Notes


Note    N18675         Index
Walter was a conductor for the Boston and Maine Railroad, stationed at Concord, New Hampshire.

Notes


Note    N18697         Index
Ida was a sisiter to Bert Frank Shambaugh, husband of her sister-in-law, Pearl.

Notes


Note    N18701         Index
Clarence was a farmer in Juneau County, Wisconsin.

Notes


Note    N18708         Index
George was a farmer in Waldo Township, Marion County, Ohio.

Notes


Note    N18713         Index
Salmacious was a railroad worker in Delaware County, Ohio. He was named for his mother's uncle, Salmacious B. Scribner, and was also referred to as "Maish" and "Frosty." His Civil War service record lists him as "Houseworth Maish." He served less than a year with Co. H, 174th Ohio Infantry Regiment, enlisting 31 August 1864, and being mustered out on 25 June 1865.

Notes


Note    N18718         Index
George was a barber in Richland Center, Wisconsin.

Notes


Note    N18720         Index
Bert was a brother to Ida Shambaugh, wife of his brother-in-law, Clarence.
 Bert was a cheesemaker in Richland Ceneter, Wisconsin.

Notes


Note    N18721         Index
Felix was co-owner of an auto repair ship in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. He and his parents, Martin and Gertrude, immigrated to America in 1907. When he registered for the World War I Draft, he reported that he was born in Seattle, Washington, and that his birthdate was 10 May 1896.
 After he moved to Richland Center, he operated a repair business there. Maxine was a music teacher.

Notes


Note    N18725         Index
Arthur was a barber in Richland Center, Wisconsin.

Notes


Note    N18733         Index
According to the article in MEMORIAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD OF DELAWARE, UNION AND MORROW COUNTIES, OHIO [op.cit.], Viola was "recognized as a cultured and refined lady, who, by her many excellencies, has gained a wide circle of friends. She belongs to the Methodist Episcopal Church, and has long been an active worker in church and Sunday-school, doing effective service in the cause of Christianity" (page 424).

Notes


Note    N18734         Index
Johnston and his father were in the business of dealing in "fine horses, handling nothing but roadsters." He also llisted himself as a cattle broker.
 He and his first wife, Nancy, had three children, but he and Viola had no children.

Notes


Note    N18739         Index
George was a farmer in Jackson Township, Linn County, Missouri, in 1880. By 1900, they had moved to the City of Meadville, where, in 1900's Census, he lists his occupation as "landlord." Catherine was a milliner. They moved again, this time to Chetopa, Labette County, Kansas, before 1910. In the 1910 Census, George says that he is retired.

Notes


Note    N18741         Index
John was an Ohio farmer.

Notes


Note    N18742         Index
Charles was a house carpenter. They moved to Oklahoma for a few years, then returned to the Buckeye State before 1920. Charles and Eleanor were in Florence Township, Erie County, in 1920 and 1930 (In the 1930 Census, he listed himself as a farmer).