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Henry ADOLPH - you will also see his last name spelled ADOLF


Checklist of American Coverlet Weavers, by John Heisey, Page 31

ADOLF, Henry (ca. 1815- ). Born in Alsace, France, Adolf worked in Montgomery County, Ohio, in 1838, moving to Wayne County, Indiana, by 1840 where, according to Montgomery, he was weaving with John Wissler near Milton. In 1844 he settled in Cambridge City and set up his own weaving shop. By 1849 he had purchased land near Noblesville, Indiana (Hamilton Co.), where he farmed and continued weaving. When the land was sold in 1855, Adolf's residence was given as Mahaska County, Iowa. From inscriptions on his coverlets, it is evident that in 1866 he was weaving in Douglas County, Kansas, and in 1878 in Clinton, Kansas (Douglas Co.) (See also entry for John Klein). 7, 1842-1878.

Checklist of American Coverlet Weavers, by John Heisey, Page 76

KLEIN, John (ca. 1834-1901). He came to America from Germany with his family (see entries) and, according to Montgomery, was weaving with his father and three brothers in Shelbyville, Indiana (Shelby Co.). After 1854 he moved to Hamilton County, Indiana, where he worked with Henry Adolf and Martin Forrer (see entries). By 1857 John and his brother Andrew opened a weaving shop in Noblesville (Hamilton Co.). After the Civil War, John became a sewing machine salesman. His later coverlets do not have the Klein trademark of a rose, but they are signed with the location of manufacture (Hamilton County) and the date. Montgomery believes that John usually included the full name and age of the person for whom the piece was woven. 2 (Klein family), 1850 and 1854; 4, 1857-1868.


Samples of Our Heritage, 1977.210, Page 5

Coverlet
Henry Adolph was born in 1815 in Alsace, France. He migrated to America sometime before 1855 and began to practice his craft of weaving in Ohio. By 1857 he was working in Indiana, later moving his trade to Iowa. He next went to Douglas County, Kansas, where he was known to be working in the mid-1860s. His fine skills are evident in the colorful coverlet in the exhibit. It is a jacquard woven double lily pattern in double cloth. Weavers like Adolph signed their work with pride. The corner signature block of the coverlet bears the woven inscription, "Made by H. Adolph, Clinton, KS 1876." Coverlets such as these were cherished household possessions in Kansas.


Topeka Capital-Journal, Topeka, Kansas, April 30, 1989

KANSAS HISTORICAL SOCIETY

Weaving changed as coverlets were produced more

By Blair D. Tarr, Curator of Decorative Arts, Kansas Museum of History

At the beginning of the nineteenth century a French weaver, Joseph-Marie Jacquard, perfected an attachment for handlooms that marked the beginning of the mechanization of weaving. This device could be used in the making of double-weave coverlets, or ones woven so that the reverse was the mirror image of the front.

The Jacquard attachment controlled the design of the coverlet through a series of cards punched with holes that activated the harness of the loom. These resembled the computer punch cards of the 20th century.

Weaving was changed dramatically as coverlets were produced more economically and with greater speed. Designs of a more complicated nature - birds, animals, and flowers, for example - replaced geometric designs. Elaborate borders could and were often added, with the design of these usually contrasting with the general field.

Many pattern books were probably available, as similar borders and motifs can be found in different regions. The most skilled of the Jacquard weavers punched their own cards to create designs.

In the corners of the Jacquards were blocks that now reveal their history. Here was placed a variety of information. It might be the weaver's name, or a design that served as his trademark, and it might also include the name of the customer, or when and where it was woven.

Weavers of Jacquards were professionals who had received specialized training. Because it did require this training, many European weavers came to this country after the attachment became available in the United States in the mid-1820s. The attachment itself was rather costly; it had to pay for itself, and was not for someone who made only a few items.

This was a male profession. Occasionally Jacquards have a family tradition that indicates they were made by a female ancestor. Women often provided prepared yards (should read yarns), but very few actually wove these coverlets. Their expected duties in the household usually denied them the time to make this type of weaving profitable.

The Jacquards gained popularity in the 1830s and remained so until the Civil War. But industrial growth and further mechanization made it unprofitable for the independent weaver to remain in business. There were those who tried to continue past the war, but most efforts were short-lived.

As Kansas was settled at the end of the Jacquard's popularity, it is not surprising that most of the coverlets in the state's private and museum collections were brought by immigrants. Three, perhaps four weavers came to Kansas, but only one is known to have produced coverlets here.

The state's one Jacquard weaver was an Alsatian immigrant named Henry Adolph, who came to this country about 1838. After a short stay in Ohio, he moved to Indiana, eventually establishing a shop in Cambridge City and later at Noblesville. After moves to Iowa and Missouri, he arrived in Kansas.

In 1866 Henry set up shop in Douglas County at what became Clinton. His first Kansas coverlets were made that year. Although independent weavers elsewhere saw the demand for their work declining, Adolph apparently found a demand for his work in the young state. He continued making coverlets at Clinton until the end of the 1870s.

By 1880 Henry was back in Missouri, where he spent the remainder of his life. He apparently made a few more coverlets, but may have made carpets more frequently. It was not uncommon for Jacquard weavers to do both. Adolph may have been weaving until the time of his death in 1907, a few days short of his 93rd birthday. (should read 92nd birthday)

Henry was joined in this profession by two brothers, Charles and George. Both brothers wove coverlets in Indiana, but there is no evidence of Kansas coverlets. Charles Adolph lived much of his life after the Civil War at Centropolis, Franklin County, where it is known that he wove carpets.

George Adolph is more of a mystery, and he may never have lived in the state. His low production in Indiana suggests that he was less committed to weaving than his brothers. According to family tradition, he and two men were killed in Missouri in the mid-1860s, their supplies stolen, their wagons and bodies burned.

Thomas Cranston was also a successful Jacquard weaver in Indiana. A Scottish immigrant, he came to that state in the mid-1850s and wove through the 1870s.

For further reading, see John Heisey, A Checklist of American Coverlet Weavers (1978); Pauline Montgomery, Indiana Coverlet Weavers and Their Coverlets (1974); and Carleton Safford and Robert Bishop, America's Quilts and Coverlets (1980).


Indiana Coverlet Weavers and Their Coverlets by Pauline Montgomery

THE BACKGROUND

(Transcribers Note: I am not putting the entire "The Background" section in here. Only the parts that pertain to Henry, Charles or George Adolph (Adolf). This would be an excellent book to check out at the library if you are interested in the background of coverlet weaving. It has a lot of good information in it and I found it very interesting.)

The connecting link between the pioneer home as a completely self-contained unit in textile production and the power loom three or four decades later was the professional weaver. The earliest dated coverlet from a jacquard loom which could be positively identified as the work of an Indiana professional weaver was 1838, the latest, 1874....

However, many women probably preferred to let the malodorous "blue-pot," simmering on the hearth, become an unpleasant memory and to turn the dyeing operation over to the weaver for a fee. Being a time-consuming process, the dyeing was done under the weaver's supervision, by his assistant or the women of the weaver's family.11 In Indiana coverlets blues were the most popular color; reds second. Greens appear somewhat infrequently; yellows, browns, blacks, and purples almost never. The blues ranged from a very deep blue-black, through the familiar dark blue of many coverlets, a brilliant Prussian blue, an "October sky" blue, a soft gray-blue, and the true azure which only Henry Adolf seemed able to achieve successfully. Reds ran the gamut from brick-red, orange of varying intensity, crimson, American Beauty, scarlet, rose shades, a watermelon pink, and the soft lavenderish pink seen in many Adolf coverlets...

Almost uniformly the German, Pennsylvania, New York, and Ohio weavers of Indiana wove single jacquards, usually in more standardized patterns of sunbursts, geometric patterns, and the favorite "Four Roses" or "Four Lilies" patterns. They also tended to be fonder of color, and with the device of weaving in stripes or bands of color with the patterns in sharply contrasting hues. They achieved some striking effects. Henry Adolf and Josiah Slaybaugh were particularly skillful in this. Scottish, Irish and English weavers, weaving double jacquards, offered a wider variety of patterns...

...Probably most Henry Adolf patrons would have willingly paid more for his handsome three-inch looped side fringes...

For twenty or thirty years coverlet weaving was a flourishing occupation. In an era of large families, in which a son or daughter was often presented a coverlet on marriage, such commissions were a lucrative source of income. The Craigs of Decatur County wove seven for the Harcourts and twelve for the Clemsons; Charles Adolph, twelve for the Russell family and five for the Lewises; Henry Adolf, five for the Sleets;...

The theory has been advanced that coverlets, with the weaver's name but with no additional identifying information, were used as samples or part of a weaver's stock-pile. Only three such coverlets were seen during the research: One from Henry Adolf, one from Slaybaugh, and a third from Huber. There is very little evidence that Indiana weavers stock-piled their coverlets. Weavers were usually far behind in their orders and struggling to catch up. There is certainly no evidence that they ever peddled their wares from door to door. Hoosier demand took care of that!

THE WEAVERS

Henry Adolf

Somewhere in the horde of migrants pushing their way westward from Ohio to Indiana on the National Road was Henry Adolf, twenty-three year old Alsatian weaver. Just as soon as possible after the required period of residence in America, Henry had filed his "Declaration of Intention" to become an American citizen in the Montgomery County (Ohio) Court of Common Please on February 26, 1838. Prior to that time he may have been weaving in Germantown, Ohio, a way station for a number of Indiana-bound weavers and a center of weaving activity. In 1840 he received full American citizenship in the Wayne County (Indiana) Circuit Court, swearing that he had "behaved himself as a man of good moral character" and renouncing all allegiance to "Louis Philip, King of France."

Henry had two invaluable assets: A complete mastery of his craft and an American wife, Pennsylvania-born Elizabeth, who could help him over the language barrier which plagued so many German immigrants. Just what led him to move from ohio to the little eastern Indiana village of Cambridge City is pure conjecture. Possibly there were too many weavers in Montgomery County, Ohio; probably, at the time, Cambridge City seemed to be an excellent choice, located at the intersection of the National Road and the projected Whitewater Canal. The town had prospects! For a time Adolf wove with John Wissler, already well-setablished in nearby Milton.16

Under Wissler Henry undoubtedly acquired a following. When, in 1844, Wissler moved his profitable weaving establishment from a farm south of Milton into the village itself, Henry was ready to establish his own weaving shop in Cambridge City, two miles north. His first purchase was two lots in Vandalia (now part of Cambridge City) and, speculatively, two more lots in west Cambridge City.

Three years later he was again planning to move. The prospects of the town had failed to materialize; Hamilton County looked more promising. By 1849 he had settled on a farm southeast of Noblesville. Judging from his somewhat smaller production of coverlets in that county, he was devoting more time to cultivating his farmland. Although his stay in Noblesville Township, with weavers Martin Forrer and John Klein as close neighbors, was probably pleasant, and the combining of weaving and farming was profitable, Henry was eyeing land farther west. When his Indiana farm land was sold in 1855, the deed gave Henry's residence as Mahaska County, Iowa.

In 1847, when he sold his Vandalia (Cambridge City) lots, Henry signed his name "In Dutch," as a conscientious Wayne County Recorder parenthetically noted. Five years later, with the sale of the two remaining lots, no such notation appeared; he may have mastered the writing of his name in English. But his struggles with the vagaries of the English language remained monumental. Hamilton County appears variously on his coverlets as "Hamildon," "Hamelton," or "Hameldon"; the past participle of weave became "wov."

Most weavers wove either single jacquards or double, but seldome both. Evidence seems to indicate that Adolf could produce both types. A John Whissler (Wissler) coverlet of 1840, woven while Henry was still working with him, is a double jacquard identical in pattern and border to one marked "H. Adolf, Douglas County, Kansas, 1866." Wissler's offering, after Adolf left him, was usually the single jacquard. Both types appear in Hamilton County signed with Henry's name, although the double jacquards bear exactly the same trademark (except for the name) as that John Klein used throughout his career.

Double jacquards by Adolf are in blue and white in patterns and borders customarily used by the Scotch weavers. His single jacquards show not only the competent craftsmen in weaving but one with a magnificent color sense. Most of his coverlets are woven in broad stripes of color, employing variations of the "Four Roses" pattern or sunburts medallions; borders are most often the bird and shrub or shrub rose or the swag and tassel design. The device of weaving the "Four Roses" pattern in broad stripes of contrasting color was most effective; one coverlet has a blue-black background, brilliant blue stripes, turkey red roses and sage green foliage; another uses natural cotton, with azure blue stripes and scarlet roses. Many have the roses in the soft lavender pink which few weavers produced successfully.

The Adolf dye-pot was almost as important a factor in producing handsome coverlets as the Adolf loom. Henry doubtless kept a vigilant eye on this part of the coverlet production; his dyer, who might have been his Pennsylvania-born wife, Elizabeth, consistently produced a splendid array of shades in red, blue, and green.

The Adolphs, Charles and George

When the ship from Le Havre docked in New Orleans on November 1, 1843, it brought to American shores three Alsatians, Charles Adolph, aged twenty-eight, his wife Emerance, and Charles's brother, George, aged twenty-one. The two weavers were fortunate in that they knew their destination; they apparently came directly to Wayne County, Indiana, where another Alsatian and possibly a kinsman, Henry Adolf, was weaving in Cambridge City.17 For a time George worked under Henry Adolf; in 1849 he wove in Henry County but in 1850 was back in Cambridge City.

In the village of Williamsburg Charles set up his loom. He must have woven in considerable volume as there are a great many coverlets still found from this period. Here he remained until the late 1850's, when neighboring Henry County offered better prospects. One of his first commissions in Liberty Township, Henry County, was twelve coverlets for the Russell family.

An elderly resident of Liberty Township who could remember the Adolphs quite well, reported many years ago to the late Mrs. L. C. Marshall that the Adolphs "talked very Dutchy and weren't very clean." If Emerance lacked the housewifely virtues she may have been equally lacking in thrift; in spite of the great output from Charles's loom, the records do not reveal any accumulation of property and the only Indiana land Charles owned was a very small strip, acquired jointly with George, just west of New Lisbon. In 1870 he sold the Henry County land and moved on to Osage County, Kansas.

Meanwhile, George had taken a Hoosier bride, Rebecca Schmuck. They were married in the Dunkard (German Baptist) Church near Hagerstown on August 31, 1846. (Transcriber's Note: George and Rebecca were actually married on 2 SEPTEMBER 1846. The marriage license was issued on 31 AUGUST 1846. It is filed in Marriage Record Book E Page 78 in Richmond, Wayne County, Indiana. See George Adolph on main page for transcription of Marriage record.) In 1850, he was living in Cambridge City, quite possibly on Henry Adolf's lots and carrying on Henry's weaving while the latter made the transfer to Hamilton County. When Charles moved to Henry County, so did George.

The attitudes of the two brothers toward their craft are reflected in the report to the census-taker of 1850: Charles, "Coverlet Weaver," and George, "Laborer." Only three coverlets woven by George were found during the research, perhaps indicating that weaving was a part-time career with him, whereas Charles produced many coverlets.

Charles Adolph coverlets bear as trademarks either his name, the locations (Wayne or Henry County), and date, or the temple-like figure shown on page 11. Side borders often show handsome baskets of flowers; favorite bottom borders were the birds feeding their young or trees bearing over-sized fruits. Two unusual ones, not seen elsewhere, are side borders on an 1849 coverlet in the Wabash County Museum with Masonic emblems, and a second, dated 1845, with pyramids and palm trees. Certainly unique among Indiana's coverlets is the Bookout coverlet, page 13, with elegant side borders of flower baskets beautifully executed and the bottom border with its funereal sentiment and design in folk art.

Martin Forrer

(Transcribers Note: I am only putting information on this family in that refers to Henry, Charles or George. For full information on Martin Forrer please refer to the book.)

...His first Indiana farmland was bought from Henry Adolf, another coverlet weaver, who, in 1854, had moved farther west.

The Kleins, Michael, Andrew, Frances, Fredoline, John

(Transcribers Note: I am only putting information on this family in that refers to Henry, Charles or George. For full information on the Kleins please refer to the book.)

Young John, still in his teens, soon after his father's death had gone to weavers Henry Adolf and Martin Forrer in Hamilton County. Undobubtedly one or both had been friends of his father. John first wove in the loomhouse on the Forrer farm southeast of Noblesville until he could establish himself. There is some evidence, too, that Henry Adolf, living nearby, gave work to the fatherless lad, as double jacquards, bearing a strong resemblance to ones woven later and bearting the trademark Klein used, but with the name "H. Adolf," and dated from 1852 on have appeared in Hamilton County. Several land transactions in that county involved all three men.

John Wissler (Whissler)

(Transcribers Note: I am only putting information on this family in that refers to Henry, Charles or George. For full information on John Wissler (Whisler) please refer to the book.)

Just when and where John learned the weaver's craft is not known. After his marriage to Sarah Canutt in 1833 they moved to a farm south of Milton, where John established his weaving shop. During the following eleven years various weavers worked with him: John Marr, John Snyder, Henry Adolf, and possibly Peter Lorenz. In 1844 the Wisslers moved to Milton; Henry Adolf left Wissler to start his own shop in Cambridge City.

LOOM ENDS

(Transcribers Note: I am only putting in the parts that refer to Henry, Charles or George. For full item please refer to the book.)

...The Henry Adolf coverlet on page 8 was bought for twenty dollars from a woman who mistakenly believed she owned two unmatched strips.

11. The consistency of the fine color in the work of a number of Indiana weavers, particularly the LaTourettes, Henry Adolf, Samuel Stinger, and Joseph Slaybaugh, would indicate that the weaver closely supervised the dyeing process.

16. "Hoosier Listening Post," Indianapolis Star, October 2, 1928, interview of the late Charles Calloway of Milton with Sanford Wissler, son of John Wissler, as reported to Kate Milner Rabb.

17. Both Charles and George received their naturlization papers in the fall term, 1850, of the Wayne County Circuit Court.

Note: for pictures referred to in this article please see the pictures section on the main page.


The Walnut Grove Tribune, Walnut Grove, Missouri, Volume IV, Number 44, Wednesday, February 6, 1907

Henry Adolph is quite seriously sick with pneumonia at his home in the south part of town. Should he live until 18th last he will be 92 years old.


The Walnut Grove Tribune, Walnut Grove, Missouri, Volume IV, Number 46, Wednesday, February 20, 1907

In Memory of Henry Adolph

Who was born February 18, 1815 at Elmo, a Province of France, of German parents. He emigrated to America in 1835 and became an American in 1836 at Dayton, Ohio. He imigrated to Richmond, Indiana in 1837 then went to Cambridge, Wayne County land began his trade of weaving coverlets, which business he followed for 40 years. He married Miss Elizabeth Klein and to this union were born 9 children, only one of whom is living, a daughter.

His wife died in 1859 and in October 1860 he married Miss Nancy Stoddard in Dade County, Missouri. They have lived in Walnut Grove fro 26 years.

Bro. Adolph retained all his senses to the last, departing this life the 14th day of February 1907, at the advanced age of 92 years. He proclaimed faith Christ in early life and joined the German Baptist Church in which he lived and died. He led a convenient life, being a quiet and personable citizen. His wife, daughter and one brother mourn his loss, but all the neighbors were and are ready to comfort and assist, for we all hope to meet where parting and death are no more. So farwell, Uncle Henry for a time, until we meet again.

A Friend.

Transcriber's Note: Henry was 91 years old at his death as he died 4 days before his birthday. Henry Adolph applied for naturalization in 1838 in Montgomery County, Ohio. He was actually naturalized in 1840 in Richmond, Wayne County, Indiana, Order Book F, Page 264, March 1840 to August 1841. It is also believed that Henry was born in Alsace France as were his brothers George and Charles.

Chas. Adolph of Centropolis, Kansas came in last week being called here by the serious sickness of his brother, Henry Adolph.

Mrs. Sarah Scott of Greenfield came over, one day last week, being called here by the sickness and death of her brother-in-law, Henry Adolph.

Will Scott and family of Greenfield attended the funeral of Henry Adolph, Friday.


The Walnut Grove Tribune, Walnut Grove, Missouri, Volume IV, Number 47, Wednesday, February 27, 1907

Mrs. Adolph's yeast can be obtained of Mrs. Martha J. Saye.

Mrs. Scott of Greenfield who had become insane was brought here for treatment by her husband, Sunday. She became very demonstrative late in the evening and was taken to the Sprinfield hospital. - Express.

Mrs. Henry Adolph went to Greenfield, Sunday to make her home with her sister, Mrs. Scott.


APPLICATION FOR NATURALIZATION

Mont.Co. Pleas Monday, February 26, 1838

Henry Adolph aged about 23 years, a native of France appeared in open Court and declared under oath that in is bona fide his intention to become a citizen of the United States and to renounce all alleghance and fidelity to every foreign prince, potentate state or sovereignty whatsoever, and particularly to Louis Phillippe King of the French.

(Note: My thanks to Linda Barsalou for researching and transcribing this information for me.
NATURALIZATION OF HENRY ADOLPH

Richmond, Wayne County, Indiana, Order Book F, Page 264, March 1840 to August 1841

The fall term of Court A.D. 1840 and now has this day comes into open court Henry Adolph and known to the Court on the 26th day of February, 1838 he made application under oath in the court of Common Pleas of Montgomery County in the State of Ohio declaring his intention preparatory to being admitted as a citizen of the United States and there upon the said Henry Adolph proves to the satisfaction of the Court upon the Oath of George Rearshed that he was resident within the Unite States more than five years and within the State of Indiana more than (1) one year and that during that time he has behaved himself as a man of good moral character; attached to the principles of the Constitution of the United States in well disposed to the good order in happenings of the same and therefore the said Henry Adolph is here in open Court sworn to support the Constitution of the United States and that he doth forever renounce all allegiance and fidelity to every foreign prince, potentiate state of sovernity whatever and particularly to Louis Philip the present King of the French of whom he was formerly a subject.


Marriage Records, Book C, Page 346, Wayne County, Indiana

Be it Remembered that on the 23rd day of January A.D., 1841 the Clerk of the Wayne Circuit Court issued a license to any person legally authorized to solemnize matrimony in said County to join in marriage Henry Adolph adn Elizabeth Cline and afterwards, to wit on the 6th day of March 1841 the following return was made to the Clercks office to wit:

I Benjamin Bowman a regular minister of the Gospel of the German Baptist do certify that Henry Adolph and Elizabeth Cline were legally joined in marriage by me on the 28th day of January, 1841.

Attest: John Finley, Clerk

Note: Benjamin Bowman was minister of Nettle Creek Church of the Brethren south of Hagerstown, Indiana. He is buried in the cemetery next to this church.


Warranty Deed

Know all Men by these Presents, That Henry Adolph and Nancy Adolph, his wife of the County of Greene, in the State of Missouri, have this day, for, and in consideration of the sum of Twelve Hundred Dollars, to the said Henry Adolph and Nancy his wife in hand paid, by William D. Acuff of the County of Polk, in the State of Missouri, Granted, Bargained and Sold, and by these presents, do GRANT, BARGAIN, SELL AND CONVEY, unto the said William D. Acuff the following described tract - or parcel - of Land, situated in the County of Greene, in the State of Missoui, that is to say: Lots No. 2 and 3 in Block No. 3 and Lot No. 2 in Block No. 4 in the Town of Walnut Grove in the said County of Greene.

Also the following described tract to wit: commencing at the North West corner of the North East qr. of the North East qr. of Section No. 22, Township No. 31 of Range No. 24, and running South 39 rods. Thence East 12 1/2 rods; thence North 39 rods, thence West 12 1/2 rods to the place of beginning, containing three acres more or less.

TO HAVE AND TO HOLD the premises conveyed with all the rights, privileges and appurtenances hereto belonging, or in anywise appertaining, unto the said William D. Acuff his heirs and assigns, forever, they, the said Henry Adolph and Nancy his wife hereby Covenanting to and with the said William D. Acuff his heirs and assigns, for them and their heirs, executors and administrators, to WARRANT AND DEFEND teh title to the premises hereby conveyed against the claims of every person whatsoever.

IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF we have hereto subscribed our names and affixed our seals, this 3rd day of August, in the year of our Lord, one thousand eight hundred and eighty-five (1885). signatures: Henry Adolph and Nancy Adolph

State of Missouri

County of Greene

On this 3rd day of August A.D. 1885, before me personally appeared Henry Adolph and Nancy Adolph his wife, to me known to be the persons described in and who executed the foregoing instrument, and acknowledged that they executed the same as their free act and deed. [My commission as Notary Public will expire on the 27th day of March 1888.]

GIVEN under my hand and official seal, at my office in Walnut Grove in the County aforesaid, the day and date above written.

I.W. Davis

Notary Public

Filed for Record this 2nd day of February 1887 at 1 o'clock 15 minutes P.M.

J. R. Ferguson

Recorder of Deeds

Transcriber's Note: Much of this document is written by hand. I have done my best to transcribe it correctly. Go to the picture area of this web page to see the actual scan of the document.


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