USA > Iowa > Washington County > History of Washington County, Iowa from the first white settlements to 1908. Also biographical sketches of some prominent citizens of the county, Vol. II > Part 58
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He had the peculiar faculty in a very marked degree of intrenching him- self in the affections of all who knew him intimately. He was not a man with whom it was easy to become acquainted ; but having once given his con- fidence, his friendship was steadfast and enduring. He loved his home ; and his home life was ideal. He surrounded his family with a collection embrac- ing a very wide range of pictures and works of art ; at his death he had the largest private library in the state of Iowa.
In the fall of 1866 he was united in marriage with Amelia B. Wilson, and two children were born to them : Clara J. and Cora L. The former was married to Charles E. Patterson, a member of the Seattle bar, and the other daughter lives with her mother in the old Scofield homestead, on West Main street in Washington.
THE PARKINSON FAMILY.
Benoni Parkinson was born in Marshall county, West Virginia, March 3, 1836, and was one of a large family of children. He was educated in the subscription schools of that county and afterward attended Waynesburg College and still later took a course in medicine at Cleveland, Ohio. When the war of the Rebellion broke out he enlisted in the First West Virginia In- fantry. for a short service and upon the expiration of Ins term of enlistment, he reenlisted in the Third West Virginia Cavalry and was assigned to the position of assistant surgeon of the regiment. Later on he was assigned to the Seventeenth West Virginia Infantry as surgeon of the regiment and in that capacity served until the end of the war.
When he was mustered out of the army he entered the practice of medi- cine at Cameron, West Virginia. where he remained until about the year 1870. when he migrated to Ainsworth, Washington county, Iowa. Here he forsook the medical profession and engaged in the sale of lumber, in which he continued until about 1880. At that time he sold out his business at Ains- worth and moved to Washington, where he reengaged in the same line of trade. In 1893 he disposed of his business interests al Washington and moved to Palo Alto, California, where he engaged in the lumber and banking business, becoming president of the bank of Palo Alto. He died there in February, 1899.
Mr. Parkinson was a republican in politics. He served as a member of the house of representatives of the seventeenth general assembly from Wash- ington county, having defeated Rev. Benjamin Eicher for that office. The Doctor was a good citizen : plain, common and easily approached by every one. He was an influential citizen and possessed of fine business attainments. In his dealings he was prosperous as well as the soul of integrity, und by the
613
HISTORY OF WASHINGTON COUNTY
exercise of the nobler qualities of mind and heart endeared himself to all who knew him.
He was married to Katharine Gray, of Greene county, Pennsylvania, in 1863. She was born in November, 1842, and died while the family was living at Ainsworth. There were born to them seven children of whom four sur- vive: John Francis, Fannie Gray, George and Charles R. Subsequently he married Mrs. Nena Staples, who now resides at Los Angeles, California. By this marriage they had three children: Lieuba, Mary and Frank, who reside with their mother.
John Francis Parkinson, the eldest son, was born December 1, 1864, while his father was in the army. He was educated in the schools of Wash- ington county and a college at Burlington. In June, 1888, he was married to Maizie Scofield, the older daughter of William and Sarah Scofield, in Washington, and they went at once to Palo Alto, California, where they have since made their home. They have five children : Katharine, Robert, Benoni, John Francis, Jr., and Sarah Gray. Mr. Parkinson is engaged in numerous business enterprises and has been very successful. Among his other business interests, he is the owner and publisher of "The Citizen", a weekly newspaper published in his home town. He is a very public-spirited citizen and is con- stantly engaged in enterprises for the good of the public.
THE FORMAN FAMILY.
One of the oldest families in the county was founded by George W. For- man. He was born in Middletown, Butler county, Ohio, in 1822. After receiving his education he moved to Deedsville, now Merrimac, Jef- ferson county, Iowa, and that fall moved to Brighton township. Prior to his coming to Iowa he had learned the wagonmaker's trade, but after ar- riving at Brighton he gave up his trade and engaged in farming. He was a member of the board of supervisors of Washington county and had the sup- ervision of the building of the first bridge over Skunk river on the Washing- ton-Brighton road. He also served as justice of the peace for a number of terms. In partnership with John A. Henderson, he became a railroad con- tractor and built many of the bridges on what are now the Rock Island lines in Washington and Jefferson counties. In 1878, he moved to Alton, Kansas, where he died in July, 1907.
Mr. Forman was married to Margaret Heaton, a daughter of Samuel Heaton, the pioneer merchant of Brighton. She was born in Greene county, Pennsylvania, and was of a very fine family. She died February 14, 1898. Nine children were born to them: Walter, Lawrence N., Samuel Heaton, John, Emma, Carrie (Williams), Alvin, William and Effie (Anderson).
George W. Forman was a republican in politics, very strong Union man and a stanch supporter of President Lincoln throughout the war. He was a man of literary tastes and fond of society. Although not a member of a church, he was a man of very high moral character and a prohibitionist in his
1
614
HISTORY OF WASHINGTON COUNTY
temperance views. He was a great debater and was talked of as a can- didate for state senator and representative at different times but would never consent to the use of his name before the convention. He was an excellent type of the fine old pioneers who laid the foundation of that civilization which gives Washington county such prestige in the state.
Samuel Heaton Forman was born on Christmas day. 1854. at Brighton. He obtained his education in the schools of the county and on the 24th of August, 1881. he was united in marriage to Lillian J. Norton, a daughter of the pioneer merchant of Washington, whose picture is shown among the pioneer merchants of the county. They have one child, Mary, By occupa- tion, Mr. Forman is a traveling salesman, and for twenty-five years he has held a responsible position with Young, Smythe. Field Company, of Phila- delphia. There is probably not another traveling man in the state with the same line who has represented one house during so long a time. The For- man family has had a very long and honorable career in the county, and Samuel H. has contributed his part to the history of the family.
DEE WORK.
While Dee Work is no longer a resident of Washington county, he has here a host of warm friends so that his life record will prove of much in- terest to those with whom he was long associated. For many years he was a representative and prominent citizen of the county and the community felt and expressed its loss when he removed to De Funiak Springs, Florida, where he now resides. He was born in Washington county, July 12, 1861, and is a son of Simeon A. and Mary (Bailey) Work, who in the year 1851 came to Washington county where the father followed the occupation ~farming.
Reared under the parental roof Dee Work pursued his education in the public schools and afterward benefited by a year's instruction in the Iowa City Academy. while for six months he was a student in the Iowa City Commercial College. In early manhood he engaged in teaching, being in charge of several country schools, after which he was principal of the schools at Wellman, Kalona and Richmond. His identification with the educational interests of his part of the state was a source of benefit to the communities in which he labored for he proved himself a most competent and able instructor, imparting clearly and readily to others the knowledge that he had acquired.
On the 17th of January, 1889, Mr. Work was united in marri, , w Miss Maggie Elizabeth Thomas at the home of her father, McD. Thomas, at Pilot Grove, Washington county. Unto them have been born eight children : Carl Leo Thomas, who was born at Salina, Kansas. October 27, 1889; Earl Leon Britton, born March 21, 1801, at Salina ; William Wayne Bailey, who was born at Pilot Grove, Iowa, November 13, 1892, and there passed away May 17. 1897; Paul McDonald, born at Pilot Grove, Iowa, July 16, 1894 ; Lola Mary, born February 6, 1896; Arthur Lee, July 13, 1898: Burton
615
HISTORY OF WASHINGTON COUNTY
Nathaniel, July 2, 1900; and Ethel Leona, March 7, 1902. With the excep- tion of the first two all were born at Pilot Grove.
Mr. Work is a member of the Masonic fraternity, having been initiated into the order in the Richmond lodge, No. 96, A. F. & A. M., at Kalona, Iowa, in 1885. He was the first candidate initiated in the new hall there which burned. He was also the first candidate initiated in Naomi chapter of the Order of the Eastern Star at Kalona, but this occurred several years later. In the winter of 1907 the failure of Mrs. Work's health made it necessary for the family to go south. They chose as their location Du Funiak Springs, Florida, the home of her uncle, the Rev. Dr. H. W. Thomas, the founder of the People's church in Chicago. The change to the sunny south proved beneficial to Mrs. Work's health. De Funiak Springs is a noted health resort and is the place that Bishop Vincent selected twenty-five years ago for the West Florida Chautauqua. The breaking of ties of friendship in Washington county proved a sad time for the children of Mr. and Mrs. Work, but the family is now pleasantly located in Florida. The parents and four of their children, Carl, Earl. Paul and Lola, are mem- bers of the Methodist church. The first mentioned has taught his first term of school in Walton county, Florida, while Earl is now in the printing office of his uncle, C. W. Thomas, at Citronelle, Alabama. Mr. Work enlisted in Company K of the First Regiment, Florida State Troops, in 1907. His eldest son, Carl Work, enlisted at the same time and place and in the same company, which was the first on the scene of the street car strike at Pensa- cola in 1908. On their removal from Iowa the family left behind them many friends in Washington county to whom they are still bound by ties of affec- tion, association and love. The influence and activity of Mr. Work are always upon the side of progress, reform, improvement and advancement and these qualities constitute him a citizen of worth in any community.
JOHN MAXWELL AULD, M. D.
Among the native sons of Iowa of whom the state has every reason to be proud is John Maxwell Auld, who in his professional career has made valuable contributions to the science of medicine as the result of his in- vestigation, research and broad experience. He has advanced many ideas, the worth of which professional wisdom sanctions and which, moreover, have stood the test of actual practice. He is not a theorist for his opinions are ilet of unsubstantial fabric but are built upon the logical deductions of years of active and successful work in his chosen calling.
Dr. Auld was born on the 5th of June, 1855. about six miles south of Crawfordsville, in Henry county, Iowa, where he lived until ten years of age when he removed to Washington county, in company with his parents. George T. and Martha A. (Maxwell ) Auld. The mother was born near Cadiz, Ohio, and came of Scotch ancestry. The father was a native of Uhrichsville, Ohio, and in September, 1907, they celebrated their sixtieth wedding anniversary.
616
HISTORY OF WASHINGTON COUNTY
They were pioneers of the western country, fearing not the hardships and labor incident to the establishment of a home on the frontier and unfaltering in their devotion to the land they had come to help make. Moreover Mr. Auld regarded it as the duty as well as the privilege of citizenship to support the political measures which he deemed of greatest value to the country and became an active worker in the whig party while later he was one of the founders of the republican party in Iowa. For a number of years he was recognized as one of the leaders of the party in his section of the state and his district twice elected him to congress. Dr. Auld is the only son of the family but has four sisters: Mrs. Jennie Bailey of Washington, Iowa ; Mrs. Annie E. Mintur of Polk City, Iowa; Mrs. Nettie Anderson of Washington, Iowa ; and Mrs. Alma Whiteman, of Biggsville, Illinois.
Having mastered the branches of learning taught in the schools of his locality, Dr. Auld continued his education in the academy at Mount Pleasant, Iowa, and also attended the Washington Academy. Determining upon the practice of medicine as a life work he was matriculated in the College of Physicians & Surgeons of Keokuk, now in affiliation with Drake University and was graduated therefrom with the class of 1880. He located tor practice in Keota, Iowa, but after a brief period went to the cast and spent sometime in study in hospitals and clinics in New York and Philadelphia that he might be still better qualified for the onerous duties of the profession. In 1890 he located in Chicago where he has since been prominently associated with hospitals and has won fame as an operating surgeon. He has always been a student, reading widely and thinking deeply and has been greatly inter- ested in experiments pertaining to food. After leaving college he made a specialty of major surgery and rectal diseases and has become widely known to the laity as well as to the profession as one of the foremost sur- geons of Chicago. Unlike many, however, who follow this branch of the profession Dr. Auld discourages rather then encourages operative surgery, a fa - which indicates that in all of his practice he has been actuated by a spirit of broad humanitarianism that seeks the good of mankind rather than the promotion of individual financial interests. Notwithstanding this he has been very successful from both a financial and professional standpoint. He was on the staff of the Temperance Hospital for a number of years and served nine years as a faithful attending physician to the Chicago Baptist Hospital. He now conducts his major surgery cases in the Rhodes Avenue Hospital, formerly the Woman's Hospital, which is one of the oldest hospitals in the city of Chicago, established by the late Henry T. Byford: and the National Emergency Hospital. At the former he maintains what is kierr. as the Auld room. He is also a specialist on rectal and intestinal diseases, patients coming to him from all over the world. That his opinions on this branch of the profession are largely accepted as authority is indicated in the fact that he was chosen, and for cight years served, as professor of rectal and intestinal diseases at Harvey Medical College and is now professor of rectal and intestinal diseases and professor of gynecology in the medical depart- ment of the Chicago Night University. Patients for treatment in the line of his
617
HISTORY OF WASHINGTON COUNTY
specialty come to him from all parts of the country and his practice makes heavy demands upon his time and energies.
Perhaps Dr. Auld's greatest contribution to the world's knowledge has resulted from his investigation of the subject of diet. His study of the science of food chemistry has been the result of his desire to avoid opera- tions for diseases of the alimentary canal. His many years as major operator in Chicago hospitals revealed to him the results of over-eating in the fevers that caused all the intestinal troubles of the human system. Indigestion was the cause of those ailments that had been considered as those which could only be cured by use of the surgeon's knife. The large majority rated in these operations caused Dr. Auld to question the absolute necessity of operations and he set to work to discover some cure that would not demand surgery and some preventive for the diseases. After most careful and thorough investiga- tion he arrived at the conclusion that the preventive is self-restraint in eating and consideration of what and how food is eaten. The cure is a method that he has now perfected and with which he has been astonishingly successful. Students have come to him from all over the world as a result of the fame he has attained in medical science by his methods. It is the dangers of the use of anaesthetics that have made Dr. Auld an opponent of the method that he used for years before he was able to discover a better way. He found on in- vestigation that while the patient might be in a suitable condition and the operator the most skillful the anaesthetic in itself, because of adulteration, might prove fatal. Dr. Auld is convinced that nine out of ten cases of rectal diseases would be unnecessary if the patient would be given proper care in time. They could be averted altogether if the proper method of diet had been observed. He advises less haste in partaking of meals, believes in a vegetable diet, although he does not demand an entire abstinence from meats and also advises that a much less amount of meat be eaten. He thoroughly endorses the Shakespearian statement, "they are sick that serve with too much as they that starve with nothing." The opinions which Dr. Auld has advanced have been generally accepted by the profession and he is looked upon as a leader in a forward movement, the value of which is just beginning to be appreciated but which will become more and more one of the recog- nized laws of health that cannot be set aside.
Dr. Auld is not unknown as a business man of ability aside from any professional relations and is now interested in the erection of an apartment building on the Lakeshore drive in Chicago at a cost of one hundred thou- sand dollars.
On the 8th of December, 1875, occurred the marriage of Dr. Auld and Miss Elizabeth L. Love and unto them were born two children: Ralph R. and Bertha E. The mother died September 18, 1900, and on the 10th of September, 1903, Dr. Auld was married to Mrs. Bertha Hax Forman of St. Joseph, Missouri. He is a believer in the Presbyterian faith, to which his parents strictly adhered and is a prominent member of the South Shore Country Club. Politically Dr. Auld is a supporter of the principles of the republican party. He is a highly industrious man, of rigid and sterling in- tegrity, and his honesty of purpose and upright principles have won him the
618
HISTORY OF WASHINGTON COUNTY
respect and confidence of every one who knows him. He has achieved a great success in his professional calling through his own unaided efforts and has secured, along with a competence which will afford to his declining years the ease and comfort earned by a long life of toil, his name recorded as a lib- eral contributor both to medical science and humanitarianism.
INDEX
Adams, I. C. .395
Anderson, Absalom .136
Anderson, J. N. 270
Casey Brothers 241
Anderson, Samuel 215
Cherry, R. G. 510
Alberson, A. N. .255
Cherryholms, H. D. 433
Alexander, G. W. 135
Allen, T. J.
.558
Applegate, E. A.
117
Armstrong, D. H.
Arnold, I. N.
488
Arthaud. Daniel 193
Ashby, E. W. H.
192
Ashby, R. M. .491
Augustine, J. A. .520
Auld, J. M .. 615
Ayers, J. J. 195
Curl, W. A. 217
Cushman, F. W. 561
Bailey, A. & E. 568
Bailey, M. W.
5
Davidson, John 583
Davies, H. E.
.486
Dayton, Lenox 578
Bauer, J. C.
26
Bauer, Sylvester
394
Bear, S. II.
98
Beanchamp, Aaron
473
Benz, J. P. .283
Bidwell, L. J.
460
Birney, W. A.
307
Bishop, S. E. .367
Bishop, W. L. 68
Blickensderfer, J. F. 571
Blumenstein, W. H. 143
Booth, P. J. 180
Booth, T. D.
82
Bittenfield, Lizza
145
Bovee. J. E. 373
Boyer. D. A. .228
Braden, A. L. 54
Bradford, E. 426
Brinning, H. H. 383
Brook, C. A.
.248
Brookhart, S. W. 100
Brown, B. F. 161
Brown, Charles
490
Brown. C. E.
85
Brown. Edwin
267
Brown. T. J. 422
Brown, W. E. 38
Bryson, John 580
Buckley, J. D. . 533
Bulger, J. T.
434
Frain, J. F.
404
Bush, Cyrus
570
190
Curr. j. .
92
Gardner, J. E.
349
619
Eyestone, J. N. 372
Fesler, D. A.
10
Fleming. F. M.
53
Fleming, W. F. 299
Forman Family
Foster, G. L. 613
.511
Foster. H. L. 320
Foster, W. A.
214
Frain. A. M. T. .405
Frits. Rachel
293
Gardner. C. C.
392
Dorrance, N. L.
201
Downing, L. M. 39
Dye, Harry 202
Eckhardt, John 251
Edwards, J. W.
.300
Eichelberger, D. J.
368
Eicher, H. M.
152
Eitermiller, Peter 351
Elder, Orville 28
England, II. O. 485
England, S. A.
474
Essley, Martin 175
97
Denker, H. W. 446
Dewey, C. A.
99
Dey, J. B.
56
Dixon, B. F. 131
Donaldson, John C. 587
Ball, H. A. 496
Bartholomew, W. S. 358
Deen, Eli 130
Delong, J. E. 253
Desing, Ida M.
Cole, D. S. 199
Conner, Samuel .279
Craig. A. D. 403
Cress, W. H. 415
Critz, Frank 364
Crumpacker, J. R. 577
Chittum, J. M. 459
Cocklin, S. J. 176
Coe, C. S. 507
Coffey. E. I. 529
.590
Carr, R. H. 36
Carson, J. A. 456
Bunker Fami .556
620
INDEX
Gardner, N. B.
427
Logue, I. W. .243
.305
Gardner. W. P.
17
Longwell. Jesse
Godlove, E. W.
185
Luithly. Il. A. 562
Goodspeed. Marshall
280
LuithIv. L. B. .502
Gorden. L. W.
154
Lukavsky. James
155
Graham, John
.581
Gray. J. S.
M.Elroy, R. W.
571
Griffin. H. F.
80
Griffith. G. G.
455
McFarlane. R. F. 225
277
Griffith. G. W.
Mckinley. John
516
Griffith, J. E.
MeKinney. J. R.
558
Griffith. R. W.
578
MeLanghlin. David
448
McMillan. I. G.
601
Manatt, Samuel
380
Mapel. J. S.
Hamil on. A. L.
108
llamilton. W. R.
189
Hamilton. W. T.
274
Marsh. J. A.
512
llarding. F. W.
475
Marshall. Robert
184
Harding. Thomas
39d
Matthess, Nathan 263
541
Hasty. A. C.
477
Maxwell. J. G. .
478
ITeck. John
49
Maxwell. McDowell
437
Henderson. Alexander
470
Maver. Charles
406
Henderson. H. T. D.
96
Mayer. J. C.
133
Hood. W. N.
551
Mayer. W. ...
254
Horning. John
29
Meyer. C. A.
50
L'uber, Aaron
297
Miller. A. N.
582
Huber. Frank
286
Miller, A. R.
8
Iluff. J. W.
400
Miller. M. P.
328
Hull. II. C.
126
Miller, S. S.
227
Hull. Horatio
492
Miller. W. L.
182
Hunter. Albert
78
Moomey. B. P.
567
Hunter. T. W.
Moore. H. G.
466
Moothart. George
24
Morgan. C. B.
517
Morgan, Henry
572
Morrow. Josiah
40
Morrow. W. J.
361
Myers. C. E.
90
Jacobsmeier. Bernard 121
118
Nagley. L. E.
69
Needham, C. K.
11
Nelson, J. C.
348
Jones. Isaac
238
Nicola. E.
584
Oldfield. Isaiah
27
Oldfield. Paul
428
Keck Family
594
Kendall. Il. L.
58
Kennedy, John
331
Kerr. W. B. 125
Kiburz, Mrs. M. E. .377
Palmer. D. J. 20
Parkinson Family 612
Parks. W. S. 43
543
PanI. G. I.
72
Pearson. Abram
519
Pearson. J. H.
288
Laubach. O. F.
273
Phillips, W. S.
498
Leonard. J. F. R. 583
Pimme. Albert
242
Lewis. D. W.
605
Lewis. J. R.
609
Pulver, Isaac 540
Lewis. R. P. 310
Pulver. S. M ..
141
Lins. Conrad 25
Livingston. S. W. 159
88
IInston. J. H.
508
ITyde. W. N.
141
Ihrig. I. H. 499
Jackson, L. P.
212
.Johnson. C. T.
Jolison. T. E.
534
Jones. E. C.
442
Jones. E. L.
196
Nichols, J. W.
Jones, James
76
Keating. John
268
O'Longhlin. John
570
Ott, Alma G. 37
Overfelt. C. A. 416
Krebs. Charles
275
Kreb -. Gottlieb
327
Krebs. Henry 341
Kueneman, W. J.
539
Latta. F. M 592
374
Hagist. F. W.
Manners. Henderson
Ilagist, Il. G.
165
Maresh. George
144
Marr, Jesse
435
476
Martin. F. G. 236
Harper. J. W.
Hart. Seth
Maunhardt, D. W.
345
384
McGee. F. S. .
258
223
Guzeman. A. H.
McCleery. S. M. 246
Prizer. O. H.
.579
Patterson. D. I.
Rath. Theodore 487
621
INDEX
546
Rawson, A.
171
Reed. G. W.
Reeves, A. E. 266
245
Reiner, Joseph
530
Terry, M. C. 565
Rickey, F. E.
Therion, Arthur 181
Riekey. Reuben
Thomas Family 569
436
Risk. R. C.
122
Ritchey, D. R.
70
Roberts, Jaekson
411
Robertson, D. C.
458
Robinson, H. S.
457
Robison, W. R.
555
Rodman, W. F.
571
Romine. C. L.
114
Vincent. G. G. 312
67
Sands. A. E. 413
Wakelee, C. L. 531
Sands, F. G.
.330
Waldschmidt, Joseph 443
Schilling. T. M.
552
Walker, J. A.
122
Sehmelzer. H. F. 172
342
Wallingford, Hiram
580
Schnoebelen. V. F.
521
Wallingford, Hiram, Jr.
19
Schulty. Charles
Walton, Charles
500
Schulty. Henry, Jr.
.336
Walton, Ellis
468
Schulty, Henry
610
Weekly. Solomon
46
Seeley, Horace
162
Wells. C. R. 218
Shaffer, C. F.
235
Wells. W. W. 186
203
Shaw. A. R.
19
Whetstine, Melvin
226
Shaw, E. M.
White. A. L.
370
Sigler. W. W.
151
White, S. A.
294
Singmaster, Thomas
102
Wickham, T. Y.
276
Wilde. Daniel
559
Sitler, L. C.
308
Williams, Elias
445
Skola. F. E.
205
Willson. II. H.
438
Smith. E. I.
Wilson. C. J.
264
Smith. F. H.
156
Wilson. F. L.
149
Smith, U. S.
Wilson, J. M.
14
Smith. Wesley
206
Wilson, W. A. 322
Wilson. W. W. 362
Steel, Horaee
15
Wolcott. E. S. 391
166
Stephens. W. P.
501
Wombacher, John 146
Stewart, C. W.
285
Stewart, Frank
Woodburn. L. F.
409
Stewart, F. L.
221
Stewart, John
579
Work. De
614
Stewart, J. M.
454
Stewart, J. W.
352
Young Family 560
Voung. J. A.
30
Stoutner, W. A.
319
Young. J. H. 582
Young. R. H. and A. H. 480
Struble. M. C.
596
Stuart, R. A. 505
Sueppel, Nickolaus, Jr. 453
Taylor, J. R. 424
Terry, J. L. L. 581
Reynolds, II. T.
290
538
"Rickey. T. W.
60
Thorne, Clifford
316
Tipton, B. F.
86
Traey Family
545
Trotter. W. T.
213
Robinson, J. A.
Trumbauer, C. A.
81
Turkington, Samuel
464
Van Siekle. Dr. A. H. 587
Romine. J. H.
580
Russell, S. A.
Vincent, William
Walker, W. A. 379
Schnoebelen, S.
211
332
Wead. . J. C. F.
252
Seufield, Iliram
Shaver. D. K.
317
Whetstine. George
522 401
White. R. S.
431
Simpson. Thomas, Jr.
Sitler, D. C. 340
Squire. J. II.
124
Steiner. William
116
Wombacher, Adam
Wood, S. G. 382
173
Woodford, S. E. 579
Stichter, Henry 163
412
Thomas, J. P.
55
Timmins. C. F.
298
363
233
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