The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, August 29, 1895, Page 3

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STRANGLED BY AN Of10; MOB.|in the rope for the lynchers and the| Negro Murderer Dragged to His Death Through New Richmond’s Streets. . Cincinnati, O., Aug. 21.—The third lynching in the history of Ohio | tion. jmob of 390 is looked upon as a rashness that bordered on participa i | | took place this afternoon at New Richmond, twenty miles Ohio river from Cincinnati. and strangled to death. o'clock Andergon murdered lin Friedman jail. men was on his way home from New Richmond. He look at some land adjoining a lot where the murderer lived. Ander- son, who had frequently threatened to kill any one who came near his house, came out and ordered the old man away. The latter replied that he was on his own property and would not leave until he got ready. Andersonrushed upon him bore him to the ground and choked him until life was gone. A neighbor gave the alarm and the police authorities went to An derson’s house. It is just on the outskirts of New Richmond. They found him, apparently unconcerned. He was taken to the New Richmond jail, a small, frail affair, and locked up. Halfa hundred men followed, and soon the mob feeling developed from the discussion of the terrible crime. The jail was surrounded by several hundred people, who shout ed, “Hang bim! Lynch the coward!” Anderson divined the purpose of the mob, and his murderous heart failed him, and he raved in his cell and pleaded for mercy. Shortly after Anderson’s arrest he confessed to Marshal Henderson, of New up the penis Noah Anderson, a negro, was taken from the marshal and mayor by a mob} At 12:30} bound Union Pacific flyer, Frank- and three and a half | held up by train robbers i houre later he was dangling from a} tree a half a square from the village The murder occurred while Fried- stopped to/ the train, and when it stopped board EXPRESS CAR DYNAMITED. | | Train Robbers’ Desperate Attempt te) Blow Open a Safe. | | Omaha, Neb., Aug. 21.—TbLe eusi | jue in| Omaha at 10:25 this mor | between Brady's island and G burg about 1 o'clock this morning and the Pacific express robbed of about $130, found in the sma! J station safe. The robbers tlagged elthe engine. They then climbed| | | on the smallend of the car as the train was leaving Brady Island | When the train reached the switch | at the east end of the station the! robbers clambered up on the tank and engine and covered Engineer Austin and Fireman Duke with their guns. and ordered them train abead until stop. They compelled tue engineer and fireman to uucouple tk and beggage car from the train and to run them ahead. They compelled the evgineera nd fir on the doors of the car baggageman and expressman to openit. One bandit entered the car with dynamite, while the other one visible guarded the engineer and fireman. Athird is supposed to have been outside watching the train it still being coupied to the express car and train men coming out to see the cause of the stop. While this scene was being enact- ed, robber No. 2 was guarding the engineer and fireman on the outside with revolvers and a Winchester. Robber No. 1 asked the fireman to to run the communded to express man to pound and tell the Richmond, that he committed the} hand him the dynamite, which was murder, and gave as his reason that} on the tender, which he did. The Friedman was the cause of his} dynamite was placed in position on losing over $200,000,000. He said| the big safe, afuse attached and a that Friedman scratched around and | quantity of waste packed around it. resisted while he strangled him. but} The match was then applied. The it did no good. STRANGLED IN THE DUST. About 4 o’clock the crowd that surrounded the jail were almost furious, and the marshal who at- tempted to enter the jail, was kept back by the mob. Finally he was allowed to enter the jail in company with Mayor Dawson. They brought Anderson forth to take him to the county jail at Batavia, but no sooner had they reached the sidewalk than son’s neck, at the same time crying, “This is no bluff; we must have him.” Strong arms Anderson was pulled forward and fell on his face in the dusiy street. ~ The mob then began torun north on Washington street, with the mur derer trailing in the dust. poplar tree. the end of the rope to the trunk of | big fire and burglar proof safe was | the tree. dust. H leaves an estate valued at $250,000. He was born at Stolhaven, near|inch in thickness and a foot in| boundary line between Missouri and | Strazburg, Germany, in 1816, and| length, was rent intwo and hurled} Kansas, and according to their sur- | came to the United States in 1833,/a distance of ten feet, penetrating | vey Missouri would get a four mile | locating in Cincinnati, where he was | trunk. The Pacific Express pack-|gtrip out ef Kansas the entire engaged as a boiler maker for some | ages of freight were undisturbed at length of the state. In 1840 he removed to| the front end of the car. years. Clermontville, Clermont county, O. where he has since been engaged in immediately grasped the rope, and in an instant At the corner of Washington and Western avenues the mob stopped and threw the rope across the limb of a large The crowd evidently weakened at the last moment, but one man, who appeared to be the leader, cried out, “You're a nice lot | of nervy fellows,” and with this he { jerked the body upward and tied | demolished by the explosion. & ' The negro was evidently |not seriously damaged. dead when he was strung up, as he| was slightly disfigured. showed no signs of life, having been} proof packing was disarranged and no doubt strangled to death in the|/a hole about six inches in depth Friedmaa was one of the wealthi-| was placed, reaching to the steel est men of Clermont county, and| cover. expressman was ordered out of the car, and the robbers and three train men walked a short distance away and all laid down on the ground. At this time the engineer asked he robbers to allow him to turn off the injector so as to prevent his en- gine from blowing up. The fire- man was allowed to go forward to the engine and instead of turning off the injector, the fireman cut the steam and air pipes and bell cords, and turned on fall steam and start- ed for Gothenburg for assistance. The explosion followed almost upon the departure of the engine. The robber who entered the car appear- ed, and discovering the engine gone, said that the business was a failure all around and called to his come panions to fellow him. The three men then escaped in the darkness, and mounting horses they rode away. After the explosion the train crew entered the baggage car, and with considerable effcrt put out the fire} which was kindled by the explosion. Seven trunks and contents were The The top The fire was made init where the dynamite One of the steel bands which attempted removal of the murderer to the county jail in the face of the | a. ew | From the St, Paal Glot 5 | eatin: ao P Clothes We Wear | feath- of jer iron, and s as |much as 3) pounds. Sian Pa aye MUEENSWARSE AND GLASSWARE. ‘ARS AND TOBACTSO, Always pays the highet market orice for Countv .| holds the safe in position, about an The total damage to the car and contents will not exceed $1,000. A special from Gothenburg says 2 mercantile, manufacturing and bank-| that the sheriffs of Lincoln and Daw- ing pursuits, and has been until the|son counties are out with posses in - time of his death president of the| pursuit of the train _ Friedman lumber company, presi- dent of the First National Bank and robbers, and all day, and undone to cap- have been traveling nothing is being left ture the robbers. president of the Shain Roberts fur- niture company, all of New Rich-} mond, O. Anderson was a_ brutal-looking © negro, who landed at New Richmond " afew months ago from a shanty | boat, and no one knows where he “came from. “There is Danger in Delay.” Since 1861 I have been a great ertrom catarrh. I tried E Balm and to all appearances ‘ferrible headaches from w long suffered are gone.—W. ]. Hitchcock late Major U. S. Vol. and A. A. Gen.. Buftalo, N.- Ely’s Cream Balm has completely cur- itwith excellent results Stegens, Caldwell, Cream Balm is 50 cents, ‘part of the mob at disguise. One of the deputy marshals tied a knot i } East Side Square. Butler, Moe ETSY TL TT RR eT: McFARLAND BROS. | | Harness and Saddlery, Fink's Leather Tree Saddle | | South Side Square | Butler Mo. i 'MeEarlana Bros, the pioneer They keep everything that horse owners need. herness men of Bates county, Mo. $29; Double wagon harness from $10 to single buggy harness, $7.50 to $25; second hand harness from ¥3 to $15. Saddles of ull stylesand prices, from the cheapest to the best STEEL FORK “COW BOY SADDLE” made in this country. Bring your old harness and trade in on new ones. 5 | A 5 fa ne / } In A. D. 395 the breeches-makers 8, o* Gaaeyu ~ hd expelled from and all persons were ordered to di | wearin 2 | England everybody |spurs, whether he ever m j the court of | wore a forehead eloth tightly bound | Hearne, for the murder of Amos J. !on their heads continue g breeches. During the reign of Charles I. of wore boots and inted a | horse or not To prevent wrinkles, the ladies of Catherine de Medici A cassocs was originally another nt now called a! It was afterwards applied to v one, loose ec a long, loose coat The armilausa was the cloak worn y knights of the middle ages over by bnig g heir armor. It was often wholly! of silk and very costly. Perfect Health. Keep the system in pertect or- der by the occas Tutt’s Liver Pills, Tl ulate the bowels and produ A Vigoreus Bous For sick headache, ma i lousness, constipati TUTT’S =e The grand jury of Marion county has indicted Dr. and Mrs. J. C Stillwell, at Hannibal, several years ago. Mrs. Hearne was the wife ot the wealthy old man Stillwell, at the time of the murder. The evidence against the pair is only circumstan- tial, but there are many links in the chain of evidence all pointing to the guilt of the parties indicted for the crime. Mrs. Stillwell was infatuated Hats of the modern style were | With the Doctor, and the Doctor was first made ky aSwiss at Paris 1404. Befere that ti caps Were general in boods and worn. t worn by men. nth century it ns of a large The garter was iirs During the sixt reached the dimensi scarf round the leg. Buskins were high boots, made of velyet or other cloth, and worn by ladies, or exc when cele brating the rites of the churck. The breeches worn during the reign of Francis I. were often 24 yards in circumferance at the hips, and stuffed with bran or sawdust. The first article of human clothing mentioned in history was an apron. It is spoken of in the book of Gene sis, B. C. 40¢i4. Pythagoras directed his disciples not to wear the skins of animals in any form, and so their shoes were made of the bark of trees. The coat is in the fifteenth cen- astics "MAY 267 McFarland Bros. Butler Missouri. tury first mentioned as an upper garmentfor men. All the seams were then covered wi th gold lace or braid. o'clock this afternoon a serious fire thoug broke out Dock and aman threwa rope around Ander-| detaching the engine from the train | nominie River. house Company. the west side of th ing plums, when the villian seized | were mostly frame, were ned, the Heidelman girl and carried her with contents, including much of into the woods. freght. Her companions gave the alarm, Among other buildings burned and pursuers later found her in an was the one in which the Delaney ous small old eupied by freight handlers and their “WHERE DIRT GATHERS, WASTE RULES.” GREAT SAVING RESULTS FROM THE USE OF SAPOL1IO es Hatf Mithon Milwaukee, Wis., Aug. 22-—A Inhuman Monster. a, 21.—Al- fh over a hundred enraged citi- zens of DuPage County spent yes- terday afternoon, lust night and this morning ic pursuit of a white scoun- drel,who yesterday kidnaped the 12- year-old daughter of Benj. Heidel- man,the fiend has not been captured. About a dozen children were pick Napierville, A y Aug. in the Union Steamboat Warchonse on the Me-| The dock and ware- | leased by the Chicago, Milwaukee avd St are Paul Railway Warehouses for six blecks along unconscious condition from the Gil Company is located and numer-| assault made by her unknown cap- frame residences, Oc- tor. She may die. Wine For the Communion Table. Speer’s unfermented grape juice preserved absolutely pure as it runs ie aS trom the press without cooking or ably $300,000 to $500,000. the addition of spirits or any sub- A boy named McManus was run Stance in any form whatever. It is over and killed by a coal supply | preseryed by precipitating and ex- wagon. | tracting the ferment or yeast princi- Cenc Ron oe pal by fumigation and electricity. Wil Missouri goa Strip on Springfield, Mo. Aug. 22—The : ; grand jury hes indicted James R. families. Before 2 o'clock the fire was under control. The loss will foot up preb- Beware of Qintments for Catarrh that contain Mercury. as Mercury will s ot smell and cc 'y destroy the sense ipletely derange the whole system when entering 1t through the mucous surtaces. Such articles should neyer be used except on perscrip- tions from reputable physicians, as the damage they w is ten fold to the good you y derive from them Hall's Cata r F, J. Cheney & C no merc ur. acting dire surfaces Hall’s + cous you ge: the ger internally and 1s made py F. J. Cheney & Co. When | Washington Post. Virginians Meet. thus identify each other. and generally ends in establishing between 1650 end 1895. hours: dolphs of ‘Cur!?’ ” Her mother was a Burwell. Had Ripley, a prominent Coal | Milner, one of the most prominent township farmer, was in Ft. Scott | loan agents in Southwest Missouri, yesterday. He said a surveying | on the charge of embezzlement. He corps had been there locating tbe | is out of the city and will be arrest- ed on his return. He represented Mrs. E. A. Ruff, a wealthy Phila- delphia widow, and she claims that jhe has taken 26,000 belonging to { her The survey put the Missouri line| eS west of the Goodlander mills and | Lexington, Mo., Aug. 20—A large threw abeut one-fourth of the city, and enthusiastic mecting was held Ot Ft. Soottinto thie state If Gus in the court house last night fer the ies pape | purpose of making the necessary survey proves correct, it will put all fe arrangements to hold a reunion of of Wyandotte, Armourdale and Ar- the survivors of the battle of Lex gentine, Kansas, into Kansas City, ington September 21. Prominent Mo., proper and give that city a speakers will be secured and an grandfather Tuckahoe, and, ah—” him. Gold Ina Skull. a number of large trees. the branches a haman skull. The first thing two Virginians do} when they meet is to take a mint! was useless to nominate a Populist julep together; they next talk kin, if they are strangers to one another | the first requisite is to locate and|the element favorable toa plank for Then the | free coinage of silver at 16 to 1, wild hunt for relationship begins! \hile Rev. Vrooman represented the cousinship from a first to a tenth) degree from a marriage somewhere | “You say you are one of the Ran- “No; but my mother was a Page.} My great-grandmother was a Curry. My great-grandfather was a Lee. My great-great grandmother was Wash- ington and my great-great-great- was a Randolph of Alfred W. Qhioe Price of What’s the Use ot Talking ed me ot catarrh when everything else | mer time. Scott population of 200,000. Mr. Ripley said the location of the boundary line was all jin Ft. | Post. the talk yesterday.— Nevada | interesting time is anticipated. Are you Billiou bled with Ja € shoulders, chills and tever, &c. | Is out of order and your bl 75 Cents. best cur efor it. Sold by H. L. Tucker | fuckers drugst re. conszipated or trou-/| ) Sick Headache, bad taste in the mouth, foul breath, coated tongue, dyspepsia, Indigestion, hot dry skin, pain in the back and between the If you have any of these symptoms, your liver od is slowly About coldsand coughs in the sum-/| being poisoned because your liver does You may haye a tickliug | not act properly. Herbine will cure ali There was no pretense on the| failed, Many acquaintances have used] cough or a little cold or baby may have | disorder of the iver, Stomach or bowels the croup and when it comes you ough | It has no equal as aliver medicine. Price toknow that Parks cough Syruy is th Free trial bottles at H. L. had completely transformed. top of the passer und latter down money bad evidentiv been put in on; cure and the most dreaded ha had ib-'d the infatuated with the old man’s money. The pair would have eloped and fled out of the cour but tl his would \fail to get a s)cre of the estate. The jold man was put ont of the way. Mrs. Stillwell received about $40,- 000, and in less than a year she married Dr. Hearne, and moved to |California. A few months ago Hearne and wife separated, and much bad blood was engendered by the pair. All kinds of loud and boisterous talking between the pair caused the San Francisco Chronicle to write up their family troubles. The doctor having been divorced, was again married,and then followed a damage suit against the Chronicle fer $100,000. The Chronicle forced the tight to Hannibal (Mo.) where the murder was committed, and depositions were taken in the case. The investigation developed some evidence which never before had reached the grand jury, and the re- sult is the Doctor and wife were in- dicted and are now in jail at Palmy- ra. The grand jury on several oc- casions had failed to indict the doc- tor for lack of evidence. The in- dictment of these people is highly gratifying to nearly every citizen of Hannibal. Maryland Popuhst Convention. Baltimore, Md., August 21.—A! the Maryland Populist State Con- vention to-day Rev. Walter Vroo- man, representing the socialistic . {element in the Convention, accused | N. A. Dunning,editor of the “Watch- map,” the national organ of the Labor party, of coming to the Con- -|Vention to prevent the nomination of a ticket. Dunning responded that he had jsaid casually that the old parties | were so strongly entrenched that it ticket. It developed that Dunning headed element favorable to Government ownership of railways, telegraphs, ete, along socialistic lines. The Then they | discussion brought out that Dele- take another julep and the conversa- tion takes this turn and goes on for gate Burchard had written a letter favorable to the Republican State ticket. General John D. Imboden, one of the most noted characters in the state died at his home at Damascus, Va., at the age of 75 years. During the late civil war he was a brigadier general in the confederate army, and took part in nearly all the en- gagements in the valley of Virginia jin the campaign of 1864. He was Here another mint julep stops | at the battle of Gettysburg, and was intrusted with the army on ite jretreat across the swollen river at Warsaw, Icd., August 21.—In a} Williamsport. He was a man of thickly settled part of this city are Yesterday, formation. and contributed to the some boys climbed one of them, and | @agazines on war topics. near the top, found nailed to one of bright intellect and wonderful in- Since the war he hae done much by his pen to | attract capital to southwest Virginia, The ekull contained $700 in gold sed the developments thers are m jand afew Mexicnn dollars. It also |targely due to his influence. jeontained a substance which prob-/ ably had once been paper, but which | | long exposure to all sorts of weather | The | #che Electri Cure for Headache. 2 As aremedy for all torms of Head- Bitters has proved to be It ettects a nent sick the yery be: headaches yield to i influencey> We urge all wh Procure a | bottie and a@ tair triai. A large number of people pass | In cases of habitual constipasion Electric Bittets cures by giving the needed tone daily on the street, and the electri¢} to tne bowels, and tew cases long resist cars also pass it, but still no one 48 1y| has cr<r noticed it before. tne use of this medicine, Try it once. Large bottles only Fitty cents at H, L. Tucker’s Drug Store, mseretninmienanmnrnssnnvenensiv—sniene emealit

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