. Progressive men of Bannock, Bear Lake, Bingham, Fremont and Oneida counties, Idaho. affairs of life willultimately bring success, and in following thecareer of the prominent subject of this review,the observer will acquire much incentive andinspiration. Tbe qualities which have madeMr. Standrod one of the prominent financialpowers of the state of Idaho, and the legalability which he has manifested have broughthim into connection with a wide range of va-rious classes of humanity and have won forhim the universal esteem of his fellow career has been one of well-directed en-ergy, strong


. Progressive men of Bannock, Bear Lake, Bingham, Fremont and Oneida counties, Idaho. affairs of life willultimately bring success, and in following thecareer of the prominent subject of this review,the observer will acquire much incentive andinspiration. Tbe qualities which have madeMr. Standrod one of the prominent financialpowers of the state of Idaho, and the legalability which he has manifested have broughthim into connection with a wide range of va-rious classes of humanity and have won forhim the universal esteem of his fellow career has been one of well-directed en-ergy, strong determination, honorable methodsand financial integrity. Hon. D. W. Standrod, now a prominentattorney, the vice-president of the First Na-tional Bank, of Pocatello. Idaho, and the pres-ident of the D. W. Standrod & Co. Bank ofBlackfoot, Idaho, was born in Rock Castle,Ky., on August 12, 1859, a son of and Elvira (Campbell) Standrod. na-tives of the same state, the father being aphysician and surgeon at Rock Castle, and aman of influence, public spirit and high char-. BINGHAM, FREMONT AND ONEIDA COUNTIES, IDAHO. 77 acter. Dr. Samuel Standrod was a son of Ba-sil and Rebecca (Rogers) Standrod, who intheir native state of North Carolina owned alarge plantation and many slaves, being ofGerman extraction and of old Colonial mother of the subject of this review was avictim of the cholera epidemic of 1873. dying atthe age of thirty-three years, the father laterremoving to the West and making his home inMalad, where he died in 1885, at the age ofsixty years, and of their seven children onlythree attained mature years, and beside only one is now living, Mrs. Fran-ces Nicholas, of Ogden City, Utah. Hon. Drew W. Standrod received his pre-liminary literary education in the publicschools of his native county, thereafter attend-ing Cadiz Institute, in the state of Kentucky,from which he was graduated in the class of1880, having paid attention to the technicalst


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