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Browsing named entities in a specific section of The Daily Dispatch: January 3, 1861., [Electronic resource]. Search the whole document.
Found 16 total hits in 6 results.
Havre De Grace (Maryland, United States) (search for this): article 5
Sudden end of an impostor.
--The Wellsburg (Va.) Herald tells how a man claiming to be a member of Morning Star Lodge 1.
O. O. F., at Havre-de-Grace, Md., appeared in that town on the 22d of November, told a pitiable story of poverty and distress, that he had been robbed of his traveling pass, and that he wanted a little aid to carry him to Pittsburg on his way home.
Although he could not prove his title as an Odd Fellow in good standing, yet his story so much prevailed upon the sympathy of some of the members that the requisite aid was supplied him and he was sent on his way, and a correspondence instituted with Morning Star Lodge, Md., which resulted in a letter from the Secretary of that Lodge, showing him to be an impostor.
Subsequently he went to Steubenville, Ohio, and made a similar application to the Steubenville Lodge.
He was invited to work his way into the Lodge, and while being examined in the ante-room was stricken with an apoplectic fit, from which he died in a
Steubenville (Ohio, United States) (search for this): article 5
Pittsburgh (Pennsylvania, United States) (search for this): article 5
Sudden end of an impostor.
--The Wellsburg (Va.) Herald tells how a man claiming to be a member of Morning Star Lodge 1.
O. O. F., at Havre-de-Grace, Md., appeared in that town on the 22d of November, told a pitiable story of poverty and distress, that he had been robbed of his traveling pass, and that he wanted a little aid to carry him to Pittsburg on his way home.
Although he could not prove his title as an Odd Fellow in good standing, yet his story so much prevailed upon the sympathy of some of the members that the requisite aid was supplied him and he was sent on his way, and a correspondence instituted with Morning Star Lodge, Md., which resulted in a letter from the Secretary of that Lodge, showing him to be an impostor.
Subsequently he went to Steubenville, Ohio, and made a similar application to the Steubenville Lodge.
He was invited to work his way into the Lodge, and while being examined in the ante-room was stricken with an apoplectic fit, from which he died in a
Charlestown, W. Va. (West Virginia, United States) (search for this): article 5
Sudden end of an impostor.
--The Wellsburg (Va.) Herald tells how a man claiming to be a member of Morning Star Lodge 1.
O. O. F., at Havre-de-Grace, Md., appeared in that town on the 22d of November, told a pitiable story of poverty and distress, that he had been robbed of his traveling pass, and that he wanted a little aid to carry him to Pittsburg on his way home.
Although he could not prove his title as an Odd Fellow in good standing, yet his story so much prevailed upon the sympathy of some of the members that the requisite aid was supplied him and he was sent on his way, and a correspondence instituted with Morning Star Lodge, Md., which resulted in a letter from the Secretary of that Lodge, showing him to be an impostor.
Subsequently he went to Steubenville, Ohio, and made a similar application to the Steubenville Lodge.
He was invited to work his way into the Lodge, and while being examined in the ante-room was stricken with an apoplectic fit, from which he died in a
Lodge (search for this): article 5
Sudden end of an impostor.
--The Wellsburg (Va.) Herald tells how a man claiming to be a member of Morning Star Lodge 1.
O. O. F., at Havre-de-Grace, Md., appeared in that town on the 22d of November, told a pitiable story of poverty and distress, that he had been robbed of his traveling pass, and that he wanted a little aid iled upon the sympathy of some of the members that the requisite aid was supplied him and he was sent on his way, and a correspondence instituted with Morning Star Lodge, Md., which resulted in a letter from the Secretary of that Lodge, showing him to be an impostor.
Subsequently he went to Steubenville, Ohio, and made a similar afrom the Secretary of that Lodge, showing him to be an impostor.
Subsequently he went to Steubenville, Ohio, and made a similar application to the Steubenville Lodge.
He was invited to work his way into the Lodge, and while being examined in the ante-room was stricken with an apoplectic fit, from which he died in a few moments.
November 22nd (search for this): article 5
Sudden end of an impostor.
--The Wellsburg (Va.) Herald tells how a man claiming to be a member of Morning Star Lodge 1.
O. O. F., at Havre-de-Grace, Md., appeared in that town on the 22d of November, told a pitiable story of poverty and distress, that he had been robbed of his traveling pass, and that he wanted a little aid to carry him to Pittsburg on his way home.
Although he could not prove his title as an Odd Fellow in good standing, yet his story so much prevailed upon the sympathy of some of the members that the requisite aid was supplied him and he was sent on his way, and a correspondence instituted with Morning Star Lodge, Md., which resulted in a letter from the Secretary of that Lodge, showing him to be an impostor.
Subsequently he went to Steubenville, Ohio, and made a similar application to the Steubenville Lodge.
He was invited to work his way into the Lodge, and while being examined in the ante-room was stricken with an apoplectic fit, from which he died in a