USA > Pennsylvania > Chester County > New Garden > Two hundredth anniversary of the establishment of the Friends meeting at New Garden, Chester County, Pennsylvania > Part 6
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Why is this? You know why it is. We have three or four churches in Kennett Square. We do not differ a hair's breadth in theology, I suppose. Probably the most of them are right in their theology. If they agree with me I know they are right! (Laughter). I think most of the people in Kennett agree with me regarding the fundamental needs of the present hour-the social and the political and the personal needs. I think the various churches in Kennett Square are emphasizing about the same things; but we have weakened ourselves by our little divisions. Some of us do not know why the divisions are there, or what created them; but they are there, and we have become weakened in our efforts and are not able to im-
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part those great ideals to the souls of men that we could im- part if we were working unitedly.
I do not know whether the rest of you believe in an or- ganic unity in the Christian church. Some folks say that the unity they talk about is a co-operative unity. I do not believe
in that kind of unity when we can get something better. I think the aim the Christian church ought to have before it this hour is not simply co-operation; we have co-operation, but we need something mightier, and that is a corporate unity in which we stand together, in which we worship together, and serve together and lift our hearts in prayer together. I believe we ought to work for that kind of unity. I think that kind of unity is needed in the rural section, that we may impart the religion and the ideals of the Master in some fundamental and striking way.
Some of you are familiar with the book by Gill and Pin- chot on "The Country Church," in which they give a careful analysis of the religious conditions of two counties, one county in the state of Vermont and the other in the state of New York. They give a picture that is not very inspiring. Their study covers a period of twenty years and during this time the churches have gradually declined. The attendance has grown less, the ministers have become more and more poorly equipped for their work and the influence of the churches upon the sur- rounding community has grown gradually less. There is one church in Windsor County, Vermont, which is an exception. While others have declined it has grown strong. While others have depended upon periodic revivals it has applied the Gospel all the months of the year and to the varied needs of the people. It has dared to be unselfish in its work. Its constant question has been, not how can I surpass a rival church, but how can I be of more service to the people? It has worked for civic betterment; it has taken an interest in the lives of the boys and girls, not of the church only, but of the community; it has had a Christmas celebration for all the people and it has asked for no praise or glory in return. In thus manifesting the spirit of Jesus the church has grown both in numbers and in influence.
Too often our rural churches are actuated by selfish mo- tives. We sometimes cast our bread upon the water but during the process we are wondering how many days will pass before it will return to us in multiplied quantity.
The rural problems are driving the conscientious churches of the towns and country-sides into an increasing measure of co-operation, and in some cases into union. May this spirit
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grow from more to more until our present divisions shall exist only on the pages of history.
The third great force that is making for unity is found in the tremendous social needs that are pressing upon us and the great social problems demanding our attention as churches and as communities. This social ideal of the gospel is modern. Our work in religion for many generations has been almost entirely individualistic. We have tried to save souls out of the world; we have not tried to save the world itself. We have tried to drag here and there an individual out of the mudpuddle, instead of trying to dry up the mudpuddle. Today we are try- ing to do a larger work. We are seeking not simply to save individuals here and there out of the world, grand as that work may be, but we are seeking to purify the whole world itself. As we are doing this great work we are faced with tremendous social problems and needs. Great writers like Washington Gladden, Walter Rouschenbusch, Scott Nearing, and others are writing upon this phase of Christianity at this hour. They are picturing to us the needs of the home, to save it from the in- roads that are being made by the present materialism. They are picturing to us the needs of childhood, that every child may be given a chance in this great nation of ours. They are picturing to us the housing conditions of the cities; they are picturing to us the condition of the colored man in the South ; they are picturing to us the condition of the Indian in the West; they are telling us that we are faced by these great social problems. And they are asking us as Christian people to do something to make the homes of our land better; to do something to banish the saloon from the country; to do some- thing to establish peace upon the face of the earth; to do some- thing to lift the moral condition of our children; to destroy the hovels and the brothels that breed immorality and crime. And as we face this great social need of the hour we are made to realize that no single denomination is adequate to this work and no single church has the solution of these problems; that that which is common to us all is the great need of the people. The things that we hold separately are not the things that solve the social problems or meet the social needs. The Presbyterian church, or the Baptist church or the Friends' Meeting do not any of them hold the special word that needs to be spoken. We, altogether, in the broad, simple fundamentals of the gospel, have the Bread of Life. As we appreciate the fact that we, together, in our common gospel, have the thing that the world needs in its social conditions, we will realize the importance of drawing together instead of widening the breaches that are separating us.
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My friends, here in our rich and beautiful country are cesspools of iniquity ; here are gigantic social wrongs; here are political corruptions; here is wickedness in high places; here is materialism pressing its claims upon the hearts and minds of the people; and the need is Christianity. Not the particular kind of Christianity that my denomination holds, dis- tinct from the kind of Christianity that your denomination holds, but the need is the kind of Christianity that we hold in common-the Christianity that loves and helps and serves and fights for truth and righteousness.
And as we are facing this common need that appeals to the fundamental gospel that we hold in common, we are led to clasp hands and call each other "brother" and refuse to quarrel over petty issues and refuse to make wider the breaches that have up to this hour separated us as Christian churches. (Applause).
The fourth and last great force that is drawing us together is the world-need, and the world-need is very great and of a varied character. One hesitates to say that we have made any progress in meeting the needs of the world, taken as a whole. Almost anything that we can say seems to be refuted by the actual conditions that now exist in Europe. We seem to have sunk back into barbarism-back into the old methods where might makes right instead of righteousness winning by its own force. Nevertheless, I do believe that we have made progress in meeting the great world's need, and that that progress has drawn us together as a Christian church.
I suppose the union of the denominations has made greater advancement in India and China than it has in the United States of America. As the different missionaries have gone to these countries they have realized that the needs of these people are the simple needs of purity and strength of character and love for one another and brotherhood and the conscious- ness that God can help them in the sorrow, work and joys of life; and these are not things that are peculiar to any de- nomination. And as the missionaries have come face to face with the needs of the Orient, they have refused to spend their energy in teaching the catechisms of this or that denomination. They have come into personal contact with great actual needs- needs in the home life, needs in the city life, needs of every kind that have to do with personal character and social living. And as the missionaries have seen this, many of them have refused to do their work along sectarian lines. In many parts of China and India and Japan, the sectarian hospitals have
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given way to interdenominational hospitals. Sectarian schools, in which have been taught the rudiments of education and the fundamentals of Christianity, have given place, one after an- other, to large union schools; so that American missionaries are teaching the men and women who go out to preach the gospel among their brethren in schools and colleges which are simply Christian. In many parts of these countries denomina- tional names do not appear over the churches. The word "Christian" is enough.
The appeal from the foreign field has come back to the home churches with great force. They are calling us to get together, to cease wasting our funds on unnecessary boards and officers, and to realize the greatness of the work that they are trying to do. This influence has been very important, and we now see the denominations co-operating through their boards. I receive pamphlets from the Student Volunteer Move- ment asking for men for this or that field. It is the non-sec- tarian Student Volunteer band, as well as the denominations, that is asking for trained men and women to fill important positions.
This missionary work, which is growing more and more united, has been the mighty force that has stopped the burning of widows in India ; that has banished much of the opium traffic in China; that is doing away with the liquor traffic in Africa. It is this united effort of Christianity that has been able to cope with these larger needs, and has been able to meet them in some adequate way.
I say to you, my friends, that we, under these peaceful trees, in this beautiful spot, gathered together today to think of the past and to look forward into the future and to worship God with a united heart, need to think of the great war in Europe and to realize that that is only one of the problems that meet us; and if we are to meet this and other great needs in any sufficient way, we must meet it together. We must stand side by side; we must refuse to be divided over petty matters. We must put into the past the narrow things over which we have quarreled-the small matters by which we have been divided. We are worshipping one God. We are seeking to love one another. We are putting our hands to the plow to extend the kingdom of God until it shall cover the earth as the waters cover the sea; and to do this we must stand to- gether, and work together and pray together.
These are four forces that are making for unity in the Christian church: The demand for co-operation among the
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churches for great evangelistic efforts; the call of the rural work, which is demanding of us the best quality of leadership and the strongest presentation of Christianity; the great social need, with its white slavery, with its rum traffic, with its opium hells, with its slum districts; and finally the great world call of heathenism, of social degradation, of wickedness, of hopelessness, and of a lost condition of life. These four needs are pressing upon us and are binding us together, and God is leading us on. (Applause).
WE'VE ALL OUR ANGEL SIDE
A concert exercise "Our Angel Side," was give by the members of the First Day School, conducted by Ethel P. Jefferis.
The huge, rough stones from out the mines, Unsightly, and unfair Have veins of purest metal hid Beneath the surface there.
Few rocks so bare, but to their heights Some tiny moss-plant clings, And on the peaks so desolate The sea-bird sits and sings.
Believe me, too, that rugged souls Beneath their rudeness hide
Much that is beautiful and good, We've all our Angel side.
In all there is an inner depth A far-off secret way Where through the windows of the soul, God sends his smiling ray. In every human heart there is A faithful sounding chord That may be struck, unknown to us, By sonie sweet loving word. The wayward will in man may try Its softer thoughts to hide- Some unexpected tone reveals It has an angel side.
Despised, and lone, and trodden down, Dark with the shades of Sin, Deciphering not those halo lights Which God has lit within;
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Groping about in endless night Poor poisoned souls they are, Who guess not what life's meaning is Nor dream of heaven afar. O, that some gentle hand of love Their stumbling steps would guide And show them, that amidst it all Life has its Angel side.
Brutal, and mean, and dark enough God knows some natures are, But He, compassionate, comes near, And shall we stand afar? Our cruise of oil will not grow less If shared with hearty hand, For words of peace, and looks of love Few natures can withstand. Love is the mighty conqueror, Love is the beauteous guide,
Love, with her beaming eyes, can see We've all our Angel side.
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HORSEBLOCK
LIST OF NAMES
Helen Able James W. Aiken
Davis E. Allen
Rebecca J. Allen
George L. Anderson
Alice Balderston
Lillie A. M. Anderson Lawrence Anderson
Robert Balderston
John L. Balderston
Anna E. Balderston
Catharine C. Balderston
Lily Baldwin
Mary G. Baldwin
Edith Ball
Harold P. Ash Hazel C. Ash
Nan M. Asherson
William P. Bancroft
Albert Atkinson
A. Stanley Ayers
Amos Barnard
Elizabeth H. Barnard
Marian H. Barnard
Mary L. Barnard
James W. Baily
Ida Barnard Baily
Ruth Pyle Baily
Phebe W. Barnard
Anna E. Barnard
James T. Barnard
Anna R. Baily
Averla C. Baily
Anna M. Baily William H. Baily
Sue P. Barnard
Ella K. Barnard
Dr. Franklin Barnard
Mrs. Franklin P. Barnes
Mrs. J. Eugene Baker
Gertrude Baker Bertha M. Baker
Alison Baker
Anna L. Baker Nellie Baker
Sue Baker S. A. Balderston
Anna Balderston
Richard M. Balderston
Marianna Balderston
Lillian Anderson Gerald M. Anderson
Herman Anderson
Hazel R. Anderson
Mildred Anderson
Levi Ballinger
Finma C. Bancroft
Harry E. Bacon Alta J. Baily Leon J. Baily
Clara H. Barnard Wilson Barnard
Mary E. Baily B. M. Baily
Mary T. Barnard Jere Barnard Ida Barnard Julian W. Barnard
Eusebius Barnard Baily
Walter C. Baily A. W. Baily
J. Eugene Baker
Martha H. Barton Chalkley Bartram Mary S. Bartram Daniel Batchellor
Alfred C. Becker Mrs. Alfred C. Becker
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Randolph Becker Chandler Becker . Ralph Becker
Clarence Becker
Melissa R. Bell
Eliza H. Bell F. W. Beneman Aaron Beiler Ada Beiler
W. S. Beyer William Biddle
J. Passmore Bingham
Homer W. Booker
Dorothy Booker
Elaine Booker
Lydia T. Booker
Homer W. Booker, Jr.
Laura M. Booth
Emily Borton
Lawrence Bowers
Josephine J. Boyd
Charles J. Boyer
Martha Boyer
C. R. Brandenberger
Francis W. Brinton
Martha A. Brinton
Samuel H. Broomell
Mary E. Broomell Ella Broomell
Margaret W. Brosius
Lewis W. Brosius
Elizabeth A. Brosius
Sumner G. Brosius
Marian M. Brosius
Augustus Brosius Mary Brosius Arthur Brosius Laura H. Brosius
Anna M. Brosius
Mary T. Brown
Lewis T. Brown
Mary L. T. Brown Edna Brown George T. Brown Mrs. George T. Brown Ralph Warren Brown
Mary P. Brown Mrs. S. C. Brown Virginia T. Brown Lillian Brown
Lena H. Brown
Mrs. Jacob Browning
Richard G. Buckingham
Henry Bushong
Alice R. Bushong Marvin E. Bushong Gertrude Bushong
Henry Rakestraw Bushong
Lydia Rakestraw Bushong M. F. Bushong
Theodore W. Bye Charles Canby
Mary P. Canby
William Canby
Anna E. Canby
W. R. T. Cann
Francis Walton Carter
A. Moncrieff Carr Elizabeth Cooper Carr . Emily Helen Carr Sarah M. Carver
Sarah Casselberry
James C. Chambers
M. Grace Chambers John T. Chambers Charles P. Chambers
Bessie Phillips Chambers Edwin Chambers Sue W. Chambers Carrie W. Chambers
W. R. Chambers
Joseph C. Chambers Sophie B. Chambers Ramona Chambers
Irma L. Chambers Caleb E. Chambers Sue E. P. Chambers Charles E. Chambers C. Barnard Chambers William J. Chambers Charles D. Chambers Maurice I .. Chambers
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Maryanna C. Chambers David E. Chambers Eban Laylor Chambers Mrs. Morris Chambers Lloyd S. Chambers Sue M. Chambers Mary P. Chambers
Helen E. Norrell Clarkson Elisha Cloud
Mabel K. Cloud
Lizzie J. Cloud
James Y. Cloud
Francina Cloud
Lydia A. Chambers
William Webster Cloud Ellie Cloud
Samuel K. Chambers
George W. Chambers
Roselda K. Cloud
Jessie M. Chambers
P. Allen Cloud
Henry M. Chambers
Lillie B. Cloud
May M. Chambers
J. Howard Chambers
Sara B. Cloud
Francis Canby Chambers
Mary B. Cloud
H. W. Chalfant
Thomas A. Cloud
Martha E. Clark
Sarah W. Chalfant
Mrs. Charles Chalfant
Helen B. Chalfont
Pusey Coates
Adaline B. Coates
W. B. Coates
Deborah P. Coates
H. Lewellyn Chandler
Geo. B. Cock
S. Anna Chandler
Mary Harlan Coder
Norman B. Chandler
Marion E. Collins
Margaret E. Chandler William L. Chandler Esther M. Chandler
Samuel S. Conard
Louisa F. Conard Ellwood H. Conard
Phebe Pownall Chandler
William T. Conard
Homer W. Chandler Mrs. Homer Chandler
Mary Hughes Conard
Lewis Chandler
Katharine A. Conard Everard Conard
Emma Good Conard
M. E. Conard
S. Emma Chandler
Amy A. Conard
Royden Chandler
Alice M. Conard
Morris Chandler
George W. Conrad
F. G. Chandler Bertha M. Chandler
Emma Conard Roland M. Conard
Philemma Chandler
Mary Conard
William M. Chandler
Edith H. Conard
Annie Connell
Elizabeth F. Connell
Elizabeth Biddle Conrow
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Willis Chandler
Philip Chandler
George Chandler
Lou A. Cloud
Mary W. Chalfant
J. Harlan Clark S. Elizabeth Clark
George M. Chandler I. Frank Chandler Emily C. Chandler
Sarah Ann Conard
H. L. Chandler Lilly E. Chappell Frank P. Clayton
James O. Cloud
Truman Cooper Anna W. B. Cooper Harold T. Cooper J. Morris Cooper Emily B. Cooper Mary B. Cooper Phebe H. Cooper Mabel T. Cooper
Marian Cooper Willis A. Cooper
Maude Mercer Cooper
Horace S. Cooper
Franklin Cooper Howard Cooper Pennock Cooper Ellwood Cooper
Sarah W. Cooper
Edwin K. Cooper Lillie Cooper Alfred Hill Cooper E. Newbold Cooper Ella S. Cooper
Sarah Miller Cooper
Sarah Moore Cooper I. Amanda Cooper Gilbert Cope Anna G. Cope
Catharine H. Cope Ellen P. Cope Barclay Cope Caleb D. Cope
Emma B. Cope Esther Cope Mary E. Cope Sharpless Cox
Martha W. Cox
Hughes W. Cox Mary Pugh Cox
Sara Anna Cox Townsend P. Cox Catherine E. S. Cox Ida F. Cox Mary W. Cranston C. J. Crossan Mrs. C. J. Crossan Ella Crossan
Chester Crouthers Lillian J. Darlington Jane Darlington Windle Darlington Richard Darlington Edgar Darlington Sarah Barnard Darlington Marian O. Darlington Caroline S. Darlington Maria K. Davis
Lida A. Davis Edith P. Davis
C. Blanche Davis Dorothy H. Davis
Mary A. Dawson
Mary T. Dennison
Watson W. Dewees
Mary R. Devon Horace L. Dilworth
Sarah F. Dilworth
Debora L. Dilworth Elizabeth C. Dilworth Mary C. Dilworth Anna L. Dilworth L. Ernest Dilworth Mary A. Harlan Dickey
J. Ralph Donaghy Emma Starr Dowdall Charles T. Downing S. R. Downing Edward Duncan anna E. Duncan Courtland Duncan George S. Dutton Emily P. Dutton Raymond T. Earnhart
Oliver W. Eastburn, 3rd Oliver W. Eastburn, Jr. Mary Buckingham Eastburn
Florence J. Eastburn William F. Edwards Sallie E. Edwards W. H. Ewing Margaret E. Ewing J. Ralph Ewart Mary Hoopes Ewart
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Hanna P. Ewart Marion Ewing Saner Fairlamb
Martha A. Fairlamb
Ethel W. Farron
Elizabeth Cox Fell Eliza T. Fell Elizabeth Fell Robert A. Fell
Ada M. Ferguson
Alice M. Ferguson
Theodore Bye Ferguson
J. D. Fernan Mrs. J. D. Fernan
Elizabeth Fisher Bayard T. Fisher
Lydia Fisher Roy S. Fisher Mary B. Fisher
George H. Fisher
Elizabeth Baldwin Fisher
John P. Fisher
Wm. Parker Tinney
Eleanor Hoopes Finney
Darlington Flinn
Mrs. Lewis A. Forbes
Hettie G. P. Fogg
Davis H .. Forsythe
Myra Wickersham Foster
Joseph T. Foulke Hannah L. Foulke Edward Foulke
Laura 1 .. Foulke
Sylvania C. Frame
W. M. Fredd
Mrs. W. M. Fredd
Mary L. Fredd
Ella M. Fredd
W. M. Fredd J. E. Fuller Isaac L. Garrett
Laura E. L. Garrett Emmor D. Gawthrop Phebe S. Gawthrop
Edith Newlin Gawthrop Frank Gilbert
Anna Mae Gilbert Joseph Franklin Gilbert Ida D. Gilbert Charles C. Gill Catherine B. Gill Elwood Gleason Amy Ida Gleason Wm. Golder Letitia T. Good
Mary Frances Goodwin
Katherine H. Greenfield E. Kathryn Greenfield Bessie M. Greenfield Mrs. O. H. Greenfield George C. Gregg Bertha Grevell Sarah G. Hagee
Lizzie W. Hagerty
Williamı R. Hallowell
Elizabeth C. Hallowell
Anna E. Hallowell Anna M. S. Hamilton Harry H. Hamilton Nerbert B. Hamilton C. Burleigh Hambleton Sabilla E. Hambleton
Caroline D. Hannum D. Thomas M. Hatton Anna L. Hatton M. Emma Hatton Eliza J. Harper Mary L. Harper
Sarah M. Harper
Edith R. Harper Alice T. Harper John B. Harris Ida J. Harris Andrew Harris Thad. W. Harry
Jesse B. Harvey Lydia G. Harvey Harriet G. Harvey J. Louis Harvey Hanna. M. Harvey Alexine B. Harvey Eleanor Hawthorn
Henry T. Hayes Lizzie A. Hayes Emma Gawthrop Hayes
Laura S. Heald
Dr. Pusey Heald Cora M. Heald Anna Heaton Norman D. Herr
Mrs. Herbert Heston
Anna J. Hibberd
Francis W. Hicks
Margaret A. Hicks
Mary R. Hicks Phebe Hilles
Maris M. Hollingsworth
Anna L. Hollingsworth
Enos J. Hollingsworth
Emily M. Hollingsworth
Charles M. Hollingsworth Howard Hollingsworth Amy S. Holcombe Ruth Holcombe
Lamartine Hood
Adeline W. Hood
Florence W. Hood
Ralph C. Hood
Lamartine Hood, Jr.
Anna M. Hood Mary Hood
W. Penn Hoopes
Anabelle S. Hoopes
Ruth Hoopes Owen C. Hoopes
Philena Scott Jacob John Jagger Louisa Jagger
Ida Ingram Hoopes
Frances Hoopes Elizabeth Hoopes Edward Hoopes
Elizabeth Gray Hoopes
Edwin A. Hoopes
Dr. Levi Hoopes Anna M. Hoopes Edwin J. Hoopes
Beulah Crossan Hoopes
Calvin Hoopes
Louisa Hoopes
Neva A. Hoopes
J. Walker Hoopes Mrs. Fred B. Hoopes Margaret E. Hoopes Margaret Hoopes Joseph Hoopes Rebecca M. Hoopes Charles C. Hoopes Mae Hoopes Halliday J. Hoopes
Ruth E. Hoopes
Rebecca C. Hoopes
Charles Franklin Hoopes
Mary E. Hopkins Ruth A. Huey Alfred L. Hughes
Adele Hughes
Hanna M. Hughes Mark Hughes
Priscilla H. Hughes
Lydia C. Hughes
Hanna M. Hurford
Philena C. Hurford Lena C. Ingram Joseph P. Jackson
Anna R. Jackson
Elizabeth A. Jackson
David W. Jackson
Mrs. David W. Jackson
Mrs. W. E. Jackson Jessie W. Jackson
Elsie Jackson
Thomas K. Jefferis Annie T. Jefferis J. Walter Jefferis Elizabeth P. Jefferis Ethel P. Jefferis Homer H. Jefferis Edwin Jefferis Jennie H. Jefferis
E. Elizabeth Jefferis
Bertha R. Jefferis
Walter H. Jenkins Esther L. Jenkins
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Laura E. Johnson Charles G. Jones Maluan H. P. Jones Gordon Jones William P. Jones Samuel Jones Jane C. B. Jones
Mrs. Wm. P. Jones
Grace Moore Jones
Florence M. Jones
Ada M. Kaltenthaler Eleanor Kaltenthaler
Thomas Kay
Lydia R. Linvill
Alice R. Linvill
Elizabeth Lamborn Little
Ruth E. Little
Mary A. Lloyd
Elsie W. Logan
Alice Lamborn Long
Marian Longaker
Charles W. Love
Mabelle Mercer Love Harold G. Love
George W. Lukens
Martha Jackson Lukens
Charlotte J. Lukens Helen Lund F. T. Lyons
Dr. Hannah McK. Lyons J. Quarll Mackey, P. D. Anna C. Mackey James Quarll Mackey
J. W. Macklem L. A. D. Macklem
Rev. Henry G. Main Martha Main Nellie Main
Abram L. Marshall
Marietta Marshall
Ruth M. Marshall Alice Marshall Charles Marshall
Mrs. Charles Marshall
Ada B. Larkin
Ethel S. O. Leech Emily D. Leech
John Leahy Deborah C. Leeds Margaretta R. Leeds Austin C. Leeds
Benjamin F. Leggett
Wm. H. Leslie Dillwyn Lewis
Annie C. Lewis
Sharpless W. Lewis
Sarah Shortlidge Lewis
Isaiah W. Linton
Aquilla J. Linvill
Orville T. Kay
Emma Y. Kay.
Edward Pusey Kay
L. Mildred Kay Abby Y. Kay Henry D. Keith
Clara Hatton Keith Anna Brown Kelton
Frank B. King
Anna F. W. King
S. Janet King Garrett Kirk
Martha B. Kirk
Garrett Kirk, Jr.
Annie Phillips Ladley
Percy Lamborn
Bertha Lamborn Arthur Iamborn
Regina Lamborn
Mrs. N. J. Lamborn
Mrs. Robert Lamborn
F. H. Lamborn
Eliza J. Lamborn
Samuel Lamborn
Mattie R. Lamborn
L. L. Lamborn
Bertha S. Lamborn Edith M. Large Isaac Larkin Thomas K. Larkin-
Jane H. Marshall
Caleb P. Martin Anna H. Martin
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Samuel S. Martin Ella S. Martin Ida H. Martin Ethel W. Martin Florence Martin
Emma Martin Irene M. Martin Anna Martin Stanley Martin
F. R. Martin
Ruth E. C. Martin
Raymond Martin
Bessie C. Martin
George C. Maule
Clara B. Maule
H. C. Maule
Richard Pyle Maule
Edna J. Pyle Maule
Norman Maule
Susan E. Mercer
Phebe D. Maule
Mary H. F. Merillatt
Lydia C. Maule
Katharine L. Maule
S. Emma Maule
Bertha P. Michener Clara J. Miller
Mary A. Maule
Margaret H. Maule
Emma Pyle Miller
Margaret E. Major
Bayard Miller, Jr.
Orin Russell Miller
Reuben Miller
Sarah A. Miller
Andrew J. McCue Flla C. McCue
Ethyl E. McCue
Martha McCord Alice McCord Lydia H. McCord
Elmer E. Miller
Mrs. Elmer E. Miller
Ethel Miller
W. Lindley Miller
Eleanor Miller Elizabeth J. Miller Ella J. Miller Lillie M. Miller
Sarah S. Miller
Laura S. Miller
M. Anna Miller
Faith D. Strawbridge Miller
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Mark B. McHenry Laura T. McHenry Elizabeth C. McMillan Warren C. McPherson Ida Bailey McPherson Mrs. Herman Mc Vaugh Ethel C. McVaugh
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