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Pulaski
County, Illinois
Historical
Newspaper Data

Source: Tulsa
Daily World 1918 Apr 11 Oklahoma
And now the
town of Mounds, way down almost in the southern
point of Illinois, has a sensation about a mob
attempting to lynch a disloyalist. As the
offending party is an editor and a Socialist to
boot, no doubt he deserves some disagreeable
experiences.
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Source: The
Morning Herald 1901 Jan 16 Kentucky
Personal
Mention
Mr. C. S. Bell
of Mounds, Illinois is in the city.
----------------------------------------------------
Source: Butte
Weekly Miner 1900 Sept 13 Montana
NINE ARE KILLED
Special Car of Duncan Clark's
Minstrel Troupe Wrecked at Mounds, Illinois
A number of seriously
injured--Patrick Patterson was hurled from the
car and struck the switch stand, his wife
horribly injured, a piece of wood driven through
her shoulders.
Memphis, Sept. 12--A special
to the Commercial-Appeal from Cairo, Ill., says;
The special car of Duncan Clark's female
minstrel troupe was wrecked at Mounds this
afternoon, and of sixteen occupants nine are now
dead and six others are seriously injured, some
of them perhaps fatally. The dead
are: Alice Williams, Ollie Enright, Etta
Clark Patterson, Patrick Patterson, Margaret
Compella, Anna Bell, Betty Ruby, Kitty Howard,
Faith Hamilton. Seriously injured:
Ettie Foy Elliot, May Martin, Otis Well, Duncan
Clark. The injured are all in the hospital
here. Duncan Clark, the manager will
probably recover. Patrick Patterson, the
only male who was killed, was the cook. He
was hurled from the car and struck the switch
stand. Etta Clark Patterson, his wife, was
horribly injured, a large piece of wood being
driven through her right shoulder.
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Source:
The Columbus Enquirer-Sun 1918 Apr
10 Georgia
AN ILLINOIS MOB AFTER AN
EDITOR
Cairo, Ill., April 9--Officer
left here by motor car shortly before midnight
for Mounds, Illinois, a small town about eight
miles north of Cairo, in answer to information
that a mob has taken possession of Norman M.
Harris, formerly editor of the Mounds Tribune,
threatening to do him bodily violence.
Harris is under indictment for making alleged
disloyal utterances.
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Source:
The Morning Herald 1901 Aug 18 Kentucky
SOCIAL NEWS
Mr. and Mrs.
Charles S. Bell and daughter, Miss Virginia
Bell, will leave today for their home in Mounds,
Illinois.
-----------------------------------------------
Source:
The Philadelphia Inquirer 1920 Mar
21 Pennsylvania
ADVERTISEMENT
Do you want a
list of 1000 prominent Illinois farmers,
covering the State, and just compiled by a
country publisher? Guaranteed almost
perfect: $3.00 will get it. Three
result-getting sales letters $10.00
ARVEL
SOWERS, Ullin, Illinois
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Source:
The Connecticut Courant 1841 Apr 03
Connecticut
DEATHS
At Pulaski,
Illinois, Mrs. Electa Olcott, wife of Elisha
Olcott, Esq., formerly of Manchester, Conn.
-------------------------------------
Source:
Vermont Journal 1866 June 2 Vermont
Two loads of
strawberries now arrive daily at Chicago from
Camden, Anna and Villa Ridge on the Illinois
Central Railroad. There is an area of over
300 acres of strawberries now ripening in three
towns, and promising the heaviest yield that any
season has afforded.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source:
The Wheeling Register 1895 Mar 07
Virginia
THE STATES GOOD
MONEY
The Disposition
Which the Last Legislature Made Of
P.M. Long in
full for his services in apprehending and
conveying A. C. Davis, charged with felony from
Villa Ridge, Illinois to Clarksburg, West
Virginia in July 1893, $75.
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Source:
The Daily Ohio Statesman 1859 Oct 16
MURDER IN MOUND
CITY ILLINOIS, THE MURDERER HUNG
The Cairo
correspondent of the St. Louis Democrat
says: On Saturday night last a desperado
of considerable notoriety in that locality ,
named James Vaughn, in company with one of the
operatives at Goodloe's foundry, name unknown,
got on a spree and became inebriated to a
considerable extent. Subsequently the two
fell in with a carpenter or machinist from
Pennsylvania, by name, John K. Charles,
similarly inflicted. They continued
together, and in the course of the evening's
conversation, there seems to have been a clash
of opinion between Vaughn's companion and
Charles, resulting in a clash of arms, boots and
fists. They closed, and in the ensuing
struggle, Charles, proving to be the more sober
man, got rather the better of the foundryman,
observing which, Vaughn, who stood by, drew his
pistol and deliberately shot Charles through the
heart, killing him instantly. Vaughn as
instantly disappeared, and crossing to Kentucky,
fled. He was pursued however, Saturday, by
Captain Ferrel and others, who overtook him
about ten miles below Cairo. He was armed
with a gun, which he presented, but was,
nevertheless, captured without difficulty, taken
back to Mound City, and lodged in jail, to await
examination. Last Saturday night a crowd
gathered, went to the jail, armed with a log as
a battering ram, effected an entrance, and
taking Vaughn out, notified him that fifteen
minutes would be generously allowed him to say
his prayers and attend to any other matters he
chose, preparatory to having his "mortal
coil shuffled off." Hardly
appreciating the reality of the thing at first,
his cries when the truth began to break upon him
are represented as heart-rendering--increasing
in force and piteousness as the stolid
indifference of his captors show how fixed was
their purpose for blood, and how surely the
retribution for his villainy was at hand.
Neither prayers nor cries could defer the
appointed time, however, and at the minute he
was run up a tree by the excited throng, where
he hung till he was dead. He was left
hanging till this morning, when he was cut down
by some of his friends and taken away. The
thing was done determinedly, and at the scene
of blood there seems to have been general
unanimity of feeling. The appearance of
his father, an individual enjoying considerable
notoriety in the same way as his son, and his
companion of Saturday night, had well nigh cost
them their lives, and they made themselves
scarce suddenly.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source:
The Daily Ohio Statesman 1858 Feb 20
John K. Hickey,
Bridget Cannon, and Ellen Gillen have been fully
committed to answer for the murder of a German
at the junction near Mound City, Illinois.
Murderers seem to have been so common down in
that section that the prisoners made no attempt
at either escape or concealment, and seemed
quite surprised at the Mound City folks making
so much fuss about their killing a strange
Dutchman.
---------------------------------------------------------
Source:
The Memphis Daily Avalanche 1869 Jan 27
John Dwyer was
mortally wounded by Nick Smith in a bar-room
brawl in Mound City, Illinois, a few days ago.
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Source:
Belleview News-Democrat 1918 Oct 11
DEATHS
FERDINAND BANGE
Ferdinand
Bange, a late resident of Swansea, died at the
Alton Hospital Friday morning at 4
o'clock. He was born in Sugar Loaf
Township, August 19th, 1868?, and was united in
marriage with Elizabeth Daab, who preceded him
in death. He is survived by seven
daughters and two sons, 3 brothers and one
sister. He was a brick maker by trade and
belonged to that union and to the Federal Labor
Union. Burial will be at New Grand Chain,
Illinois. The time for the funeral has not
been set at the time of going to press.
-----------------------------------------
Source:
Hawaiian Gazette 1868 Nov 4
A MONSTER BIRD
James Henry, of
Mound City, Illinois, on Sunday week shot a new
and comparatively unknown bird, on the Kentuckey
shore, opposite that city, which is thus
described by the Cairo Democrat: "It
is larger than the ostrich, and weighs one
hundred and four pounds. The body of this
wonderful bird is covered with snow-white down,
and it's head is of a fiery red. The
wings, of deep black, measured fifteen feet from
tip to tip, and the bill, of a yellow color,
twenty-four inches. It's legs are slender
and sinewy, pea green in color, and measure
forty-eight inches in length. One of the
feet resemble that of a duck, and the other that
of a turkey. Mr. Henry shot it at a
distance of one hundred yards, from the top-most
branch of a dead tree, where it had perched
preying upon a full sized sheep that it had
carried from the ground. This strange
species of bird, which is said to have existed
extensively during the days of the mastodon, is
almost entirely extinct--the last one having
been seen in the state of New York during the
year 1812. Potter has it on exhibition at
his office at Mound City. Its flight
across the town and river was witnessed by
hundreds of citizens."

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