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News-Journal from Mansfield, Ohio • 8

News-Journal du lieu suivant : Mansfield, Ohio • 8

Publication:
News-Journali
Lieu:
Mansfield, Ohio
Date de parution:
Page:
8
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

THE MANSFIELD NEWS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1907. DAMAGES OF $10,000 CAPT. H. L. REED BRINGS SUIT IN COMMON PLEAS AGAINST THE C.

ST. L. R. R. FOR PERSONAL INJURIES SUSTAINED In a Railroad Wreck While a Passenger on the Big Four Between Galion and Columbus--Train White Going at a High Rate of Speed Ran Into an Open Switch and Coaches Were Overturned, Resulting in Injuries to the Mansfield Man Which it is Claimed are Permanent.

H. L. Reed, by his attorneys, Kramer Reed and W. S. Kerr, has begun suit in common pleas court against the Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago St.

Louis Railway company for $10,000 damages for personal injuries. The plaintiff alleges that the defondant, the C. St. L. Railway company, prior to June 18, 1907, was and is now a corporation duly organized and incorporated under the laws of Ohio.

That it owned, operated and controlled a line of railroad together with its locomotives, passenger coaches and its other rolling stock used in the operation of a railroad; the railroad extends from the city of Cleveland, Ohio, to the city of St. Louis, and elsewhere passing through Gallon and Columbus in Ohio. Further that on June 18, 1907, and prior thereto and ever since, the defendant was and is now a common carrier of passengers for hire, He alleges that at the time the defendant had in its employ agents, servants and employes to operate its line of railroad and the trains on the same. The plaintiff says that on June 18, 1307. he with others, boarded one of defendant's passenger trains at Galion and paid his fare to Columbus, Ohio, which fare was received by the defendant, and he became a passenger of the defendant company; the train which the plaintiff boarded left Calion at 9:15 a.

m. and arrived at Columbus at 10:30 a. m. when on time. While he was thus being carried as a passenger by the defendant company on its train from Galion to Columbus with great speed, a short distance out of Columbus and without any warning or notice to the plaintiff and without any fault or negligence on the part of the plaintiff, but through the negligence and carelessness of the company, the train left the main track and turned into and upon a side track through an open switch and thereby the car upon which the plaintiff was riding was thrown upon its side against a bank along the line of railroad, partially demolishing the car 1:1 which the plaintiff was riding and throwing him with great force and violence against the side of a wash stand on the opposite side of the car from where the plaintiff was riding.

He received severe and painful infuries to his hip, also serious and permanent injuries to his back and side causing him ever since great physical and mental suffering. His kidneys are also injured so that he is unable to do any work that requires any strength and he suffers continually. Wherefore the plaintiff asks judgment for $10,000 damages and for costs of suit. SIXTEEN TIMES AROUND EARTH Is Distance Crall Has Traveled 29 Traction Conductor. John P.

Crall, the oldest conductor on the Ohio Central Traction lines in point of service, has secured a 60 days leave of absence from his duties, effective Thursday and on next Tuesday will leave with a party of Galion people to visit Oklahoma and Indian which by that time will have been combined in statehood as the one state of Oklahoma. While there he will visit his brother, H. J. Crall, at Anadarko, Cado county, Indian and will make his visit one of sight seeing and recreation. During Mr.

Crall's eight years of Hay's Hair Health Never Fails to RESTORE GRAY HAIR to its NATURAL COLOR No matter how long it has been gray or faded. Promotes a luxuriant growth of healthy hair. Stops its falling out, and positively removes Dandruff. Keeps hair soft Philo and glossy. Is not a dye.

Hay Spec. Newark, N. J. 50c. and $1.00 bottles, all druggists.

BARTON, ASHBROOK, HURSH PHARMACY, MOWRY LUCAS RAUCH ARMOND, CALD. WELL BLCOR. The Knock-out Blow. The blow which knocked out Corbett was a revelation, to the prize fighters, From days of the ring the knock-out blow was almed for the jaw, the temple or the jugular vein. Stomach punches, were fighter, thrown but if in a to scientific worry man and had told one of the old fighters that the most vulnerable spot was the region the stomach, he'd have laughed at him for an ignoramus.

Dr. Pierce is bringing home public a parallel fact; that the stomack is the most vulnerable organ out of the prize ring 8.8 well as in it. We protect our heads, throats, feet and lungs, but the we are utterly indifferand to, knocks until us diseace out. finds Make the your solar stomaching, sound and strong by the use of Doctor Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, and you protect yourse in your most vulnerspot. "Golden Medical Discovery? cures stomach," indigestion, or dyspepsia, torpid liver, bad, thin and 1m- pure blood and other diseases of the organs of digestion and nutrition.

The "Golden Medical Discovery has specific curative effect upon all mucous surfaces hence cures catarrh, no matter where located or what stage it may have reached. In Nasal Catarrh It 18 well to cleanse passages with Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy fluid while using the "Discovery as a constitutional remedy. Why the "Golden Medical Discovery cures catarrhal diseases, 8.5 of the stomach, bowels, bladder and other pelvic organs will be plain to you if you will read a booklet of extracts from the writings of eminent medical authorities, endorsing its Ingredients and explaining their curative properties, It mailed free on request. Address Dr.

R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. This booklet gives all the Ingredients entering into Dr.

Pierce's medicines from which it will be seen that they contain not a drop of alcohol, pure, triple-refined glycerine being used Instead. Pierce's great thousand-page Illustrated Common Sense Medical Adviser will be sent free, paper-bound, for 21 onecent stampa, or cloth- -bound tor 31 stamps. Address Dr. Pierce as above. service on the traction line he figures that lie has traveled 400,000 miles in going back and forth over his run.

When one stops to think that this distance equals sixteen times the distance around the world at its greatest distance, the immense distance that Mr. Crall has gone in the discharge his duties may be realized. Mr. Crail has been a most faithful employe of the traction company and all enter into the hope that his vacation may be a pleasant and helpful one. Galion Leader.

COURT HOUSE CULLINGS Recorder's Office, Transfers: Charles E. Heath et. al to Halsey F. Root, lot No. 290 in Plymouth, $250.

Harry W. Tucker et al to Sarah M. Wise, lot No. 1375 in Shelby, $250. John Zeiters et.

al to Sarah M. Pittenger, 4 acres of land in Franklin township, $207.50. Martha E. Byrd et al to the city of Mansfield, 10 acres of land in Madison township, $1, George W. Snyder et al to Joseph S.

Hedges, 34 lots in Mansfield (undivided one-third interest), $1,600. Probate Court. Marriage Licenses: Waldo E. Hartman, of Shelby, and Ella J. Light, of Franklin township.

Rev. I. E. Moody officiating clergyman. Harley Stafford, of Mansfield, and Odessa Ross, of Mansfield.

Rev. S. P. Long officiating clergyman. W.

E. Uebel, of Bellville, and Effie Higgins, of Bellville. Edgar R. McCully, of Galion, and Anna C. Hartman, of Mansfleld.

Rev. S. P. Long officiating clergyman. Minute Docket: Ella Askew, of Shelby, appointed administratrix of the estate of Lydia Askew, deceased.

Bond $6,000. Appraisers, Robert Kinkead, M. I. Love and A. Moyer, Appearance Docket: 1726.

Jacob Friday VS, Mirandy Friday. Civil action. Divorce. R. E.

Hutchison attorney for the plaintiff. INDIAN CHIEF CARVED IN ROCK Unique Monument For a Battleground In Kentucky. To stand as long as the rocks them selves James Andrew Scott is having a colossal figure of an Indian chief in full battle array carved out of a solid pinnacle of rock overlooking his "In dian rock camp" out on the waters of Elkhorn creek, about five miles from Frankfort, ou the Peak's Mill pike, says the Louisville Courier Jour. nal. Not only will the commanding figure of the aboriginal chieftain stand as a unique and picturesque landmark through future years, but it will prove a monument to an incident in the early bistory of Kentucky intimately and directly connected with the settlement of the Frankfort section of the state and which occurred almost under the shadow of the rock out of which the Indian figure will be hewn.

It WAS on the site of Mr. Scott's "camp," as he calls his delightful sumther retreat, that the celebrated Cook massacre occurred in the days when Kentucky was in reality a "dark and bloody ground," and afterward one of the bravest of the chiefs of the attack. ing red men met his death on the massIre rock whence the camp takes its name. Pola Rossak, who was one of the Austrian sculptors engaged In the carving of the magnificent pediment to the new capitol, has been engaged by Colonel Scott for this work and has already begun his preparations. Mr.

Scott's place is in a deep recess between two overhanging cliffs, and it is on the eastern pinnacle that the figure of the Shawnee chief is to be made. Arrangements are also being made to have a series of Indian figures made to take a place in a natural niche which is found in the western pinnacle and which will add much to the picturesqueness of the effect. FROM THE STATE CAPITAL Columbus, No. closes its fiscal year today with a splendid surplus in the treasury. When all the deposits of the various state departments have been made it is estimated that the balance oll hand at the close of business today will approximate the goodly sum of five millions of dollars.

Quite a respectable showis it not when the disquietude of the recent past in financial circles is considered? The year has been an exceedingly prosperous one, and the state is able to boast of having a million and a half dollars more than was in the treasury at the close of the fiscal year in 1906. This opulent condition, of course, is due primarily to the prosperous times, and represents largely the contributions made to the' state as taxes by the railroads, public service corporations, foreign and domestic corporations and insurance companies. While the individual taxpayer also contributes the great bulk of money required to manage the affairs of the state comes from the corporations. The cost of maintaining the Ohio penitentiary for the fiscal year will approximate about $280.000, which includes the payment of a debt of $47,000 which has been outstanding against the institution for several years. The receipts from all sources will aggregate $263,000 or within about $17,000 of making the institution self sustaining.

The average cost for keeping prisoners has been $119 per man, but based on the receipts the actual cost to the state will not exceed $15 per head. This record, according to the statement of the prison officials, is the best In the history of the big prison. In a discussion of the separation of state and local revenues, Professor T. S. Adams of the University of Wisconsin, in an address before the National Tax conference here Thursday evening, declared that under the guise of this specific reform, which to a certain degree is highly commendable, a programme of fiscal decentralization is being advocated, which is thoroughly bad.

He said the greatest fiscal evil of the present time is the inefficient assessment of property. And the most promising way, if not the only way of correcting this evil, is by increasing the supervision and control by the state government, through permanent tax commissions, over local assessment work. The programme of separation should not be carried far enough to interfere with this wholesome centralization of assessments. Moreover, separation should not be carried so far as to deprive heavily burdened municipal governments of revenues logically belonging to them. There is no object in completely abolishing direct taxation by the state.

On the contrary, if such taxes are light and are apportioned or equalized by efilcient tax commissions who take the work of equalization seriously, they are likely to prove a blessing instead of a curse. They maintain the interest of the average ettizen in the expenditures of the state, and they compel state tax commissioners to gather data which is invaluable in the apportionment or equalization of county taxes. Charles R. Fisher, president of the board of trustees of the Athens State hospital made a verbal report to Governor Andrew L. Harris Thursday evening, of the circumstances surrounding the death of Mary North on Oct.

24 last, who is alleged to have been the victim of brutal treatment at the hands of one of the institution attendants. At the close of Mr. Fisher's talk, Governor Harris announced that a special meeting of the board will be held next Tuesday, when a definite statement will be givell to the public as to the truthfulness or the falsity of the charges. The effect of the second opinion by the attorney general relative to the tenure of offices of justices of the peace elected in 1904, will be to annul many appointments all over the state made by township trustees on the supposition that vacancies existed immediately following the election where the incumbents were not reelected to succeed themselves. An has already been stated in this correspondence, the department holds that the terms of these officials does rot expire until Jan .1.

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE LECTURE At Bucyrus by Mrs. Mims Draws Auditors from Adjoining Cities. A party of nineteen people, the majority of them members of the Christian Science church of this city and the balance interested in the movement, went to Bucyrus Thursday afternoon and attended the lecture of Mrs. Sue Harper Mims, of Atlanta, member of the international Christian Science lecture board of Boston, Mass. The lecture was given in the opera house at Bucyrus and was well attended.

The scientists who went over from this city were well rewarded for the long ride of about 28 miles over the trolley lines and the 25-mile return trip over the Pennsylvania road at midnight. Mrs. Mims ranks as one of the best of the lecture board and the audience last night was sorry when the ad- Superfluous Hair Removed by the New Principle De Miracle a revelation to modern science. It is the only scientific and practical way to destroy hair. Don't waste time experimenting with electrolysis, X-ray and depilatories.

These are offered you on the BARE WORD of the operators and manufacturers. De Miracle is not. It is the only method which is indorsed by physicians, surgeons, derinatologists, medical journals and prominent zines. De Miracle mailed, sealed in plain wrapper for, $1.00. Your money back without question (no red tape) if it fails to do all that is claimed for it.

Hooklet free, in plain sealed envelope by the De Miracle Chemical 1909 Park New York. For sale by all first class druggists, department stores, hairdressers, and dress was finished at the end of an hour and a half. Mrs. Mims is a southern woman, born in Mississippi, has been on the lecture platform in the interest of Christian Science for 15 years and is not only a thoroughly educated woman, but one of the most finished public talkers among the women of the day. Three weeks ago she visited Mrs.

Mary Baker Eddy, the head of Christian Science, at her home in Concord, N. H. At the close of the address an impromptu reception was held on the stage for Mrs. Mims and practically everybody in the audience the distinguished lady. In to the party which attended from Mansfield there were people present from Marion, Galion, Crestline, Upper Sandusky, Fostoria, Tiffin and other points.

NEIGHBORHOOD DEATHS. The Caldwell Bloor Co. Repp. Mrs. Eliza Repp, a well known resident of Jackson township, Ashland county, died Wednesday.

Hiner. Eli Hiner, aged 63, died at his home in Ashland, Thursday. He was a member of Andrews Post, G. A. R.

Fralick. Mrs. Harriet Fralick, wife of Elias H. Fralick, died Wednesday at. her home in Galion.

Four weeks ago Mrs. Fralick was operated upon. Mr. and Mrs. Fralick would have celebrated their golden wedding anniversury next January.

Dute. Mrs. Mary Dute, wife of Frank Dute, of Bucyrus, died Thursday morning. McCullough. James Neptune this morning received word from Butler, announcing the death of Mrs.

Isaac McCullough, a sister of Mrs. Neptune, and well known here. The deceased suffered a stroke of paralysis 011 Sunday and never spoke afterwards, but was conscious part of the time. Mrs. McCullough was aged about 77 years.

Funeral services Saturday at 10 o'clock. Democrat. A Handy Pocket Diary. The pocket diary issued this year by C. A.

Snow Patent Attorneys of Washington, D. is one of the most useful and complete books of the kind we have seen. It contains beside ample space for daily memoranda and cash account, information about patents and other data of value to the business man, the mechanic and general public. Nowhere that we know of can such a complete memorandum book be obtained for so little. Copies may be had by sending two cents to C.

A. Snow Patent Attorneys, Warder Washington, D. C. SIRE A FRESHIE, SON A SOPH. Father Hazed by Son, but Took the Latter's Shirt In a Rush.

A son is a sophomore and his father has to wear A freshman cap in the University of Missouri, says a State Columbia (Mo.) dispatch to the New York Times. Elmer Ellsworth Vannatta has returned to the university after an absence of twenty-three years and has begun a four years' course in the agricultural department. His son, Earl, went to the university last year and is now enrolled as a full sophomore. The senior Vannatta is forty-four years old. At the age of twenty he came to Columbia and spent one year in the academic department.

He then returned home and married a graduate of Stephens college, Columbia. The younger Vannatta, twenty years old, aided in compelling "the governor" to discard his hat and don a little cap, according to the edict issued by the upper class men. The old man got even a few days later in the class rush. He lined up with the "freshies," and when the dust cleared away he was waving three-fourths of his heir's shirt. The father goes in for gymnasium work three times a week and takes in cross country runs with members of his class who are in their teens.

He is afraid to tackle football, but is 1 a rooter of the first water. Like the rose, it has a sweetness its' own'--ELIJAH'S MANNA Easily the most delicious flavour of any flake food known. No Cooking Required BE SURE the food comes to the table CRISP. When package 19 allowed to remain open the molsture of the air makes it tough. In such cage insist that be dried in an oven as per directions on then It is delicious.

Grocers sell at 5 and 15 cents. Made by Postum Cereal Battle Creek, Mich. 03 0 JUST RECEIVED A LARGE SHIPMENT OF THE NEWEST THINGS IN DAVENPORT SOFA BEDS One style, COVERED IN VELOUR- And just think of it-A GENUINE at- LEATHER DAVENPORT, with $20.00 massive quartered oak frame, forOne style, COVERED IN CRUSHED only $45 MOHAIR PLUSHOthers up to $75.00. $25.00 WHEN YOU HAVE A DAVENOther styles in SOFT GOODS up to- PORT SOFA BED it is not necessary to have a spare bed-room. Did you ever $50.00 over think of while that? we have Don't the large delay, look assortment.

them REMEMBER THE PLACE-IT'S AT SC SCHROERS' 109-III-113-115 NORTH DIAMOND STREET. FALL SUITS and Overcoats We offer a splendid assortment of all the late fashionable colors and smart effects. "'Miller-Made" Garments Fit Perfectly and possess an individuality not possible to procure elsewhere. John H. Miller 48 West Fourth St.

THE MAN WHO SWEARS BY THE FISH BRAND SLICKER is the man who has tried to get the same service out of some other make ROWER'S FISH BRAND Clean Light Durable Guaranteed Waterproof and Sold Everywhere at $300 ILLUSTRATED CATALOG FREE FOR THE ASKING 4 TOWER CO A CO LINTER TORONTO CAM VALUABLE SUGGESTIONS, CONCERNING PLUMBING 4th-THE KITCHEN. The plumbing in the kitchen is rather complex. It consists of a sink and hot water boller, with gas heater altached and is occasionally connected with the range or cook stove. Suitable traps must protect the sink from becoming a channel for sewer gas--a grease trap is strongly recom. mended, as this kind is a receptaclo for the grease, which can be removed at intervals.

The liquid waste from the kitchen, when conducted through an ordinary trap, tends to narden on the sides of the waste pipe, and in time completely clog it, The hot and cold water plumbing in the kitchen must be constructed so as to secure a free circulation of the water. Care should be taken in cold weather that the pipes do not freeze. and if they do freeze, that they are thawed out before a fire is started. Beware of old unsanitary plumbing fixtures in the kitchen. Their ence is a serious menace to your health.

I am in a position to furrish you good plumbing at reasonable prices, with modern methods and material. WM. M. HARRIS Both phones 104. 6 East Third St.

News Wants Are constantly at your service. Cheap ind effective, YOUR Winter Garments ON CREDIT Suits, Coats, Millinery and other apparel for Women, and Overcoats, Suits, for Men can be purchased here on the same liberal credit plan. The best feature of our easy term is this: You don't have to pay a penny more for your Clothing than you would pay at any cash store. Make Us Your Savings Bank Deposit a little with us every week and we will fit you out for the winter in the most fashionable and serviceable fabrics, and the convenient weekly payments will not embarrass you in the least. Our showing of Fall Goods must compel attention.

All that's new and good in endless variety in Men's and Women's Winter Clothing can be found here The time to inspect this stock is now. The G. R. Hopkins Co. 120 North Main St.

Wall Paper WINDOW SHADES, ART GOODS, PICTURES and hundreds of other articles that go to beautify your home you can find in endless varieties at our store. KOCH FISHER!.

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