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Page "Crystal Lake, Illinois" ¶ 12
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Eliza and Lou
The road was named after ElizaLouRingling who, as founder of the Lake Development Company, purchased the Dole Mansion in 1922 and converted it into the first Crystal Lake Country Club.
* Billie Lou Watt-Kimba, Eliza, Dodie Deer, Gypsy
Janae ( Eliza Taylor-Cotter ) and Janelle Timmins ( Nell Feeney ) then buy the garage from Lou and Libby.

Eliza and was
At the age of 18, Johnson married 16-year-old Eliza McCardle in 1827 ; she was the daughter of a local shoemaker.
ELIZA was named after Eliza Doolittle, a working-class character in George Bernard Shaw's play Pygmalion, who is taught to speak with an upper-class accent.
Vancouver was " mortified " ( his word ) to learn they already had a crude chart of the Strait of Georgia based on the 1791 exploratory voyage of José María Narváez the year before, under command of Francisco de Eliza.
Here he was to receive any British buildings and lands returned by the Spanish from claims by Francisco de Eliza for the Spanish crown.
The Spanish expeditions to the Pacific Northwest, with the 1791 Francisco de Eliza expedition preceding Vancouver by a year, had also missed the Fraser River although they knew from its muddy plume that there was a major river located nearby.
Her real name was Eliza Gilbert
The island's first known sighting by Europeans was on 21 August 1821 by the British ship Eliza Francis ( or Eliza Frances ) owned by Edward, Thomas and William Jarvis and commanded by Captain Brown.
Several volumes of letters were published after his death, as was Journal to Eliza, a more sentimental than humorous love letter to a woman Sterne was courting during the final years of his life.
In 1862 he wrote that Eliza was " a true yoke-fellow, in love, in spirit and in service.
By this time Gosse was " very comfortably off " with the earnings from his books and dividends from his investments, and in 1864 Eliza received a substantial legacy which allowed Gosse to retire from his career as a professional writer and live in " congenial obscurity.
She was the second oldest of seven children — Guelma Penn ( 1818 – 1873 ), Hannah Lapham ( 1821 – 1877 ), Daniel Read ( 1824 – 1904 ), Mary Stafford ( 1827 – 1907 ), Eliza Tefft ( 1832 – 1834 ), and Jacob Merritt ( 1834 – 1900 ).
It will go on to become Disney's biggest moneymaker, and winner of 5 Academy Awards, including a Best Actress award for Julie Andrews, who accepted the part after she was passed over by Jack L. Warner for the leading role of Eliza Dolittle in the film version of My Fair Lady.
The name " San Juan " was given to the islands by the Spanish explorer Francisco de Eliza, who charted the islands in 1791, naming them Isla y Archiepelago de San Juan.
Referred to as " Funeralgate " or " Formaldegate " in the media, the controversy was widely publicized when Eliza May, a director with the Texas Funeral Service Commission ( TFSC ), was fired while investigating SCI.
In 1882 the Padthaway Estate Homestead was built by Eliza and Robert Lawson.
Although she began proceedings for divorce in January 1794, it was at the insistence of Condorcet and Cabanis, who wished to protect their property from expropriation and to provide financially for Sophie and their young daughter, Louise ' Eliza ' Alexandrine.
Condorcet was survived by his widow and their four-year-old daughter Eliza.
Her work was carried on by their daughter Eliza Condorcet-O ' Connor, wife of former United Irishman Arthur O ' Connor.
Ellen was the daughter of Henry Breese, a Liverpool policeman and his wife Eliza, who had given up her own teaching career after marrying.
Of Welsh ancestry, he was reared and cared for by his mother, Eliza Ballou, who said, " He was the largest babe I had and looked like a red Irishman.
His father, Richard Carte ( 1808 – 1891 ), was a flautist, and his mother was the former Eliza Jones ( 1814 – 1885 ); they had eloped, to the disappointment of her father, Thomas Jones, a clergyman.

Eliza and widow
His widow, Eliza, began working to sell the family's slaves.
He died in the Iowa Territory in 1843 ; his widow Eliza inherited his estate, including Scott.
His widow, Anna Eliza Bray, with the assistance of her brother, completed his Monumental Effigies, left unfinished at his death.
His widow, Eliza O ' Neal, was left with four daughters and a cash-poor farm to manage.
David Montagu Erskine ( 1776 – 1855 ) was a member of parliament and diplomat ; Henry David ( 1786 – 1859 ) was dean of Ripon ; Thomas ( 1788 – 1864 ) became a judge of the court of Common Pleas ; Esmé Steuart ( 1789 – 1817 ) fought at the battle of Waterloo where he lost an arm ( his widow Eliza married Admiral James Norton, who also lost an arm in action ).
Brâncuşi lived in the city in the summer of 1914, after Eliza Seceleanu, a young local landowner's widow, had commissioned him to create two sculptures: Prayer and the bust of Petre Stănescu, her late husband.
Only 41 when her husband became president, widow Mrs. Sarah Polk outlived several of her successors: Margaret Taylor, Abigail Fillmore, Jane Pierce, Mary Todd Lincoln, Eliza Johnson and Lucy Webb Hayes.
He left a pamphlet entitled Die “ Schuld ” am Kriege ( The Blame for the War ), which his widow Eliza intended to publish in 1919.
In 1792, Eaton accepted a captain's commission in the Legion of the United States and married Eliza, the widow of General Timothy Danielson.
Hopkins died three years later in October 1805, possibly due to yellow fever, leaving Eliza an eighteen-year old widow.
The story ends in 1702 with Eliza a wealthy duchess of Arcachon and Qwghlm and a widow, Newton at the head of the London Mint, Waterhouse having made the decision to move to Massachusetts and to work on his Logic Mill away from European distractions, Sophia Charlotte the queen of the newly-formed Kingdom of Prussia, and Leibniz the president of Prussian Academy of Sciences.
Benson later married Adeline Brooks Andrus, Desdemona Fullmer ( widow of Joseph Smith, Jr .), Eliza Ann Perry, Lucinda West, Elizabeth Gollaher, Olive Mary Knight, and Mary Larsen.
Today, Eliza is a widow of Adolf Kamil, live in Israel.
Monroe's personal papers were left to Gouverneur, who also was asked to support his wife's sister Eliza Monroe Hay ( also his cousin, then a widow ).
From 1868 to 1870, Goldsworthy was Inspector General of Police in Sierra Leone ; during this time he married a widow named Eliza Egan.
His widow Eliza fought a resolute but ultimately losing battle to hold together the Dulhunty's sprawling rural kingdom in the face of droughts, floods, outbreaks of livestock diseases, harsh bank foreclosures and various other setbacks — and all the while being saddled with the additional responsibility of raising a large tribe of children to maturity.
The governor opined that Blair, who was slightly built, stoop-shouldered, and suffering from tuberculosis, would leave Eliza a widow within six months.

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