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Subject: New Article for United States - Idaho
Date: Tue, 30 May 2006 21:59:22 -0500


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A new article has been added at Newspaper Abstracts > United States > Idaho > Latah

Direct link to article: http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/link.php?id=26361

More articles for Latah can be found at:
http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/index.php?action=displaycat&catid=1304

Article Title: The Idaho Post

Article Date: August 13 1920

Article Description:

Article Text:

Mrs. Harriet S. Kendrick, wife of the late Captain Albert S. Kendrick, died Wednesday evening, August 11, at her home in Moscow after an illness covering several months.

Mrs. Kendrick is survived by her two daughters, Mrs. W.C. Rumsey, of St. Louis, Mo.; and Miss Martha Kendrick, of Moscow; four grand children, Lieutenant Albert Kendrick Rumsey, of the U.S. navy; Ruth Rumsey, Robert Kendrick Adams and Jackson Kendrick Adams, and a sister, Mrs. A.W. Eldridge, of Moscow, mother of Dean J.G. Eldridge.

The funeral services will be held at St. Mark's Episcopal church, Moscow, on Friday afternoon, at 2 o'clock, the Rev. H.H. Mitchell, rector of Good Samaritan Episcopal church, Colfax, conducting the services.

Interment will be made at her former home, St. Louis, Mo.

The pall bearers selected are A.H. Oversmith, G.D. Hodge, R. Hodgins, Francis Jenkins, L.F. Parsons and J.N. Nankervis.

Mrs. Kendrick's death came as a great shock to her hundreds of friends in and near Moscow. She had been an untiring worker in the Guild and the Sunday school of St. Mark's church, of which she was a member.

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Joseph McLaughlin, aged 76, an inmate of the county poor farm, is dead. He had been in failing health for months. He came to the farm several months ago. That he was born in Canada and was naturalized in the east many years ago, but that his papers were burned, is a statement he made when he registered to vote recently. Nothing is known of any relatives. The body was buried at county expense.

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Mrs. J.F. Barnes and daughter, Maud, of Spokane, arrived in Moscow this morning [August 6]. They accompanied the body of Will Fisher, a brother of Mrs. Barnes, who recently died in a Spokane hospital and who is to be buried this afternoon in the Moscow cemetery.

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St. Maries--The body of the man found at the mouth of Emerald creek on July 17 remains unidentified. Nearly all clues have been exhausted in an endeavor to establish identity and there remains only one more possible lead for the officers to work upon, a pair of gold-rimmed glasses made by the Huteson-Donahey Optical company of Seattke, which have been sent there with the hope that the prescription may be on file and will give the name of the wearer.

Mrs. August Deerkop of Palouse, Wash., had seen the stranger while he was in search of horses and stopped at the Deerkop farm about May 25. A card bearing the name of August Deerkop was found upon the body, having been given the man by Mrs. Deerkop that he might notify her husband of pasture available for the grazing of Mr. Deerkop's stock.

The stranger told Mrs. Deerkop his name was George Morgan and that he had a son living near Farmington. He said he was the father of seven children, all of whom had left home except a daughter, whom he called "Liza." He said he had shipped cream and eggs to Spokane from Palouse and Potlatch, and that his next shipment was to be to the Fairmont creamery at Spokane. He said he lived seven miles from Kennedy Ford Idaho, and five miles from Potlatch.

The dead man's description follows: Age, 68 years; height, about six feet; weither, about 185 pounds; eyes, blue and deepset; eye-brows, very heavy; face thin and sharp; nose, long and sharp; corners of mouth drawn down at both sides; was large of frame and rawboned; wrists very large; fingernail of right index finger split and large as the result of having been mashed; had very heavy hair, somewhat gray of brow shade; he was very roundshouldered.

He wore a gray coat, heavy trousers, soft light-colored shirt, no vest, a heavy pair of dress shoes which were fairly new and had been shined and a brown slouch hat with the initials "G.M." perforated into the sweatband.

Prentice C. Wolfe, sheriff of Benewah county, is investigating the case and seeking information that will lead to discovery of relatives.

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Spokane--J.T. Worthington, aged 69, one of the most widely known pioneers of the Palouse has died at Rosalia. He was born in Kentucky and came to Whitman county 44 years ago, locating on a homestead near Rosalia, which he still owned, with other extensive farm land holdings, at the time of his death.

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A decree of divorce has been granted to Nicholas N. Pflepsen from Mary A. Pflepsen, on the grounds of cruelty, ungovernable temper and "general cussedness" according to the complaint and evidence. The defendant did not appear. They were married at Coeur d'Alene February 20, 1917. Suppiger & Ogden were attorneys for the plaintiff.

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George Bellos, a Greek shoe shiner in the Third Street barbershop, has applied for citizenship. He gives his age as 36 years and has been in the United States since 1910.

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Paul H. Manley of White Salmon, Wash., and Josephine Roberts, of Kendrick, were married by Judge Adrian Nelson, in his office Monday [August 9].

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Ralph W. Seaver, of Colfax, and Lorena Albright, of Palouse, were married at noon Wednesday [August 11], by W.G. Barge, justice of the peace. They will make their home in Colfax.

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Marriage license--John Bellomy and Maudie Holden, Moscow.





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