NEWS: Selected items from the Evening Tribune, January 2, 1899, Altoona, Blair 
County, PA

Contributed for use in the USGenWeb Archives by Judy Banja jbanja@msn.com

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Selections from the Altoona Evening Tribune, Monday, January 2, 1899 

Death of Sen. John Blair Linn.
  BELLEFONTE, Pa. January 1. - Ex-Secretary of the Commonwealth John Blair Linn, 
one of the oldest lawyers of the Centre county bar, died to-day at his home in 
this city.  He had been in feeble health for some time and during last week 
contracted the grip which caused his death.  He was born in Lewisburg, Pa., in 
October, 1831.  He graduated from Franklin and Marshall College, and was 
admitted to the bar in 1851.  He was the first district attorney of Sullivan 
county and practiced law in Union county from 1854 until his removal to 
Bellefonte in 1871.  In 1873 he was appointed deputy secretary of the 
commonwealth by the then Secretary of the Commonwealth Hon. M. S. Quay.  Upon 
Mr. Quay's resigning in 1878 Mr. Linn was commissioned as his successor.  Soon 
after he was succeeded in turn by Mr. Quay.  While secretary of the commonwealth 
there was published under his direction a number of publications bearing upon 
the early history of many sections of Pennsylvania.  He leaves a widow and two 
children.

HOLLIDAYSBURG HAPPENINGS.

  Mr. J. Henry Albright, cashier of Armour & Co.'s house at Johnstown, spent 
Sunday with his father, Mr. John M. Albright.

  During the temporary absence of Merchant John C. West from his store on 
Saturday a sneak thief purloined his entire stock of grippe cures and cough 
medicines.

  I. D. Metzger, superintendent of the Hollidaysburg public schools, spent the 
holiday week in New York city.  While there he was entertained by Lieutenant 
William R. Rooney aboard the cruiser New Orleans.

  Paddy, the little curly dog belonging to Mr. and Mrs. Guy R. Lingafelt, 
manifested a striking instance of canine devotion to duty last week.  Paddy 
keeps watch and ward over the baby carriage in the household.  The carriage 
needed mending and it accompanied by the little sentinel, was taken to Jacobs's 
hardware store for that purpose.  Paddy refused to desert the carriage the 
entire day, and barked and snapped at the workmen who came near with the mending 
tools.  The dog was chained while the necessary repairs were made.  Paddy rode 
home in the carriage in triumph to the baby master.

  This is inauguration day at the court house.  Register and Recorder-elect 
William H. Irwin, County Treasurer-elect William H. Wolff, Director of the Poor-
elect H. H. Pensyl and District Attorney-elect William L. Hicks will be duly 
installed in their respective offices.  The county commissioners will make their 
annual appointments.  It is said there are no contests and the present 
appointees will be retained.  A vigorous contest is being made for the position 
of almshouse steward, the choice being between P. H. Bridenbaugh, the present 
steward, and J. Kyle Orr, the of Tyrone township.  County Auditors Coleman, 
Lorens and Gilliland will begin their annual labors this week.

LATE HOSPITAL NOTES.
Flagman Fred Wicker Hurt at BO Office Yesterday Morning.
  Fred N. Wicker, a flagman employed on the Pittsburg division, residing at 2508 
Maple avenue, was admitted to the hospital yesterday morning suffering with a 
bad sprain at the back and bodily contusions.  Wicker was in his caboose at BO 
office when a shifter pushed it off the track.  He jumped and was hurt in 
striking the fails.

  James Funk, the bell boy at the hospital, while coasting Saturday evening 
struck a post and suffered a laceration of the lip and a contusion of the chin.  
The injury was dressed at the dispensary.

Yingling Taken Back to the Hospital.
  Harvey Yingling, the lad who was shot by Charles Reem in Fairview, was 
readmitted to the hospital on Saturday, because of the fact that the bullet was 
located.  The attending physician found it imbedded in the skull in the outer 
canal of the ear.  The bullet can be extracted, it is though, without 
difficulty.  The hospital surgeons now hope that after the bullet is extracted, 
the lad's hearing will be completely restored.

RAILROAD FLAGMAN KILLED.
Struck by an Engine at Gallitzin and Died a Few Hours Later.
  Edward J. Youler, of Pitcairn, a flagman employed on the Pittsburg division, 
was struck and fatally injured by engine 1376 at Gallitzin about noon yesterday.  
He was brought to Altoona on an engine but died in the ambulance while on the 
way to the hospital.
  Youler was a flagman of Conductor Keagel's crew.  His train was lying at 
Gallitzin at the time of the accident and after eating dinner in the caboose, 
Keagel and Youler got off and started to walk forward to the engine in the six-
foot.  When they had nearly reached the engine, a cloud of steam from the 
locomotive blew down on the tracks, obscuring engine 1376, Engineer Glunt, which 
was approaching.  The back step of the engine struck Youler hurling him to the 
ballast.  The unfortunate man was picked up unconscious with blood gushing from 
his nose, mouth and ears.  A Gallitzin physician gave him some attention before 
he was sent on the locomotive to Altoona.  He never regained consciousness.  The 
hospital surgeons made an examination of the remains and found he had suffered 
two fractures of the skull, one on the right temple, and the other at the base 
of the brain.  
  Youler's crew had an eventful trip east from Wall.  They left east at noon 
Saturday, and two hours later piled into the mixed passenger and freight train 
off the Unity branch at Latrobe.  Engines 1014 and 170 which were hauling 
Youler's train were battered up, and Engineer Samuel Briar of the 1014 injured.  
Fourteen freight cars were smashed up.  Engine 70 from Derry hauled the train 
from Latrobe to Gallitzin where Youler was injured twenty-four hours after the 
train left Wall.  Of the crew of five which left Wall, but three return 
uninjured.  Coroner McCartney was advised of the death.   He viewed the body at 
Lafferty's undertaking rooms and decided an inquest unnecessary.
  Youler was aged about 50 years and unmarried.  His home was in Johnstown 
though he resided at Pitcairn.  He was one of the officials of the branch of 
Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen at Pitcairn.  No instructions have been received 
yet as to the disposal of the body.

DEATH OF MICHAEL HICKLE.
Well Known Electrician Passes Away at His Home Yesterday.
  Michael Hickle, a well known electrician, died at his home, 1111 Fifth avenue, 
at 1 o'clock yesterday afternoon, of a complication of diseases, after a long 
illness.  The deceased was born near Arch Spring 58 years ago.  About twenty-
seven years ago he came to Altoona and entered the employ of the Pennsylvania 
Railroad company as electric lineman.  Of recent years he was foreman of the 
company linemen in the Altoona yard.
  Deceased is survived by his wife and one sister, Mrs. Mary Fisher, of Arch 
Springs.  He was a member of St. Mary's Catholic church, St. John's Literary and 
Benevolent Society and the Pennsylvania Railroad Relief Fund.  He was very well 
known in the city and county, and a host of friends will hear of his death with 
regret.  High mass will be celebrated at St. Mary's church at 9 o'clock 
Wednesday morning; interment in St. Mary's cemetery.

MARRIED ON NEW YEAR.
Rookis Simon and Gertrude Wertz Joined in Wedlock.
  Mr. Rookis Simon, the well known Assyrian fruit dealer at 924 Seventeenth 
street, and Miss Gertrude Wertz, of Blair township, celebrated the New Year 
yesterday by plighting vows of eternal fidelity in holy wedlock.  The marriage 
ceremony was performed at 4 o'clock by Rev. Father Schmitt at the Sacred Heart 
parsonage.
  Previous to the wedding, and according to the Assyrian custom the marriage 
feast was celebrated.  There was plenty of good cheer of a liquid nature and 
some of the guests were so overcome by Rookis's good fortune that they were 
unable to attend the nuptials, where Mr. Michael Sophie officiated as best man 
and Mrs. George Azzer charmingly assumed the onerous duties of bridesmaid.  At 
the conclusion of the nuptials, the wedding feast was resumed with the aid of 
more guests who arrived in the meantime.  Rookis is generally liked by his 
neighbors, many of whom hastened to congratulate him when it became known that 
he was doing himself proud in honor of his new wife.

IN OTHER COUNTIES.
Items of Interest Clipped or Condensed from Our Exchanges.

  At Jersey Shore Thursday the 7-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Keeler, 
of the Third ward, was placing some paper in the stove when her dress became 
ignited.  In an instant she was almost enveloped in flames.  Her screams brought 
Mrs. Keeler to the room and seizing a blanket, she hastily wrapped it around the 
child, extinguishing the flames.

  Joseph Francis, while working about a saw mill near his home in South 
Huntingdon township, Westmoreland county, met with an accident on Thursday 
afternoon which caused his death.  The engineer was reversing the log carriage 
and a leather belt slipped off, striking Mr. Francis with sufficient force to 
break his neck.  The deceased was aged 60 years and leaves a wife and grown 
family.

  On Thursday a man named Priestley, an employe of the tannery at Ralston, 
Lycoming county, accidentally fell into an empty vat several feet deep and will 
likely die.  He was hurt internally and vomited blood, besides having his brain 
injured.  At Ralston the same day Keleon Packard, while cutting a limb off a 
tree that was bent over, was badly injured.  The limb sprung and struck him on 
the upper jaw, fracturing it.

  Diphtheria is prevalent at Nanty Glo, Cambria county, and the community 
roundabout are very properly alarmed quite a little over its presence.  There 
are said to be about twenty cases just in the neighborhood, which, considering 
the population, is a very great number, and some of them are reported to be 
quite serious.  A 4-year-old child of Landlord Dunn succumbed to the disease on 
Wednesday, and other deaths are feared.

  Two weeks ago a store at Summer Hill was entered by burglars and a large 
amount of goods taken.  This prompted a merchant, Wallace Plummer, of the same 
place, to place a watchman in his store.  Thursday night three men entered the 
place by cutting out a window in the rear.  The watchman shot one of the men 
through the breast, inflicting a terrible and necessarily fatal wound.  The 
wounded burglar gave his name as Lambert and his home Milwaukee, but refused to 
give the names of his comrades who escaped.  The wounded burglar was taken to 
the Ebensburg jail.

  The barn on the farm of John Kirby, at the head of Sugar run, in Bald Eagle 
township, Clinton county, was totally destroyed by fire at an early hour this 
morning.  It is supposed the fire broke out about 2 o'clock.  It was something 
past that hour when Mr. Kirby was awakened by roaring and crackling of the 
flames.  About the same time some of his neighbors who had seen the fire 
arrived.  The barn was then all aflame and the roof about to fall in.  None of 
the contents of the barn was saved, as the fire had gained so much headway when 
discovered that nothing could be removed.  All of last season's crops of hay and 
grain, farm implements, wagons and harness were burned.  Two horses, three cows 
and three head of young cattle perished in the flames.

TYRONE TOPICS.
Some New Society Officers - A Child's Death - Other News.

  Wanted - Cook and baker.  Apply to A. R. Grier, Birmingham, Pa.

  An infant child of S. Clement Wilson and wife died at their home on Adams 
avenue yesterday morning.
  
  Leroy Berg, druggist, of Wilkesbarre, Pa., is visiting his parents, Mr. and 
Mrs. L. E. Berg, 1207 North Washington avenue, in the Central City.

  Messrs. Hoopes & Blanchard have relinquished the management of the Academy of 
Music at this place and have gone to their former home at Baltimore, Md.

  Dr. J. M. Gemmill, of this place, departed yesterday at noon for Danville, 
Pa., where he had been summoned on account of the illness of Mrs. Gemmill, who 
has been visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Boyd, at that place.

  Paul Leslie, the 4-months-and-20-days-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Bice, of 
Columbia avenue, died at the parental home on Saturday morning at 11 o'clock of 
pneumonia.  Funeral services will be held at the home of the parents this 
afternoon at 2 o'clock.  Interment in Oak Grove cemetery.