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    1. Re: [OHCUYAHO] 1087 E. 11th St. Cleveland
    2. The 2nd entry mentions "Garfield Hts". There is an E. 111th in Garfield Hts., not E 11th. Could this be a typo problem? Alice -------------- Original message -------------- > Hi! > > I did some research and found that Vesta Fox was not the only person who > seems to have lived on East 11th Street in Cleveland. I found 16 others whose > death notices indicate an East 11th St. address. I am providing you with > their names, year of death, and exact address on East 11th St.: > > Sophie Banas (1964) 2962 E. 11th St. Guiseppi Badalamenti (1953) "369) E. > 11th St." > Seth Watterson (1961) 1806 E. 11th St. Chester J. Masters (1964) "? E. > 11th, Garfield Hts." > Lula belle Johnson (1969) 1341 E. 11 st. Matilda Jackson (1955) 1321 E. > 11th St. > James Callaghan (1958) 1810 E. 11th St. Frank J. Smisek (1934) 688 E. 11th > St. > Ernest A. Rumbold (1930) 1383 E.11St. Barbara Pazderak (1947) 2947 E. 11th > St. > Joseph H. Hutton (1922) 1220 E. 11th St. Hugo Otto Hoehn(1940)Chester Ave & > E. 11St > Axel Hansen (1922) 4159 E. 11th St. Elale May Gould (1938) 1207E. > 11th St. > John H. Doyle (1924) 1350 E. 11th St. Minnie Beyersdorf (1920) 4160 E. > 11th St. > > Hope this may somehow help you. > > Best, > > Peggy > > > ==== OHCUYAHO Mailing List ==== > Virus warnings > > RootsWeb's mailing lists are filtered and attachments are not allowed. A virus > that is distributed as an attachment will not reach you through a RootsWeb > mailing list. > > A recent virus, and several imitations of it, may result in your receiving an > e-mail (or a greeting card) with a virus attached, that appears to come from > RootsWeb or from an address you are familiar with. Some virus will send a > message to all the unread messages in the infected person's mailbox folders; > another will use addresses found in the infected person's address book. They > send messages using a forged address (for instance, using RootsWeb or the > infected person in the return address). The subject line may be from a message > that was recently received, making it even more credible. While it may appear to > come from RootsWeb, that is only an illusion of the virus -- our address and the > subject line is a forgery. > > What can you do? Protect yourself by never opening an attachment from someone > you do not know, or that look suspicious. If an unexpected attachment comes from > someone you do know, write to confirm that the attachment was sent by them prior > to opening it. If you have an e-mail from RootsWeb, and there is an attachment > of any kind, don't open it. Use a virus protection program. Know what viruses > are out there so you will recognize one when if you get it. There are sites that > will help you, including those shown below. > > http://housecall.antivirus.com/pc_housecall/ > http://www.symantec.com/avcenter/ > http://www.stanford.edu/group/partners/hoaxes.shtml > http://kumite.com/myths/ > http://www.mcafee.com/centers/anti-virus/default2.asp > http://www.europe.f-secure.com/v-descs/newapt.htm > > Remember, if you do not open the attachment, you can not get infected with the > virus. Delete it. Then empty the trash bin to make sure it is gone. If you are > using an e-mail program that stores attachments elsewhere on your computer, such > as Eudora, find it there and delete it too. > > ============================== > Gain access to over two billion names including the new Immigration > Collection with an Ancestry.com free trial. Click to learn more. > http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=4930&sourceid=1237 >

    10/27/2004 11:15:40