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On the wintry evening of December 7, 1911, 22 year old Anna Weber left her family's home in Spokane, Washington and never returned. The next morning, her body was discovered only yards away from the front door of her home. The hunt to solve the mystery of how and why Anna ended up murdered that evening was a long, exasperating task for the City of Spokane, full of twists and turns along with growing pressure from the citizens of a city plagued with a mounting number of murder cases remaining unsolved.
2003 marked the 100th anniversary of the founding of Hershey, PA. This book details over five thousand relations of Milton Hershey - most of them from the Central Pennsylvania region. This volume is 563 pages - INDEXED. Add $4.50 for S & H via media mail. Title: The Relations of Milton Snavely Hershey. Format - softcover - perfect binding with black and white photos. 8 1/2 by 11 Author: Lawrence Berger-Knorr, MBA, CCP Publisher: Sunbury Press Contents: Ancestry of Milton Hershey - (1857 - 1945) including numerous Swiss ancestors from the 1500''s and 1600''s. Photos of Milton Hershey and relations. The Strange Death of David Ober in the B & O Train Wreck at Republic, Ohio, Jan. 4 1887. Photos of Hackman family members, including Andrew Baer Hackman. Descendents of Hans Stouffer (circa 1500) which includes family pages of the Stauffer, Hershey, Ober, Shank, Hackman, Hostetter & allied families. (1734 listings) Descendents of Georg Weber (circa 1578) which includes family pages of the Weber, Herr, Baumann, Kendig, Barr, Meyer, Mumma, Brubaker, Snavely & allied families. (577 listings) Kinship Report of Milton Hershey, including over 5000 relations. Family Names mentioned at least 5 times: Adams, Agnew, Aguirre, Allen, Alter, Amidon, Annett, Arnold, Arthur, Augsburger, Baer, Baker, Ball, Balsbaugh, Bar, Barkey, Barner, Barnett, Barr, Barth, Bassler, Bateman, Bauman, Baumgartner, Beachy, Bear, Begg, Bender, Betzner, Bitner, Bolender, Bollinger, Bomberger, Borton, Bowers, Bowman, Brackbill, Brechbill, Breneman, Brenneman, Briggs, Bright, Brooks, Brown, Brubacher, Brubaker, Brunk, Bucher, Buckwalter, Burkholder, Burns, Byers, Campbell, Cartier, Choflet, Collard, Collingsworth, Cook, Cooley, Cooper, Coughen, Crouthamel, Cruce, Dafoe, Daman, Damiant, Davis, Deihl, Delgado, Denlinger, DePalmo. Devlin, Diehl, Duncan, Dunham, Dupuy, Eberly, Ebersole, Eby, Eicher, Eagle, Erb, Erisman, Ernst, Eshelman, Evans, Everett, Eyer, Farner, Fink, Forsythe, Fox, Frantz, Freshley, Frost, Gardner, Gates, Gearhart, Gehman, George, Gingrich, Glancey, Glick, Good, Goodhart, Gordley, Goring, Grace, Graeff, Groff, Grove, Gruen, Guthrie, Hackman, Hahn, Hall, Hamilton, Hardgrove, Hardy, Harmon, Harnish, Harrington, Harter, Hartigan, Hawk, Haynes, Heestand, Heimbach, Hendrix, Herr, Hershey, Hertzler, Hess, Hewes, High, Higley, Hinton, Hippensteel, Hofer, Hoffman, Hoffstetter, Hollinger, Hoover, Horning, Horst, Hostetter, Huber, Hubert, Hursh, Hurst, Imler, Isaacs, Jackson, Johnson, Jones, Kauffman, Kendig, Kettering, Kibler, Kilmer, Kinzer, Kitchen, Knupp, Krause, Kreider, Kundig, Kurtz, Landis, Lane, Langsdale, Lapp, Lefever, LeFevre, LeGron, Lehman, Lesher, Level, Lichty, Light, Line, Livengod, Long, Longenecker, Loose, Martig, Martin, Mayer, McCarrin, McDowell, McLeod, Mercer, Metzler, Meyer, Miller, Mitten, Mohler, Mohr, Moore, Mornhengwieg, Morris, Mosemann, Mountz, Moyer, Mumma, Mummah, Murison, Murphy, Murray, Musser, Myers, Neff, Newcomer, Newswanger, Mickey, Nigh, Nissley, Nolt, Ober, Oberholtzer, Oliver, Orsbirn, Osborn, Pancake, Patterson, Peachey, Pearsol, Penner, Pennock, Peters, Pfaltzgraff, Pifer, Pike, Planchock, Porter, Powell, Ranck, Randall, Ray, Raymer, Reese, Reiff, Reist, Reiter, Rhoads, Richardson, Risser, Ritter, Robertson, Rockwell, Rodgers, Rohrer, Royer, Rudy, Schell, Schenk, Schnebele, Schuyler, Scott, Seibert, Sensenig, Sharick, Sharpe, Sheaffer, Shelly, Shenk, Sherk, Shirk, Shore, Shultz, Skiles, Smith, Snavely, Sneltzer, Snyder, Stambaugh, Stauffer, Stevens, Stoffer, Stouffer, Strickler, Stroup, Stuart, Stutt, Summers, Summy, Swartzendruber, Sweigart, Thomas, Tritt, Trump, Tyner, Wall, Walsh, Wanner, Ward, Weaver, Webb, Weber, Wenger, Westover, White, Wiancko, Wideman, Williams, Wissler, Witmer, Witwer, Wolf, Woods, Wyss, Yoder, Zeiset & Zimmerman. All told - over 5,000 relations are mentioned - including a substantial Kinship Report and complete Index. Many of the prominent Mennonite families of Lancaster, Lebanon & Dauphin Counties are represented. This is a wonderful Pennsylvania Dutch genealogy.
Rev. Waldschmidt's entries, which pertain to the congregations of Cocalico (Swamp), Weiseichenland (formerly Sebastian Reicher's Church), Modecreek, and Zeltenreich, are arranged in four separate alphabetical groupings. The first part, baptismal records, gives the name of the child, parents' names, date of birth and date of baptism, and the names of sponsors. Marriages come next, and they state the name of the bride and groom, the date of the marriage, and, frequently, the name(s) of the parents. Each marriage is listed twice, alphabetically according to the surname of both the bride and groom. The third section of the book lists the various communion services performed by Rev. Waldschmidt, with the names of the communicants. Finally, a separate listing of brides and grooms from official Pennsylvania marriage licenses signed by the pastor between 1784-1786 concludes the volume.
Praised for its conversational tone, personal examples, and helpful pedagogical tools, the Fourth Edition of Explorations in Classical Sociological Theory: Seeing the Social World is organized around the modern ideas of progress, knowledge, and democracy. With this historical thread woven throughout the chapters, the book presents a diverse selection of major classical theorists including Marx, Spencer, Durkheim, Weber, Mead, Simmel, Martineau, Gilman, Douglass, Du Bois, Parsons, and the Frankfurt School. Kenneth Allan and new co-author Sarah Daynes focus on the specific views of each theorist, rather than schools of thought, and highlight modernity and postmodernity to help contemporary readers understand how classical sociological theory applies to their lives.
Sixteenth-century Augsburg comes to life in this beautifully chosen and elegantly translated selection of original documents. Ranging across the whole panoply of social activity from the legislative reformation to work, recreation, and family life, these extracts make plain the subtle system of checks and balances, violence, and self-regulation that brought order and vibrancy to a sophisticated city community. Most of all we hear sixteenth-century people speak: in their petitions and complaints, their nervous responses under interrogation, their rage and laughter. Tlusty has done an invaluable service in crafting a collection that should be an indispensable part of the teaching syllabus. --Andrew Pettegree, University of St. Andrews