Lexington
Will Craig returned
to Delphos last week.
Miss Maxwell, of
Kirby, is the guest of the family of G. J. Maxwell, Sr.
Barney Beverstock
relinquished his position at Mansfield last week and resumed
business with W. W. Cockley.
Frank Culp, son of
C. D. Culp, has been promoted for his proficiency in the railway
mail service.
Mrs. Tobias Fike
attended the obsequies of Mrs. Cherry at Mansfield last week.
Smith McCune has
purchased the Horn avenue residence formerly owned by J. Strausbaugh,
Sr., now in Kansas.
Mrs. W. H. Cook
visited Mrs. L. H. Cook at Mansfield.
Frank Beverstock
went to Bellville Friday to attend the obsequies of Ed Lanehart,
with whom he had been a student at Gambier.
There was no
purchaser for the property of Robert Colwell, deceased, which was
recently (the second time) offered for sale by the sheriff.
The literary society
met at Miss Carrie Joslin’s Friday night.
William C. Daugherty
was in Garrett, Ind., last week.
Intelligence came
March 5 that Alexander Baughman, a former well known resident of
Lexington and Mansfield, had for 10 weeks, been very seriously ill
at the home of his daughter, Mrs. S. R. Barnette, in Pittsburg.
Mrs. Daniel Stough
is visiting the family of Mrs. H. M. Abernathy, her daughter at
Newark.
Mrs. Jane Cracraft
has been very seriously prostrated since March 1, from the
infirmities incident to her age, 83 years.
A handsome boy adds
to the nuptial joys of W. Strasbaugh and wife.
William R. McKee, of
Mansfield, was here Saturday at a meeting of the officers of the
Live Stock Company, of which he is a member.
Joe Welch, of
Ashland county, was here last week.
Mrs. Boughman, of
Bloominggrove, visited friends here last week.
William Ailer, of
Ashland county, was recreating in Lexington recently.
Mel Blair, son of J.
M. Blair, of Fredericktown, is visiting Mrs. C. King.
Charlie Schaeffer,
of Mansfield, was the guest of George Carey, Sunday.
The Lexington
baseball club will contend with the Cherry Valley club for the
championship at Cherry Valley March 13.
Miss George, of
Independence, is visiting the family of William George, Sr., her
grandfather.
Thomas Shafer, of
Johnsville, was recreating here recently.
The remains of Mr.
and Mrs. Stroller’s child, who died in Galion, were interred in the
cemetery at Lexington on Sunday.
The Japanese tea and
concert in the Congregational church Saturday night was a social and
financial success, the net proceeds being about $11.
Mrs. George Craig
returned to Delphos last week. Her mother, Mrs. S. Stough, has not
materially improved.
George Taylor, of
this vicinity, has been in critical condition since Feb. 28 from a
second paralytic attack.
Mrs. Mills recently
received intelligence from Mansfield of the serious illness of Mrs.
James Woods, her daughter.
Frank Boals, of
Pleasant Valley, was here last week superintending improvements on
Mrs David Stough’s property.
The past week Mrs.
Thomas Brown has been more seriously ill with her heart malady.
The 30 guests who
were entertained by Mrs. Snurr are quite exuberant over the
brilliant affair and everything also conspired to make Mrs. Kyner’s
party a very pleasant social event.
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Ontario
A novel wedding took
place at the residence of James Crow last Wednesday. The high
contracting parties were Miss Estella Millikin, alias John Crow, and
Miss Oda Crow. Miss Marzetta Walker was the bridesmaid and Miss
Mary Wiley the groomsman The marriage ceremony, which was very
impressive, was performed by Miss Lizzie Hammon. The happy bride
served a bountiful dinner to her guests before the marriage At a
late hour of the day and after heartily congratulating each other on
their success the ladies dispersed with the consciousness of knowing
that the boys can’t catch up before next winter. On Saturday they
held another meeting at W. B. Millikin’s. As the girls are mum on
the subject we can’t say if the boys were again reminded of their
dereliction of duties. Two more meetings are on the programme for
this week, one at Finley Walker’s and the other at I. J. Cassel’s.
S S. Hackedorn, our
township clerk, was too sick on last Monday to attend the meeting of
the township board. His father, J. R. Hackedorn, filled his place.
His sister, Miss Jennie, has been in charge of his school for about
ten days.
J.M. Condon is some
better again. He has had several relapses.
The meetings at
Riblet closed last Tuesday evening.
Dr. Beall was on the
sick list a couple of days last week. Charles Jolley delivered
medicines to several of the doctor’s patients.
A leaf social,
whatever that is, will be given at the M. E. parsonage Wednesday
evening, March 18, for the benefit of the choir.
Miss Amanda Wolff,
cashier at Harrison’s store in Mansfield, was at home over Sunday.
Tommy Grove and
wife, of Mansfield, attended church here Sunday.
The features of
William Umbarger, which were somewhat distorted by a paralytic
stroke a couple of weeks ago, are again assuming their natural
position.
Bert Hershey started
to town one day last week to do some trading. When near the Trigger
bridge his team took fright and ran away spilling him out and
demolishing the buggy He was but slightly hurt. The team was
caught near the Five Corners.
Grandma Cole is
quite feeble.
Born - To Mr. and
Mrs. Marion Guthrie, March 9, a daughter.
Ben Borden and
family started for Newark in a wagon Monday. From there they intend
to go to Kentucky.
Miller Carter’s
house burned to the ground last Friday afternoon. The most of the
household goods were saved.
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Pavonia
On Tuesday evening,
of last week, Mrs. John Horn entertained a company of gentleman, on
the occasion of her husband’s 41st birthday. It was a
complete and pleasant surprise to Mr. Horn. Mrs. Horn and daughter
Mabel treated the company to a supper of oysters and all the
necessary accessories. Samuel Shively, in behalf of the gentleman
friends, presented their host with a handsome secretary. Mr. Horn
responded with many thanks.
The numerous friends
of Miss Vancha McElhenny threw their mites together and an easy
chair was purchased for her by Miss Kate Robinson; Miss Vancha has
been an invalid for a year, and it is hoped by her friends that her
chair may be a source of comfort to her.
The pleasant face of
Rev. E. T. Hagerman, of Salem, was seen the first of the week here.
John Hersh closed
his school at Windsor on last Friday, and in the evening had a very
good entertainment.
Albert Damback has
accepted a position as engineer of a stone crusher at Bloomville,
and expects to go there by April 1.
Messrs Jacob Osbun,
Jacob Feree and Rane Grimes all start next week for the far west.
The two former will go to Washington and Mr. Grimes’ destination is
California
Sam Slick is moving
to the city. Solomon Hout, Jr., and his sister will take charge of
the farm vacated.
Claude Wren, of
Gilead, has been spending a few days with friends here.
A number of cars of
baled hay have been shipped from Pavonia lately.
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Lucas
Curt Baxter, of
Mansfield, visited with T. J. Wilson last Sunday.
Dr. J.H. Rummel and
wife and Mrs. L. E. Parry returned from Cleveland Saturday, where
they have been visiting.
Ed Yingling, lately
with P. L. Harrison, is now at home with his parents.
Mrs. Dr. C. W.
Skeggs, of Green Springs, is visiting with her parents south of town
The Rev. G. M. Grau,
of Bucyrus, was in town Monday on business.
D F. Tucker loaded a
car of fine horses here on Sunday, then went with them, in charge,
the same day to New York.
John Crummy will
shortly move into the house now occupied by V. E. Dye.
The “Inskeep Comedy
company” played a week’s engagement in our opera house last week.
They went to Crestline Sunday evening. Some of our “toughs” tried
to break up the performance the first night but they found
themselves in mayor’s court the next morning where they were made to
pay for their “fun.” After that the company had no further troubles
from the outlaws.
Mrs. McClaren, of
North Baltimore, was in town lately.
Mrs. Everly, of
Orrville, and Charley Boles are at the bedside of their brother, R
S. Boles.
Mrs. D. Robinson
visited friends and relatives in Mansfield lately.
Robert Gallagher,
better known as “Boofer,” has gone to house-keeping in the house
lately the property of “Aunty” Kerr.
S. Rummel has
purchased the property lately owned by Senator Kerr and his mother.
Consideration not known.
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Pleasant Valley
[Morrow County]
George Culley has
returned from Indianapolis, Ind., and reports his brother as gaining
slowly, though he suffers great pain with his arm.
J N. Smith is
reported better. Dr. McFarland says he will get better. His son,
J. W., has moved into the house with them with the intention of
farming the place and attending to his father’s business affairs.
Joseph Day has
rented the McCormick farm. Charley Orwiler and Charley Day will
farm the same. We welcome Mr. O. to our neighborhood.
L J. Cully’s son’s
arm will have to be taken off, after he has suffered so many months
with it.
Oscar Mitchell has
quite a curiosity in the way of the lower jaws of a squirrel which
he shot when a very small boy. It lodged in a hole in a tree which
it was on. When the squirrel was shot its tail hung out of the hole
for a long time. Mr. M says it was the first squirrel he ever shot,
and he has since remembered the tree and this winter cut the tree
and found the hole grown shut. Upon sawing it in two he found the
jaws and a part of the lower with three inches of solid wood where
the hole was. It had been about twenty years since he shot the
squirrel.
Mifflin
Luther Koogle wishes
it to be distinctly understood that he is not interested in the
neatsfoot oil and phosphate factory on the banks of the Blackfork.
He says it is his brother, Wesley. That was our impression from the
start. The firm reports trade a little dull.
Mr. and Mrs. J. W.
Shively, a blind couple, gave a concert at the U. B. church last
Saturday evening. Mrs. Shively will be remembered as Miss Abbie
Butler, who formerly lived at this place with her father, J. G.
Butler.
Efforts are being
made to establish a post-office at our neighboring city of Needmore,
across the creek, to be supplied from this office.
The question
discussed at the literary on last Friday evening was: “Resolved,
that Physical Environments are of Greater Benefit to the Country
than Art and Science.” It was the debate par excellence of the
season, both disputants making able speeches.
C J. Staman and L.
H. Matthews have leased the Commercial House at Lucas from Sheriff
Tressel, and expect to remove there in a few weeks.
Mr. McCullough, of
Wyandotte county, visited his daughter, Miss Mary McCullough, at C.
C. Staman’s, over Sunday.
The Misses Eby, of
Indiana, visited at J. W. Lemon’s last week.
E J. Parkes, of
Akron, paid his best girl here the usual visit last Sunday.
A bountiful supply
of ice was harvested by a number of farmers during the cold snap
last week.
Mrs. Harriet Lemon
is confined to her home by sickness.
Peter Bissman will
lecture at this place Thursday evening, March 26, describing his
recent visit to Egypt and the Holy Land.
G S. McClure, the
barber, has pulled up stakes. He has accepted a position in Newark,
to which place he expects to go in a few days.
Alonzo Starrett
moved on his mother’s farm in North Mifflin last Tuesday.
Professor Andrews,
of Hayesville, will deliver a lecture before the literary society of
this place next Friday evening.
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Bellville
A series of
temperance meetings have been held with the object in view of
electing a dry council at the spring election. There are two
saloons here, if they are voted out the money they pay into the
treasury will be lost to the town, while past experience here shows
the usual amount of drunkenness through prescriptions to the drug
stores. As far as I can remember the drug stores flourish while the
saloons are gone. Last year the saloons here carried on as
wholesale houses, and will probably do the same next year, if voted
out. If this is done the town treasury will get no more from them
in taxes.
Last Friday the
remains of Ed. Lanehart were deposited in the Bellville cemetery.
Ed was a model young man 20 years old. He was finishing his third
year at Kenyon college. He had lung fever and only suffered a
week. The funeral was very largely attended, twenty students and
the professors from Kenyon college attending. The Bellville high
school attended in a body. Very beautiful flowers were sent by
sympathizing friends from Columbus and other places.
The Bellville
Manufacturing Co. expects to commence bending buggy stuff soon, as
its rim bender arrived last week.
The Bellville
Bending company, a new institution, is about ready to commence
operations Both companies begin business under favorable
circumstances. The Bellville Bending company has enough goods
already sold to keep it busy the entire coming summer.
A good deal of
choice maple molasses is being brought to town and sold at from 60
to 80 cents a gallon.
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Darlington
On the 6th
just, the neighbors of Samuel Paxton celebrated his 80th
birthday anniversary at his home. One hundred and twenty-five of
them honored him by their presence, because he has always honored
himself by a pure and well ordered life. It was a regular
love-feast as well as a feast of fat things The friends of Mr.
Paxton exercised their good gifts by subscribing $40.95 of which
$27.82 was expended for clothing, including full suit, under shirt,
overcoat, hat and shoes, also a fine dress for his wife, who is one
year his senior, the remainder being handed over in cash. These
gifts were presented in behalf of the company of J. L. VanBuskirk,
and accepted by John Steel, Esq., in eloquent and fitting language,
“All went merry as a marriage bell.” Each one vied with the other
in efforts to make the occasion pleasant for their aged friend In
the evening the young folks held a social entertainment which was a
grand success, rich in music and in joy. In fact Hagartown never
saw or enjoyed a better or a brighter day. Mr. Paxton was born in
Franklin county, Pa., ten miles northwest of Chambersburg and is
well acquainted with the country in which the great Gettsyburg
battle was fought. He moved with his father when eight years of age
to Cumberland county where the family lived seven years then moved
back to Franklin county. At this youthful age, he began to drive a
team transporting goods from Philadelphia to Pittsburgh and from
Baltimore to Wheeling, W. Va., and Dandridge, Tenn. He visited Ohio
in 1840, and moved from Pennsylvania to Woodbury, Morrow county,
Ohio, which place he reached May 21, 1844, and has resided in this
section of the state since, farming and teaming, some of his
experience being to move three families to Indiana, and take a drove
of horses to Pennsylvania. His has been a busy and useful life, and
as he nears the sunset time where the shadows of evening gather,
full of years, and loved by all who know him, we all wish him many
more birthdays full of blessings and joy.
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Bloominggrove [Morrow
County]
Willis Swartz moved
last week to the McClure farm south of Galion.
Mr. Long moved from
Dr. Craig’s farm, southeast of the village, to Ed Cook’s farm on the
Crestline road.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Ibeck, who have been visiting friends in Morrow, Richland, Crawford
and Marion counties the past winter, returned to their home in Iowa
last week.
Grace Evans returned
home from Crestline last week..
Henry Bachman went
to Lexington Saturday to spend a couple of weeks with his
grandmother
Mrs. Elijah Bachman
is visiting her parents at Bellville.
Mr. and Mrs. Charley
Evans expect to return to their home in Kansas this week.
Prof. A.R. Frank
left here last Wednesday to go to Ada. He expects to visit the
principal schools of Ohio this spring and then go to Baltimore, Md.,
where he has a position in the State Normal for next year.
Miss Ruth Osbun
leaves this week to visit friends in Galion and Columbus and will go
to Auglaize county to teach a summer school.
Miss Belle Bachman’s
singing class gave an entertainment Tuesday evening, March 3, with
an excellent programme.
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Washington
There is
considerable sickness in the community.
H P. Davis will
close his school at the Wilderness, in Monroe township, Thursday of
this week. Mr. Taylor is a successful teacher.
Milton Pollock, of
Putnam county, visited relatives here last week.
M.D. Miller will
close his school at Union Hall Tuesday.
Mrs Robinson and
children attended a surprise party at Mansfield on the 5th
given in honor of her father, William Pollock, it being the occasion
of his 63d birthday.
Our new blacksmiths
are from Peterburg, Mifflin township, and not from Pittsburg, as the
type setter made us say last week.
M D. Miller will
move north of Mansfield in a couple of weeks. He will teach there
the coming summer.
We had the pleasure
of visiting at the NEWS building last Saturday from basement to
tower, and would just say everything seems to be complete for
issuing of the cheapest and best newspaper in Richland county.
S A. Miller will
commence work on Thomas Banks’ house about April 1st.
News has been
received here that Mrs. Pollock, wife of John Pollock, of near
Abilene, Kansas, is dead.
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Newville
As J. Zimmerman and
two other men living here were felling a tree in Mr. Berry’s woods,
Mr. Zimmerman was caught between the falling tree and another one in
such a way as to crush his body fearfully. Death was almost
instant. The deceased leaves a wife, five children and a host of
friends to mourn the loss. He was 49 years, 4 months and 29 days
old. The remains were interred in the Bunker Hill cemetery March
8. Services conducted by the Rev. McLaughlin.
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Jackson Township
Carpet rag sewing at
Mrs. John Stover’s March 3.
Frank Craiglow has
opened the Madison sugar camp.
District No. 6 has a
new fence.
William and Samuel
Hartman have improved their sugar house with a new shed.
Philip Hines will
have a stock sale, March 13.
G U. Kuhn was
secretary of the Farmer’s Alliance meeting in Mansfield last
Saturday.
Mrs Hattie R. Brooks
is visiting in Plymouth.
A number of friends
of Mr. Elim Hines called and spent last Wednesday evening with them.
Mr and Mrs. B. F.
Lowe were in Mansfield Saturday.
Will Sheets will
stay with John Hartman another year.
Frank is dangerously
ill at Van Wert. He is the son of J. D. Myers, of this township
About 20 of their
friends called upon Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Roush Thursday night and had
an enjoyable time.
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Olivesburg
This village is in a
prosperous condition.
Charles Conley has
bought a half interest in the Redman store. He moved in the store
building and will also keep the hotel.
John Redman went to
Tiro last week to take charge of the deceased Joe Rearick’s store.
Rome Wharton bought
a farm of 160 acres, two miles east of this place of his father,
where he expects to move this spring.
John Wharton, Jr.,
will move to Ashland this Spring.
George Callin will
move to Mansfield to keep boarding house.
Will Crabbs, of
Wooster, was in town last week and hired Barney Swineford for the
summer
Samuel Liston will
move to Mansfield this spring.
The Rev. J. H.
Barron commenced a series of meetings last week.
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