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Dan R. Anderson, Corwin's Izaak Walton, has been entertaining E. Neiderman, of Cincinnati. They are the only known survivors of Company H, First Kentucky Volunteers, the first regiment in the United States to be mustered into the three years' service. The time-honored Smith-O'Neall picnic, which is usually held the first Saturday in August, was not celebrated this year. It is one of the social features of the county and calls together representatives of the two old families from far and near. Mr. D. W. Humphreys, wife and daughter, flora, Misses Juliet Hamlin, Mary Drake, Lucy Simonton and Lida Keever, Mrs. Jennie Corwin and son and daughter and Messrs. Geo. A. Burr, Horace Stokes and Wilbur and Lou Ivins, left yesterday morning for a trip to the world's fair. The Western Star acknowledges the receipt of a photograph of the salesroom of the Western Tobacco Co., 516 East Twelfth street, Kansas City, which shows the manager, Asa M. Egbert, our Asa, and his office force at work. The factory employs twenty hands in manufacturing and shipping tobacco. We Will bet one of Sam Wilkinson's little red apples that Editor McKay, of the Waynesville News, is not a married man. If he were he would be a little more cautious about uttering such rapturous exclamations as this: "The dear Waynesville girls, God bless them all, far surpass all others, and if they are ever in need of assistance, may we be there to strike our lance in their behalf." Source: The Western Star, Lebanon,
Ohio, Thursday, August 17, 1893 |
by Arne H Trelvik 20 November 2008 |
This page created 20 November 2008 and last updated
20 November, 2008
© 2008 Arne
H Trelvik All rights reserved