n?nT nnOT LARGEST : PAPER : IN PART lIKuli Central West Virginia noi virginiaj ?larhsbm*0 LARGEST : PAPER : IN Central West Virginia ?clc0tam. )L. XXXII.?NO. 19. Devoted to Praotioal Information, gome Reins, Pure Politios, dnd the Development of Y?)eet Virginia's Resources CLARKSBURG, W. VA.|MARC1L 24. 1893. = = WHOLE NO. 1573 iGEDYON ATRAIN . '??*??>>- ' desperadoes Attempt to jfce a K. & 0. Train, A BATTLE ENSUES IN jtterllT Burnett was Killed and Dfputy Dale Wounded. IF THE IlESI'ERADOES SHOT. btillk, Tkns., March 19.? tory of the tragedy on a near here yesterday is inter 5 and dramatic. . It occurred f Knoxville and Ohio pass train this morning before Jit at Hell's.Point, a pecu nipiiflcant name, one mile talf eajt of Ntwcomb, in bell county, in which Sheriff BnmettjOf Campbell county, tilled; Deputy Sheriff John probably fatally shot; eSmith, mortally wounded, esse Jones sustained aevera' injuries. riff Burnett. I and Duputy I Dale went to Jellico yes t from Jacksboro, to arrest ner by the name of Jesse ,on the charge of carrying lied weapons. Jones wi-s ted and a beautiful peari leJ 38-caliber Smith & Wes istol was taken from him by ff Burnett. iECBKD By HIS FRIENDS. ? arrest was ' made oh the Ktiding Kentucky and Ten e.not far from Jellico. Boon nrds a number of miners, Js of Jonesji,>came to the iiif Jones and successed in 1 li^^aiic^^l^defl^nce ic Tennessee officers, who W it prudent not to cross tien the train left Jelico short er 4 o'clock this morning, icers were aboard oji their in home to Jacksboro. Just passing Newcomb, Oonduc frown passed through the uid found that the water fof the car was locked. He *ted Jones hiding from the rc. for the miner had got on M and paid his fare to Elk |i e conductor called Sheriff iftt to the door of the closet sit asked for the condnctor's *'!iicli was given to him, but ?lil not unlock the door and lulled the key back to the "tor. with the request that ?'IK'k the door. The con "knocked on the door and Med that the party on the 'should open it. The door 1*'?ed and Jones found ins 'sheriff arrested him, took 'lo tliii seat and began to Him. Deputy Sheriff Dale 'itting dose to the sheriff and "finer. Over close to the 'assented an old man by ?up of Smith, evidently a j| "f ?'ones. The old man, ' :l miner, carried a big foster in his lap which he wiidling nervously. Near f?ter of the car was another fof Jones by the name of | Smith, a much younger '"an the Smith who had the ? ester. ""g Smith attempted to llls Pistol on Sheriff Burnett, ,as Invented from using his <"> by Deputy Sheriff Dale, *as ",e quicker of the two the drop on Crusoe. The ' '"ith then hurriedly rushed 'Aching him from liehind iptacing him so that Dale j^erloss to do any thing, "iikiiown party opposite to #w scene was being en >i then commenced to Are "le officers., j I'^ri" Was killed,a .'i8-oa]i piercing his brain R'r entering this liody! in close proximity to his heart, either of which would have been fatal. I" the meantime, Deputy Slier ill" Dale had freed himself from the elder Smith and had. opened fire upon the murderous assailant of himself and his superior officer. But he was overpowered and rushed to the rear platform of the smoker and was thrown off, his assailants leaping after him, while the train was rolling swiftly along on schedule time, thirty miles an hour. The train was stopped by Con ductor Brown as quickly as possi ble. He had left the smoker after the sheriff had arrested Jones, going into another car, but stopped the train as soon as he heard the shooting. Rushing into the smoker the conductor saw THE SHERIFF LYING DEAD ON THE FLOOR. The train was stopped by this time, and missing Dale, the* train was run back to where the shoot ing had commenced. Dale was found wandering about the woods near the track in a dazed and partianv demented condition. He at first inquired what the tram had stopped there for. His senses graduallv re turned, however, and it wasfound that he had been shot in the temple, receiving a verv danger ous wound. Crusoe Smith and Jesse Jones were found near where the deputy was come upon. They were lyi n'g by the side of the railroad ap parently dead, but they soon re turned to consciousness. Jones the prisoner, was found to have a broken arm, sustaining injuries about the head also. Crusoe Smith was in acritical condition. He was shot in the breast and stomach and his right arm. was Dale sufficiently recovered from the shock which he had sustained to take charge of Smith and Jones. He was in bad shape, however, complaining in addition to the suffering caused by the shot in the temple, of pains in his shoulders and back, which were caused, no doubt, by the fall from the train, as Smith and Jones, broken limbs had been injured in a similar manner. What became of the elder Smith is not known. He probably (led, as did the un known party who commenced the shooting, both having, no doubt, jumped from the train at the time their confederate did, but escap ing. The tragedy caused great ex citement in Knoxville. If the desperadoes are caught they will be lynched. LATKH. Jelmco, Texn., March 20.? Judge Lynch held a meetinglast night at Jacksboro, and at day light the form of Jesse Jones was found hanging to an old fashioned gate beam a quarter of a mile east of the town limits. At midnight Jailer Irwin was called to the door of his residence. He looked out upon a court yard of determined people and" the leaders at once covered him with their rifles and demanded that he unfasten the doors and lead them to Jesse Jones' cell. The jailor obeyed the orders and soon Jones was brought forth. A march was taken up until the barn*ynrd of the Rev.J. S.Lindsay was reached. Before an old old-time beam gate the mob halted and one of their number Counted the gallows and placed the rope over the top beam. Marcy McD. Price, of Clarks bure, who captivated the hearts of our fair ones during his stay at the military encampment last summer, was a visitor in the city yesterday. "All's fair in love and war," as the saying goes and it is rumored that he has captured a handsome prize here.?Parkers burg Sentinel M. M.Thompson, Clarksburg's attorney, was taking depositions in our town on Tuesday. He was accompanied by that jolly good felloe. Mike Conley. police of Clarksburg The Clarksburg Telegram's World's Fairedition caught public favor in great shape. It was a creditable piece of enterprise on tho part of its publisher Charles F. Thomp son. the music dealer of Clarks burg. was in town this week.? Grafton Sentinel. A FATAL ACCIDENT. Another Victim Loses His Life at the Depot Crossing. THE THIRD IN SIX MONTHS. Again the railroad crossing and some one's carelessness are responsible for a human life? the third within six months. Old Dr. Champ whose familiar form has been seen on our streets for many years is time the victim. While crossing the railroad at the depot on Monday he was watching the yard engine back ing toward him, and was trying to keep out of its way. Being thus occupied lie failed to see or hear a freight approching in the opposite direction and on another track. Suddenly he was struck from behind by the pilot of the freight and thrown almost direct ly under the yard engine. The shock was so sudden that the "Doctor" who was about 78 years old and somewhat infirm could not save himself. The wheels catching his right hand followed up and cut his shoulder clear off with the ex ception of a little shred of skin, and grazed past the side of his face. He was immediatly carried to the Nutter Hotel and a physi cian summoned, but from the very first it was evident that the terrible wounds were more than his strength could withstand,and the only care taken was to alle viate his terrible suffering for the short time he had to live. For two or three hours he re | the time suffering indescribable agony. Soon after noon he was placed under the influence of an opiate and remained so almost all the time until he died at about eleven o'clock\the same night. Hotels ut the Fair. The number of hotels under construction m the immediate vi cinity of the fair grounds at Chicago is 279, containing 33, 945 rooms. The projectors of these buildings entertain great expectations in the way of possi ble profits. Some of the struct ures will be torn down after the fair is over, others will be used for residences and llats, wriile others may be devoted to a vari ety of purposes. At present they all count as "hotels," and it is expected that private resi dences in the exposition district, in which one or more rooms will be rented to lodgers, will swell the number of available rooijas to nearly, if not quite, 50.000. Al- t lowing an average of two to a room these will accomodate 100, 000 visitors. There has been a regular craze in the direction of hotel building,,and those legiti mately engaged in the ousiness I are predicting disaster to many j who are putting their money in these ventures. The possibility of fire is also causing no little uneasiness, but nothing can stop the building boom. It is estimated that about $4. 000,00Cf has been expended on these buildings. Nothing is said about rates except that the ac commodations are regarded as so abundant that exorbitant charges will not be possible. A favorite plan of the builders is to receive advance payments on account from inteuding visitors. It is said that $1,500,000 has been paid in on this plan. One so called club took in $125,000 from the sale of memberships alone. Agents have scoured the country from one end to the other and have raked in large sums from persons anxious to "secure" ac commodations during the fair. Much of this money has no doubt i been thrown away. li. has been I developed that some of the al leged hotels exist only on pa per, while the character of the buildings, the danger from fire and from lack of sanitary appli ances and other drawbacks will prevent many visitors from oc cupyingtheir rooms after they have Once seen them. The public should be warned against ^Jjossiblo frauds in this connefcticm. . A leading Chicago paper says: "Out of the large number of people who have be come interested in those projoc'-s it would bo unreasonable to sup pose that some knaves would not develop. It is possible that some honest folks have been entraped into schemes which will prove too heavy to.be carried out and will meet with disaster, the prospec tive patrons who have paid in ad vance being the heaviest losers." There is no doubt as to the latter suggestion?the loss will not fall on the Chicago schemers, but up on tbibjle who are foolish enough to paw. for rooms in advance which exist only in the air. Visi tors cannot be too careful in dpnlins- -with hotel speculators at longJrsSgj.?Pittsburgh Ootnmer- I cial Gacettc. UlalDr and Heurr U*r. James G. Blaino is often com pared with Henry Clay. The parallelism is striking in many points. * But the differences are. after all. as many and as great as the similarities. Clay was probably the greater master of the art of oratory. His voice was a superb musical instrument, and with it he swayed his audi tors at will. But lienry Clay, whll!:-;:iidoubt?dly a great orator, can hardly be called a great thinker. He was always some j what superficial. Blaine was a I man of wider knowledge and sounder thinking. Clay was essentially a timmer. Blaine was positive and fearless. He was an abler man than Henry Clay. The two were much alike in the art of winning and keeping friends. This is sometimes called "magnetism," and explained as something quite undefinable in the personality. And yet the nature of it is not far to seek. It I must consist in a really affection ate and sympathetic dispjsition. I Men loved Henry Clay because ho loved them. Blaine had keen sensibilities. He craved affection. I and in turn gave it lavishly; and I that was the charm that won to ? him not men of his own party ? alone, but men of all parties. In I that magic power of winning de- ? volion lie was the Henry Clay of I recent politics. Both were in tensely American; both supreme- I ly lov"d the welfare and glory of I the republic; and both, while they keenly enjoyed the strife of I I parties, were yet much more than party men. They were not mere- i I ly Republicans. In the highest I sense, and in no partisan way, ! I were both National Republicans. > I Prof, -/mlxon's article in March j I number Review of Reviews. Competent engineers who; have surveyed the route report j I that a line of railroad can be con- I structed to Behring straits and j that the straits can be bridged by I modern scientific bridges. If the j proposed lines on both sides of the strait are constructed it will be possible for travelers to pro | cede from New York to Paris by an all-rail route by the way or Behring straits. The engineers may be all right, but their road, if built, will not soon become pop ular as a through route .between ? the two points named, asthedist- ; ance is "J1,000 miles and through ' tickets wiW probably come high. We smile at the announcement of ; the project, but who will say that i in view of the world's steady and . rapid progress our children's children may not go to France by ( the very route proposed.? Commercial Gazette. THE C0A1. BUSINESS, Along The West Va. Central Railway. STEPHEN B. ELK1NS LARGELY INTERESTED In a talk with "Oath," pablish ed in the Now York Sun, Ex-Sea retary Elkins has this to say of his future plans: "I never felt so comfortable in my life. Here I can read a uewspaper all through. I havo just been reading the Pennsylva nia railroad report. I havo not had time to read anything like another citizen since I entered the Cabinet, and though I have been a hard worker all my lifo, I call that Cabinet job hard. They commenced at mo at eight o'clock, before I loft my houso, and kept it up until I went to bed." "I suppose you are going to work again?" ?'Without a day's delay. We have three bands of surveyors outtotind us the easiest route from Cumberland to Hagerstown. As soon as they report, which will be immediately, we are going to work extending our West Vir ginia railroad to Hagerstown. It will cost &i,000,000. I bolieve that Hagerstown will be a place of 50,000 people in a few years. When wo get in there and con nect wi'.h the Cumberland Valley railroad it will be more of a rail road center than Harrisburg." ??I thought you connected al ready with two railroads atCum berland?" ' Well, we did, but you see the Baltimore and Ohio railroad, has more stuff than it can haul for itself, and we have hundreds of cars blocked up in its yards un able to get out at Cumberland. The Pennsylvania railroad has to haul our coal to Huntington, on the Juniata, across the mountains, and we have all of that mileage to pay to get around back to Har risburg and to the seaboard. Now, we have the largest and the near est deposit of steam-making coal to the seaboard, and Cumberland Valley railroad, which has very littlo coal to haul, comes just in our line. By building a hundred miles -we connect with It, and have a grade as smooth as the | floor to Harrisburg and all that manufacturing district of the | East." ?What is the name of your coal I I field?" ?It is the same as the Cumber land coal field in Maryland, which is simply the toe of the I great shoe of coal which passes I over to the Uppor Potomac and West Virginia. 1 suppose you I would call it tho Potomac coal Held. We can now get out 3.000 I tons of coal a day. and our engin- I eers compute that we have 800, 000,000, tons of coal upon the veins already located. Coal is to be the greatest factor, in the fu ture. Coal and the metals will control the future destiny of this country." The moon and its phases have | always been supposed by star gazers and others to have a great deal to do with the fortanes and I affairs of the people of the earth. Now.however.it is proposed to add to their importance by hold ing them responsible for the ap petites of the fishes of the sea. Ac cording to a veteran Continental angler who|has recently given the world the results of his observa tions, fishes bite most freely dur ing the four or five days afUir the moon's first quarter, while from ihe third day after the last quar ter to the second day before t new moon the - sport is at i worst. .....nil . ?? Subscribe for the Telegkam. Only $1-50 per year. A t'nre for lllohthrrl*. Wo are glad to find and insert tho following e uro for tho dread ful disease that is raging so many places in our State. A few years ago. when diphtheria was raging in England, a gentleman accom panied the celebrated Dr. Field on his ronnd to witness the so called "wonaorful euros" whick he performed while tho patients of others were dropping on all sides. Tho romody, to bo so rapid, must be simple. All he took with him was powder of sul phur and a quill, and with the** ho cured every patient without exception. He put a teaspoonful of flour of brinistono into a win# glass of water, and stlrrod it witk his finger, instead of a spoon, aa tho sulphur roally does not amal gamate with water. Whon the sulphur was well mixed he gave it as a gargle and'in ten minutes the patient was out of danger. Brimstone kills ovory spocios of fungus in man, beast and plant in a few minutes. Instead of spitting out tho gargle, ho recom mended tho swallowing of it. In extreme casos. in which he had been called just in the nick of time, whon tho fungus was too nearly closed to allow tho garg ling. ho blew the sulphurthrough i quill into tho throat, and ufter the fungus had shrunk to allow of it, then tho gargling. H? never lost a patent from diph theria. If a patient cannot gargle, tako a live coal, put it on a shovel and sprinkle <* spoonful or two of flour of brimstone at a time upon it, let the sufTorer in hale it. holding the head over it, and the fungus will die. If plen tifully used the whole room may bo filled almost to suffocation; the patient can walk about in it. in haling tho fumes, with doors and windows shut. The mode of fumigating a room with sulphur has often cured most violent atUcks of cold in the head, chest, etc., at any time, and is recom mended in cases of consumption and asthma. Geological theories are wonder ful things. One of them sots forth that kemseno is tho oil of long extinct monsters of tho earth, and another that the re ported accumulating ice at the North Pole will eventually throw the earth out of balance so a> to result in the utter annihilation of man by the rush of moving objects. A Went V'lrirlulun Tlmuphl he wuk 1b It, but he nrn?n't. Washington! D. C.. March 10. ?This was semi monthly pay day at tho Postofiice Department and this afternoon a long line of clerks formed in the corridor near tho disbursing clerk's office to receive the envelopes in turn. While they were thus standing a new arrival in town from West Virginia burst into tho building, satchel in hand, and eager to tile an application for office with the Postmaster General. Seeing tho long line of clerks, ho hastily took his place at the tail end and slowly made his way forward as those in front were paid off and went away. At last tho man ahead of him noticing he was a stranger in the department, in quired what he wanted with thu disbursing clerk; he wanted to see the Postmaster General. The clerk smiled and explained the situation to the stranger. "H?1," exclaimed the "West Virginia man. "I thought this was a line of candidates for office waiting to see the Postmaster General," and oft he went. Dr. A. M. Jarrett, DENTIST.^, Will be in 111* ClarkHburg office. Howell building, every tour month s-nue local no tice. Kvery thin* in Proftlbette IieiuiHtry done here-not brought and inserted. AH of the finer Hpecinttlc? attended to promptly, a# All commonIcntlmiH should b? addrenHod to the home office at Ukakton, w. Va. -"it*