{ title: 'The Medina Daily Journal. (Medina, N.Y.) 1903-1932, March 11, 1903, Page 1, Image 1', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn94057567/1903-03-11/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn94057567/1903-03-11/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn94057567/1903-03-11/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn94057567/1903-03-11/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Lee-Whedon Memorial Library
: : \fWW:'r-:: muuh % Y.» m&mmw EVENING, APRCH H> 1905.: PRlGIION^GeNf . ..M'« ) Advertiser / • t\ y '**••»? •V 1 NOTICE The Daily Journal •«• Iterly 1,000 Klitll: -Thrown Over an Enjbanfonefit j In His Autornobile. V iMtamwBm GFMwmn .ICm PsnnolJ, Who Was With JE*n>) & , »u Uucomclcus Condition. Machine Suddenly Swerved to Oni Side Just a« It Was Opposite an Qlc Stone Quarry—Crashed to Rock? 8t Feet Below—Mr. Penned Instantl) Kilted, Almost Every Bone belnj Broken—-Mra. Penned Havering' Be twejn Life anti Death--?Couple Hat Eeen on a Short Run Alons Hum bo|dt Parkway and Had Turned Intt Kensington Avenue Just a> It Be • santo Rain—Attempt to Reepvei His Hat Probably Oauscd the Acf?t dent. f t«* Strings aMRndinfe^ iastrttments ; M ^ do l°!f' j* Box Paper, Writing Pa- l J 0S * I per and Envelopes in bulk,. .fiuitars, Violins* ._ \ -Accordions, Tablets, Note Books, Com- Mov\h Or$atis, \ „.«!,• Mvsic Rolls, kuiic Stands ^ibon Books, PocKct Musicjterete.* 1 '\ McmorajidumBooKs,Pen§, All knidsjI-Musieai In- j **&&, Fo straments J rcpaircd. ,-.*•; ,-?_,jic i?-*v*:/. PlayinaJCards, etc. 10 per cent saved and a chance td'wn the ptize by clip- ^count of lo-per cent, oil any 1' caSh-iurdliaBejiiuid a chance' I .»,oh ihe prize of - '45-!N;OOLO , * tb'iiegiven away Mar. 30th, V IfVrlte < Maine and AdSras* Hera 'j^rompart's Music Store, rledina & 3&I1 .*y\» ' •••I 5i Buffalo, March II.—Arthur- K, Pan noli,] too lawyer who figured promt ndntiy In the recent EurdicK murrtei case, mot wltb a. sudden and terrlbk death, and his -wife was seriously in* - jured la an automobile accident abort ly beforo S o'clock yesterday af ternoot on Kensington -avenue, about 300 tool acuth of PHRnoro avenue. The machine In which tho couple wero riding suddenly swerved- to one side, Just as thoy wero opposite the old Anna Gsurea stone quarry, and bef fcro Pennell could rc-sala control oi tho automobile It ran over tho curb plunged down 'too emtjantoont an£ crashed to the rocks at tha bottom ol tho\ quarry, 30 fcot below. Pennell was pinioned beneath the machine and literally crushed to palp, almost Query bono in Ma body Be- ing broken. Ho. ww killed Instantly jarirPennclI *<A% rronrnor\se*t\in*ffic maahlno and wn» dashed against a pile of rock. Sho la now hovering be- tween llfe~and death at the Sisters hospital, suffering from a fracture at the base of the? skull and several mi- nor Injuries. • Suicide Theory Scautetf. As near .as could bo learned the death of Pennell and the latal injuries of hia wife were the results of purely an accident At«flrat it,,was rumored t.hat wblle suScrins fruoj tho mental anguish entailed from tho prominence he had gained In the Burdlck caaevhe had puipasv3y .run the machine over the brink of the q.uarry. This 'story Is branded as false, and the two wit- nesses v.uo saw tae accident atato pos- itively that it .va3 unavoiflable. No 0£e s^enis to Itaow just where tho ceuple were geing at the time ol tho accident, ft Is suypuaod, however, that they were on their way_ home -from a short ran along this boulevards of Humboldt pa«k. It was learned 'that they cad ayeat the greater part ol the late 'afterncon la running about £&i $$rk la t&sir ele^rie phas^a and. shtfftly after 6 S'cloek started on theh nomeward trip. After leaving ^fumbotdt pa*kway they turned up several side streets and, continued north OS Kensington ave- nue, The pavement in this thorough- i&te is f^a.rSa.6Jy_jniootfr and fa a fa- vorite place for speeding automobllstS. tot as. they turnea into Kensington avenue It, began, 'ta rain and Pennelh It is though^ sent his machlna ahead at a greater rate of speed, for it Is' claimed that at the time of the acci- dent they were going af a rapid rate, Oh. both sides of the street are sit- uated the old Anna (Jehres stone quar- ries, from which large quantities of block and building stone ire daily taken. Thelie quarries extend for a distance of abemt a mile along both, \ sides 6f the street and are about a hafi. J? .£•*•»«.'vui»*-w««i witcmutr was tjxose upon^ -.tbeni and' nunninig ai a rapid rate oi- : speed, J«st as the phaeten. vraw ahont to pas&.theia, they siw JPennell make s: : franfle effort to catph''hia v hia^ whiete had blown, froin^his hei4 byi * audd,eii : gust'of wind, .. Pennell •hbrew-'Up Ws right nand to; oW.ch His hat and at fte.same. tiriie lessened.iis grasgiioh the'handle by •which Ms njacnine.-' U steered, < Mrs. Pe^jiell, was h^ara to •teugn. merrily atflte e~Qrts &> caM t^ieJiat» hat tin langh ;dl^-*ira^r Jlps and '*&4 sool feplaceahy a cry of ftorrer, for as hei husband loosened*MB hold on Hh< steering gear the automobile saddenlj oareened *o one side, ^\hen hefore Pennell could either slacken th.« speed of the machine ot again gain control of it, tbey hai bumped dye* _the cujib, Pefcw«en ttili low curbstone and the brlafc of th« quarry there is a^soant space of flv< feet, la an instant We macnJne hac oovere4 thto^istance, Then came the awful plunge to the rooks below, Tlu Witnesses only heard a cry ot despoil from, the terrified (woman; and s hearse shout from tho man as the - m tonioblle disappeared ovor the fl>rlnk, Then came .the tertlble crash, The machine, which, ie'onoof the eleptrK phaetoa tyjpo, carried two' neavy bat terlea between the rear wheals, flu .weight ..of these batteries ca-ased the machine to tip upright as It left the brink and it struck on both real wheels with a terrible crasb. on the rock bottom of the Quarry. Pennell evidently clung to €he seat for .when, the automobile landed fte was pStttemed beneath its wreckage on the rocky bottom, Mrs, Peonell wa$ thrown some distance away,-ha,vlng fallen over tho back of the seat Ponnell was a mass of crusbed and bleeding flesh. Practically every boiu Ip his body was brohoa and Ws head apUt clear across. Splashes of blood dyed atones aboufc tho wreel»aso of the machino and his brains were- spattarod about for a space of several feet, %re, Pennell struck'on a pllo ol stone beneath a derrick •wMchhad wcipate- in tt. .-pur. y/ansns left ,|or Paris'at .nighr la order- tc-'catoh ttie ; KronprlnzvWilheim. for New York af (SherboMrg. !•; Fiye of the Crevv &ea£fch<?d the Venezuelan Coa|t b«?ca used by* the mon at work In ikt gnarry during tho day, ^t>' *f'\.i. tiU'. Vo ^#T *f^\ ^f<¥-r»* - * - .:». - •* - .--\4- mile wide, f be depth of the quarries 'varies ^from 1J0 to SO feet. Tie sides and b.otfcoin are of. solid rock and the laborers have blasted away the noclt Up to- within about six feet of the curb stone. I • Frojn the curb stone {he sides are, nearly' perpendicular and at -the bot. torn were placed piles of rock, and shales which bad' beefl : blasted by thg men\ at wofk'q'ufinjl the day, making it a particularly dangerous spot.^ ' two Witnesses of Accident's, When about'100 feet south of fchq spot where the accident took iplaoe, Fennell rang his bell, warning two yolmg men, Gfeorge Dunbar, 21 years did, living at No. 28 Florida street, and William Latinon, 2i years old, liv-' ing at No. 64 Florida street, to get out ,qf the way. ' According to the Story told by both of these young inien, IflteyitUrned about w»w heario? the vwfljw beu. 'Rv Tho too boys stood for a momenl borror'strickoa at tho accident which tdey had witnessed, -Resalntag thjilt presenco of mind, thoy ruclicd t6 the brink of the quarry and ftrom there behold the crushed niul WeodlaB formi of the two victims lying aaald the wreckage of the automobile. Dnnhar scrambled down tho cm- bankmont and went to thef assistance of Mrs, Pennell, who lay ^aconaeious aad-. Weodlag. -lannon hurried to the nearest telephono and notified tho po- lice at tho Main- street station. Mr* Pennell on Operating Xabte. An aninultu&o was hastily sum- moned from tnc Sisters' htapital and too lnjutcd woman was hurr-ted to th< bosp^ai. It was seen at a glance cuat Feuweli was beyond all oaitaly aid and mo -C'uort \\was made to release tltu body irom beneath tho wrecked ma- caJiio until the-arrival ot Medical i* anuuer Kanser, tjn her arrival at tho hospital Mrs Penned was taken to tho operating rocm and placed on the table. She was sull -unconscious and. apparently snderlng greatly, dlouso Sta«eott 0. H. Drown and bis assistant worked over the suffering woman, but i t was seed that she was sorknisly and per- haps fatally Injured. An examination of'lor body showed' that'she had sustained a fracture nl the base of the skull, the bleeding from tho mouth and noS<| being cer- tain evidence of It, numerous scalp wounds, a compoiind fracture of thd left arm a t the elbow and several minor bruises and loceratiotts nbptti •the UOdy, At the -conclusion of the trephining operation, she was placed in a private room and for a time regained con- sciousness, bat was too weaK to malts any statement regarding the accident Soon after she lapsed into a semi- conscious state and for a time her recovery seemed doubtful. At mid- night House Surgeon Browa stated that Mrs. Penneil bad an even chance of recovering! - ' - The body of Pennell was talren from benath the wreckage of the automobile and under the direction of tbe medical examiner was talsen to tbe morgue in the\ county (undertaker's wagon. There a superficial examination of tlie body was made by Dr. Dansef, who found, that the\ unfortunate man's sfeull had been split clean across the top, all of ihe facial bones crushed and fractured and through the fissures the brain mat- ter oozed. Six ribs Were\ fractured, the fight femur broken and boHr arms fractured. Dr. Danser stated that ded-th had been instantaneous. Pennell was 41 years o'ld and lived at • No, 208 Cleveland' avenue. Hl#- law o{Iice3 were in the Austin build- BOBBED OF MONEY AND CLOTHES' M«U, ? ~ MTKSVBQ tfy KeVoiHtipntsu \Itiey Met in Spite c-f their ProtesJ That They Were Americans,— United , States Consul at Core Sent Them t« WHNsmatad, \Wlllemstad Curacao, March 11.— The -crew of the Porto Kican schooner Bapldo, wrecked on •She \Venezuelan «)aat, Sias arrived here. After the •jtapldo was wrecked the crew, num- bering five, gained-the -shore, from which they took three days to reach the port of Coro. They had to trudge thtrough an in hospitable country without food or •water, while the revolutionists whom they encountered on their; way threat- ened them and rofibed them of their money and clouhing, in spite of their protests that thoy w<ere shipwrocked American Bailors, . v They -uhen met wiUt :the govern- ment troops, wlio dotained them.and mado the sailors follow them. The shipwrecked men were finally released' and the United States consular agent at Coro (had them forwarded hero on the Venezuelan sloop Linda. The con- sul hero, ha? given thorn relief and their passage to Porio Rico, 8!GHTED,A BURNING VESSEL, the Admiral Dewey Ban Closo'to Her, But the Crew Had Gone. Boston, March 11,—Cantata Israel of tho fruit steamej Admiral Dewey, which arrived yesterday, reports that on March 0, in latitudo 31 degrees 28 mlnatea north, longitude 72 degrees CO minutes west, a burnlfig craft was sighted about 10 miles off 'tho port bowT'* _ Tio frulter'a course \('was changed and sho started in tho direction of the blazing vessel, .When the steamer ap- proached there Were no signs of life, tho crow prebably having beea taken off by some steamer or sailing craft A largo vessel was seen far away to tho westward which might have taken off fco crow, ' Captain Israel said it was a wooden vessel, apparently, a brig or a schoon- er, of between 200 and 300 tons reg- irter. Nothing remained but the shell. The' bottom of the craft was coppered. The captain thought by tho heavy smoko which enveloped tbe wreck she might have been loaded with pitch pine. Apparently she had been aban- doned only a few hours. There was nothing by wnich ihor Identity could ho established. nyowi Cures Catarrh flttwurOaii^ aeriiii^ JTot ':^il Buypjnei sv»§r4i8?pvlwd 7 : lias it. lieeu poseihle-jto.W^tty 4jr.:. %.ta^iihedyfia*.'<^^1i:W|lf«^o^^• tlie %oniei jjiiiatjer to$& W y mU-< wtes f^-timee-^ ,4ay, 'pfti '$m$g 4bat timepvery jiarfeie hi tsa '':$&& into, fhedv paseagea «nid. togs.-fe inxpregnaf 6$ with, thft ^erm im&g aRdWAgh-in^HypMi. R: is the only ti-eiitmont that cures gatatrh. Stompli drugging Qften, calises disordered digestion ofoirittgs on, sQTOe.otW'disuses ^ndnevejr'inikeff a petwanettt euro of catarr£ ffyomoi not only MUB the gettms in tlie-tlirofttnud nose btit penetrates to the minutest air cells in U10 lungs and enters, the Wood wifli, tho 4- 0:x yg6n, killings the germs -in fhe blood. It frees the nwcouB nienx-. braneiwm poisonous-.miorobes i»& gives perfect 10 1th, A tiotnploto-Qutflt costs but $1.00, and inehides an inhaler, dropper and suflicient Hyomoi jtdr mCire than a month's tifjafraentr, \ * Charloa A. Mack has so nwteli fatth in tho merit of Hyomei that ho agrees to return the money to any purchaser who uaay be dissatisfied, •^«fc^S^*rf—^WV^^»1 THE Ot,EAN DISASTER, Mr. Francis Met King Leopold, Brussels, -March 11, — Fa-esident Bfanols of the St. Louis opposition lias arrived here from Berlia and was mot at the station by United StateiTMlnls ter Townsend, who aeeonnpajiied 'him on- visits to the premier, ahd tfice minis- ter of agriculture. In .(he afternoon ICing Leopold received Mr, Prancis in an attdience wlii'ch lasted ail houir. The king expressed groat interest in yie St, Louis exposition, and assured Revised List pf the Killed and In- jured—Coroner's Investigation. Olean, N. Y., March ll.-^-Following is the revised list of the dead and.in- jured: • N. . j .Bead; William Hubbard, Michael V. Driscoll, 'Wllilam Ross, Harry Godden, Bicljard O'Cdnnell, Herman Vollmnn, John McMahon, Walter Swift, John Tobln, John McCready, John* Stem* linger, \Ksrmas Brewa,. Baeffaeto Quarlnto and Sarmen^Slceteino. Injured: Richard McDo#ld, aged S years, probably fatally; James Mc- Donald, his brother; George Smith, Warren Thornton, Edward Brown, Ed- ward Hartwig, \Thomas Olson, George Sirdeven, Ray Sol!iv\aa r James Mc- Cready, Walter Jackson, seriously; Bert Miller, seriously; 'Glen Cole and two boys named Blackwel.l. Coroner Smith has begun an inves- tigation. It i s said that after the traia broke in two, the fijst section stopped in'order to take a side traek atid was run into by the rear section which struck it with tremendous force. The coroner has not decided when he will hold the inquest •. * 0 SAYr ***** Now is the.tirae to bring * in your wheel and have itf, ^ cleaned and any neede<£ c -'\|~ * repairing done, « ... 'W^%HMWy«f»«WWVM%» I.also do^ener- N^ al repairing Call and find out the differ- ent kinds, of work I' do V and look \over my complete ~ line of sundries. All work, guaranteed. MEDINA CYGIE WORKS ...KiriCe 3ST. Warner-. eoa Mr. {-faftbury. to Be Appotffted. Utica, March 'il.—It Is learned from an. unquestioned source tbat Harry A. Ilanbury of Brooklyn will be appoint- ed United .States shipping commis- sioner at the, harbor Of New York. Mr. Hanbury was a member of the' Fifty.sevenhb' congress from the Fourth district of New Ydrlf and was defeated at the last election His name was-strongly urged by Senator Piatt and his .candidacy had the'sup- port of practically tlj#intire congres- sional delegation .from New York state.- ' w Bliavea few Overcoats' left and to close them out we Will give you a 4is? count of Lyons Village Election. . _ Lyons, N, Y„ March 11.—-At the vil- lage election yesterday uh« Republi-. cans elected pile trustee, the Demo- crats, electing' the president two trus- tees, collector, assessor- and treasurer. The Vllage 'has heretofore Been Solidly DemocraitijC. The majorities ranged from. -«etfeh for collector to 184 for/ 34™i'%eald6nt & if, ^iusojpvv the.regular pficej as we do not want to carry them over. Oux. springs goods are ar- riving every day and we must have room. Call in and see what we can do jfof you.' See our line of spring \hats—the very lateskskapes, prices right. Opp. l?ost Office, HAVB YOTJ.]3VBIt:t|$!E]Q Thl Ontario Baking Co.'s • 3?or sale only at Hai-fcts't-• Tflie filaSd prtfnt ^rodcry T^X^X^X^X, 5