A. J. Hylton

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(Created page with " Worked as an officer for the Indiana Reform School for Boys, Plainfield, Indiana for 9.5 years, for the last several years as the Assistant Superintendent.")
 
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ALLEN J. HYLTON, M. D., has been engaged in the practice of his profession nearly thirty years and his service has included his supervision of several important institutions, in Indiana and in other states of the Union. He is, now engaged in general private practice in the City of Mooresville and is distinctly one of the able and representative physicians and surgeons of Morgan County.
  
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Doctor Hylton was born in Hendricks County, Indiana, in the year 1862, and is a son of Abraham and Minerva (Powers) Hylton, the former of whom was born in North Carolina, and the latter of whom was a daughter of Allen Powers, who came from North Carolina and became a pioneer farmer in Indiana, where he passed the remainder of his life. Abraham Hylton became a stationary engineer by vocation, and both he and his wife were still young at the time of their death.
  
Worked as an officer for the Indiana Reform School for Boys, Plainfield, Indiana for 9.5 years, for the last several years as the Assistant Superintendent.
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Doctor Hylton was an infant at the time of the death of his parents, and was taken into the home of William Conn, a substantial farmer near Danville, Hendricks County, where he was reared to the age of fifteen years, he having assisted in the work of the farm during the summer seasons and having attended the local schools during the winter terms. His ambition for higher education was not to be denied, and in obtaining the same he depended mainly upon his own resources. At the age of twenty-one years he was graduated in the Indiana State Normal School at Danville, and for three years thereafter he was a teacher in the Indiana State Reformatory at Plainfield, he having then been advanced to the position of assistant superintendent of the institution and having retained his executive office seven years. In 1894 he assumed the position of superintendent of the Montana State Reformatory, at Miles City, and he held this position until 1897, when he returned to Indiana and in its capital city completed a course in the Medical College of Indiana. From this institution he received in 1901 his degree of Doctor of Medicine, and he then engaged in the practice of his profession at Mooresville. In 1905 he went to Colorado, where he served fourteen months as superintendent of the Telluride Hospital, and he then resumed his residence at Mooresville, Indiana, where he has since continued in the active general practice of his profession, that practice having a scope and importance that testify to the high popular estimate placed upon him. The Doctor has his office at 43 West Main Street, and his home at 63 West Main Street.
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Doctor Hylton has membership in the Morgan County Medical Society, Indiana State Medical Society and American Medical Association, his political allegiance is given to the Democratic party, and he is affiliated with the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, the Knights of Pythias and the Modern Wocidmen of America.
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In the year 1907 Doctor Hylton was united in marriage to Miss Mabel Mills, who was born and reared at Mooresville and who was a daughter of Amos and Eliza (Bowman) Mills, the former a native of Indiana and the latter of North Carolina. The death of Mrs. Hylton occurred in the year 1927, and she is survived by one child, William Madison, who was born in 1909.
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==
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Worked as an officer for the Indiana Reform School for Boys, Plainfield, Indiana for 9.5 years, for the last several years as the Assistant Superintendent. While there his projects included having boys make bricks.
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==
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In 1894, the Montana State College, Agricultural Experiment Station reported:
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Director A. J. Hylton, of the State Reform School at
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Miles City, considers a sandy loam, plowed eight inches
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deep in the spring, and pulverized as deeply as plowed, best
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for a good yield. He plants two seed pieces of one or two
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eyes per hill, twenty inches apart, and covers them six
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inches deep. For most of the cultivation he uses a double-
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shovel plow, giving final hilling just before they begin to
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bloom, with a turning plow. All irrigating is also done
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before the bloom appears. Earh' Rose and Beauty of
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Hebron are the kinds grown, and these have not been
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6 THE MONTANA EXPERIMENT STATION.
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affected by scab, nor has the seed rotted in the ground after
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planting.
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Saturday, March 27, 1897
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Supt Hylton Resigns v TRIBUNE Helena March Smith was officially notified today that Super intendent A J Hylton of the Milea City Reform school who was accused by of a committee of the last Legislature of various abuses had re The board elected to succeed Mr Hylton B C White of Ubet Fer gus county who now a stockman and lawyer but who was formerly em in a high capacity in the re 4 Elmira N Y
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Supt Hylton Resigns. v , [TRIBUNE SPECIAL.] Helena, Mont., March 2G.~Gov'. Smith was officially notified today that Superintendent A. J. Hylton of the Milea City 'Reform school, who was accused by the-report of a committee of the last Legislature ! of various abuses, had re- slfrneu; The board elected to succeed Mr Hylton, B: C. White of Ubet, Fergus county, who i» now a stockman and lawyer, but who was formerly employed in a high capacity in the re- 4 >*t Elmira, N. Y.

Revision as of 21:37, 23 December 2013

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