USA > Indiana > Allen County > Fort Wayne > Some Fort Wayne phizes > 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
Mr. Hauss learned his business through a long association with A. Hattersley & Sons-eighteen years in all. A year and a halt ago he launched out for him- self, and since then has been as busy as the proverbial cranberry merchant.
ALI ABOUT NOT WATER HEATING
WALTER W. BARNETT
F you should ask Dr. Barnett this question, "Which would you rather do or go hunting?" he would yell at the top of his voice. "Play ball!"
He is a great lover of the national game, and has good reasons for it. because it was base ball that furn- ished the money, or a big part of it for his college train- ing. While attending Wittenberg College, at Springfield, Ohio, Doctor Barnett was captain of the college team and his work on the diamond was of such a character that he was asked to act as substitute player in the Springfield league team when that famous aggregation played on the home grounds.
** I'll never forget the first time I ever saw 'Grandpa' Anson, " said Doctor Barnett, while recounting old base ball days. "At that time we used a live ball. Anson came up to bat and basted the hrst ball up. 1 was in center field, and we had what we called the carriage field, allowing spectators to drive out around us to view the game. Well, that ball went so high in the air that it looked like a little walnut And then it came down slowly, away out beyond the carriages. It seemed as though I ran a mile. It took four long throws to get it back into the diamond." Although Doctor Barnett is out of the game he will never succeed in getting the game out of him, and he is "there" rain or shine.
Doctor Barnett is the son of a Lutheran minister, and was born at Lewisburg, Ohio. The family lived for a while in DeKath county and later in Kentucky. The lad received his education at the Constantine, Michigan. High School, and Wittenberg College at Springheld. His medical studies were begun in the office of an uncle at Butler, Indiana, and were completed in the Fort Wayne College of Medicine. from whence he was grad- uated in 1886.
As the Democratic candidate, he was elected coroner ot Allen county in 1898.
$74
DELMER C. FITCH
I F Dell Fitch could have his way, he would make health catching and disease a myth. The world would be all sunshine and hte and there would be a shuffling uff of this mortal coil only when the individual had ceased to be worth while. No other man in Fort Wayne takes a keener interest in the health of the community ; no other scans the mortality reports with greater regularity. Mr. Fitch is the local representative of the John Han- cock Mutual Life Insurance Company-or rather. his firm is, and he attends chiefly to this branch of the bust- ness. It takes a good man to write even a small policy in these days of competition, but Dell has landed some big ones of late ; the demise of any of these policy hold- ers, making necessary the payment of their claims. would punch a large, irregular hole in the John Han- cock's bank account.
Dell is a natural-born solicitor and has been remark- ably successful. His experience in the insurance busi- ness commenced when he took a position as assistant superintendent for the Prudential. He had come from Media county, Ohio, the place of his birth, in 18or, and for a year and a half worked in the Hoosier shoe store for his uncle. O. B. Fitch. On leaving the store. he took a business college course and then became connected with the Prudential. He then engaged in the business with another agency, but left the work to spend a cou- ple ot years with Max Blitz in his ticket brokerage busi- ness. In 1898, he, with his father and brother, Eugene, formed the firm of M. W. Fitch & Sons. Until the Hartnett agency was purchased. Dell gave his entire attention to the life insurance end of the business, but now he'll talk fire insurance or real estate with any to whum those topics are agreeable.
He is an Elk, a Knight of Pythias. a member of the Anthony Wayne Club and of the Nocturne Society.
hm Fancak
5
ALFRED L. RANDALL
THE father of "Larry" Randall was a pioneer of Fort Wayne. It was a physical impossibility for "Larry" to be one of the first settlers, so he looked around for some other way of being a pioneer. He found it. He became one of the earliest dealers in bicycles in Fort Wayne-in fact there was but one man ahead of him, ani as the latter has passed away Mr. Randall enjoys the distinction of being the longest in the business.
Now, however, he doesn't give much attention to the bicycle end of his affairs. Automobiles have come mn to take his attention and he is certainly carried away with them-and by them.
"Larry" frequently takes a spin out on West Wayne street and cuts through that portion of the city which was once the campus of the old Methodist College where he used to have a good time in other ways before that institution passed away and before the chng-chug of the auto was even dreamed of It was directly after the close of luis school days that Mr. Randall entered the employ of the Kerr-Murray Manufacturing Company as a bookkeeper. He remained there four years and then transferred his attentions to the business affairs of the Seavey Hardware Company, with which he was employed as cashier for several years. It was in 1893 that he engaged in the bicycle business and devoted his efforts to popularizing several of the best lines of wheels. Upon the perfection of the automobile, Mr. Randall became interested in it and is now as well in- formed on the subject as any man in Indiana. In igor the Randall Wheel Company was incorporated. It car- res not only automobiles and bicycles but boats and athletic goods. In the present year the Randall Motor Car Company was incorporated. Mr. Randall is the secretary and manager of both concerns.
ALFRED L. JOHNS
W HAT on earth." asks somebody who knows him well. "is Mr. Johns doing?" Nearly everybody in Fort Wayne-and for that matter the same may be said of hundreds of dealers throughout this part of the country-knows that Mr. Johns has been for many years the city's big manufacturer and wholesale dealer in harness and saddlery hardware, so the picture Is apt to excite such a question as that quoted ahove.
To explain: Mr. Johns is a philosopher. He has things for sale. Sick people have no use for the things he makes and sells. Tu increase and preserve his patron- age, he tries to keep everybody in good health. How. thought he, can I do this in the hroadest possible way? He tound. on investigation, that three-fourths of the human anatomy is water, and that good health depends largely on the kind of water that is taken into the system. So he has undertaken to distribute among the people a water still which removes every impurity. Of course, he doesn't do this without cost to the consumer, because he has to pay for them himself, but he does claim that in view of the necessity of pure drinking water, it would be impossible for you to spend your money in any more advantageous way. Perhaps you would like to ask him about it.
Mr. Johns was born in Fort Wayne and has always lived here. He received his education from the public schools and the Methodist College. Then he entered the harness store of his father, who had been a resident of Fort Wayne since 1837 when he came here from Pennsylvama. In 1874. the business had increased to large proportions, and it was decided to devote the energies of the firm to a wholesaling business. The father continued as a member of the firm until 1884, since which time Mr. Johns has been alone in the enter- prise. The business is housed in one of the finest business blocks in Fort Wayne
1
ET
ALBERT F. DORSEY
THE only time Bert Dorsey gets real homesick for his native town is when he opens a pail ot tresh oy's- ters at the wholesale grocery house of the F. P. Wilt Company. He is trom Baltimore. He usually lets some- one else handle the oysters, however, and, as they are on the market during only eight months of the year, he is generally found in a happy, contented frame of mind. Even a load like that in the sketch doesn't seem to weigh him down. Don't you think he looks happy?
As we have remarked. Mr. Dorsey was born in Bal- timore, but that was before the big hire. Just as soon as he was oldenough to walk by holding onto the furniture. his folks packed his playthings and took him with them to Lima, Ohio. Here he used to cultivate a little garden back of the house after school hours, and planted it en- tirely in Lima beans, thus showing loyalty to the town of his adoption.
He got su accustomed to preparing things for people to eat that when he went to Findlay, Ohio, at the age of Seventeen, he naturally drifted into the employ of a wholesale grocery house. The firm with which he he- came connected was Frans, Perfect & Company. Mi A. H. Pertect, now ut Fort Wayne, was a member of this concern, and when he came to this aty to engage in busi- ness. Mr Dorsey came also, He was connected with Mr. Perfect in a business way for twelve years.
Two years ago. on the organization of the F. P. Wilt Company, Mr. Dorsey became its secretary.
Bert is one of the hustling young business men of Fort Wayne, and his long experience in the wholesale grocery trade enables him to contribute materially to the success of his house
SAMUEL L. NELSON
H ERE is Mr Nelson spilling down another electric railroad. He strikes the thing night on the dot every time. Mr Nelson's busy hte has been made up of dashes and dots-mostly dashes-ever since he began to learn telegraphy when he was a buy.
He is the vice-president and general manager of the Fort Wayne & Southwestern Traction Company, but this doesn't tell much of what he has done for the cause of electric railway building in this "part of the country Born in DeKalb county, he trudged to school two miles from home and thus developed a good understanding for whatever physical duties were to come to him in after life. Before he was fifteen he began railroading by car- rying water for and brushing the mosquitoes off a con- struction gang on the Baltimore & Ohio right of way. Then he learned telegraphy at Edgerton, Ohio, and worked at it all over this broad land until 1884.
At the inception of the telephone business he jumped in and built the first toll lines in the interior of lilinois. In 1885 he connected himself with W. B Mckinley, ot Champaign, Illinois, in the extensive construction of electric lighting, gas and water works plants and electric railroads. Lighting and water systems were tirst con- structed at Champaign and Urbana, and later a horse car line between the two cities was bought and con- verted into an electric connection.
Later, the MeKmley syndicate, as it is known, woh Mr. Nelson as the active man, purchased or construc- ted plants or electric lines at McPherson. Kansas : Dehance. Ohno: Springheld, Ohio: Joliet, Illinois; Quincy. Hunos; Galesburg. Hunors: Wichita, Kansas, Danville, Illinois, and elsewhere. In 1902 the Fort Wayne & Southwestern interurban bine was purchased Mr. Nelson sivs the secret of success in the operation of enterprises in which the public is interested bes in the abandonment of the "pubhe be hanged" policy which now governs most large concerns,
FRANCK;)
. THE
- THE
ULFST (1)
E CHICAGO
FT.
WAYNE
GUIDE
BOOK
FAY P. RANDALL
A FEW years ago, when the toboggan craze swept over the country, they used to describe the sport in this apt phrase: "Zip, and walk a mile." Now that the automobile ( from the English, ought to, and the French. mobilis, move) has come in, we have the same expression, enlarged a little to describe an auto ride in the country: "Zip, and walk fifty-nine miles."
Fay Randall is perhaps the most enthusiastic follower of this latest pastime. The sketch shows him illus- trating the latter part of the above quoted phrase. The zip portion of it is all out and over. His companions have gone in the opposite direction, toward Chicago. With his faithful guide book, however. he never gets lost. There was some fear that when the automobile came into general use we would become a generation of weaklings because everybody would ride and thus be cheated out of needed exercise. Fay says he sees no immediate fulfillment of the prediction.
Mr. Randall is one of the wide-awake real estate men of Fort Wayne and he is out in the country a good deal with his machine to display farm lands to prospect- ive purchasers. Don't think for a minute that his parties always pedesnanize back. It's only in the exceptional cases that this happens-only. in fact when the walking is good and when the nice weather causes the automobile to feel frisky and acrobatic.
Mr. Randall was born in Fort Wayne in 1878. He secured his early education from the public schools and went to New York City to enter the Halsey Collegiate School. He graduated in 1897, but remained to take a post-graduate course the following year. Returning home in 1890. he opened his real estate and loan office. He is the president of the Randall Wheel Company. president ot the Randall Motor Car Company. is in- terested in Indiana uil. and is a director in three oil companies,
28
EUGENE M. FITCH
To avoid a misunderstanding of the attitude of Mr. Fitch, we hasten to say that he isn't the least lut stuck up, although the view may lead you to believe that he is. He is simply following the custom which has prevailed for centuries of making proclamations from the house-top. The Mussulman proclaims thusly, but Gene isn't making any such announcement as his heathen triend does. He is simply telling you that the house under his shoes is for sale.
Gene is a member of the wide-awake insurance and real estate firm of Monroe W. Fitch & Sons. He is at hustler and has been on the move ever since he was turned loose on a two hundred and fifty acre farm m Ohio. He spent twenty years of his life on this farm. where he helped his father and brother in the raising ol tine horses and conducted a large dairy and cheese factory. His physical culture treatment in those days consisted of a five-mile walk to the high school at Medina. The year 1892 found him in Fort Wayne. Atter taking a business course, he engaged in the insurance and real estate business with his father and brother, the firm being known as Monroe W. Fitch & Sons. This was in 1898.
Then, after helping to get things running smoothly. Gene packed his telescope one day he hied himself to Oklahoma and drew one hundred and sixty acres of land in Uncle Sam's lottery: he stayed there two years and talked insurance successfully to the people of Lawton, Anadarko and Oklahoma City. However, he had not cut loose from the business here, and after dispusing of his farm he came back and has been a busy boy ever since. He gives most of his time to the real estate branch of the business, but never forgets to remind people that his firm not only Sells the earth but insures everything on it.
P-
ROCK-2
A -
MIATT-
ON
7
NELSON L. DEMING
H ERE we get two views of Doctor Deming - exterior and X-ray. His own apparatus for looking through folks helped us to get the latter picture. Unlike the fads of others, the doctor's fad is closely connected with his profession : in fact its an important part of it. While attending to his extensive duties he has found time to keep up with every improvement winch has followed the Roentgen discovery, and probably few physicians have kept so fully informed on the X-ray subject.
Doctor Deming was born in Danbury, Connecticut, and lived there until he was fourteen, having attended the schools of his native city, Going to New York. then, he remained four years.
As a preparatory step to entering college, he enrolled in the Hopkins Grammar School at New Haven, Con- necticut. He subsequently entered Yale University and graduated from that great seat of learning in 1800.
It was after securing this general foundation, that he began his medical studies, at the College of Physicians and Surgeons, in New York, which is the medical de- partment of Columbia University, and graduated three years later.
The prohciency shown during his school days at once commended him to attention which came in the form of an oppointment as a resident physician to the city hos- pital of New York. At this time, also, he did special work with Prot. T. M. Prudden and filled various despen- sary appointments. He is a member of the American Medical Association and the Tri-State and the Allen County Medical Societies.
For eight years he has been a leading physician uf this city.
2º
MYRON DOWNING
H ERE we see Myron Downing. To be more explicit. we see Myron downing a good-sized cracker. He thinks you should have plenty of this sort whether Uneeda biscuit or one of these queer-shaped Fox crack- ers If you are looking for a snap. he'll tell you where to find plenty of them, fresh from the oven.
Mr. Downing was recently elevated to the position of manager ut the Fox bakery, which is now one of the important branches of the National Biscuit Company. However. from this new elevation he never looks down on his associates any more than he did when he pot in his first day's work there seventeen years ago, at which time he wasn't a fractional part as importent as he is now.
Mr. Downing was horn at Sandusky. but came to Fort Wayne in 180; when five years old. He went back into the Buckeye state lung enough to absorb a supply of learning from Heidelberg University, at Tiffin, and then for four or tive years was a Hoosier schoolmaster and taught the boys and girls of Allen county how to mind their P's and Q's after they had learned their A-B- C's. In 1887 he began work for the Fox bakery, then conducted by Louis Fox & Brother, and for years was one of the most popular traveling salesmen to cover the territory of any local house. Thus he continued until the business was absorbed by the United States Baking Company, now the National Biscuit Company. He was then made manager of the sales department and assist- ant manager of the plant. More recently his worth has been recognized by his promotion to the position of manager.
Mr. Downing is a Mason and an Hk and a member of the Anthony Wayne Club, of which latter he was one of the original stockholders.
CRA
€
NAT !!
KELSEY
HENRY J. ASH
PEOPLE get ashes from furnaces. They also get furnaces from Ash's. It is necessary to take the ashes from the furnaces, but it isn't necessary to take furnaces from Ash's. However, a very large number do. and there's a reason for it. Mr. Ash has the reputation of being one of the best informed men in the state on the question of hot-air heating, and that's why.
Mr. Ash was reared on a farm near Walpole, New Hampshire. He always remembered how cold it was in those bleak winter days in New England. The problem of chill-blains and frost-bitten ears came early in his experience when the frigid zephyrs swept down from the snow-capped White Mountains. So it is quite natural that he should drift into the hot-air business.
He left the east and settled in Cincinnati, where, trom 1856 to 1860, he learned the tinners' trade. In the latter year he came to Fort Wayne. Here he opened a tinware store, and took in E. Agnew as a partner. They continued for five years, when Mr. Agnew sold his interest to Fred H. McCulloch. At the expiration of three years Mr. Ash gave up his business and sold to his partner in order to travel as a salesman. He was on the road two years, but returned to re-engage in business on a larger scale. On the ist of August, 1871. he opened his wholesale and retail establishment. carry- ing furnaces, stoves and tinware. By close attention and untiring energy he has always had a splendid business.
Mr. Ash has done a good deal to bring comfort into the homes of Fort Wayne. It is only when the mercury creeps down and tries to get out of the cold into the bulb that people begin to appreciate their good fortune in having secured the proper kind of a furnace, installed by a man who knows his business and does it well.
28.
HENRY COLERICK
H AD Mr. Colerick tried never so hard, he couldn't have avoided it. Avoided what? Well, in the first place, he couldn't have helped being a lawyer, even if he had striven with might and main to be something else. Several of the ancestral Colericks were disting- wished lawyers, three of his mother's brothers were lawyers ; his father was one of the foremost members of the Indiana bar, and all of his five brothers made their mark in the world as successful practitioners of the same profession. So the germ seems to have been born with him.
And then, secondly, he couldn't have avoided being a fighter even if he had tried still harder to escape that trait. And why? Simply because that characteristic came hand in hand with the other. His grandfather. a distinguished Irish patriot, fought with Robert Emm. t in his great struggle for the bberation of Ireland. Thi- trait has been handed down to the Colericks of today, and Henry got his share. It is while attacking some principle which he believes is wrong that Mr. Colerick displays his title to the oft-apphed appellation of " The Little Giant. "
Mr. Colerick was born in Fort Wayne in 1847. and has lived here continuously. He began his legal practice In 1872 and has been a prominent figure ever since.
For fourteen years, beginning with 1877. he was the city attorney of Fort Wayne. His early practice was apphed chiefly to criminal law cases and he has partici- pated as counsel in thirty-nine murder trials-a remark- able record.
His prominence in Democratic ranks is illustrated by the statement that he was a delegate to the national conventions of 1884, 18q0, 1900 and Too4.
In nineteen years he has missed attendance at only one state convention-then he was ill.
Mr. Colerick is an orator of the strenuous type and whatever he thinks comes out in the shape of verbal fireworks and he isn't at all partictular where the sparks land. The only thing to do is to dudge. How- vver, only the guilty are scorched.
INDEX
PAGE
PAG}
PAGE
Aiken, Jolın H.
236
Boerger, Gustav W. 177
Dorsey Albert F. 278
Alderman, Frank
50
Bohne, Fredrick II.
191
Dond, Wallace E. 198
Alter, Albert C.
63
Bond, Charles E.
99
Dougall, Allan H.
Angell, Byron D.
174
Borgman, Willian F.
268
Dougall, John T.
262
Archer, Charles E.
167
Bowser, Sylvanns F. .
48
Doughman, Newton D
85
Ash, Fred H
228
Bradley, Robert A. .
130
Douglass, William V.
186
Ash, Henry J.
284
Breen, William P.
8
Downing, Myron
283
Asterlin, Charles A.
272
Bresnahan, Thomas F.
244
Dreibelbiss, John
166
Anrentz, Augustus C.
105
Brosius, Jesse
106
Dreibelbiss, Robert B.
31
Baade, William C.
65
Bruder, August
136
Dunkelberg, Charles A.
115
Baker, Samuel 11.
140
Bulson, Albert E., Jr.
227
Eckert, David S.
164
Ballou, William N.
11
Bursley, Joseph A.
74
Edgerton, Clement W.
81
Barnett, Charles K.
183
Carroll, Albert E
16
Edmunds, Frank W.
35
Barnett, Walter W
274
Centlivre, Louis A.
90
Eggemann, John W.
256
Barrett, James M.
119
Cleary, Martin J.
209
Ehrman, Edward J.
250
Bash, Daniel F.
87
Cook, Ernest W.
33
Evans, George P.
240
Bayer, Coony.
161
Coombs, Edmund II. .
156
Fairbank, Clark
137
Beadell, Henry
102
Cooper, William P.
68
Felger, Henry G.
129
Beadell, Nat
176
Coverdale, Asahel S.
271
Ferguson, Jolın
118
Beahler, Jolın E.
152
Craw, Edward L.
62
Fisher, Robert J.
27
Bechtel, Sylvanus B.
75
Cressler, Alfred D.
261
Fitch, Charles B.
157
Beck, Louis M. .
21
Cressler, Alfred M.
247
Fitch, Delmer C.
275
Beck, William P.
126
Culbertson, Frank V.
45
Fitch, Eugene M.
281
Beers, George W.
109
Curdes, Louis F.
29
Fitch, Monroe W.
53
Belot, Frank J. .
Davis, E. Gregg
95
Fitch, Otis B.
235
Berghoff, Henry C.
5
Dawson, Ronald
100
Fletcher, Harry P.
123
Berghoff, Hubert
269
Deming, Nelson L.
282
Foster, David N.
243
Bicknell, Clarence F
158
DeWald, George L.
195
Foster, Samuel M.
7
Bht/, Maximillian J.
'11
DeWald, Robert W. T.
141
Fox, Joseph V. .
43
286
Bash, Charles S.
163
Colerick, Henry
285
Emrick, Franklin A.
PAGE
PAGE
PALVD
Fox, Louis
260
Horstmann, Henry J. 216
McKee, George W. 197
Fox, Robert L. 96
Hulburd, Loyal P. 200
Macbeth, Albert H. 20
Freeman, Henry R.
178
Hull, Lewis O.
107
Mahurin, Marshall S. 173
Funk, Jacob
52
Hunter, L. C. .
201
Mautner, Isadore 94
Garrison, Frank R.
143
Hunting, Fred. S.
144
Melching, Albert E. 248
Geake, William .
210
Jenkinson, William E.
208
Millard, Robert 180
Geake, William C
222
Johns, Alfred L.
277
Miller, Edward C.
13
Gesaman, Elmus R.
207
Johnson, William A.
168
Mills, Charles M.
32
Gilbert, Newton W.
151
Kaough, William
264
Miner, Charles W. 37
Gordon, Peter
139
Karn, Samuel A.
267
Moellering, Henry F. 251
Gorsline, Homer A.
71
Keegan, Hugh G.
122
Moellering, William F. 229
Graeter, William F.
181
Keil, Luther H. .
88
Moellering, William L.
25
Graves, Charles E.
61
Kemp, Martin W.
252
Mohr, John, Jr.
12
Green, Dallas F.
127
Keplinger, Harry A.
111
Morris, John, Jr.
245
Griffin, William M.
165
Knight, Asa L.
171
Morris, Samuel L.
232
Gross, W. Otto .
82
Landenberger, John M.
138
Morris, Stephen
185
Guild, Charles G.
40
Lane, Charles R.
220
Mossman, Paul
249
tilllin Olaf N
131
Lawson, William
120
Mossman, William E.
23S
Hackett, Edward A. K.
224
Learmonth Robert
194
Myers, William F.
155
Hamilton, Allen .
193
Leedy, William M.
217
Nelson, Samuel L.
289
Ilanna, Robert B.
215
Leonard, Elmer
205
Nieschang, Charles C. F.
266
Harper, James B.
51
Leonard, Wilmer
34
Ninde, Daniel B.
169
Hauss, Daniel F.
273
Lennart, William J.
39
Olds, Charles L.
163
Hazzard, Al.
117
Leslie, Gaylord MI.
104
Olds, Percy
246
Heaton, Benjamin F. .
226
Lightfoot, Frank S.
202
Olds, Walter
255
Heaton, Owen N.
64
Loesch, George H.
258
Orr, Charles W.
58
Heine, Gottlieb H.
231
Logan, Thomas J. McCulloch, Charles
150
Orr, Joseph Henry
124
Hench, Sammel M.
265
19
Ortlieb, F. William
190
Hoefel, Emil M.
237
McCulloch, J. Ross
66
O'Ryan, John J.
69
Hoffman, Edward G. .
103
McDonald, Emmett H.
135
Page, William D.
47
Hofmann, G. Max
214
McDonald, Patrick J. .
160
Pape, Charles G.
46
Iloham, Fred D.
199
Mckay, James M.
22
Parrot, George J.
192
287
Mills, Glen W. 38
Gillett, Charles M.
Jones, Maurice L.
155
PAGE
PAGE
Paul, William B.
142
Schrader, Henry C
72
Verweire, Jolın I. 30
203
Peltier, James C.
79
Seaney, Ora E. 170
Perfect, Arthur II.
110
Seavey, Walter R.
113
Vesey, William J 57
Perfect, Harry A.
121
Seemeyer, Theodore G.
133
Viberg, Russelles S. 239
Perrey, Ed
230
Shambaugh, William 11.
Perrine, Van B.
242
Sharp, Lewis P.
93
Weatherhogg, Charles R
225
Pfeiffer, John N.
114
Siemon, Herman T.
97
Wells, William S.
56
Pickard, Harry R.
145
Smith, Joseph L.
17
Wheelook, Kent K.
149
Pickard, Peter E.
128
Smyser, Peter D.
147
White, Alexander B.
67
Pidgeon, Charles T.
221
Somers, Herbert L.
+2
White, Edward 148
Pixley, George W.
98
Sommers, Harry W. Jr
189
White, James B.
15
Rabus, Gustave A.
213
Snook, Tom
92
White, John W.
23
Randall, Alfred L.
276
Staples, Thomas L.
108
White, Robert P.
257
Randall, Fay P. .
280
Staub, Alex H.
204
Wilding, Charles A.
24
Randall, Frank M
1.32
Strawbridge, Charles T.
179
Wilson, Edward M.
146
Randall, Perry A.
259
Stouder, Frank E.
196
Wilson, G. William
9
Ranke, William F.
116
Stout, George W.
=
Windt, Charles 11.
241
Rastetter, William C.
76
Study, Justin N.
41
Rawlins, Charles H.
IS2
Stults, Joseph F.
7.3
Wolf, Sam
206
Reuss, John B. .
Sullivan, Joseph .A.
270
Wood, James J.
125
Riedel, John M. E.
187
Taft, Frank L.
112
Wood, Sol A.
55
Robinson, James M.
10
Taylor, Robert S.
6
Woodworth, Charles B.
18
Rockhill, Wright W.
5.4
Thieme, Frederick J. .
254
Worden, Charles II.
83
Roggen, A.
172
Thieme, Theodore F
175
Wynant, Wilbur
223
Romy, Robert L.
49
Tillo, Charles 1).
219
Y'aple, Carl
91
Rurode, Ernest C.
60)
Tolan, Frank C.
36
Yarnelle, Edward F.
218
Sale, John W.
Trier, George 1.
1.34
Varnelle, E. Ralph
153
Scherer, Henry P.
Ulrey, Lew V. .
59
Young, Jesse H.
234
Schmidt, August M.
T'rbahns, F. William.
26
Zollars, .Allen
28
-
Wilt, Frank P.
253
Wing, John 1 .
101
Rolf, Herman I ..
212
Thompson. R. G.
Wynegar, Eugene
Schlatter, Christian C.
HALFTONES BY JOS H BARNETT & 1 U
PIESS +1 ARCHER PRINTING C FORT WAYNE INDIANA
PAGE
Vesey, Allen J.
Walter, Amos R. 159
Need help finding more records? Try our genealogical records directory which has more than 1 million sources to help you more easily locate the available records.