Mrs. Fred Lockley, 53, wife of Fred Lockley, member of the editorial staff of the Oregon Journal, died yesterday at the Portland sanitarium. Nervous shock following a surgical operation was the cause of death.
Funeral services will be held Monday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock at the Finley chapel, with Chaplain John W. Beard, minister at Mount Tabor Presbyterian church officiating. Pall bearers will be Jennings F. Sutor, E. G. Hopson, Roscoe H. Johnson, C. W. Henderson, Del Morgan and Harold E. Hunt.
Mrs. Lockley (Hope Gans) was born October 10, 1874, in Faribault, Minnesota. She spent part of her girlhood on the Mescalaro Apache Indian reservation in New Mexico, with her uncle, Major H. H. Liewellyn, who was in charge of the army post. Later she lived on a cattle ranch in New Mexico with her family until they moved to Salem, Oregon when she was 18 years old.
Mrs Lockley attended school in Salem and taught for a while in the East Salem school. She was married to Mr. Lockley June 16, 1897. Lawrence Campbell Lockley is the only one of three children who survive Mrs. Lockley. He is an instructor in English literature at the southern branch of the University of California in Los Angeles. Three sisters and one brother also survive her. They are Mrs. D. Gale Bandon; Mrs. Thomas Mountain, Zilliah, Washington; Miss Bonnie Gans of Portland, and George Gans of Oakland, California.
Oregonian - March 26, 1927
Mrs. Fred Lockley, 53, wife of Fred Lockley, member of the editorial staff of the Oregon Journal, died yesterday at the Portland sanitarium. Nervous shock following a surgical operation was the cause of death.
Funeral services will be held Monday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock at the Finley chapel, with Chaplain John W. Beard, minister at Mount Tabor Presbyterian church officiating. Pall bearers will be Jennings F. Sutor, E. G. Hopson, Roscoe H. Johnson, C. W. Henderson, Del Morgan and Harold E. Hunt.
Mrs. Lockley (Hope Gans) was born October 10, 1874, in Faribault, Minnesota. She spent part of her girlhood on the Mescalaro Apache Indian reservation in New Mexico, with her uncle, Major H. H. Liewellyn, who was in charge of the army post. Later she lived on a cattle ranch in New Mexico with her family until they moved to Salem, Oregon when she was 18 years old.
Mrs Lockley attended school in Salem and taught for a while in the East Salem school. She was married to Mr. Lockley June 16, 1897. Lawrence Campbell Lockley is the only one of three children who survive Mrs. Lockley. He is an instructor in English literature at the southern branch of the University of California in Los Angeles. Three sisters and one brother also survive her. They are Mrs. D. Gale Bandon; Mrs. Thomas Mountain, Zilliah, Washington; Miss Bonnie Gans of Portland, and George Gans of Oakland, California.
Oregonian - March 26, 1927
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