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Page "Union County, Ohio" ¶ 40
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By and 1883
By 1883 the `` Battenkill Telegraph Company '' was in existence and Alvin Pettibone was its president.
By 1883 Smith's Directory listed several telegraph offices operated by the Post Office, in addition to those at Douglas, Ramsey, Castletown and Peel the telegraph was also available at Laxey, Ballaugh, and Port St. Mary.
By 1996, a series of RFCs was released defining Internet Protocol version 6 ( IPv6 ), starting with RFC 1883.
* By the Seashore ( 1883 )
By 1881 both Ireland and Wales had representative teams, and in 1883 the first international competition, the Home Nations Championship had begun.
By 1883, Morris wrote " Almost all the designs we use for surface decoration, wallpapers, textiles, and the like, I design myself.
By mid 1883, financial difficulties due to aggressive growth and expenditures led to a shake up among the D & RG board of directors, and General Palmer resigned as president of the D & RG in August 1883, while retaining that position with the Western.
By 1880 Houghton had become " a burgeoning city " and in 1883, the railroad was extended from Marquette.
By 1883 Catron had consolidated the deeds he held for the whole of the grant sans the original villages and their associated fields.
By 1883, the principal market for this tobacco was Cincinnati, but it was grown throughout central Kentucky and Middle Tennessee.
By 1877, the village population was up to 300 and in 1883 the Orangeville Alert, the first village newspaper, was established.
By 1883, a small business community emerged, including a hotel, flour mill, and several shops.
By the 1880s, there were canning factories in Harrington and Columbia Falls, and a blueberry rake was designed by Abijah Tabbutt in 1883.
By 1883, the western boundary of Minneapolis was at France Avenue.
By 1883 the Minnesota Iron Company had purchased all but four acres of Thomas Sextons land around Agate Bay.
By 1900, Chester Atwood had increased his land holdings and his family included wife Patsy Ann ( familiarly called Mattie ), daughters Ottie ( b. 1883 ) and Arrie ( b. 1886 ), son Bennie ( b. 1887 ), daughter Allie ( b. 1889 ), son Coleman ( b. 1891 ), and daughters Lizzie ( b. 1893 ) and Ambrozia ( b. 1895 ).
By 1883, the town's population had more than doubled.
By 1883, the DL & W had begun to construct a breaker and to prepare railroad beds for a branch line connecting the breaker to the DL & W's railroad line on the west shore of the Susquehanna River.
By the time Anna was platted in 1883, it had a population of twenty, two stores, a steam gristmill, and a Baptist church.
By 1883, 15 lots had been sold.
By the fall of 1883 an irrigation system was constructed on the Wheatland flats including a 2, 380 foot long tunnel to divert water for irrigation into Bluegrass Creek and the first two of the system's canals.
By 1883, the first transcontinental rail was established.
By 1883 there were 15 homes in the vicinity.

By and Marysville
By 1857, Marysville was a prospering city ; in fact, it was one of the largest cities in California, due to strategic location during the Gold Rush.
By 1908, eleven different mines had been worked in the Marysville area, primarily by the Mammoth Vein Coal Company, which took over from the O. K.
By 1846, Marysville had 360 inhabitants, three small dry goods stores, two churches-Presbyterian and Methodist, a private school, and a newspaper office.
By 1865, Marysville had six dry goods stores, one hardware store, nine or ten groceries, a mill, a woolen factory, and most of the trades and professions.
By 1890, Marysville had a population of 2, 832 residents, and by 1888 had earned itself the title “ the Shaded City ” because of its tree-lined streets.
By 1984, the Accords sold in the eastern U. S. were produced at the new Marysville plant, with quality considered equal to those produced in Japan.
By the time he was twenty-five he had worked for at least seven different papers, including the Marysville, California Appeal ; the Sacramento Union ; the Panama Star and Herald ; the New Orleans Item ; the Atlanta Journal, the Hudson Observer in Hoboken, New Jersey ; the Brooklyn Eagle ; and the San Francisco Call.

By and Tribune
By this, Plutarch probably means that as Plebeian Tribune, Metilius had the Plebeian Council, a popular assembly which only Tribunes could preside over, grant Minucius quasi-dictatorial powers.
By three days later it had burned approximately in San Diego County with over 640 homes destroyed, 250 damaged, and 12 firefighters injured according to the San Diego Union Tribune.
By 1878, according to the Wadena County Tribune, which was published at Verndale, the population had grown to 300 and the countryside near the town was full of rapidly-developing farm sites.
In his column in Tribune, he pointed out the adverse effects of climate change both at home in England and worldwide: " By 2050, if climate change proceeds unchecked, England will no longer be a green and pleasant land.
Her work includes articles for magazines and newspapers around the world ( e. g., Wall Street Journal, International Herald Tribune, The Independent ( UK ), The Irish Times, The Toronto Globe and Mail, The LA Times, La Jornada ( Mexico ), The Review of the International Red Cross, Columbia University ’ s Journal of Politics and Society ) and chapters to numerous books ( e. g., This I Believe: The Personal Philosophies of Remarkable Men and Women, edited by Jay Allison and Dan Gediman book is the result of the “ This I Believe ” series on National Public Radio ; The Satanic Bible By Caesar 999 ; A Memory, A Monologue, A Rant, and A Prayer, edited by Eve Ensler ; Lessons from our Fathers, by Keith McDermott ; Girls Like Us: 40 Extraordinary Women Celebrate Girlhood in Story, Poetry and Song, by Gina Misiroglu ; The Way We Will be 50 Years from Today: 60 of the World ’ s Greatest Minds Share Their Visions of the Next Half-Century, edited by Mike Wallace ).
By Marion Kaplan, The Tribune, June 24, 2002.
By a 9 – 4 decision the council " voted to sustain the complaint that the Star Tribune editorial unfairly characterized the scientific reputations of Patrick Michaels and Robert Balling.
By 1914 the magazine work became too much for her to accomplish while working other jobs, so she resigned from the Chicago Tribune and accepted a salary of fifty dollars per month from the magazine.
By his sixth season, Howard had become unpopular and a bit of a disappointment in Washington, according to Sam Smith from the Chicago Tribune.
By the mid-twentieth century this rustic feature was a rarity ; in 1953, William Chapman White wrote in the New York Herald Tribune:
* 100 years of the Paris trib: From the archives of the International Herald Tribune Author: Bruce Singer ; introduction By Art Buchwald.
By 1954, a local restaurant was advertising its " Pizza, Spaghetti, Ravioli, Italian Beef Sandwiches " in the Chicago Tribune.
By the late 1930s, Paterson led a group of younger writers, many of them other Herald Tribune employees, who shared her views.
By 1970 he was rated as one of the most effective of the large 1964 intake of Labour MPs: in David Butler's The British General Election of 1970 ( page 4 ), he was identified as a leading figure in the Tribune Group, which had been established in 1964.
By fall of the next year, McClatchy was editing his own Settlers and Miners Tribune, which survived only a few weeks.

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