An illustrated history of Monroe County, Iowa, Part 26

Author: Hickenlooper, Frank
Publication date: 1896
Publisher: Albia, Iowa : F. Hickenlooper
Number of Pages: 390


USA > Iowa > Monroe County > An illustrated history of Monroe County, Iowa > Part 26


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H. A. Prizer & Brother, dry goods, Odd Fellows' Temple; in business six years.


Paulline & Son, tailors, Odd Fellows' Temple, base- ment; in business one and one-half years.


G. R. Carden & Company, druggist, west side of Square; in business three years.


Globe Clothing House, Sol. Loeb, proprietor, west side Square; in business one year.


J. T. Porter, cigar-maker, west side of Square; in busi- ness four years.


Jas. Pheney, grocer., west side of Square; in business thirty-seven years.


W. N. Moon & Son, general merchandise, west side of Square; in business twenty-nine years.


Max Loeb, clothier, west side of Square; in business twenty-eight years.


J. T. Rowe & Son, carpenters, Benton Street; in busi- ness twenty years.


Walter Cokingham, wagon-maker, Benton Street; in business twenty-seven years.


Sparks & Rowe, blacksmiths, Benton Street; in business twenty-six years.


Tom Teas, blacksmith, Benton Street; in business nine- teen years.


Clark Brothers, implements, Benton Street; in business twenty-one years. (See further mention near the end of this volume.)


E. H. Wilson, novelty store. Benton Street; in business four months.


Miss C. Hamilton, millinery, Benton Street ; in business six months.


Jas. Stewart, feed store, Main Street; in business six months.


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HISTORY OF MONROE COUNTY, IOWA.


Wilson Brothers, livery and feed, Main Street; in busi- ness six months.


Saunders & Warner, blacksmiths, Main Street; in busi- ness four years.


Hobson Brothers, lumber; in business two years.


W. E. Whited, livery; in business ten years.


S. Eaton, barber, southwest corner of Square; in busi- ness six months.


Wm. Peppers, implements ; in business twenty-two years.


Albia State Bank, south side of Square; in business six years.


First National Bank, northwest corner of Square; in business twenty-five years.


Albia Roller Mills, M. M. Edward, proprietor.


Commercial Hotel, one block south of southwest corner of Square; J. M. Titus, proprietor.


J. R. Wallace, Diamond Laundry, near Central Depot; lately burned out.


The Semi-Weekly Union, southeast corner of Square; A. R. Barnes, publisher and proprietor.


The Progress-Defender, Wall Street; M. M. Hinton, pub- lisher and proprietor.


The News, west side of Square; Belvel & Crenshaw, publishers and proprietors.


The Messenger Publishing Company, west side of Square.


Monroe County Republican, daily and weekly, Benton Street ; Sebille & Mendal, publishers and proprietors.


L. E. Lambert, jeweler; in business six years.


Cottage Hotel, at C., B. & Q. depot; Wm. Campbell, proprietor.


Byerley Hotel. A. J. Byerley, proprietor.


Albia Bicycle Manufacturing Company, Heiserman & Anderson, proprietors; in business one year. (See further mention near end of this volume.)


Arery.


The town of Avery was established when the C., B. & Q. Railway was put through, in 1868. The present population is about 400, but the population varies according to the condition of the mines, as it is strictly a mining town. The houses are small and unattractive. The town is five or


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HISTORY OF MONROE COUNTY, IOWA.


six miles east of Albia, on the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railway.


At present the place contains the following named business firms :


Dr. J. R. Cady, physician ; eight years residence.


Dr. Montgomery, physician, eleven years residence.


Dr. A. M. Tait, physician, five years residence.


Smoky Hollow Coal Company, eleven years in business. Central Coal Company, just opening up.


STREET IN AVERY LOOKING WEST.


W. H. Tedrow, lawyer and insurance; four years in business.


T. L. Evans, general merchandise; eight years in business.


Hotel, Mrs. Ella Morgan.


J. G. Thayer, notary public.


A. L. Criddlebaugh, barber.


John Melcher, meat market; in business six months.


I. R. Pearson, general merchandise; in business sixteen years.


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HISTORY OF MONROE COUNTY, IOWA.


The town also contains a Methodist Church organization and church edifice.


In the vicinity of Avery are situated the Chisholm Mines. They are now about worked out, and the village of Chisholm will of course disappear with the exhaustion of the coal supply. However, a new coal enterprise has just gotten itself on foot in the vicinity, which promises to develop into an extensive coal plant. It is known as the C'entral Coal Company, and its headquarters are at Avery. The mines are on the Iowa Central Railway, and the camp will be named Lockman, in honor of Thos. D. Lockman. of the First National Bank of Albia. The company has control of about six hundred acres of coal lands, underlaid by a vein of coal averaging four feet in thickness. The mines will be operated by means of a "slope." Wm. Evans is president of the company, Enoch Evans treasurer, and Thos. L. Evans secretary. The company began operations in 1896.


In about the year 1870 Avery was in the zenith of her prosperity. The mines were the most extensive of any in the county, and the miners made good wages.


They formed an association and built the Miners' In- stitute-a sort of epitomized Tammany Hall. The building is still used as a public hall, but the organization has gone down. It was a social club, and had for its object the educational and social improvement of the miners and their families. The club had a good library, and the "Institute" was doubtless beneficial to the miners.


Hynes City.


This lately christened village lies one and three-fourths miles southeast of Avery. The locality is also known as "Smoky Hollow."


Here the Smoky Hollow Coal Company operate their mines. The company's mines have a capacity of about 1000 tons of coal daily. J. L. Evans is at the head of the concern, and the company has been in business eleven years. Faley Hynes acts as superintendent of the mine, and P. H. Hynes is secretary. The mines are entered by two "slopes," and ventilation is supplied by means of fans.


Hynes City contains a population of from 250 to 300 people. The town was projected in 1892, when six houses were built by John T. Evans, and the place increased rapidly.


20-


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HISTORY OF MONROE COUNTY, IOWA.


In 1894 the town contained forty more houses; then the town was formally christened by Mr. Horace Barnes, of the Albia Union. The place was named in honor of P. H. Hynes, secretary of the Smoky Hollow Coal Company and manager of the Avery Supply Company. His brother, Faley Hynes, it is understood, comes in as a joint sharer of the honor.


About forty rods east of Hynes City is located the Famous Coal Mines, or Nos. 1 and 2. of the Smoky Hollow Coal Company.


Hynes City has a large store in its midst, owned by the Avery Supply Company; and also a school-house. In addition to these, there is soon to be established a black- smith shop and post-office.


Foster.


In 1889, when the Marion and Kansas City Division of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway was completed through Monroe County, a side-track was put in, near Soap Creek, and about nine miles southeast of Albia. The stop- ping-place was called Soap Creek Siding, and as soon as Ira Phillips and E. I. Foster began to establish a coal plant in the vicinity, trains began to stop regularly; but a station had already been established at Brompton, about two miles east of Foster, where the railroad company erected a tank and constructed a large reservoir.


By the time Mr. Phillips had gotten the mine in operation, which went by the name of the Soap Creek Coal Company, several buildings had gone up, erected by the coal company. A large boarding-house and another equally large store building were erected among the first by the Ottumwa Supply Company, an auxiliary of the coal com- pany. The store was conducted as a "company store," issuing "serip" to the miners instead of currency. This "serip" was emitted in this way: The coal company paid its employees once a month in currency. If a miner needed goods or provisions before pay-day, and had no credit with merchants or cash with which to buy, the coal company would issue him an amount of "serip," the amount depend- ing on the account in his favor, against the company, for his labor. This "serip" was current at the company store, in exchange for merchandise. The store was an extensive concern, and handled all lines of merchandise, but. like all


.


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HISTORY OF MONROE COUNTY, IOWA.


"company stores," it was not popular with the people. The upper floor of the building was used as a hall.


Shortly after the village began its existence it was christened Foster, in honor of E. I. Foster, of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, the principal investor in the mine enterprise. The Messrs. Phillips then retired from the concern, but Henry Phillips, who was president of the Ottumwa Supply Com- pany, continued to run the store; not, however, in con- junetion with the coal company. The building burned down two or three years later, and was never rebuilt.


A GLIMPSE OF FOSTER, LOOKING WEST.


While sinking the shaft in 1858 or 1889, a very unfortu- nato and fatal accident occurred, which attached to Mr. Phillips considerable ill feeling in the community. Mr. Phillips was running the hoisting engine, and the half of a kerosene barrel was used as a "bucket" with which to hoist the dirt. Ed. Dial and Rolla Williams, two young men working in the pit, were being hoisted in the "bucket" to the top of the ground; while ascending and passing through the curbed aperture at the top, Williams' head


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HISTORY OF MONROE COUNTY, IOWA.


struck a cross-bar and he fell out of the "bucket," down to the bottom of the pit, a distance of nearly 200 feet, and was instantly killed. He was a young man of good family and highly esteemed, and Mr. Phillips was harshly criticised,


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SODA


WATER


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DRUG STORE OF WOODRUFF & PABST, FOSTER, IOWA.


it being alleged that he did not slow up the engine while the men were entering the top of the pit. A civil suit followed, being instituted by W. D. Kinser, administrator


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HISTORY OF MONROE COUNTY, IOWA.


of the estate of the deceased, and a small amount of dam- ages was awarded the plaintiff.


Foster now contains about 800 population, the figures varying, according to the state of activity of the mines.


In October, 1891, G. W. Bever, of Cedar Rapids, invested in the mine, and the company was reorganized with E. I. Foster president and Chas, Fugle manager. The firm name was changed to that of the Deep Vein Coal Company, and under that name it is at present incorporated. The plant has a capacity of 1000 tons of coal daily, but from 500 to 700 tons is its usual daily output.


DEEP VEIN COAL COMPANY'S WORKS, FOSTER, IOWA.


The company originally purchased 320 acres of coal land, paying about $40 per acre for it. Since then it has acquired nearly that much more, but has sold a consider- able portion of its surface, retaining only the coal. The company at the present time has removed 30 per cent of the coal from underneath its tract. The mine is ventilated by a fan, which forces down 40,000 cubic feet of air per


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HISTORY OF MONROE COUNTY, IOWA.


minute. The coal is a superior grade of steam coal, and the output is sold in Iowa, Minnesota, and Dakota.


Most of the buildings in Foster are owned by the Foster Land and Town-lot Company, a corporation said by the incorporators to be distinct and separate from the coal com- pany. Both concerns, however, bear the same date of organi- zation, and E. I. Foster is president of each. Some of the coal land lately purchased was bought by the Foster Land and Town-lot Company, and the coal company mines the coal.


The Deep Vein Coal Company have $200,000 invested in the plant, and it is next to the largest in the county. The mines for the last eight months have been running on nearly full time, and the company has paid to its employees during the present year $100,000. The coal company has no "company store," and pays its men every two weeks.


The population of Foster is largely made up of English and Welsh. There are also a number of Swedes, and a few Italians and Scotch. The Welsh are fine singers, but many of them are intemperate. The Italians are quiet and peaceable, but are fond of their beer. They are quite social among themselves, and about every Saturday night congregate around a keg of beer. They drink and sing all night, but do not affiliate with Scotch, Welsh, and English.


The Swedes are much more quiet, and at the same time more temperate. Those who do drink, however, get a quantity of raw alcohol, sweeten it, and dilute it with hot water, drinking it hot. This is the Swede's national drink. The Scotchman drinks anything, from bay rum to whisky, and never gets enough.


Taken on the whole, they are all a jovial set of fellows, and the better one gets acquainted with them the more he likes them. They lead uncertain lives in the mines, and every miner of ten or twenty years' experience has had his injuries and miraculous escapes.


Foster is an incorporated town and is an excellent trading point ; and boasts of a baseball team of considerable local fame.


The Foster Cornet Band ranks as one of the best in the State of Towa. Mr. Hughes, the pit-boss of the mines, is a lover of music himself, and has had opportunity to draw to Foster some of the best band-players in the country.


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HISTORY OF MONROE COUNTY, IOWA.


A good band-player-and there are some good ones among , the miners-can always secure work in the Foster mines through Mr. Hughes. Following are the names of the members of the Foster Band: Samuel Webb, conductor; Thos. Berdinner, clarionet; Samuel Webb, solo clarionet ; Robt. Dalzel, first cornet : Jas. Dazel, solo clarionet ; Winter Giles, E flat cornet ; Joseph Thomas, first alto; Harry Webb, second alto: John Marshall, first trombone; John Caldwell,


C., M. & ST. PAUL, RAILWAY TRESTLE, FOSTER, IOWA.


second trombone; Robt. Muffit, third trombone; Wm. Dalzel, euphonium; Chris. Thomley, B flat bass; Jack Webb. E flat bass; John Dalzel, E flat bass; Geo. Saunders, bass drum ; James Kennedy, snare drum; Robert Hughes, general manager.


Foster at present contains the following business firms: Deep Vein Coal Company.


Hilton Coal Company, whose plant is near Hilton, but whose headquarters are at Foster.


Chamberlin & Carson, general merchandise.


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HISTORY OF MONROE COUNTY, IOWA.


R. M. Bixby, hardware and tinware.


Mrs. Treat, confectionery.


Rowles & Hickenlooper, general merchandise.


Wilson Brothers, general merchandise.


G. W. Buck, meat market.


Rupert Brothers, grocers.


Trussell & Eslinger, lumber, implements, hardware, and banking.


Wm. Miller, general merchandise, restaurant, and livery.


Mrs. France Jones, hotel.


Mrs. Bowley, hotel and boarding-house.


McCoy Brothers, livery and draying.


- Furgason, racket store.


Woodruff & Pabst, drugs and stationers. (See further mention near end of this volume.) Alex Reed, barber.


Richard Williams, justice of the peace.


Frank Hawk, Mayor and post-master.


C. P. Jones, blacksmith and wagonmaker.


Blucher Hutchins, blacksmith.


J. H. Treat, coal company blacksmith.


Foster has two churches, with a large membership in each. They are the Baptists and Methodists. The Baptists erected a commodious church edifice in 1891-2. It burned in 1894, and in 1895 a new structure was completed. which is a handsomer building than the first, and would be a credit to any locality. They also built a parsonage for their pastor.


Foster is twenty-three miles southwest of Ottumwa. There is an unlimited supply of coal in the vicinity, and it is quite probable that other coal enterprises will soon spring up.


Blakesburg.


This village is one of the oldest hamlets in the county. It was named in honor of Theophilus Blake, who, with Cyrus Vancleve, laid out the town in 1850. The greater portion of the town lies in Wapello County.


The first white woman who ever resided in Blakesburg, or on the spot where the town now stands, was a Mrs. Smith, who, on the death of her husband, married Len Daggett. She lived on the present site of Blakesburg a whole year before she saw another white woman. Some


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HISTORY OF MONROE COUNTY, IOWA.


of Mrs. Smith's children and grandchildren still live in Urbana Township. She was the grandmother of Elmer Thayer's present wife.


Since the C., M. & St. Paul Railway was built through the town, it has grown considerably, and large shipments of live stock are made all the year round.


Blakesburg is growing rapidly and the town is sur- rounded by a prosperous community. A handsome $3,000 school building is now in process of erection, besides other


STREET IN BLAKESBURG.


building improvements. The town has about 400 inhabit- ants, and it is not an incorporated village. There are large bodies of coal lying along Avery Creek, two or three miles north of the town, which, when developed, will doubtless make the town one of considerable importance.


Following is a list of the business firms doing business in Blakesburg in 1896.


G. L. Redmon, restaurant; in business three years.


I .. Campbell & Son, druggists; in business four years.


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HISTORY OF MONROE COUNTY, IOWA.


M. H. Abernathy, general merchandise; in business three years.


C. N. Thompson, meat market; in business twenty-six years.


Wm. Angel, hotel; in business two months.


Wilson & Durby, general merchandise; just beginning business.


Frank Fritz, hardware; in business two years.


W'm. Fritz & Brother, general merchandise, lumber and implements; in business ten years.


Wm. Rowe, blacksmith ; in business sixteen years.


Chas. Reading, blacksmith; in business sixteen years.


Geo. Chedister, barber; in business three years.


A. V. Tinsley, livery ; in business four years.


David Zigler, saw and planing mills; in business five years.


W. H. Kolman, hardware; in business three years.


Henry Weidman, boots and shoes; in business seven years.


Mrs. Harrington, hotel; in business one year.


John F. Lober, harness and groceries; in business seven years.


Mrs. Semiramis Barnes, a young widowed lady, has held the office of postmistress during the Cleveland admin- istration. Blakesburg, in this particular, has been most fortunate, as the present postmistress' predecessor was a young lady, Miss Effie Reading.


Blakesburg has two churches and three doctors. Dr. C. N. Udell is one of the most successful practitioners in Monroe and Wapello counties. He is also a preacher, poli- tician, writer, philosopher and sage. Drs, Ray and Torrence are each skillful physicians.


The Baptist Church built an edifice two years ago, and has about 30 members. Rev. Garrison is in charge. The Methodist Episcopal Church erected a building about eight years ago. Its membership is about half a hundred. Rev. Ingham is in charge of the congregation at present.


Hilton.


Hilton was originally a flag-station about midway between Albia and Moravia on the C., M. & A. Railway. It contained a post-office, and in 1893 or 1894 H. Herrington started a small store and ran it for a year or more. At the


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HISTORY OF MONROE COUNTY, IOWA.


present time there is a prospect of the place taking a boom, as a coal company has secured an option on a large body of coal land in the vicinity, comprising 400 acres, which by thorough drilling was found to contain on an average five feet of coal, at a depth of 215 feet, where the shaft is located. The present shaft has a capacity of 300 tons daily.


The company is known as the Hilton Coal Company, with headquarters at Foster. The company's lands abut against the lowa Central Railway. The town has been platted, and already contains seven houses. The company was incorporated January 1. 1896, with a capital of $25,000, $4,000 of which has been paid in. L. A. Chamberlin is president, A. L. Wright vice-president, and A. R. Chamberlin treasurer. The present town plat is about a half-mile cast of the station or platform.


Melrose.


Melrose has about 500 population, and is fifteen miles west of Albia on the C., B. & Q. Railway. It is situated in the midst of a Catholic community, and the name itself has an Irish ring to it, like Tyrone.


The site of Melrose was first claimed by John Drew, in 1847; but the town was not laid out until 1866.


In 1857 the first school was taught in the town by Sarah Prindle, and the next year a commodious school- house was built. The first store was started by T. C. Stewart in 1860. In 1861 the post-office was established, with J. D. S. Peacock as postmaster.


Among the earlier settlers were A. D. Brown, J. P. Currier, T. C. Stewart, J. Davenport, John McCoy, Adam Yontsey, Wm. Gilbert, Willis Gilbert, Wm. Bernard, .J. Robinson, Pat Coady, and Orson Glass.


Following is an enumeration of the business firms of Melrose in 1896:


Sumner Smith, notary, pension agent, and insurance; in business twenty-two years.


W. R. Briles & Company (W. R. Briles and D. Riordan). druggists and pharmacists; in business four years.


Jas. Duggan, postmaster and merchant; in business since 1881.


Thomas Brandon, banker; established in 1881.


L. Lemly & Son, hardware and farm implements; in business five years.


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HISTORY OF MONROE COUNTY, IOWA.


Geo. Sone, breeder and importer of thoroughbred stallions.


Wm. Ford, blacksmithing; in business twenty-two years.


F. L. Sailing, harnessmaker.


M. D. Sullivan, general merchandise and justice of the peace; in business sixteen years.


J. C. O'Conner, druggist; oldest druggist in Monroe County-in business twenty-five years.


A. G. Paschal & Son, general merchandise; in business fifteen years.


W. S. Curry, groceries, boots and shoes; in business one year.


Cleveland Hotel, Mrs. S. W. Albert, proprietor; in business ten years.


Providence Hotel, P. G. Dever, proprietor; in business two years.


J. P. Currier & Son, meat market and grain; in business four years.


Western Exchange Hotel, C. H. Whelan, proprietor.


Mary Heffron, millinery and dressmaking.


Riordan & Blair; in business two years.


A. O. Lee, lumber; in business thirty years.


Win. Lahart, general merchandise; in business twenty years.


P. C. Murphy, bakery and confections.


W. W. O'Bryan, attorney at law and notary.


Stacyville.


This hamlet is seven miles north of Melrose, and con- tains the principal Catholic church in Monroe County.


East of Stacyville, three miles, is the hamlet of George- town, and Tyrone is south of Georgetown and nine miles west of Albia.


West of Albia three miles are located the once bustling coal mines known as Cedar Mines, now about extinct. The Cedar Valley and Albia coal companies had their plants here.


Frederic.


This village is located on the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railway, about four miles east of the town of Avery, and about two miles south of what was once the village of "Business Corners." The town was laid out by Messrs.


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HISTORY OF MONROE COUNTY, IOWA.


Hale and Hamilton when the railroad was built. The place was named in honor of Frederick Joy, a former president of the B. & M. Railroad.


The village contains perhaps 150 people, and those en- gaged at present in business are:


Hawthorn & Hansel, general merchandise; in business six months.


S. A. Worley, blacksmithing and implement dealer; in business four years.


Akers Grocery Company, general merchandise; in busi- ness three years.


Reeves & Company, general merchandise; in business two years.


Grove Brothers, general merchandise; in business twenty-eight years.


Frederic Coal Company, controlled by Chas. Akers, who has an option on the plant and eighty acres of land.


Hiteman.


The town of Hiteman is the largest town in Monroe County outside the city of Albia. At present (1896) the place contains a population of between 1400 and 1500, and is situated on Cedar Creek, six miles northwest of Albia. The town was platted September 1, 1890. The location is broken and was selected more to suit the convenience of the Wapello Coal Company than with a view to symmetry or beauty. The population is made up almost exclusively of miners. They consist of Americans, English, Welsh, Swedes, Scotch, Germans, and negroes. The negro population oe- eupy the southern part of the town.


Those engaged in business in Hiteman in July, 1896. were:


W. A. Dovenspike. Hiteman Hotel; in business two years.


Win. Morrissey, postmaster.


Dr. McFall, physician; in business two years.


B. O. Meadows, barber; in business two years.


Hiteman Supply Company, JJ. P. Early, manager; in business six years.


Sam White, blacksmith and wagon-maker; in business one and one-half years.


Win. Kennedy, livery; in business two and one-half years.


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HISTORY OF MONROE COUNTY, IOWA.


Wapello Coal Company; in business six years.


J. W. Loach, restaurant and bakery; in business two years.


Drs. Avery and Palmquest, physicians; Dr. Avery has been located three years, and Dr. Palmquest three months.


Mrs. Olive James, millinery and dressmaking; in busi- ness four years.


Dr. W. O. MeFall, physician: in business three years. Dr. Fred 1. Poligue, physician; in business one year. The fraternal institutions are also well represented.


WAPELLO COAL COMPANY'S WORKS, ALBIA, IOWA.


In 1893 the Freemasons established a lodge, known as Perfeet Square Lodge, No. 526. Thos. Bridges is at present worshipful master; Sam'l Chase. senior warden; Owen Reese, junior warden; J. W. Lewis, treasurer; W. F. Narber, secretary ; J. J. Davis, senior deacon; David Jeffreys, junior deacon; W. H. Thomas, senior steward; Alf. Neighbors, junior steward; W. L. Morgan, tyler. The order has no building, but has a lease on the I. O. O. F. Hall.




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