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News-Journal from Mansfield, Ohio • 13

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News-Journali
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Mansfield, Ohio
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13
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Ohio Assembly Sings 'Swan Song Final Session Today, MANSFIELD NEWS-JOURNAL TELEPHONE 7231-6 alai Boyle Family Passes Secret of Perfect Cymbals Down Through Centuries NEW YORKThe Avedis Zildjian family has held a secret for 326 years. "We don't tell it to the women," said Zildjian. "The father tells it only to his eldest son, and in time he tells it to his eldest son. In this way we keep the secret." man at least six years to become The secret is how to make skillful." cymbals. That doesn't sound like much of a secretbut the cymbal isn't as simple as it sounds.

The cymbals then are stored You don't have to age a saxo- in vaults anywhere from i phone. You do a cymbalit months to 20 years until each has to be mellowed like a good reaches its proper resonance. wine. Zildjian now has 40,000 in the These musical noise-makers Process of aging. are as old as the Bible, but the Zildjian family has been manu "And they have 40,000 differ.

facturing them only since 1623. ent tones," he said. "Find two It was in that year that the first that are alike and I'll give you $1,000 ant the cymbals, too. Avedis Zildjian, a Constanti- In 45 years in this business I've rople alchemist, discovered a secret process for making an never heard two that sounded ideal cymbal metal from an alike." alloy of tin, copper and silver. It is this variatke in tone that Through the centuries the fam- accounts for the volume of the Hy developed almost a world cymbal business.

Professional monopoly in the manufacture of drummers collect them like post-cymbals. They still dominate it. It is this variance in tone that accounts for the volume of the cymbal business. Professional drummers collect them like FRIDAY, JULY 29, 1949 It i'letWr'w 't 11.4110001v1.0.1.4,' 7 It i' 41 1, 33 43, 4 After about "one too many" ne Up and 4.1., 4. :7, nolvIt the Street ,0 One of the betterknon elder HAZARDS OF DRINK lk; l' 't 3 .4, i wl -w- .4 to, 1:, iso.

ly patrons of a local tavern made 'awe 1 4.. .4 2 3. .114,,......,. 1 his usual visit several nights ago. 1.

4 7: ordered a sandwich, but couldn't 4,, handle false teeth. He care- i.N. fully place the teeth on the bar ,4 and finished hissandwich. Then he left. The teeth were forgotten.

4 1., i tie. 4 The bartender wrapped the 04,, .,,,3,1,, teeth and put them in a safe irq '''s place. Later the toothless gent 4 5.s, entered the tavern and looked -01 4: S. carefully around the bar and ,,..4 4 i 4 1 f'' tables But he didn say any 4 thing Noither did Anyone P1RP Up and Down the Street HAZARDS OF DRINK One of the better-known elderly patrons of a local tavern made his usual visit several nights ago. After about "one too many" ne ordered a sandwich, but couldn't handle his false teeth.

He carefully placed the teeth on the bar and finished hissandwich. Then he left. The teeth were forgotten. The bartender wrapped the teeth and put them in a safe place. Later the toothless gent entered the tavern and looked carefully around the bar and tables.

But he didn't say anything. Neither did anyone else. postage stamps. "Harry dison, the cymbalist for Toscanini, has three chests full about 200," said Zildjian. "Jazz drummers used to use only one cymbal.

Now they use six or Zildjian last year also began to manufacture gongs, and says he is the first man outside China to do so. It took him six-months to make the first one. Now he is turning them out in 27 weights and sizes. How long does a cymbal last? "A hot drummer like Gene Krupa wears out a cymbal in two months," said Zildjian. "In Guy Lombardo's band, which plays softer music, a cymbal Is good for at least two years.

"But in the Metropolitan Opera orchestra the cymbalist only goes 'crash, crash, kerplunk' maybe three times a night. His cymbals ought to last forever." HEADED FOR VERMONT Mrs. Arthur Lamea of Hunt. and her traveling menagerie of horses, goat chickens and dogs, (above) rolled out Ashland road today on the fourth week of the cross-country trip to Green Mountains, Vermont. At left, Mrs.

Lemea, native New Englander, says she wants to "take the horses back to where they were born." Apparently healthy hale and hearty, the sunburned pioneer woman of modern day, is shown above as she fondled one of her two young dogs. "It Is easy to analyze the alloy we use," said the current Avedis Zildjian. "But no one can put It together and some of the biggest metal companies in the country have tried." Zildjian, a 59-year-old Armenian who came to this country in 1909, has done more than any other single man to make the musical world cymbal-minded. "When I started, the bands only used one kind of cymbala heavy one," he said. "Now we have 171 models in different weights and sizes." His 12-man factory at Quincy, now turns out thousands of cymbals yearly.

The work is all done by hand, and it takes 45 days to turn the rude metal ingots into sounding brass. They must be hand-hammered from four to six times. "It isn't easy to hammer cymbals," said Zildjian. "It takes a A ij A It io. 4, 1 1 4 i I rr kt I Vo 1, fi 1 0 I 'll :11.::,:.,,,,,..,,: lite II 4 0 ''C'.

tc 19,644 1 A 4: tr In rr 1" is 410 PAGE THIRTEEN He shook his head and walked out. The bartender said he was going to return the teeth to the man the next night he stopped in. BACK FROM TRIP Miss Margaret Oswalt, county board of education secretary, and Mrs. Alice Deibner, deputy in the clerk of courts office, were back at work today after a week's vacation in Kentucky and Tennessee. They visited Miss Oswalt's twin sister, Mrs.

Albert Kipp, at Murray, Ky. They went fishing at Lake Kentucky, considered the largest man-macie lake in the world, said Miss Oswalt. Their fishing expeditions resulted in the catching of "several" fish, Mrs. Deibner said, adding that they also "left some in the lake." Chatter Two girls on West First street trying to teach a large, white rabbit to follow them on a leash and finding the rabbit had characteristics of a stubborn mule. Mrs.

C. L. Heston, of Mansfield, R. D. 8, returning home after an 11-day stay at Charity hospital, Cleveland.

Robert Levering, of Mt. Vernon, who ran for 17th district congressman last year, at the courthouse yesterday afternoon renewing acquaintances made during the fall campaign. He is now an assistant attorney general of Ohio. Sheridan C. Carr, son of Mr.

and Mrs. Wesley G. Carr, 61 Parkwood boulevard, enrolling in a summer naval training course at the Naval Station, Newport, R. I. as part of the new Naval Reserve Officers' candidate program.

Mrs. Beer, 74, Dies At Home Mrs. Amanda Beer, 74, widow of Samuel Beer, died unexpectedly last night at her home in East Mansfield. Mrs. Beer was born in Washington township June 28, 1875, the daughter of John and Anna Foss.

She had spent her entire life in this vicinity. Surviving are a son, Wilbur G. Beer, of Mansfield; a daughter, Miss Helen Beer, at home; four brothers, George Foss, of Los Angeles, and William, Charles, and Fred Foss, all of Mansfield; three sisters, Mrs. Lewsi Burghard, Mrs. Florence Burgbard, and Mrs.

Melvin Miller, all of Mansfield; and two grandsons, Jimmy and Larry Beer. Rev. Edward W. Welch, pastor of the East Mansfield Presbyterian church, will conduct funeral services at the Wappner funeral home at 3 p. m.

Saturday. Burial will be in Mansfield cemetery. GBU To Hold Picnic Sunday Members of the German Benefit Union will hold their annual picnic at the GBU park Sunday from nom) until 11:30 p. m. During the picnic there will be hourly bus service to the park starting from Fourth and Main streets, at 2 p.

m. and continuing until 8 p. m. Lunch and refreshments will be served and from 2 to 4 p. m.

pony rides and various other forms of entertainment will be enjoyed by the children. Dancing for the adults will start at 4 and continue until 11 p. m. with the Skulski band playing. The picnic is open to the public.

Jack Lait 'Peace' Mores Into Gangland As Trigger-Men Become Old and Gray It so chanced that my early reporting nights threw me in with the birth of modern gangsterism, the commercial racketeering system, which ante-dated Prohibition but leaped on that Noble Experiment as manna from Hoodlums' Heaven. Big Jim Colosimo, an immi- incarceration in Alcatraz, a grant from Sicily, put all the somewhat new era emerged. His pieces together first, in Chicago. heirs and successors were as He foresaw that the essential greedy as ever, but not as imacomponents were force, with gat ginative or daring. and ferocity; political drag, with the payoff; organization, with But they were hoodlums in brains and efficiency and merci- their hearts and could not re-less management at the top; a sist the cushy cash they knew few quick killings as advertising, so well how to get.

So they so lugs would be softened up for compromised. They retained the kick-in, and monopoly, so enough of the outlaw habits to the take would be all the traffic shake down more millions, could stand, but they pulled in their horns Colosimo closed in on vice, on the roughest of the old stuff. liquor, public contracts, labor unions (some of which he could They have a national organizain his day Walk in on and take tion, a trust, in which all region-over cold, at the muzzle of a al chiefs hold stock in certain gun), gambling, boxing, corpor- pooled enterprises, allotted in ations which had lucrative labor proportion to ser vices and troubles or could have them set stature. Of this combine, Char-up for him (he would hook onto lie "Lucky" Luciano, who steer-either side, depending on where ed it through, holds the largest the top dough lay); and from share and is still the last word, there to solid legitimate invest- though he is ostensibly a deportments with the cash proceeds. ed and harassed exile in Italy.

Tire Merger Ahead of Schedule Production Gains At Plant Here Consolidation of the production of Pennsylvania tires and tubes with the tires manufactured at the local Mansfield Tire and Rubber company plant is proceeding at a pace at least two weeks ahead of schedule, company officials said today. Production of Pennsylvania Turnpike truck tires started last week, little more than two weeks after announcement of the merger of the local tire manufacturing plant with the Pennsylvania Rubber company of Jeannette, Pa. Earlier this week officials said that 25 more workers have been added to the production line. Production of Pennsylvania passenger car tires began 24 hours after the consolidation became official. Present plans call for establishing Pennsylvania's sales, advertising and other allied personnel in offices at Plant No.

3, immediately adjacent to the main Mansfield plant. Tire manufacture at Jeannette will continue until all of the tire and tube production is integrated into the regular daily schedules here. Pennsylvania Rubber's nationally known line of athletic goods will continue to be produced at the Jeannette plant. Meanwhile, company officials said all production of the plant will be closed down at quitting time today for the annual two-week vacation for employes. Only skeleton maintenance crews will be kept at the plant during the two week period.

Production will resume on Aug. 15. Rites Set For Hero The body of one of Mansfield's war heroes will be returned to 'Ohio for re-burial next week. Military rites for John E. robinette, son of Mrs.

Adeline Robinette; 385 Newman street, will be held at the Beck funeral home in Bowling Green at 2:30 p. m. Tuesday. Burial will be at Bever Creek. Robinette, a hero of the famed Bataan death march, died in a Japanese prison camp Nov.

10, 1942. He was 28. He entered service in 1941 and was a private first class in the 192nd tank battalion in the Army at the time of his capture by the Japanese. Robinette was one of six Mansfielders in the tank battalion who were in the Bataan death march. Only two of them returned.

A former resident of Bowling Green, Robinette was living in Mansfield and was an employe of the Westinghouse Electric corporation at the time he entered service. In addition to his mother, he is survived by four sisters, Mrs. Lena Kern and Mrs. Ledra So-wash, both of Mansfield, Mrs. Bessie Yoder of Lima, and Mrs.

Glady sEmd ofBowling Green, and two brothers, Orville Robinette of Bowling Green, and Chester Robinette of West Salem. ENLISTS IN NAVY Theodore H. Ernst, 22, Shiloh, veteran of almost three years service in the U. S. Army, has enlisted in the Navy for three years.

Ernst was sent to the Naval Recruiting Station at San Diego, Calif. Donald McGee, 876 Millsboro road, Thursday. Son, to Mr. and Mrs. James Jefferson, 253 North Diamond street, Thursday.

Son, to Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cramer, 356 East Fourth street, Thursday. Son, to Mr. and Mrs.

Ralph McFadden, 774 Geddes avenue, Thursday. Son, to Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Wolff, 1456 Wooster road, today. Son, to Mr.

and Mrs. Dana Buck, 930 Ashland road, today. Son, to Mr. and Mrs. Glendale Uhlich, 46112 Springmill street, today.

Marriaae Licenses APPLIED FOR, Robert Hill. 411 Ohio street, and Emily L. Pamer, Mansfieid, R. D. L.

C. Vandervort, 60 North Franklin avenue, and Marian Spayde, 1106 Woodland road. Divorce Actions DIVORCES GRANTED Nellie Borden Casper from George Casper, on grounds of neglect and cruelty. Plaintiff restored to maiden name of Nellie Borden. Betty C.

Spencer from Clifford Spencer, on grounds of neglect. Plaintiff restored to maiden name of Betty C. Gibson. Frances L. Gerhart from Richard R.

Gerhart, on grounds of neglect and cruelty. Plaintiff restored to maiden name of Frances L. Russell. Marjorie E. Schnitzer from Robert L.

Schnitzer, on grounds of neglect. Plaintiff restored to Takes Her Horses Back To Vermont Fight Hinted On Quail Bill BULLETIN. COLUMBUSGov. Frank J. Lausche today signed one bill approved by the Ohio legislature, and vetoed another.

The governor signed a bill raising by half the amount of money cities and counties get from the three per cent sales tax. Ile vetoed a measure authorizing State Auditor Joseph T.Ferguson to make pre-auditS of counties anl cities poor relief expenditures. By KEN DAVIS COLUMBUSUP)The 98th General Assembly lauded and lambasted as the best and the worstreturned to the capitol today for its final session. If one legislative group has its way, this legislative swan song may contain at least one diei cordant note. Rep.

Lowell Fess (R-Greene). Is reported spearheading a movement to give Gov. Frank J. Lausche the bird over his veto of the bill that would have taken quail off the songbird list and made them game birds. Fess, it is reported in state.

house corridors, has been mail. ing letters to fellow legislators, asking their attendance at the final hdjournment session and their vote to override Lausche's veto. Legislators must muster 81 votes in the House and 20 in the Senate, a three-fifths vote. Final sessions often are not attended by enough legislators to vetoes. VETOES SIX BILLS Governor Lausche, with several major bills his desk, has used his veto six times; twice on bills of major interest.

In addition to the quail measure, the governor also turned thumbs down on the uniform municipal court bill. Four others that felt the axe: House Bill 353 which would have required county auditors or boards of tax appeals to give 10 days notice to owners of properties which either planned to remove from the tax exemption list. Senate Bill 336 which would have hiked salaries of referees of the bureau of unemploy. ment compensation to a maximum of 66,000 from a present maximum of $4,500. House Bill 479 which would have removed aircraft front taxable property lists and provided for registration and licensing of aircraft.

Senate Bill 379 which dealt with soldiers' and sailors' relief. Governor Lausche still must act onor allow to become law without his signature several major proposals. These include pre-auditing of county poor relief by the state auditor, aid to local governments, voting machines and establishment of a government study commission to replace the postwar planning commission. Truck Driver, 3 Others Fined Driver of a small truck was arrested for driving while under the influence of alcohol and three passengers were arrested for intoxication by police at 936 p. m.

yesterday when officers saw the truck following an uncertain course on East Sixth street. Robert Clark, of Millsboro road, driver of the truck, was fined $75 and costs and his right to drive was suspended for six months when he appeared before Acting Judge James V. Will today in municipal court. Fined $5 and costs each for intoxication were Edward Pathgeb, 44, of North Main street, Ray Lee Deen, 35, of Portsmouth and Raymond W. Jones, 45, of Newark.

Services Set For illallett Child Funeral services for Donna Jean Ma Ilea, eight-week-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ray. mond D. Mal lett, 627 Johns ave.

flue, will be held at 1 p. Saturday at the Wappner funeral home. Rev. A. F.

Lindbeck, pas. tor of the Mayflower Congrega. tional church, will officiate. Bur. ial will be in the cemetery at Ankenytown.

Knox county. the first five months of the year Mansfield averaged 11 acci dents causing more than seven days lost time. Institutions and firms on the June Safety Honor roll were Senior High school, Mansfield Fire department, Ohio Fuel Gas company, Page Dairy company, Yellow Stripe Cab company, Westinghouse Electric corpora. tion, Hartman Electric Manufacturing company, Richland Shale Brick company, Swan Cleaners, Brandenburg Chevrolet company, Mansfield Leland hotel, M. O'Neil company anti the Standard Oil company, A make-shift wagon, containing a small menagerie of goats, chickens and dogs, rolled along under "two horse power" out Ashland road this morning.

The strange looking vehicle had come from Arkansas. A sun burned New England woman, who identified herself as Mrs. Arthur Lamea shifted on the burlap-covered wagon seat and stated: "I want to take the horses back to where they was born." Blames Child The fly-molested hor se hitched to the wagon, noncha- In Garage Fire lantly pulled at the weeds beside the highway. So did a small colt, fastened to the team by a strap. Blame for the fire which de He expanded to where he required an executive vice-president, and he installed Johnny Torrio, his wife's nephew.

When-his interests expanded so he needed another trustworthy executive, Torrio brought on Al Capone, who had made his mark and had a mark made on him in Brooklyn. Torrio was shot in the jaw as his car was forced to the curb. An attempt to assassinate him on a high floor of St. Luke's Hospital nearly succeeded. Johnny took the fire escape, beat it to New York in his pajamas, and fled to Italy.

Capone moved up and in. Capon became a figure of world-wide notoriety. With Capone's conviction and Decide Fate of Building State Inspector To Meet Weldon Fate of the Weldon building, Fourth and Main streets, heavily damaged by fire early Monday, expected to be decided late today, Fire Chief L. J. Steele said.

So far, no recommendations either for the repair or rebuilding of the structure have been made by state inspectors, the chief added. 'The chief said H. J. Bayer, building inspector for the State Department of Public Relations, was to meet with William M. Weldon owner of the building at Fourth and Main streets.

Chief Steele said a representative of the state fire marshal's office also made an Inspection of the damaged structure but no recommendation has been made. An estimated $100,000 of damage was done to the structure by the blaze which broke out in the rear center of the building about 5 a. rn. Monday. The chief said earlier this week that he "would like to see a new fireproof building go up on the site." The fire, which the chief believed started in the Hobby Center, spread through the rear portion of the second and third floors, causing $30,000 damage to the Sutter Candy company and from $1,000 to $10,000 damage to five other offices and shops in the structure.

4 More File For Offices Four more men have filed for school board and village offices, subject to the general election in November. Two filed for places on the Plymouth school board. They are John F. Root and J. H.

Cashman. Walter Pritchard filed his nominating petition for the Lucas school board while J. Ben Smith filed for Plymouth councilman. 4 e' On the Records In Mansfield Today Above "Lucky" is a board of directors, gray-haired ex-gangsters who now live on luxurious suburban estates. These are facts.

But they are far less glamorous than the tales of old, blazing chronicles of sawed off shotguns and portable machine guns, the "taken for a- a -ride" and "Put on the spot" techniques. Those now bear the fingerprints of punks. The well behaved gangman of 1949 scorns them, except in the most aggravated instances. The flaming torpedo that thrilled and scandalized the globe is gray, bald and scared. I am looking around for something more spectacular.

One must make a living. ard street; Danny Walsh, Bell-vine; Mrs. Josephine Bittman and daughter, Mansfield, R. D. Mrs.

Claude Hale and daughter, Mansfield, R. D. Mrs. William Pryor and daughter, Mansfield, R. D.

John Lehr, 214 Chilton avenue; Thelma Critchfield, 411 Sloane avenue; John Richard, 11312 North Walnut street; Mrs. Joseph Titschinger, 431 Daisy street; Altha Stevenson, Cleveland; Patricia Stockwell, 501 Glessner avenue; Margie Shafer, 589 Garfield place; Vance Dean, 99 Dawson avenue; Dorothy Normant, 359 West Sixth street. AT PEOPLE'S HOSPITAL Admissions Raymond Mc-Peek, Trailer city; Vivian Anderson, 246 East First street. Releases Phillip Strine, 219 Elmwood drive; Rex Strine, 219 Elmwood drive; Mrs. Garnard Kelley, 20 West Raleigh avenue; Leonard Woerth, 621 Edgewood road; Sarah Mace, 416 Reed street; Lucius Feagin, 798 North Main street; Florence Cates, Butler.

AT MADISON HOSPITAL Admissions Richard Horning, 40 Small avenue; Mrs. Caroline Stout, 24 South Foster street; Roger Clifford, Mansfield, R. D. 3. Releases Miss Pearl Enderle, 635 Scholl road; Mrs.

Al-lie Stentz. Galion; Richard Horning, 40 Small avenue; Kenneth Farst, Perrysville, R. D. 2. Births AT GENERAL HOSPITAL Daughter, to Mr.

and Mrs. stroyed a one-car garage shortly after noon yesterday at the Gail Kern Home, 394 McPherson street, today rested on the not-so-broad shoulders of a fouryear-old McPherson street boy. Kern notified police at 7:30 p. in. yesterday that the boy had been playing with matches in the garage and that he believed the youngster started the blaze.

However, the child's father, contacted by police, said the boy was with him when the fire was first noticed. The father added that the boy had been corrected several times about playing with matches. Laffail-Day kN a. jet Mrs. Lamea, who is sort of a pioneer woman in reverse she's going eastsaid she's headed for the Green mountains, Vermont.

That's where the horses were born, she said. About two years ago she made the same trip out west to Arkansas. She gave no reason for her change of mind. Behind her in the boarded-up wagon, 12 goats munched on hay and 25 chi.ckens clucked and fluttered in their pens. "Made it this far in three weeks," she said, petting a puppy that bore relationship to a shepherd.

"We drink goat's milk on the way and once in a while I stop and get something hot to eat." CARRIES HAY STACK Usual fare for the goats and horses was the hay carried on the wagon. Also piled with the hay were several rubber tires, "extras" for the tires on the wagon. Mrs. Lames, also secretive about her age, smoothed the wrinkles from her faded green house dress, and brushed back her greying hair. A dried up elm branch, used as switch for the horses, swayed in the breeze.

Asked if passage through cities ever became a problem, she answered in her New England matter-of-fact tone: "Oh, just keep goin'just like everywhere else." former name of Marjorie E. Rein. FILES ANSWER Marion Virginia Davis, a minor, Shelby, vs. Ernest Junior Davis, Naval Mine Warfare school, Yorktown, Va. Defendant answer denying most allegations.

June L. Teffeteller vs. Andrew S. Teffeteller, on grounds of neglect. Plaintiff granted custody of one child.

PETITIONS FILED Kathleen Mary Furguson, 429 Scholl road, vs. William Furguson, 117 South Diamond street. For divorce and custody of three children, on grounds of neglect and cruelty. Married Feb. 28, 1948.

1111 1 Wv ospirdo, Tonight's Dates, Mansfield Lodge No. 19. IOOF, 2012 North Diamond street, Hospital Notes AT GENERAL HOSPITAL Admissions Mrs. Robert Cramer, 356 East Fourth street; Nick Orosan, 246 Bowman street; Mrs. Donald McGee, 876 Millsboro road; Mrs.

Grace Clark, Sunbury; John Underwood. Aver-ill avenue; Mrs. Glendale Uh Bch. 461 Springmill street; Jack Salvers, 21 John Long avenue; Mrs. Laura Bedman, Bucyrus; Mrs.

Ralph McFadden, 774 Geddes avenue; Mrs. William Flinn, 62 Sturges avenue; Plc O'Brien, 433 North Mulberry street; Carol Merrell, 147 North Walnut street; Mrs. Cora Bemiller, Ashland; Mrs. Peter Simon, 172 Crouse stree Raymond Stauffer, Perrysville; Mrs. Tony Santoro, 265 Parkway drive; Dorothy Walker, 34 Orchard street; Mrs.

Frederick Wolff, 1456 Wooster road; Mrs. Dana Buck, 930 Ashland road; Mrs. Benjamin Czajka, 168 West Third street; Mrs. William Cave, 133 Willow street; William E. Post, 274 Davis road; Mr.

Alvis Booker, 320 First avenue. Releases Mrs. Ernest Burkett. 163 West Fifth street; Marilyn Horn, 206 Saxton road; John Tischler, 196 East Third street; Eileen Riddle, 113 Arthur avenue; Michael Phillips, 552 Spring-mill street; Kit Cochran, 504 Cline avenue; Donald Schnitzer, 2712 Blanche street; Mrs. Paul Weirick and daughter, Lucas, R.

D. Albert F. Adams, 461 How Industrial Accident hate In City Shows Decline The accident rate in industry and business took a sharp decline during June, according to the Mansfield Chamber of Commerce Sifety Council report. Only 11 accidents were reported during the month as compared with an average of almost 20 accidents for the first five months of the year. The accident severity rate during June was 4.68, compared with tlie accumulative average of 6.40,.

Of the 11 accidents in June only four caused a loss of more than seven days time. During ir 4,7 Apt Kg Features Spxa ICodd nghts reserved. 'The mice seem to enjoy our cheese. This is the third they've left us a tip." 1-Z.

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