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[skipping Room 1]
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Nearly 8 months after Mama Margaret filed for divorce, the case is being heard in court.
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SET FOR TRIAL.
Assignment of Cases For September Term Of Court.
Common pleas court opens in both rooms on Monday, September 17. The following assignment of cases has been made:
[skipping Room 1]
ROOM 2. -- JUDGE I. H. TAYLOR
Monday, September 17 --
Hearing motion docket; Richards vs. Deckard et al; Louisville Deposit Bank Vs. Schlott; Hossler, trustee, vs. Dime Savings Bank company et al; Graham vs. Veteran Memorial Association et al.
Tuesday, September 18 --
Kame vs. Steiner et all; Cook vs. Alexander et al; Pitkin vs. Crocker et al; Schauwecker vs. Fenton et al; Madden vs. Webb et al.
Wednesday, September 19 --
Randels vs. Randels; Buttermore vs. Clapper et al; Buchman vs. Buchman; Zuber vs. Unger et al; Remley vs. Remley.
Thursday, September 20 --
Sabourein vs. Montague et al; Howell vs. Champion Pole & Shaft company's assignee; Reeves vs. Adler et al; Gurski et al vs. Gurski et al; Thull vs. Werntz.
Friday September 21 --
Matthews et al vs. McIntosh; Worthington vs. Clay et al; Decker vs. Glessner; Savings and Loan company vs. Oberlin et al; Stokey vs. Stokey.
Assignment of Cases For September Term Of Court.
Common pleas court opens in both rooms on Monday, September 17. The following assignment of cases has been made:
[skipping Room 1]
ROOM 2. -- JUDGE I. H. TAYLOR
Monday, September 17 --
Hearing motion docket; Richards vs. Deckard et al; Louisville Deposit Bank Vs. Schlott; Hossler, trustee, vs. Dime Savings Bank company et al; Graham vs. Veteran Memorial Association et al.
Tuesday, September 18 --
Kame vs. Steiner et all; Cook vs. Alexander et al; Pitkin vs. Crocker et al; Schauwecker vs. Fenton et al; Madden vs. Webb et al.
Wednesday, September 19 --
Randels vs. Randels; Buttermore vs. Clapper et al; Buchman vs. Buchman; Zuber vs. Unger et al; Remley vs. Remley.
Thursday, September 20 --
Sabourein vs. Montague et al; Howell vs. Champion Pole & Shaft company's assignee; Reeves vs. Adler et al; Gurski et al vs. Gurski et al; Thull vs. Werntz.
Friday September 21 --
Matthews et al vs. McIntosh; Worthington vs. Clay et al; Decker vs. Glessner; Savings and Loan company vs. Oberlin et al; Stokey vs. Stokey.
audio---images---comment---transcript---~NOTES~---links---site navigation
1.
This is one of a series of documents about the divorce of Mama Margaret and Papa Charles.
You can find links to all the documents that I've uploaded so far in:
2.
Common pleas court opens in both rooms on Monday, September 17.
There's a song in Gilbert and Sullivan's Iolanthe with the following lines:
"Or assume that the witnesses summoned in force
"In Exchequer, Queen's Bench, Common Pleas, or Divorce
"Have perjured themselves as a matter of course."
That makes it sound as though in England divorce suits are not heard in the Common Pleas court, whereas in Ohio apparently they are. But maybe Gilbert was just looking for a rhyme that would fit in the song.
3.
ROOM 2. -- JUDGE I. H. TAYLOR
Wikipedia says:
Isaac Hamilton Taylor (April 18, 1840 – December 18, 1936) was a lawyer, judge, and single-term U.S. Representative from Ohio from 1885 to 1887.
and:
Taylor served as a delegate to the 1892 Republican National Convention. He was the judge of the Court of Common Pleas from 1889 to 1901, when he resigned. He engaged in the practice of his profession in Canton until 1922.
Since he was a Republican in politics, I'll bet Papa Charles knew him.
4.
The case is at the absolute end of the week. It sounds as though nobody thought it would take very long. I don't know if this was the only hearing for the divorce, or what.
This is one of a series of documents about the divorce of Mama Margaret and Papa Charles.
- The previous document in the series is: 1900-06-19 NEWSPAPER ITEM FEATURING PAPA CHARLES
- The next document in the series is: 1900-09-25 NEWSPAPER ITEM MENTIONING THE STOKEY DIVORCE
You can find links to all the documents that I've uploaded so far in:
2.
Common pleas court opens in both rooms on Monday, September 17.
There's a song in Gilbert and Sullivan's Iolanthe with the following lines:
"Or assume that the witnesses summoned in force
"In Exchequer, Queen's Bench, Common Pleas, or Divorce
"Have perjured themselves as a matter of course."
That makes it sound as though in England divorce suits are not heard in the Common Pleas court, whereas in Ohio apparently they are. But maybe Gilbert was just looking for a rhyme that would fit in the song.
3.
ROOM 2. -- JUDGE I. H. TAYLOR
Wikipedia says:
Isaac Hamilton Taylor (April 18, 1840 – December 18, 1936) was a lawyer, judge, and single-term U.S. Representative from Ohio from 1885 to 1887.
and:
Taylor served as a delegate to the 1892 Republican National Convention. He was the judge of the Court of Common Pleas from 1889 to 1901, when he resigned. He engaged in the practice of his profession in Canton until 1922.
Since he was a Republican in politics, I'll bet Papa Charles knew him.
4.
The case is at the absolute end of the week. It sounds as though nobody thought it would take very long. I don't know if this was the only hearing for the divorce, or what.
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DOCUMENT LISTS FOR PEOPLE:
- MAMA MARGARET: DOCUMENTS ----- Related
- PAPA CHARLES: DOCUMENTS ----- Related
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