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Annals of the Carnegie Museum. 



measure as on the frontier, were replete with interest and with 

 humor. He was greatly beloved, not only by his parishioners, but 

 by a wide circle of friends outside of his own immediate ecclesias- 

 tical relationship. In his death the church to which he belonged 

 lost one of its most beloved parish-priests and ablest men, and the 

 entire city of Pittsburgh experienced a sense of genuine bereave- 

 ment. 



He died on December 24, 1918, in the seventy-seventh year of 

 his age. W. J. H. 



