VIII 
PARK AND CEMETERY . 
sentatives from G. A. R. Posts 58 and 
116 acting as pall-bearers. 
Edward Willoughby, sexton of Mt. 
Moriah Cemetery, Butte, Mont., for 
more than ten years, died at his resi- 
dence a short time since, after a few 
days' illness. He was 47 years old and 
had quite recently accepted the appoint- 
ment to the office of sexton at the new 
Mountain View Cemetery on the Nine- 
Mile boulevard. He leaves a wife and 
three sons. 
CEMETERY NOTES 
{Continued f rom page 3S0) 
for driving faster than a walk in Cave 
Hill Cemetery. The judge held that the 
ordinance prohibiting driving faster 
than a walk in the cemeteries was valid. 
The bequest of the late David Fro- 
man, of Albany, N. Y., of $12,000, to 
be used as a perpetual fund for the care 
of the local Masonic cemetery will en- 
able the St. John’s Lodge of Masons to 
carry out some much desired improve- 
ments. 
The Crystal Lake Cemetery Associa- 
tion, Minneapolis, Minn., has recently 
acquired by purchase enough new prop- 
erty to bring its holdings to* up nearly 
200 acres, making it one of the largest 
cemeteries in the northwest. 
A Denver firm is negotiating with the 
officials of Colorado Springs, Colo., for 
the erection of a compartment mauso- 
leum in Evergreen Cemetery. 
The question of better roads is holding 
the attention of the trustees of the 
Woodlawn Cemetery Association, Wi- 
nona, Minn. It has become one of the 
most pressing needs of the cemetery, 
and will have consideration in the very 
near future. 
The Court of Appeals,- Albany, N. Y., 
recently overruled a demurrer of the 
Pinelawn Cemetery, Incorp., of 1271 
Broadway, New York, which vitally in- 
terests the holders of some 127,850 of 
its certificates. It is claimed that 100,- 
000 persons in five different states are 
affected by the decision. It appears that 
in 1902 eleven cemeteries in Suffolk Co. 
were consolidated, under the terms of 
which the new Pinelawn Cemetery was 
authorized to issue 127,850 shares to be 
known as purchase money certificates, 
which were constituted liens on the land, 
and each holder was entitled “to have 
paid over to him such proportion of 
the funds from the purchase of lots as 
the number of shares in such cemetery 
held by him bears to the entire num- 
ber of shares issued and shall continue to 
be so entitled until the last burial lands 
in such cemetery are sold and their pro- 
ceeds distributed according to the terms 
of said certificates,” The terms pro- 
vided that half of the purchase money 
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