News: Items from the Lebanon Daily Times, September 12, 1900, Lebanon, Lebanon County, PA Contributed and transcribed for use in the USGenWeb Archives by Copyright 2005. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/pa/lebanon/ _______________________________________________ Items from the Lebanon Daily Times, September 12, 1900 Having an Outing. Yesterday morning Thomas Bollman, Al. Reizenstein and Wm. Bollman, members of the Wm. Penn club, left on the 7:08 train over the Cornwall railroad for Fishing creek, along the Susquehanna river, near Columbia, where they will camp for a week. They took with them a complete fishing and gunning outfit and will be joined today by other members of the club. Returned from Europe. Miss Elizabeth Grumbein, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Cornelius Grumbein, Lehman street, who had been in Europe for two months, where she visited the Paris Exposition and attended the International Christian Endeavor convention, at London, has returned home. Left for Fullerton. Walter Turner and James Hisener, of this city, formerly employed as puddlers at the American Iron and Steel company's works, left yesterday morning for Fullerton, Pa., where they have secured employment. THE SICK. Matthias Rohland, the well known ice dealer, residing on Fourteenth street, was stricken with paralysis on Monday and his condition is serious. ACCIDENT. Clara Hickey, an eight-year-old daughter of William Hickey, Fall and South alleys, fell off of a swing about 5 o'clock last evening and knocked the breath out of her body, but fortunately she sustained no serious injury. The shock to her mother was the cause of a severe fainting spell. IN ALDERMANIC COURTS. Mery E. Gamber, of this city, made information before Alderman Miller, charging M. B. Wengert, a carpenter, of the same place, with malicious mischief, alleging that the accused destroyed some of her property, 1127 Lehman street. Chief of Police Stine yesterday morning made information before Alderman Snyder, charging E. Bers and A. Bers, of Philadelphia, with receiving a lot of stolen goods in the nature of brass, which is alleged to have been stolen at the local furnaces and iron industries recently and was then sent to that city, where the goods were sold. The arrest was made yesterday by officers in that city and each were held in $1,000 bail for a hearing before Alderman Snyder tomorrow.