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    1. New Article for United States - Ohio
    2. See end of this message for instructions on how to unsubscribe. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A new article has been added at Newspaper Abstracts > United States > Ohio > Muskingum Direct link to article: http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/link.php?id=26417 More articles for Muskingum can be found at: http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/index.php?action=displaycat&catid=2521 Article Title: Albuquerque Morning Journal Article Date: July 18 1910 Article Description: Youth Faces Murder Charges Article Text: Zanesville: William Wurster Jr a 15 year old boy was arrested here today charged with murder in the first degree in connection with the lyunching of Carl Etherington, the 'dry'detective, at Newark ten days ago. The warrant accuses Wurster of fastening the rope around Etherington's neck. Wurster who is employed in a pool room here was held without bail. To reporters he said he was in the mob adding that he had been drinking. Newark: A searching investigation into recent riots here and the lynching of Carl Etherington a 'dry'detective is promised by the special grand jury which convenese here tomorrow. Attorney General Denman and his assistsnt,William Willer held their final conference tonight with Preosecutor Smythe and Mayor Ankele prior to the special grand jury's session.All downtown Newark saloons were closed today but the police raided two in the outskirts of the city. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ IMPORTANT: To stop receiving these notifications, you need to know if you are receiving them through a mailing list or if you subscribed through the Newspaper Abstracts website. Either way, you had to have subscribed yourself, as we do NOT just add people randomly to our notifications. To determine what you subscribed to, look at the subject line of this message. If the subject line begins with the words 'Old-News' followed by 'New Article for', then you are receiving this notification through a mailing list. Look at the end of this message for instructions on how to unsubscribe. If the subject line says 'New Article for' - but does NOT have 'Old-News' in front of it - then you subscribed through the website. To unsubscribe, go to http://www.newspaperabstracts.com and login. Once logged in, click on 'Your Account' near the upper right corner of the screen. Once there, click on the 'Edit' button next to the statement 'Profile of your-username'. Then look at the line that reads ' Receive email notification of every new article added to the site?' and make sure it says 'No'. If it says 'Yes', then change it to 'No' and then click on 'edit profile'. Next click on 'Manage Subscriptions' to see if you subscribed to receive notifications of articles added to a specific state or county. If so, check the box next to the state or county and then click on 'Cancel Subscriptions'. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ NewspaperAbstracts.com - Finding our ancestors in the news! TM http://www.NewspaperAbstracts.com

    06/03/2006 10:24:52
    1. New Article for United States - Ohio
    2. See end of this message for instructions on how to unsubscribe. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A new article has been added at Newspaper Abstracts > United States > Ohio > Columbiana Direct link to article: http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/link.php?id=26347 More articles for Columbiana can be found at: http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/index.php?action=displaycat&catid=2560 Article Title: Albuquerque Morning Journal Article Date: July 17 1910 Article Description: Boy Shot Article Text: East Liverpool:'Albert Keddle aged 21 years was shot by Detective Ira Rickett of the anti saloon league force tonight. Keddle was standing on the sidewalk, when Detective Ricket it is alleged attempted to shoot Alvin Dawson 21 years old. Dawson escaped the fire and Keddle was shot through the left ankle. Rickett escaped pursued by a crowd, but ran into the arms of a policeman. He and Dawson were taken to the city jail, followed by a crowd of several thousand persons. Threats were made to lynch the detective, but he was finally landed behind the bars. Extra police were placed on duty at the jail in an endeavor to prevent a repetition of the Newark tragedy of eight days ago. A rumor quickly spread that Keddle had been killed and hundreds of his friends and acquaintances threatened to take vengeance on the detective. Only a display of force by the police prevented the detective from being roughly handled. The trouble was precipitated by an attack made by Dawson and a crowd of young men on Rickett. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ IMPORTANT: To stop receiving these notifications, you need to know if you are receiving them through a mailing list or if you subscribed through the Newspaper Abstracts website. Either way, you had to have subscribed yourself, as we do NOT just add people randomly to our notifications. To determine what you subscribed to, look at the subject line of this message. If the subject line begins with the words 'Old-News' followed by 'New Article for', then you are receiving this notification through a mailing list. Look at the end of this message for instructions on how to unsubscribe. If the subject line says 'New Article for' - but does NOT have 'Old-News' in front of it - then you subscribed through the website. To unsubscribe, go to http://www.newspaperabstracts.com and login. Once logged in, click on 'Your Account' near the upper right corner of the screen. Once there, click on the 'Edit' button next to the statement 'Profile of your-username'. Then look at the line that reads ' Receive email notification of every new article added to the site?' and make sure it says 'No'. If it says 'Yes', then change it to 'No' and then click on 'edit profile'. Next click on 'Manage Subscriptions' to see if you subscribed to receive notifications of articles added to a specific state or county. If so, check the box next to the state or county and then click on 'Cancel Subscriptions'. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ NewspaperAbstracts.com - Finding our ancestors in the news! TM http://www.NewspaperAbstracts.com

    05/29/2006 11:28:50
    1. New Article for United States - Ohio
    2. See end of this message for instructions on how to unsubscribe. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A new article has been added at Newspaper Abstracts > United States > Ohio > Marion Direct link to article: http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/link.php?id=26308 More articles for Marion can be found at: http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/index.php?action=displaycat&catid=2519 Article Title: Prospect Monitor Article Date: July 13 1905 Article Description: Gallant failure to appear; Real Estate Transfers; Baldwin Death; Welch Divorce; Penney Sanders suit Article Text: To Those Concerned. All persons knowing themselves indebted to the late E. C. Bevis are requested to call on the undersigned within the next thirty days and settle such indebtedness. Mrs. E. C. Bevis They Got Theirs Union county court allowed Attorneys Hoops and Cameron $150 each for assisting in the prosecution of the Richwood bucket shop. Failed to Appear Edward Gallant, who was under indictment in Union county for riot, and assult upon preacher Mitchel at Magnetic Springs some time ago, failed to appear in court last week and his bond was forfited. Real Estate Transfers. MARION CO. Viola B. Hughes to D. M. Breen, part of a lot in Prospect, $275. Rickie Kibler to Viola B. Huges, a lot in Prospect, $1,500. Gottleib Keller to John C. Moore, a lot in Green Camp, $600. Mary Retterer to John Furstenberger, 40 acres in Richland township, $2,000. George Retterer by sheriff to Mary Retterer, 80 acres in Richland township $2,825. Death of Carl Baldwin. Carl Baldwin who a year ago taught the school at Owens and who became well known in Prospect, died Sunday evening at St. Marys, Ohio, of heart failure, aged about thirty years. The funeral was held at Essex, Ohio. Goes to Works to Work There is no excuse for a man being out of work in Marion, Mayor Madder declares, and he proposed to give the city's street corner loafers some incentive for going to work. Tuesday morning Frank Simpson, better known as "Butch" and a former resident of Prospect, was taken before the mayor for a hearing. Simpson is one of the fellows who is known to be a habitual loafer, and in order to make an example of him, the gayor gave him $5 and 30 days in the workhouse. Simpson DIVORCE PETITION Filed in Common Pleas Court in Which Well Known Former Residents of Prospect are Interested Carrie Welch, through her attorneys, Carhart and Warner, has filed a petition in the court of common pleas of Marion county, praying for a divorce from George W. Welch. She relates that they were married in Essex, Union County on December 6, 1896 and two children, Levi aged 8 and Edmond aged 5, have been born. Mrs. Welch charges her husband with gross neglect of duty and failure to provide and states that the first of this year he deserted his family. The plaintiff asks for a divorce and for the custoday of the children. The parties to the suit are well known in Prospect and vicinity. Mr. Welch at one time being station agent for the Erie at Woodland, and later kept a Racket store in Prospect. Soldiers Picnic Five Hundred dollars has been raised in Marion which will be used to make the big soldiers picnic at the Marion fair grounds August 24 a grand success. SUIT FILED In Union County Court to Recover Money Lost in Richwood Bucket Shop F. O. Penney, of Richwood has brough suit against Clarence M. Sanders, James H. Sanders, John M. Sanders, Percy H. Sanders and B. L. Talmage to recover $776.25. Penny alleges that he was fleeced out of the above in the bucket shop at Richwood operated by one George A. Baker of Delaware. Penney bought suit in a civil action against Baker to recover the above sum, and at the April term of common pleas court the defendant confessed judgment for the full amount, but claimed that he had no money to pay with. Penney therefore brings suit against the above named defendants to to recover the money, as they owned the building at the time the brokerage business was conducted. Mr. Talmage is made party defendant to the suit on account of holding a mortgage on the building. RADNOR NEWS David Jones returned to Butte, Montana this morning. Mrs. Jones will follow in the future. Mrs. Ann Thomas is critical ill at her brother's home in Richwood. Mr. and Mrs. Chaney Griffith and son, of St. Louis, are guests of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Humphrey Griffith. Charley Gallant is building a new barn. W. B. Spicer has about completed the contract. Miss Hettie Wolfley is clerking in Delaware. It is rumored that Radnor is going to have another R. F. D. route No. 3. Miss Gertrude Bowen, of Delaware, who went to sister, Mrs. Adams, in Toronoto, Canada, was married there July, 4th. Little Ardith Spicer gave a party to a number of her friends June 28th, it being her second birthday. Miss Lola Bowen and gentleman friend were the guest of her sister, Mrs. W. B. Spicer, last Sunday. Guy Lloyd and tom Griffith opened an ice cream parlor near the Central telephone office. They serve ice cream Tuesday and Saturday evening. CODDING Jesse Almendinger will fire his engine and commence threshing Friday. Arthur Johnson and family took dinner Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Mayfield. S. L. Wottring wife and daughter, spent Sunday with Mrs. Wottring's parents, Mr. and Mrs. David Mayfield. Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cratty entertained Mr. N. E. Barnhart and family, Mrs. Frank Smeltzer and children and Mrs. David Cratty. Jacob Fox and sons, who are always striving for the best, in the way of machinery, have just added a new self feeder to their threshing machine and will start the wheels to rolling the last of this week. NORTON One of the most delightful social events of the season was that which took place Saturday evening when about seventy-five members and friends met at the church and spent the evening in a most pleasing social way. Light refreshments were served after which a short service was held. C. G. Quigg and W. R. James went to Cedar Point Sunday. Hazel Scofield spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. W. K. Jones. West Wheeler and family visited with Geo Wheeler and family Sunday. Miss Adah Wheeler, of Bellefontaine is staying at the home of Mr. Strine at present. RICHLAND Mr. Curtis and family was entertained at the home of Charley Davis and family,k Saturday evening, ice cream was in order and a pleasant time was had. James Smith was in Prospect Saturday afternoon. Miss Edna Grosgross is the guest of Miss Verna Osborne. Mrs. Flossie Davis is on the sick list. Misses Nellie and Myrtle Morris were in Prospect Saturday evening. Mary Snyders was taken Saturday to Columbus by Dr. Simpson of Radnor and Dr. Hedge of Delaware, to undergo an operation at the Protestant Hospital for appendicitis. She is from Troy township. Forest Anderson was in Prospect Saturday evening. ON THE LINE. Mrs. Charles Fryman spent a few days with her parents last week. Mrs. W. E. Boyd was the guests of relatives in Marion Saturday. W. J. Fitts and family spent Sunday in Marion with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Hawk took dinner with J. M. Adams and wife Sunday. Mrs. W. E. Boyd is entertaining the Ladies Aid Society of the Presbyterian church, this afternoon. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ IMPORTANT: To stop receiving these notifications, you need to know if you are receiving them through a mailing list or if you subscribed through the Newspaper Abstracts website. Either way, you had to have subscribed yourself, as we do NOT just add people randomly to our notifications. To determine what you subscribed to, look at the subject line of this message. If the subject line begins with the words 'Old-News' followed by 'New Article for', then you are receiving this notification through a mailing list. Look at the end of this message for instructions on how to unsubscribe. If the subject line says 'New Article for' - but does NOT have 'Old-News' in front of it - then you subscribed through the website. To unsubscribe, go to http://www.newspaperabstracts.com and login. Once logged in, click on 'Your Account' near the upper right corner of the screen. Once there, click on the 'Edit' button next to the statement 'Profile of your-username'. Then look at the line that reads ' Receive email notification of every new article added to the site?' and make sure it says 'No'. If it says 'Yes', then change it to 'No' and then click on 'edit profile'. Next click on 'Manage Subscriptions' to see if you subscribed to receive notifications of articles added to a specific state or county. If so, check the box next to the state or county and then click on 'Cancel Subscriptions'. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ NewspaperAbstracts.com - Finding our ancestors in the news! TM http://www.NewspaperAbstracts.com

    05/28/2006 02:38:38
    1. New Article for United States - Ohio
    2. See end of this message for instructions on how to unsubscribe. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A new article has been added at Newspaper Abstracts > United States > Ohio > Marion Direct link to article: http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/link.php?id=26307 More articles for Marion can be found at: http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/index.php?action=displaycat&catid=2519 Article Title: Prospect Monitor Article Date: July 13 1905 Article Description: Memoriam Monument; About Prospect, Current Events Article Text: IN MEMORIAM Is Large Monument Erected to Victims of Iroquois Theatre Fire Buried at Delaware, Ohio. Messrs. J. F. Dodd and D. H. Battenfield, of Delaware, who lost their families in the Iroquois Theatre fire at Chicago have erected on their cemetery lots, which adjoin each other, one of the largest sarcophagus monuments that adorn Oak Grove Cemetary, in fact it is one of the largest and most beautiful in the state. The inscriptions on the monument are as follows: On the west side near the base of the monument, in large raised letters is the word Battenfield. On the left panel is found the following inscriptions: Sarah Ann Murray, born August 11, 1853, wife of D. H. Battenfield; and their children, John Murray, born January 15, 1880; Ruth Ann, born May 4, 1881; Robert Murray, born Oct. 24, 1888. All perished Dec. 30, 1903. On the east side the name Dodd appears in raised letters, and the following words are engraved in this panel: Ruth Emma Murray, 1856-1903, wife of J. F. Dodd. Their daughter; Ruth Murray, 1890-1903. On the south side is carved the following inscription "To the six lives lost in the Iroquois disaster, Chicago, December 30, 1902. ABOUT PROSPECT Interesting Items of Old Times in and Around the Village and Vicinity. Sorry was I to hear of the sad afflictions which recently befell your wife, in the murder of her step-brother, Charles E. Davis, and his beautiful daughter, by fiends in human shape, in Florida. Oh! it was horrible. I well knew him and his family; his brother, Frank Davis and the writer were members of the same Company and Regiment for a season during the rebellion. He is now living in Kansas City, Missouri. There seems to be an unusual number of marriages taking place in your city these days, as the almanac maker is in the habit of puting it. May it be a long time before any of these couples find (or imagine they do) it necessary to call upon the courts to burst the hymeneal bonds asunder and let them free. In the olden days of Prospect, marriages were for life; today only a short time comes and goes before many apply for a legal seperation, but then you know as the old clown used to sing, "Times ain't now as it used to was." According to the Assessor's report, Prospect has the bulge on Delaware, in the number of horses, by quite a few. Word comes down from your section, along the Scioto, that some nameless weevil is damaging the wheat badly; the same insect is roosting and feeding high in our section as well. No one here seems to know a name for it; it seems to be of a destructive character and the most grain raisers ask of it is not to show its ugly mug in this section after this year. I once knew a man named Addison Osborn, who was editor of the Marion Mirror, a lawyer and a member of the Marion County Board of School Examiners. I received a certificate from him as the secretary of the board, to teach the young ideas of Marion county how to shoot, which I have yet, I never used it. My vote helped him to be elected Prosecuting Attorney of Marion county over James H. Anderson, son of Judge Thomas J. Anderson, one of the old Associate Judges of their county. Young Anderson was a warm personal friend of the writer and far the better lawyer of the two, but his politics were not to my liking. He is still living in Columbus as Judge Anderson and his politics at present are of the correct kind. He has always been lucky politically since that mishap at Marion, marrying a Miss Miller with many broad acres of rich land n the Plains, much personal beauty and accomplishments, this giving him a lieu to the best society. During the Civil war times he held a fore! ign office or two, also a good civil office such as U. S. Assessor or Collector, at home, I think though I am not positive in reference to the latter. Delaware vicinity is still an attraction for some of your younger people, whose mothers were born, raised and spent their school days in southern Delaware township. Miss Clara Cope, one of your leading young ladies is an instance, she frequently visits her many relatives and other friends, who always have the glad hand extended to welcome her. Nothing is heard down this way about the radnor Centennial. Has it been definitely postponed? D. W. C. L. Current Events Mrs. W. C. Anderson was hostess to the Ladies Missionary Society, of the M. E. church, this week. Mr. Henry Katt of Ft. Wayne is visiting his cousin, Nevin Schaaf. The Mothers Council will be entertained next Thursday by Mrs. A. L. Gast. Miss Carrie Owens after several days visit with Prospect friends has returned to her home in Marion. The first night of the blackbird hunt at Delaware, Tuesday night, resulted in 400 birds being killed. Wednesday night the game was not so plentiful. Mrs. Homer Smith, Wedn' entertained Mrs. R. J. Deigle and daughter Beatrice, of Sandusky, and Miss Vern Noll, of Marion. John Decker of Lawrence, Tennessee, is still at Sawyer Sanatorium, Marion, Ohio with typhoid fever. Mrs. Decker returned home Saturday. Mr. Martin Kuehner spent Sunday and Monday with his parents and relatives at West Jefferson, Ohio. Miss Emma Snyder is visiting relatives at Dayton this week. While mowing grass for J. F. Smelzer of near Woodland Monday, Emmet Decker killed a black snake, measuring 5 feet in length. Mr. J. N. Freeman and family left Wednesday for Lakeside to spend their summer vacation at that popular resort. A number of Prospect friends attended a reception given by Mrs. C. W. Lydia at her home in Marion Monday in honor of her birthday anniversary. R. W. Harberson the popular Hocking Valley passenger conductor is laying off a few days on account of a sprained ankle received while stepping from his train. Mr. Albert Sutley moved this week into the residence on North street. Mr. and Mrs. Scott Gast, of Marion visited relatives here, Sunday. Mrs. John Evans and children visited Delaware relatives from Saturday until Monday. Dr. J. R. Osborn has just returned after spending a very pleasant week's vacation up at the Lakes. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Farnum had as guests over the Fourth, Mrs. E. R. Hathaway of Milford Center, Mr. J. Dynes Lee of Marysville and Mr. C. E. Lee of Macon, Missouri. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Farnum entertained at their beautiful country home, "Poplar Avenue Farm." Mr. S. J. Wottring of Delaware, and Mrs. Cora Van Dykl of Athens, Sunday. Miss Theo Gast left this morning to join Miss Winifred Gast at Centerburg, Ohio, where they will be the guests of friends for a short time. While the show was being unloaded at the H. V. yards, a horse driven by Charles Almendinger became frightened at the antics of a camel and ran away. Mr. Almendinger was thrown out, but only slightly injured. Sun Brothers Shows gave a most creditable performance to two large audiances Wednesday. They went to Upper Sandusky from Prospect, where they show today. At the home of her mother, Mrs. Samuel Fryman in Thompson township, where she is visiting a twelve pound daughter was born to Mrs. Corday Knachel, of Cleveland, Ohio, Wednesday. Eight young friends enjoyed a picnic with David R. Griffith at his home south of town Tuesday, in honor of the young man's 12th birthday anniversary. Mr. Lafayette Main, or Norton, was a business visitor to Prospect, Tuesday. Miss Clara Wottring is being entertained by friends and relatives at Delaware. Dr. A. L. Gast and G. F. Gast were at Mt. Vernon on business this week. Senator Bashford, with a record of 2.19, belonging to Charley Price has been sent to Marion and will be trained for the fall races by Harry Tallman. While working around his tile kiln, Wednesday afternoon, W. L. Cox had the big toe of his right foot so badly mashed that the services of a physician were necessary. Miss Lela Zimmerman of Delaware, is visiting at the home of Mrs. T. B. Smith. Mrs. J. F. Wottring, of Green Camp, was entertained by Prospect friends, Wednesday. Mrs. Hazel Bower of Delaware was the guest of Prospect friends Wednesday. The Misses Iva and Mae Kyle left Friday for a few weeks visit with relatives at Cambridge, Ohio. About thirty friends surprised Wm. Berry at his home north-west of town Wednesday evening, the occasion being his 30th birthday anniversary. Everybody highly enjoyed themselves. A happy surprise was given Mrs. Flina McPherson, Monday evening. About forty of her relatives and neighbors called at her home with baskets well filled with good things to eat. It was her 47th birthday anniversary, Mrs. McPherson was reminded with several nice presents. All returned home happy and wishing Mother McPherson a prosperous and successful life. Mrs. T. J. Collins and son Cliff of Newport, Ky., and Mrs. Elizabeth Collins of Cleveland are guests of Mr. Jos. Sauer and other relatives. Mr. Jacob Young and Miss Blanche Young of Mt. Vernon, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Young over Sunday. Miss Inez Humphreys of Richwood, is the guest of Benjamin Ransom this week. Miss Edith Hord of Columbus is visiting with friends in Prospect and vicinity. Queen Esther Circle will give an Ice Cream Social at Gast Pavilion Saturday evening, July 13, 1905. One of the most popular evenings to be spent this season. The K. of P. band will furnish music. Mrs. R. H. Finefrock and daughter and Mrs. Ralph Shaw were Cardington visitors from Saturday until Monday. E. M. Stockwell and family left Monday for a three weeks visit with relatives at Michigan City, Indiana. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ IMPORTANT: To stop receiving these notifications, you need to know if you are receiving them through a mailing list or if you subscribed through the Newspaper Abstracts website. Either way, you had to have subscribed yourself, as we do NOT just add people randomly to our notifications. To determine what you subscribed to, look at the subject line of this message. If the subject line begins with the words 'Old-News' followed by 'New Article for', then you are receiving this notification through a mailing list. Look at the end of this message for instructions on how to unsubscribe. If the subject line says 'New Article for' - but does NOT have 'Old-News' in front of it - then you subscribed through the website. To unsubscribe, go to http://www.newspaperabstracts.com and login. Once logged in, click on 'Your Account' near the upper right corner of the screen. Once there, click on the 'Edit' button next to the statement 'Profile of your-username'. Then look at the line that reads ' Receive email notification of every new article added to the site?' and make sure it says 'No'. If it says 'Yes', then change it to 'No' and then click on 'edit profile'. Next click on 'Manage Subscriptions' to see if you subscribed to receive notifications of articles added to a specific state or county. If so, check the box next to the state or county and then click on 'Cancel Subscriptions'. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ NewspaperAbstracts.com - Finding our ancestors in the news! TM http://www.NewspaperAbstracts.com

    05/28/2006 02:35:38
    1. New Article for United States - Ohio
    2. See end of this message for instructions on how to unsubscribe. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A new article has been added at Newspaper Abstracts > United States > Ohio > Hamilton Direct link to article: http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/link.php?id=26144 More articles for Hamilton can be found at: http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/index.php?action=displaycat&catid=2544 Article Title: LANE Article Date: January 1989 Article Description: Obituary of Walter B. LANE Article Text: LANE Walter B, dear husband of Arthia Cooper Lane. Father of Walter Lane, brother of Louis, Guy, Joseph, Bobby, and Danny Lane, Emma George Jean Taylor and Mary Vanderpool, also survived by five step-children. Monday, January 16, 1989. Friends may call at the Barrere-Gilligan Funeral Home, 2723 Eastern Avenue. Wednesday, 5-8 P.M. Funeral services Thursday at 1 p.m. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ IMPORTANT: To stop receiving these notifications, you need to know if you are receiving them through a mailing list or if you subscribed through the Newspaper Abstracts website. Either way, you had to have subscribed yourself, as we do NOT just add people randomly to our notifications. To determine what you subscribed to, look at the subject line of this message. If the subject line begins with the words 'Old-News' followed by 'New Article for', then you are receiving this notification through a mailing list. Look at the end of this message for instructions on how to unsubscribe. If the subject line says 'New Article for' - but does NOT have 'Old-News' in front of it - then you subscribed through the website. To unsubscribe, go to http://www.newspaperabstracts.com and login. Once logged in, click on 'Your Account' near the upper right corner of the screen. Once there, click on the 'Edit' button next to the statement 'Profile of your-username'. Then look at the line that reads ' Receive email notification of every new article added to the site?' and make sure it says 'No'. If it says 'Yes', then change it to 'No' and then click on 'edit profile'. Next click on 'Manage Subscriptions' to see if you subscribed to receive notifications of articles added to a specific state or county. If so, check the box next to the state or county and then click on 'Cancel Subscriptions'. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ NewspaperAbstracts.com - Finding our ancestors in the news! TM http://www.NewspaperAbstracts.com

    05/23/2006 04:57:49
    1. New Article for United States - Ohio
    2. See end of this message for instructions on how to unsubscribe. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A new article has been added at Newspaper Abstracts > United States > Ohio > Licking Direct link to article: http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/link.php?id=25773 More articles for Licking can be found at: http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/index.php?action=displaycat&catid=2532 Article Title: Albuquerque Morning Journal Article Date: July 10 1910 Article Description: Newark Quiet After Wild Night Article Text: With the town quieted from yesterday'w frenzy that ended in the lynching of Carl Etherington "dry detective" the city authorites tonight are making preparations for the aftermath. Mayor Herbet A Atherton tonight announced that if the Anti Saloon league sent another raiding party here,he would declare for marital law and call upon Governor Harmon for troops. "If Harmon attempts to remove me,I will fight him to the last ditch" declared the Mayor. Judge C M Seward of common pleas court stated that he might call a special grand jury to investigate the lynching. The mayor tonight ordered the two soft drink places closed until after order is restored. It is declared that three negroes led the lynching party. The three colored men have left town it is said. Others implicated left when it became known that Govenor Harmon is returning to Ohio to investigate. It developed today that last night's mob was after two prisoners instead of one. Frank Ame an Italian charged with assaulting an iron moulder was the other intended victim. While the mob was searching the jail for him, he hid under his cell. The lynchers left the second rope intended for him lynching on the floor of his cell.The body of young Etherington will be sent to his home in Kentucky tomorrow. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ IMPORTANT: To stop receiving these notifications, you need to know if you are receiving them through a mailing list or if you subscribed through the Newspaper Abstracts website. Either way, you had to have subscribed yourself, as we do NOT just add people randomly to our notifications. To determine what you subscribed to, look at the subject line of this message. If the subject line begins with the words 'Old-News' followed by 'New Article for', then you are receiving this notification through a mailing list. Look at the end of this message for instructions on how to unsubscribe. If the subject line says 'New Article for' - but does NOT have 'Old-News' in front of it - then you subscribed through the website. To unsubscribe, go to http://www.newspaperabstracts.com and login. Once logged in, click on 'Your Account' near the upper right corner of the screen. Once there, click on the 'Edit' button next to the statement 'Profile of your-username'. Then look at the line that reads ' Receive email notification of every new article added to the site?' and make sure it says 'No'. If it says 'Yes', then change it to 'No' and then click on 'edit profile'. Next click on 'Manage Subscriptions' to see if you subscribed to receive notifications of articles added to a specific state or county. If so, check the box next to the state or county and then click on 'Cancel Subscriptions'. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ NewspaperAbstracts.com - Finding our ancestors in the news! TM http://www.NewspaperAbstracts.com

    05/08/2006 11:30:45
    1. New Article for United States - Ohio
    2. See end of this message for instructions on how to unsubscribe. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A new article has been added at Newspaper Abstracts > United States > Ohio > Marion Direct link to article: http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/link.php?id=25724 More articles for Marion can be found at: http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/index.php?action=displaycat&catid=2519 Article Title: Prospect Monitor Article Date: July 6 1905 Article Description: Finefrock, Dr.; Heavy Storm; Worline Estate; Guthery death; Baughman-Miller; Local News Article Text: Passes Examination. Charles Adams Finefrock of Prospect passed the recent examination of the state board of medical examination and registration and has been granted a certificate to practice medicine. Disolution Notice. By mutual agreement, Wottring Bros. have this day, July 6, 1905, dissolved their partnership business in the machine shop. S. L. Wottring will continue the business. All persons knowing themselves indebted to Wottring Bros. are requested to call at once and settle. S. L. Wottring, W. C. Wottring. Mrs. Viola B. Hughes this week purchased the residence of Wm. Kibler on N. Main street for the sum of $1500 and sold to D. M. Breen a lot west of J. N. Freeman's residence on Water street for $275. Mr. Breen will soon erect a business room on the lot. Governor Herrick passed through Prospect, Monday on his way to Toledo. Heavy Storm The heavy storm that passed north Monday afternoon did considerable damage to trees, fences and small buildings near Prospect, but was more severe further north. Jacob Smeltzer, a well known farmer residing three fourths of a mile west of Green Camp, lost two valuable draft horses during the storm. Mr. Smeltzer and one of his farm hands had just placed the horses in his barn and only stepped from the from the building when it was struck by lightning. The building was not damaged but both horses were instantly killed. John Herrigel, a farmer residing near the Smeltzer home lost a cow which was killed by lightnine, while standing out in a field.. Several animals were killed near Claridon. The barn of Henry Knickle also located near Green Camp, was struck by lightning during the storm and was partially destroyed. The building was almost new. Notice of Appointment. Estate of Henry Worline deceased. The undersigned has been appointed and qualified an Executor of the estate of Henry Worline late of Marion County, deceased. Dated at Marion, Ohio, this 27th day of June, A. D. 1905. Newton H. Griffith, Celina, Ohio. Delaware Transfer W. Guy Jones and Jennie F. Jones, quit claim to R. Edgar Jones et al, 120 67-160 acres in Radnor township $1. Death of U. K. Guthery. Upton K. Guthery, one of the best known men of Marion county, died at his home in Marion Sunday morning of cancer at the age of fifty-four years, his birthday anniversary would have been Monday. The deceased was born in Bowling Green township and from a farmer boy he rose to be a power in the political and business circles of Marion city and county. A widow and five children are left of the family. The funeral under the auspices of the Masons and Knights of Pythias was held Tuesday afternoon. Baughman—Miller. Rev. J. J. Halliday, Monday evening at eight o'clock, united in marriage Miss Ida Miller, of Marion and Mr. George S. Baughman, of Prospect. Mr. and Mrs. Baughman will reside in Prospect. RADNOR NEWS The celebration on Tuesday was enjoyed and appreciated by our citizens. The program, the races excepted, was carried out,. There will be preaching by Rev. Mr. Harris at the Baptist church next Sunday. Mrs. D. D. Williams entertained the Missionary Society Friday. Mrs. J. W. Gallant entertains the W. C. T. U. July 14. Mr. and Mrs. David Jones were the recipients of a linen shower at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Emlin Jones last Thursday evening. They leave Monday for Butte, Montana, their future home. Mrs. Guy Penry and Mrs. W. P. Penry spent their Fourth at Akron. Rev. and Mrs. T. P. Jomes and son David and David Kyle of Richwood spent Tuesday here. WOODLAND News is scarce as all our people ar busy harvesting hay and a few, wheat. William D. Almendinger who has been in California for some time is visiting friends and relatives in this vicinity. John Decker and wife who went to Tennessee last spring is making a visit to relatives around here. Harry Rose is still very ill at his home near Woodland. Emery Butz has returned from Coshocton county where he visited with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Fox, Minnie Fox, and Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Grindell attended the Conrad-Costello wedding at Marion Wednesday evening, June 28. George Aronhall of Delaware spent Sunday with his parents. Miss Pet Fish and Chauncy Fish of near Finley chapel spent Sunday with Miss Ida Treese. Mrs. D. Bevis of Prospect is visiting her sons, Robert and Kennith Bevis and families. Jess Kagey of Richwood was the guest of friends Sunday afternoon. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Will Crissinger a son, the Fourth. ON THE LINE Miss Anna Williams of Columbus is visiting with Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Gast. Eva Hildreth of Woodland is visiting Mr, and Mrs, T. A. Hawk this week. John Reynolds and family were guests of Wm. Reynolds and family Sunday. W. J. Fitts and wife entertained Mr. Mr. Fitts' brother and family of Marion Sunday. Miss Emma Adams is taking a vacation and is visiting relative. Mrs. Lafayette Gast and grandson of Columbus and Mr., and Mrs, Dwyer of Newmanville are guests of J. A. Gast and wife this week. RICHLAND Miss Hazel Price, daughter of Robert Price and wife, got cut on a piece of glass unabling her to walk. Forest Anderson was in Prospect Saturday evening. D. T. Griffith of Radnor and his force of men in the afternoons are building an addition to Benjamin Lloyd's house. Mr. and Mrs. David Jones dined with Jack Price and family Sunday. NORTON Ernest Temple who has been staying in California returned home. Miss Francis Brown has returned from a two week's visit with friends and relatives at Mechanicsburg. A number of Norton people enjoyed the trip to Gallipolis. W. A. Howard of Columbus spent last week with his parents. Charles James and Santford Strine attended the tent meeting at Prospect Sunday evening. The Misses Addie Wheeler and Florence Hemphill called on Mrs. George Wheeler one day last week. F.J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. We the undersigned have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligation made by his firm. WALDING, KINNAN & MARVIN ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ IMPORTANT: To stop receiving these notifications, you need to know if you are receiving them through a mailing list or if you subscribed through the Newspaper Abstracts website. Either way, you had to have subscribed yourself, as we do NOT just add people randomly to our notifications. To determine what you subscribed to, look at the subject line of this message. If the subject line begins with the words 'Old-News' followed by 'New Article for', then you are receiving this notification through a mailing list. Look at the end of this message for instructions on how to unsubscribe. If the subject line says 'New Article for' - but does NOT have 'Old-News' in front of it - then you subscribed through the website. To unsubscribe, go to http://www.newspaperabstracts.com and login. Once logged in, click on 'Your Account' near the upper right corner of the screen. Once there, click on the 'Edit' button next to the statement 'Profile of your-username'. Then look at the line that reads ' Receive email notification of every new article added to the site?' and make sure it says 'No'. If it says 'Yes', then change it to 'No' and then click on 'edit profile'. Next click on 'Manage Subscriptions' to see if you subscribed to receive notifications of articles added to a specific state or county. If so, check the box next to the state or county and then click on 'Cancel Subscriptions'. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ NewspaperAbstracts.com - Finding our ancestors in the news! TM http://www.NewspaperAbstracts.com

    05/05/2006 01:54:37
    1. New Article for United States - Ohio
    2. See end of this message for instructions on how to unsubscribe. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A new article has been added at Newspaper Abstracts > United States > Ohio > Marion Direct link to article: http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/link.php?id=25723 More articles for Marion can be found at: http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/index.php?action=displaycat&catid=2519 Article Title: Prospect Monitor Article Date: June 16 1905 Article Description: Prospect Ball Game; Johnson Entertains; Current Events; Davis murder. Article Text: PROSPECT WINS Two Games of Ball Tuesday Afternoon Defeating Agosta and West Mansfield. A large crowd saw Prospect win two well played games of ball Tuesday afternoon at Gast's Park. The first game was between Prospect and Agosta, with Little and Windsor, and Casey brothers as the batteries. Casey was easy for the home players, eight runs being made in the first inning, Little pitched a good game, having 5 strike outs to his credit and allowing only three hits. The score was Prospect 15, Agosta 5. The second game was between Prospect and the strong W. Mansfield team. Prospect had Weaver and Curtis up, with Marsh and Votan for W. Mansfield. Weaver was in great form struck out 12 men and having only three hits against him. Marsh struck out six and allowed Prospect eight hits. The game was a pitchers battle and was one of the best ever played on the home grounds. W. Mansfield can lay the loss of the game to Parks their first baseman who had eight errors chalked against him. The score was Prospect 5, and W. Mansfield 3. Petition Files. Messers. A. S. Somerlot and Charles Williams, doing business at Green Camp under the firm name of Somerlot and Williams, have filed a petition in error in the circuit court asking that the judgment granted Edward T. Williams in the court of common pleas on May 5, 1905, be reversed. Attorney for the plaintiffs are Scofield, Durfee and Scofield. Fell From Window Lester Baker, well known in Prospect, was wrestling with a companion a few weeks ago at the printing office where they were employed in Columbus, when both boys fell out of a second story window to the pavement. Lester received severe sprains of both wrists and several cuts and bruises, while his companion, was also bruised and had his leg broken. Baker was able to go to work again Monday. Delightfully Entertained Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Johnson and son Harold and Mr. T. B. Weaver were delightfully entertained at a six o'clock tea by Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Cox at their country residence east of Prospect Thursday evening. After the several courses had been served by the accomplished hostess and daughter, Susie, a very enjoyable hour was spent, music and reminiscence having leading parts. Current Events Misses Ila Stahl and Dottie Ulrey, of Shelby, were guests of Mrs. R. H. Finefrock over the Fourth. Mrs. Fannie Mickel of Cincinnati has been the guest this week of Mrs. Clara Young. Mrs. Wells who has been the guest of her sister Mrs. W. R. Lauer returned to her home at Cardington today. Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Herbster returned from Lehighton, Pennsylvania, Wednesday, Mrs. Herbster is nearly recovered from her late illness. C. Crissinger of Columbus spent the Fourth with Prospect friends. A large number of Prospect people spent the Fourth at Columbus and Delaware, but the most were at Marion. Jacob Cole of Green Camp, who is well known in this vicinity celebrated his ninetieth birthday anniversary Monday. Mrs. T. R. Griffith spent Tuesday with Cardington friends. The best lubricating oil for harvesting machinery, at Osborn Bros. John H. Almendinger living east of Prospect was kicked by a horse early this morning, fracturing his right leg. Tuesday morning while celebrating the fourth, Lee Carpenter was severly burned by an explosion of lose powder which he accidently ignited with a match. Miss Eva Landon of St. Louis, is the guest of friends in Prospect and vicinity. Mrs. G. W. Fleming returned home Wednesday, after a pleasant visit with relatives in Beaver Dam, Ohio. John D. Owens has been granted a patent on an improved Lime, Kiln fuel saver. Mrs. John G. Stuckey and daughter Emma, were Sunday guests of Marion friends. Mrs. Wm. Wagner who has been the guest of her sister, Mrs. A. Shuey, left Wednesday for her home at Buckhon, Pennsylvania, stoping at Pittsburg to visit relatives. Mrs. Angeline Ditter of Barnesville, Ohio is visiting her daughter, Mrs. R. Crum and family. FOR SALE—The A. H. Curtis farm of 36 acres two and one-half miles south of Prospect, on the C. D. & M. Electric line. Enquire of A. H. Curtis, on the premises. Rev. Schaaf Sunday evening at the home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. John C. Ruth, near Green Camp, united in marriage Miss Florence Ruth and Mr. Milton J. Flach, of Vincennes Indiana. Mr. and Mrs. John Jones visited with Prospect friend Wednesday while on their way from Newark, Ohio to their home in Marion. Mr. P. M. Gast visited relatives at Findlay, this week. NO Clue No clue so far has been obtained of the murderers of Charles and Elsie Davis at Cocoanut Grove, Florida, two weeks ago. A reward of $3000 has been offered for their apprehension. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ IMPORTANT: To stop receiving these notifications, you need to know if you are receiving them through a mailing list or if you subscribed through the Newspaper Abstracts website. Either way, you had to have subscribed yourself, as we do NOT just add people randomly to our notifications. To determine what you subscribed to, look at the subject line of this message. If the subject line begins with the words 'Old-News' followed by 'New Article for', then you are receiving this notification through a mailing list. Look at the end of this message for instructions on how to unsubscribe. If the subject line says 'New Article for' - but does NOT have 'Old-News' in front of it - then you subscribed through the website. To unsubscribe, go to http://www.newspaperabstracts.com and login. Once logged in, click on 'Your Account' near the upper right corner of the screen. Once there, click on the 'Edit' button next to the statement 'Profile of your-username'. Then look at the line that reads ' Receive email notification of every new article added to the site?' and make sure it says 'No'. If it says 'Yes', then change it to 'No' and then click on 'edit profile'. Next click on 'Manage Subscriptions' to see if you subscribed to receive notifications of articles added to a specific state or county. If so, check the box next to the state or county and then click on 'Cancel Subscriptions'. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ NewspaperAbstracts.com - Finding our ancestors in the news! TM http://www.NewspaperAbstracts.com

    05/05/2006 01:50:34
    1. New Article for United States - Ohio
    2. See end of this message for instructions on how to unsubscribe. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A new article has been added at Newspaper Abstracts > United States > Ohio > Marion Direct link to article: http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/link.php?id=25497 More articles for Marion can be found at: http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/index.php?action=displaycat&catid=2519 Article Title: Prospect Monitor Article Date: June 29 1905 Article Description: Local Events; Court Divorce; Brown death; Beavers-Gladden; Taylor Suicide. Article Text: LOCALS W. F. Court is ill this week with tonsilitis. Mrs. J. B. Miller and son Jay will leave Saturday for Brazil, Indiana for a short visit with relatives. Rev. Schaaf at Sugar Grover, near Lancaster, Ohio, will unite in marriage Thursday Rev. J. G. Lebrerman, who is well known in Prospect and a personal friend of Rev. Schaaf, to Miss Anna Sharp, a prominent lady of Sugar Grove. N. C. Gast attended the convention at columbus Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. D. S. Drake moved this week to Columbus, Ohio, where Mr. Drake is employed in the undertaking business. Mrs. Dr. Hinklin will entertain the Ladies Aid Society of the Marion M. E. church, Thursday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. John Adams visited Broadway friends Sunday. Miss Stena Wottring visited with Delaware friends the first of the week. The commissioners have granted the Little Scioto river improvement. Newton H. Griffith has been appointed executor of the estate of Henry Worline, late of Prospect. Rev. A. E. Smith of Marion, has been elected President of Ada college. R. W. Herbster was called Saturday to Lehighton, Pa., on account of the serious illness of Mrs. Herbster, who is visiting relatives. Late advices from Mr. Herbster states that his wife is very ill but improving. On account of ill health Rev. L. A. Belt has resigned as president of Ada College. Mrs. J. J. Roberts, Mrs. Jennie Watkins and Mrs. Dr. Charles A. Finefrock were entertained Tuesday by Marion friends. There will be quarterly meeting at the M. E. church next Sunday. Rev. Fitzwater will preach at the morning services. One year ago Sunday the fatal wreck of the Twentieth Century Limited train on the Big Four occured at Delaware. Miss Dell Gray, Miss Abigail Gast, Miss Laura Treese and Miss Josephine Straub have been re-elected teachers in the Marion schools for the next school year. Current Events Mr. J. E. Smeltzer and family and Mrs. Elizabeth Smeltzer and daughter of Marion, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Smeltzer. Mrs. J. E. Smeltzer and daughter of Marion, returned home Sunday after a week's visit with her sister, Mrs. J. J. Stiffler. Mr. and Mrs. Neil J. Gast had as their guests last week, the Misses Shultz of Delaware. Margaret Ethel Osborn has been given the custody of her young son and granted a divorce from John R. Osborn, by Judge Young of the common pleas court of Marion county. Mrs. C. Able of Marion, is visiting her daughter, Mrs. Rob Adams at E. Buffalo, N. Y. C. S. Clark, of the Sun Bros., show, was in town this week making arrangements for the appearance of the show in Prospect July 12th. John F. Crissinger has in the Recorders office at Delaware, transfered 109 acres of land in Thompson township, to Max Thibaut for $6,500. Mrs. Mary A. Wottring, born in Allentown, Pennsylvania, in 1827 and widow of Samuel Wottring, once a prominent miller of Delaware, died at Athens last Friday and was buried at Delaware, Monday. John Able, of Marion, well known in Prospect, has accepted a position as book keeper for the Marion Milling and Grain Company. Miss Claudine Paxton, of Marion was a Sunday guest of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Hughes. Dr. Guy M. Chaffin, of Adrian, Michigan, and Anna M. Owens, school teacher of Richwood were married Monday evening. Edwin Demarest, Bessie Cobb, Arthur Cook, Pearl Rutter, Maude Roberts, Arthur Becker, Eetta Behelor, formed an automobile party from Delaware who took supper at the Dentral Hotel Sunday. Leon Cope of Osborn Brothers is enjoying his vacation. FOR SALE—The A. H. Curtis farm of 36 acres two and one-half miles south of Prospect, on the C. D. & M. Electric line. Enquire of A. H. Curtis, on the premises. Mrs. J. N. Freeman entertained a party of friends from Delaware Wednesday. C. R. Herr who has been in West Virginia for some time is home on a short vacation. Dr. Feasters' barn at Delaware burned Tuesday evening consuming among other things the doctor's new automobile. Loss $1500. N. C. Hilford who has been laid up with a sprained ankle, was able to go to his work Monday. Prof. T. B. Bolander has received from the county school examiners an eight year high school certificate. Mrs. J. B. Hilford and son, of Neodesha, Kansas, are visiting with Mr. and Mrs. N. C. Hilford. Geo. Noble, of Delaware, spent Sunday the guest of Prospect friends. Miss Grace Harford, of Granville, is the guest of Prospect friends. H. D. Beavers shipped a load of fine horses to New York and Boston this week. Ex-Commissioner, of Schools, L. D. Bonebrake and E. C. Payne, of Columbus, were in Prospect on business this week, About four weeks ago J. W. Hogan the big fat man on the C. D. & M. freight car, received an appointment as detective for the Erie railway. Saturday he was in Prospect on business. Harry Thomas and wife, of Waldo, have been guests of Prospect friends this week. Rural route inspector W. G. Johnson, of Columbus, is making an inspection of the Prospect rural routes, in order to if possible better their conditions. Miss Anabella Beavers, of Perrysville, Ohio, is the guest of her brother, H. D. Beavers and family. A Naptha launch with Sam Croft as captain and Billie Seifert, chief engineer, both bold sailors, of Marion, Ohio, made its appearance on the Scioto river Sunday. The craft was a trim one and will enter the live freight business between Battle Creek Junction, below Prospect and the upper plaza, near Marion Park, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. Vone Roberts entertained a dinner Tuesday, Rev. C. M. Eddy, of Delaware and Miss Grace Harford, of Granville, Ohio. The Misses Winifred and Theo. Gast, Shirley Roberts, Ruth Freeman, and Mr. Ray Pace, attended the closing recital of the Marion School of Music at Marion Friday evening. Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Miller and Mr. and Mrs. Lester Postal, of Marion, were Sunday visitors to Prospect friends. Rutherford B. Hayes, of Ashley, and Miss Iva Coleman, of Waldo, were united in marriage last Sunday. Mrs. T. B. Weaver and Miss Fannie Weaver, who for the past few weeks have been visiting with relatives and friends in northern Ohio, have returned to their home in Prospect. Mrs. Bell Sproat, of Corodon, Iowa and Mrs. J. S. Harmon, of Richwood, have been guests of Mr. and Mrs. r. R. Davids and other friends in this vicinity. Mrs. Gast wishes to call special attention to the fact that she still attends to all optical work and any one desiring spectacles should see her now as during the months of July and August a 10 per cent discount will be made on all gold and gold filled frames. The long winter evenings will come and your eyes will ache so that you cannot read. Get yours glasses now and get accustomed to them before that time, then you can read and sew with comfort. Dont fail to consult Mrs. Gast for any eye troubles. She has relieved many others and can help you. Mrs. M. M. Mohr was the guest of Marion friends Wednesday. There are a lot of towels and dishes at Mrs. S. L. Wottring's, left there after the school picnic, which the owners can have by calling for them. Mrs. Wm. Money and Mrs. Wat Kyle were at Delaware this week. The Misses Vera and Vernice Smith of Marion are visiting with Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Smith at the Commercial Hotel. Herman Kuehner and C. J. Cummings were at Columbus on business Wednesday. The marriage of Mr. Lee Howison and Miss Callie Ault well known people will be solemnized today. Mrs. Minta Simpson Trott of Marion was visiting friends at Prospect Wednesday. P. H. Fackler the monument dealer of Richwood was in Prospect on business Wednesday. Miss Charlotte Watkins has returned from a pleasant visit with relatives at Indianapolis. Henry Adams of Sandusky was circulating among Prospect friends this week. Miss Clara Cope is visiting friends at Delaware. Bob the pacing horse of J. L. Court was kicked by another animal Wednesday morning breaking one of his legs and Bob had to be killed. Mrs. W. E. Groll of Waldo was a guest of Prospect friends Wednesday. Mrs. W. R. Lauer has as her guests, her sister Mrs. A. W. Welsh of Cardington and Mrs. Gilbert and chidren of Toledo. Mrs. Ora Ryder a former school teacher in the Prospect schools and Mr. George Weiland of Mt. Gilead will be married this evening at the home of the bride in Delaware. A number of friends from Prospect will be in attendance. RADNOR NEWS The rededication of Congregationalist church took place last Sunday. Services were held morning and afternoon. Rev. Small, Thomas and Davis of Columbus were present. Rev. J. A. James and wife took their departure from Radnor, Thursday. Rev. James going to the World Baptist Congress, which convens at London July 7th. Mrs. James and children will remain with friends in Pennsylvania. Mrs. Tod Graff of Delaware, was calling on friends Tuesday. Mr. Lewis of Wales, brother-in-law of Rev. Harris, gave a very interesting talk on the Revival at Wales. Mrs. Jessie Harris returned home Tuesday after a visit with her brother, Edgar and wife. Miss Widman of Delaware, was the guest of her aunt Mrs. Ann Thomas Monday. Mr. Willie Welsh of Columbus, is visiting his grandparent Mr. James Smith. Mr. William Thomas had four sheep killed, by dogs Wednesday morning. After the dogs left the sheep, they commenced on some hogs. Mr. Thomas scared them away. Wednesday night the citizens of Radnor gave an oratorio at the town hall. It was a grand affair. Mrs. Augusta Confare and Mrs. Walter Willey was calling on Mrs. Daisy Anderson Wednesday afternoon. Charley Davis and family took an outing Thursday, fishing at the Scioto river. WOODLAND Born to Mr. and Mrs. Thos. H. Henderson, of Tampa, Florida, a son. Miss Hattie M. Johnson, of Moundsville, W. Va., is visiting J. H. Treese and family. Mr. Chauncy Fish and Miss Ida Treese spent Sunday with Marion friends. James Kinnikin and wife of West Richwood was the guest of Frank Hazen and wife Sunday. William Bland and family, of Marion, were guests of relatives here Sunday. Grant Waters and family were the guests of M. F. Hough and family southwest of Prospect. Harry Rose is still in a serious condition. ON THE LINE. Jessie, Nellie and May Roberts attended Children Day services, at Otterbein church, Sunday. Elias Jones spent Sunday with John Neiswander and wife.l John Wynn and daughter visited Russel Thomas and wife Tuesday. J. P. Lawrence has moved his barn back of the road adding much to the appearance of his farm. D. S. Lamarters, who has been visiting in West Virgina for the past ten days returned home Saturday. Milligan—Crabb. Rev. Halliday, Wednesday morning joined in marriage Lovell Milligan and Miss Bessie L. Crabb, well known young people of Prospect. Motion Filed. In the divorce matter of Mrs. Anna Court against John I. Court, the plaintiff has filed a motion in the court of common pleas to have the decree modified so that she can have the custody of her son, Lester Court. Fred Brown Dies Fred Brown, aged 33 years, son of the late George Brown, died hear Marion, Saturday evening. A wife and three children survive. The funeral was held at Prospect Sunday with burial in the Prospect cemetery. Beavers—Gladden Sunday evening Rev. West of Delaware, officiating, Mr. Earnest Beavers and Miss May Gladden, of Perrysville, Ohio, were quietly united in marriage at the home of the groom's brother, H. D. Beavers, on Elm street, Prospect, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. Beavers expects soon to settle in Prospect where Mr. Beavers, who is a veterinary surgeon, will practice his profession. Shoots Herself. Anna Taylor aged 22 years, in a fit of despondency commits suicide at Columbus, Friday by shooting herself through the heart. No cause can be found. She was to have been married to C. W. Lust, a popular Hocking Valley fireman, next month. She left a letter for her brother, Harry Taylor containing only the word "Disappointed." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ IMPORTANT: To stop receiving these notifications, you need to know if you are receiving them through a mailing list or if you subscribed through the Newspaper Abstracts website. Either way, you had to have subscribed yourself, as we do NOT just add people randomly to our notifications. To determine what you subscribed to, look at the subject line of this message. If the subject line begins with the words 'Old-News' followed by 'New Article for', then you are receiving this notification through a mailing list. Look at the end of this message for instructions on how to unsubscribe. If the subject line says 'New Article for' - but does NOT have 'Old-News' in front of it - then you subscribed through the website. To unsubscribe, go to http://www.newspaperabstracts.com and login. Once logged in, click on 'Your Account' near the upper right corner of the screen. Once there, click on the 'Edit' button next to the statement 'Profile of your-username'. Then look at the line that reads ' Receive email notification of every new article added to the site?' and make sure it says 'No'. If it says 'Yes', then change it to 'No' and then click on 'edit profile'. Next click on 'Manage Subscriptions' to see if you subscribed to receive notifications of articles added to a specific state or county. If so, check the box next to the state or county and then click on 'Cancel Subscriptions'. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ NewspaperAbstracts.com - Finding our ancestors in the news! TM http://www.NewspaperAbstracts.com

    04/24/2006 11:34:08
    1. New Article for United States - Ohio
    2. See end of this message for instructions on how to unsubscribe. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A new article has been added at Newspaper Abstracts > United States > Ohio > Marion Direct link to article: http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/link.php?id=25496 More articles for Marion can be found at: http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/index.php?action=displaycat&catid=2519 Article Title: Prospect Monitor Article Date: June 29 1905 Article Description: Clay House Explosion; Greenlee death; Thompson Auto into river; Davis murder; Real Estate Article Text: June 29, 1905 AN EXPLOSION Of Gasoline Sunday Evening. Badly Burns Christopher Clay at his Home in Marion. Christopher Clay, well known in Prospect and a brother of Mrs. J. N. Roush, was seriously injured by an explosion of gasoline at Marion Sunday. the following account is from Monday's Marion Star: "Unconscious and his clothes aflame as a result of a gasoline explosion, Christopher Clay, aged about sixty years, was found lying on the basement floor of his home on Wood street by his son, Arthur Clay, Sunday evening shortly after 6 o'clock. The son's timely arrival saved the old man's life. The elder Clay had started to light the gasoline stove, which is located in the basement. He turned on the fluid then went upstairs to get a match. When he returned, the pan below had dripped full of the explosive. He applied the match, an explosion followed and the old man was knocked unconscious. The women ran screaming from the house. The son retained his presence of mind and dashed into the basement. With his hands he extinguished the flames from his father's clothing, but not until he had been seriously burned about the face, neck and arms. The flesh fell off his forhead and arms in small strips. An alarm from box, No. 38, called out the fire department, but the house failed to catch fire. Dr. R. C. M. Lewis, who was called, arrived a short time after the accident, and dressed the victim's injuries. He states that Clay did not inhaled any of the flame, and that the burns on his face and body are not necessarily fatal, though he will probably be permanently scarred." Death of Mrs. Greenlee Mrs. Margaret Greenlee, aged 64 years sister of Mr. George Johnson of Prospect and Mrs. E. H. Hyatt of Delaware, died at Cleveland Saturday morning of a complication of diseases. The remains arrived in Delaware Sunday morning over the Big Four road, and were taken to the residence of Mrs. Hyatt. The funeral was held Monday afternoon at 3 o'clock, from the residence, conducted by Rev. Dr. Barnes, pastor of the Williom street church. The pall bearers were Fred Sauer, Albert Johnson and Arthur Johnson, of Prospect; William Clark, of Columbus; Samuel Eckles, of Ashley and Gail Hyatt of Delaware. Sheep Claims. Among the sheep claims allowed by the county commissionery, are the following. S. Cox, $107; D. D. Little, $5.00; Frank Hazen, $92; Henry Jacobs, $41.00; E. Durfee, $49.00; A. T. Redd, $35.00; Edward Bender, $36.00; A. E. Tobin, $5.00; U. F. Zachman, $73.50; G. Pftider, $16.50. The county paid par oh all claims, and during the year of 1904-05, the whole amount of money paid out was $1680. INTO THE SCIOTO Goes Auto and One Passenger, Saturday Afternoon, But No Damage is Sustained. Mr. and Mrs. Charley P. Thompson, of Columbus and John Alden, of Sagnaw, Michignn, who were guests of Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Farnum, Saturday and Sunday, had quite a thrilling adventure during their visit. Saturday afternoon the party, who traveled in an automobile with Mrs. Thompson as chaffuer, in order to turn around near the house of Mr. Farnum, backed the auto down the river bank, and the clutch lever refusing to work the machine went into the river until almost submerged. Mr. and Mrs. Thompson jumped, but Mr. Alden stuck to the auto and received a thorough weting. The automobile was not injured but was with difficulty saved from a watery grave. MURDERED ARE CHARLES E. DAVIS AND DAUGHTER ELSIE. Former Residents of Delaware County and Brother and Neice of John David of Radnor. Following is a Scripps McRae dispatch from Miami, Florida, recounting the murder of a former Delaware county man and his daughter: "Charles E. Davis and his daughter Elsie were found murdered in their beds this morning four miles west of this city. The crime was committed Saturday night. Davis was shot in the neck and also strangled to death. The girl was shot in the right and left breasts and is believed to haved been criminally assaulted. The girl's room bears evidence of a struggle, and it is believed she fought desperately for her life and honor. Davis came to Miami 14 years ago from Delaware county, Ohio, and engaged in the nursery business. He was respected and supposed to be without a known enemy. He and his daughter lived alone and the latter being a most cultured and most popular young woman. Rewards aggregating $1,000 for the apprehension of the murderers have been offered. A posse has organized and is now scouring the country. It is thought negroes committed the crime. Excitement runs high and a lynching if not a burning at the stake will follow if the murderers are captured. Mrs. Fannie Barnwell and Mrs. Elijah Barns, sisters of Mr. Davis, live in Columbus; a brother, Mr. John Davis, lives at Radnor; Mrs. Frank C. Poppleton of Delaware, and Mrs. Croft of New York, are half sisters of Mr. Davis. Mrs. B. E. Davis of Delaware, the step-mother of the murdered man, is visiting at the home of her son, Mr. Hosea Davis, half brother of the murdered man, living about a mile distant from Cocoanut Grove, Floridan, and has been there since January. She has been visiting at both homes but fortunately was at the home of her son, Hosea, the night of the murder. Mr. Davis had been quite successful in the south and had accumulated considerable money. This leads his Delaware relatives to the belief that the terrible crime was most likely committed for the purpose of robbery. Although having left several years ago, Mr. Davis and his daughter are well known about Delaware county. For many years Mr. Davis resided with his family in Ostrander where he was engaged in the stock business. Real Estate Transfers MARION CO. Montgomery Lindsay to H. C. and L. P. Lindsay, 275 acres in Claridon township, $10,000. E. E. Osborne to C. Owens, one quarter acre in Marion, $3,000. Samuel R. Riley to Jonathan Ward, a lot in Marion, $200. A. Barron to C. E. Amrine, a lot in Marion, $1,200. J. B. Bolander to Susie Cummins, a lot in Marion, $1,700. C. P. Woodcock to James Fink, one-seventh in 100 acres in Tully township, $500. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ IMPORTANT: To stop receiving these notifications, you need to know if you are receiving them through a mailing list or if you subscribed through the Newspaper Abstracts website. Either way, you had to have subscribed yourself, as we do NOT just add people randomly to our notifications. To determine what you subscribed to, look at the subject line of this message. If the subject line begins with the words 'Old-News' followed by 'New Article for', then you are receiving this notification through a mailing list. Look at the end of this message for instructions on how to unsubscribe. 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    04/24/2006 11:22:08
    1. New Article for United States - Ohio
    2. See end of this message for instructions on how to unsubscribe. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A new article has been added at Newspaper Abstracts > United States > Ohio > Marion Direct link to article: http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/link.php?id=25442 More articles for Marion can be found at: http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/index.php?action=displaycat&catid=2519 Article Title: Prospect Monitor Article Date: June 22 1905 Article Description: Various Village's News; Teaching Applicants; Mathers death; Howser death; Ryder-Weiland Article Text: RADNOR NEWS Rev. J. A. James will soon depart for Europe, where he will attend the World's Baptist Congress in London, as one of the representatives of the Ohio Baptist Convention. Radnor is planning for an old fashioned fourth of July celebration. Particulars will be given later. Miss Ann Thomas is still afflicted with very poor health. Mrs. J. A. James and children will reside in Mansfield, Pa., during the absence of Rev. James, in Europe. C. C. Bowen is the Celery King of Radnor and has some very fine plants. Rev. J. A. James has returned from Fredricktown where he attended the Mt. Vernon Association Sunday School Institute. It is reported that David Jones, when he returns to his home in Montana will be accompanied by a Radnor girl as a bride. Now guess who. Walter Jones and family of Concord, spent Sunday with Radnor friends. OWENS John McClaskey came very near losing one of his eyes, one day this week by a bolt flying and striking him. Mrs. Minnie Tonguet returned to her home near Agosta Saturday, after spend a few days with Mrs. John Kimber. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Boyd were guests of Mrs. Cratty Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Finchbaugh are the happy parents of a baby boy. Mrs. Mina Johnson and daughter visited friends near Marion, Friday. Ora Price, wife and daughter and Jesse Kimber, wife and daughter spent Sunday with Wilbur Price and family near Caledonia. Miss Nettie Prettyman of Agosta is visiting with John Kinder and family. Miss Daisy Rhyne of Waldo was a guest of James Johnson Jr. and family Sunday. Harvey Almendinger called on John Reeckley Tuesday. ON THE LINE. Isaac Aronhalt and wife visited at his old home near Codding, Sunday. Miss Fannie Willauer has been quite sick for a few days, but is now better. Mrs. Wm Russel and daughters spent Monday at her parents home. A. D. Gast and wife and James Gast and wife were guests of Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Smith Sunday. J. T. Ludwig was a Marion visitor Sunday. J. A. Gast and wife were in Delaware Monday. Mrs. Lowe and children, of Columbus were guests of Grandma Dill this week. Mrs. Myron T. Herrick and son of Columbus, and a lady, of St. Louis, took supper with J. M. Adams and wife, Tuesday. J. W. Gast is still in poor health. Will be Admitted Clerks of Court, Bert Benton, of Delaware and W. F. Johnson, of Marion county, Lloyd DeGelley and John Himminger of Marion, Ohio, passed the law examination of Columbus last week and will be admitted to the bar June 29. School Teachers The successful applicants at the teachers' examination held in Marion, June 3, will receive certificates as follows: Two years—Orral Ault, Findlay; May-etta Anselment, Caledonia; E. Lillian Ewing, Marion; W. A. Early, Adelaide; Carrie Hudson, Marion. One year—Edythe Anderson, Marion; Zelda Briggs, Cochranton, Libbie Dowell, Green Camp; Agnes Dill, Prospect; E. E. Holt, LaRue; Jane L. Monahan, Marion; Daisy Markey, LaRue; Carrie L. Mears, Cochranton; Homer McColley, Marion; Jerome Tittelbaugh, Cardington; Golda Kemper, LaRue; Mrs. M. S. Tschantz, La Rue; Etta Walters, Green Camp; Zetta Wolfe, Morra and Ura B. Young, Marion. Death by Paralysis Dr. Samuel Mathers, a prominent gentleman, of Columbus, who has been taking treatment at the sanitarium for some time, died Monday afternoon about one o'clock from a stroke of paralysis. The body was taken the same afternoon to Columbus. Pensions Received. Through the pension agency, of Peter S. Johnson, the following pensions are granted: Hamilton A. London increased from $6 to $12 per month, Prospect; George W. Wright increased from $10 to $12 per month, LaRue; Levi Davis renewed and increased from $8 to $12 per month, Green Camp; Truac Wynn increased from $14 to $17 per month, Green Camp; Charles Shouers increased from $10 to $12 per month, Marion; Samuel Bobinson increased from $17 to $24 per month, Green Camp. Death of Mrs. Howser. Mrs. Elizabeth Howser, aged 86, widow of Jacob Howser, and mother of Mr. A. H. Howser, of the Prospect Lumber Co., died at her home in Richwood Friday, her death being due directly to old age. The funeral was held at Richwood Monday and the remains taken to Marion cemetery for burial. Ryder---Weiland. Invitations are out for the marriage of Miss Ora Estelle Ryder, to Geo. Frederick Weiland, of Mt. Gilead, which will take place at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Granville Ryder, on North Franklin street, Thursday, June 29 at 10 o'clock, in the presence of the immediate relatives of the contracting parties. Miss Ryder is a former teacher in the Prospect schools, and has many friends here who wish her much happiness. Birthday Party. Thursday, June 15, 1905, Miss Ozella Thibaut entertained in honor of her fourteenth birthday anniversary, the Misses Lizzie Diffany, Lola Idleman, Clara and Daisy Hoffman, Katherine and Helen Dutt, Lura Oswald, Rhena and Florence Diffany of Marion. Light refreshments were served and a most enjoyable time was had by all. RICHLAND Mrs. Marsh, of Nelsonville, Ohio, is visiting her daughter, Mrs. David Griffith, of Radnor. Harvey Davis has a tussel with the measles. Hazel Price has the measles at the present writing. Miss May Morris of Columbus, spent Sunday with her parents. Mrs. William Anderson and daughter Margaret were in Delaware shopping Saturday. Mr. Thomas Griffith was calling on her sister, Daisy Anderson, Sunday afternoon. Miss Nancy Hinderlong was in Prospect Saturday. Little Morris Mayes, of Radnor underwent an operation in Columbus, Thursday at 3 o'clock. He is in a critical condition, but got through all right. The operation was of the eyes. Miss Verna Osborn is getting over the measles all right. It is hot weather to be sick at present. Forest Anderson was in Prospect Saturday evening. The little child of Major Maize has the cholera infantum. NEWMANS George Landon is visiting relatives in Marion this week. Mr. N. Moehn and family, of Pharisburg, visited at the homes of Will Hale and J. W. Moehn last week. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Jones of Downs, Kansas, are visiting the latters sister, Mrs. D. D. Little. Miss Mollie Boyd returned Wednesday night from a two weeks visit with friends near Rushylvania and Mr. Victory. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ IMPORTANT: To stop receiving these notifications, you need to know if you are receiving them through a mailing list or if you subscribed through the Newspaper Abstracts website. Either way, you had to have subscribed yourself, as we do NOT just add people randomly to our notifications. To determine what you subscribed to, look at the subject line of this message. If the subject line begins with the words 'Old-News' followed by 'New Article for', then you are receiving this notification through a mailing list. Look at the end of this message for instructions on how to unsubscribe. 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    04/21/2006 03:46:07
    1. New Article for United States - Ohio
    2. See end of this message for instructions on how to unsubscribe. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A new article has been added at Newspaper Abstracts > United States > Ohio > Marion Direct link to article: http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/link.php?id=25441 More articles for Marion can be found at: http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/index.php?action=displaycat&catid=2519 Article Title: Prospect Monitor Article Date: June 22 1905 Article Description: Bevis Death from Runaway; Current Events; Real Estate Article Text: FATAL INJURIES Are Received Thursday in a Runaway Accident by Clint Bevis, the Well Driller. Last Thursday about noon E. C. Bevis the well driller, received injuries in a runaway accident, that caused his death at the Sanitarium, where he had been taken for treatment, at three o'clock Monday morning. It was near twelve o'clock, noon, Thursday when Mr. Bevis driving a horse to his wagon approached the interurban station, going south on Elm street. Just at this instant a north bound car came round the curve and despite the efforts of Mr. Bevis the horse took fright and dashed away at a terrific pace. The animal turned west on Park avenue, then north into the alley between Main and Elm streets. At this point the wagon was overturned, Mr. Bevis thrown out alighting with his whole weight on his left foot and the hind wheel of the wagon forcing itself through the siding on the coal house of the J. F. Moore, allowing the maddened animal to break away from the wagon and continue down the alley to near Water street, when it was caught. Attaches of the MONITOR office saw the accident and hurried to the assistance of Mr. Bevis, is was seen at a glance that he was seriously injured as his left ankle was broken, the bone protuding at least five inches through the flesh. Medical assistance was summoned immediately, Dr. Masters being the first to arrive. A cot was procured upon which the injured man was placed and borne by sympathetic friends to his home on Elm street. In response to the wishes of Mr. Bevis, Dr. Shuel was called to take charge of the case, and upon his arrival he found a compound fracture of the ankle and a terrible wound caused by the bone forcing itself through the flesh and the tissues of the leg. The fracture was reduced and everything done to make the patient comfortable. Up to Saturday morning all was well, then indications of gangrene were discovered, later it was found the foot was dead and that terrible Septicaemia or blood poison, had surely developed placing the victim in a critical condition. Sunday is was found that the disease was progressing at an alarming rate and an operation was decided upon in hopes of saving the man's life. About three o'clock Sunday afternoon Mr. Bevis was removed to the sanitarium where Doctors Shuey and Hinklin, with Dr. Dix administering the anaesthetic, amputated the leg above the knee. Then it was seen that the disease had proceeded further, necessitating a second amputation within a few inches of the thigh. The patient rallied nicely from the effects of the operation and some little hope was entertained for his recovery. He was conscious and answered questions asked and seemed to recognize those around him. Within a few hours afterward Mr. Bevis began sinking rapidly and despite every known effort on the part of his physicians to prolong life, died as heretofore stated. The cause of the gangrene is said to have orginated from the bursting of an artery near the injury during the restless periods of Mr. Bevis. This caused the circulation of the blood to cease below the wound, the foot to die and the rapid advancement of the fatal poison. The body was removed early Monday morning to the home on N. Elm street. E. C. Bevis, familiarly known as Clint was one of the best known and esteemed men of Prospect and vicinity. He was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Bevis and for years has been in the well drilling business, in Marion and adjourning counties. Genial and generous, he made friends with all he met, and great is the sorrow in the community over his sad end. Mr. Bevis was born near Prospect and at the time of his death was forty-four years old. A widow, several brothers and sisters, and a large number of relatives mourn his demise. The funeral, which was largely attended, was held at the Lutheran church Wednesday morning and the remains laid to rest in Prospect beautiful cemetery under the auspices of the Knights of Pythias. Current Events W. R. Lavender and wife of Elkhart, Ind., and Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Russell and children of Mansfield returned home after a two weeks' visit with relatives in Prospect and vicinity. Mrs. Sarah Thatcher of Youngstown visited relatives here this week. Miss Maud Doty, Fern Geltz and Lillian Henry, of Columbus, who were guests of Miss Blanch Henry over Sunday, accompanied by herself, Miss Ada Mohr, Mr. Frank Mohr and Hartly Miner were entertained by the telephone operators at Upper Sandusky Sunday afternoon. Miss Zaye Johnson is the guest of friends at Ashley, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. Will H. Penry, of Jackson Center, attended the funeral of E. C. Bevis, Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Cummings, of Cedar Falls, Iowa, are visiting with friends in Prospect and vicinity. R. L. Osborn was in Columbus, Tuesday and Wednesday on business. Mrs. S. A. McCausland and Miss Bess Straub, of Columbus, were the guests Sunday of friends at Lancaster, Ohio. During the storm Tuesday morning a horse belonging to Wm. Sparks, near Waldo, was struck by lightening and killed. Mrs. J. J. Halliday entertained a few friends at six o'clock dinner Tuesday evening. Mrs. Rev. Gerlach is visiting her mother, Mrs. Lemp, 126 Jefferson street, Tiffin, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Johnson and son Harold were guests Sunday of friends at Marysville, Ohio. Charles A. Sauer, Monday took full control of the Sauer Restaurant, which has been operated for some time by Fred Sauer. Miss Julia Wagner of Bucyrus spent Saturday and Sunday with A. H. Campbell and family. Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Lauer visited with friends at Marion Tuesday afternoon. Miss Starling Milligan made a short visit Monday to friends at Marion. NOTICED—Rat Terrier pups for sale. Enquire of Henry Gerlach. Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Campbell and daughter Pearle, of Marion spent Sunday with A. M. Campbell and family. Miss Iva Campbell left Monday for Athens, where she will attend the summer term of school. Mrs. J. N. Freeman entertained at a six o'clock tea Friday evening in honor of Mrs. William Pettit and Miss Stephenson, of Jamestown, and Mrs. C. W. Moots of Delphos. Mrs. Grace Smith McKinsey and son, of Joplin, Mo., and Mrs. Margurite Smith Alkire, of New York, have been guests this week of Mr. and Mrs. Honer Smith and Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Walker. The Sunday school class, of Miss Hortense Gast, is enjoying an outing at Green Wood Lake to-day. Mr. and Mrs. John McCune left Saturday for Plain City. Mr. McCune returned Monday, but Mrs. McCune will remain several weeks. LOST—A pair of gold rim spectacles, on the Howison road, between J. W. Kyle's and Prospect. Finder leave with Mrs. James Lust and receive reward. Rodney Deagle, of Marion, well known in Prospect, is advertising manager for the Cedar Point Company at Sandusky, Ohio. Mrs. Clara Young, of Dayton, is home for the summer with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. G. Stockman. Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Stiffler v (part cut out) relatives, near Marion over S---------. It is said Saturday was the warmest June day for seventeen years. The mercury registered 89 in the shade. Cliff Curtis, the Delaware base ball pitcher, has been traded by Millwaukee to the Indianapolis team. Mr. and Mrs. John Adams were the guests of Byhalia friends Sunday. Real Estate Transfers (part cut out) W. H. Hinklin to Oliver Hinklin, one third interest in 224 acres in Montgomery township, $3,000. Martin Kuehner to R. R. Davids, a lot in Prospect, $1,150. D. C. Ridgeway to R. C. Kramp, 120 acres in Grand township, $8,000. Milton Selanders to J. F. Brundige, 11 acres in Waldo township, $200. Rachael Uncapher to D. C. Ridgeway 120 acres in Grand township, $1. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ IMPORTANT: To stop receiving these notifications, you need to know if you are receiving them through a mailing list or if you subscribed through the Newspaper Abstracts website. Either way, you had to have subscribed yourself, as we do NOT just add people randomly to our notifications. To determine what you subscribed to, look at the subject line of this message. If the subject line begins with the words 'Old-News' followed by 'New Article for', then you are receiving this notification through a mailing list. Look at the end of this message for instructions on how to unsubscribe. If the subject line says 'New Article for' - but does NOT have 'Old-News' in front of it - then you subscribed through the website. To unsubscribe, go to http://www.newspaperabstracts.com and login. Once logged in, click on 'Your Account' near the upper right corner of the screen. Once there, click on the 'Edit' button next to the statement 'Profile of your-username'. Then look at the line that reads ' Receive email notification of every new article added to the site?' and make sure it says 'No'. If it says 'Yes', then change it to 'No' and then click on 'edit profile'. Next click on 'Manage Subscriptions' to see if you subscribed to receive notifications of articles added to a specific state or county. If so, check the box next to the state or county and then click on 'Cancel Subscriptions'. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ NewspaperAbstracts.com - Finding our ancestors in the news! TM http://www.NewspaperAbstracts.com

    04/21/2006 03:42:21
    1. New Article for United States - Ohio
    2. See end of this message for instructions on how to unsubscribe. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A new article has been added at Newspaper Abstracts > United States > Ohio > Butler Direct link to article: http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/link.php?id=25433 More articles for Butler can be found at: http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/index.php?action=displaycat&catid=2567 Article Title: Albuquerque Morning Journal Article Date: July 5 1910 Article Description: Ninteen Dead In Train Crash Article Text: Middletown" Nineteen person were killed outright,three probably fatally hurt and half a dozen seriously injured in a head on collision between a freight train and passenger train on the Cincinnati,Hamilton and Dayton railroad here today. Of the killed, eighteen were passengers .the other victims being members of the passenger train crew. The identified dead were all residents of Ohio. The bodies of three men and one woman have not been identified ,but on the clothing of one of the men were the initials W A. The trains were the Cincinnati section of the 20th century limited on the Cleveland,Cincinnati,Chicago and St Louis(The Big 4) and the second section of a freight train on the Cincinnati,Hamilton and Dayton. The latter was attempting to make a siding to give the passenger train a clear track,when the limited traveling fifty miles an hour flashed around a curve and crashed into it. The big four train had been detoured to avoid a track blocked by a freight wreck earlier in the day. A misunderstanding of orders caused the disaster. Pilot Engineer George Wald of the C H and D who was in practical charge of the big four train had received orders to wait at Post Town,a siding station three miles north of the city. The freight train was to have passed him there,but was late in puffing out of Middletown. Instead of the seven minute margin which Wald thought he had to reach Middletown,the time was less than five minutes. The first section of the freight had taken the siding here and Conductor John Weaver in charge of the second section tried to reach the north end of the same siding. Before his train had cleared the switch points,the passenger train rounded a curve screened by the thickly wooded lots on each side of the track. The engine crew had to jump and all escaped serious injury. All the dead and injured were in the first two cars. Every seat in this coach was torn from its fastenings,the roof was thrown to one side and the heavy weight of massive timbers from a freight car hurled with full force struck among the women and men in the coach.Even before the engine came,rescuers were running to the wreck from the Middletown station. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ IMPORTANT: To stop receiving these notifications, you need to know if you are receiving them through a mailing list or if you subscribed through the Newspaper Abstracts website. Either way, you had to have subscribed yourself, as we do NOT just add people randomly to our notifications. To determine what you subscribed to, look at the subject line of this message. If the subject line begins with the words 'Old-News' followed by 'New Article for', then you are receiving this notification through a mailing list. Look at the end of this message for instructions on how to unsubscribe. If the subject line says 'New Article for' - but does NOT have 'Old-News' in front of it - then you subscribed through the website. To unsubscribe, go to http://www.newspaperabstracts.com and login. Once logged in, click on 'Your Account' near the upper right corner of the screen. Once there, click on the 'Edit' button next to the statement 'Profile of your-username'. Then look at the line that reads ' Receive email notification of every new article added to the site?' and make sure it says 'No'. If it says 'Yes', then change it to 'No' and then click on 'edit profile'. Next click on 'Manage Subscriptions' to see if you subscribed to receive notifications of articles added to a specific state or county. If so, check the box next to the state or county and then click on 'Cancel Subscriptions'. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ NewspaperAbstracts.com - Finding our ancestors in the news! TM http://www.NewspaperAbstracts.com

    04/21/2006 11:29:56
    1. New Article for United States - Ohio
    2. See end of this message for instructions on how to unsubscribe. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A new article has been added at Newspaper Abstracts > United States > Ohio > Marion Direct link to article: http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/link.php?id=25416 More articles for Marion can be found at: http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/index.php?action=displaycat&catid=2519 Article Title: Prospect Monitor Article Date: June 15 1905 Article Description: Local News; Graham-Jones; Lauer-Dove; Village news; Real Estate Article Text: Prospect Honored At the meeting of the Grand Lodge of the Pythian Sisterhood held at Springfield this week Prospect was honored in the election of one of the grand officers. Mrs. Bell Roberts delegate to the Grand Lodge from Prospect Sisterhood was made Grand Outer Guard. B. M. Hord and W. F. Court are on the petit jury at Marion this week. LOST—A pair of gold rim spectacles, on the Howison road, between J. W,. Kyle's and Prospect. Finder leave with Mrs. James Lust and receive reward. Mrs. Frank Crawford and daughter are visiting in Morrow county. Jacob Hecker has purchased the residence of Mrs. M. L. Carpenter on Elm street. A. E. Woolpert once editor of the MONITOR but for several years owner of the Osborn, O., Times, has sold the Times to Dr. R. E. Smith of Osborn. Miss Hortense Van Osten is attending school at Marion. C. Neimeyer, Rev. Hurrelbrink, Sam Gast, John Stockey, and Paul Gast are visiting in Michigan this week. They left Monday. Sisterhood Officers. The Sisterhood of the Knights of Pythias lodge of Prospect elected the following officers at a meeting, Monday evening. Miss Lula Kyle, chancellor commander, Mrs. Pace, Past chancellor commander; Miss Sarah Dildine, vice chancellor; Mrs. B. M. Hord, prelate; Miss Mabel Fleming, keeper of records and seal; Mrs. M. E. Fleming, mistress of exchequer; Mrs. E. N. Stockwell, mistress of finance; Miss Daily Roberts, mistress at arms; Mrs. J. J. Roberts, inner guard; Mrs. T. E. Drake, assistant at arms; Miss Maud Roberts, outer guard; Miss Anna Adams, mystic one. The installation will take place on evening of July 26. Graham--Jones At the residence of the officiating clergyman, Rev. A. D. Hawn, Frank E. Graham, of Thompson township, and Miss Anna Maude Jones, of Radnor township, were united in marriage last Thursday afternoon at four o'clock. The bride and groom are popular young people and will make their home with Mr. Graham's parents in Thompson. Lauer--Dove Mr. Joseph Lauer, the well known brick mason of Prospect was married Sunday, June third, by M. W. Hill, to Miss Rosa M. Dove, of Richwood. Mr. and Mrs. Lauer will make their home in Prospect. RADNOR NEWS The third annual Boxwell commencement will be held at the town hall Friday evening June 23. There are nine graduates. The address will be made by County Clerk Benton of Delaware. Good music. RICHLAND The Ladies Aid Society of the Congregational church met at the home of Mrs. David Watkins, Wednesday afternood. The Ladies of the Presbyterian church will hold a strawberry and ice cream festival in the church yard, Thursday evening., They would like to have a good turn out. Mr. and Mrs. William Thomas was calling on Charley Watkins and wife Sunday afternoon. WOODLAND Bevis Bros., have purchased another threshing outfit and will be ready when the threshing season opens up. R, W. Bevis and daughter were guests of James Foster and family of near Marysville. Frank Hazen has purchased several new pieces of farm machinery among which are a mower, hay tedder and rake. WARRENSBURG Messers. Wm. Miligan and Bert Bill accompained by their ladies, Miss Ora Bill and Miss Bell Miligan, spent Sunday afternoon and evening at Woodburg. Tom Davids spent Sunday with his sister, Mrs. Hosey Jones, on the Dildine pike. In about three weeks a shipment of fine cattle will be made to Chicago by V. T. Hills. Mr. Vernon Mitchel delivered thirty fine hogs to Ostrander, Monday evening. Mr. Davids accompanied by Mr. Jones Visited the V. T. Hill farm to see those white faced calves. Mr. Lewis Jones of Scioto accompanied by his lady friend, drove to Prospect Sunday afternoon attending the ------ servuces, NEWMAN Mrs. W. E. Wynn was ---- in Centerburg, Knox county, last week to attend the funeral of her cousin, C. A. Poland. A. T. Redd and daughter Irene, spent Saturday and Sunday at Ashley. Mrs. Lewis Jones, of Marion, is now visiting her many friends at Newmans. Mrs. D. F. Poland, of Marion, past through our neighborhood, Tuesday. Arthur Sisson, of Owen, spent Sunday evening with August Rider and family. Miss Hilda Porter, of Marion, spent Sunday afternoon at Newmans. Miss Belle Aronhalt took dinner at the home of W. E. Wynn, Thursday. Several neighbors and friends called at the home of C. D. Russel, Wednesday evening to remind him of his 38th birthday. A very good time was had by all. The early part of the evening was spent in games, and about ten o'clock ice cream and cake were served after which the company was entertained by instrumental music. Mrs. Wm. Everett manipulating the organ, Mr. Everett the violin and both are very adept, in the use of them. Miss Millie Boyd is visiting in Mansfield at present. Lance Poland, of Marion was in Newmans Sunday. Harley Redd, ladie-friend and sister, Irene attended the Children's Day exercises at Green Camp Sunday evening. Miss Louise Howald is visiting her sister, Mrs. Ruth Thomas. Elected Officers. The Sunday School Convention at Canton, Ohio, last week elected: President, W. A. Eudaly, Cincinnati; vice president, Howard E. Beeker, Zanesville, and general secretary, Dr. Joseph Clark, Columbus. Marietta gets the next convention. Real Estate Transfers MARION CO. W. A. Cull to William Gottfried, 42 acres in Richland township, $2,100. E. B. Gast to C. P. Herr, a lot in Prospect, $1,000. D. J. Gatchell two lots in LaRue, $685. John Lester to L. B. Gatchell, a lot in LaRue, $1350. Sarah Molloy to W. H. Lundergan, 50 acres in Big Island township, $3,200. Milton Selanders to J. F. Brundige, a lot in Waldo, $200. DELAWARE CO. James B. Jackson by Sarah M. Jackson, administratrix, to Louis B. Jackson 241 acres in Troy township, $5,660. Sheriff of Delaware county, by partition to R. J. Pumphrey and William McKenzie, 53 2/3 acres in Berkshire and Berlin townships, $3325. James B. Jackson, by Admx., to Lewis B. Jackson; undivided 3-7 of 231 œ acres of land in Troy township, $5660. C. C. Northrup and wife to Clem Liellen and S. G. Howison, 9688 feet in Thompson township, $20. UNION CO. R. W. Bump to M. W. Hill, 2 9-40 of an acre in Claibourne township, $250 W. H. Butz and wife to R. H. Finefrock, $5500. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ IMPORTANT: To stop receiving these notifications, you need to know if you are receiving them through a mailing list or if you subscribed through the Newspaper Abstracts website. Either way, you had to have subscribed yourself, as we do NOT just add people randomly to our notifications. To determine what you subscribed to, look at the subject line of this message. If the subject line begins with the words 'Old-News' followed by 'New Article for', then you are receiving this notification through a mailing list. Look at the end of this message for instructions on how to unsubscribe. If the subject line says 'New Article for' - but does NOT have 'Old-News' in front of it - then you subscribed through the website. To unsubscribe, go to http://www.newspaperabstracts.com and login. Once logged in, click on 'Your Account' near the upper right corner of the screen. Once there, click on the 'Edit' button next to the statement 'Profile of your-username'. Then look at the line that reads ' Receive email notification of every new article added to the site?' and make sure it says 'No'. If it says 'Yes', then change it to 'No' and then click on 'edit profile'. Next click on 'Manage Subscriptions' to see if you subscribed to receive notifications of articles added to a specific state or county. If so, check the box next to the state or county and then click on 'Cancel Subscriptions'. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ NewspaperAbstracts.com - Finding our ancestors in the news! TM http://www.NewspaperAbstracts.com

    04/19/2006 04:25:17
    1. New Article for United States - Ohio
    2. See end of this message for instructions on how to unsubscribe. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A new article has been added at Newspaper Abstracts > United States > Ohio > Marion Direct link to article: http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/link.php?id=25415 More articles for Marion can be found at: http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/index.php?action=displaycat&catid=2519 Article Title: Prospect Monitor Article Date: June 15 1905 Article Description: Court Reunion; Huffman marriage; Current Events Article Text: Court Reunion The sixth annual reunion of the Court family was celebrated last Thursday at the home of Clinton Porter on west Columbia street, Marion, O. Following a fine dinner a program of music and recitations occupied a short period, and the remainder of the afternoon was spent in relating experiences and other pleasing pastimes. Those in attendance from Prospect were Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Court, Mr. and Mrs. William Court and Mrs. William Fritch and children. JOE HUFFMAN Much Married But Still Wants a Marion Girl for Another Wife According to the Marion Star, Joseph Huffman, a former resident of Prospect, who also married a popular Prospect girl, who a short time afterward secured a divorce from him, has become involved in serious trouble on account of his winning ways. The Star says; A Miss Diehl has retained H. E. Hill in a case which she contemplates bringing against Joseph Huffman, an employe of the Parsons-Houghton company. Miss Diehl alleges that Huffman engaged himself to marry her some time this fall, and, after inquiry, she found that he is a married man, with a wife living at Richmond, Indiana. She is undecided as to whether she will sue him for breach of promise, or have him arrested under the "masher" law. ON THE LINE J. W. Gast, of Springfield, visited with Samuel Graham and family, last week. Joseph Graham and family, of near Richwood, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Moore. Albert Griffith is building an addition to his house, it will add much to its appearance. Mrs. W. G. Howison and daughter spent Wednesday afternoon at her parents home. Mrs. A. Roberts and daughter, were guests of relatives near Woodland, Tuesday. Current Events. Messers Scott and Woodrow, of Columbus were in Prospect Tuesday, looking after the building of their hay barn, the frame of which will be raised today by Jess Pinyard, of Delaware and a force of men. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Almendinger and Mr. and Mrs. John Kilfain spent Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Almendinger. Mr. and Mrs. N. C. Hilford, have returned from the West after a nice visit with their sons. Before leaving for home, a heavy chest fell upon the ankle of Mr. Hilford, injuring it to the extent that he is compelled to use crutches. Dr. A. G. Dana has decided to locate in Brooklyn, New York and his office fixtures have been shipped to him. Sam Lichtenberger and wife, of Bethlehem, were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. O. B. Smith. Tillman Baughman has a lot of fine roses which he is very proud of. John T. Cochnam, who has been in Prospect for some time representing the Chase Brothers Nursey, left Wednesday Wm. Bland, manager and Rose Coleman, operator, have charge of the Bell telephone exchange at Waldo. A son was born to Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Isler, Tuesday morning. Mrs. Mary P. McMillian, aged sixty-three years, of DeCliff, arrested for alleged pension fraud, furnished $2,000 bond before Judge Tayler, at Toledo, Monday afternoon. Mrs. C. L. Miller and Claudin Paxton of Marion and Miss Hazel Osborn, of Prospect, have returned from a visit to friends at Bellefountain. While trying to kick out a draw bar on a Hocking Valley Freight car, at Owens, Tuesday morning William Greenland, of Marion lost the toes and part of his left foot, by being caught between the bumpers. H. L. Frank has been re-elected superintendent of the Marion schools at a a salary of $2000 per year, an increase of $200. Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Drake were guests of friends at Cardington, Sunday. W. L. Turney and Miss Mable Thomas of Delaware, spent Sunday in Prospect. Brother P. P. Landon writes to the MONITOR that he has returned from a pleasant visit with friends in Kansas and is now at his home in Leroy, Michigan, for the summer. Prof. Taylor of Westerville, Ohio was elected principal of our high school for the coming year, at the meeting of the board of education Thursday evening. The juniors and seniors of our high school enjoyed a pleasant outing to Greenwood Lake, and a visit at O. W. U. Wednesday. House on East Water street for rent, Enquire of Mrs. E. Osborne, Citizen's Phone 43. Miss Imogene Fritch has returned home after a two weeks visit with friends in Newark, Ohio. Misses Faye, Marie and Helen Parshall of Marion, were guests of Miss Susie Cox, Sunday. Mrs. John Howison has been ill with pneumonia since last Thursday at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Frank Blair, near Magnetic Springs. Mrs. E. A. Finefrock and Mrs. Flora Howison visited her Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Mohr and daughter Clara, were guests of Prospect relatives, Sunday. Stanley Humphreys returned Monday from a visit with Mt. Gilead relatives. Fred Lauer of Marion, was the guest of his brother, Henry Lauer, Monday. Professor Ira Parker, principal of the Prospect schools has been appointed to the superintendency of the Jeffersonville, Fayette county school, for the next school year. Mrs. George Fleming left for Beaver Dam Thursday to make an extended visit with relatives. Mr. Orra Price, John Kimber, and Steven Hart were in Prospect Saturday evening. Mrs. E. A. Tobin and Mrs. Lida Kimber spent Saturday in Marion. The lecture at Five Points, Sunday evening was well attended. Mr. B. F. Conklin and family attended the Memorial services at Prospect, Sunday. Mrs. Magdaline, who has spent the winter with her daughter, Mrs. J. W. Hughes, of Prospect returned home Tuesday. Mr. Jesse Kimber and wife and Mrs. John Kimber attended memorial services in Prospect, Sunday. Mr. John Reckly was the guest of Orra Price and family Sunday. Miss Mae Middlesworth, of Byhalia is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. John Adams. Miss Rebecca Riley has returned to her home near Owens, after a pleasant visit with Prospect friends. Mrs. Frank Solomon spent Saturday and Sunday with relatives in Mansfield, Ohio. Miss Margarette Johnson and Miss Ora Weston were guests of Prospect friends, Sunday. Tom Stockwell and C. S. Hauck were at Columbus on business Wednesday. The ladies of the Embroidery club held a picnic and a six o'clock luncheon at Gast's Park Wednesday evening. Those present were, Mr. and Mrs. Ollie Neimeyer, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Wottring, Mr. and Mrs. Wat Kyle, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sauer, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Curtis, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Roberts, Mr. and Mrs. Neil Gast and Mr. and Mrs. H. D. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ IMPORTANT: To stop receiving these notifications, you need to know if you are receiving them through a mailing list or if you subscribed through the Newspaper Abstracts website. Either way, you had to have subscribed yourself, as we do NOT just add people randomly to our notifications. To determine what you subscribed to, look at the subject line of this message. If the subject line begins with the words 'Old-News' followed by 'New Article for', then you are receiving this notification through a mailing list. Look at the end of this message for instructions on how to unsubscribe. If the subject line says 'New Article for' - but does NOT have 'Old-News' in front of it - then you subscribed through the website. To unsubscribe, go to http://www.newspaperabstracts.com and login. Once logged in, click on 'Your Account' near the upper right corner of the screen. Once there, click on the 'Edit' button next to the statement 'Profile of your-username'. Then look at the line that reads ' Receive email notification of every new article added to the site?' and make sure it says 'No'. If it says 'Yes', then change it to 'No' and then click on 'edit profile'. Next click on 'Manage Subscriptions' to see if you subscribed to receive notifications of articles added to a specific state or county. If so, check the box next to the state or county and then click on 'Cancel Subscriptions'. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ NewspaperAbstracts.com - Finding our ancestors in the news! TM http://www.NewspaperAbstracts.com

    04/19/2006 04:22:32
    1. Re: OH-OLD-NEWS-D Digest V06 #10
    2. Greetings; Should anyone come across any news of Eva Pearl Enyeart of Miami and Darke Counties, please contact me at: _wyndstrm@aol.com_ (mailto:wyndstrm@aol.com) I have been searching for any news of her possible marriage, birth of daughter Bessie Mae in either County or her illness or death circa mid 1860-1884. She is my maternal great grandmother. Thank you for your help. Christina Ottoson La Grange Illinois

    04/19/2006 04:27:10
    1. New Article for United States - Ohio
    2. See end of this message for instructions on how to unsubscribe. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A new article has been added at Newspaper Abstracts > United States > Ohio > Marion Direct link to article: http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/link.php?id=25405 More articles for Marion can be found at: http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/index.php?action=displaycat&catid=2519 Article Title: Prospect Monitor Article Date: June 8 1905 Article Description: Bailey Suicide; Local Village News; Real Estate Article Text: Commits Suicide. James Baily, aged 30 years, store keeper, at Norton, Ohio, who some time ago was released from the State Hospital for insane, and who for the past week has been wandering about the county in a demented state of mind, spent Sunday in Prospect and returned to his home in Norton Monday morning. Bailey evidently feared he would be sent back to the asylum, so Monday afternoon, he requesting his cousin to play the piano, he went to an upstairs room and fired a pistol ball into his head, killing himself instantly. T. E. Drake left today for Toledo to attend the meeting of the Funeral Directors and Embalmers Association held Wednesday Thursday and Friday this week. John D. Owens and Son have a full stock of all sizes of stone building blocks at all times. Buy your Cakes at Sauers Bakery. Miss Ella Mears of Scottown is visiting her sister Mrs. Jesse Kimber. Robert Boyd was taken seriously ill at Owen Monday but is some better. Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Hart of Toledo are the guests of John Kimber and family. Mr. and Mrs. Willis Allen are the proud parents of a nine pound baby boy. Mother and child doing well. Mr. and Mrs. Messenger and Mrs. Jacob Huffman were guests of Wilson Courts and family Sunday. Grandchildren of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Mayfield, numbering 14 were photographed in a group at Neimeyers studio Tuesday. It was a fine picture of the young people. Mrs. George Lauer nicely entertained Tuesday evening in honor of her guest Miss Nellie Bolander of Marion. About twenty guests were present. A large number of friends gave R. L. Culberne? a "surprise" Wednesday evening in honor of the 43 anniversary of his ------- of this glorious world. RADNOR NEWS A Grand Concert. A grand concert will be given at the Town Hall, Radnor, Friday evening, June 16, by the Radnor Choral Union, assisted by soloist from Prospect, Delaware and Columbus, Admission 25 cents. Mrs William Osborn has the measles. Vernia Osborn is nursing her. E. J. Roberts is on the sick list. Mrs. Dora Baker has recovered from the measles, so as to be up and around. The series of meetings closed Sunday evening at the M. E. church, notwithstanding the busy season of the year there was a good attendance; the church was greatly revived. Morgon James has the measles, but is convalesing. Mrs. Ann Thomas is in very feeble health. Mrs. J. W. Gallant is quite feeble but is convalesing. Miss Charlotte Dunn is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Oharron. The farmers in this locality are through with corn planting, but disheartened over the rain. Both Rev. James and Rev. Harris suspended their services on account of the meeting at the M. E. church Sunday evening. The Ladies Aid Society of the Congregationalist church, who served meals at the horse sale, at Titus Jones last Saturday made a financial success. They took in $20.40 clear of expense. Mr. Jacob Steits was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Chronkleton last week. Newton Jones was the guest of his parents Decoration Day. Next Sunday is the proper day. Rev. B. Harris and Rev. J. W. James took a drive to south Radnor, to Mr. Harris charge. Did not return until night on account of the rain. Quite a number attended the missionary meeting at Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Morris last Friday. The Union Services of the village churches societies which were entertained at the home of John Coonfare last was Thursday entertained by the Presbyterian Missionary Society. Ladies of the Presbyterian Church Ice Cream Social, Radnor, Thursday evening June 15. RICHLAND Delayed Letter Mrs. Dora Baker and daughter Laura of Radnor have the measles. Mr. and Mrs. David T. Griffith and --------- Frances? spent Sunday the guests of Mrs. Griffith's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Marslo, of Nelsonville, Ohio. Helen and Florence Griffith, daughters of W. T. Griffith is sick at this writing with the measles. Mr. Fred Emerson Jones has the dreaded disease, the measles. Miss Edna Davis in the vollage of Radnor has the mumps at this writing. Hazel Lloyd has the whooping cough, it seems like there is most every disease that is agoing in Radnor. Mrs. David Watkins spent Wednesday in Delaware. Mr. and Mrs. John Morrison passed through the village Friday, to Richwood to visit his brother, Edward Morrison and wife. Mr. Charley Watkins was in Powell, Thursday and Friday attending the funeral of his cousin. Dr. T. R. Jones and son took an outing, at the Scioto river, Friday afternoon. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Charley Watkins a little daughter Sunday morning. Monday during the storm, the barn of Mr. Vone Roberts, north of here, was struck by lightning and burned to the ground. WARRENSBURG Mr. Harry Bill is under the weather at this writing. Mr. Lewis Jones, of Scioto, made his regular trip over in Troy Sunday and reports a bad night to be out. Mr. Bert Bill spent Sunday with his lady friend of Superior street, Marion, Bert drove that new horse, he reports that the animal can go from the V. T. Hill's farm to Superior street very nicely is you give it time. Miss Lucy Bill is spending the week with relatives in Delaware. Say! That fellow that works on the Hill farm was not asleep when he drove the corn planter, as the rows are as straight as a string. Dr. Crissinger, of Marion, accompioned by a friend visited the V. T. Hill's farm Sunday to see those white faces and reports them to be the best bunch of calves he has seen at that age. Johnny Mathews, who is employed at the Dr. Jones farm, on the Dildine pike by G. M. Biggerstaff, was seen out riding accompanied by a lady friend. Mr. G. M. Biggerstaff has ordered a pony carriage for the children. WOODLAND Frank Butz's new house is nearing completion. Miss Laura Treese arrived from Marion Tuesday and will spend her summer at home. Mr. and Mrs. John Hellenbach spent Sunday with Sim Blue and family. Miss Mollie Treese of Marion, was the guest of her parents Mr. and Mrs. Joe H. Treese, Saturday and Sunday. Bevis Bros., sold their threshing outfit to Sanders and Harriman, of Essex and will devote their time to farming having rented a large farm. ON THE LINE A. D. Gast and wife and James Gast, wife and son spent Sunday with A, Gast and family near Richwood. Samuel Gast, of Marion is visiting relatives here this week. Mrs. Elizabeth Petty was the guest of J. A. Gast and family over Sunday. Jacob Coleman, of Waldo, was in town Monday. Mrs. G. W. Dunbar and Mrs. Joseph Cunningham was calling on Mrs. W. E. Boyd, Tuesday. George Snair has accepted a position with the Steam Shovel company, of Marion. The Ladies Aid Society of the Presbyterian church met at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Graves, Thursday. There was a good attendance and a pleasant time. Wanted Cows and Springers. Must be yound, large and in good flesh. For such I will pay the highest market price. H. D. Beavers, Prospect, Ohio. Township Trustees. The trustees met in regular meeting Friday and paid the following bills.: John Statler, notary fee, $.75; Sam Woodrow, labor, $1.00; James Rouse cleaning Otterbein and Tyler cemeteries $13.00 Trustees Salary, F. A. Lauer, $6.00; S. J. Farnum, $6.00; W. E. Griffith $4.40, Leon Cope quarter salary as clerk, $30.00 Real Estate Transfers. MARION CO. Iva Hartman to J. B. Guthery, 58 acres in Marion township, $4,350. C. Hinkle to Iva Hostottle, two lots in Marion, $1,350. F. W. Haberman to Dorotha Haberman, a lot in Marion, $1,000. Charles Kennedy to the Marion Land company, a lot in Marion, $400. W. B. Peters to Sarah A. Hale, a lot in Marion, $1,475. DELAWARE CO. William C. Nye and wife to Raymond Butts, inlot 2010 in the city of Delaware $55. Sheriff of Delaware county, Ohio, to William A. Foster, 44 47-160 acres of land in Berkshire township, $1500. Frances L. Vought, quit claim to Estella M. Vought, inlot No. 8 in the village of Stratford, $1. Merrick Conry and wife to Orpha Conry, 2 acres of land in Liberty Tp., $500. Charles E. Courtright et al quit claim Martha E. Bailey, 98 œ acres of land in Concord township, $10. UNION CO. Grey Riley to Rebecca Riley, 1 acre in Claibourne township, $550. B. F. Reading and wife to Sallie M. Hazelett, 100 acres in Claibourne township, $7000. M. Courtright and husband to W. L. Blaney, 52 acres in Jerome, $2400. T. J. Williams to J. A. Shipley, lot in Richwood, $2925. George G. Fisher and wife to John Ward, 50 acres in Claibourne township, $80. S. S. Cheney and wife to Gottlieb Keller, 34 acres in Jackson township, $2210. S. M. Sonders and others to C. M. and J. H. Sanders, lots in Richwood, $3500. Mary Dee to J. B. Miller, lots in Richwood, $1000. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ IMPORTANT: To stop receiving these notifications, you need to know if you are receiving them through a mailing list or if you subscribed through the Newspaper Abstracts website. Either way, you had to have subscribed yourself, as we do NOT just add people randomly to our notifications. To determine what you subscribed to, look at the subject line of this message. If the subject line begins with the words 'Old-News' followed by 'New Article for', then you are receiving this notification through a mailing list. Look at the end of this message for instructions on how to unsubscribe. If the subject line says 'New Article for' - but does NOT have 'Old-News' in front of it - then you subscribed through the website. To unsubscribe, go to http://www.newspaperabstracts.com and login. Once logged in, click on 'Your Account' near the upper right corner of the screen. Once there, click on the 'Edit' button next to the statement 'Profile of your-username'. Then look at the line that reads ' Receive email notification of every new article added to the site?' and make sure it says 'No'. If it says 'Yes', then change it to 'No' and then click on 'edit profile'. Next click on 'Manage Subscriptions' to see if you subscribed to receive notifications of articles added to a specific state or county. If so, check the box next to the state or county and then click on 'Cancel Subscriptions'. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ NewspaperAbstracts.com - Finding our ancestors in the news! TM http://www.NewspaperAbstracts.com

    04/18/2006 02:47:14
    1. New Article for United States - Ohio
    2. See end of this message for instructions on how to unsubscribe. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A new article has been added at Newspaper Abstracts > United States > Ohio > Marion Direct link to article: http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/link.php?id=25404 More articles for Marion can be found at: http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/index.php?action=displaycat&catid=2519 Article Title: Prospect Monitor Article Date: June 8 1905 Article Description: About Prospect; Neimeyer-Lavender; Finefrock-Roberts; Local News Article Text: ABOUT PROSPECT Interesting Items of Old Times in and Around the Village and Vicinity Mrs. Mary Thomas, nee Guthery, who died in your city at a recent date was a native of, and for some time, a resident of Delaware, where her father was a very competent blacksmith, and a very sociable gentleman. Her oldest brother James Guthery prior to the Civil war, learned the printing business in Delaware on the Democratic Standard, under George F. Stayman. He served Uncle Sam during the war in the Navy. In 1868 he published a paper in Delaware, called the Golden Era. Later on he entered the ministery. Mrs. Thomas always had a host of friends who deeply regret her departure hence. The C. D. & M. have got thing pretty well arranged for having pleasant times, both at Stratford and your near by park, during the heated term, if that term comes their way. All right, they could not do that in the days of "Auld Lang Syne." Sorry to hear of your Uncle E. E. Poppleton's death at Cleveland, the last but one of your grand-father Poppletons family. Emory, lik your father was a bright, intelligent, clever, sociable gentleman. Like the writer back in the forties, he put in much time in the old time school house instructing the young generation of both sexes how to shoot. Come to think of it your honorable father in his younger days, did some good pedagogueing in the vicinity of Millville, now sailing under the euphonious name of Warrensburg but it was even so. Please now see that Prospect does not want to extend her incorporation so as to include Radnor since that counterfeit Japanese swell wedding, as a new wrinkle for Commencement while you are putting on airs. I noticed by the papers that a gentleman bearing the old time familiar name in Middletown, Prospect and Delaware-Wottring-W. C.- of your vicinity, aspires to the Democratic nomination as a candidate for Treasurer of Marion county. If he is equal to the old times by tha name, he is fully prepared to exactly fit that position. Rev. Halliday, of your city, a grand-son of the late Hon. Thomas F. Joy, of Delaware, an old time friend and schoolmate of the writers, seems to be enjoying a very reputable standing in Prospect. I see that your Postmaster's salary has been reduced $100 per year. Why is that? If the fishing in the historical Scioto up yur way at this writing, anyway comparable with that in ye olden days? Neimeyer-Lavender Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock at the home of the bride's mother Mrs. Jennie Lavender on South Main St., Prospect O., Miss Anna Louise Lavender was united, by Rev. J. J. Halliday, in the holy bonds of matrimony to Oliver H. Neimeyer one of Prospect prominent young business men. About twenty five immediate, relatives and friends were present, and after the ceremony a delicous four course wedding supper was served, the brides colors pink and white being pre-eminent. Mr. and Mrs. Neimeyer at the close of a "beautiful" serenade by a large number of their admiring friends, in which tin pans, tin horns, cannon, and other time honored charivari musical instruments were promiscious bade their friends adieu carrying with them the best wishes of all, and departed on a short wedding trip among relatives in southern parts of Ohio. Finefrock-Roberts This, Thursday afternoon at his home in Marion O., Rev. Tudor Lewis will unite in marriage, Dr. Charles A. Finefrock and Miss Grace Gertrude Roberts the charming daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John J. Roberts. The bride and groom are among the most highly esteemed and popular young people of Prospect and the best wishes of their many friends and acquaintances go with them in their lifes journeys. May they long live and prosper and their paths be strewn with roses without a thorn. Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Roberts, at their home on North Main Street, will, this evening, give a supper and reception to the happy and radiant bride and groom who will for the present continue to reside in Prospect. LOCALS Mrs. B. F. Shurz of Marion is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. A. Stiffler. Charles A. Sauer of Los Angeles, Cal., arrived in Prospect Tuesday to visit his father, Joseph Sauer and brothers, Fred and Louie for a short time. Will Schooley who has been attending to the business of Wm. R. Lauer during his illness has returned to his home in Toledo, Mr. Lauer having recovered sufficiently to again take charge of his cafe. Jack Moriarty has been transferred by the Hocking Valley to Columbus as watchman at the South High St. crossing and Marion Danner appointed section boss of the south section of the railroad. E. Dewitt of Marion was in Prospect on Business this week. Just take a look at Drakes show window. Paul Gast who has been attending the Lombard Academy of music at Galesburg Ill under the direction of Prof. E. E. Davis has returned home for the summer. H. O. Toms was in Columbus Tuesday on business. The Misses M. Katherine Kirchner and Nellie Lawrence of Marion entertained to supper at the Central Hotel Friday evening, Mrs. F. C. Ambross of Logan O., Mrs. John Warde of New Lexington O., and Miss Norene Scanlon of Kenton O. Mrs., Ambross and Mrs. Warde are prominent in Church and Social Circles of their cities and their society is thoroughly enjoyable and it is hoped that this will not be their last visit to Prospect. The hay barn of Scott Woodrow at the Hocking Valley yard is progressing rapidly. Marion friends entertained the Misses Grace and Shirley Roberts Tuesday. Mr. George Gast and Mrs. G. H. Masters are attending the Moore famiy reunion being held at Ashland O., this week. Miss Adelaide Milligan is spending a part of her vacation with relatives in Thompson township. Mrs. T. B. Weaver and daughter, Fannie are visiting relatives at Perrysville O. The Junior League of the M. E. Church will give an entertainment at the Church will give an entertainment at the Church Friday evening. Admission 10 cents. Miss Bertha Stephenson of Jamestown O. is the guest of her friend Mrs. Jeanette Walker at the Central Hotel. Mrs. Neil J. Gast entertained the Embroidery Club Wednesday afternoon. Mrs. Wm. Pettit of Jamestown and Mrs. H. D. Beavers were guests of the Club. The Sabbath school at Five Point Church will open at nine o'clock, standard time, every Sunday in the future. Mr. and Mrs. Ferdinand Swinefurth and family were guests of John Reckly and family Sunday. Mr. Gene Young was in Owens Monday. Mr. Orra Price and family were the guests of Jesse Kimber and family Sunday. The Fluer-de-lis Club, numbering about twenty-five are enjoying a picnic and dance at Greenwood Lake today. Homer Hord of Columbus made a short visit to Prospect on business one day this week. The local pension agency on next Monday will mail to Mrsr Lucretia Garfield, widow of former President Garfield, and Mrs. Ida McKinley, widow of former President McKinley, check in payment of their pensions. The checks will be for $1,250 each, three months allowance. The Columbus office is the only one, now having widows of Presidents on its list. Miss Mary Stockwell who graduated this year from the North Baltimore High School is the guest of the Misses Winifred and Theo Gast. Will W. Byers of Cleveland who has recovered from a serious illness is with his family visiting Mr. and Mrs. T. M. Byers at Delaware. Harry Rose of Woodland was taken to the infirmary at Marysville Thursday. B. O. Barton, Superintendent of the North Baltimore schools visited in Prospect this week. Current Events Harry Frank of Delaware was in Prospect Sunday evening, but unfortunately he arrived to late. J. F. Dodd of Delaware whose wife and daughter lost their lives in the Iroquois fire at Chicago is to start a rest farm near Mt. Vernon for poor children as a memorial to his daughter. Price Coon manager of the Elevator at Green Camp who was struck in the stomach by a board flying from a buzz saw last Thursday is getting along fine. E. G. Stockman is attending the G. A. R. Encampment at Washington C. H. this week. Edwin Keller, aged 85, and a vetran of the Civil war, died at his home in Brush Ridge, Saturday morning. Funeral was held Monday. Los Angeles, California, went wet Friday, by a large majority. Mr. and Mrs. J. V. Kennedy, of Cambridge are the guests of relatives in and around Prospect for a few days. Joe Carpenter, the Radnor blacksmith was in Prospect on business Monday evening. Dr. Will Pasters and wife of Marion spent a few days this week with Mr. and Mrs. John Pasters. Mrs. W. M. Pettit, of Jamestown, is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Greek. Jesse S. Kagay, one of Richwood's real estate men, was in Prospect Monday evening and gave the MONITOR a pleasant call. Mrs. M. Hauck and daughter, Miss Clara were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hauck at Shelby over Sunday. Aaron Stimmell of Los Angeles, Cal., well known in Prospect has purchased a building site on Main St., Delaware, O. and will erect a large business block. Miss Mary Fleming, after a short visit with her brother, M. E. Fleming and family has returned to her home in Delaware. Miss Peal Rutter of Delaware was entertained by Prospect friends over Sunday. J. Fred Gleick of the Delaware Gazette spent Sunday with friends at Prospect. Mrs. J. A. F. Cellar in Liberty, Delaware County this week to make a pleasant with with relatives and friends. W. J. Fitts and Charley Hains have purchased three head of pedigreed Durham cattle. H. D. Beavers sale of colts last Saturday was extremely good. The colts sold at $100 to $217 apeice. John Merkle aged 62, pioneer butcher of Marion, died Monday morning of cancer, Funeral Thursday afternoon. Tuesday, June 6 1905, Miss Vena Hughes delightfully entertained the Misses Grace Miller, Margaret Almendinger, Maud Blue of Prospect, Hilda Pritchard of Radnor and Ethel Uncapher of Marion at her beautiful home, northwest of Prospect. A very fine unch was served, after which games and music were enjoyed. C. D. Crawford, Superintendent fo Green Wood Lake the Delaware pleasure resort was in Prospect on business this Louis Lauer and family formerly of Radnor have settled at Pomeroy, Garfield Co., Wash. Through J. W. Hughes, Clarence Herr purchased the property of E. B. Gast this week, the price being $1,100. John C. Smith and family have moved into their new house, west of town. Mrs. Fred Gorenflo and Mrs. H. Coleman of Marion were the guests of friends in Prospect Tuesday. A fine big baby boy was born Tuesday morning to Mr. and Mrs. Will Petty. Banzai to the youngster. Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Osborn spent Thursday in Delaware the guests of Mr. and Mrs. D. S. Grube. I have for sale, a boat in first class condition. Price very low. David McPherson. Miss Edna Pfiffner a popular young lady of Delaware who has many friends in Prospect was united in marriage Wednesday evening at the home of her parents to Mr. Glen M. Crippen a business man of Lima O. Mrs. Prior Cox entertained at dinner last Friday, Mrs. Eliza Perkins, Mrs. G. W. Powers and Mrs. H. C. Thompson of Delaware, Mrs. Gerhard of Minneapolis and Mrs. Elias Cellar. John Kline of Shilo O. is visiting his parents and brother in Prospect and vicinity. Will S. Grube of Columbus was in Prospect on business this week. Miss Martha Stiffler made a short visit to Marion friends this week. Charles Akron and wife of Marion were guests Sunday of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Akron. Mrs. S. L. Wottring left Monday for Kenton to spend a week with friends. Next Sunday, at Delaware, Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Ryan prominent citizens of Delaware will celebrate their golden wedding. Sometime last week a colt belonging to T. B. Smith, while running in pasture by some means unknown, cut its throat so badly that it was killed. A cloud burst at Bellfontaine and the local heavy rains has caused the Scioto to raise almost to the danger point. Mrs. David Gast, after spending the winter with relatives in Indiana has returned to her home in Prospect. H. D. Beaver returned Tuesday morning from New York where he had sold another load of good horses. Miss Mary Thomas will, this evening, entertain the Queen Esther Circle at her home on E. Park Ave. Miss Atlanta Young left for Dayton Friday to visit her mother, Mrs. Clara Young and both will return to Prospect next week. The Junior Epworth League of the M. E. Church Friday will give an entertainment at the church Friday evening at 8 p.m. Ice cream and cake will be served. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ IMPORTANT: To stop receiving these notifications, you need to know if you are receiving them through a mailing list or if you subscribed through the Newspaper Abstracts website. Either way, you had to have subscribed yourself, as we do NOT just add people randomly to our notifications. To determine what you subscribed to, look at the subject line of this message. If the subject line begins with the words 'Old-News' followed by 'New Article for', then you are receiving this notification through a mailing list. Look at the end of this message for instructions on how to unsubscribe. If the subject line says 'New Article for' - but does NOT have 'Old-News' in front of it - then you subscribed through the website. To unsubscribe, go to http://www.newspaperabstracts.com and login. Once logged in, click on 'Your Account' near the upper right corner of the screen. Once there, click on the 'Edit' button next to the statement 'Profile of your-username'. Then look at the line that reads ' Receive email notification of every new article added to the site?' and make sure it says 'No'. If it says 'Yes', then change it to 'No' and then click on 'edit profile'. 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    04/18/2006 02:44:26
    1. New Article for United States - Ohio
    2. See end of this message for instructions on how to unsubscribe. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A new article has been added at Newspaper Abstracts > United States > Ohio > Marion Direct link to article: http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/link.php?id=25398 More articles for Marion can be found at: http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/index.php?action=displaycat&catid=2519 Article Title: Prospect Monitor Article Date: June 1 1905 Article Description: Various Village's News; High School Commencement; Henry Worline Obituary Article Text: RADNOR NEWS. Ladies of the Radnor Congregational church are going to serve dinner at the home of Titus Jones on Saturday, June 3. Everybody cordially invited. ON THE LINE. J. W. Gast is able to ride out and seems to be improving slowly. The hay barn on the farm of Roberts Brothers was struck by lightning Monday night and burned down. About 30 tons of hay was stored in the barn. The total loss is $1000 with an insurance of $500. BRUSH COLLEGE. Mr. and Mrs. C. Isler spent Saturday in Marion. Mrs. J. W. Hecker is on the sick list. A. A. Maize and Jimmie Redmon attended the funeral of Mrs. Bailey, at Thompson. YOUNG BETHLEHEM Dr. Walker visited Almendingers Bros. Monday. John Benson has a fine bunch of horses for sale. Caleb Isler bought a horse of C. Isler. COMMENCEMENT OF PROSPECT SCHOOLS AT OPERA HOUSE FRIDAY EVENING Drew a Large Audience and was An Interesting and Enjoyable Affair Reflecting Credit Upon All Concerned. Friday evening, May twenty-sixth, the class of nineteen hundred and five, Prospect High School, held their Commencement, the following eight classical and scholarly young ladies and gentlemen graduating with honors. The Misses Mary Hughes, Mary Alice Thomas, Grace Odessa Campbell, Winifred Gast, Audra Farnum, Ida Lucille Treese, and Messers Vernon I. Mounts, and W. Oscar Gast. The exercises were held in the Prospect Opera House, which was beautifully and harmoniously decorated with the class colors, green and white, arranged in Japanese themes to illustrate and interpret the classw motto "Banzai" the national greeting of the Japanese and signifying "Long Life." Long before the hour of begining, the auditorium of the Opera House was filled to its utmost capacity with the parents, relatives and friends of the graduates, impatiently waiting for the transmission of the bright lads and ladies from an ended existance of happy school days to a higher and more stern sphere of life, a going forth to responsibility, and self reliance, equipped to fight the desperate and treacherous battles of life. At eight o'clock the brilliant program was opened by the Philharmonic orchestra of Marion under the direction of Prof. Howard E. Goodsall followed by Rev. J. J. Halliday, who gave the invocation, and then introduced Miss Mary Hughes, the Salutatorian of the class. Miss Hughes spoke very nicely, and eloquently expressed the appreciation and love of the class of '05 for teachers and friends who doing their school years inbued them with the principles of learning true friendship and a love for the good and beautiful in life and its living. The fair graduate closed her grand effort with this glorious tribute to those who had brought the class to its cherished goal: "You shall be our forgetmenots in the green meadow of this scene. Vernon I. Mounts followed with an oration entitled "Three Shafts of Fame." depicting the troublesome and tragic lives of three great men of past decades whose fame ended in misfortune and distress, Cyrus whose shaft of fame ended with a "bowl of blood," Alexander the Great, whose shaft of fame was capped with wine and, Napoleon whose shaft of fame was crowned by degradation and a broken heart. The oration was extremely interesting the well delivered. Mr. Mounts was followed by Miss Mary Alice Thomas with an essay, "Banzai" the motto of the class. HENRY WORLINE An Old and Respected Citizen of Prospect Dies Fri After a Long Illness. After a long illness Henry Worline, a vetran of the Civil war and one of Prospect's oldest and beloved citizens died at his home on N. Elm street Friday morning, peacefully and surrounded by his loved ones. The deceased was widely known in Marion and Delaware counties and many friends and relative mourn his demise. The funeral conducted by Rev. James of Richwood, was held at the Prospect Baptist church Sunday afternoon with interment in Prospect cemetery. OBITUARY Father Worline was born in Delaware county, Ohio, January 3d, 1825. Died at Prospect, Ohio, May 26th, 1905, Aged 80 years, 4 months and 23 days. His father, dying before his birth, he lived with his widowed mother on a farm until he was united in marriage to Miss Eunice Main, Sept., 19th, 1847. To this union were born 3 sons and 3 daughters, one son dying in infancy, the others Chauncey E. called to his reward June 11th, 1891, leaving a wife and two children. Carrie, rich in the faith departed this life March 28th, 1900; leaving a wife and two sons. Mary, Maggie and Ettie, the 3 daughters and the wife with the weight of 4 score years, survives him together with 8 grand children and one great grand child. Deacon Worline was baptised into the fellowship of the Prospect Baptist church by Elder Tunison, October 17th, 1858. He was chosen Deacon by the church August 17th, 1872, and filled that position until his death, 33 years. In 1864 when our Country was in peril he enlisted in its service and served it until its close. He has lived to see all of his children, and grand children, accept his Savior as their Redeemer. He was very faithful to the Cause he so much loved, The Church. He was a devoted husband and father. a consistant Christian. In him Mother Worline loses a loved companion that walked with her for nearly 58 years. The Church a faithful member and has been for about 47 years. The children a wife councillor, and the Community a good and respected citizen. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ IMPORTANT: To stop receiving these notifications, you need to know if you are receiving them through a mailing list or if you subscribed through the Newspaper Abstracts website. Either way, you had to have subscribed yourself, as we do NOT just add people randomly to our notifications. To determine what you subscribed to, look at the subject line of this message. If the subject line begins with the words 'Old-News' followed by 'New Article for', then you are receiving this notification through a mailing list. Look at the end of this message for instructions on how to unsubscribe. If the subject line says 'New Article for' - but does NOT have 'Old-News' in front of it - then you subscribed through the website. To unsubscribe, go to http://www.newspaperabstracts.com and login. Once logged in, click on 'Your Account' near the upper right corner of the screen. Once there, click on the 'Edit' button next to the statement 'Profile of your-username'. Then look at the line that reads ' Receive email notification of every new article added to the site?' and make sure it says 'No'. If it says 'Yes', then change it to 'No' and then click on 'edit profile'. Next click on 'Manage Subscriptions' to see if you subscribed to receive notifications of articles added to a specific state or county. If so, check the box next to the state or county and then click on 'Cancel Subscriptions'. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ NewspaperAbstracts.com - Finding our ancestors in the news! 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    04/17/2006 01:32:13
    1. New Article for United States - Ohio
    2. See end of this message for instructions on how to unsubscribe. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A new article has been added at Newspaper Abstracts > United States > Ohio > Marion Direct link to article: http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/link.php?id=25397 More articles for Marion can be found at: http://www.newspaperabstracts.com/index.php?action=displaycat&catid=2519 Article Title: Prospect Monitor Article Date: June 1 1905 Article Description: Wolfinger Birthday; George Brown Death; Democratic Convention; Current Events Article Text: Anniversary Party. Saturday evening the friends of Miss Minnie Wolflinger gathered at her home in Bethlehem and gave her a surprise in honor of her sixteenth birthday anniversary. The entire evening was most pleasantly spent. Miss Wolfinger was presented with a number of beautiful presents. Those present were as follows: Sam Rentachler, Frank Basler, Walter Zeig, George Almendinger, Paul Zachman, John Seiter; Misses Gertrude Hatcher, Bessie Hock, Lydia Almendinger, Cora Artipeous, Lena Almendinger, Catherine Bensler and Katie Seiter. Death of George Brown. George Brown, an old residence of Prospect, aged 66 years was found by his wife about four o'clock Wednesday afternoon, in the yard of his home, lying upon the ground. Dr. Shuey was summoned and pronounced the man dead from heart disease. The deceased had not been complaing of illness and his death was a shock to his family and friends. The Coroner examined the remains and rendered a verdict of death from desease of the heart. The funeral will be held at the home Friday afternoon at one o'clock standard. Democratic County Convention. The democrats of Marion county met in convention at Marion, Saturday and placed in nomination the following ticket for the November election: Representive—J. H. Criswell, of Marion. Probate Judge—C. H. Foster, of Marion. Clerk of Court—A. A. Gottshall, Marion. Sheriff—Connie Breen' Marion. Treasurer—W. C. Wottring, Prospect. Commissioner—J. K. Lefer, Grand Prairie. Infirmary Director Smith was renominated for the second term. The delegates to the State Conventnion are D. R. Crissinger, F. E. Guthery, Henry Seiter, George B. Schofield, S. H. DeLong, W. L. Raub, P. J. Monaham, George B. Christian, Jr., and O. S. Anthony. The convention was well attended and most enthuiastic and reminded the delegates of an old time gathering of democracy. Current Events Mrs. Effie Miller of Middletown spent Friday and Saturday with her parents Mr. and Mrs. Henry Fritch and left Sunday morning to attend the funeral of her mother-in-law Mrs. Clem Miller which was held at Cardington Monday. Harry Thomas and George Davis spent Sunday in Chicago on their way to Battle Creek, Mich., where their Carnival Company shows this week. The K. of P. band of Prospect was at the head of the Uniform Rank, K. of P of Marion at Marion, Decoration day. Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Roberts entertained Rev. L. E. Smith and family Tuesday. Miss Alice Saeman of Upper Sandusky was a Sunday guest of Miss Blanche Henry. The funeral of Joseph Watkins well known in Prospect and Radnor was held at Lima Friday with interment at Gomer. Hugh and Lillian Henry of Columbus spent Sunday with their parents Mr. and Mrs. C. Henry. Mrs. I. Barrick and daughter Daisy spent Sunday in Marion, the guests of Thos. B. Smith was elected vice president of the Rural Letter Carriers Association at Columbus this week. LOST—A bunch of keys somewhere in the east end. The ring contained six keys and a finger ring. Finder will return to A. D. Mohr or MONITOR office. Magnetic Springs will vote dry or wet June 12. It is eight years since saloons were voted out of the village. Miss Candas Gast and Miss Maggie Hollenbach were entertained by Delaware friends this week. Ray Bonner has sold to W. S. Bonner 20 acres in Thompson for $1.00 and other considerations. A. large number of Prospect Masons attended the county meeting at Marion Friday afternoon and evening. T. E. Drake and Harry "Curl" were at Columbus Monday. Rev. L. E. Smith went to Columbus Wednesday to make arrangements for the Baptist annual excursion. New plate glass fronts are being put in the store rooms of J. N. Earick and Charles Almendinger on north Main. Miss Bessie Powers of Sandusky has returned home after a visit with S. J. Farnum and family. Mrs. F. D. Lewis and daughter Crace (?Grace?), Miss Ethel Jonson and Dr. T. L. Landon were guests at the home of S. J. Farnum this week. Deputy Marshal Pearl Sells of Toledo spent Sunday with Prospect friends. Miss Maud Dreher of Marion was the guest Tuesday of Miss Sarah Dildine. Rev. Schaaf preached the funeral services of Phillip Cooper at Mt. Olive church Sunday afternoon. Robert Gast leaves today for Louisiana, Mo., after a visit with Prospect friends and relatives. I now have plenty of brick on hand. W. L. Cox. Rev. Keller of New Dover is spending a few days with Mrs. Keller at the home of her parents Mr. and Mrs. Ramey. Beard's shooting gallery has been moved from Earick's room to Marion Park. George W. Waldo of Delaware, a former resident of Prospect was in town on business Tuesday. Will Grube of Columbus was in Prospect on business Tuesday. Cards are out announcing the coming marriage of Miss Edna Pfiffiner of Delaware, who has many friends in Prospect to Mr. Glen Crippen a young businessman of Lima, June 6. Rev. Settlage and family of Marion were guests Monday of Rev. and Mrs. Schaaf. Miss Highland Clime of Columbus is visiting Mrs. C. L. Mohr. Mrs. Vala Cranston of Newark and Mr. T. H. Wells of Mr. Vernon, the former a sister and the latter a son of Mrs. J. A. Pasters visited from Thursday until Tuesday with Mrs. Pasters and other relatives. The picnic of Prospect schools has been postponed until Thursday, June 15. Milton Cope and wife of Plain City and Miss Mercedes Corbin of Columbus were guests of Mrs. Joseph Cope and family Decoration day. Miss Bess Hipple, a charming young lady of Delaware will spend Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Homer Smith. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ IMPORTANT: To stop receiving these notifications, you need to know if you are receiving them through a mailing list or if you subscribed through the Newspaper Abstracts website. Either way, you had to have subscribed yourself, as we do NOT just add people randomly to our notifications. To determine what you subscribed to, look at the subject line of this message. If the subject line begins with the words 'Old-News' followed by 'New Article for', then you are receiving this notification through a mailing list. Look at the end of this message for instructions on how to unsubscribe. 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    04/17/2006 01:29:43