Newspaper Page Text
INDSTINCT PRINT
NUMBER 128.
VOLUME XV.
ALBANY, GA, 8ATURDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 17, 1906.
VICTIMS OF WRECK
ROASTED ALIVE
Further Details of the Great Disaster on
the Denver and Rio Grande Railroad.
Opposition Has Developed to the Pro
posed Suits Against McCall Estate.
To Refute Damaging Evidence, Stoessel
Calls for Nogi and Other Witnesses.
PUEBLO, Colo., March 17.—Lively, the telegraph operator whose
failure to deliver a train order resulted In the collision at.Adobe, had not
been arrested up to noon today, and It Is considered Ilkely tKat no~a6tlon
against him will be taken until after the coroner’s Inquest. Lively says
of his failure to deliver the train order:
NEW YORK, March 17.—Opposition to the proposed suits against
the estate of John A. McCall, to recover the “yellow dog funds" he gave
to Andrew Hamilton, as reported by the World today, hap orison among
the trustees of the New York Life Insurance Company, which opposition
Is said to he strong enough to defeat the movement It Is Also re
ported that the finance committee serving at the time the political con
tributions were made have about completed a plan to make good the
payments from their/ own pockets. It Is asserted that suit will be brought
against Andrew Hamilton, no matter What Is done to the,McCall estate.
St. Petersburg, March 17.—The evidence in the investigation of
the surrender of Port Arthur by General Stoessel, which is likely to
drag oh for six weeks longer, is heavily damaging General Stoessel’s
reputation. He is now demanding that General Nogi and other Jap
anese commanders be summoned as witnesses to prove the heroic
character of his defense.
'I was asleep; that’s .alb'
asserted that he had worked several days without sleep. -
DENVER, Colo., March 17.—It Is announced here today from the gen
eral manager's offloe of the Denver & Rio Qrande Railroad, that E. L.'
Lively, night operator at Swallows Station, was wholly responsible for'
the collision at Adobe yesterday. He said that he was asleep at his post
when train No. 3 passed, to which he should have delivered the order.
The railroad officials deny that Lively h^d been required to work over
time.
HE NEVER EXPECTS
TO BE SOBER AGAIN!
SHOOTING BIRDS
And C. O. Anglin’s Wife Therefore
Ask6 for Divorce.
OUT OF SEASON.
Special to The Herald.
Atlanta, Ga., March 17.—When Mre.
Mollie Anglin yesterday filed suit In
the Pulton county superior court, ask
ing for a divorce from her husband,
.C. O. Anglin,'she alleged that the man
she-had,t&ken as a life partner in 1882
had informed her he never expected
to be sober again. His subsequent
The Celebration this Year
to Extend to Monday
Night—Features of the
Programme. /
Stated That, Cases Will Be Presented
to the Grand J|ury.
Pneblo, Colo., March 17.—While the Dry Goods Box of Bones.
exact number of lives, {lost In the - A correspondent who returned from
Adobe wreck on • the • Denver & Rib the wreck says that the car In which
Grande railroad will never, b^ knowp.i be believes twenty-five persons were
iL will undoubtedly take rank among killed was completely consumed. He
the great railroad disasters. : also states that a dry goods-box had
The estimated Iosb of life Is thirty- been placed alongside the track- and;
six. Sixteen charred bodies are in the bones of the bodies which were
the morgue here, all unrecognisable, .burped were .placed In It. The Jbiif
Dr. Hamilton Jones Says it
is YelloVif B^’Two
Other Doctors Say it is
Jaundice.
Special to The Herald.
Savannah, Ga., March 17.—Savan
nah has been given over today to the
celebration of St. Patrick’s day. There
is no city in the United States of its
size that pays more attention to St
Patrick and his natal day than Sa
vannah. The celebration really began
New York, March 17.—A special to
the Tribune from New Orleans says
that the he'altK officers of Mississippi
and Alabama gathered there to inves
tigate a 1 supposed case of yellow fever
on which the local physicians failed
to Agree. Dr. Hamilton Jones, otter
three days .watching, reports the case
to be yellow fever. Two Other well-
known ,(doctors-declaj^Jt is catarrhal
Jaundice. The caso was treated as
yellow fever front the'.beginning and
the usual 'precautions were taken.
was brought to this city by the.cor
oner: - . ■ ■
List of the Dead.' , (
A list of the dead, made' lip by re
sponsible parties, follows: [
Wm. Hollis, bnglheer; Walter Cose-
tel, engineer; H. D. Suddutb, fireman;
Edward E. Baird, deputy sheriff, Den
ver; Archibald Whitney, prisoner In
charge of Baird; Mrs. Wlllianj Burn
side, daughter and daughter^ child,
all of Kansas; A. N. Barelow, SaHd%
Colo.; Mis? Grace Barklo, Sallflo,
I Colo.; Enos McPbarjaht: express, mes
senger; Taylor Hewitt. Lebo, Kan.;
Kan.; Pearl
the hunting season, A good many
t>M»\were killed‘on these occasions.
A member of the grand jury stated,
thir morning: “That section of the
•state game law which provides;that
ho person shall kill more than forty
doves In a day Beams to he generally
disregarded, and amounts to a’ dead
letter. ’ But when it comes to hunting
openly after the season haB closed,
that 4s another matter.' I Understand
that a list of names has been banded
'to several members pf the ngxt grand
jury, and the -mitter will receive due
attention in April."
It Is not known whether all parties
against whom complaint hks been
hiade are residents of Albany,'’or of
this county.'
of the Ancient Order of HlberniaiiB i
and the two ladies’ auxiliaries met at
Emmett’s Hall and enjoyed, S^kilpper.
There were several speeches and |
much music and singing.
This morning there was a paradd by
the three divisions of the A. O. H.,
celebrated at St. Pat- l
The parade was taken ]
At the i
before help could reach them. Most
i
of the Injured were on No. 3, which
was' heavily loaded. No. 16 carried
comparatively few passengers, and
these escaped generally with a Blight
shaklng-up..,, v . ... j
During the progress of the fire one
man was seen hanging from a car Mrs. Wm. Hewitt,
Kiy tare. Catherine
Hewitt audibly .boy, LBh0f-Kan.';Ed.
Kan.; Fred Lemeqooley, Denver; Mrs.
Winona Hewitt, Bebo, Kan.
One Family Nearly Exterminated.
One of the pathetic' tragedies of the
could not be disaster was the wiping out of all but
coach two of the family Of Taylor Hewitt, of
ti the Lebo, Kan:’ father, mother, daughter,
girl who grandchild and the wives of the sons
are missing. The two sons, E. A.,
deavored to lift her to a place of safe-J Hewitt and W. L. Hewitt, are among
ty. As he raised her the girl died in the injured In the hospital, each of
his arms. The rescuer dropped his them having leK fractures In addition
burden and seized a man who was to other injuries. ’ E. A. Hewitt said
lying under a roof timber. He that he had a dream several months
, . .. . , , , ago in which his family were all
dragged the man to a clearing in the He ^ ^ ^ ^ a8 pIaln .
wreckage, where others carried him ]y as j, e later saw ^ r0a] wrec ]j (
to a place of safety. This one rescuer everything that took place .after the
saved four persons’ lives. collision.
For Refusing, fder. His Company
to Fire on The People.
Moscow, March 17.—Captain Sham-
luskyj $1 refused/
pany^to |ire op the ..
autumn riots here;
tenced by coi
from service ai
and mass was-
rick’s church.
part in by Jully 600 men.
church there was a panegyric upon SL
Patrick. Later In the day the Bmmott
Rifles an'd ^frisS Jasper' Greenes fired' fortress,-:
a salute at the Jasper monument on ;
Bull street. j HE FL
The celebration will not end this
year until Monday night, when the
Hibernian Society will give its annual ...
And Tor
banquet at the DeSoto- Hotel. .
With the announcement that
Peach' 1 chop' Is • safe,' add has ;%*$
start, idll of: us begin to' have vIb:
3 the luscious ^fruits of sum:
ough the day is still, some time
dismissal
Hew|tt, Lebo,
helcried, but- the-heah-waa-too intense
_ for the rescuers to reach him. He
slowly roasted to death before the
eyes of the crowd around the burning
:ITY CLUB. wre ck |
Many thrilling rescues are reported. I
i Police Court g ne man> w p 0 se name
tersvllle Man. ] e a.rne<J, forced his way into a <
that had received the brunt ol
L7 -Because he ^ 00k ’ and seelnS a young
dZ had been P Inned ' under a eeat , en '
and sticking our tooth Into other
luscious fruit.
Early strawberry beds are begin
ning to take on a pinkish hue. And
thirty-five ,cents a quart will be tho
subject of the grower’s remarks when 1
the fruit first gets to market.
THE TRADE SHOW
TUESDAY NIGHT.
Extravaganza Will Be Excellent At-
' traction for Benefit of Hoepltal.
Albanians ate looking forward with
rapidly Increasing Interest to the trade
extravaganza which will be the at-
traction at the Rawlins theatre on
Tuesday evening. The program has
been completed and Is now In the
hands of the printer, and Its perusal
makes the reader certain that the en
tertainment Is going to be jarely
pleasing!
It would be difficult to explain Just
what the public may expect The
name “trade extravaganza” conveys
little In the way of Information, and
the mystery Is one of-the attractive
features of the whole affair.
There will be scoreB of well-known
Albanians on the stage on Tuesday
evening, young ladles, girls and even
little tots. There will be a great deal
to appeal to the eye, a great deal more
to be heard, and much ihai will ap
peal to the audience’s sense of the
humorous. .
The entertainment will be for the
benefit of the charity hospital, under
whose auspices Mrs. HolUbaugh has
been working.
Of course you will not miss the en
tertainment 1
! i police court,
een drinking.
ST. PATRICK’S DAY.
IN NEW YORK.
UNITED MINE WORKERS
IN CONVENTION.
M’REE BROTHERS
LOSE CRATE FACTORY.
Fifty Thousand Irishmen and Irish-
Americans In Parade.
Crate and Basket Plant at Klnderlou Money Voted for Defenie of Federa-
Completely Destroyed. tion Officials in Idaho.
New Ybrk, March 17.—St. Patrick’s
day is being celebrated here by a Valdosta, Ga.,'March 13.—A dlsas- Indianapolis, March 17. —The con-
parade of 60,000 Irishmen and Irish- trous fire occurred at Klnderlou this ventlon of United Mine Workers of
Americans, under the auspices of the afternoon at 6 o’clock, when the large America today voted $6,000 for the le-
Ancient Order of Hibernians. There crate and basket factory belonging to gal defense of Moyer, Heywood and
will be numerous dinners and balls the McRee Brothers was consumed. Fettibone, officers of the Western Fed-
The building was . a large, two-story eratlon of Miners, who are under in
structure, with drying shed, platform, dlctment In Idaho charged with con-
etc., attached, and lta value was about splracy.
$50,000. ’ The convention adopted a resolu-
The plant had not been operating tlon favoring woman’s suifrage and
since last September, and was Idle defeated a resolution favoring govern-
when It caught fire. The fire was ment ownership of mines.
We sell them. Fresh
shipments of these deli
cious confections are re
ceived weekly, 1, 2,-3
and 5 pound boxes and
STEAMER CEARENSE
MAY BE SAVED.
The merchants and business men
generally who know a good thing when
they see it are making their arrange
ments for space In the Chautapqua
edition of The, Herald.
the best your
should come to
A pair of runaway horses attached earlier in the day, and a large force v/iTDiur
to a'dray created some excitement was » ut to to beat the flameB MILL U0,NG N °THING.
down. It was thought that all danger *■
on Pine street this morning, but at the &om ^ waa by0r unU , “ vaE Everythlnfl WaItlna on French , nd
New Albany corner Mr. F. W. Godwin discovered that the factory building eterman Delegates,
succeeded in capturing the lines, at was on fire. The blaze spread with - ■,
the cost of considerable risk to him- great rapidity, and in spite of thej Algeciras, March 17. —Neither the
self, and soon brought the runaways strenuous efforts to get it under con-! Moroccan ~'nter°n'-<> nor tho -"""ki-
to a standstill. trol the entire plant was destroyed. | - ..
A number of other houses W Everything is being
The finest Strawberries you ever threatened, but the wind was nqt de,en ’ ed 011111 French and German
saw. The-largest headed Lettuce. ^ blowing, which enabled the bucket delegates agree on the unsettled ques-
CA8H GROCERY CO., Phone 73. ; brigade to do effective work. ttons.
Mr. Mike Cohen Is In town again,
after an unprecedented absence of sev
eral weeks. \
sman’
The T. P. A. of Georgia meets in
Albany in April, and the State Asso
ciation of Elks will hold lta ann&al
convention here In May.