OHIO STATEWIDE FILES OH-FOOTSTEPS Mailing List *********************************************************************** USGENWEB NOTICE: These electronic pages may NOT be reproduced in any format for profit or presentation by other organization or persons. Persons or organizations desiring to use this material, must obtain the written consent of the contributor, or the legal representative of the submitter, and contact the listed USGenWeb archivist with proof of this consent. The submitter has given permission to the USGenWeb Archives to store the file permanently for free access. *********************************************************************** OH-FOOTSTEPS-D Digest Volume 99 : Issue 600 Today's Topics: #1 ALVIN JEROME HOSTETLER - TUSCARAWA [AUPQ38A@prodigy.com (MRS GINA M RE] #2 TUSCARAWAS COUNTY BURIALS [AUPQ38A@prodigy.com (MRS GINA M RE] #3 TUSCARAWAS COUNTY - PART 4 [AUPQ38A@prodigy.com (MRS GINA M RE] #4 Misc Ohio Obits - part 2 [ojfwb@webtv.net (O Slush)] ------------------------------ X-Message: #1 Date: Sun, 8 Aug 1999 23:04:52, -0500 From: AUPQ38A@prodigy.com (MRS GINA M REASONER) To: OH-FOOTSTEPS-L@rootsweb.com Message-Id: <199908090304.XAA06862@mime3.prodigy.com> Subject: ALVIN JEROME HOSTETLER - TUSCARAWAS CO. Content-Type: Text/Plain; charset=US-ASCII HISTORY OF OHIO The American Historical Society, Inc., 1925 Volume V, page 226 ALVIN JEROME HOSTETLER, a resident of Dover, Tuscarawas County, is a veteran school man, his experience covering all phases of work as teacher and school administration. He is now head of the County Normal School. He was born on a farm in Tuscarawas County, January 23, 1879, son of Rudolph and Lucinda (Dietz) Hostetler. His parents were born in Tuscarawas County. His grandparents were Daniel and Mary Hostetler, the former a native of Pennsylvania and of Swiss lineage. Lucinda Dietz was a daughter of Abraham and Elizabeth (Levengood) Dietz, the former a native of Pennsylvania, of German lineage. Rudolph Hostetler spent a long and active life as a farmer in Tuscarawas County, and died at the age of seventy-five. His widow is still living. They had six children, two sons and four daughters. Alvin Jerome Hostetler lived on a farm through his youth and early manhood, was educated in country schools, and was only seventeen when he began teaching. His knowledge of methods was perfected in the summer normal schools, and in the intervals of teaching he attended the Ohio Northern University at Ada, where in 1908 he was graduated with the Bachelor of Science degree. Up to 1908, for a total of nine years, he taught in rural schools. After that he was a teacher in the high schools at McComb, Hicksville and Bluffton, Ohio, until 1917, when he returned to Tuscarawas County as a district supervisor of schools. That post he held five years, and since 1922 has been director of the Tuscarawas County Normal School at New Philadelphia, where many of the teachers of the county receive their training. He is a member of the County, Eastern Ohio and the Ohio State Teachers' associations. Mr. Hostetler is a member of the Lutheran Church and is a democrat in politics. He married in 1909 Miss Clara Stewart, who was born in Hancock County, Ohio. She has to her credit a teaching record of about fifteen years. The two children of their marriage are Marion Stewart and Carma Coy Hostetler. ______________________________ ------------------------------ X-Message: #2 Date: Sun, 8 Aug 1999 23:05:11, -0500 From: AUPQ38A@prodigy.com (MRS GINA M REASONER) To: OH-FOOTSTEPS-L@rootsweb.com Message-Id: <199908090305.XAA08214@mime3.prodigy.com> Subject: TUSCARAWAS COUNTY BURIALS Content-Type: Text/Plain; charset=US-ASCII PLEASANT GROVE CEMETERY TUSCARAWAS COUNTY ARNOLD, Emma A. 1867-1929 -wife of J.T. AULD, Cath. -November 1, 1895 21y 3m 10d -wife of H.W. BARKLEY, Frank -September 7, 1881 6y 3m 25d -son of W. and E.A. Elizabeth -January 8, 1888 44y 4m 24d - wife of Wm. William -April 27, 1918 78y 9m 11d BEST, Charley -1871-1919 Ida -1872-1919 B. -? W. -? BIDDLESTON, Martin - 1850-1931 Mary -1849-1937 BLISS, Isabell -July 19, 1837-May 6, 1905 Melvin -1876-1906 BROWN, Glenda - February 6, 1937-November 11, 1955 CARNES, Benjamin -1870-1898 CARRUTHERS, Bessie -August 28, 1885-August 24, 1909, daugh. of T.J. & Mary Infant -November 17, 1910, daughter of C.F. & M.M. Mary A. -September 23, 1845-December 11, 1911 wife of Thos. J. Thomas J. -1848-1915 William -June 22, 1845-May 18, 1919 Sarah E. -August 15, 1847-January 15, 1911 CONWELL, Christina -November 4, 1884 71y 11m 15d, wife of J.D. Jeremiah -March 2, 1887 74y 4m 12d Maria A. -August 1, 1882 60y 11m 7d wife of Thomas C. Thomas C -August 28, 1845 28y 8m 17d CRABTREE, Eleanor -April 11, 1868 68y 9m 17d, wife of Thomas L. Jennie E. -1867-1915 Loman -1861-1938 Millard -March 14, 1859 6y 8m son of M. & M. McKendree -November 26, 1824-June 20, 1904 Mary -January 27, 1830-February 7, 1882 Delmar -March 26, 1869-April 5, 1888 CROSIER, Dean Leroy -March 18, 1935-April 29, 1935 son of Ervin and Mary DEEMS, Permele -August 9, 1823-November 14, 1900 wife of R.W. Robert W. -December 26, 1826-August 7, 1909 EVANS, John D -September 30, 1860 40y 11m 2d FERGUSON Larry Gene -January 10, 1951-April 11, 1951 son of Alton & Ila FOUTS, Albert -1873-1943 Sylvia -1875-1965 David S. -1851-1922 Hannah R. -1857-1927 wife of David S. Herbert -June 25, 1905-March 8, 1907, son of J.W. & M.C. Jacob - January 2, 1891 80y 4m 9d Anna - July 9, 1888 73y 9m 5d wife of Jacob James W. -1882-1918 Orpha S. -April 28, 1910-January 13, 1940 GARNER, Clyde B. -July 13, 1913-October 21, 1962 Purl J. -1887-1919 Nora E. -1894 -1919 wife of Purl Sophia E. -March 11, 1862-January 29, 1936 wife of Hezekiah Hezekiah - December 18, 1854-January 18, 1930 GATCHELL, Eva L. -1870-1885 Frank W. -1877-1898 John -1836-1916 Lovinia -1846-1922 wife of John Nettie F. -1875-1890 GEORGE, Amos Erwin -May 18, 1876-June 11, 1893 Margaret Ann - march 3, 1847-February 23, 1892 wife of A.M. GREWELL, Harvey T. -1879-1927 Clara M.-1885-1939 wife of Harvey Infant -August 4, 1914 daughter of P.H. & C.M. HINES, Lewis H -September 9, 1860-November 7, 1930 Sarah E. - October 30, 1866-July 16, 1932 Lucy Ann -November 23, 1902-November 23, 1930 HOTZ, Nannie E. Stahl -December 29, 1853-March 10, 1893 wife of K.S. HOUK, Infant -November 11, 1877 son of P. & T. KLAR, Lewis W. -June 16, 1880-June 4, 1951 Alice -June 16, 1877-January 21, 1952 LATTO, Andrew -November 18, 1829-September 16, 1901 Hulda A. -1838-1910 wife of Andrew Elizabeth -July 15, 1833-January 7, 1917 Lucy B. -April 26, 1878-April 27, 1960 Fred -April 1, 1877-May 1, 1962 RADER, Maud -September 8, 1884 2y 19d daughter of H.M. & Rebecca SMITH, Mabel -December 27, 1905- Raymond -December 21, 1891-January 4, 1959 STAHL, Frank S. -1883-1963 Nellie J. -1897-1937 Frank Jr. -1924-1924 George -June 14, 1862 30y 2m Henry - August 14, 1824-January 15, 1897 Emily -April 3, 1825-February 5, 1894 wife of Henry Huston -June 28, 1842-November 5, 1911 Elizabeth -April 13, 1848-may 26, 1929 wife of Huston Mary D. -1855-1903 wife of Leonard Ralph -1926-1926 Leonard -1926-1926 William H. -September 17, 1877-April 28, 1909 STONER, Mary J. -1852-1920 James M. -1851-1924 WALKER, Minnie A. -1874-1947 WALLACE, Robert -1829-1900 Mary Houk -1834-1917 Viola -July 23, 1865-january 31, 1895 wife of C.R. WARDELL, Charles Jr. -1954-1955 WEAVER, Jeremiah -Co. H. 16th Ohio Infantry WEST, Estella -July 16, 1884-April 29, 1926 Amos -January 18, 1867-September 6, 1956 Leo -April 18, 1919-February 22, 1920 YARNALL, Sarah M. -April 15, 1857 15y 6d daughter of Z. & J. ______________________________ ------------------------------ X-Message: #3 Date: Sun, 8 Aug 1999 23:05:06, -0500 From: AUPQ38A@prodigy.com (MRS GINA M REASONER) To: OH-FOOTSTEPS-L@rootsweb.com Message-Id: <199908090305.XAA06894@mime3.prodigy.com> Subject: TUSCARAWAS COUNTY - PART 4 Content-Type: Text/Plain; charset=US-ASCII TUSCARAWAS COUNTY PART 4 THE LAST OF MORAVIAN INDIANS IN OHIO. -On the 4th of August, 1823, an agreement or treaty was entered into a Gnadenhutten, between Lewis Cass, then governor of Michigan, on the part of the United States, and Lewis de Schweinitz, on the part of the society, as a preliminary step towards the retrocession of the land to the government. By this agreement, the members of the society relinquished their right as trustees, conditioned that the United States would pay $6,654, being but a moiety of the money they had expended. The agreement could not be legal without the written consent of the Indians, for whose benefit the land had been donated. These embraced the remainder of the Christian Indians formerly settled on the land, "including Killbuck and his descendants, and the nephews and descendants of the late Captain White Eyes, Delaware chiefs." The Goshen Indians as they were now called, repaired to Detroit, for the purpose of completing the contract. On the 8th of November they signed a treaty with Gov. Cass, in which they relinquished their right to the twelve thousand acres of land in Tuscarawas county, for twenty-four thousand acres in one of the Territories, to be designated by the United States, together with an annuity of $400. The latter stipulation was clogged with a proviso which rendered its fulfillment uncertain. The Indians never returned. The principal part of them took up their residence at the Moravian missionary station on the river Thames in Canada. By an act of Congress, passed May 26, 1824, their former inheritance, comprising the Shoenbrun, Gnadenhutten and Salem tracts, were surveyed into farm lots and sold. The writer of this article (James Patrick) was appointed agent of the United States for that purpose. CHANGES WROUGHT BY CIVILIZATION. -In the following year the Ohio canal was located, and now passes close to the site of the three ancient Indian villages. The population of the county rapidly increased, and their character and its aspect have consequently changed. A few years more, and the scenes and acters here described will be forgotten, unless preserved by that art which is preservative of the histories of nations and of men. Goshen, the last abiding-place of the Christian Indians, on the Tuscarawas, is now occupied and cultivated by a German farmer. A high hill which overlooked their village, and which is yet covered with trees, under whose shade its semi-civilized inhabitants perhaps once "stretched their listless length, is now being worked in the centre as a coal mine. The twang of the bow-string, or the whoop of the young Indian, is succeeded by the dull, crashing sound of the coal-car, as it drops its burden into the canal boat. Yet there is one spot here still sacred to the memory of its former occupants. As you descend the south side of the hill, on the Zanesville road, a small brook runs at its base, bordered on the opposite side by a high bank. On ascending the bank, a few rods to the right, is a small enclosed graveyard, overgrown with low trees or brushwood. Here lie the remains of several Indians, with two of their spiritual pastors (Edwards and Zeisberger). The grave of the latter is partly covered with a small marble slab, on which is the following inscription: -------------------------------------------- DAVID ZEISBERGER, Who was born 11th April, 1721, in Moravia, and departed this life 7th November. 1808, aged 87 years, 7 months and 6 days. This faithful servant of the Lord labored among the Moravian Indians, as a missionary, during the last sixty years of his life. -------------------------------------------- Some friendly hand, perhaps a relative, placed the stone on the grave, many years after the decease of him who rests beneath it. SITE OF THE MASSACRES. -Gnadenhutten is still a small village, containing 120 souls, chiefly Moravians, who have a neat church and parsonage-house. About a hundred yards east of the town is the site of the ancient Indian village, with the stone foundations of their huts, and marks of the conflagration that consumed the bodies of the slain in 1782. The notice which has been taken of this tragical affair in different publications has given a mournful celebrity to the spot where it transpired. The intelligent traveller often stops on his journey to pay a visit to the graves of the Indian martyrs, who fell victims to that love of peace which is the genuine attribute of Christianity. From the appearance of the foundations, the village must have been formed of one street. Here and there may be excavated burnt corn and other relics of the fire. Apple-trees, planted by the missionaries, are yet standing, surrounded by rough underbrush. A row of Lombardy poplars were planted for ornament, one of which yet towers aloft undecayed by time, a natural monument to the memory of those who are interred beneath its shade. But another monument, more suitable to the place and the event to be commemorated, will, it is hoped, to be erected at no distant day. A MONUMENT PROPOSED. -Some eight or ten individuals of the town and neighborhood, mostly farmers and mechanics, met on the 7th of October, 1843, and organized a society for the purpose of enclosing the area around the place where the bodies of the Christian Indians are buried, and erecting a suitable monument to their memory. The two prominent officers selected were Rev. Sylvester Walle, resident Moravian minister, president, and Lewis Peter, treasurer. The first and second articles of the constitution declare the intention of the "Gnadenhutten Monument Society" to be -"to make judicious and suitable improvements upon the plat of the old Indian village, and to erect on that spot an appropriate monument, commemorating the death of ninety-six Christian Indians, who were murdered there on the 8th day of March, A.D. 1782." It is further provided, that any person paying annually the sum of one dollar shall be considered a member; if he pay the sum of ten dollars, or add to his one dollar payment a sum to make it equal to that amount, he is considered a member for life. Owing to the circumscribed means of the members, and the comparative obscurity of the village, the fund has yet only reached seventy dollars, whereas five hundred would be required to erect anything like a suitable monument. Whether it will be ultimately completed must depend on the liberality of the public. Sixty-five years have elapsed since the Moravian Indians paid the forfeit of their lives for adhering to the peaceable injunctions of their religion. Shall the disciples of Zeisberger, the philanthropist, the scholar and the Christian -he who labored more than half a century to reclaim the wild man of the forest from barbarism, and shed on his path the light of civilization -shall no monument perpetuate the benevolent deeds of the missionary -no inscription proclaim the pious fidelity of his converts? If the reader feels a sympathy for the cause in which each became a sacrifice, he has now the power to contribute his mite in transmitting the memory of their virtues to posterity. GNADENHUTTEN MONUMENT In 1871 the Gnadenhutten Monument Fund having reached the sum of $1,300, the society contracted for the erection of a monument, to cost $2,000, of which $700 was to be raised by subscription. The dedication took place at Gnadenhutten, Wednesday, June 5, 1872. The stone is Indiana marble; the main shaft rising twenty-five feet above the base is one solid stone, weighing fourteen tons. The entire height of the monument is thirty-seven feet. On the south side is the inscription, "HERE TRIUMPHED IN DEATH NINETY CHRISTIAN INDIANS. MARCH 8, 1872." On the north side is the date of dedication. The monument is located in the centre of the street of the original town. DEDICATORY CEREMONIES. -Several thousand people witnessed the dedicatory ceremonies. The oration was delivered by Rev. Edmund de Schweinitz, D.D., of Bethlehem, Pa., Bishop of the Moravian Church. At its close a funeral dirge was chanted, and an Indian, at each of the four corners, with cord in hand, as the last notes of the requiem died away, detached the drapery, which fell to the ground, and the monument stood revealed to the gaze of the assembled multitudes. The four Indians were from the Moravian mission in Canada. One of them, John Jacobs, was the great-grandson of Jacob Schebosh, the first victim of the massacre ninety years before. CENTENNIAL MEMORIAL EXERCISES. -Memorial exercises were held at Gnadenhutten, May 24, 1882, the centennial year of the massacre. The day was pleasant; excursion trains brought an audience of nearly 10,000 people. Henry B. Lugwenbaugh, a grandson of Rev. John Heckewelder, was present with his wife. In the village cemetery temporary indices were erected, pointing to the location of historical buildings. West of the monument, some thirty feet away, was a small mound labelled, "Site of Mission House." Fifteen feet east of the monument, "Site of Church." Seventy feet farther east, "Site of the Cooper Shop, one of the slaughter houses." Near the cemetery fence, some 200 feet south of monument, was a mound, eighteen feet in width and five feet high, bearing the sign, "In a cellar under this mound, Rev. J. Heckewelder and D. Peter, in 1779, deposited the bones." At eleven o'clock in the morning the assembly was called to order by Judge J. H. Barnhill. Bishop H.J. Van Vleck delivered an address of welcome. Hon. D.A. Hollingsworth, of Cadiz, was the orator of the day. In the afternoon Gov. Chas. Foster and other distinguished guests addressed the assembled people. -continued in part 5 ______________________________ ------------------------------ X-Message: #4 Date: Mon, 9 Aug 1999 00:03:42 -0500 (CDT) From: ojfwb@webtv.net (O Slush) To: OH-FOOTSTEPS-L@rootsweb.com Message-ID: <5346-37AE612E-24143@postoffice-121.bryant.webtv.net> Subject: Misc Ohio Obits - part 2 Content-Disposition: Inline Content-Type: Text/Plain; Charset=US-ASCII Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7Bit The following are brief extracts of obits published in Cleveland, Oho, Newspapers - They are not family members of this poster. From Cleveland PD, Fri, 7 Jan 1991: 1. CECH Eleanor CECH (nee BENHOFF), beloved wife of the late Jack A., dear mother of Mrs. Daniel (Jacqueline) MORRISON, sister of the late Gladys LEISING. (burial) Park Cemetery, Matfield Hts. 2. CHOVAN Dorothy B. CHOVAN, beloved wife of the late Alex E., dear mother of the late Richard CHOVAN. Interment Holy Spirit Cemetery. From Cleveland PD, Thurs, 30 Jan 1958: 1. CHMIELEWSKI, Marion, beloved husband of Pauline, father of Adam, Joseph (CHIMES), Elizabeth FUNK, Marion Jr. and Eleanor MURRAY. Interment Calvary Cemeery. 2. DEARY, Henry J., father of Robert E., and Mary. 3. DENNERLE, Rt. Rev. M S G R George M., pastor of St. Francis Church, 7149 Superior Ave; beloved son of George and the late Mary, brother of Rita SCHUERGER and the late Helen and Lawrence. Jan. 28. Interment St. Mary's Cemetery. 4. DIEBOLD, John, beloved husband of Anna, passed away Tuesday, late, residence 4411 Spokane Ave. 5. DIEHL, Hattie C., (nee BAUER), residence 6811 Conrad Ave, beloved wife of the late Jacob, mothe of Melvin E. and the late CARL, Raymond and Shirley, sister of Charles BAUER. 6. DIETZ, John, beloved husband of the late Amelia, father of Walter J. and the Late John W. and Carl L. 7. KAST, Luella K., beloved wife of the late Frank W., mother of Mrs. Betty A. CAMBELL, Mrs. Mary L. BAKER, sister of Mrs J. B. LITMAN, New Castle, Pa., grandmother of Janice CAMBELL, David and Pamela BAKER. Jan 28, 1958. 8. KERR, Sanford (Bud), husband of the late Mary (nee NEWAL), father of Joseph, Irene SINGER, and the late John. 9. KNAPP, Emiy R., beloved wife of Kenneth R., mother of Ralph M., of Cincinatti, O., and the Rv. William G. of New Philidelphia, O. Jan 19. 10. KNIGHT, Lillian (B? or R?), beloved wife of Paul S., mother of John B., Mrs. Margaret WISE, sister of Mrs. A. T. MORGAn of St. Petersburg, Fla., late residence 2461 Noble Rd., Cleveland Heights. Jan 28. 11. KRESINSKI, Vincent, age 74, passed away Jan 29 at is late residence, Montville, O., beloved husband of the late Ida, father of Leo KRESS of Cleveland, Mrs. Sophie FURLAN of Cleveland, Frank KRESINSKI, Montville, O., Mrs. Marge ARDITO, Cleveland, and Mrs. Edna KAPANSKI, Willowick, O., brother of Tofil KRESINSKI, Cleveland, and Mary SZALKOWSKI. From Cleveland PD, 19 Nov 1982: 1. MANIACI Natale B. MANIACI, age 79, beloved husband of Madeline (formery MELLINO) and the late Martha (nee PUELO), dear father of Natale (Tony) of Zanesville and Matthew P., father-in-law of Genevieve (Nee LaMARCA) and Joann (Nee COCCHIARALE). Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. 2. MARSHALL Elizabeth H. MARSHALL, died Oct 6, 1982 at Heather Hill Nursing Home, Chardoln, O., beloved sister of Amelia ANDERSON and the late Joseph MARSHALL and Huston MARSHALL, beloved aunt of Robert L. MARSHALL, John H. L. MARSHALL, Mary L. DEBEVOISE, Paula M. GRAY and Eugina TAMORRIA. 3. MERASHOFF Mickey MERASHOFF, beloved husband of Mary (nee JENNE), father of four,so of Mrs. Barbara MERASHOFF and the late Micke, brother of Samuel and Barbara SESTILLI. 4. ROEDER Katherine A. (Kitty) ROEDER, age 88, of Stuart, Fla., formaly of Cleveland, wife of the late Louis J.,dear mother of Robert J. ROEDER of Chagrin Falls and the late Mae Louise DAUGHERY. Sister of Emery FESCO and Violet GERNSEY. 5. SCHLEY Edward T.SCHLEY, age 55, dearly beloved husband of Frances, dear father of Mrs. Teresa SHERRY. 6. SEBASTIANO Michele SEBASTIANO, passed away in Baranello, Italy, beloved husband of Antonia (nee GIOVINALE) of Italy, dear father of Frank and Maria DiCHIRO (Mrs. Tony). 7. Sr. Helene RANDA Sr. Helene RANDA, C.S.J. (Dorothy RANDA), age 71, beloved daughter of the late James and Lucille RANDA, sister of Paul. Just completed 50th Golden Jubilee. Interment Saturday, Nov 20, Calvary Cemetery. 8. SUPECK Jauanita R. SUPECK (nee BERTRAM), beloved wife of the late Dorothy BURAK, Roberta LANE and Loretta BLACKBURN. Interment West Park Cemetery. From Cleveland PD, Weds, 4 Jan 1997: 1. ONDRUSKO Anna B. ONDRUSKO (Nee FORGACH) beloved wife of Milton Sr. and the late Alex KUHAR, dear mother of Richard KUHAR, Ritamae WOYTEK Milton Jr., and Regina ORAVEC. Sister of Mary HLBAK (as written ?) and Helen SARAN (both deceased). Interment Calvary Cemetery. 2. PARDUE Delbert Ray RARDUE, 70, of Bedford Hts. Beloved husband of Nett A. (nee STRINGER), loving father of Paulette LEWIS, Mike PARDUE, Dan PARDUE and Barbara JUSTICE, brother of Anna FOREMAN and Earl PARDUE. Died Minday. Mr PARDUEserved in the U.S. Navy.. 3. RUSNAK Grace Ann RUSNAK, age 10, beloved daughter of William and Deborah (nee IMHOFF), dear sister of Billy, Connie, Bobby, Jeanne,Rick and Courtney, and Elizabeth ZIFFINO (best friend), loving granddaughter of Eleanor RUSNAK and the late Walter RUSNAK, and the late Jeanne and Paul IMHOFF, dear great-granddaughter of Marie ADAMS. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. 4. SNOW Lucy M. SNOW (nee NAREY), beloved wife of the late Joseph A., dearest mother of Joseph J. (Patricia), Thomas J. (Patricia_, Donna CLARK (Arthur), Rosemary HOLMES (Michael), and James (Judy), loving grandmother of 11 and the late Tracy CLARK, sister of the late Loretta MACKLESS and James NAREY. Interment Holy Cross Cemetery. 5. STALKER James J. STALKER II, Beloved father of Georgianna, Rosemary, Florence and James III, brother of Rosemary BOLAND and Maryanne KOSTAL, former husband of Carolyn FERREBEE. Entered into peaceful slmber, June 1, 1997. May his father James STALKER, his mother Florence KATKO, brothers; Joseph and Anthony, greet him with open arms at Heaven's Gate. Interment Calvary Cemetery. -------------------------------- End of OH-FOOTSTEPS-D Digest V99 Issue #600 *******************************************