBS 6 SBRVICB

Exlf"ll Comfof"l- Extra Powe,. -l!.xtr11 Thrift

Completely New Through It Through
622 Mass .••••.•••••••••••••••••••• . 616

Tuxedos, Renting

FOR GOOD

PARTY-LINE
SERVICE

BROWN'S TOGGERY 830 Mass ............. 389

Typewriters
BULLOCK'S 2 E 7 .•••••••••••••••••••••••S79
Crane &amp; Co Inc 643 Mass .....•....•.••••••501
&lt;See Advertisement This Page)

OFFICE MACHINES CO

All Makes New-Used Typewriters
710 Mass . .. . . .. .... . .. .............. 13
&lt;See Advertisement This Page)

ROYAL TYPEWRITERS-

LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER EXCH 735 Mass.548

Typewriters, Repairing
OFFICE MACHINES CO 710

Mass . .. .... . . ... 13

Undertakers
-5ee Funeral Director•

please don't interrupt
when the line is in use,
except to make an
emergency call.
•

�76

LAWRENCE

UNITED-VINEGAR

Vacuum Cleaners, Domestic
(Cont'd)

United States Government
Offices
Collector of Internal Rrvenue Post Office bg .... 531
Farmtrs Homt Administration Court House .... 2450
Geological Survey Kansas University ........... 852
Office of Rent Stabilization 8 W 8 . . _ ... ..... 856
Organized Reserve Corps 609 Mass ....••..•.•.309
Post Offlct b45 N H ....... _...... ....... 276
Production &amp; Marketing Administration
County Committee 641 Mass.652
Seltetive Service l ocal Board No 18
Courthoust .1369
Soil Constrvatlon Serv 6411 Mass._. _... _... . 64:!
Sunflower Ordnance Works DeSoto .......... 3800
USA &amp; USAF Recruiting Office 609 Mass ...•. 575

-see Schools, Uniursities

LEWYT
vAcuu" CLtAt&lt;tQS

FREE HOME DEMONSTRATION

"WBERE TO BUY THEM"
SALES 6 SI!RVICB DEALERS

BELLINGER ELEC 814 Mass ...•........ 428

Vacuum Cleaners, Repairing
Belll119er Eltetrlc
All Makes-Parts-Supplies-Rentals

Upholsterers
Courter P E Upholstering Co
Slip Covers-Drapes To Order
837 Vt ...•...... _.... ..... .. _...... 143
DINGMAN'S FURN &amp; UPHLSTRY 1801 Mass .1503
Farr Edgar H 646 W 23 .................. 1290

Upholstery, Cleaning
NEW YORK CLEANERS 926 Mass . . .......... 75
ELECTROLUX VACUUM CLNR AGcv-y- - - - - - .
ELECTllOLUX CLEANER &amp;

Am PURIPillR

With Power Driven Floor Polisher
"The Cleaner You Never Have 10 Empty"
SALBS 6- SBR:VICB
P. V. Cox. hlho,;z,tl DIMIF

1904 Barker . ...••...•.•.• . .•.•••••. 454

GENERAL ELECTRIC VACUUM CLEANERs- Backed by years of research anti ex• •
perience, G·E cleaners g'(ve you effi·
clent, dependable seNice. light
weight - easy to handle. BoUt up·
right and tank·type models.

· /.

814 Mass ..... .. _.......... _.. _ •.... 428
Mann CJ Repair Snop 839 Ky .... _ ...•.....2611

Variety Stores

KrtssS H 921 Mass . . .............•....•.•510
Woolworth F W Co 915 Mass . _. ___ . _ . ___ . __ _962

Vegetables, Wholesale
SAM'S PROD CO 718 N H.. - ..... . ........ 206

Vacuum Cleaners, Domestic

1 ·.

'(/,
·

"WHERE TO CALL"
SALES DBALI!RS
VINCENT'S INC 724 Mass. ___ . ____ ..... 178

HOOVER AUTHORIZED SALES &amp; SERVICr-Upright trlple·acl ion
or Tank·Type
Hoover Cleaners.
Service by Hoover trained men using genuine Hoover
parts are available only through Factory Branch Stations
and Authorized dealers. Do not accept Substitutes.

IHOOVERI

"WHERE TO BUY IT"
DBALER

Radio Shop 933 Mass .... _•....•.. 303

Help newcomers in town to gel acquainted with you-classify your products and services in these YELLOW
PAGES.

Nu vu::.' b"b TO EMPTY

It's quiet- no roar! Lewyl
picks up mol&gt;! lint, thread,
hair - with less rug wear.
Filters the air 3 times. You
breathe no dusty odors.

TALBERT APPLNCE CO
Hoover Vacuum Cleaners
910 Mass .. ... _......... ___ ..... _..3606

Universities

Hanna

LEWYT SALES AND SERVIc...------

Vending Machines
EMICK JOHN

u----------.

ROWE CIGARETTE KACHIN.!:S
SCALES 4: AMUSEMENT MACHINES
Pbced On Commiuion
WURUTZER PHONOGRAPHS RENTED

1014! Mass .. . •••....•.••...•.••..•• 343

Venetian Blinds
Burk Awning &amp; Canvas Glfs Mfg Co 706} Mus.ll73
Davis Paint Associate Store 931 Mass ....... 1078
Ramsty W A Shade Shop 818 Mass._ .........606
WEAVER A D 901 Mass ..... _.... _.....•.. W

Veterinarians
WSUR! VETERINARY HOSPITAL----.
Da. T. J. L&amp;Aauu
Ettablialocd Since 1930

GENERAL PRACTICE

Large and Small Animals
Special Attention to Rural Calla
809 Vt ...............•.•.•..••..... 240

Nights Sundays &amp; Holidays Call.._ ..... 4258
PIERSON I J
Heated Insulated Kennels-Boarding
Large Outside Individual Runs
Boarding-Bathing-Clipping

2201 La ... ... _............. _...... 186

Residence 1746 Miss .................... 859
WEMPEWW
General Veterinary Practitioner
Modern Small Anim.1l Hospital
With Complete Small Animal Service
219 E 9 ............................ 602

Vinegar
Krum

c c 810 Pa .........•.....••••••.•.. m

�LAWRENCE

Wallpaper

WALLPAPER-WATER

77

Watches, Repairing

COOK PAINT &amp; VARN ISH CO '119 Mass ....... 846
DAVIS PAINT ASSOCIATE STORE 931 Mass.l078
Malott's Hardware 73&amp; Mass ............... 615
RAMSEY W A SHADE SHOP
Shades-Wall Paper-Paint- Linoleum
818 Mass ........ . .................. 606

Washing Machines
APEX WASHERTALBERT APPLNCE CO 910 Mass . . . ... . 3606
EASY WASHERSSMITH L LOKE CO 846 Mass .... . ....... 725
FRIGIDAIRE AUTOMATIC WASHER
See Frigidaire Automatic
Washer with "Live-Water"
action and Rapidry-Spin.
Also Frigidaire ironers,
dryers, refrigerators, electric ranges, food freezers,
water heaters, dehumidi-

~
Frigidaire

fiers, air conditioners.

"WHERE TO O.d.LL"

BALFOUR L G CO
Watchrnaster Rated Repairs

411 w 14 .......................... 307
GUSTAFSON B G
Free Watch Inspection Work Guaranteed
809 Mass . ... . ...................... 911
MASDEN'S WATCH SHOP
&amp; BIBLE SUPPLIES
WATCHES- CLOCKS- GIFTS
Guaranteed Precision Repair of All Types
of Watches, Clocks, Chronographs

BffiLB SUPPLIES
12 E 9 .•........• . ..•. . .••..••••••• .lf'T

REUSCH-GUENTHER JEWELRY 824 Mass .... 903
SAMPLES WATCH SHOP 914~ Mass . .. .. ••.368
WOLFSON'S
WATCH&amp;: JEWELRY REPAIRING
Esput Slrvici-Gt~tJrtJrttutl WMlt
See Us For Diamonds, Watcltet
J e welry and Lu&amp;traae

SALES &amp; Sl!.RVICB DBALBR

HANNA RADIO SHOP 933 Mass ........ .. 303
G1NERAL ELECTRIC HOME LAUNDRY
EQUIPMENT
For "Quick-Clean Washing," famous •
Wringer Washers, gentle, thorough
·'P. .· 1
washing action. Automatic Washers,
with revolutionary G. E. improvements.
~.
.
Automatic Dryers, Automatic and
·'
Rotary Ironers.
"IV HERE 1'0 O.d.LL"
SALBS &amp; SBRVICB DBAI.BR
GENERAL APPLIANCE CO INC 1103 Mus .. 19

Gravitt's Tire &amp; Home Supply 916 Mass .•••. 1630
MAYTAG WASHERS &amp; IRONER
SALES &amp; SERVICE
See The
World Fa.mous
One Piece Cast

AllltDinum Tub

Mass .......................... 675

Water, Distilled
Bottling co
Pick Up And Delivery

Dr Pepper

81!1 N H ....... . .... . ......... . .. . 198

Water Heaters
CHRISTENSON CO 400 E 23 ............... no
GREEN BROS
Fairbanks-Morse Gas-Electric Heaters
633 Mass ...............•••.••.••. .• 631
KANSAS PUBLIC SERV CO INC
Ruud-Rex-Security Water Heaters
733 Mass ...••.•• .•••• ••••••••• •• •••SlS
NORRIS I!ROS 500 Locust ............... 1163
RHEEM WATER HEATERS
RELY ON RHEEM

for reliable hot water service.

Marua

WE REPAlll AU MAJO!S W ASHEltS

"WHERE TO BUY IT"
VINCENT'S INC 724 Mass .. . ........... 178
NORGE WASHERSBELLINGER ELEC
Automatic &amp; Conventional
814 Mass ..... .. ................. 428
WESTINGHOUSE LAUNDRY EQUIPMEN
West inghouse Laundry
"Twins" make washday
workless. The Laundromat
washes, rinses, damp·dries
clothes. The Clothes Dryer
dries them bone dry, or
just right for ironing. All
Automatically!
"WHERE TO OALL"
DBif.L£RS

BEACON APPLNCE CO INC

743

709

Mass ..... 253

Models for every home All automatic,
all "Pressure-Proved"
for long, trouble-free life.
Gas, electric, oil.

"WHERE TO BUY THEltf"
DBALE!.RS

BRUNE PLBG HTG &amp; ELEC CO

545

Ind .. . 308

VINCENT'S INC 724 Mass. . . . . .
. .. . ... 178
WESTINGHOUSE WATER HEATERS
Automatic, electric, they
fit every need. Get rid of
trouble, get ideal service
with Westinghouse. Electric water heating is
economical.
You Can Be SURE .•
If It's WESTINGHOUSE.
"WHERE TO O.d.LL"
DBALBRS

Beacon Applnce Co Inc

709

Mass .......... 253

Washing Machines, Repairing
Bellinger Electric
We Service All Makes
New Wringer Rolls Made Up
814 Mass .. .. ............... • ....... 428
Mann C J Repair Shop 839 Ky ........ . . . . .. 2611
VINCENT'S INC 724 Mass ................. 178

Water Softeners
LINDSAY SOFT WATER SERV 613 Vt .......623

Water Softeners, Renting
CULLIGAN SOFT WATER SERV 1:330 W 9 .... 680

�78

WATER-WRECKER

LAWRENCE

Water Supply Systems
CHRISTENSON CO 400 E 23 ............... 710
FAIRBANKS·MORSE WATER SYSTEMsGREEN BROS t.33 Mass .... ... .. . ..... .. 631

Water Well Drilling Contractors
WILSON W D DRILLING CONTR 520 Ohio ... 2968

Welding
Pickens Welding Shop 623 Vt •••••••••••••• 179
ZimmerNn &amp; Sons 1832 Mau .••••••••.••.• 429

Welding Equipment
LINCOLN ARC WELDING EQUIPMENT-

KRAFT TRUCK &amp; TRACTOR CO 1818 Mass.244

Wheel Aligning
BEE Llf4E WHEEL ALIGNING SYSTEM-

Window Shades
Ramsey W A Shade Shop 818 Mau ... •. ...... 606

Windows, Metal
Morton's Bldg Matrls Co 1834 Mass .......... 264
Penny M N Construction Co 730 Delaware •••• 11192

Windows, Storm
RHODES HEATIIIG &amp; ROOFUIG
lL H. "DUSTY"

"'co----,

-.HOD~

Thermoseal All Aluminum Combination
Self Storing-Permanent .Aluminum Finish
lit VI Gh1t y ..

.__1

815 Vermont .......................702

UNDERWOOD METAL CO 730 Vt ... ......403

PICKENS WELDING SHOP

Bear Aligning-Dy-NA-Mic Wheel BAhlllCIII9
f&gt;23 Vt ..•••••••••••••••••••••••••• . 179

Wheel Balancing
BEAR ALIGNING-DYNAMIC WHEEL
BALNCING-

UNIVERSITY MOTORS 707 N H . .... ..... 540

Window Cleaning
Handy Man
Experienced Workmen For Any Job
Good References-Bill Walker Mgr
1033 R I ......... .... .. ............ 1325

Windows, Wood
Wilton Wlndow &amp; Glass Service 512 E 9 .... .. 1052

Wiping Materials
MECHANICS OVERALL CLNG CO
Wiping Cloths Rented And Sold
Pick-Up &amp; Delivery Twice Weekly
1720 Wabash Kansas City Mo
&lt;Toll Call&gt; . Benton 1656

Women's Wear
-See Ladiel' Ready·To-JJ'etll'

Woodworking
Hatk T H Woodworking Shop 807 Vt ......... 1!111

IT PAYS ..
to answer
the telephone
promptly
and
pleasantly.

Wrecker Service, Automobile
-See A.utomobilll W reeker Senriee

You can sell more nationally advtr·
tised goods by listing the brand names
in these YELLOW PAGES and identifying yourself as a dealer.

NEED SOAIETH/Nil?
Look first in the

YELLOW PAGES
for who lluys, sells, rents, repoil$

�to the best party-line
telephone service
Help yourself? Of course! You can get the greatest value from a party-line telephone by doing a
few simple things:
1. Remember to hang up quietly if the line is
in use when you try to call. Wait awhile before trying again.
2. Keep your calls as short as possible. That
gives the other fellow a chance to make or
receive calls.

3. If you have children, teach them partyline telephone courtesy.
Your skillful and considerate use of your partyline telephone will encourage others to do the
same. Result: Best service!

�•

Keep a list of the out-of-town telephone numbers you are

most likely to call. Then, save time by giving the operator
the number when you call long distance.

If you want to talk to a certain person, give the operator
his name, as well as the number, when you place your call.

Your call will go through faster.
••• often twice as fastI

•

•

�I

SEE THE" CLASSIFIED" IN THIS DIRECTORY

0

06~£L~O SO£~

0

11111111 ~lli:mend
lllll l lll~I ~~1111111111
A~\l~en

30N3~M\11

&lt;.OIT
(]lr

NIT

1:
:I

c
2

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            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
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                  <text>Telephone Directories</text>
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                  <text>Business enterprises — Kansas — Lawrence — Telephone directories.</text>
                </elementText>
                <elementText elementTextId="166">
                  <text>Lawrence (Kan.) — Telephone directories.</text>
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                <elementText elementTextId="167">
                  <text>Douglas County (Kan.) — Telephone directories.</text>
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        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="34903">
                <text>Nov 1952 Telephone directory, Lawrence, Kansas.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="34904">
                <text>Business enterprises — Kansas — Lawrence — Telephone directories.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="34905">
                <text>Lawrence (Kan.) — Telephone directories.</text>
              </elementText>
              <elementText elementTextId="34906">
                <text>Douglas County (Kan.) — Telephone directories.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="34907">
                <text>Text: A telephone directory of Lawrence (Kan.) residents and businesses produced in November 1952 by Southwestern Bell Telephone Company. The directory contains information about long distance calls, Lawrence telephone subscribers' phone numbers and addresses, and a classified section with businesses sorted by type. Numerous ads are also present in the directory.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="34908">
                <text>Helen Osma Local History Room</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="34909">
                <text>Southwestern Bell Telephone Company</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="34910">
                <text>1954-11-01</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="34911">
                <text>We believe that this item has no known US copyright restrictions. The item may be subject to rights of privacy, rights of publicity and other restrictions. We encourage anyone who may have more information about our items to contact us at custserv@lawrencepubliclibrary.org.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="46">
            <name>Relation</name>
            <description>A related resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="34912">
                <text>Access this item's record in the Lawrence Public Library catalog here: https://lawrence.bibliocommons.com/v2/record/S119C14578</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="34913">
                <text>PDF</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="34914">
                <text>eng</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="34915">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="34916">
                <text>LawrenceHomeTelephoneCo-Nov1952.pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="34917">
                <text>Lawrence (Kan.)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="34918">
                <text>Southwestern Bell Telephone Company</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </item>
</itemContainer>
