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Progress-Bulletin from Pomona, California • 2

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Progress-Bulletini
Location:
Pomona, California
Issue Date:
Page:
2
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Page 2, Sec.l Progr-ulUtln, Pomona, Tuaiday Ivening, fob. 4, 1944 Obituary tlcticeJ In Orange County 'Real' Mountain Lion Killed by Deputies MARKET REPORTS NEW YORK UP) The stock market continued an irregular decline late this afternoon in moderately active trading. Volume for the day was estimated at 4.2 million shares compared with 4.16 million Monday. Losses of most key stocks went from fractions to about a point. Todays Closing N.Y.

Prices DOW JONES AVERAGES By United Press International 30 industrials 784.72, off 0.74; 15 utilities 139.83, up 0.34, and 65 stocks 278.58, off 0.27. Stock Averages by A mountain lion, no doubt about it, was shot and killed by sheriffs deputies in Orange County Monday. Presumably it was not the phantom cat" seen roaming the hills of Diamond Bar in recent weeks. The Orange County lion was surrounded by three deputy sheriffs and animal control officer Bob Worman who closed in and pumped 40 shots into the 5 foot, 100 pound beast. The cat wore a dark brown leather collar and had been declawed, indicating it had been someones pet.

Its teeth were unaltered. The animal was killed in Cowan Heights near 10011 Range View which is near the City of Orange and about 20 miles from Diamond Bar. The killed cat is believed to be one which has been reported from Orange to north Tustin during the last two months. It is believed to be responsible for recent complaints from ranchers that their stock had been attacked by a Hon. Worman said none of the stock was killed, probably because the clawless cat was unable to pin down its victims.

A lion-like beast of prey" was reported in Diamond Bar several times in the last two months. A paw track more than four inches across was found there Jan. 23 and hast-ity identified as that of a mountain lion. Closer inspection and research indicated the "cat track belonged to a large dog. Legislature Partisanship Very Visible (Continued from Page 1, Sec.

1) los Bee, D-Hayward, stayed on as speaker pro tern. More people were startled by the new Unruh physical image. Unruh was flirting with the 300-pound mark when he and Assembly Republicans battled over the budget bill last year, and he locked them up overnight. He has dieted down to 195, and looks positively thin. Aides remarked it'll be tough for opponents to use the Big Daddy" title that he dislikes.

Before Mondays election, majority Democrats junked what Republicans had termed punitive house rules adopted at the close of the stormy 1963 special session; these rules left the selection of speaker to the majority party caucus. Now, once again, all members can decide the choice on the house floor. But Republicans pledged beforehand not to put up their own candidate, since it wa3 a hopeless cause, or to vote for Unruh. Hale Ashcraft, R-Rancho Santa Fe, broke away and supported Unruh on the floor when the budget session convened. In a second election for the special session, he was joined by E.

Richard Barnes, R-San Diego. Ashcraft later explained he felt It inconsistent not to cast a ballot in view of the fact that the Democrats had rescinded the disputed rule. JOHN J. REID John Jackson Reid of 705 E. Alvarado St.

died in Pomona Valley Community Hospital Sunday at 4:15 p.m. Mr. Reid was born Sept. 9, 1896, in Carrollton, Mo. He moved to Glendale with his parents in 1906 and was educated in the Glendale public schools.

He was a veteran of World War I. Mr. Reid was married April 9, 1919, to Genta Faris. They moved to Missouri where they lived on a farm until 1938, returning then to California and settling in Claremont Mr. Reid was employed at the Naval Ordnance Test Station at China Lake until ill health forced his retirement in 1959.

He was a member of the Kenneth Powell American Legion Post of Claremont and the First Baptist Church of Ontario of which he was a deacon. Survivors include his widow, Mrs. Genta F. Reid; three sons, Jack F. Reid of Costa Mesa, Gene E.

Reid of Orange, and Gale Reid of La Habra; a sister, Mrs. Roy G. Pierce of Claremont; two brothers, Harry Reid of Glendale, and Sam W. Reid of Chester; three grandchildren, Mrs. Kurt Bon-newell of Costa Mesa, Bryan Reid and Brente Reid of La Habra; and several nieces and nephews.

The Rev. W. A. Warner of the First Baptist Church will conduct funeral services Wednesday at 3:30 p.m. In the Pollock Mortuary Chapel.

Entombment will be made in Pomona Mausoleum. Astronaut in Orbit Said Effective Spy L. D. (JACK) JONES L. D.

(Jack) Jones of 250 N. Hambledon La Puente, died in La Puente Valley Community Hospital Monday morning at 1:15 after a short illness. Mr. Jones was born Dec. 15, 1911, in Rule, Tex.

He came to California from Wichita Falls, in 1939 and has been a resident of La Puente since May 1960. Besides his widow, Mrs. Ramona I. Jones, he is survived by a daughter, Jacqueline M. Jones, also at home; a sister, Mrs.

Cecil H. White of Lubbock, and his mother-in-law, Mrs. Ollie Tripp of Pomona. Funeral services will be held 'tomorrow afternoon at 12:15 in Todd Memorial Chapel. The Rev.

W. A. Warner of the First Baptist Church will officiate. Interment will be in Pomona Cemetery. IVERWALLMAN Funeral services will be held tomorrow in North Hollywood for a former Claremont resident, I Wallman, 75, of 1701 Pepper Burbank, who died Sunday.

Services will be conducted by the Rev. Morris R. Bigbee of the Little White Chapel, Burbank, at the Pierce Brothers Valhalla Mortuary, 10621 Victory North Hollywood. Interment will follow In nearby Valhalla Cemetery. A native of Sweden, Mr.

Wallman came to this country at the age of 5 and resided most of his early life in Barron County, Wis. He married Minnie Teeter on Oct 11, 1911, in Lamed, Kan and came to California in 1941 from Superior, Wis. He moved from Claremont to Burbank in 1951. Besides his widow and a son, Earl at home, he is survived by three other sons, Merle K. of Burbank, Marvin of Arlington and Morris N.

of Bishop; one daughter, Mrs. David Boothroyd of Tracy; and 10 grandchildren. He also leaves three sisters, Bobbie and Ella of Minneapolis and Louise of Philadelphia, and two brothers, Fred and Henry of Minneapolis. PANFILO C. PEREZ Panfilo C.

Perez, 75, of 1270 S. Thomas died Monday morning at the family home after a long period of failing health. Born June 1, 1888, in Santa Barbara, Jalisco, he came to Pomona in 1918 and for 45 years was associated with the College Heights Lemon Association of Claremont He was a member of the Sacred Heart Catholic Church of Pomona. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Juanity Perez; three Reyes and Mrs.

Pauline Esca-jeda of Pomona and Mrs. Isabel Garcia of Vista; and nine grandchildren. Rosary will be recited in the Gippie R. Blackman Mortuary tomorrow at 8 p.m. Requiem Mass will be celebrated in Sacred Heart Catholic Church Thursday at 8 a.m.

with the Rev, Angel Beta officiating, followed by interment in Holy Cross Cemetery. MRS. FLORENCE DAUBNEY Mrs. Florence Daubney of 280 E. Center St.

died suddenly Sunday afternoon at her home. Mrs. Daubney was born July 22, 1887, in Saginaw, Mich. She came to California from Algonac, in 1949 and has resided in Pomona for the last 15 years. She was a member of the First Baptist Church.

Surviving are four daughters, Mrs, James C. Wood of Whittier, Mrs. August York of Redondo Beach, Mrs. Fred La-Lone of Fairfield and Mrs. Robert McMilan of Saginaw, and a son, Donald Daubney of Saginaw.

Funeral services will be held Thursday afternoon at 1:30 in Todd Memorial Chapel. The Rev. W. A. Warner of the First Baptist Church will officiate.

Services will be concluded in the chapel. MRS. MARTHA CRAWFORD Mrs. Martha E. Crawford, formerly of 195 W.

Kingsley died Monday afternoon at 4:55 in a local convalescent hospital. Mrs. Crawford was born Feb. 5, 1873, in South Pittsburg, Tenn. She came to California from Oklahoma in 1923, moved to Pomona from Riverside in 1940, and since then has resided here most of the time.

She was a member of Chapter 87, Order of the Eastern Star, in Garber, Okla. She Is survived by a brother, Henry Rhodes of and many nieces and nephews. Funeral services will be held Thursday afternoon at 3 in Todd Memorial Chapel. The Rev. W.

A. Warner of the First Baptist Church will officiate. Entombment will be made in Pomona Mausoleum by the side of her husband. R. E.

Crawford, who died in 1961. Todays Pacific Coast Stocks By ASSOCIATED PRESS Stock of Litton Industries and Xerox Corp. lost 2 points this morning on the Pacific Coast Exchange. Radio Corp. was down 214.

Chrysler declined Richfield Oil Douglas Aircraft General Motors and SCM There were losses of in Crestmont Oil, Northrop, Occidental Petroleum and Standard of California. Midnights Deadline on Auto Fees Midnight tonight is the deadline for paying 1964 auto istration fees if penalties are to be avoided. The local office of the Department of Motor Vehicles, 211 Erie will close at 5 p.m. today, and motorists who havent bought their 1964 stickers by then may avoid the penalty by mailing their applications in, either to the local office or to Sacramento. Mail applications must be postmarked before midnight tonight.

Registrations made tomorrow and for the next 30 days will be assessed a 10 per cent1 penalty. After that the penalty will be much higher. The registration fee will go up from $8 to $16, and' tax rate will go up 50 per cent. A license which cost $30 today will be $49 in March. Lines developed both today and Monday at the Pomona DMV office.

Doors will be locked at 5 p.m., but all who can get inside the building by that time will be served. Nobody who lined up Monday afternoon was turned away. Abbot Labs Alumn Ltd Amerad Cp Am bile a complex process which involves intellect and experience as well as optics. We can recognize close friends at greater distances than casual acquaint ances. We make this recogni tion on the basis of imaged clues with which we have be come familiar at closer range.

"Major Cooper saw things from orbit in this same way," the paper continued. OuweraU WAYNE F. MIDDOUGH Funeral services for Wayne F. Middough, 74, of Long Beach were conducted today in Mottells and Peek Mortuary in Long Beach. Mr.

Middough died Saturday in Long Beach. He was the brother of Leroy Middough of Pomona and had visited here frequently. Mr. Middough had lived about 25 years in Southern California, coming to this state from Missouri. R.

A. TIEFENTHAL Funeral services for Ray-mon A. Tiefenthal of 1062 N. Huntington will be held tomorrow morning at 11 in Todd Memorial Chapel. The Rev.

Gordon A. McGrane, pastor of the First Presbyterian Church, will officiate. Entombment win be, A in Pomona Mausoleum. JULIE C. MARTIN Funeral services for Julie Christine Martin, daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Gerald Martin of 141 S. College Claremont, will be held tomorrow at 2 p.m. in the Pollock Mortuary Chapel. The Rev.

Herschell D. Rice of the First Church of God will officiate. Interment will be made in Pomona Cemetery. MRS. PRESTON TAYLOR Funeral services for Mrs.

Ruth M. Taylor, wife of S. Preston Taylor of 1754 S. Huntington will be held tomorrow afternoon at 3 in Todd Memorial Chapel. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Chino Ward, will conduct the services.

Interment will be in Pomona IRA H. WILLIAMS Funeral services for Ira H. Williams of 809 W. Orange Grove will be held tomorrow afternoon at 1:30 in Todd Memorial Chapel. The Rev.

R. Lee Pryor, pastor of the First Christian Church, will officiate. Interment will be made in Pomona Cemetery by the side of his wife, Mrs. Lola E. Williams, who died in 1963.

EUGENE POLIQUIN Rosary will be recited at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow at Griffith Mortuary chapel for Eugene Poliquin, 2060 S. Cypress Ontario, a retired poultryman who died Monday. The Rev. Michael ODay, pastor of St.

Margaret Catholic Church, Chino, will say a Requiem Mass for Mr. Poliquin at St Margaret's at 10:30 a.m. Thursday. Entombment will be made in Bellevie Mausoleum, Ontario. The Associated Press 27 4 1U9 36 42 34 4ti '4 4 26 5(1 20 102 47 is 32 32 37 19 3 03 02 27 32 23 2" 73 2n 21 64 17 38 7,2 32 10 40 7 60 12 27 6 30 31 32 130 LIVESTOCK MARKET I.OS ANGELES (ATI (FSMN) Producers Slork.vard, Artesla: Slaughter steers: Good with end low choice, 1U15 lb.

21.75: 1295 lb. 20.50; standard, 925-1075 lb. 19.00-19,50. Heifers: Good, 860-1050 20.181; standard, 7x5-1055 19.00. Cows, utility, dairy breed, 14.

50-15. to. Cutters, 13.00-14,50; ran-tters, 12.00-13.00. Bulls, utility, 20.40-21.90. Cutlers, 1 7.00-20,40.

Calves, salable 2u0. not established, llogs salable 25. Sheep none. City of Industry: Cattle salable 500. Slaughter rows moderately active, fully steady to 50 cents higher; bulls strong.

other classes nominal. Slaughter heifers: Standard, 805 lb. 17.50. Cows, utility, 14.00-15.00; cutters 13.00-14.00; canners 12.IW- 13.00. Bulls, utility, Io.oO-22.uO; oul-tersf.

18.00-20.00. Calves none, llogs salable 2n0. Sheep pone. 0 GRAIN MARKET CHICAGO (AP) No wheat or soybean sales. Corn No.

2 yellow 1.22: No. 3 yellow t.18-21: No. 5 yellow 1.12. oata No. 1 extra heavy white 70.

Soybean oil 7R-3A. CITRUS MARKET 118 ANGELES (API The Federal State News Service today reported lemon prices unchanged; orange prices slightly stronger on Central California first grade 72s and slightly weaker on choice 113a and larger: grapefruit slightly weaker on Coachella ruby reds 36s to 40s. Grapefruit: Coachella ruby reds 32s 2.25-75; S6s to 4ts 2.25-75. Oranges: Navels Cen Cal 1st grade 56s 4.00; 72s 3.40-75: 8x to This 3.25-50; 138s 2.90-3.25; 163s 2.75-3.10; choice 113s and Igr 2.40-75: 138s 2.75; 163s 2.50-75. Sunktst Growers reported representative orange prices by sixe, all auction markets, were higher In spot s.

Sunktst first grade 4xs 4.19, 56s 4.40; 72s 4.24; 8Xs 3.43: 113s 3.59: 138 3.92; 163s 3.58. No second grade. THIEVES TAKE INJECTION KIT A fuel Injection kit. valued at $250, has been stolen from a laboratory room of Cal Polys Kellogg eampus, sheriff's deputies reported. The kit was loaned to the college by the Fuel Injection Engineering Co.

of Santa Monica. It was removed from an automobile engine which was set up for dynamometer tests. Todd mnoriaf Chapel Todd and Smith, Inc. FUNERAL DIRECTORS SINCE 1907 BROOKS AIR FORCE BASE, Tex. UP) An orbiting astronaut can spy effectively on enemy territory with the unaided eye, a team of Air Force ophthalmologists ported today.

The group, from the Aerospace Medical Division, told a space medicine conference here that the finding was based on studies of visual reports of six American astronauts who rocketed into space. The paper, presented by Maj. William B. Clark, said that with proper reconnaissance training, military space pilots could readily spot mis sile bases, encampments, troop movements and unsuspected targets of opportunity from their 100-mile-high outposts. Specific definition of mans maximum visual capabilities in space will be one of the most militarily significant achievements in future orbital flights," the paper said, The report leaned heavily on the remarkable accounts given by Maj.

Leroy Gordon Cooper Jr. after his 22-orbit flight last May. Cooper said he clearly saw houses and streets in the Himalaya mountains, on the plains of Tibet and in the southwest United States. He said he sighted a vehicle moving on a road, a boat on a river and a steam locomotive on Some doctors doubted' Cooper. They said such sighting from his altitude was beyond the capability of the human eye.

Some said the astronaut must have suffered hallucinations. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration assigned a five-man team of experts to determine if Cooper did see objects on earth with such clarity. It concluded that he did. The ophthalmologist paper concurred. When we speak of seeing, it said, We are talking about Car Hop Says Beckwith Car Near Killing JACKSON, Miss.

(P) A nervous 17-year-old car hop testified today Byron De La Beckwiths car was parked within a lew hundred feet of the murder scene on the night integration leader Medgar Evers was shot. Martha Jean OBrien said the car was left in a corner of the lot at a drive-in where she worked. The parking area overlooks the vacant lot where the killer stood hidden in a clump of trees waiting for Evers to come home. Evers. 37, state secretary for the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, was shot in the back by a sniper when he stepped from his car at his Jackson home shortly after midnight June 12.

Beckwith, 43, is on trial in circuit court for the murder. Man Unidentified Miss O'Brien said she could not Identify the man she saw driving the car and, since she got off at midnight, did not know how long it remained. Fire Department Douses Trash Fire A fire in a pile of trash found burning in a garage was put out by firemen shortly after noon Monday at 620 W. Center St. The garage was not damaged.

The fire department said children may have started the fire. ALBERT W. URTON Albert Wiliam Urton, 55, 6f 5580 Moreno Montclair, died Monday morning at San Antonio Community Hospital in Upland after a sudden illness. Bom in Long Beach, he lived in CaMfornia all his life. And in Banning for 40 years until He moved to Redding from Banning, then came to Montclair in 1961.

He was a lumber yard manager for Inland Lumber Co. at Rialto. Mr. Urton Is survived by his widow, Nettie P. Urton; two daughters, Mrs.

Phyllis Metje, of Whittier, and Mrs. Barbara Hillstrand, of Palm Springs; two sisters, Mrs. William Schlegel, of Corona Del Mar, and Mrs. Paul Crouch, of Pasadena; a brother, Donald Urton, of Santa Cruz; and five grandchildren. Funeral services will be held Thursday at 1:30 p.m.

at Wie-fels and Son Funeral Home in Banning. Interment will be made in San Gorgonio Memorial Park in Banning. Draper Mortuary of Ontario is in charge of local arrangements. Contributions may be made to Childrens Hospital in care of Wiefels and Son. EMIL GROSS Emil Gross, 59, of Cleveland, Ohio, died Monday at Park Avenue Hospital, Mr.

Gross was here visiting his daughter and son-in-law, Dr. and Mrs. Arthur Madorsky of Pomona, and a son, Ronald Gross of Walnut Creek. He also leaves his widow, Mrs. Helen Gross, of Cleve land; a brother, three sisters and six grandchildren.

Funeral services will be at 3 p. m. Wednesday at Home of Peace Chapel in Los Angeles with Rabbi Irving Mandel of Temple Beth Israel officiating. Interment will be in Eden cemetery, 11100 Sepulveda San Fernando Valley. Malinow and Silverman Mor tuary of Los Angeles is in charge of arrangements.

Baker Case (Continued from Pag 1, Sec. 1) from Baker saying he had some people in his office who were interested in buying meat from the plant in Port au Prince, Haiti. Law said he told Baker to send them over to his and Webbs office and that Benitez and his wife and a Mr. Lopez, whom he identified as a meat distributor in Puerto Rico, showed up later. As Law related it, Lopez told Benitez that he would like to buy the output of the Haiti plant and, if he could get it, would be willing to pay a finders fee or com-were released by the committee.

Law, testifying first, said Jlakef got into jffie picture while efforts were Under way to arrange with the Agricul-missicn of one cent a pound. This was before Lopez and Benitez came to his office, Law testified. Law said that Benitez was a personal friend of Baker and also was Puerto Ricos Democratic national committeeman at the time. Lopez proposal for a 1-cent a pound commission was repeated in his office, Law said, and under the arrangement worked out Law and Webb were to receive half of it and Benitez and his wife were to split their half with Baker. Law testified that this agreement subsequently was terminated and he and Webb, the Washington representatives of the Murchison interests, nego tiated a new agreement under which William Kentor of Chicago placed Lopez as the purchaser of the Haitian meat.

Under this agreement, Law said, beginning Dec. 1, 1962, Baker was to receive 10 per cent of the profits of Hampco up to $30,000 a year and to split this with Law and Webb. In addition, Law said, Baker was to receive half of the half-cent a pound that Law and Webb got on each pound of meat imported by Kentor from the Haitian meat plant Snowstorm (Continued from Pag 1, Sec. 1) ton, C. Douglas Smith, said the snow was moist and dinging the best kind.

"All we need is more of it." Amarillos major arteries to Oklahoma, New Mexico, Colorado and the interior of Texas were closed by midnight. The airport closed Monday afternoon with visibility of less than one-eighth of a mile. Heavy snow was reported at Muleshoe, Pampa, Hereford, Dumas, and Lubbock, in Texas, and at Tucumeari, Clovis and Santa Rosa, in New Mexico. Cyprus Plan Okayed LONDON UP) British officials said President Archbishop Markarios of Cyprus today accepted with qualifications the British American plan for sending an Allied peace keeping army Into Cyprus. Typhoons rip across Okinawa from May through Amn C.va Amn MAE Am lj AnacoiafC Aria Pt J5v Atlaa Corp Avco Corp beech Airo lteth Steel lloeing Air bilwy Hale bninaw Cp lturrotigh butte Uaa Cai Ink Co Caatle ft Co Cater Trae Chryslr Cp Cttiea Serv Clary Corp Col brtcat Coil Kilison Coot In Co Creatm Oil Crown Zell Curtis Wr Dia Natl Cp Ing Aire lymo Ind K1 la so NO Kmp Captv Kxeter Oil Fihrebd Cp Fire Tftlt Firm Chart Fltntkote KMC Corp Ford Motor Frtiehf Tlr tienl Pvna C.en Explor BUTTER AND EGGS (Federal State Mkt.

News Service) BUTTER Jobbing price to retailers In carton. Grade AA Grade A Grade 87-71 67-71 EGGS To Retail Stores, f.o.b. distributors' plants: Grade A A Ex. Ift. Large Medium Small 49.5-33.5 42.3-46.5 40.5-43.5 31.5-34.5 Grade A 43.5-51.5 40.5-41.5 38.5-39.5 29.5-30.5 To Retailers, delivered In cartons.

Grade AA Ex.I.ge. Large Med. Small 55-59 48-51 44-19 35-39 tirade A 53-56 45-46 43-44 34-35 To Consumers in cartons In large retail store. tirade Large Medium Small AA 53-02 48-59 45-49 A 51 -58 53-55 42-45 POULTRY AND GAME Buying prices f.o.b. Los Angelea, Including allowable handling charges: Live poultry at ranch: Fryer 56.000 head.

14 pet 17. 8 pot 19, 78 pet undetermined; roasters head. 21-25: It hen 15.500 head, 4-5 weighted avg 4.60; crosses bead. 5-6, weighted avg 6.68: turkeys; young toms under 2S lbs. 21.

MARKET ROUNDUP NEW YORK (AP) Markets at a glance: Storks Irregularly lower, active trading. Bonds Mixed: moderate trading. Cotton Generally lower; quiet trading. CHICACO: Wheat Lower; old crop month weak. Corn Steady to easier; light trade.

Oats Weak: liquidation. Soybeans Mostly weak; liquidation. Hogs Weak to 25 cents higher; tob 116. Slaughter steer Steady to strong; top 23.25. ci HAY MARKET LOS ANGELES (AP) (FSMX) Alfalfa and grain hay prices unchanged.

Carlot arrivals: 1 wheal, 4 Corn, 10 flour, 1 oats, 32 sorghum, 8 barley, 19 hay. "Progress-Bulletin Publish'd daily by Progrtss6uMttin Publish nf 300 S. Thomas Pomona, CaM. ffifOhones NAtiona! 2-1201 and YUkon 6-8b8S. frit 5c daily.

10c Sunday. by arrier, SI 75 monthly; by mail, 52 monthly lomestic, $4 monthty foreign. Stcondciass mad privileges authorized at omona, Calif. MRS. MARTHA E.

CRAWFORD Chapel Service Thursday, 3:00 p.m. Entombment Pomona Mausoleum MRS. FLORENCE DAUBNEY Chapel Service Thursday, 1:30 p.m. Private Committal MRS. MARY ANN GANGER Chapel Rosary Friday, 8:00 p.m.

Requiem Mass Holy Name of Mary Catholic Church, La Verne, Saturday, 9:00 a.m. OLE HEGG Chapel Service Thursday, 11:00 a.m. Interment Pomona Cemetery L. D. (JACK) JONES Chapel Service Wedneseday, 12:15 p.m.

Interment Pomona Cemetery RUDY RAMIREZ Chapel Rosary Wednesday, 8:00 p.m. Requiem Mass Holy Name of Mary Catholic Church, La Verne, Thursday, 9:00 a.m. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery MRS. RUTH M. TAYLOR Chapel Service Wednesday, 3:00 p.m.

Interment Pomona Cemetery RAYMON A. TIEFENTHAL Chapel Service Wednesday, 11:00 a.m. Entombment Pomona Mausoleum IRA H. WILLIAMS Chapel Service Wednesday, 1:30 p.m. Interment Pomona Cemetery 570 N.

GAREY AVE. POMONA NA 2-1217 Pollock Mortuary 7 1 NORTH TOWNI AVtNUI POMONA NA. 2 1 5 6 MSMm.THI ORAM OF 41 SOtMN MM JULIE C. MARTIN Chapel Service Wednesday, 2:00 p.m. Interment Pomona Cemetery JOHN J.

REID Chapel Service Wednesday, 3:30 p.m. Entombment Pomona Mausoleum MARY A. TEETER Chapel Service Thursday, 2:00 p.m. Interment Pomona Cemetery GIPPIE R. BLACKMAN FUNERAL CHAPEL 1020 WEST FIFTH AVE.

PHONE NA. 2-1078 PANFILO PEREZ Chapel Rosary, Wednesday 8:00 P.M. Requiem Mass, Sacred Heart Catholic Church, Thursday 8:00 A.M. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery BENJAMIN W. STATON Arrangements Pending POMONA CEMETERY COMPLETE MEMORIAL PARK Dlractad by "Grava Owner," Board at Truiteel tinea 1192 JQ2 (ait Franklin Fomana.

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About Progress-Bulletin Archive

Pages Available:
87,558
Years Available:
1958-1964