The Nebraska advertiser. (Nemaha City, Neb.) 18??-1909, September 17, 1897, Image 6

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SLAIN LI KB SILElflP.
Pennsylvania Striking Minors Fired
Upon by Deputy sheriffs.
ftloro TIiiiii SJO .Mini Killed mid I'llllr -tO
Jujiiri'il Dead mill Wounded All
llnn;iirliiu-Tnt;tfi Crlnl In
(lin Mr Ik i! Munition.
ITazlkion, Til., Sept. 11. The strike
oltuntlon reached a terrible crisis on
the outskirts of La timer yesterday
afternoon, when a hand of deputy
nheriflY. fired into a mob of Hungarian
miners. Tho men fell Mice sheep and
the excitement has since been so in
tense tliut no accurate figures of dead
und wounded can he obtained, Re
ports run from 15 to 'JO odd killed and
40 or more wounded. One man who
reached the scene lust night counted
III corpses. Knur other bodies lie in
4,ho mountains between Latimer iiuil
llarleigh. Those who were not injured
earned their dead and wounded friends
into the woods, and "Uiiuute is bullied.
The strikers left Ilaleton about il.KO
o'clock tlih afternoon, and it was their
Intention to go to Latimer. As soon as
(Ills became known, a band of deputies
was loaded on a trolley ear and went
whirling across the mountain to tho
ceno where the bloody conflict fol
lowed. After reaching Latimer, they
left the ear and formed into three com
panies. Shcriir .Martin was in entire
command, ami stood In the front of tho
line until the strikers approached.
They were seen coming across the
ridge, and Martin went out to meet
them. Tho men drew up suddenly,
mid listened in silence until he had
once more read the riot act. This fin
ished, a low muttering arose among
tho foreigners, and there was a slight
movement forward. Perceiving this,
tho Hhcrlll' stepped toward them and,
in a determined tone, forbade ad
vance. Some one struck the shoritr,
and tho next moment there was nun m
.inainl to the deputies to tire.
tl'he guns of the deputies instantly
bolchod forth a terrible volley. Tho
report seemed to shako the very moun
tains, and a cry of dismay went up
.from tho people. The strikers were
taken entirely by surprise, and as the
men toppled and fell over each other,
those who remained unhurt stampeded.
Tho mon wont down before the storm
of bullets like tenpins and tho groans
of tho dying and wounded filled tho
.air. Tho excitement that followed
was simply indescribable. The depu
ties seemed to bo terror-stricken at tho
deadly execution of their guns and,
seeing tho living strikers Jleeing like
wild, and others dropping to the earth,
they went to the aid of the unfor
.ittuuilcs whom they had brought down.
BETTER IN ALL WAYS.
VDiiu'h Weekly Trade Itcvlow Say 1'hero In
. i No lliiltlui; In IIiimIiickk Progress.
lTi:w Yomc, Sept. 11. II. G. Dun it
Ca's Weekly Review of Trade says:
aVicro Is no hnltliu,' la tho advance lltisl-
. wtisq jjrows bettor In all iwiy.s, for while Its
niiucillutlvo oiul occasionally breaks considcu-
OH!r,.tvtsady Incrcnso In production, In uorli-
. Uiv;iforcc nnd In tho power of tho people to pttr-
obnso Is tho feature wliloli overshadow all
others. Itoports of Now York tnulo unions
show mi inero iso since ono your n;o of III per
cent, hi tlio number of inuiiiit work aiuliislml
.livir Jiuireaso nmoni; mon In llko position
f throt.R'hout tho country would exceed MIO.UO),
whllo ovcry wcolc iiddsinnny establishment to
itlro nctlvo list.
'Uho fnrmurs aro helped by higher prices Tor
wheat, and whllo western receipts do not show
Hut thoy liuvo nmrketed a tenth of their crops,
assurance of a handsome prollt to como prc-
'ijiires tliein to buy llborallv liuruiiftor. llo-
cause of this, and tho Increase of hands at
uorlr, dealers throughout tho country hao
Btarlcd to replenish stocks, which is ihourcut
tfurco nt present operating la manufactures
mid trade, thout-h distribution by retail trade
iia.s Krciilly Increased.
Failures for tho week have been 'J." In the
United States, uifiitiist :tl5 lust juar; and a.'i in
Canada, aijalust 17 last year.
'RUNNING OUT OF DRUGS.
TNpw Cause for Anxiety nt
Where Yellow I'm or 1
Ni'.w Olli.l'.ANH, Sept. 11
lllllixl, .MISS.,
IhIh,
-At Uiloxi
tho drug stores are running
out of
medicines and no freights have been I
received, although ordered in ample i
time, President Lemon, of the Uiloxi I
board, has wired President Oltphnnt .
.uririnir mm in heltall ol liuinnnitv to ,
ihce that requests for drugs shall be
promptly attended to. The Uiloxi board
of health issued a notice to all phy
sicians that they must report within
ill hours to that body all infec
tious, contagious and suspicious eases
under a penalty of Slud flue. All pre
vailing cases of fever were reported to
"bo convalescent. Ocean Springs re--ported
ono now ease and one suspicious
.ease this morning, but no deaths huvo
occurred slnco that of tho man, Sey
mour, reported yesterday. An urgent
request, howover.has been forwarded to
Now Orleans for yellow fever nurses.
TWO ARE DROWNED.
(lirlHllan cull 'snn Droit from
Mm.
the
Kocli Inland llrldt;iit 1'opclcn.
Toi'KKA, Ivan., Sent. 11. Mary Chris-
'Hun and little son Eddie, of North
'.Topeka, wore drowned last night by
falling oW tho Itock Island railroad
'bridge. Tho accident was most pe
culiar and distressing. Mrs. Christian
accompanied by her son had started to
walk across tho bridge, this being a
common occurrence. They hud reached
the middle of the firstspan and stepped
out on ono of tho stringers to lot a
rallroad veloulpede pass by. dust at
the moment of passing them tho man
pit tho velocipede was horrified to seo
tho woman throw up her hands frail-
tleally and with a loud cry full into
the , river, tho boy being dragged In
with her.
SENATOR CHANDLER'S PLEA.
1I lint rent lllmctitllUtM Kverywhere to
.Miiko l'heinelve Heard.
IIohion, .Sept. i:. Senator Wllliiim
V. Chandler, of New Hampshire, has
I given tin following letter to tlie Asso
ciated press:
I HppiMil lo nil republican to moot wltli Joy
ous welcome Hi" llrst step KtiKltind inny twite
toward bltnotiilllstn Tho movement earnestly
nncl zealously btKUii by President MeKinley In
rTU
BKNATOK WII.MA.V K. OHANDI.Klt.
obedience to the HU Louis platform, wns (titck
ly followed by the French ministry, and the
Joint proposals uro be I in,' caret ullv and seriously
considered by tho Ilrltlsh cabinet, with a rea
sonable prospect (hat Ln.'land will reopen her
Indian mints, will use silver as a p-irt of her
bank reserve, and otherwise cordially aid In
rotnoir tlz ttlon I entreat blmntii lists every
where to m ik'! tliotm 'lvs huird against the
selllsb oulcrles of tho otiowd money-lenders
of New York and Chicago and their subservi
ent newspapers.
TWO MEN BLAMED.
Conductor lliirlmnk mill lliiulneer Ottr.ni
tier Charged "lib llio Colorado Train
Wreck.
Nkwcabii.k, Col., Sept. l.'i. Krank
Hurbimk, conductor, and Engineer
Ostrander, deceased, of the Colorado
Midland railway, aro charged by tho
coroner's jury with being responsible
for the frightful wreck which occurred
hero Thurs'' y night. Tho jury de
cided from tho evidence that tho con
ductor and engineer attempted to ar
rive at Newcastle siding upon tho
time allotted by order of train dis
patcher to the llio Grande passenger
westbound. Conductor Iturbank was
released upon his own recognizance.
The death of Rev. Alexander llartman,
of Ilerseher, 111., and the finding of
tho body of Engineer Ostrander in
creases the number of known dead to
11. The coroner's researches among
this ruins have convinced him that
from six to ten more met death in tho
awful accident. This materially re
duces the original estimates.
DEFENDED HER GOOD NAME.
A
'lucky Woman .School Teacher Chastises
Olio of llio School Directors.
Hoi.t.A, Mo.. Sept. 12. K. E. Dowd, a
prominent real estate man of this city,
and a member of the school board, was
publicly horsewhipped on tho street
by Miss Myra Ithiuchard, a teacher in
tho public schools. Dowd hud made
disparaging remarks about the lady's
character in a meeting of the board on
Kriday night. This produced consid
erable feeling in that body, and Mr.
Dowd'.s resignation was aslced for.
Miss lllaneharil, accompanied by her
father and several friends, met Dowd
on the street and proceeded to belabor
him with blows from a rawhide.
Dowd made an etl'ort to escape, but
was prevented by Miss Itlunchnrd's
friends. On her appearance in the
school room she was warmly congratu
lated by the other teachers for the
courage she had exhibited in defense
of her character.
THEIR ATTITUDE CHANGED.
Chinese oniclnU No I kit l'erseinto .llls-
Hlonarlesof 1'rol esiunt ( hinclns.
London, Sent, lit. Protestant nfs
sionaries returned from China say that
the war lias brought about a revolu
tion in tho attitude of tho governing
class toward evangelistic work
which is calculated to have an
enormous ell'eet on China's tutu re.
' lu! d hostilities to missionary work
llIlve ceased. Olliciuls now frequently
eiinsult the missionaries respecting
the best methods of advancing Chinese
iiiicicsih,
TWENTY-FOUR KILLED.
Tearful lxphmlon at u Stone On.irry on thri
CIM Cm. KllllWII).
City ov Mi:mco, Sept. i:.. Twenty
four persons, mainly spectators of the
great blast at Panuelas quarry on the
Vera Cru. railway, were instantly
killed. Tho blast went off, and the
people rushed forward to see tho ef
fects, when gases in tho air ignited,
causing a terrific explosion with aw
ful results.
SIrKlnley Hack In WiiHhlnuton.
Washington', Sept. Hi. Tho presi
dent hns sent notice that he will re
turn to WoKhington from Somerset to-
! day, and a meeting of the cabinet has
been called for Tuesday. It Is under-
stood that the president will not to-
, main In Washington more than a day
or two, but will leave the city again in
eontliiutIon of his vacation, and will
not return
October 1.
to the white house before
SajH Hut r.levcn Perished.
Topuka, Kan., Sept. 1!). C. W. llvus,
claim agent of the Santa Ke, says there
is no truth whatever in tho report
from Emporia to the effect that addl-
tlonul charred bodies of victims of tho
wreck had been found. He says ho
saw the wreck cleared from the track,
and no such remains were found. Ho
asserts that the death of Engineer
Krlsby made tho 11th death resulting
from tho wreck,
to Ml
wA w KNfe
smn
.FATAL WRECK.
Ten People Killed and Many Injured In
a Santa Fo Wreck.
Accident Occurred r ICinpnrla, thn Itw
Htllt of ix llead-Cnd C'olllnloii Vita
AiIiIh to tho Other Horror f;om-
pany'a I.oin Over 8100,000.
KxiPoitiA, Ium., ScpL 0. Ten nre
dead and 17 aro injured, some of them
fatally, as tho result of a head-end col
lision of two of tho fastest trains in
the .Santa Ke service at 7:30 last night.
Tho fast mall train, castbound, and
tho California and Mexico express,
westbound, crashed together on a
curve three miles east of Emporia.
The engines exploded, tearing an im
mense hole in the earth into which
the baggage and mail cars plunged
and weru consumed by fire. The list
of tho dead are:
.Inmos Ilrcunnn, engineer. Topclcn, Knn.;
Nato Ilollistcr. fireman Topo'cti. Kan.; Julius
V. K Sauer. m'sseiiK'T Wells-Far'o express,
Ivansas city, Mo.; William I-'risbey, engineer
of fast mall train; K. O MctJeo. postal clerk,
Knnsas City; It A. Doran, postal clerk. Um-
porla; llruifinan. 0J3 Locust street, Topeka;
Kan.; (lonzales, llrcmau of westbound
train. Daniel McKonnon, 17 years old. O.'O linn
cock street Topeka, Kan., two unknown trumps.
Ilmv tho Wreck Occurred.
The wreck was caused by the mis
carriage of orders from tho trainmas
ter. The conductor of the castbound
train was ordered at Emporia to meet
and pass the California flyer at Lang,
seven miles cast. An order sent to
Lang to the conductor of the westbound
train for him to wait there was not
delivered and he supposed ho was to
pass at Emporia. Each train was hur
rying onu to Emporia, the other to
Lang and mot at full speed on the
main line. The westbound train was
making not less than 40 miles an hour
when tho wreck occurred. The express
train was drawn by two locomotives
and when thoy struck the fust mail all
three of the engines exploded and tore a
hole in the track so deep that tho smok
ing car of tho westbound train went
on top of tho wreck of the three en
gines and two mail cars, and balanced
there without turning over. Those in
this car who escaped through the win
dows came very near turning the car
over, In which event the fatality would
have been much greater, as this car
soon caught flro from tho exploded en
gines underneath it and burned to
asheh in no time. In jumping out of
the windows one or two aro known to
have fallen into the burning debris
underneath and their fate is unknown.
There were not more than a dozen
passengers in the fast mail, all in ono
conch, and while none of thorn were
seriously injured, the slinking up was
terrible. Every seat was torn from its
lloor fastenings with such force that
many of them pulled planks from tho
lloor with them.
lirjnn One of the I'lisHcnirers.
On the west bound train was W. J.
Hryan and T. M. Potter. l!oth mon
did splendid work in the work of res
cue. Mr. ltryan assisted in carrying
out of the wreckage two postal clerks,
lie was by the side of Engineer Kris
bee and helped attend him until tho
doctors and relief train arrived from
Emporia.
rlrv Addx to the Horror.
The dead and mangled bodies of four
victims wore dragged to the grass be
side the tracks. The women passen
gers huddled in terror and watched
the Humes grow higher and higher.
As the lire roared and crackled like sv
furnace, men with blanched faces
fought with the bravery of he
roes to subdue it, but thoy were
working under the most ad
verse circumstances, and it seemed
that thoy would be unable to
stay the course of the lire fiend.
Tho flames at oitu time rose to such a
height that they could be seen in Em
poria, tli ree miles uway. After her
culean work, they were subdued.
Trains over the Santa Ke will be run
by way of Ottawa for a few days. Tho
cost of the wreck to the railway is esti
mated at $100,0(M.
FOR WESTERNSHIPPERS.
.Mcetlni; H'lll Soon lie Mold In Portlier tlio
lUc or Cnlf Ports.
Wichita. Kan., Sept. 1). -The execu
tive committee of tho gulf and inter
state transportation committee will
meet hero to decide upon a date and
place for holding a general convention
of delegates from the states west
of tho Mississippi river. Tho pur
pose of the convention is to thor
oughly unite and organi.o the sections
of the country interested, tho forma
tion of transportation clubs in coun
ties and eities to the end that a gen
eral and powerful crusade may be in
augurated for the enforcement of tho
natural rights of western shippers to
prollt by their nearness to the south
ern outlets to tide water.
TOLSTOI'S FOLLOWERS.
KiiHHlan Kccleslnsti' Pronounce Them Dun
Korous to Church and Statu.
Moscow. Sept. V. A congress of high
Russian ecclesiastics, now in session in
Kazan, is considering measures to stop
the spread of sectarianism. The con
gress has decided to ask the govern
ment to proceed against the adherents
of Count Tolstoi as being dangerous to
to the church and state. It also voted
to prohibit thu publication of Lutheran
books In the Russian language. It
was proposed that the children of sec
tarians be taken from them and edu
cated in public institutions of tho
orthodox faith. Ono bishop suggested
that tho property of sectarians be con
Useated by the government.
AN APPALLING RECORD.
Great Number of Deail Postal Clerk nun
Itcult of Kallroad Wreck.
Kansas Citv, Mo., Sept. 10. The
deaths in railway wrecks among tho
postal clerks slnco .January in the ter
ritory tributary to Kansas City has ex
ceeded the record for any year in tho
history of tho department. The list of
dead and Injured clerks hns reached
an appalling number and has demon
strated to the clerks the very great
danger to which they are con
stantly exposed. Tho first serious
wreck and fatality of tho year
In this district was March fi on
tho Missouri Pacific, east of Jeltersor:
City, in which Clerk W. A. Kosonbergcr
was cremated and Clerks E. S. Vance
and C. II. Nouek were injured. Tho
next one was the awful wreck on tho
Wabash, dune 5J0, in which the whole
postal crow lost their lives. K. W.
llrink, G. A. Smith, Jr., .1. W. Sal
wenter and W. S. Mills were killed.
August !i the Union Pacific trt'iu was
wrecked near Denver and J. E. Held
and W. II. Rankin were both
seriously injured. Their escape
from Instant death was almost mirac
ulous. August 0, G. II. Edgeworth, a
clerk, was seriously hurt at llur
lingnme, Kan., and now the wreck at
Emporia, with two clerks dead and
three badly hurt, completes tho list to
date. Tho records of tho department
show no equal to the awful mortality
of tho present year. The danger to
the clerks is from wreck and fire. The
fear of cremation is their one great
dread.
DEATHS NUMBER
TWELVE.
Victims or tlin Santii To Wreck
'Jli.innt First Supposed.
Orentor
Empokia, Kan. Sept. 10. The charred
remains of five human beings were
discovered by the wrecking crow which
is clearing away tho debris of tho ter
rible wreck on tho Santa Ke Wednes
day night. It is impossible to identify
any of them, but thoy are supposed to
he the two firemen, Ed Gunsuully and
lien Walters; J. K. Suiter, tho express
messenger; Harvey Kowler, of Empo
ria, and a tramp. Six bodies were re
covered last night, and Hrakeman Van
Clove died this morning while en route
to tho hospital, so that the list of dead
now number 12.
Two unknown, one of whom is un
doubtedly Harvey Kowler, a farmer, of
Emporia, who is missing. The other
is thought to be a tramp. It is barely
possible that tho burned and blackened
remains taken from the wreck may be
of only four persons, in which event
the death list would number but 11,
and there would be but ono "unknown"
to account for.
HAD BEEN THERE BEFORE.
A .Shrewd Imclneer on t lie "ICaty" Defeats
the Plan of t;i-;ht Kobbers.
SIi;skooi:i:, I. T., Sept. 10. A daring
attempt was made last night to hold
up the southbound passenger train on
the Missouri, Ivansas A Texas railroad
at Uond, I. T., a Hag station !!() miles
south of here. The engineer in
charge of the locomotive was .John
lluglaud, an old and trusted em
ploye, who had been held up several
times before. He proceeded to obey
tho signal, but when his engine was
within 100 yards of the signal ho no
ticed several mon standing near tho
tracks and at once suspected their pur
pose. Opening the throttle, he sped
by them as though no signal had been
given. The robbers, having been
foiled in their attempt to stop the
train, tied and tire still at large.
MISSOURI'S SPLENDHD SHOWING
State Labor Commissioner Prvpares Sta
tistics for t he Omaha t:poslilon.
.iKKri.nso.N I'n v, Mo., Sept. 10. State
Labor Commissioner Ro.elle has pro-'
pared for the Triiusmississippi Inter-'
national exposition a statement show
ing Missouri's productions in lS'.HS and I
their value. Tho estimated value of i
those products, including theoutputof
all factories, except flouring mills, is
S 100,1100.000. Although it is impossible
to get an accurate estimate of the
products for ISD7 tit this time tho sur
prising increase in tho growth of small
fruits, the value of the peach and apple
crop, together with tho great increase
in the value of tho wheat and corn
crops, win place tne ligures lor
LS'.)7 approximately $100,000,000 more
than for lbOH.
EDMUNDS NOtHdENTIFIED.
Colorado Woman ho saw Koj'h iMurderer
Not Sure Kiliiiunds Is the Man.
Coi.okado Si'itiNos, Col., Sept. 10.
Sheritl ltoynton arranged a mooting
with John It. Edmunds, suspected of
murdering Herbert II. Kay on Piko'a
peak, and tho two young women who
'ust saw the mysterious stranger in
company with Kay on the night of
August IS. The women were shown
Edmunds dressed as tho stranger had
been described, and also in his every
day attire, llolh of them were in
doubt. They could not say that Ed
munds was tho man. but said there
was a resemblance. Edmunds will bo
' held until further investigation by tho
sherill.
Tii riff mi .'Mexlean Cuttle Not Prohibitory.
WAMMNtnoN, Sept. 10. The treasury
department has received information
from Eagle Pass, Tex., of tho importa
tion of MJO head of cattle from Mexico.
It is said that this is tho first entry of
importance since the new tariff law
went into effect, and that treasury
otllelals call attention to It, as it was
contended by opponents of tho bill
that the increase of "H per cent, ad
valorem on cattle would bo found tobu
prohibitory. Another largo entry in
expected soon at Laredo, Tux.
AWFUL IIAVOU.
A Colorado Train Wreck Results in
Terrible Disaster.
Thirty l'coplo Demi mid Nearly JJOO Injured
ninny rnMcnurrn tiro Consumed by
riniiicn Aftor tlin Wreck Con
ductor Under Arrest.
Xi'AVCABi't.K, Col., Sept. 11. Tho
worst wreck in the history of the state
of Colorado occurred tit 12:23 yester
day morning on tho joint track of tho
Denver & Rio Grande and the Colorado
Midland railways, XA miles west of
here. After 12 Jiours' incessant work
by the wrecking crows in clearing
away the debris and rescuing tho
bodies of those who perished, it is yet
impossible to secure more than an es
timate of the loss of life, and not even
those known to be dead have been
identified. Many of the unfortunates
will never be known, and it is possible
that tho number killed will always bo
in doubt. Prom thu best information
obtainable now fully :J0 persons are be
lieved to have perished, while 1S3 who
came out of thu wreck alive aro buffer
ing from serious Injuries.
Tho wreck was caused by a head-end
collision between a Denver & Rio
Grande passenger train, running at the
rate of 10 miles tin hour, and a special
Colorado Midland stock train, running
ataspecd of probably t!0 miles an hour.
So terrific was tho concussion that
both engines, baggage and express
cars, smoker and day coaches and two
stock cars were totally demolished and
the trade torn up for rods in each di
rection. To add to the horror of tho
boene, tho wreckage at once caught
lire from an explosion of a Pintsoh gas
tank on the passenger train, and
burned so rapidly that many passen
gers, pinned beneath the debris, were
burned to death before help could
reach them.
Tho most generally accepted theory
as to the cause of the wreck is that
Conductor Hurbank, of tho Midland
special, anticipating the time of tho
passenger, undertook to "steal a sta
tion" and beat the passenger into New
castle. Hurbank escaped uninjured,
and, upon orders from Coroner Clark,
has been placed under arrest by the
sheriff. Midland Engineer Ostrander
is missing, and a thorough search all
about his engine fails to reveal any
vestige of his remains. It is thought
that when he saw tho threatened dan
ger he jumped from his engine, and,
realizing his negligence, took to the
hills.
Mr. and Mrs. E. II. Strouse, who live
one-fourth of a mile from the scene of
the accident, report that when tho
two trains met tho shock was so great
tis to literally hurl them out of bed.
Some say tho noise was heard and tho
shock felt in Newcastle. Charred
fragments of limbs and bodies of a
number of persons have been taken
out of tho ruins, but it is not likely
that any more bodies will be positively
identified, and it seems certain that
the number killed will remain in
doubt.
DEATH LIST GROWING.
Three More Victims of tho S.mti I'o
Wreck, SIiikIiik 15 In All.
Empoima, Kan, Sept. 11. Three more
victims of Wednesday night's awful
Santa Ke disaster were found in the
debris by tho wrecking crew vester
day. The bodies are so badly mutilat
ed that identification has been impos
sible. These, with tho death of En
gineer William Prisbeo at Topeka,
make the total number killed in
tho wreck 13. Conductor Wil
son, who is in charge of tho
wrecking crew, expresses the be
lief that several more bodies will be
found when tho wreckage is cleared
away. One of the charred remains re
covered is that of ti woman. It was
found early in tho afternoon. There
was not enough of the body to identify
except that it was a woman, as shown
by tho bust and corsets. A telegram
was received yesterday from Chicago,
signed Good row, asking if his wife
had escaped the wreck uninjured, and
it is thought the remains maybe those
of tho woman inquired for.
DRIVEN OUT OF ARKANSAS.
lMltor Gonlil Pled from the Wrath of an
Outraged Populace.
Litti.k Rock, Ark.. Sept. 11. Kel
logg O. Gould, editor and publisher of
tho Little Rock Tribune, was driven
from tho city by an infuriated popu
lace. Gould's career in Little Rock
has boon a checkered one. He started
tho Tribune four years ago and has
been in trouble continually on account
of thu questionable method ho pur-
t suou in conducting the sensational
I sheet, and several times received severe
I chastisement from citizens whom he
! had written un in hi miner. Hi tnnk
ono step too inr when lie assisted in
defeating justice in tho case of J esse
Heard, the murderer of S. T. Itlair,
recently ucqultted at Perryville.
THIRTEEN FATALITIES.
. . . . v -----
Tlmt Number or .'Men Have lieen Killed
This summer in .loplln .Minim; District.
Joi'l.IN. Mo., Sept. 11. Tho third
mininir fatalitv of the week oennrrfd
yesterday when Aaron Dennlson, a
well-known miner, had his skull
( crushed by u falling pieeo of scautling,
while working in tho shaft of the
Moonshine mine. The scantling fell a
distance of bO feet, striking Dennlson
on tho back of the head, lie lived
J about two hours. This makes KJ minq
I fatalities In the district tills summer.
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