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Page "Kincardine, Ontario" ¶ 4
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Some Related Sentences

Both and township
Both the town and the township of Sidell were named after John Sidell, who came to the area from Ohio in 1861 and purchased on the banks of the Little Vermilion River.
Both the village and township are bedroom communities for the city of St. Joseph.
Both the township and Mullett Lake are named for John Mullett, who surveyed much of the area between 1840 and 1843.
Both the community and township were named after Salmon P. Chase, the Chief Justice of the United States at the time the area was being settled in the 1860s.
Both the village and township are named in honor of DeWitt Clinton, the governor of New York from 1817 to 1823.
Both the village and township are named in honor of DeWitt Clinton, the governor of New York from 1817 to 1823.
Both the community and the township were named after Bernard Nadeau, who owned the first farm in the area.
Both are separate entities from the township.
Both the community and township were named after George B. Dresbach, who founded the community and was a representative in the state legislature.
Both interstates houses interchanges in the township.
Both schools are in the Manahawkin section of the township.
Both I-95 and U. S. 1 pass through the township, offering its residents an easy commute, with the exception of rush hour traffic, which too has been greatly reduced and continues to be in ongoing road projects.
Both departments average more than 800 fire calls ( both departments run mutually on each call within the township ) a year making them the busiest volunteer fire district in Northampton county.
Both Interstate 75 and Interstate 71 cross the township, as do U. S. Route 42 and State Routes 48, 63, 123, 350, and 741.
Both the township and the district later used the same name.
Both formerly independent settlements, Central Patricia now consists only of a few buildings located at the terminus of Highway 599 within the township, while Pickle Crow is a ghost town.
Both Akron and Cuyahoga Falls had been annexing the southern part of the township.
Both Highway 416 and Highway 401 pass through the township.
Both high schools are being replaced as of fall 2008, part of a $ 350 million township building program.
Both the town and township are named for the famous Shawnee chief.

Both and county
Both these types, and those in between, are in existence by reason of a legislative interest in libraries that began at Albany as early as 1950, with the creation by the legislature of county library systems financed by county governments with matching funds from the state.
Both city and county are part of the South-West Region.
Both the Patapsco and Patuxent run largely through publicly accessible parkland along the county borders.
Both the New York State Thruway and the Erie Canal cross the northern part of the county.
Both the county and city are named for the tribe.
Both were buried in Buttevant church, county Cork.
Both county and city were named for Philip Pendleton Barbour ( 1783 – 1841 ), a U. S. Congressman from Virginia and Associate Justice of the U. S. Supreme Court.
Both have additional help when need by the county sheriff.
Both Częstochowas ( Old and New ) belonged to the province of South Prussia, Department of Kalisz ( Kalisch ), in which Old Częstochowa was the capital of a county ( see Districts of Prussia ).
Both have been scrutinized by federal prosecutors, with several former county officials convicted of bribery and corruption.
Both the county, established in 1848, and the city were named for David Spangler Kaufman, a diplomat and U. S. congressman from Texas who was the first Jewish person to serve in Congress from Texas.
Both the county and its county seat are named for Anson Jones, the fifth president of the Republic of Texas.
Both the county and the county seat were named after Collin McKinney ( 1766-1861 ), one of the five men who drafted the Texas Declaration of Independence and the oldest of the 59 men who signed it.
Both Aiken County and its county seat of Aiken are named after William Aiken ( 1779 – 1831 ) who was the first president of the South Carolina Railroad Company.
Both Abbeville County and the county seat, Abbeville, SC, get their name from the town of Abbeville, France.
Both the county and the city were named for American Revolutionary War leader George Washington, later to become the first President of the United States.
Both wired and wireless telephone services are nearly universally available in the county.
Both highways pass through the northern part of the county.
Both parties hold exactly half of the elected positions in the county.
Both towns wanted to be county seat of Tallahatchie, and Tillatoba succeeded.
Both the county and county seat are commonly referred to by locals as " Rosco ".

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