Newspapers / The Roanoke Beacon and … / March 13, 1908, edition 1 / Page 8
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fM i y Mill lilll 1 Bill 111 U I 1IIB JJL M "S-r VIHJmI fl KEmI 1 Ell I A 1 lllfa .School Building Burns and Children Die ly Scores in Utter Helplessness HAW M SCHOOL HOUSE ;-"33Uacr Egress Cut Off hj the Piery . Harness That 2U$e ISfllow Them, XiiJe ;hie3 Are Incinerated -Almost WitMn Beach of Safety. Clcvelaral, ,L, .Special. Penned iu exrrow ffcaHrcayfi, jammed up against Irs that viilj opened inward, be wwaa. ! 170 children iu the jjlyurb tZ Xerth Collinwood Wednes- -day wfariillcd by lire, by smoke and itesuesLza. fjzs grinding: heels ot their g33ievlKM&jDii playmates. Tie &wal tragedy occurred Wed- ejsjxj inusEg ia the public school of N&cth. CcJiiawaod, 10 miles east of this alu. At 10 o'clock Wednesday aigfct ej2ises were in the morgue ' tho bodies was begun by firemen and at CaUcssititttfldy nix children were still ' railroad employes from the Lake UEncow&l&i far and all the hospitals ! Shore shops. The railroad company aoi fkns9-r two miles around con- J tnrned over one of its buildings near tasiuvji nsstMrs of children, some fa- by to be used as a temporary morgue, tally .-iiwL znaay less .seriously injur-'and thither the charred and broken 2- ( little bodies were removed as fast as All j the victims were between cms ngR sf 6 and 15 years. Tho rcMf tainevl between J1U and JJo pupiLi, atod esf this entire number only made only by means of clothing or .about ?araiy .are iknowa lo hsve left trinkets. The fire had swept away tis Lilii;i .unliurL It will be sev- nearly all resemblance to human fea tzlL eLaj "before the exact number tures. Distracted parents soon bega f kiifi as ikcown as the ruins may 'to gather and the work of identify, attli. cnnlxix ther 'bodies and the list . ing the blackened and mangled corp o. atstlitrcs. may .be increased by a ses began. esumSexr 05I 3eths ameng the children j The grewsome task of taking out 2&ns flying in the hospitals the blackened torsos and bits of STecis.!' between life and death. 'human remains was one of horror. A Orij &nm Pure .Escape. Tbe arisniboitae was of brick, two stories axxl n atic in height. The number aZ svapils was more tha nor saially targe, and .the -smaller children Stss.1 b-ti placed :in the -upper part off tha Sraiklingr. 'There was but one Sires esesrw -mid that was in the rear oST that Vteldiog: There were two stairways, one leading to .a door in gzmit,. ssd. the other .to a -door in the assxr. EtSL of these .dooxs opened ijrsrsari, a ad. it is .claimed the rear j wax iaeked as 7?sU. ths .flames were .cLisesvered , the: feeaiissi who throughont seem 4 bara jocied -with courage and seJf- jwJMS3sin. .aal fo have struggled he j5o5aSv for the safety of their pu- iZsj, nsarslcalt-il the little ones into xtlnma. "Esre iarili," which tliey had '&teu prru'tic-f d. Snrtxinafcely tke line of mareli in "rJiis rsavias had always led to the ront dnc4r and the children had not herjx traiawl to seek any eth-er exit. '2 Sre Rjsie from a furnace silu- j&eA .JirwlJy under this part of the T&uiKlHn. When the children reached the only thing for me to do was to faa Foot ot the stairs Vue.y Sfound the ' get around to the rear door if pos- Liiurs rihk.e apron them, and so swift ; sible and help those who were near " m rnsib. -was ma& Sot the door that in j the entrance. When I got there, af izuL i2ista.t a. tigntiy packed mass of j ter climbing out of a window I found -efealdrpa ixaa piled up against it. From ' the children so crowded in the. nar Clist seeou.4 none of thjKC who were j row passageway that I could not pull axr i-",rtjoM of the first flight of even one of them out. Those behind stsjxs Iissi a ith&nee for their lives, j TTae rliifdwpw at ihs front uc-f the stairs -irtrviWrpa to vlSbi tbeir way back to : he Boor above, wfeile these who were min' d& shored ttha mercilessly " aa'S;into Lh1 ilaaes': h'ltrvs. In an iu- afirt AVn Ttas Aj"xu;ilitful panic with fLVlniiulralftife ppds hghtiag tor ; . - -vt. whn upin i V &ki'd&ik lire. The greater part .1 -vows. wlu escaped managed to to r' back ascd reached iiws fire es- is?, and the windows hi the rear. p-MjdirAtely 30 .-childrwi attend- oi stfaoai, which Juid nine room.-?. Sccxcs c JEreigM; Conductors Laid Off Ty Southern, AsheviL&v Speeaal On account of fecra3e ia business on the Asheville iiviiort o? ihft Soatiwra it is learned fesrvt tfest -within a week 59 freight oHjdattora havr been laid off. It is sudd r'isfc ssA far years has business mi thts Ujflusv heea as slack as at Slariass Xalwr Troubles Threatened ia England. Hoadoiv By Cable. Serious labor ffcroefclc still are tLreatened in the Kaaeahire exAton trade and among thru cogiivnsn en the northeast coast. 2&ytiee& wwre posed threatening a :&cirtt e 20,000 cotton operatives in -Ztbfi! 0Ie ami Nelson districts, while Jtte eHSuers who have been involved ;Jn the. treexki bip building strike aliwig- tl5 Tyne rejected by a large i j-rity wn:promise effected with I'tSks eixvph3t23 by David Lloyd-George I rpsicit cJT Oie lird of trade. ' XocsanelivE Explodes. !"l lfWila- G-, Special. Engine No. ! 2tv tna No. til. Southern railway lxpli at Champion, two miles be atS o'clock Wednesday Zrhri. EnfSr Charles O'Neill, I-jC Ftfc VUy WM scalded and m i:ir iiiwd arwl vnll die. Two J-r feiiHmCTi were scalded, one fa CiIr Tb mvdno and four freights ltrea wnptete wreck. The truck is :-!rm" Mp for n. hundred yard. Janitor Ilerter could remember lit tie of what happened after the fire started. "I was sweeping in the base ment," he said, "when I looked up and saw a wisp of smoke curling from beneath the front stairwav. ' "I ran to the fire alarm and pulled the gong that sounded throughout the building. Then I ran first to the front and then to the rear doors. I can't remember what happened next, ex ccpt that I saw the flames shooting ail about and the children running down through thera screaming. Some foil , at the rear entrauco and others stum ;bled over them. I saw my little Helen among' them. 1 tried to pull her oik. ; bnt the flames drove me back. I had ; to leave my little child to die." Her ! ter was badly burned about the head After ihi fire had practically burn- ' ed itself out, the Avork ,of rescuing they could be dug irom the rums. They were placed to rows in the Lake Shore shoo. Identihcations were 1 line of rescu 16 rs was formed backed by half a dozen ambulances. As tho bodies were untanglvd from the de brio they weie passed along to the s'rclchers aud thence loaded in tim ambulance. Mercifully covered with blanket:.: ,the pitiful sights were veil- on ireni the crowd 01 curious. ,h frtsfc as a load was obtained it v.ai diiven ' away to the improvised r.iorguo, to be succeeded by another within a short time. Taachfr Telia Story. "It was awful. I can sea the wee tilings in my room holding out their tiny arms and crying to me to help them.- Their voices are ringing in my cars vet, and I shall never forge 1 . in t them. When tho alarm gong rang 1 started the pupils to marching from the building. When we started down the front stairs Ave were met by a sol id wall of flame and clouds of dense smoke. We retreated, and when we turned the children became panic stricken and I could not do anything with them. They became jammed in the narrow stairway and I knew that pushed forward and as I stood there the little ones piled "upon one anoth- er. Those who could, stretched out their arms to me, and cried for me to helo them. I tried with all my might to pull-them out and stayed there until the flames drove me away.7' At mirlnio-ht; there were 165 bodies j in the morgue of which 103 had been identified and 57 were still unknown. j It is possible that other bodies may ! bo found in the ruins, as at least 13 ' children are still missing and have ' not been heard from since the fire. News of tho Day. Mine. Schumann-Heink, the opera took out her naturalization I papers and became an American citi- : 7PI1 j BUhop W. W. Duncan, of the Methodist Episcopal church died at Spartanburg, S. C. j Secretary Root's report on the case 'of Judge Wilfiey is ready for trans- mtesion to tho President. 1 Hartje and Hi3 Cohorts Acquitted of Perjury. Pittsburg, Pa., Special. Au gustus Hartje, a millionaire; John L. Welshons, a hardware merchant, and j friend of Hartje aud Clifford Hooe, the negro coachman, who have been I on trial in criminal court charged ' with conspiracy to blacken the char- acter of Mrs. Mary Scott Hartje, were all acquitted, binding . instruc tions having been given the jury" to find such a verdict and place the j costs ot' the case upon the county. New3 in Brief. In the House the increase in pay of enlisted men was restored to the Army bill. The Senate passed the Indian Ap propriation bill. A Patent Office examiner, a Phila delphia lawyer and York (Pa.) in ventor have been indicted charged with patent frauds involving electric patents valued, at $3,000,000. wtiirui nil Mutterings Affainst the Janitor Could B Heard on Every Side, Tho Grief-Oraaed Parents Forgetting That the Janitor Himself Walked Behind a Hearse Containing Three of His Loved Ones. Cleveland, 0., Special. Collins wood Friday camo to a full fealiza tion of her woe. Slowly and solemn ly the processions of death began to wnd their way toward the ceme teries, bearing the battered and charred remains of somo of the hun dred and sixty-seven children whose lives were snuffed out in Wednesday morning's catastrophe iu the Lake view school. From 9 o'clock in the morning until dusk there was no cessation in the ' funeral corteges. Those who had no dead to mourn as a personal loss stood in the streets with bared heads as the grim proces sions passed. There was scarcely a dry eye in Collinwood. One of the sad fnnerals was that of tho threo children of Janitor Ilirter, held joint ly with the services for three othei little ones. Talk Against Janitor. Mutterings against the janitor could be heard about the village as grief -crazed parents sought an ob ject upon which to wreak vengeaneft, forgetting as they did that Ilirter himself was walking with bowed head and broken-hearted behind the biers of three of his loved one. A detail of police was placed about the Ilir ter home when the hour of the fun eral came. Fully five hundred per sons had gathered, but when the cof fins were earned to the doorway the crowd spread and opened the way to them without protest or expres sion of hostility. Altogether there were 50 burials Friday and Saturday the grewsome task was repeated. Sunday will wit ness the last of the individual burials and on Monday the remains of all those who are yet unidentified will be laid to rest with one funeral. There are 28 of these bundles of flesh that await claimants. Stories of Herioism. Testimony describing the mad rush to death of the school children was given Friday at the continued session of the coroner's inquest. Stories of heroism nn'" the part of the women teachers were recited. F. P. Whit ney, superintendent of the Collinwood schools, stated his belief to be that no fire department could have done any effective work after the fire had started. Two of the teachers told of their unavailing attempts to open one of the double doors at the rear which they said was locked. The in quest also developed the fact that, af ter the first crush at the door, u was beyond human possibility to aid or save those whom the tongues of fire were devouring in the charnel house. The inquest will be resumed Monday. In a statement Chiet Wallace, oi the Cleveland fire department, after an examination of the ruins, of the Collinwood school, said it was his op inion that the loss of life would not have been so great had there been no partitions at the sides of the storm doors at the rear entrance. Two feet eiVht inches had been taken off either side of tha hall for the partitions. His examination developed that the doors opened outward. Chief Wallace doubtless will bo a witness before the coroner. Cleveland Lesrns Lesson. TWQctift sters were taken by the Cleveland school board to place all the Cleveland educational buildings in a condition that will preclude any loss of life from fires. Basements will be fireproof, wooden stairwaja replaced by iron and spiral nres es capes enclosed in towers installed. Inner doors in vestibules also will be removed. - Another Priest Threatened. T.iAa,-n rt T.. Special. The fate that overtook Father Leo Hein- richs, of Denver, threatens ixev. j. Notre Dame French Catholic church of Central Falls. Letters have come to nun con taining a notification that he will be tilled at the altar. His friends ap pealed to the authorities when they learned of his danger. Big Horse Show in Texas. Fort Worth, Tex, Special Entries have closed for the horse show ex hibits at the National Feeders' and P,reeders' Show, which will open next Wednesday in the great coliseum erected at a cost of $250,000. There are fifty-four different classes in the horse show lists and $3,000 will be awarded in premiums. A prize list aggregating $20,000 is offered on th live stock which will be on exhibit. Governor Campbell will preside at th opening of the show on Wednesday morning and will deliver an address. The Suit Over Virginia's Debt. Washington, Special.-The big suit between the States of Virginia and West Virginia over the claim of the former that the latter should share the latter's $33,000,000 debt advanc cd one stage when attorneys for West Virginia presented to the Su preme Court arguments for limitation of the powers of the master whom the court proposes to appoint to take testimony in the suit. Virginia want. the master given a wide field. ar-ngni,iSTTimiGliD IN GEORGIA Georgians Avange the Murder of Mr. aad Mrs. Warren Hart Lynching Party, Wearing Masks, Takes Pris oners From County Jail and After Hanging Them to a Tree, Bums Their Bodies. Hawkinsville, (., Special. Two kegroes, Curry Robertson and John Henry, were lynched Thursday near bere and their bodies burned. They vere charged with the murder of Mr. ind Mrs. Warren Hart. One of the negroes confessed to the Jrime and said the motive was rob bery. Robertson and Henry were jwi--ested Wednesday following the dis iovery of the body of Warren Hart. His wife was lying nearby in a dy ing condition. The murders took )lace near Frazier, the home of the 3arts. Mr. Hart had been killed as the re mit of a blow on the head, appar ently made by an axe. Mrs. Hart -was teriously beaten and was found un fonscious. She died Wednesday night without having recovered conscious less. Thursday the negroes were quietly ;aken from the county jail and car--ried some distance from the town, vhere they were hanged to a tree. The lynching party consisted of a lumber of men who concealen Iheir dentity with masks. After the hang ng the bodies were cut down and in jinexated. After this the posse quiet ly dispersed. Thera is no announce ment in the district as a result ot the lynching. The crime of which the negroes Fere accused was committed just at laylight Wednesday, when some one ittacked Hart as he went from his louse to feed his stock. His head fas crushed. The murderers then went to the kitchen of the Hart home vhere Mrs. Hart was preparing breakfast and attacked her with an ixe, leaving her for dead. Mrs. Hart was found on the floor rith a fork in her hand and the ireakfast which she had cooked burn yl to a crisp. She died late that aight. The parpose of the asaidt is be ieved to have been robbery, as the flarts were known to have about $1, )00 in the house. The murderers -did lot get the money. News of the mur ler spread quickly through the sec ;ion, and in the vicinity of Empire, a tillage near the socene of the murder, there was the most intense excite nent. Over a thousand persons gathered, among them the friends of the aged louple, who imediately formed a posse, secured dogs and began a search. Within a short time two ne groes were arrested and brought here for safe keeping. During the night lien gathered near the county jail, Jemanded Robertson and Henry and then took tiiem to an isolated' plaee lear the scene of thedouble murder jnd lynched them. Mi. Hart and Jus .vile were oo years ow. Bank President Indicted. New Orleans, La.. Special. Wil liam Adler, former president of the State National Bank of New Or- laonc wu imlipfrpil hv trip United States grand jury here charged with misapplying national bank funds ind with other illegal transactions. There were 74 counts in the indict Ment. Charges that dealings about tfhich they should have been inform id were concealed from the board o Jireetors and that false entries and misapplication and distriction of funds occurred reaching betwten $200,000 .'and $300,000 were madu lgainst Adler in the indictment. Louisiana Banker Threatened. Alexandria, La., Special Paul Lis io, president of the First National bank here announced the receipt of a letter demanding $3,000 from him at in appointed place and signed "The United Black Hand of Louisana." he letter threatens the life of Pres ident Lisso's daughter if he refuses payment. The police have begun an investigation. Attempt to Sell War Secrets. New York, Special. The Federal authorities of Brooklyn reluctantly admitted that the arrest of Heinrich Esser, on charges of attempting lo sell United States war secrets to Ger many, is directly due to the German authorities. The latter notified the German consul in New York, who in turn communicated with the police. Together with the tip came an assur nnco from Germany that under no cir cumstances would that government J take advantage of such offers. Patents to Carolinians. Washington, Special R. W. Bish op, patent atortiey, reports the issue of the following patents on the 3rd instant to residents of North and Softh Carolina: Log turner J. K Meoce, Roseman; drive gear for en gines M. O. Carter and W. T. Davis Travelers' Rest, S. C; sandpaper ma chine J. T. Braiftley, Salisbury: brush handle J. II. Greene, Iligt Point. THE WORK jF CONGRESS Doings of Our National Law-Makeis Day by Day. Railroads Robbing Undo Sam. The charge that the government had been robbed of over" .$70,000,000 since 1SS0 by railroads carrying the mails was. made on the floor of the house of Representatives by Mr. Lloyd, of Missouri. He referred to the isew System of weighing the mails recently introduced by the Postmast er General and declared that it was an admission that the Postoffice De partment had allowed the people of the country to be mulcted out of the sum stated. . Ho demanded to know why suits had not been instituted against the railroads to recover this money. No suits, he eharged, had been filed and none suggested. 'I call npon the chairman of the committee to audit and control the expenses of the Postoffice Department," he ex claimed, "to investigate that depart ment and ascertain whether there is anything; wrong in it." Mr. Waneer, of Pennsylvania, the chairman, pledged careful investiga tion into the subject. Mr. Lloyd, referring to the retirement of Mr. Madden, the Third Assistant Post ffiader General, and the proposition lo drop 22 postoffice inspectors, de olarcd that they were from the be ginning all "marked" men because of their connection in one way or an oiher with the suppression of certain publications. "We have too much beaucracy," he exclaimed. "We need more law and less departmental rule. ' ' A Day in the Senate. Speeches on the pending currency bill were made in the Senate by Sen ators McCumber, of North Dakota, and Newlands, of Nevada. Each of these Senators contended for modifications of the emergency turrency bill and each declared in favor of legislation adding confidence on the part of the depositors in tho banks as a prominent feature of any plan for preventing panics. Ihc Senate also passed a resolution offered by Senator Tillman, of South Carolina, calling on the Attorney General for all "information concern ing court proceedings in the Indian Territory affecting the Choctaw and Chickasaw tribes. A rumber of bills of minor impor tance were passed. Tillman Wants to Know. Senator Tillman wants to have the Comptroller of Currency send to the Senate a detailed statement of all loans made by national banks in New York City upon collateral security from June 1st to December 1st, 1907, with the full names of borrowers, amounts of loans and lists of stocks and bonds deposited with each loan as collateral security with a state ment whether they are time or call loans and whether call loans are made by excutive officers of the banks by rder of the board of directors. This direction to the Comptroller of the Cuireney was embodied in a resolu- lion submitted to the Senate by Mr. Tillman. A preamble of the resolution re cites that ban'is in cities where stock exchanges are located loan money of depositors which are trust funds upon worthless stocks and bonds, on terms that make such loans dangerous and make them a menace to the public. Mr. Aldrich asked that the consid eration of the resolution be postponed Mr. Tillman wanted immediate ac tion. "Stock gambling," be said, "is recognized by a great many people as one of the most pernicious and devil ish things of all the pernicious and devilish things that are being done in New York." Senator Aldrich suggested that there were other places besides New York where stock gambling is prac ticed. Mr. Tillman said he would be glad to have the same information from all places where there are stock ex changed. "I am willing to let it go over," he added, "to see what special interests are jeopardized." Consideration of the resolution was postponed. P03toffico Appropriations. Washington, Special. Considera tion of the postoffice appropriation resentatives. As adopted the bill bill was begun in the House of Rep earrics a total appropriation of $220,765,392, which is $0,675,024 les3 than tlie estimates. Mr. Overstreet, on Indiana, explained the provisions of the measures, the main features of which already have been published. An understanding was reached whereby general debate is to continue indefinitely. Millionaires in Congress. Washington, Special. According to a Washington statistican, the Unit ed States Senate now has 32 mil lionaires, represent; r.g a captal of $210,500,000, and the Hons? 14 men in the millionaire class, with fortunes aggregating $S3.000,000. Simot Gug genheim heads the list of millionaire Senators, with $00,000,000. Senator Isaac Stephenson of Wisconsin pos sesses a fortune estimated at half that sum, and Senator Stephen B. Elkins, of West Virginia, is a closo third, with $25,000,000. Representa tive John A. Andrus, of New York, is the rich man of the house, his "pile" being given as $3-5,000,000. Late Jel&s In 'Brief ' V? MINOR MATTERS OF INTEREST Seven of the Russian terrorists sen tenced to death for plotting against a grand duke and' other personagej were hanged at St. Petersburg. The air pressure caused by an aval anche wrecked a temporary hotel in Switzerland, 13 persons being killed and 15 others hurt. The British campaign against .'the Zakakhels, a tribe of Afridis in Nor thern India, has ended with the com plete submission of the tribesmen. Eleven men of a French column were killed- and 3G wbunded in an all day fight with Madakra tribesmen in Morocco. " Wlyle railroads must employ thous ands more telegraph operators to en force the nine-hour law, they intend to close hundreds of small stations. The progress of the fleet gives im petus to the movement to create ths rank of Vice Admiral in the Navy. A. B. Butt, cashier of the wrecked People's Bank of Portsmouth, took a special train on his journey to serve five years in the Richmond peniten tiary. Norfolk police found a baby in a 6atchel and are looking for 2 and Mrs. B. B. Davis, said to be its par ents. Dr. Eli Marsh Turner, former pres ident of West Virginia University, died a few hours after consenting to run for mayor of Morgantown. A hot fight is to be made over tha New Jersey Local Option bill at Tren ton. jr nenas oi near-Auuiuui hope to greet him with s vice-admir- al's commission when he reaches Saof Francisco s More than 300 buildings were burn ed, with a loss of $600,000, at Tampa, Fla. One boy was killed and another badly injured in a collision of ice boats on the St. Laurence river. , Among the clergymen mentioned as possible successors to the late Bishop Satterlee, of Washington, is Rev. Dr. Randolph II. McKim, who was for a time at a Baltimore church. W. B. Wood, an American magician and his daughter Bertha were drown ed by the sinking of a tug off Yuca tan recently. Andrew Hamilton, in charge of the legislative fund of the Equitable Life Assurance Society and other compan ies, was found dead at his home in Anonymous pamphlets scattered in the streets of Teheran notified the Shah that there was no intention to kill him at the time the bombs were thrown. Thomas B. Wannainaker,' sot John Wanamaker and proprietor ef the Philadelphia North American, died in Pari3. Mexican Ambassador Creel's bank was robbed of $500,000. Commander Sims, testifying before the Senate Naval Committee, declar ed the markmanship at Santiago to have been "disgraceful." The Supreme Court will hear Vir ginia rate test cases October 13. President Roosevelt praised Judge Wilfiey, of Shanghai, but the House investigators will probe the charge! against him. . Six Taft delegates were selected in Ivansa'. : "Senator Smith of Michigan, accus ed Senator Aldrich of bolstering up prices of railroad bonds in his finan cial bill. The Interstate Commerce Commi sion decided to disregard petitions to delay enforcing the nine hour law. Mr. Hepburn introduced a bill pro viding a tax of 50. cents a hundred shares for stock sales. A bill making October 12 the an niversary of Columbus' discovery, a holiday was offered in the House. The House defeated a bill for ex porting alien felons. - Luther Combs was shot in the thigh by Clifton Sawyer, his 17-year-old stepson, near Norfolk. The Senate will ask the President to withdraw the name of G. A. Por ter, a cousin of- Mrs. Roosevelt, as United States marshal in Oklahoma. Ex-Judge F. M. Whitehurst died in Norflok. The Potomac River Oyster bill agreed on by Maryland and Virginia legislators, was passed bv the Assem bly. Chief of Police Shippy, of Chicago, killed an anarchist who had stabbed him and shot his son and driver. Father Leo lleinriclv assassinated at the altar of Rt. Elizabeth's Catho He church in Denver, was buried at Patterson, N. J. The defense in the suit of Attor-ncy-General Jackson in New York to dissolve the New York City Railway Company admitted that $4,500,000 entered as an asset was not a real asset. The Ohio State Republican Conven tion is expected to be harmonious foe Taft, ;
The Roanoke Beacon and Washington County News (Plymouth, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 13, 1908, edition 1
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