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MARRIAGES: (continued)
(2) Carey-Hollingsworth, New York - 1853.
April 5, 1853 - At the Park House, by REv. S.H. Norton, Rector of
St. Thomas's Church, Mr. Andrew M. Carey, of Augusta (Oneida County,
New York - Ed) to Miss Elizabeth A. Hollingsworth, of Eaton (Madison
County). (Democratic Republican, Hamilton, New York.)
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(3) Millen-Hollingsworth, Dallas, Texas - 197-.
Miss Diana Lee Millen and Sam Thomas Hollingsworth, Jr. both of
Dallas, will be married Sept. 2 in St. Bernard's Catholic Church in
Dallas. The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Charles Gerrior of Honolulu
and Lamar B. Millen of Dallas. Parents of the groom are Mrs. Allen
Ring of Lubbock and Sam T. Hollingsworth.
Miss Millen is a graduate of Texas Tech University where she received
a BA Degree in journalism. She was a member of Alpha Delta Sigma and president of Theta Sigma Phi. Her fiance received a bachelor of fine arts degree in art from Texas Tech. (From the San Antonio Express, sent by Doug Hollingsworth, Bangor, Maine.)
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(4) Hollingsworth-Hollingsworth, Hamilton, N.Y. - 1855.
In the Episcopal Church, Hamilton, on the 20th inst., by Rev. Hayes, Thomas Hollingsworth of New York to Sarah M. Hollingsworth of this town. (Morrisville Observer, 31 Mar 1855. She was a daughter of Samuel and Esther (Hollingsworth) Hollingsworth; he a son of Nicholas and Lucinda (Styles) Hollingsworth, which said Nick was also a cousin of both sam and Esther! Such were the Protestant Irish.)
Send the editor your cuttings for this and the obituary column, or a birth notice, if found. Give the name and date of the paper, please, if at all possible. No returns can be made of this material. Send a photocopy or typescript - or a very legible handcopy - in lieu of any treasured original.
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"A Bottle Pops Out Of The Sea"
A Cranford (New Jersey) couple found that proverbial bottle in the sea along the Florida coastline. And it turned out to be real, with a message for help.
Edward and Gerda Hollingsworth of 207 Columbia Avenue, discovered the bottle while "beachcombing" on vacation at Nettles Island north of Palm Beach. It had floated all the way from Cuba, apparently. The visible message from inside the glass read: "Abra la Botella," and "Open the Bottle." They took it back to their motor home and opened it before their disbelieving children: Edward Jr., 17; Mary, 12, and Kathleen. The family extricated a rubber cork from the bottle and found instructions, again in English and Spanish, from the Insti(t)uto de Oceanologia in Havana, to fill out a form about where they found the bottle to help the institute study ocean currents along the coasts of Cuba. "Your correct answers are invaluable to us," the message said.
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