tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5134611249290839644.post6398674858776895549..comments2024-02-13T01:08:08.878-07:00Comments on Have You Seen My Roots?: The Villers Saga, Part IIUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5134611249290839644.post-84079612237775058272010-11-28T05:16:16.386-07:002010-11-28T05:16:16.386-07:00You are so awesome, Kevin! :) Thanks! Now I know...You are so awesome, Kevin! :) Thanks! Now I know where to send anything else that can't be made out!Cherie Cayemberghttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00748187506552981093noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5134611249290839644.post-48371633052804369582010-11-27T16:26:52.130-07:002010-11-27T16:26:52.130-07:00Starting at the eighth line:
Mrs Tromer, who will...Starting at the eighth line:<br /><br />Mrs Tromer, who will attempt to testify that (unreadable) appearance of the body (unreadable) the skull prove the man who's body was found was murdered as the skull was broken to fragments showing that the head of the victim must have been mashed to jelly. The Jamestown Alert says of the burial of the remains:<br /><br />The body lay in a narrow grave...<br /><br />And then at the end, the last paragraph reads:<br /><br />If the body is identified as that of Tromer as now seems probable Villers, the prisoner in the pen may be taken thence and made to stand trial for murder. Villers was sentenced to nine and one half years (unreadable) in 1893 and would be released in 1902 if (unreadable)Kevin Boylenoreply@blogger.com