Political history of Chicago (covering the period from 1837 to 1887) Local politics from the city's birth; Chicago's mayors, aldermen and other officials; county and federal officers; the fire and police departments; the Haymarket horror; miscellaneous, Part 20

Author: Ahern, M. L
Publication date: 1886
Publisher: Chicago : Donohue & Henneberry, printers and binders
Number of Pages: 416


USA > Illinois > Cook County > Chicago > Political history of Chicago (covering the period from 1837 to 1887) Local politics from the city's birth; Chicago's mayors, aldermen and other officials; county and federal officers; the fire and police departments; the Haymarket horror; miscellaneous > Part 20


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).


Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28


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of the eighth ward. He was elected to represent this ward five consecutive times. In the council Mr. Lawler has always been the friend of the toilers. He presented the ordinance closing the bridges from six to seven in the morning and half past five to half past six in the evening, for the benefit of the laboring class; offered the ordinance forbidding the employment of children in factories un- der twelve years of age; insisted upon the tax-fighters coming to the front, and was most energetic in his oppo- sition to convict labor. Among other recognitions he re- ceived the following :


INTERNATIONAL TYPOGRAPHICAL UNION, ¿ DETROIT, Mich., June 7, 1878.


The following resolution was adopted by the International Typo- graphical Union in convention assembled (delegates being present from all the cities in the United States, the territories, and Canada) in the city of Detroit, Mich., on the day and date above mentioned:


Resolved, That the thanks of the International Typographical Union are hereby tendered to Alderman Frank Lawler, of the Com- mon Council of the city of Chicago, for his successful and energetic opposition to the employment of convict labor on the new City Hall of that city.


DARWIN R. STREETER, Pres., JOHN H. O'DONNELL, Sec .- Treas.


Congressman Lawler was nominated Sept. 6, 1884, at Westphail's Hall, by the Democratic convention. He was elected by a majority of 2,410 in one of the largest Dem- ocractic districts in the country.


JAMES H. WARD.


The Congressman from the third district, and suc- cessor to Col. George R. Davis, was born in Chicago, on the southwest corner of Madison and Halsted streets, and is about thirty-three years of age. He attended St. Patrick's School, and graduated at Notre Dame Univer- sity, Indiana. Emerging from the institution with high honors, he adopted the profession of law, and when he was


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elected to congress by the flattering vote of the third dis- trict he was transacting a lucrative practice in the Metro- politan Block. He was offered the Presidency of the Young Democracy, but declined.


GEORGE E. ADAMS.


George Everett Adams, Congressman of the fourth congressional district, was born June 18, 1840, at Keene, N. H. He graduated at Harvard when twenty years of age, and immediately commenced the study of law at Dane Law School, at Cambridge, Mass., was subsequently ad- mitted to the bar, and has since practiced his profession. In November, 1880, he was elected State Senator of Illinois from the sixth district, but resigned March 3, 1883, having been elected to the Forty-eighth Congress as a Republican. He was reëlected.


LAMBERT TREE.


Our Minister to Belgium, Judge Lambert Tree, was born in Washington City, District of Columbia, November 29, 1832. Here he was educated, graduating at Columbia College. Soon after this event he studied law in the office of James M. Carlisle, leader at that time of the Washing- ton bar. He spent two years thereafter in the law school of the University of Virginia. In the fall of 1855 he was admitted to the bar, and immediately came to Chicago. This city has been his home ever since.


Six months after his arrival our subject formed a co- partnership with Joseph P. Clarkson, which continued for a number of years. He practiced law continually until 1871, when he visited Europe. He was President of the Law In- stitute at the time. In 1871 he was elected Judge of the Cir- cuit Court, to fill the unexpired term of Hon. William K. McAllister, who was elevated to the supreme bench of Illinois. On the expiration of this term he was reelected without op- position-a magnificent tribute to his judicial character. In


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1875, his health failing, Judge Tree resigned and spent four years in foreign travel, visiting every spot in Europe. In 1878, while absent, he was nominated for Congress for the fourth district by the Democrats, and declined. His party, however, insisted on retaining his name upon the ticket, cast an immense vote for him, but he was defcated. He hardly counted on victory, as the district is one of the largest republican strongholds in the state. His opponent was Hiram Barber. In 1882 he was again unanimously nominated for the same district, but was defeated by George E. Adams, the present incumbent. In 1884 he was a delegate-at-large to the Democratic National Con- vention, held at Chicago. President Cleveland appointed Judge Tree Minister to Belgium, July 9, 1885.


At the session of the General Assembly of Illinois, of 1884-85, after the withdrawal of Col. Morrison, Judge Tree was unanimously nominated by the Democrats in the Legislature as their candidate for the United States Senate against Gen. John A. Logan, the Republican candidate, and on joint ballot lacked but one vote of election.


Judge Lambert Tree donated to the city $700, from the proceeds of which a medal is to be struck and awarded annually for the bravest deed of a fireman or police officer. This donation was duplicated by Mayor Harrison on Octo- ber 6, so that a medal may go to one member of each of the the two departments annually.


JAMES T. HEALY.


The selection by President Cleveland of James T. Healy for the very responsible position of Sub-Treasurer was a genuine surprise to the recipient. There were many aspirants for the office, but everybody conceded that Mr. Healy was not one of them.


Mr. Healy was born in Chicago, February 16, 1846, and represents a family known to the early settlers of the


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northwest as one of the best in the category of worth. Educated in Chicago, Mr. Healy became a business man in a very brief period. He first kept books for Nash & Co., commission merchants. His experience here in general business transactions induced him to form a co-partnership with a Mr. Stevens in the lumber traffic. Subsequently he engaged in the pork-packing business under the firm name of Moran & Healy. He was busy attending to the business of this firm when unexpectedly notified that he was appointed Sub-Treasurer.


While manifesting a commendable interest in politics, Mr. Healy has never sought office. Sheriff Hoffman se- lected him as Chief Deputy on business principles. He served four years as a member of the Board of Education.


F. H. MARSH.


The United States Marshal for the northern district of Illinois, Frank H. Marsh, was born in Dover, England, September 7, 1843, and when a youth came to this coun- try. At the age of eighteen, having received his educa- tion at Rock River Seminary, at Mount Morris, Ogle County, Illinois, our subject entered the union army as a private. He enlisted in the Fifteenth Illinois, afterward the Forty-Sixth. His first battle was at fort Donnelson, and for meritorious conduct at Pittsburg Landing and other famous battles, he was promoted to a captaincy. He served throughout the war, participating in every battle fought by this regiment.


Resuming civil life, he engaged in the book and news trade up to 1869, when he became general agent for the American Express Company, at Oregon, Illinois. He was shortly elected Representative of his district in the Twen- ty-eighth and Twenty-ninth General Assembly, and in 1883 was elected Sheriff of the county. His majority was 900 on the Democratic ticket, where the Republicans


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elected his predecessor by 2,100 majority. The Marshal has always been a Democrat, casting his first vote for Seymour, and his prominence in the party has ever been strongly recognized. In June, 1885, he was appointed by President Cleveland United States Marshal, and his papers on file in Washington bear the indorsement of Republi- cans as well as Democrats.


Mr. Marsh's superiority as Sheriff of Ogle county justi- fies the prediction that he will make an almost unrivaled United States Marshal for the northern district of Illinois.


RENSSELAER STONE.


The collector of internal revenue was born August 14, 1830, in Oneida county, N. Y. He received his education at academies in Vernon and Lowville, Lewis county, N. Y. In the East he was known as a flourishing commission merchant. In 1859 he came to Chicago where in the firm of Bates, Stone & Co. his business enterprise material- ly contributed to one of the largest mercantile structures in the Northwest. He is one of the most prominent members of the Board of Trade with which he has been associated for twenty-six years last past, and has always been active in Democratic politics. His appointment by President Cleveland is dated September 10, 1885.


A. F. SEEBERGER.


The dignified Collector of the port of Chicago has been all his life a business man in every sense of the word, and was selected by President Cleveland as a representative of the German element which assisted in his election.


He was born in 1829 in Wetzlar, on the river Lahn, in Germany. Coming to America when very young he rapid- ly became identified with our commercial institutions and the fact that he is the senior member of the hardware establishment of Seeberger, Breakey & Co., sufficiently at- tests liis great business success.


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PHILIP A. HOYNE.


The United States Commissioner was born in New York, November 20, 1825, and is the son of an Irish patroit. Exiled from his country at the age of thirteen he entered a book binding and printing establishment, but abandoned the business in 1841, when he entered the law office of his brother Thomas Hoyne. From 1842 to 1844 he kept books in Galena and dabbled in mining. In 1844 he came to Chicago as an agent for the St. Louis Fur Com- pany, and in 1851 permanently located here. In 1853 he was elected the first clerk of the Recorder's Court for five years. In 1855 he was admitted to the bar, and in 1868 to the Supreme Court of the United States. On January 9, 1855, he was made United States Commissioner for the district of Illinois and is the oldest in the service in the Northwest.


He is Commissioner of Deeds of every state and ter- ritory, the provinces of Canada and British America, the District of Columbia, and represents the United States Court of Claims, the Court of Commissioners of Alabama, and French and American claims. He is a prominent member of many societies.


ELIJAH B. SHERMAN.


This gentleman was appointed as Master in Chancery in the United States courts in 1879. He is of Anglo- Welsh descent and was born in Fairfield, Vt., June 13, 1832. In 1854 he entered a drug store in Brandon, Vt. In 1860 he graduated from Middleborough College. He was the poet for the junior exhibition and also at the graduation exercises. In 1862 he enlisted in the Ninth Vermont Infantry and became a Lieutenant. In 1864 he graduated in law. In 1876 he was elected in the fourth sen- atorial district and again in 1878. Among other positions of dignity and trust filled by Mr. Sherman may be men-


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tioned, the Grand Mastership of the Grand Lodge of Odd Fellows; memberships in the Chicago Philosophical Society; Chicago Bar Association; Chicago Law Institute, and State Bar Association.


The Grant memorial address pronounced by Elijah B. Sherman ranks among the best extant.


MARIAN A. MULLIGAN.


This lady is pension agent at Chicago, her application for the very responsible position having been indorsed by the leading men of the city and the state, regardless of politics. Mrs. Mulligan is the eldest daughter of Michael and Alice Grant Nugent, and was born in Liverpool, England, September 14, 1841. She might be said to be a Chicagoan, as she was a mere child when her parents set- tled here. She was educated at St. Xavier's Academy, and when fifteen, after her father's death, she became a boarder at Miss Sarah J. Hale's school for young ladies at Philadel- phia. On October 20, 1859, she was married to James A. Mulligan, a young lawyer of great promise, who on the outbreak of the war of the rebellion abandoned his law books to unsheathe his sword in defense of the Union. He organized the Twenty-third Illinois Volunteers, subse- quently known as the Irish Brigade, whose exploits on the field can never be forgotten so long as American history remains.


Mrs. Mulligan accompanied her husband in his cam- paigns, and after his surrender at Lexington, in 1861, shared his captivity. He was held prisoner by General Sterling Price. In July, 1864, Col. Mulligan was fatally wounded at the battle of Kernstown, near Winchester, Va., and Mrs. Mulligan's eldest brother, Lieutenant James H. Nugent, A. D. C., while assisting his commander from the field was instantly killed. The Lieutenant was but nineteen years and six months old, and his body was never


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recovered. Colonel Mulligan received three fatal wounds, and was carried to a farm house and died on July 26. His wife, hearing that he was wounded, started from Cumber- land, Maryland, and after a most distressing journey of over one hundred miles, reached Winchester, only to find her husband and brother dead, and to realize the fact that she was a widow at the age of twenty-three, with two little children. On the following January a third daughter was born.


Mrs. Mulligan brought the remains of her husband to Chicago, where with signal military honors they were con- signed to Calvary. On Decoration Day, in 1875, the grave of the gallant Colonel was marked by a beauti- ful monument erected by the State of Illinois and the citi- zens of Chicago.


Our pension agent was a heroine before, during and after the battle, displaying the rarest fortitude in affliction. She maintained and educated her children by literary work and music teaching. Her eldest daughter is the wife of Mr. John C. Carroll, one of our leading citizens. Mrs. Mulligan's ability, culture and great sacrifices for the pres- ervation of the Union, eminently justified her appointment.


J. J. CROWLEY.


The Chief of the Special Agents of the United States Treasury at Chicago is Jeremiah J. Crowley. He was born in Boston, Mass., and graduated from Georgetown College, D. C. In 1866 he came to Chicago, and served as Corresponding Clerk for the Western News Company up to 1869, when he was appointed Assistant Cashier in the City Collector's office. In 1875 he was elected Chief Clerk in the Illinois House of Representatives, and in 1877 was made First Assistant Secretary of the State Senate. Returning to Chicago he accepted the position of Chief Clerk in the West Town Assessor's office, and having made an excep-


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tionally fine record there, was selected for his present re- sponsible position.


S. CORNING JUDD.


The Postmaster of Chicago was born in Otisco, Onan- dago county, N. Y., July 21, 1827. At the age of nine he was sent to the Aurora Academy, in Erie county. He here met Hon. Henry Fillmore, afterward President of the United States. He subsequently taught school in Canada. In 1845 he studied law with Griswold & Corning in Syra- cuse, N. Y. Richard S. Corning was the brother of the late Hon. Erastus Corning, of Albany, N. Y. In 1848 he was admitted to the bar, becoming a partner of H. S. Winston at Syracuse, and writing for the press at the same time. In 1849 he was City Clerk of Syracuse, and edited the daily Star, which was Independent in politics. In 1850 he accepted a position in the Department of the Interior, but soon returned and purchased the daily Star from Mr. Comstock. In 1853 he sold the paper to the Democrats, and it became the Republican and Courier. In 1854 he went to Lewiston, Fulton county, Illinois, and was a law partner of W. C. Goudy. 1873 he came to Chicago, and was a partner with William Fitzhugh, son of Bishop Whitehouse. In 1883 Mr. Judd was President of the Chicago Bar Association.


It might be said that Mr. Judd's political activity out- side of the press was manifested principally in 1860, when he was the Democratic candidate for Presidential Elector on the Douglas ticket, and in 1864, when he was the Democratic nominee for Lieutenant Governor of Illinois. Outside of what speeches he has made in Presidential cam - paigns since 1864, his entire time has been given to the practice of his profession.


COLLINS S. SQUIERS.


The very able and courteous Assistant Postmaster, Col- lins S. Squiers, was born May 30, 1832, in Madison


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County, N. Y. In 1857 he came to Chicago and entered the Board of Public Works. His first experience in the Chicago postoffice was as a letter distributor, and after- wards he was made Superintendent of that department. In 1865 he was made Cashier of the office, then Chief Clerk, and finally Assistant Postmaster.


HENRY F. DONOVAN.


The Superintendent of letter-carriers in the Chicago postoffice, whose appointment gave singularly unanimous satisfaction, is but twenty-eight years of age and has lived in Chicago all his life. His ringing speeches in one of the most exciting presidential campaigns in the annals of America, alone certainly entitled him to great consideration from the Democratic administration.


" Harry," as Mr. Donovan is best known, was educated in the public schools. For ten years he was employed on the Chicago Press. On his retirement with the honors of a first-class reporter from the active field of journalism, he was appointed Deputy County Clerk in charge of the marriage license department by M. W. Ryan, County Clerk. He was elected President of the County Board of Education, Oct. 8, 1883, and was reëlected President in 1884 and 1886. He was one of the founders of the Chicago Press Club and one of the originators of the old Irish- American Second Regiment, in which he served as Ser- geant-Major. He is at present Secretary of the Board of Civil Service Examiners, in addition to his duties as Super- intendent of Carriers. He was a candidate for Clerk of the Superior Court on the Democratic ticket in 1884, run- ning ahead of his ticket, but was defeated, the county being strongly Republican. Mr. Donovan is a member of the Iroquois, Algonquin and Cook County Democratic Clubs; is President of the Post Office Mutual Aid Society, and be- longs to a large number of social and benevolent organiza- tions. He is married to a daughter of Christian Cassle- man, Esq., and has three children.


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CLERKS OF POSTOFFICE.


C. M. Alexander, C. J, Agger, J. L. Aymong, A. G. Anderson, August Arnold, M. Aszling, W. H. Andrus, W. T. Alden, A. G. Ayer, James Anderson, H. Ackhoff, S. Adler, C. S. Bates, William Butler, John D. Blackwell, D. M. Ball, C. Boorman, A. N. Boe, Joseph Barr, T. M. Beatty, E. D. Barber, J. P. Burbeck, C. P. Burr, C. Bie- denweg, C. E. Beach, E. T. Berryhill, P. H. Bready, W. J. Bigley, H. Burnside, W. E. Burcky, F. L. Barnett, D. F. Barber, C. L. Buchan, Joseph Boyd, H. C. Barbour, R. C. Baer, L. B. Bergersen, S. S. Bendit, F. H. Brown, F. Beattie, L. Baer, Mary T. Briggs, J. W. Brown, A. M. Blanchard, J. M. Burke, Thomas Berry, N. B. Brant, F. H. Brooks. F. Brenken, C. Burkhardt, A. G. Begy, C. F. Bock, C. Brugmann, J. J. Brown, J. J. Burke, E. M. Castle, J. W. Cooper, M. B. Collins, W. E. Crumbackeer, P. M. Clowry, J. C. Cluett, Mrs. L. M. F. Cook, G. H. Churchill, C. O. Curtis, Miss H. A. Cary, J. H. Casey, W. A. Calhoun, R. Cuniff, Mary V. Caumragere, D. A. Cook, A. G. Clark, H. Cordes, Miss M. A. Cameron, J. S. Creech, J. H. Clancy, W. R. Crow, F. F. Clark, Mrs. E. B. Coghlan, J. V. Cowling, J. P. Costello, Miss C. D. Clement, R. Conway, B. M. Cohen, P. H. Caraher, J. H. Canavan, G. W. Colby, W. P. Cook, R. Colladine, M. Crimmins, F. T. Cairns, Miss M. M. Crocker, D. Colford, W. M. Cuthberton, P. J. Casey, F. J. Costello, M. J. Clark, E. V. Dales, E. M. Dickson, J. Donahue, Miss E. N. Decker, J. Davy, S. D. Dent, F. M. Dittus, S. Degman, Mrs. C. H. Deale, C. L. Davis, W. L. De Remer, J. G. Drought, J. Duguid, A. E. Dickinson, T. Downey, O. M. Downs, H. F. Donovan, Miss B. L. Dunbar, T. F. Dunning, W. H. Daly, P. Dunne, C. Dockery, P. Dudley, A. Donairo, N. R. Douglass, J. V. DoVino, F. C. Demorest, J. Eict, M. Emerich, F. En-


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gelhardt, A. W. Ehrhardt, J. A. Eliasson, P. L. Eber- sold, G. F. Ebinger, M. Evans, E. B. Esher, Miss F. E. Elder, J. Frank, P. R. Forest, H. S. Fowler, F. F. Fisher, F. H. Fox, T. A. Fontaine, T. F. Fay, J. V. Fox, W. Fyfo, W. J.Finn, Miss F. O. Ford, D. E. Ford, R. M. Fitzgerald, Miss M. I. Flanagan, J. H. Finnegan, R. O. Forrest, B. Foley, J. J. Flannagan, W. J. Fur- long, C. A. Gibson, Miss E. F. Griswold, Miss M. L. Gillmore, J. H. Granger, J. Galbraith, T. A. Gund, L. Goodman, P. F. Geogohan, A. J. Gowanlock, W. George, W. H. Garrity, M. Goldschmidt, G. W. Giehuly, A. F. Gorgan, Bartley Grady, J. Goldsmith, F. W. Green, H. W. Gillespie, G. D. Gerdner, J. B. Howard, E. Huther, R. Henderson, Charles Hale, D. C. Haight, Hog Aboam, R. T. Howard, A. J. Heath, P. H. Henry, C. C. Hatcher, J. C. Haltenkoff, B. Hecht, E. C. Hooker, J. H. Hughes, A. T. Hall, A. C. Hawley, B. C. Heavey, E. J. Hughes, G. B. Hennessy, W, O. Hart, S. A. Hanlon, Jr., P. J. Hermann, O. C. Hay, J. T. Hoyne, P. Hackett, F. E. Horn, Miss N. M. Hayes, C. D. Harrison, Miss H. M. Homer, James Hogan, J. J. Hennessy, Miss Lottie V. Hicks, E. T. Higgins, J. J. Hardin, B. Huhn, W. Han- ton, O. F. Haull, C. J. Henry, J. J. Hooley, W. J. Juleson, R. M. Johnston, J. H. Jones, L. Jirks, J. G. Kerr, T. E. Kennedy, G. F. Keick, M. Kearins, J. E. Kimberly, T. A. Kenny, T. P. Kerugan, J. H. Keenon, A. Knefel, J. Krewer, H. T. Knop, C. Keil, W. E. King, W. W. Kennedy, E. L. Kellogg, E. Kehoe, J. Killean, Miss J. L. Kelly, M. Knost, J. Kene, S. H. King, A. F. Klank, C. B. Langley, S. C. Labell, R. Law, J. C. Lamb, T. J. Lawler, H. Le Brown, W. H. Leirness, J. Lyons, W. Luckow H. Loveken, F. D. Lipe, J. H. Lenz, F. A. Lenhard, G. W. Lovering, P. S. Lynch, E. Lee, T. H. Litzenberg, D. B. Lynch, W. J. Lyman, H. Lieb, T. F. Maegher, H. E. Meacham, J. M. Mahler, E. Munster, J.


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W. McGee, J. N. McArthur, S. Marble, T. R. Melody, W. H. Moore, A. C. Morse, W. W. Man, E. A. Mack, D. Martin, J. Matter, G. W. Miles, E. B. Morey, J. McDavid, J. T. McGrath, H. C. Matlack, A. C. Martin, M. W. Mills, B. F. McCarty, J. J. McCue, G. E. Mc- Grew, P. McNamara, F. J. Miller, T. Mackey, T. J. McEssey, W. A. McFarlane, A. A. Morrow, J. Mullin, J. T. Monahan, J. T. McMahon, J. S. Mulliner, F. W. Mayer, W. D. McBean, P. Moran, Miss A. Murray, D. T. McGraw, M. T. McAuliff, P. J. Mulvaney, J. Marr, J. J. Masterson, E. J. Murray, J. McCormick, J. T. McMackin, J. Merwick, W. F. Murphy, S. W. Marshall, J. Mckeever, W. Mahon, J. S. McInerney, D. P. Mor- gan, P. McDentt, C. H. Manning, J. D. Murphy, J. M. Mahon, A. H. Murdorff, P. Noonan, E. B. Nordham, G. R. Nixon, P. Newton, J. E. Nelson, C. Nowlan, W. G. Noxon, R. J. Niemeyer, W. E. Nelson, W. K. Os- good, J. H. O'Brien, N. T. Ohlander, G. F. O'Leary, Mrs. A. S. Ondorff, F. G. Orcutt, I. W. Ott, D. J. O'Con- nors, J. O'Kelley, L. C. Overlock, J. J. O'Brien, D. O'Con- nell, P. J. O'Brien, E. O'Connor, J. O'Brien, P. O'Farrell, W. E. Patton, N. Petrie, Mrs. J. W. Parsons, J. E. Pear- son, L. W. Post, W. R. Pugh, W. H. C. Pierce, N. Pat- terson, G. H. Pond, J. C. Polly, Jr., R. N. Pearson, R. Panneberg, J. W. Prendergast, Mrs. M. J. Porter, J. B. Petrie, L. A. Pimdwille, A. J. Pichham, F. A. Panebla, E. Parro, S. S. C. Partello, S. J. Peterson, C. T. Pit- kin, F. E. Percy, Miss A. D. Plaister, J. Prendergast, J. F. Propper, D. W. Quirk, T. J. Quinn, M. Quinlan, A. S. Reynolds, E. Reilly, Mrs. K. Runger, E. P. Ryan, J. J. Reordan, M. N. Richards, L. D. Ripley, J. H. Rees, E. J. Rook, S. Rutter, P. K. Ryan, W. N. Reynolds, H. O. Reiley, T. J. Reedy, O. A. Ruthenberg, Jr., J. Ryan, T. M. Riordan, J. H. Rea, N. C. Reidy, R. E. Raleigh, F. Ryan, E. Rose, Miss L. H. Rea, A. D. Rueg-


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ger, J. Regan, A. Reardon, C. S. Squires, A. H. Swan, G. L. Schneler, E. J. Sanders, E. A. Stridiron, E. F. Stoetzel, F. Sherman, W. Sproehnle, M. Slosser, J. P. Stewart, Miss F. Smith, C. A. Story, J. L. Schonton, T. F. Scully, C. C. Samer, J. T. Scanlan, L. A. Stave, F. Schoenwald, R. Sheehy, G. H. Seery, R. C. Samuel, A. T. Sherman, S. P. Stiles, W. H. Sabin, H. A. Saw- yer, O. Stimming, T. B. Sconton, L. Stross, E. Scherf- fins, J. J. Smith, H. Seyforth, Miss M. A. Sears, P. J. Sweeney, W. S. Snorf, W. H. Shenton, J. B. Schloss- man, J. J. Schlesinger, J. L. Sullivan, W. M. Sullivan, H. C. Scherenemann, Mrs. C. E. Sutherland, W. R. Stiles, T. E. Scullen, H. C. Swale, W. J. Smith, J. A. Sand, J. B. Sheil, F. J. Sweeney, J. Shannon, R. E. Skelly, H. W. Slenger, C. Schaefen, Jr., Miss I. Schiff, R. L. Thompson, J. A. Thomson, E. L. Taylor, O. Tischer, C. Thelen, W. M. Tureman, T. J. Thompson, Miss M. Tipton, P. Terlin, Miss M. A. Taylor, H. G. Trotter, J. E. Vreeland, L. Voss, C. G. Warnecke, J. Weisbucher, W. J. Watt, A. Wier, T. Wixted, W. R. Woolley, J. W. Williams, J. W. Wallace, H. H. Welch, J. K. Watson, A. G. Wainwright, E. H. Wheaton, A. Wilson, J. T. Wray, W. A. Weck, G. F. Wiedinger, J. B. Wilson, J. G. Wiedeman, W. A. Webber, S. E. Web- ber, H. Welch, Jr., G. W. Weber, W. Walsh, A. Wands, R. A. D. Wilbanks, W. B. Wood, W. H. Warder, W. E. Young, A. S. Young.




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