. Boone County Recorder . er burden of taxation, wefarmers cannot afford to be tax-ed to pay for the housing andcare of the legitimate productof the whisky business namely,ITie occupants of ths asvlums,poorhouses, and jails, the major-ity of whom are the victims ofthe liquor traffic and for thecare of whom the license feps are only a trifling annuity away vhe hllls of whlch thc ceme Fifth, the profits iu Uj£* iriak- ^ knfll is one, to make room for railroad tracks, have foundmany interesting relics of earlyresidents of Riverside, Earl Zim-merman, who is in charge of thework, has a collection o


. Boone County Recorder . er burden of taxation, wefarmers cannot afford to be tax-ed to pay for the housing andcare of the legitimate productof the whisky business namely,ITie occupants of ths asvlums,poorhouses, and jails, the major-ity of whom are the victims ofthe liquor traffic and for thecare of whom the license feps are only a trifling annuity away vhe hllls of whlch thc ceme Fifth, the profits iu Uj£* iriak- ^ knfll is one, to make room for railroad tracks, have foundmany interesting relics of earlyresidents of Riverside, Earl Zim-merman, who is in charge of thework, has a collection of silver-ware, china, glassware and toolswhich were uncovered by work- The gravel company has con-tracted with the Big Four tolevel the site within two yearsand a half and to furnish roomfor tracks that will total overeight miles in length for switch-Tng^and storage purposes. The siteto be leveled is part of a graveldeposit and a plant to screenand wash the product, with acapacity of 2,500 tons a dibe erected.—Enquirer. by the Colonel When it finally was decided toorganize a village Colonel Sedamand his friends were instrumentalin having the name of the orderto which they belonged perpetu-ated lnthtr Cinciniiati^thatnexbytsto-day. Colonel Sedam died in 1823 andwas buried on the crown of thecemetery knoll. One of his sonsCaptain Cornelius R. Sedam, Jr.,an Indian fighter, Is buried nearhim. A number of other rela-tives and several members of thePrather family, prominent in early history of Cincinnati, are bur-ied near-by. A negro body ser-vant of the Colonel rests at the foot of his masters gim e. Colonel Sodams body was em-balmed and sealed in an air-tight sarcophagus hewn from ablock of limestone, and it is be-lieved that his features may haveb«en preserved, even though al-most a century has elapsed sincehis death. Boone Circuit Court, Kentucky. The monument which stood ov- J. M. Grant, &e., Plaintilfs or Sedams grave was removed sev { Against | Equity, c ral days ago, and,


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectnewspap, bookyear1914