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  2. AOL Mail

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  3. Green Lawn Cemetery (Columbus, Ohio) - Wikipedia

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    The funeral space in the chapel was dedicated to Huntington in 1902 with the placement of a bronze tablet there. [40] The Mortuary Chapel was designed to be a place where funerals could be held. Over time, few funerals were held there. Instead, the public began using the chapel as a meditative space, and requesting to be buried inside it. [32]

  4. List of Lustron houses - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Lustron_houses

    These are mostly the Winchester model, but the home at 5520 W. Philip Pl., which has a "unique blue and yellow color scheme, is almost certainly one of the early Esquire “demonstration” homes, which first appeared in 1946." [38] 3802 West Capitol Dr, Milwaukee, WI; Monona. 1305 Wyldhaven Ave, Monona, WI; 208 Starry Ave, Monona, WI; Mount Horeb

  5. Category:Houses on the National Register of Historic Places ...

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    A. A.B. Graham House; Aaron Aldrich House; Abbott–Page House; Abner Williams Log House; Acton House; Adams Street Double House; Demas Adams House; George W. Adams House

  6. Howard Dwight Smith - Wikipedia

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    Howard Dwight Smith was born in Dayton, Ohio on February 21, 1886, as the third child of Andrew Jackson Smith and Nancy Evaline Moore, and was named after the evangelist Dwight Moody. His father, a Civil War Hundred Days Man , had been a farmer (in Logan County, Ohio and Kansas), a teamster and salesman for a flour milling company (in Dayton ...

  7. AOL

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  8. Dying To Be Free - The Huffington Post

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    The program also developed marathon versions of the Game. In its early years, if an addict threatened to leave Daytop, the staff put him in a coffin and staged a funeral. One of Daytop’s founders, a Roman Catholic priest named William O’Brien, thought of addicts as needy infants — another sentiment borrowed from Synanon.

  9. AOL Mail - AOL Help

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