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Page 2 of 2 Miss Alice Necaise StiU By Caroline Kiefer Longevity seems to be a predominating factor among natives of Hancock County?last month Miss Alice Necaise, daughter of the late iV^ele Lue deGuerre and Edmond Necaise, celebrated 94 years of living, all of them spent in Hancock County and most of them in Bay St. Louis. Born Jan. 14, 1862, Miss Alice was one of eight children. She was born In the house on N. Beach in Bay St. Louis, now owned by Mr. and Mrs. Mae Lan-guirand, and known as ?Kill Top House?. Here she spent her early childhood, until Bay St. Louis was occupied by Union soldiers during the black days of the Civil war, when Sgt. Edmond Necaise of the Confederate Army moved his family to safer quarters on Bayqu ?Gallare* wji^re they remained until the end of the war. Returning to Bay St. Louis, the family move4 into a new home on Main Street in the third block, and here Miss Necaise lived until about th^ee vears aso. when she moved to children a boy and a at an early age during fever epidemic, a si A dele Saucier, moth* Bay St. Louis police c Saucier, died in seventies, a brother. H was in his middle S( time of his death. Thi Home Demo Hears Talk Mrs. Harry Cooley N. C. Wells entertainec of the Home Demonstr Thursday afternoon. Mrs. M. D. Richar< the thought for the n know how to do is the of doing.? The outsts dresg of the afternoo Civil Defense given h Chaneey and Sgt. E. Brooklyn Air Force J arrived from Mobile fc gram. Mrs. Georgia Reager the Jackson County 6/11/2008
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