Bette: I served as Law Director of Euclid from 1964 to 1971. Harry Knuth was President of Counsel during that period until he was elected Mayor in 1970. My memmory is that there was a son named Bob who was in education and specifically at Euclid High. Later on he rose to a management position. The Euclid Historical Society should have more information. My memory is that Harry was in the greenhouse busines. Bill Monroe iaces@aol
----- Original Message ----- From: <Iaces@aol.com> To: <OHCUYAHO-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Sunday, September 26, 2004 11:57 AM Subject: Re: [OHCUYAHO] Euclid, OH City Directories > ca 1900-1910 > Bette: > > I served as Law Director of Euclid from 1964 to 1971. Harry Knuth was > President of Counsel during that period until he was elected Mayor in > 1970. My > memmory is that there was a son named Bob who was in education and > specifically at > Euclid High. Later on he rose to a management position. > > The Euclid Historical Society should have more information. > > My memory is that Harry was in the greenhouse busines. > > Bill Monroe > iaces@aol > > > ==== 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 > >