USA > Oregon > The Oregon native son, 1900-1901 > Part 43
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PILLAR ROCK.
Pillar Rock, situated down on the Col- umbia river, near Brookfield, at one time lived at Celilo, and was one of the ancient animal gods. He took a notion not to allow the salmon to pass that point, and in consequence the Indians
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LEGENDARY LORE OF THE INDIANS.
Iving above where he did were unable to secure food, salmon in those days be- ing their main article of sustenence. This went along for some time, but at last tuyote came traveling that way, putting a stop to the god's selfish and cruel ac- tons. In explanation of his conduct, he Claimed that hecould not bear to see that almon pass by him, and that he stopped them on that account and not to deprive the Indians of needed food. Coyote not twing a believer in selfishness, tore down the obstruction made to prevent salmon from proceeding up the river, and then shouldlered their builder and carried him down the river. On arriving at a point deemed suitable for his designs, he halted, turned his burden into stone and xt him out in the river's channel ; telling hin that he should stand there forever, 11dl that the salmon should sport and play around him when seeking the upper waters of the river, and he should not Ix able to prevent their progress. Sel- fisliness brings about hardship to others, and often the downfall of those imbued with that characteristic.
LOUSE ROCKS.
There are two large rocks near the onth head of Long Island, in Shoal- water bay caled "E'-na-poo," or Louse Rocks, and the legend is that they were formerly a chief and his wife, who were not only of a vicious character, but very filthy and dirty. They are credited with being the first to introduce the festive lonse into this section of the country, which soon secured a foothold upon the other Indians, much to their discom- fort. The god Coyote came along one day and his person becoming infested with the vermin, he grew so wroth that he pronounced a curse upon their intro- Ineers, condemning them to become rocks as a punishment, placing them out in the bay where they could not come in contact with the Indians again. This couple doubtless left some descendants, for among the Indians living along the
coast, are some who are the filthiest. dirtiest and most full supplied with com- panion vermin, of any creatures in the world.
COYOTE KILLS A DRAGON.
Not far from Bethel, Polk county, a large number of fossil remains were found some years ago, which the Indians stated were the bones of a monster dragon inhabiting the Willamette valley in the ages past. At night it would come forth from concealment, hunt out the abodes of the people and devour them by families and communities, only ceas- ing its devastations when morning came, returning then because it could not bear the light of day. Coyote heard of the monsters doings and resolved not only to put a stop to them, but end the drag- on's life as well. Knowing that it could not be lured from its hiding place in the daytime, and so that he would be better situated to accomplish its destruction, he set about to perform the task by the aid of strategy. ,
When the sun had reached its merid- ian, Coyote took his bow and arrows and went forth to the higher ground and there shot one of the arrows into the sun, then another into the lower end of the first, and so on, until he had a continuous string of them reaching to the earth. He then pulled the sun down to him, and submerged it in the waters of the Willamette river. The dragon. thinking that night had come, emerged from his den. At the proper time Coy- ote released the sun, which quickly re- turned to its place in the heavens, light- ing up the earth. Blinded by its rays and consequently helpless, the dragon floundered about in the swamp near its den, and was easily dispatched by Coy- ote. The Indians never would frequent the immediate locality of the monster's death, and looked for evil to come upon the pale-face who dug out and carried away its remains.
F. H. SAYLOR.
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PIONEER VESSELS "COLUMBIA."
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"Columbia" has been quite a favorite name for vessels which have plowed the waters of the great river after which they were christened. The first of the name to appear in the Pacific ocean and drop her anchor in the second waterway of the Union, was the American ship Co- lumbia, Captain Robert Gray command- ing. . To him belongs the honor of the discovery of the river, and in honor of his good ship, he named the river. He crossed the bar on May 11, 1792, coming to anchor in Baker's bay. She was the first American vessel to carry the Stars and Stripes around the globe.
The next vessel to bear the name is also historical from the fact that it was " the first vessel built in the Pacific North- west proper. Her frame work was ship- ped here from the East on the ship Ton- quin, her remaining timbers were se- cured from our native woods. When she left the ways at Astoria, October 2, 1811, she plunged into the waters under the name of Dolly, but with the downfall of the Astor enterprise that built her, she fell into the possession of the British, who renamed her the Columbia. In after years she was taken to California, where she was dismantled and aban- cloned.
Another Columbia, the third to arrive, was a British brig. She came as a trad- ing vessel, arriving in 1817. In that year she entered the river for a brief stay. After securing a cargo she left for for- eign waters and did not return to this coast.
The next of the name to come was a British bark which has quite a page in history, not only because she was the consort of the Beaver. the first steamer to enter the Pacific and the second to cross the Atlantic, but because she was for years the semi-regular sailing vessel to run from this coast to the Sandwich Islands, then a much more important port than all of the Pacific coast com-
bined. She belonged to the Hudson's Bay Company and reached anchorage inside the river's bar on March 22, 1836. She finally left these shores in 1843, nev- er to return.
People not very well posted on the discovery of the Columbia river, fre- quently state that the river was christ- ened after this Hudson's Bay Company's bark, those of them believing this, should read up on the premise's. If they are Americans, they certainly ought to be proud of their nationality, when they discover that one of their own country- men named the river in honor of an American vessel, the first whose spread of sail cast a shadow upon its surging tide, and through this was the Pacific Northwest declared territory of the United States.
The next pioneer was wholly of home manufacture. It was the river steamer Columbia, the first built in the Pacific Northwest, and like the first sailing ves- sel (the Dolly), launched on the river. She was built at Astoria in 1850. She was an oddly shaped and clumsy craft. being double ender like a ferry boat. She ran between Portland and Astoria for a year or so, when she was disman- tled. Her machinery was put on the steamer Fashion and her hull left to go out with the tide to loose itself among the sea and shore sands.
The first steamship to bear the name. it is said, was built in New York by a former, resident of Astoria by the name of Hunt, who went east to construct her under an agreement with Messrs. Chap- man, Coffin and Lownsdale, Portland townsite proprietors. The keel was laid in 1849 and when ready to launch, finan- cial difficulties arose and she was at- tached and sold to Howland & Aspin- wall. These gentlemen brought her around the Horn and ran her between San Francisco and Portland, as original- ly intended, from the winter of 1850 to
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THE INDIAN GIRL.
1860, when she was sent to Chinese waters.
Since 1850, quite a number of vessels, of different class, called the Columbia, have been identified with the shipping interests of the Pacific Northwest, but around none of them has been woven the woof and warp of incident as memor- able as that which clings to their prede- cessors of pioneer times.
STARTING A REPUBLICAN PARTY .~
A Document That Marks the Origin of the Republican Party in Oregon.
The following is a true copy of the first call and resolutions of the first meet- ing for the formation of the Republican party in Oregon :
WILLAMETTE FORKS, O. T., JULY 14, 1865 .- In pursuance of the recommenda- tion of Ben Davis and H. Shaw, as to starting a Republican party, the under- named think the time has come. The old parties have lost all the good that was
in them, and the time has come when the Republican is the party for this age. We think that the spread of slavery should be stopped. We, the undersigned citi- zens, join the new party :
On motion of Hiram Smith, T. J. Vaughan is chairman, and on motion of M. Wilkins, Thomas Cady is secretary.
I. Van Duyn, A. H. Vaughan,
J. C. Spore, Jacob Zimmer,
Dave Wilson, W. Cranem,
John Bouey, J. S. Fields,
Frank Bouey, W. Whitney,
E. J. Keith, S. Bonnette,
A. Wadsworth,
M. H. Hariow,
Henry Smith,
G. R. Ward,
F. M. Simmons,
Hiram Smith,
John Post,
William Long,
G. D. Coffin,
T. Newland,
James Donnals,
B. Ramsy,
William Polic,
John Maxwell,
W. Nelson,
Shel Spencer,
James Lytle,
A. A. Spencer,
Robert Wilson,
Thomas Cady,
C. C. Morton,
T. J. Vaughan,
John Sippi.
H. Greenwood, Chairman, T. J. Vaughan; secretary,
Thomas Cady.
THE INDIAN GIRL.
Where Willamette's wavelets curl In their ceaseless flow.
Once there roamed an Indian girl, In the long ago. Paused the antelope and deer, On the grassy plain, To hear her, by the waters clear, Sing this sweet refrain :
"Bright river of the golden West ! Long as shines the sun in heaven, Close by thy side I shall abide, And love thy waters that have given To my spirit peace and rest."
O'er the waters all aglow With the sun's bright hue, Like an arrow from the bow, Sped her light canoe, Glidng down the river grand. Soft and low she sang,
And gently to the silver strand Wafted the sweet refrain :
"Bright river of the golden West! Long as shines the sun in heaven. Close by thy side I shall abice, And love thy waters that have given to my spirit peace and rest." Aldon Harness,
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Wilson Smith,
John Young,
H. Miller,
M. Wilkns,
NOTICE TO THE WORLD.
GRAND PRESIDENT BLUMAUER OUTLINES THE INTENTIONS OF THE NATIVE SONS AND DAUGHTERS.
PORTLAND, OR., Nov. I .- It has been decided by the Pioneer Monument Com- mittee of the Society of Oregon Native Sons, with the concurrence of the Oregon Native Daughters, to hold in Portland, next year, a grand celebration to last a week or ten days. While the plans are not fully matured, the consensus of opin- ion among business men, as expressed by many of them, is that it will be more satisfactory to have it take the place of the annual exposition; that we should · make it a state affair-an exhibition of the wonderful improvements in manufac- turing appliances and machinery in the nearly three score years of our govern- mental existence, and offer every en- couragement to the people to bring in the historical relics they have laid away. Be- sides the attractiveness of such a feature, it will give our historical society an op- portunity to augment their already valu- able collection.
The Native Sons and Native Daugh- ters are historical societies, their common' object being to see that the history of the early days of the land of "interminable woods" is duly recorded. The tidal wave of historical research which is now rolling over the Northwest. if not initi- ated, has been swelled to its present gi- gantic proportions by the efforts of the Native Sons and Native Daughters. who have, in their organizations. resolved that the full history of Oregon shall be writ; that he who now curls his lips in scorn when the name of "old pioneer" is men- tioned will bow his head in reverence when one of those old lieroes passes hini with face faded and turned to the ground by a weight of years or adversity.
The purpose of this celebration is to raise money to build to them a monn- ment. They do not need it at our hands. for their work is more enduring than marble mausoleum or any building of hu-
man structure. From the towering mountains round about us, whose crests parallel our noble rivers and enclose our fertile valleys, down to the myriads of little brooklets, where the speckled trout sport in the shady nooks, the very names bear evidence of the noble acts and achievements of the early settlers of Ore- gon.
We expect Oregon's adopted sons an.1 daughters to aid us in making the pro- posed celebration of 1901 the grandest ever witnessed in this state. We desire the business men, and all other societies. to join us in preparing amusements for. and taking care of the largest concourse of people ever before assembled in the Northwest. Such a concourse will as- semble in the year 1901, the year when the Native Sons and Native Daughters will have their innings.
It will be a state affair, and steps should be taken at once to demonstrate to the order throughout the state that the metropolis will meet them half way. when anything that will redound to the advantage of the city is proposed.
Portland is especially interested in this movement, for it isproposed to erect a memorial building on one of the park row blocks, which can be used as a mu- seum for pioneer relics, a meeting place for the pioneers. Indian War Veterans and Oregon Historical Society and a d: - pository for the archives of the Oregon Historical Society, a place where the liis- tory of Oregon can be learned in object lessons. We propose tliat 100,000 per- ple witness the laying of the corner-stone. and the corner-stone shall be laid :n 1001-Native Sons' and Native Daugh- ters' year.
Let this be notice to all men every- where that the year 1901 is "our year." and we will take possession of our own.
SOL BLUMAUER,
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NESIKA WA-WA.
Griffin's Cabin, Native Sons of Ore- gon, and Lucinda Carter Hill's Cabin, Native Daughters of Oregon, gave an entertainment and banquet at Hillsboro Thursday evening, which was attende 1 by Grand President Sol Blumauer and the other officers of the Grand Cabin.
One of the most interesting features of the meeting was the presence of Mrs. Mary Wood, a pioneer of 1853, aged 102 years. Despite her age, Mrs. Wood is remarkably vigorous, and appeared great- ly to enjoy the entertainment which was given. She remained at the meeting un- til nearly 12 o'clock, and did not seem to be fatigued in the least. Her memory is failing her to some extent, but physic- ally she does not appear like a woman who has lived so long.
Mrs. Wood was born in Knoxville, Knox County, Tenn., and came to Ore- gon with her only child, Mrs. James B. Southworth, who is also living, in 1853, in an ox wagon. They went to Hills- boro, where they have always made their home. MIrs. Wood claims to have kept the first hotel in Hillsboro. She cooked and managed the hotel for nearly a score of years personally. It was called the Washington Hotel, Mrs. Wood says, be- cause her father held office under Gen- eral Washington, and was anxious to perpetuate his memory in some manner.
There is still another distinction con- nected with the parentage of Mrs. Wood. It will be remembered that some time af- ter the Pilgrims came to America, a shin- load of girls were brought over and sold as wives to the colonists for so many hundred pounds of tobacco. Mrs. Wood says that her grandmother was one, of the girls who came to America in that way. Her daughter is now 70 years old, and has lost none of her sprightliness. They have a number of old-time relicss. among them being a spoon brought over by the Pilgrims, and many other articles which have been in the family a century or longer.
The matter of holding a grand cele- bration in Portland in 1901, Native Sons' year, was discussed with the result that the pioneers, Indian War Veterans and Native Sons and Daughters present promised to give the matter their most earnest support. The celebration will take place some time next Fall, and will last for a week or ten days. It is for the purpose of raising funds for a monu- ment to the pioneers.
THOSE WHO ATTENDED.
Among the pioneers present at the en- tertainment were the following. Hon. W. D. Hare and wife, '52; J. W. Wilkes, '45; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Tucker, '52: Henry Wehrung, '52; Dr. T. A. Bailev, a pioneer by courtesy ; Mrs. T. A. Baile:", 49; James W. Chambers, '45; Michael Moore, '44; Mrs. Moore, '45; Mrs. Arch- bold, '45; Mr. and Mrs. P. C. Butler, '46; Isaac Butler, '45; Mrs. Susan [. Brown, '52; Mrs. A. J. Freeman. 45; Peter Brocan and wife, Mrs. M. W. Pis- tinger, Gabriel Wilkes.
There is no comparison between the characters of Professor O S. Frambes and Professor T. M. Gatch, who tauglit in the old Portland Academy and Female Seminary. Frambes was a brute with- out a particle of sympathy for the children under his charge. That the unmerciful punishments which he inflicted upon lit- tle children were not altogether due to an ungovernable temper, is amply proven by the fact that he always had a five- foot raw hide in his desk, which must have been provided in his cooler mo- ments, when these so-called fits over. took him. One of the most brutal and cowardly acts a man was ever guilty of was the infliction of a severe punishment by Frambes on the person of a deformed and crippled girl by the name of Reni~ Davis, who possessed a most angelic dis- position. It is believed by the writer that the punishment he inflicted ultimately caused the girl's death.
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OREGON NATIVE SON.
Professor Gatch needs no enconiums at our hands. The many prominent men in Oregon who received their education under his tutorship, both at the old acad. emy and at the. Willamette University. will all bear witness to his kind and syn :- pathetic nature. He always appealed to the best instincts of a scholar's nature, holding that a failure of this treatment proved the incorrigibility of the scholar. For this reason he is beloved by all his old scholars, while the man Frambes is utterly despised by most of them.
ERROR.
In the October number of the maga- zine we stated that the children of Hon. W. H. H. Dufur were named Anna B. and Blanch B., when it should have read Andrew B. and Blanche G., the latter being the correct names of his children.
The excitement which always attends a presidential election is now over, and the question of building a monument to the Pioneers and Indian War Veterans of Oregon is now before the people. The grand celebration for the purpose of rais- ing funds for the monument will oc- cur in 1901.
It is now a settled fact that the Na- tive Sons and Daughters will give a grand celebration in the carly Fall of 1901. They have commenced already t) make arrangements and look for at- tractions. The celebration is to last eight or ten days.
Write to us what you think of the proposed celebration of Oregon's Native Sons and Daughters in 1901
OREGON HISTORICAL SOCIETY
GEO. H. HIMES, ASSISTANT SECRETARY:
The following communication from James F. Failing explains itself. It is to be hoped others will take the same inter- est in relation to this matter that those who compiled the list herein have done. A matter of so much historical value has been too long neglected.
PORTLAND, OREGON, NOV. 1900. Mr. George H. Himes, Assistant Sec- retary Oregon Historical Society, Dear Sir: Complying with your request for a list of the students of the Portland Acad- emy and Female Seminary, I hand you the enclosure.
This list is of the teachers and students, during the terms of the school while Rev P. G. Buchanan, A. M., and Rev. C. S. Kingsley, were principals, from the com- mencement of the school in 1851, until the end of Mr. Kingsley's connection with the school as teacher in 1859.
In arranging this list I have had thie assistance of Mr. J. W. ("Jim") King and his sister, Mrs. Ellen D Starr, nee
King, who, between them, furnished near- ly half of the names. As there appears to be no records extant, we were com- pelled to depend almost entirely upon our memories, and doubtless have cmitted many names. I shall be very glad in- deed if anyone knowing of omissions would notify you, and thus have the list made a correct one as near as possible. Very truly,
JAMES F. FAI! ING. LIST OF TEACHERS.
Following is the list of teachers at the Portland Academy and Female Seminary from its beginning, in 1851, to 1859:
Rev. P. G. Buchanan, A. M., principal from beginning to 1853; Rev. Calvin S. Kingsley, principal from 1853 to 1859: Miss Lizzie Boise, Miss A. Clark, ( Mrs. B. P. Cardwell), Miss C. E. Hines (Mrs. A. R. Shipley), Miss Carrie Hull, Mrs. Orlena M. Johnson ( nee Cardwell), Mrs. E. A. Kingsley, Miss Kate Quivey ( Mrs. A. E. Wait).
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OREGON HISTORICAL SOCIETY.
LIST OF PUPILS.
Miss Sarah Abrams ( Mrs. Harvey A. Hogue ). William R. Abrams, George Abernethy, Franklin S. Akin. Icelia An- derson ( Mrs. C. W. Sears). Arabella Ankeny, Henry Ankeny, Levi Ankeny, Orinoco Ankeny ( Mrs. Vincent Cook), Edwin D. Backenstos, Mary Backenstos, James Backentos, Roseta Barker, Miss Lorena Barker ( Mrs. S. Holcomb ), Charlotte Barnes, Lucy Barnes, Burris Bartholemew, Rose Bartholemew (Mrs. John Wilson,, Samuel L. Bell, Lazarus Bettman, Clarissa Bird. Fannie Black, Charles Erdley Blossom, Mercy M. Blos . som ( MIrs. J. D. Gordon)., Leonora Blossom ( Mrs. J. J. Hoffman), Alice Bonnell, Henry Bonnell. Rufus Bonnell, Walter G. Bovakin. Rebecca Brents,
Charles F. Burgess, James Brown, Joseph Brown, Margaret Brown, Will-
iam S. Buckley, Georgiana Burton (Mrs. H. L. Pittock), Helen M. Burton, James Burk, William Barrow, Edward D. Bush, Mrs. Martha Burney, James H. Burk, Mary Ann Buckalew (Mrs. C. P. Ferry), James S. Backenstos, James Campbell, John Campbell, Ann Campbell (Mrs. - Roe), Charles C. Caffee, Ed- ward T. Caffee, Emma Carroll (Mrs. James Lotan), Charles Carter. Jane Car- ter, Jefferson Carter, Nancy E. Carter ( Mrs. La Fayette Grover). Isabella Car- son, Miranda Carson (Mrs. W. T. B. Nicholson), W. W. Carson, Robert Cat- lin, Seth Catlin, Arthur Chapman, James G. Chapman, Thomas Chapman, Mary E. Chapman (Mrs. H. G. Galbraith), William Chapman, John Chance, Abbie Cline. John Cline, Abbie Coffin, George Coffin, Hezekiah Coffin, Stephen Coffin. Jr., George W. Coffman, Levi Daniel Coffman, Lucy Collins, Edward W. Cor- nell, Caltha Cotton ( Mrs. James G. Dier- dorff), Elizabeth Couch ( Mrs. R. Glis- an ), Alexander Creasy, Frances Hull, Eliza A. Humphrey ( Mrs. H. Den- linger ), Orpha T. Humphrey ( Mrs. I. H. Gove), Wolcott J. Humphrey, Henry Ingram, Louisa Ingram ( Mrs. Charles Wiberg ), Jacob Johnson, Jasper W. Johnson, John Q. A. Johnson, Cornelia Kern ( Mrs. Stransbery ). Isabella Jane Kern ( Mrs. Williams ), William J. Kern,
Mary Jane Kelly ( Mrs. James Aiken), Carrie J. King, Ellen D. King ( Mrs. L. \. Starr), James W. King, Marion W. King ( Mrs. Dr. S. M. Harris), Fran- ces Kittredge ( Mrs. George F. Boynton ), Moses Lee, Joe Ben Lane, Martha J. Lee, Winnie Lane, D. W. Litchenthaler, Hannah Llewellen, Frederick Love. Green C. Love, Lewis Love Lafayette Masters, Wilbur Masters, John Math- ers, Alexander B. McCready, William H. McDonald, George Maxwell ( Kanaka George). Eliza Jane McGuire, Anna McKee, Helen McKee, Miss Annette Mc- Laughlin ( Mrs. John Cotter), Wallace McLaughlin, Frances McNamee ( Mrs. E. J. Northrup), William McNamee. Harriet Millard ( Mrs. H. B. Morse). Henry W. Millard. Levi C. Millard, Miss Mary Millard (Mrs. H. L. Hoyt), Effie C. Morgan, Erastus M. Morgan, Frank Morgan, A. J. McNamee, Samuel A. Moreland, William Moreland, John Mountain, Joseph Mann, Edward E. Morgan, W. D. Nichols, Henry C. North- rop, Nemiah Northrop, Charles W. Par- rish, Unity Patton, Anna Pentland ( Mrs. S. L. Brooks), Frances Louisa Peters (Mrs. S. B. Morse), James W. Poe, An- nie Pope (Mrs. W. B. Laswell). Eva Pope ( Mrs. George A. Steel), John Wes- ley Powell, Leonard J. Powell, Sarah A. Powell (Mrs. H. C. Hill), Susan F. Powell, John Poynter, Theodore Poynter, Edward Pugh, Mary Purple, William S. Powell, Winfield Peters, Boyd P. Quivey. Martha Ranson (Mrs. L. J. Powell ). Stephen Ross, C. F. Roval, Mary C. Royal. Edwin Rusell, Mary Russell, Nancy Russell, John B. Roberts, Vir- ginia Shattuck, Olive Simonds, Mary Skidmore (Mrs. C. E. Sitton), Stephen G. Skidmore, Elizabeth Stephens ( Mrs. A. M. Loryea), James B. Stephens, Jr .. Nancy Stephens. Thomas Stephens, Jr. Charles Starr, Hugl: B. Starr, Abiah Starr, Andrew Stewart, Charles Stew- art, Albert Sunderland, Mary Cecilia Spencer ( Mrs. Stephen A. Young). George Talbot (of Talbot Heights ),
George Talbot (of Powell's Valley ). Miss Mary E. Talbot ( Mrs. George E. Halver, of The Dalles), Charles B. Tal- hot, Alice Talbot ( Mrs. N. H. Bird ),
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OREGON NATIVE SON.
Douglas W. Taylor, Sophia Taylor (Mrs. I. W. Pratt), Anna B. Tichenor (Mrs. George Dart), Jacob Tichenor, Char- lotte Terwilleger (Mrs. C. H. Cart- wright), Hiram Terwilleger, R. Henry Thompson, Lewis Thompson, Almira Watts, John M. Watts, Lewis W. Watts, James W. Weatherford, Lewis C Weath-
erofrd, Mary Weatherford, William Weatherford, Thomas A. Wood, William Thomas Wright, Joseph R. Wiley, Miss Sarah Jane Watkins (Mrs. L. M. Par- rish), George E. Watkins, Henry Young, Samantha A. Cornell (Mrs. Mc- Allister ), Wilbur F. Cornell, Albert Mor- ton, Mary E. Robb, Mary Pugh.
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