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Darr  Mine  Relief  Fund 


REPORT 


to  the  Executive  Committee 
covering  the  collection  and 
distribution  o/  the  public 
fund  for  the  dependents  o/ 
the  men  killed  By  the  explo- 
sion in  the  Darr  Mine  o/  the 
Pittsburgh  Coal  Company, 
December  194  1907, 


LIBRARY 

OF  THE 

UNIVERSITY  OF  CALIFORNIA. 

GIFT    OF 


Class 


WITH     COMPLIMENTS    OF 

OLIVER  MeCLINTOCK 


Darr  Mine  Relief  Fund  Report 

to  the 

Executive  Committee 

covering  the 

Collection  and  Distribution 

of  the 

Public  Fund 

for  the 

Dependents  of  the  Men  Killed 

by  the  Explosion  in  the 

Darr  Mine  of  the  Pittsburgh  Coal  Company 

December  19th,  1907 

'  I  o  > 


UNIVERSITY 

OF 


GIFT 


Secretary's  Report 

to  the  Executive  Committee 

of  the  Darr  Mine   Relief  Fund 


Gentlemen : — 

The  following  report  covers  the  collection  and  distribu- 
tion of  the  fund  of  $97,062.53,  contributed  for  the  relief  of 
the  sufferers  by  the  explosion  in  the  Darr  Mine  of  the  Pitts- 
burgh Coal  Company  at  Jacobs  Creek>  Penna.,  which  occurred 
at  eleven  o'clock  A.  M.,  December  i9th,  1907,  when  239  men 
were  at  work  and  but  one  escaped. 

TEMPORARY  RELIEF. 

The  Pittsburgh  Coal  Company  was  prompt  in  providing 
temporary  relief  for  the  families  bereft  by  the  disaster,  which 
continued  for  a  period  of  several  months,  or  until  measures 
for  permanent  relief  could  be  carried  out.  Mr.  H.  W.  Minker 
of  the  Pittsburgh  Coal  Company  was  placed  in  charge  of  a 
committee  of  the  company's  employes  to  attend  to  the  work  of 
immediate  relief.  They  were  assisted  by  a  local  committee  of 
women  headed  by  Mrs.  J.  F.  Rowe,  wife  of  the  Postmaster 
at  Jacobs  Creek.  Daily  visits  were  made  to  the  stricken 
families  and  their  wants  supplied  as  far  as  they  could  be 
learned.  During  a  period  of  four  months  the  compensation 
of  those  engaged  in  the  work  of  relief,  the  expenses  of  bury- 
ing the  dead,  including  church  fees,  carriage  hire  and  other 
Incidentals,  and  the  cost  of  provisions,  fuel  and  clothing, 
needed  by  the  dependent  families,  were  all  assumed  by  the 
Pittsburgh  Coal  Company,  the  families  meanwhile  occupying 
the  Company's  houses  free  of  rent,  no  part  of  these  expenses 
being  covered  by  this  report. 

The  task  of  dealing  with  this  class  of  people,  many  of 
them  shiftless  and  ignorant,  the  great  majority  of  them 
unable  to  speak  the  English  language,  and  unfamiliar  with 
American  ways  and  manner  of  living,  was  performed  with 
firmness  and  good  judgment,  tempered  with  sympathy,  by  Mr. 
Minker  and  his  assistants. 

3 

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However,  as  is  always  to  be  expected  from  this  class,, 
complaints  of  neglect  and  dissatisfaction,  the  most  bitter  com- 
ing from  those  who  had  received  most,  found  their  way 
into  the  newspapers  and  were  even  addressed  to  the  Governor 
of  the  State.  The  committee  sent  Mr.  F.  M.  Wilmot,  Secre- 
tary of  the  Carnegie  Hero  Fund  Commission,  to  Jacobs  Creek 
for  an  investigation.  He  found  the  charges  to  be  without 
foundation  as  stated  in  the  following  minute  of  the  meeting 
when  his  report  was  made  to  the  Committee,  January  I5th, 
1908: 

1 '  Mr.  F.  M.  Wilmot,  Secretary  of  the  'Carnegie  Hero  Fund,  re- 
ported his  having  visited  the  Darr  mine  on  Friday  and  that  he  had  in- 
vestigated the  conditions  of  the  temporary  relief  being  administered  by 
•the  representatives  of  the  Pittsburgh  Coal  Company.  He  reported  his 
gratification  that  the  company's  measures  of  relief  were  efficiently 
administered  and  that  all  sufferers  were  generously  taken  care  of." 

Mention  should  be  made  of  many  donations  of  clothing, 
shoes  and  family  supplies,  sent  to  the  local  Committee  at 
Jacobs  Creek,  in  response  to  requests  for  them  in  the  news- 
papers, and  by  cards  enclosed  in  our  Committee's  letters  of 
appeal.  These  were  transported  free  of  charge  by  the  Pitts- 
burgh &  Lake  Erie  Railroad  on  which  the  mine  is  located, 
by  the  B.  &  O.  Railroad,  whose  line  is  on  the  opposite  side 
of  the  river,  and  by  the  Pennsylvania  Railroad.  The  value 
of  the  goods  so  contributed  is  not  known  to  your  Committee. 

ORGANIZATION. 

On  December  26th  a  public  meeting,  to  consider 
measures  for  relief,  commensurate  with  the  magnitude  of  the 
disaster,  was  held  in  the  office  of  Mayor  Geo.  W.  Guthrie, 
Municipal  Hall,  Pittsburgh.  It  was  attended  by  the  Mayors 
of  Pittsburgh,  McKeesport  and  Connellsville,  the  President 
and  Vice-President  of  the  Mine  Workers'  Union,  the  Austro- 
Hungarian  and  the  Italian  Consuls  and  many  others. 

The  Darr  Mine  Relief  Committee  was  then  formed  for 
the  purpose  of  co-ordinating  the  various  efforts  for  relief,  and 
of  organizing  and  carrying  out  a  well  considered  and  sys- 
tematic plan  for  distributing  the  relief  funds  among  the  de- 
pendents of  the  men  killed.  An  Executive  Committee  was 
constituted  with  full  power  to  act  in  all  matters  for  the 
General  Committee. 

DARR  MINE  RELIEF  COMMITTEE. 

Hon.  Geo.  W.  Guthrie,  Mayor  of  Pittsburgh,  Chairman. 
Hon.    W.    H.    Coleman,    Mayor    of   McKeesport,    Vice-Chairman. 
Hon.  A.  D.  Soisson,  Mayor  of  Connellsville,  Vice-Chairman. 
Oliver   McClintock,   Merchant,   Pittsburgh,   Secretary. 
*John    B.    Jackson,   President    Fidelity    Title    &    Trust    Co.,    Pittsburgh, 
Treasurer. 

"Succeeded  at  his  death,  October  31,  1908,  by  Mr.  James  J.  Donnell,  his 
successor  as  President  of  the  Fidelity  Title  &  Trust  Co. 


His    Excellency    Edwin    S.    Stuart,    Governor    of    Pennsylvania. 

Eight  Eev.  Cortlandt  Whitehead,  Bishop  of  Pittsburgh  Diocese,  Protest- 
ant Episcopal  Church: 

Eight  Eev.  J.  F.  Eegis  Canevin,  Bishop  of  Pittsburgh  Diocese,  Eoman 
Catholic  Church. 

LeBaron   Jules  Bornemisza,   Consul   of   Austria-Hungary,   Pittsburgh. 

*James  S.  Clark,  Vice-Pr,esident,  Dist.  No.  5,  United  Mine  Workers  of 
America. 

Hon.  J.  W.  Crawford,  President,  Pittsburgh  Stock  Exchange. 

W.   C.  Cronemyer,  President,  McKeesport   Chamber  of   Commerce. 

H.  D.  W.  English,  President,  Pittsburgh   Chamber   of   Commerce. 

Francis  Feehan,  President,  Dist.  No.  5,  United  Mine. Workers  of  America. 

Eobert  C.  Hall,  Capitalist,  Pittsburgh. 

Arthur  E.   Ireland,  President,  Iron   City   Trades   Council. 

Coleman  J.  Joyce,  Pittsburgh. 

Thomas  Lynch,  President,   H.   C.   Frick  Coke   Company. 

P.  J.  McArdle,  President,  Amalgamated  Association  Iron,  Steel  and  Tin 
Workers. 

Joseph  Natali,  Acting  Vice-Consul  of  Italy,  Pittsburgh. 

J.  E.   Stauffer,  Banker,   Scottdale. 

.J.  V.  Thompson,  Banker,  Uniontown. 

B.  P.  Wallace,  Chairman  Merchants'  Association,  Connellsville. 

EXECUTIVE    COMMITTEE.  SUBSCEIPTION  COMMITTEE. 

•Chairman,  Geo.  W.  Guthrie.  Chairman,  His  Excellency,  Edwin  S. 
Secretary,  Oliver  McClintock.  Stuart. 

Mayor  W.  H.  Coleman.  Secretary,  H.  D.  W.  English. 

Mayor  A.    D.    Soisson.  Mayor  George   W.    Guthrie. 

Thomas  Lynch.  Mayor  W.  H.  Coleman. 

Val  Bittner.  Mayor  A.  D.   Soisson. 

Coleman  J.  Joyce.  Et.  Eev.  J.  F.  Eegis  Canevin. 

Francis  Feehan. 

CAMPAIGN  FOR  RELIEF  FUND. 

The  above  Committee  began  at  once  an  active  campaign 
in  behalf  of  a  relief  fund  on  January  2nd,  1908.  Sixty-two 
thousand  copies  of  an  appeal  were  distributed  among  the  peo- 
ple of  Pittsburgh  and  other  cities  and  special  personal  letters 
were  addressed  to  persons  of  wealth,  to  those  engaged  in  the 
coal  business  and  to  consumers  of  the  product  of  the  Pitts- 
burgh coal  field  in  the  United  States  and  Canada. 

Considering  that  the  country  was  then  in  the  midst  of 
.a  financial  and  industrial  depression,  and  that,  concurrent 
with  our  appeal,  other  relief  committees  were  appealing  for 
aid,  especially  in  the  Pittsburgh  district  in  behalf  of  the  de- 
pendents of  the  362  men  killed  in  the  Monongah  Mine  explo- 
sion, the  amount  received  by  our  Committee  was  a  very  cred- 
itable expression  of  the  sympathy  and  generosity  of  the 
public. 

Of  the  total  subscriptions  $25,000.00  was  contributed  by 
the  Carnegie  Hero  Fund,  and  $20,000.00  by  the  Pittsburgh 
Coal  Company.  The  balance  of  $52,062.53  was  from  all  other 
sources,  in  all  about  3,000  contributions  as  acknowledged  day 
by  day,  in  the  Pittsburgh  newspapers.  Of  this  balance  we 

^Succeeded  by  Mr.  Val  Bittner,  his  successor,  as  Vice  President  of  Dist. 
No.  5,  U.  M.  W.  of  A. 

6 


feel  assured  that,  as  much  as  $40,000.00  was  the  direct  result 
of  our  efforts.  As  the  contribution  of  the  Carnegie  Hero 
Fund  Commission  depended  largely  upon  the  amount  con- 
tributed by  the  general  public,  we  believe  that  this  also  was 
indirectly  influenced  by  their  confidence  in  the  organization 
and  methods  adopted  by  your  Committee. 

SWINDLES  IN  THE  NAME  OF  CHARITY. 

For  the  sake  of  humanity  we  are  glad  to  state,  that  this 
movement  was  comparatively  free  from  the  mean  and  con- 
temptible swindles,  which  are  commonly  practiced  upon  the 
sympathetic  benevolence  of  the  public  in  times  of  great  dis- 
asters, by  the  giving  of  public  entertainments,  ostensibly  for 
the  benefit  of  the  sufferers,  but  really  for  the  sole,  or  chief 
benefit  of  the  promoters  themselves.  Such  robbery  is  even 
more  atrocious  than  plundering  the  bodies  of  the  dead,  not 
only  because  it  defeats  the  benevolence  of  the  givers,  but 
also  because  it  robs  the  living  widow  and  fatherless  in  their 
distress. 

Several  entertainments  were  given  in  Pittsburgh  and 
neighboring  towns  in  behalf  of  the  sufferers.  The  proceeds, 
in  almost  every  instance,  were  faithfully  administered  and 
given  to  our  Committee  for  the  general  fund,  the  amount 
being  duly  acknowledged  in  the  newspapers.  A  few  withheld 
their  receipts,  to  be  distributed  by  themselves.  In  such  cases 
we  endeavored  to  ascertain  whether  the  money  reached  the 
beneficiaries  in  good  faith.  Deliberate  fraud  was  disclosed  in 
only  one  instance.  In  this  case,  the  manager  of  an  entertain- 
ment at  the  Carnegie  Music  Hall  of  Allegheny,  advertised 
as  for  the  benefit  of  the  Darr  Mine  Sufferers,  refused  to  have 
the  proceeds  added  to  the  general  fund.  His  attitude  and 
public  rumor  having  aroused  our  suspicions  as  to  his  good 
faith  an  investigation  was  started,  which  resulted  in  his  arrest, 
conviction  and  sentence  to  six  months  imprisonment  in  the 
County  Workhouse.  A  woman  associated  with  him  in  the 
scheme  escaped  similar  punishment,  only  because  of  her  ill 
health  and  her  ability  to  prove  to  our  satisfaction  and  that  of 
Mayor  Geo.  W.  Guthrie  that  she  did  not  profit  in  any  way  by 
the  enterprise. 

TWO  NOTABLE  EXAMPLES  OF  BENEVOLENT 

EFFORT.  THE  ONE  A  CHILDREN'S  SCHOOL, 

THE  OTHER  A  MINING  TOWN. 

Along  with  this  instance  of  robbery  under  the  cloak  of 
philanthropy,  numerous  instances  of  self-sacrificing  effort  for 
the  sufferers  came  to  our  notice,  showing  that  while  the  worst 
and  the  best  in  human  nature  are  both  called  into  action  by  a 
great  calamity,  the  nobler  greatly  exceeds.  Suffering  thus 
has  its  moral  compensation  in  drawing  out  the  sympathy, 


neighborliness  and  self-sacrifice  of  many  in  behalf  of  those  in 
distress. 

The  pupils  of  the  Stuart-Mitchell  School  of  Pittsburgh 
raised  $311.00  by  a  musical  entertainment  for  the  Darr  Mine 
sufferers.  They  requested  the  assignment  to  their  charge  of 
a  case  needing  help,  besides  that  given  under  the  Committee's 
uniform  rule  of  distribution,  that  they  might  be  able  to  follow 
and  know  the  individual  results  of  their  philanthropy.  Ac- 
cordingly, the  child  of  John  Markey,  a  fire-boss  killed  in  the 
mine,  having  a  permanent  disability  of  the  eyes,  impossible 
of  proper  treatment  in  a  mining  village,  was  brought  to  the 
school.  Their  charge  was  soon  terminated  by  the  admission 
of  the  boy  as  a  free  pupil  in  the  school  of  the  Western  'Penn- 
sylvania Institution  for  the  Blind.  The  Superintendent  re- 
ports him  as  "Doing  well  and  giving  promise  of  becoming  a 
useful  and  self  supporting  citizen." 

Later,,  the  Stuart-Mitchell  School  voted  to  divide  their 
fund  equally  between  two  dependent  families  needing  ad- 
ditional help.  One  was  the  grandmother  and  sister  of  an 
underground  electrician  who  had  been  their  sole  support. 
The  other  was  the  father  and  mother  of  a  young  unmarried 
miner.  The  father  (a  miner  60  years  old)  owned  his  little 
home  at  Jacobs  Creek,  but  was  incapacitated  for  work  by 
cataract  in  both  eyes. 

This  school  incident  is  mentioned  as  an  illustration  of 
how  the  lesson  of  practical  sympathy  for  the  unfortunate 
and  of  finding  true  happiness  in  service  for  others,  may  be 
taught  to  school  children  in  a  way  they  will  never  forget. 

The  people  of  Plymouth,  Pa.,  a  mining  town  of  about 
15,000,  sent  to  our  Committee  $642.89,  the  proceeds  of  a  public 
entertainment.  Mr.  Joseph  H.  Schwartz,  Chairman  of  the  local 
Committee,  in  his  accompanying  letter,  said, 

1 '  Our  entertainment  was  given  on  Lincoln 's  Birthday,  a  good  day  for 
teaching  our  new  foreign  population  a  wholesome  object  lesson.  The 
people  of  Plymouth  never  can  forget  that,  in  1869,  when  we  lost  110 
men  in  the  Avondale  Mine  disaster,  our  Relief  Committee  received  over 
$100,000.00,  and  in  1885;  when  we  had  over  1200  cases  of  typhoid  fever, 
the  country  again  came  to  our  assistance.  Our  own  experience  made  us 
ready  to  aid  Johnstown,  Butler,  Charleston,  Galveston  and  the  South 
in  a  yellow  fever  epidemic,  when  staggering  under  the  burden  of  a  great 
calamity.  It  is  now  our  bounden  duty  to  come  to  your  relief  as  a  matter 
of  decent  citizenship  and  of  ordinary  gratitude  for  what  we  have  our- 
selves received." 

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS. 

We  gratefully  acknowledge  the  generous  co-operation  of 
the  Pittsburgh  daily  press  in  our  cause,  by  printing  daily 
lists  of  the  contributions,  and  entrusting  to  our  charge  the 
separate  relief  funds  raised  by  them. 

We  are  indebted  to  the  local  Consular  Agencies  of 
Austria-Hungary,  Russia  and  Italy  for  their  very  obliging 
and  efficient  services  in  securing  information  regarding  d^- 

-tAfc 


pendent  families  of  miners  killed  residing  in  their  respective 
countries.  Without  such  aid  the  task  of  distributing  relief 
funds  to  beneficiaries  residing  in  Europe  would  have  been 
practically  impossible; 

To  Mr.  Robert  C.  Hall,  who,  besides  making  a  sub- 
stantial contribution  to  the  fund,  also  gave  us,  free  of  rent, 
the  use  of  a  suite  of  offices  in  the  Apollo  Building,  238  Fourth 
Avenue,  for  headquarters,  and  secured,  for  our  use,  from  the 
Pittsburgh  &  Allegheny  Telephone  Company,  the  installation 
of  an  instrument  and  unlimited  telephone  service,  free  of 
cost  to  the  Committee ; 

To  the  Oliver  Typewriter  Company,  the  Remington 
Typewriter  Company  and  the  L.  C.  Smith  &  Bros.  Typewriter 
Company,  who  donated  the  use  of  as  many  typewriting 
machines  as  were  required ; 

To  the  Pittsburgh  Office  Equipment  Company,  who  loan- 
ed, without  charge,  an  equipment  of  office  furniture; 

To  the  Pittsburgh  Observer  Publishing  Company,  Steven- 
son &  Foster  Company,  Wm.  G.  Johnston  &  Company  and  the 
Republic  Bank  Note  Company,  who  donated  a  very  consider- 
able portion  of  our  printing; 

To  the  employees  of  the  general  offices  of  the  Pittsburgh 
Coal  Company  for  their  voluntary  services,  outside  of  their 
office  hours,  in  helping  to  send  out  circulars,  answering  corres- 
pondence and  in  other  necessary  work  for  the  Committee; 

To  Mr.  J.  E.  McDonald  of  the  Pittsburgh  Coal  Company's 
Relief  Department  and  his  associates,  and  to  Mr.  James  R.  Mc- 
Colligan,  Chief  Clerk  at  the  Darr  Mine,  for  their  untiring 
efforts  to  secure  detailed  information  regarding  the  depend- 
ents residing  at  and  near  Jacobs  Creek ; 

To  Messrs.  Price,  Waterhouse  &  Company,  chartered 
accountants  of  New  York  and  Pittsburgh,  for  their  gratuitous 
examination  of  the  Committee's  accounts  of  money  received 
and  disbursed  and  other  records.  The  certificate  of  their  ex- 
amination and  findings  is  attached  to  this  report. 

A  very  substantial  offer  of  aid  for  the  distressed  families 
came  in  the  proposal  of  the  Right  Rev.  Regis  Canevin,  Roman 
Catholic  Bishop  of  Pittsburgh,  in  behalf  of  St.  Paul's  Orphan 
Asylum  of  Idlewood,  offering  to  receive  all  children  in  need 
of  their  care.  The  Holy  Name  Polish  Orphan  Asylum  also 
offered  to  care  for  ten  children.  There  were  also  many  offers 
from  private  families  to  take  children,  especially  the  older  ones, 
who  would  be  expected  to  develop  into  servants.  But,  the 
strong  parental  instirict  of  clinging  to  their  children  was 
strikingly  manifested  in  the  fact  that  the  local  Committee  at 
the  Darr  Mine,  to  whom  such  offers  were  referred,  could  find 
none  who  were  willing  to  part  with  their  children.  The  same 
widows  were  quick  to  marry  again,  their  children  not  being 
considered  an  obstacle  to  matrimony. 

The  Committee  has  been  most  fortunate  in  the  personnel 


of  those  who  devised  and  administered  our  plan  of  distribu- 
tion. It  is  sufficient  to  only  mention  that — John  B.  Jackson, 
late  President  of  the  Fidelity  Title  &  Trust  Company,  ac- 
cepted the  office  of  Treasurer  of  the  fund,  to  know  that  we 
had  an  ideal  treasurer.  He  frequently  attended  committee 
meetings  and  looked  after  the  interests  of  the  beneficiaries  as 
conscientiously  as  if  they  were  his  own.  At  the  time  of  his 
death,  he  had  arranged  for  a  journey  to  personally  investigate 
the  standing  of  two  country  banks,  proposed  as  custodians  of 
relief  money  to  be  paid  out  in  monthly  installments  to  two 
groups  of  dependent  families.  This  task  as  Treasurer  was  but 
one  of  the  many  good  works  of  Christian  and  patriotic  service, 
to  which  he  devoted  his  fine  abilities,  and  when  he  suddenly 
departed  this  life  by  an  accident,  a  whole  city  mourned  be- 
cause of  the  great  loss  to  the  community. 

We  are  indebted  to  Mr.  F.  M.  Wilmot,  Secretary  and 
Manager  of  the  Carnegie  Hero  Fund  Commission,  for  his 
valuable  counsel,  cheerfully  given  whenever  sought  by  our 
Committee,  and  for  the  plan  of  distributing  the  Relief  Fund, 
which  he  devised  on  our  request,  to  which  task  he  brought 
his  superior  executive  faculty  and  the  expert  knowledge  ac- 
quired as  an  administrative  officer  for  the  Harwick  Mine  Relief 
Fund. 

The  following  minute  adopted  by  the  Executive  Com- 
mittee on  February  28th,  1908,  is  quoted  below  as  expressing 
the  Committee's  appreciation  of  his  service: 

"Kesolved,  That  the  Executive  Committee  of  the  Darr  Mine  Belief 
Fund  •  Committee  record  in  its  minutes  an  expression  of  its  grateful 
thanks  for  the  gift  of  $25,000  to  the  Eelief  Fund  by  the  Carnegie  Hero 
Fund  Commission  and  of  its  high  appreciation  of  the  valuable  counsel 
and  service  so  willingly  and  generously  given  by  Mr.  F.  M.  Wilmot,  its 
Secretary  and  Manager.  Complying  with  our  request  for  his  assistance 
he  has  contributed  of  his  wide  experience  and  devoted  labors  towards 
devising  a  satisfactory  method  of  distributing  the  Eelief  Fund.  To  secure 
the  fund  was  a  large  task.  To  secure  a  comprehensive  and  equitable 
method  of  distribution,  which  will  best  carry  out  the  purpose  of  the 
givers  of  the  fund  and  at  the  same  time  safeguard  as  far  as  possible  the 
interests  of  the  beneficiaries,  was  also  an  important  and  difficult 
problem.  Mr.  Wilmot  has  solved  this  problem  to  our  entire  satisfaction 
and  his  proposed  method  of  distribution  has  been  adopted  unanimously. " 

The  Committee  was  doubly  fortunate,  first  in  securing  a, 
satisfactory  and  equitable  plan  of  distribution,  and  second  in 
securing,  in  Mr.  Coleman  J.  Joyce,  a  highly  competent  execu- 
tive, who,  with  fidelity,  indomitable  energy  and  in  a  systema- 
tic manner  has  administered  the  distribution  of  the  fund.  In 
this,  he  had  the  wise  counsel  and  skilled  assistance  of  his 
superior,  Mr.  J.  B.  L.  Hornberger,  Comptroller,  of  the  Pitts- 
burgh Coal  Company,  and  also  the  aid  of  their  office  assist- 
ants and  typewriters  in  performing  the  large  amount  of  detail 
work  required.  No  one  unfamiliar  with  those  details,  can 
comprehend  the  vast  amount  of  routine  which  was  involved 
in  the  systematic  adherence  to  a  set  of  rules  and  forms  govern- 


ing  the  administration  of  the  relief,  beginning  with  the  identi- 
fication of  the  bodies  of  the  dead,  then  the  temporary  relief  of 
the  dependents,  the  collection  of  the  relief  fund,  and  finally 
the  proving  of  the  claims  and  safeguarding  the  benefits,  as  far 
as  possible,  for  the  beneficiaries.  This  was  especially  the 
case  with  the  proving  of  claims  and  paying  them  to  the  large 
number  of  dependents  living  in  Europe. 

All  expenses  incident  to  the  collection  of  information 
concerning  dependents  and  the  salaries  of  Mr.  Joyce  and  all 
of  his  office  assistants  during  the  protracted  period  of  dis- 
tribution were  assumed  by  the  Pittsburgh  Coal  Company.  The 
voluminous  records  of  the  238  cases,  now  in  the  custody  of 
the  Pittsburgh  Coal  Company,  should  be  permanently  pre- 
served for  future  reference,  as  a  valuable  demonstration  of 
an  approved  and  equitable  method  of  distributing  a  public 
relief  fund  on  a  large  scale,  the  possibility  of  fraud  or  imposi- 
tion under  its  business-like  methods  being  reduced  to  a  mini- 
mum. Our  experience  ought  to  be  of  great  value  to  those  who 
find  themselves  suddenly  called  to  positions  of  similar  re- 
sponsibility and  trust  because  of  a  great  calamity. 

The  Committee  has  been  consulted  and  our  plan  and 
forms  have  been  inspected  by  Relief  Committees  representing 
similar  disasters  at  the  Marianna  Mine,  Washington  County, 
Pa.,  the  Lick  Branch  Mine,  Bluefield,  W.  Va.,  and  the  Cherry 
Mine,  Cherry,  111.  (See  Appendix). 

DISTRIBUTION  OF  FUND. 

Two  things  had  to  be  determined  before  making  distribu- 
tion of  the  Relief  Fund,  viz. — the  approximate  amount  avail- 
able and  an  equitable  basis  for  its  distribution.  Before 
determining  upon  the  basis  or  plan  of  distribution,  it  was  also 
necessary  to  find  out  and  tabulate  the  number  of  men  killed 
and  those  dependent  upon  them. 

The  temporary  relief  furnished  by  the  Pittsburgh  Coal 
Company  ceased  on  May  I5th,  1908,  at  which  time  distri- 
bution of  benefits  of  the  Company's  Relief  Department  was 
begun.  Based  upon  the  amount  then  available  in  the  General 
Relief  Fund  and  an  estimate  of  additional  contributions  ex- 
pected, the  initial  distribution  from  the  General  Fund  was 
begun  on  March  25th,  1908,  and  was  continued  as  rapidly 
as  proper  identification  of  the  dependents  could  be  obtained. 

Concurrent  with  the  work  of  raising  the  fund,  an  in- 
vestigation was  conducted  through  the  officers  and  employees 
of  the  Pittsburgh  Coal  Company,  the  results  of  which  were 
tabulated  and  reported  to  our  Committee  February  7th,  1908. 

That  report  disclosed  the  fact  that  239  men  went  under- 
ground to  work  and  but  one  escaped.  Of  the  238  killed, 
128  were  married  and  no  unmarried.  Of  the  married 
men,  the  families  of  78  were  residing  in  America,  mostly 
around  Jacobs  Creek,  near  the  mine.  Of  the  unmarried,  35 

10 


left  families  in  America  and  75  left  families  in  Europe.  Of 
the  total  number  killed,  the  families  of  113  resided  in  America, 
while  125  resided  in  Europe,  mostly  in  Hungary  and  some  in 
Austria,  Italy  and  Russia. 


PRINCIPLES  GOVERNING  THE  PLAN. 

It  was  decided  that  while  the  distribution  should  be  made 
with  as  much  equity  and  safe  guarding  of  the  benefits  for 
the  dependents  as  possible,  it  should  be  done  speedily,  be- 
cause of  the  temporary  character  of  the  Committee  and  the 
lack  of  facilities  for  any  other  course  of  action. 

It  was  decided  that  distribution  should  be  made  accord- 
ing to  the  degree  of  the  dependence  of  the  bereft  families; 
that  no  distinction  be  made  between  dependent  families  re- 
siding in  Europe  and  those  residing  in  America,  the  test  being 
solely  that  of  the  support  received  from  the  dead  miner;  that 
the  receipt  by  the  dependents  of  other  death  benefits  or  in- 
surance, or  the  ownership  of  property,  or  other  assets  by 
the  deceased,  was  not  to  be  considered,  not  only  because  it 
would  be  very  difficult  to  get  reliable  information,  especially 
in  the  cases  of  those  residing  in  Europe,  but  also  because 
such  action  would  be  a  discrimination  against  the  foresight 
and  self-denial  of  those,  who  had  made  provision  for  the 
future  of  their  families  during  their  life-time. 


PLAN  OF  DISTRIBUTION. 

In  accordance  with  these  principles,  a  plan  for  the  dis- 
tribution of  the  Fund  was  prepared  and  submitted  by  Mr. 
Wilmot  at  a  meeting  of  the  Executive  Committee,  February 
28th,  1908.  It  was  unanimously  adopted,  and  directions  given 
for  the  distribution  of  the  Fund  to  commence  at  once. 

Under  this  plan,  the  victims  of  the  disaster  were  divided 
into  three  classes,  namely: 

ist — Those    who    were    married    and    supporting    their 

families. 

2nd — Those   who   were   unmarried   but   supporting   their 
parents  or  other  relatives. 

3rd — Those  who  were  not  contributing  to  the  support 
of  anybody  but  themselves. 

The  first  two  classes  were  sub-divided  into  groups  accord- 
ing to  the  size  of  the  families,  and  the  condition  of  the  depend- 
ents as  follows: 

11 


MARRIED  MEN: 

Group    A — Widow   without    children    under    16    years. 
Group  B — Widow  with  1  child  under  16  years. 
Group  C — Widow  with  2  children  under  16  years. 
Group  D — Widow  with  3  children  under  16  years. 
Group  E — Widow  with  4  children  under  16  years. 
Group  F — Widow  with  5  children  under  16  years. 
Group  G — Widow  with  6  children  under  16  years. 
Group    H — Orphan    children. 

UNMARRIED  MEN: 

Group  I — Widowed  mother  without  any    dependent    children. 
Group  J  — Widowed  mother  with  1  child  under  16  years. 
Group  K — Widowed  mother  with  2  children  under  16  years. 
Group  L — Widowed  mother  with  3  children   under   16  years. 
Group  M — All  other  relatives  or  dependents  of  single  men. 

In  the  third  class  there  were  but  30  men,  (mostly  single)  t 
who  were  not  contributing  regularly  to  the  support  of  rela- 
tives or  others.  The  families  of  six  such  resided  in  America, 
and  24  in  Europe.  Fortunately  we  were  able  to  locate  the 
relatives  or  friends  of  every  man  who  was  killed.  On  the 
theory  that  nobody  but  themselves  benefited  by  their  labor 
while  living,  and  the  loss  to  their  relatives  was  only  of  a 
sentimental  character,  the  Committee  decided  that  such  were 
not  fit  subjects  for  the  charity  of  this  fund. 

There  were  thirteen  families  that  lost  two  or  more  mem- 
bers in  this  disaster,  five  of  these  were  living  in  Europe  and 
eight  in  this  country.  In  six  cases  father  and  son  were  lost 
out  of  the  same  family.  In  two  cases,  the  father  and  two 
sons  were  lost,  while  in  four  cases,  two  sons  were  lost  out 
of  the  same  family,  and  one  woman  lost  her  husband  and 
her  brother. 

In  cases  of  this  kind,  it  was  decided  that  where  a  father 
and  son  were  lost  out  of  the  same  family,  the  family  should 
receive  full  benefit  on  account  of  the  father,  and  also  full 
benefit  as  dependent  relatives  of  the  son. 

Where  two  brothers  were  lost  out  of  the  same  family, 
double  benefits  were  allowed.  In  the  single  case  of  the 
woman,  who  lost  her  husband  and  brother,  and  it  was  shown 
conclusively  that  the  brother  had  been  a  contributor  to  the 
support  of  the  family,  she  was  allowed  full  benefits  on  ac- 
count of  her  husband  and  also  as  dependent  relative  of  her 
brother. 

SCHEDULE  OF  RATES. 

A  schedule  of  amounts  to  be  paid  in  each  case,  based 
upon  the  amount  of  money  subscribed  up  to  that  time,  was 
submitted  and  adopted,  and  the  work  of  the  distribution  com- 
menced. Further  and  later  information  regarding  the  de- 

13 


pendent  families  and  a  considerable  increase  in  the  amount 
of  the  Fund,  made  a  second  distribution  possible,  equal  in 
amount  to  27%  of  the  first  distribution,  and  fixed  the  basis, 
on  which  total  payments  in  each  case  were  to  be  made,  as 
follows : 

MARRIED  MEN : 

To  each  widow    $254.00 

For  each  child  under    16    years    of  age  and  including 

posthumous  children  190.50 

UNMARRIED  MEN: 

For  the  widowed  mother,  to  whose  support  the  decedent 

actually    contributed    $254.00 

For  each  child  under  16  years  of  age   190.50 

For  all  other  relatives  or  dependents,  to  whose  support 
the  decedent  actually  contributed,  a  total  for  each 
death  of  190.50 

A  schedule  is  appended  (Exhibit  No.  2)  showing  how 
the  fund  was  distributed,  the  beneficiaries  being"  divided  into 
two  general  classes,  viz.,  those  residing  in  this  country  and 
those  residing  in  Europe;  and  also  separated  into  groups  as 
beforementioned,  showing  the  number  of  families  in  each 
group,  as  well  as  the  number  of  dependents,  their  average 
ages,  the  amount  paid  to  each,  the  amount  to  each  group  and 
the  manner  of  payment. 

MEANS  FOR  SAFEGUARDING  THE  BENEFITS. 

Having  in  mind  the  experience  of  others,  concerned  in 
previous  distributions  of  relief  funds,  the  shiftless  character 
of  many  of  the  workers  in  and  about  coal  mines,  and  the  ina- 
bility of  the  average  laborer,  to  say  nothing  of  the  average 
laborer's  family,  to  care  for  and  conserve  sums  of  money  of 
any  considerable  size,  it  was  our  aim  to  safeguard  the  ben- 
eficiaries as  far  as  possible  from  the  human  sharks  who  quick- 
ly appear  upon  the  scene  of  a  distribution  of  benefits,  to  se- 
cure for  themselves  as  large  a  share  as  possible.  The  Ex- 
ecutive Committee  accordingly  adopted  the  following  rule 
for  the  payment  of  allowances : 

"The  moneys  coming  to  those  dependents,  who  reside  in  foreign 
countries  will  be  paid  in  full  by  the  Treasurer  in  foreign  bank  drafts 
upon  the  countries  where  they  reside,  or  through  other  approved  channels 
of  payment,  on  presentation  of  proofs  of  claim  through  the  Consuls  of 
said  countries:  Also,  when  dependents,  now  residing  in  this  country,  de- 
sire to  return  to  their  native  country,  they  will  be  furnished  with  trans- 
portation, (unless  such  transportation  has  been  otherwise  provided),  and 
sufficient  funds  for  reaching  their  destination.  The  remainder  of  their 
allowance  will  be  paid  to  them  in  the  form  of  a  foreign  draft  to  be 
cashed  upon  their  arrival  at  their  destination,  or  through  other  approved 
channels  for  such  payment  at  their  destination:  Also,  the  allowance 
granted  to  dependents,  who  desire  to  remain  in  this  country,  will  be 

13 


deposited  in  the  Fidelity  Title  and  Trust  Company,  who  shall  pay  the 
same  to  the  beneficiaries  in  monthly  installments,  the  respective  amounts 
being  determined  hereafter,  and  with  power  to  the  Trust  Company  to 
pay  the  whole  amount,  or  any  part  thereof  in  cash,  whenever,  in  the 
opinion  of  the  Trustee,  such  payment  will  be  to  the  advantage  of  the 
dependent;  provided,  however,  that  when  the  dependent  is  a  foreigner, 
such  payment  be  first  approved  by  the  Consul  of  the  country  to  which  the 
dependent  belongs;  and  provided  further,  that  the  Committee  may  here- 
after authorize  the  payment  of  the  amounts  in  full  to  any  or  all  of  the 
dependents,  at  the  discretion  of  the  Committee." 

In  accordance  with  this  rule,  payments  to  those  bene- 
ficiaries residing  in  Europe  were  made  in  full,  upon  informa- 
tion as  to  their  condition  and  location.  Such  information 
was  obtained  through  the  Consuls  of  the  various  European 
countries,  resident  in  Pittsburgh,  based  upon  investigations 
conducted  in  Europe  by  them,  and  by  the  agents  of  their  re- 
spective governments.  These  investigations  were  necessa- 
rily slow,  and  it  was  not  until  December  I5th,  1909,  that  re- 
ports were  received  covering  all  the  cases  requiring  foreign 
investigation. 

The  beneficiaries  of  foreign  birth  residing  at  or  near 
Jacobs  Creek,  Pa.,  who  desired  to  return  to  their  homes  in 
Europe,  were  paid  their  allowance  by  draft  drawn  by  the  Fi- 
delity Title  &  Trust  Co.  of  Pittsburgh  on  its  correspondents 
in  Europe,  and  payable  only  to  the  beneficiaries  at  their  des- 
tination. In  some  cases  the  people  were  provided  with  an 
amount  of  cash  sufficient  to  defray  their  traveling  expenses, 
and  a  foreign  draft  for  the  balance  of  their  allowance. 

Before  payments  of  benefits  were  made  to  any  of  the 
families  residing  in,  or  near  Jacobs  Creek,  Pa.,  a  personal 
investigation  was  made  on  the  ground,  to  determine  whether 
the  beneficiaries  should  receive  the  amount  of  their  allow- 
ance in  full,  or  in  monthly  installments,  taking  into  consid- 
eration in  each  case  the  condition  and  size  of  the  family,  their 
plans  for  the  future,  their  past  reputation  for  frugality,  and 
their  ability  to  take  care  of  money.  Many  of  those  paid  in 
one  sum  owned,  or  were  paying  for  their  homes  in  and 
around  Jacobs  Creek,  indicating  by  this  and  in  other  ways 
that  the  amounts  given  them  would  be  husbanded.  The 
amounts  to  be  paid  monthly  to  the  other  beneficiaries  were 
fixed  as  follows: 

To   each  widow,  or  to  the  widowed  mother   of  an   unmarried  man, 
$15.00  per  month. 

And  for  each  child  she  may  have  had  under  16  years  of  age,  $5.00  per 
month  additional. 

To  relatives  and  dependents  of  unmarried  men,  $10.00  per  month. 

While  we  investigated  the  condition  of  the  families  of 
the  victims  of  this  disaster  to  an  extent  not  contemplated  at 
the  outset,  we  believe  that  the  experience  gained  and  the 
beneficent  results  accomplished,  fully  justified  the  extra  care 
and  efforts  employed. 

14 


EXPENSES  OF  COMMITTEE. 

Through  the  co-operation  of  the  officials  and  employees 
of  the  Pittsburgh  Coal  Company,  and  the  gratuitous  service 
of  the  foreign  Consuls  and  members  of  the  Executive  Com- 
mittee, the  distribution  was  effected  without  any  expense  to 
the  fund.  The  expense  of  conducting  the  campaign  in  rais- 
ing the  fund  was  also  largely  reduced  by  contributions  of  ma- 
terial from  Pittsburgh  business  houses  and  also  through  per- 
sonal service  by  individuals. 

A  summary  of  the  total  subscriptions  received  and  the 
disbursements  made  by  the  Committee  is  appended  hereto, 
(See  Exhibit  No.  i),  which  bears  the  certificate  of  the  honor- 
ary Auditors,  Messrs.  Price,  Waterhouse  &  Company,  Char- 
tered Accountants.  The  expenses  of  the  Committee  for  dis- 
tributing the  fund  were  assumed  by  the  Pittsburgh  Coal  Com- 
pany. The  expenses  of  collection  were: 

Postage    $1,452.06 

Printing    357.14 

Typewriting    and    expressage     227.50 

$2,036.70 

But  as  an  offset  to  these   expenses,  interest  was  re- 
ceived on  the  Funds  deposited  in  Bank,  to  the 
amount    of    .  946.72 


Leaving  a  net  expenditure  of   $1,089.98 

ADDITIONAL  BENEFITS. 

Besides  the  distribution  of  the  Darr  Mine  Relief  Fund 
as  above,  the  legal  heirs  of  each  of  the  238  men  killed  were 
entitled  to  and  received  $150.00  as  a  death  benefit  from  the 
Pittsburgh  Coal  Company's  Employees'  Relief  Department, 
making  a  total  of  $35,700.00  death  benefits  paid,  the 
Company  and  the  men  each  contributing  one-half.  On  a 
conservative  estimate  a  further  sum  of  $10,000.00  was  paid 
directly  to  these  dependents,  as  insurance  benefits,  by  va- 
rious mutual  benefit  associations  and  out  of  funds  collected 
by  Hungarian  and  Slavonic  newspapers  and  other  benevolent 
efforts. 

This  makes  an  approximate  total  of  $141,700.00  of  cash 
benefits  distributed,  besides  supplies  contributed  and  the  ex- 
penses of  burying  the  dead  and  the  temporary  relief  furnished 
by  the  Pittsburgh  Coal  Company. 

Respectfully  submited, 
Pittsburg-h,  May  28,  1910.  OLIVER  McCUNTOCK,  Secretary 

The  Executive  Committee  adopted  the  above  report,  ordered  it  to 
be  printed,  and  a  copy  to  be  sent  to  each  of  the  donors. 

GEORGE  W.  GUTHRIE,  Chairman         THOMAS  IvYNCH 
W.  H.  COIyEMAN  VAIv  BITTNER 

A.     D.  SOISSON  COL,EMAN  J.  JO\  . 

15 


EXHIBIT  No.  i. 


DARK  MINE  RELIEF  COMMITTEE. 


SUMMARY    STATEMENT    OF    THE    TOTAL    SUBSCRIPTIONS    RE- 
CEIVED AND  THE  DISBURSEMENTS  MADE  BY  THE  COM- 
MITTEE TO  MAY  17,   1910. 

SUBSCRIPTIONS  RECEIVED: 

Total  amount  (as  per  Exhibit  3) $97,062.53 

BENEFITS  PAID   DIRECT    TO   BENEFICIARIES 
OR  DEPOSITED  IN  TRUST  FOR  BENEFICIARIES: 

Total  amount   (as  per  Exhibit  2)    95,948.50 


$  1,114.03 


EXPENSES  OF  ISSUING  LETTERS  OF  APPEAL,  &c.: 

Postage    $1,452.06 

Printing     357.14 

Typewriters   and   Expressage    227.30 


$2,036.50 
Deduct: — Interest    received    on    Bank 

Deposits    946.72 

$1,089.78  ' 


CASH  BALANCE  ON  HAND  MAY  17,  1910  *$24.25 

JAMES  J.  DONNELL,  OLIVER  McCLINTOCK, 

Treasurer.  Secretary. 

*This  balance  was  expended  on  the  publication  of  this  report,  the 
remainder  of  the  cost  of  publication  being  met  by  private  subscription. 

CHARTERED   ACCOUNTANT'S    CERTIFICATE. 

We  have  examined  the  vouchers  for  all  disbursements  made  by 
the  Darr  Mine  Relief  Committee  and  have  found  them  in  order.  The 
payments  to  beneficiaries  are  fully  supported  by  proof  of  relationship 
and  other  necessary  documents,  and  have  been  made  in  accordance  with 
the  Plan  of  Distribution  adopted  by  the  Committee. 

AND  WE  CERTIFY  that  the  above  Summary  is  a  correct  statement 
of  the  subscriptions  received  and  the  disbursements  made  by  the  Com- 
mittee. 

PRICE,  WATERHOUSE  &  CO., 

Chartered  Accountants. 
Peoples  Building, 

Pittsburgh,  Pa.,  May  20,  1910. 


16 


REEF  FUND 

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EXHIBIT  No.  3. 


List  of  Contributors  to 

DARK  MINE  RELIEF  FUND 


NAME.  AMOUNT. 

Amalgamated    Association    of    Iron, 

Steel  and  Tin  Workers $        100.00 

Acorn   Lodge   No.    1 10.00 

Cumberland   Lodge   No.    1 43.25 

Follansbee    Lodge    No.    1 20.00 

Future   City  Lodge   No.    1 5.00 

Fairport   Lodge   No.    5 10.00 

Glendowen   Lodge    No.    25 5.00 

Independence   Lodge  No.   44.  ...  5.00 

John   F.   Ward  Lodge   No.   9 10.00 

Midland   (Md.)   Lodge,   No.  23..  10.00 

New  Albany  Lodge  No.   11 5.00 

Nimishiller    Lodge    No.    32 10.00 

Pioneer    Lodge    No.    23 10.00 

Progress  Lodge  No.   10 5.00 

Pride  of  New  Castle  Lodge  No.  2  25.00 

Pacific  Coast  Lodge,  No.  1 5  00 

Sylvan    Lodge    No.    15 5.00 

South   Sharon  Lodge  No.   15.  ...  25.00 

Vincennes    Lodge    No.    12 10.00 

Wieler    Lodge    No.    3 12.25 

Atlanta  Lodge   No.   6.  . 3.00 

Hyde  City  Lodge  No.  46 34.50 

Gourgas   Lodge   of  Perfection.  .  .  25.00 

Altmayer,    Leo    C 12.50 

Arcade  Matinee,  Connellsville   ....  30.25 

Adamitz,    Chas.   F 5.00 

Atlantic   Refining   Co.    Employees..  74.00 

Apple  Ave.   Young  Peoples   Society  4.14 

Anderson,    H.   J 5.00 

Aldendefer,    G.   M 5.00 

Alter,    J.    R 5.00 

Albree,    Martha   B 5.00 

Alter,    Geo     E 25.00 


Allen,    S.    L. 


5.00 


American  Blower  Company 10.00 

Anderson,    John    N.,    Jr 10.00 

American  Lumber  &  Manufacturing 

Company     50.00 

American  Sheet  &  Tin  Plate  Co.  .  .  200  00 

Ames,    Cha's.    W 10.00 

Andrews,    Harry    1.00 

Anderson,    T.    J 5.00 

Allegheny  City  Gymnastic   Club...  10.00 

Alexy,    Chas .50 

Amend,    Wm.    J 5.00 

American   National   Red   Cross....  1.00 

Asher,    H.    H 3.00 

Anderson,    A.    A 5.00 

Antenetti,    Martino    .25 

Anierican    Slavonic    Gazette     42.58 

Alexander   Union    Sunday    School.  .  15.00 

American    National    Red    Cross.  .  .  .  402.32 

Ash   Spring  Union   Sunday   School.  7.50 

Acklin,    Geo.    W 5.00 

Aldrich,   Mrs.   A.   B 1.00 

Arnold,    Morton    &    Irvine 10.00 

Aikman,    W.    M 5.00 

Algire,    J.    B 1.00 

Ancient  Order  of  Hibernians — 

Division   No.      2 5.00 

Division   No.      1 25.00 

Division    No.      5 10.00 

Division    No.      3 . 10.00 


NAME.  AMOUNT. 

Ancient    Order    of    Hibernians-- 
Division  No.      3,  Osceola,  Pa...  .$         10.00 

Division    No.    16,    Inkeman,    Pa..  10.00 

Division    No.    25 5.00 

Division    No.    24 5.00 

Division    No.    24 21.50 

Division    No.      6 10.00 

Division   No.      4 10.00 

Division    No.    15 25^00 

Division   No.      3 10.00 

Division   No.      2 .- 5.00 

Division    No.    17 5.00 

Division  No.     6,  Helvetia,  Pa...  10.00 

Armstrong,    J.    M 25.00 

Avonmore  Coal  &  Coke  Company..  53.41 

Anton,    C.   L 5.00 

Armstrong    Cork    Company    50.00 

Anton,   George    10.00 

Ashbrook,   Wm.   A 10.00 

Armour,     Frank     1.00 

Anson,    W.    A .25 

Anonymous    3.00 

Armstrong,    Mrs.    C.    W 5.00 

Arrott,    Chas.   F 10.00 

Ancona,    S.   E 10.00 

Arbuthnot-Stephenson     Company...  100.00 

Alms,    Geo.    P 10.00 

A.    R.    H 5.00 

A.   H 1.00 

Baumer,    Herman    10.00 

Bardes'     Sons,    Christian 5.00 

Barren  Brothers    10.00 

Bragin,   John  E 5.00 

Barker  &  Company,  John  T 10.00 

Baldwin   Locomotive   Works    100.00 

Barnard  &   Company,   Geo.   D 10.00 

Bartol,    Mrs.    E.   J 10.00 

Barnard,    C 5.00 

Black,     Chas.     S 10.00 

Bray,    James   H 5.00 

Battiska,     Badini     .50 

Barrows,    Grace     1.00 

Baptist    Church,    Connellsville,    Pa.  40.00 

Baltimore    News    Publishing    Co.  .  .  7.00 

Barnsville    Manufacturing    Co 10.00 

Barnwell,   Mr.  and  Mrs.  R.  W 2.00 

Brady,    A 1.00 

Barkey,     Enos 5.00 

Barnes,    W.    E 5.00 

Bader,    John     5.00 

Barber,    C.    C 5.00 

Bayard   and   Voit    1.00 

Ball,    D.    1 2.00 

Blackburn,    W.   W 50.00 

Barrom,    Geo .50 

Brackenridge,    H.    M 25.00 

Blair,    David    10.00 

Bair,    Sadie   H 1.00 

Baczewski,    Rev.    F 25.00 

Baer,     J 3.00 

Baldridge,    John    H 5.00 

Banknecht   Brothers    2.00 

Barnhart,    W.    R 10.00 

Baldwin,    W.    A 5.00 

Blank,  S.  S 10.00 

Bailie,    J.    W 15.00 


18 


NAME.  AMOUNT. 

Bryan,    A.    M 9  5.00 

Ball,    Harrison     10.00 

Beaumont,     E.     B 15.00 

Bell,    Marshall     50.00 

Betts  &  Company,  Chas.  M 10.00 

Brewmasters    Association    of    Pitts- 
burg    and    vicinity     25.00 

Bell,    Wm.    J 5.00 

Beaver    Soap    Company    10.00 

Best    Manufacturing    Company....  25.00 

Bennett,    D.    0 10.00 

Bennett    Club,    Fourteenth    Ward.  .  25.00 

Beeson,    Jennie    B 20.00 

Becker,    Frank     10.00 

Bell,    Alicia    J 5.00 

Berean    Guild    11.00 

Berry,     A.    J 1.00 

Benner  &  Company,  R.  H 5.00 

Becker,    W.    H 5.00 

Bernheim  Distilling  Company    ....  15.00 

Beinhauer  &   Son,   L 10.00 

Berry-Bergs    Coal    Company. 5.00 

Byrne,    Frank  W 1.00 

Byrne,    Thomas    F 2.00 

Byrne,    A.    P 2.00 

Byrne,    James    1.00 

Belfield,    T.    Brown     50.00 

Belfield,   Helen   Clarkson    5.00 

Beth-Eden    Baptist    Church    5.82 

Byrne,    Arthur    L 1.00 

Byrne,    A.    P 5.00 

Benevolent     Protective      Order      of 
Elks — 

Grand    Lodge     500.00 

Carnegie    Lodge    No.    831 25.00 

Indiana  Lodge  No.   931    5.00 

Fairmont  Lodge  No.  294 25.00 

Jeannette    Lodge   No.   486 25.00 

Latrobe  Lodge  No.   907 25.00 

New  Kensington  Lodge  No.  512.  25.00 

Mahoning  City  Lodge  No.   695..  10.00 

Milton    Lodge    No.    913 10.00 

Pittsburgh    Lodge    No.    11 50.00 

Pittston    Lodge    No.    382 25.00 

Uniontown  Lodge    No.    370 25.00 

Bertholotti,    C 1.00 

Belmer    Company,    H 10.00 

Beaver   Falls   Daily   Tribune 34.50 

Bridker,     Edward     5.00 

Billnieyer    Lumber    Company 5.00 

Britt,    M.    A 2.00 

Bidwell,    Mrs.    A.    B 2.00 

Blinn,     B .25 

Brickman,  G.  W.  and  Paul  Beighly 

(Fund    solicited    by) 21.50 

Booth,    Wm 70.00 

Box  No.  237,    Uniontown,   Pa 10.00 

Brown,    Mizzie     1.00 

Boedelheim,    Mrs.    S 10.00 

Brown,    Porter    S 1.00 

Brown,   John   Cook    5.00 

Boggs    &    Buhl     50.00 

Blodgett,    Chas.    M 1.00 

Basconer,    F 2.00 

Brown,    Mrs.    K.    L 20.00 

Boardman,  R.  E.  L.  &  P.   Co 2.00 

Brown,    P.    F 5.00 

Bromley,    W.    K 5.00 

Boylan,   W.   J 10.00 

Bohmer,    Chas.    H 10.00 

Brookman     Commission      Company, 

F.    W 5.00 

Brown,     Charlie     1.00 

Boyd,    Homer    1.00 

Bower,    Mr 1.00 

Box,  Alb 5.00 

Bolton,    C.    H 5.00 

Brock,     Victor     .25 

Boyts,    Porter    &    Company 50.00 

Brotherhood  of  Railway   Trainmen, 

Lodge    No.    595     .  ..  25.00 


NAME. 


AMOUNT. 


Blose,    Josephine     $ 

Burchinal,    R.    S 

Budd,     Henry     

Burchfield,    A.    P 

Brundage,   K.  B 

Buckley,    Edw.   S 

Brubaker,    Dr.   J.    L 

Burns    Brothers     

Burns,    H.    H 

Burtner,     Fred     

Burke,   J.   F 

Buehrle,    R.    K 

Burns,    Mrs.    Andrew 

Burkle   Plumbing  Company 

Blumle,    F.   X 

Bush-Krebs  Company 

Buerke,    August     

Buchanan,    J.    I 

Bushnell,    Geo.    A 

Burger  Iron   Company    

Bry,    L 

Bry,    N 

Carroll,    J.    F 

Campbell,    G.   E 

Crandall,    J.    W 

Cash    


( Signature     to 
not  be  read) 


check     could 


1.00 
5.00 
5.00 

50.00 

10.00 

50.00 
5.00 

10.00 
5.00 
5.00 
1.00 
2.00 
1.00 

50.00 
5.00 
2.00 

25.00 

10.00 
3.00 
5.00 

10.00 

10.00 
5.00 
5.00 

50.00 
1.00 
1.00 

10.00 

50.00 
1.00 

25.00 
1.00 
1.00 
1.00 

10.00 
1.00 
2.00 
1.00 
2.00 
1.00 
1.00 
1.00 

10.00 
1.00 
1.00 
1.00 
5.00 
1.00 
1.00 

10.00 
5.00 
1.00 
1.00 
2.00 
1.00 
1.00 
5.00 
1.00 
1.00 
5.00 
100.00 
1.00 
2.00 
1.00 
1.00 
5.00 
1.00 
1.00 
1.00 
2.00 
1.00 

10.00 
5.00 
5.00 
5.00 
2.00 
5.00 
1.00 
1.00 

25.00 


19 


Ca 

Ca 
(.'] 
Ca 
Cl 
Cl 
Cl 
Ci 
Ca 

Ol 

Cs 

NAME.                             A 
3h    $ 

MOUNT. 

10.00 
1.00 
1.00 
1.00 
1.00 
20.00 
1.00 
1.00 
1.00 
1.00 
1.00 
1.00 
1.00 
2.00 
10.00 
3.00 
3.00 
1.00 
10.00 
5.00 
1.00 
5.00 
10.00 
2.00 
20.00 
5.00 
.25 
1.00 
10.00 
.50 
10.00 
2.00 
.50 
4.00 
5.00 
2.00 
2.00 
1.00 
1.00 
50.00 
2.00 
2.00 
1.00 
1.00 
.25 
1.00 
1.00 
1.00 
15.00 
1.00 
1.00 
2.00 
5.00 
100.00 
15.00 
.50 
.50 
.10 
1.50 
1.00 
1.50 
1.00 
1.00 
1.00 
1.00 
2.00 
1.00 
50.00 
5.00 
5.00 
5.00 
5.00 
2.00 
15.00 
50.00 
2.00 

25.00 
1.00 

30.00 

Idare     G    D 

auncey,    Charles    

ark     J    B            

arleroi   Lumber   Company    
arke    &    Company,    E.    "W  

lien     J     Spencer 

nonsburg   Business    Men's    Asso- 
ciation      

sley,     F.    J.  —  Pastor    E.    M.    A. 
Mission 

NAME.  AMOUNT. 

Claypool,    George    L $  5.00 

Chappell,    Cyrus    S 2.00 

Gather,    William   A 10.00 

Caughey,    Mary   P.    L 5.00 

Calvary   P.    E.    Church 276.21 

Campbell,    A.   B 5.00 

Cartwright,    R.    A 20.00 

Campbell,    Kate    E 5.00 

Craig,    P.    L 10.00 

Casini,   Petro     .25 

Casini,   Giovanni     .25 

Cannarino,    F .25 

Carrigan,    Jas.    J 2.00 

Chambers,   J.  H 2.00 

Caldwell,       Ohio — Benefit       Supper 

given  by  ladies   of    37.50 

Carothers  Mine,  Monongahela  River 

C.  C.  &  C.  Co.  Employees 214.00 

Craft,    F.    E 5.00 

Clark,    Donald    '.  5.00 

Califf,    Joseph   M 2.00 

Clarkson,  Mrs.  Thomas  Chalmers.  .  50.00 

Crates,    R.    E 3.00 

Campbell    &   Horigan    15.00 

Campbell,   Wm 25.00 

Caulley,    Jas.    J 2.00 

Calvary  P.   E.   Church    (additional)  1.00 
Cramp,    Wm.    Sons    Ship    &    Engine 

Building    Company     50.00 

Carnegie  Hero  Fund  Commission.  .    25,000.00 

Cralle,   William  H 2.00 

Casini,    Frank    .25 

Casini,    Fortunati    .25 

Casini,    Giovanni    .25 

Catholic  Total  Abstinence  Union — 

T.    M.    Connery,    Treas 51.00 

Catholic     Mutual     Benefit    Associa- 
tion— 

Branch   No.      36     10.00 

Branch  No.   153     10.00 

Branch  No.      49     5.00 

Branch  No.      92     10.00 

Branch  No.   176     10.00 

Branch   No.      54     10.00 

Branch  No.   210     10.00 

Branch  No.      59     10.00 

Branch  No.      66     25.00 

Branch   No.      78     25.00 

Branch  No.    171     10.00 

Branch   No.      31     10.00 

Branch  No.    107     5.00 

Branch   No.      33    Saint   Peter's..  25.00 

Branch   No.      69   Saint  Joseph's.  5.00 

Branch  No.      34   Sacred  Heart.  .  10.00 

Branch  No.    159    Saint    Canice.  .  17.50 

Branch  No.    145    Saint  Jerome..  5.00 

Branch  No.      98     10.00 

Branch  No.      43     10.00 

Chamber  of  Commerce  of  Pitts- 
burgh Relief  Com.  (Fund  sub- 
scribed by  the  Public) 2,972.15 

Chamber  of  Commerce  of  Pitts- 
burgh (additional  Contribution 

by  the  Public)    433.79 

Chamber  of  Commerce  of  Pitts- 
burgh (additional  by  Contribu- 
tions by  the  Public) 315.68 

Chamber  of  Commerce  (Public  Con- 
tributions made  through  the  Pitts- 
burgh Dispatch)  118.50 

Canevin,    Rt.   Rev.   Regis 200.00 

Carson,    Elizabeth    10.00 

Castner,   B.   W 25.00 

Carmalt,     H.     G.,     M.    D 1.00 

Canfieid,    R.    J 5.00 

Cawley,    F.    M 1.00 

Carothers    &    Co.,    James 25.00 


20 


NAME.  AMOUNT. 

Clark,   F.  W $  1.00 

Cassidy,    Wm.   H 25.00 

C.    E 3.00 

Clemson,  D.  M 50.00 

Clyde,     W.     P 10.00 

Central  Turn  Verein 5.00 

Cherry,    C.    E 5.00 

Central    Trades    &    Labor     Council, 

Dubois,   Pa 5.00 

Central         Presbyterian        Church, 

Brownsville,   Pa 10.40 

Central  Presbyterian    Sun.    School.  23.19 

Creighton    Hotel     5.00 

Citizens     5.00 

Citizens  National  Bank,  Evans  City, 

Pa 1.00 

Childs,    H.    L 20.00 

Christie,     Robert     10.00 

Childs    &    Co.,    H 50.00 

Chief  Williams  Hook  &  L.  Co 5.00 

Clingerman,   W.  H 25.00 

Crisler,    Mrs.    Nannie    A 1.00 

Cline,    Jr.,    A.    H 5.00 

Child,    Hulswit   &    Co 10.00 

Christ    Church     7.50 

Clifford,    Treas.,    Margaret    E 5.00 

Cincinnati    Machine    Tool    Co 5.00 

Citizens    of    Butler,    Pa 392.85 

Christ    Church     16.00 

City    Bank    of    McKeesport 25.00 

Christ   Episcopal   Church,    Oil   City, 

Pa 14.08 

Christ  Protestant  Episcopal  Church  65.70 

City    National    Bank 5.00 

Ciambanella,    Carmine     .25 

Cristefano,   Domenico    .25 

Cristefano,    Michele     .25 

Cristefano,   Guiseppe     .25 

Christian    Endeavor    Society    Hope- 
well    Presbyterian    Church     ....  10.00 

Christian    Church    9.38 

Cincinnati  Iron  Store  Co 5.00 

Clinton   Mine   of   Peoples   Coal   Co. 

Employees    55.25 

Citizen,    A    2.00 

Comer,     M.    P 70.00 

Cope,    Emmor    10.00 

Collins,    Henry    L 25.00 

Connolly   Fanning   Co 10.00 

Collins,    Frank     25.00 

Close,    Ella   J 5.00 

Cole,    Chas.    L 20.00 

Cornman,   Wm.  F 5.00 

Comes,    John    T 5.00 

Cowley,    John     5.00 

Coulter,    J.    H 5.00 

Cooper  Heirs 2.00 

Connell,    William     100.00 

Conrad,    Lottie    R 1.00 

Cooper,    A.   F 25.00 

Colonial    Salt    Co 10.00 

Crooks    Bros 3.00 

Cope,  Emmor 2.50 

Corrado   &   Basilone    5.00 

Coleman,    Treas.,    W.    H 401.86 

Cronemyer,    W.    C 10.00 

Coleman,   W.   H 10.00 

Cronemyer,    W.    C 7.00 

Connell,    Jas.    A. 5.00 

Cronemyer,    Henry    C 2.00 

Commeaux,    Jos 1.00 

Colonial   Hotel,    Cleveland    10.00 

Cooley,    A.    P 5.00 

Coey,    David     25.00 

Condit,    Jr.,    C.    A 5.00 

Cook,    Isaac   T 5.00 

Corenzo,    Prettando     .50 

Consolidated  Coal  Co.  of  St.  Louis.  25.00 

Crockard,   Frank  H 10.00 

Coyle,    P.    W 5.00 

Cormack,    H.    E 20.00 


NAME.  AMOUNT. 

Corse,   W.   J $  5.00 

Conard,   Laetitia   Moore    5.00 

Commercial  Club  of  Pittsburgh,  Pa.  10.00 
Connellsville   Benefit   Concert^   Sois- 
son    Theatre,    under   direction    of 

J.   L.    Rodrigues    215.00 

Connellsville    Mfg.    &    Mine    Supply 

Co 30.25 

Curtain,    R.    G.,    M.    D 1.00 

Church  of  God,    Bellton,    Pa 3.87 

Cunningham,  F.  G 1.00 

Curry,    Mrs.   H.   G 200.00 

Church  of  the  Nativity,  Broughton, 

Pa 8.81 

Cumberland     Presbyterian     Sunday 

School,   Uniontown,   Pa 8.67 

Church  of  the  Ascension,  Pittsburg  74.88 

Cutler  Hammer  Mfg.   Co 10.00 

Church  of  Our  Father,   P.  E.,   Fox- 
burg,   Pa 12.45 

Davies,  Rev.  W.  S 2.00 

Dauler,    Close    &    Johns 25.00 

Daft,    Heward    &    Company 5.00 

Davison,    Jr.,    Ed 25.00 

Dawson  M.   E.    Sunday   School.  .  .  .  53.52 

Daniero,     Joe     .50 

Damon,   Geraldine    5.00 

Davenport,    H.   F 1.00 

Daily,  J.  F.,  from  Republican  Stan- 
dard       5.00 

Davis  &  Son,  John 5.00 

Davis,   Richard    2.00 

Davis,   Adam    N 2.00 

Danatetti,    James    .50 

Davis,   P.   H 5.00 

Davis,  E.    P .50 

Delaney,  J.  C 10.00 

Dempster,  A 100.00 

Deeley,    Theo 1.00 

Denholm   Bros.    &    Co.,   J.    M 50.00 

Denny,  Matilda  W 100.00 

Demmler  Bros.  Company 25.00 

Dysart,    P.    M 5.00 

Derby,    A 5.00 

Dewitt,    General    5.00 

Decker,    John    E 5.00 

Drexler,    Fred    J 5.00 

Denniston,    S.    L 5.00 

Detroit    City    Gas    Company 500.00 

Demuth  &  Sons,  P.  R 5.00 

Degener,    J 1.00 

Demuth,  F.  E 5.00 

Detweiler   and   others,    H.   F 30.00 

Dickson    and   Beardsley 2.00 

Dithridge,   E.   B 2.00 

Dilworth,    Louise   M 100.00 

Dillon,  P.  R 20.00 

Dillon,    Mrs.    Mamie    E 5.00 

Dillon,   Sidney    5.00 

Dickson,    W.    R 10.00 

Dilworth,  Porter  &  Co.,  Ltd 100.00 

Dickinson,   O.  B 5.00 

Dickson,    Mr.   and  Mrs.    John 5.00 

Dittmer,    E.   M 5.00 

Dixon,   Dr.    Samuel   G 25.00 

Dilworth,    Julia   W 25.00 

Dillinger,    D.    L 25.00 

Dillinger,    D.    R .50 

Dinkelspeil,   Jos 1.00 

Dines,    D 2.00 

Dieckmann  Company,  Ferdinand   .  .  10.00 

Douds,  Rev.  J.  H 1.00 

Donora    Pharmacy     2.00 

Dowds,    R.    Fred    10.00 

Dolores,    Sister   M 2.00 

D.    S.    0 6.50 

Donley,    Amelia   E 1.00 

Donley,   Mrs.  J.  J 1.00 

Dornon,    A.    A 3.00 

Douglas,   John  S 5.00 


21 


NAME.  AMOUNT. 

Donora   Lumber   Company    $  5.00 

Dougherty,  W.  F 5.00 

Dornheim.  Win.  F.,  Treasurer 5.00 

Dovey,   C.  C 5.00 

Donaldson,   John  A 30.00 

Donaldson,    H.    S 10.00 

Donaldson,    H.    C 10.00 

Doyle,    J.    P 10.00 

Donley    &    Hicky    Hotel 5.00 

Donaldson,     S.     L 1.00 

Donvan.   M.   H 2.00 

Dodds    Hotel    10.00 

Dunn,    J.    Jay    10.00 

Dudley,  W.   R 1.00 

Dunn,  Bernard  P 5.00 

Dunn,   T.   P 1.00 

Dubois  Brewing  Company 25.00 

Dunlevy   &    Brother    25.00 

Dunbar,   Wilmer    5.00 

Dunlap,    E.   J 1.00 

DuBois  Fire  Department    10.00 

Duttenhofer  Sons  Company,  Val.  .  .  10.00 

East  Liverpool,  Ohio,  Citizens  of.  .  78.38 

Earley  &   Sons,   W.   J 10.00 

Eagleson,  A.  S 5.00 

Emmanuel  Church,   Corry,  Pa 15.00 

Eaton,   Wm.   T 10.00 

Eagle   Social   Club    5.00 

Edwards,   Edith  E 3.00 

Edwards,    Eliza    Thaw    100.00 

Emmanuel    Church    4.27 

Erdelyi,   Albert    2.00 

Eckert    and    Frey    10.00 

Emlenton  Refining  Company 5.00 

Emlenton  Milling  Company,   Ltd...  5.00 

Enz  and  Scheible    10.00 

Edgoworth  Machine  Company 5.00 

Eckles,   Mrs.   Mary    1.00 

Enwer's    Sons,    J.    N 2.00 

Ehlers,   Mrs.   Chas 2.00 

Eibel,   Francis  L 10.00 

Eisenbeis,    E.    S 1.00 

Eintracht  Singing  Musical  Society.  50.00 

Edie   Coal   Company    12.00 

Elliott,    Ida   R 10.00 

Edmiston,    R.    S 10.00 

Eichler   &    Graft    10.00 

Eichleay,    Jr.,     Company,    John.  .  .  15.00 

Erskine,   R.   M 2.00 

Eiler,    Edward    20.00 

Eisenbach,   Chas.  H 5.00 

Eisendrath,  Schwab  &  Company...  5.00 

Eighth   Street  R.   P.   Church 14.75 

Elliott,    E.    B 2.00 

Employes  of  Ellsworth  Collieries  Co.      1,013.00 

Elton,    T.   J 1.00 

Emsworth   Ladies'    Aid    Society.  .  .  25.00 

Ellwood    Sand    Company    25.00 

Elton,    Blanche   B 1.00 

Edmundson,    Jos.    E 2.00 

Ely,    Geo.    W 2.00 

E.    P.    F 1.00 

Eagles    (Fraternal  Order   of) — 

Aerie  No.   1574    5.00 

Carnegie  Aerie  No.   1134 10.00 

Duquesne   Aerie    No.    1087 15.00 

Donora  Aerie   No.   502 25.00 

McKees  Rocks  Aerie  No.  1331.  .  10.00 

Pittsburg  Aerie  No.   76 25.00 

Frank,    A 10.00 

Fairmont  Brewing  Company    25.00 

Frauenheim,    Nettie    M 25.00 

Fallon,    C 5.00 

Fahnline,    John    5.00 

Faubel,    Peter    5.00 

Fay,   F.  L 3.00 

Falkenstein,  C.  G 5.00 

Fay,    Charles   L 5.00 

Favorite    Stove    &    Range    Co 50.00 

Falkner,    T.    F 3.00 

Frank,    Myer    10.00 


NAME.  AMOUNT. 

Franklin    Fire    Department $  1.00 

Frankstown  Aye.   Free  Meth.   Ch.  .  6.50 

Falzone,    Liberio    .25 

Franklin,    Wm.    E 5^00 

Farmers   &   Merchants   Bank,    West 

Newton,    Pa 75.00 

Frandia,    A.    B 1.00 

Fayette  Coal  Company  Employes..  132.25 

Frey,    Otto    20.00 

Frey,   Chas.  W 1.00 

Ferris,    U.    J 5.00 

Felger,   George  F 10.00 

Fleming,   James   C 5.00 

Ferrigan   Company,   J.   J 5.00 

Feist,  Edw.  F 2.00 

Felgar   School    Social    18.00 

Fleming,    Mrs.    Wm 20.00 

Frend,   A.   A 1.00 

Franch,    I.    J .25 

Freker,   J.    L 25.00 

Felicita,    Michael     2.00 

Freidman,    M 2.00 

Free   Accepted  Masons — 

Corinthian  Lodge,    No.    573 10.00 

Davage    Lodge,    No.    374    25.00 

Guyasuta  Lodge,    No.   513    25.00 

Homestead  Lodge,   No.   582    25.00 

lonice   Lodge,    No.    525    10.00 

Monongahela  Lodge,   No.   461    .  .  10.00 

McCandless  Lodge,  No.  390 25.00 

Oakland  Lodge,   No.   535    25.00 

Strichrath  Lodge,  No.  430 10.00 

Solomon  Lodge,   No.   231    25.00 

First  Presb.  Church  Sunday  School  15.05 

First  M.  E.  Church,  New  Brighton.  10.25 

Files,   Harry  J 5.00 

Friend,    A 5.00 

Finleyville    Presb.    Sunday    School.  30.00 

Flinn,    Ralph   E 10.00 

Fidelity    International    Agency.  .  .  .  20.00 

Ewing,    Nat'hl 50.00 

Fillmore,   A.   L 1.00 

First  Presbyterian  Church,  Browns- 
ville,   Pa 50.00 

Filer,   F.   P 10.00 

Fisher,   A.  J 10.00 

Finley,    Mr.    and  Mrs.   John    E....  10.00 

First   National   Bank,    McKeesport.  100.00 

Flinn,    Wm 100.00 

Friend,    A 5.00 

First  German  Baptist  Church,  Pitts- 
burg,   Pa 26.15 

Friend    :  .  .  .  .  2.00 

First  U.  P.  Ch.,  New  Brighton,  Pa.  5.00 

First  Germ.  Pres.  Ch.  of  Allegheny  5.25 
First    German     Ev.     Prot.     Church, 

Manchester,    Pa 26.00 

First  Baptist  Ch.,  Rochester,  Pa...  7.25 

First  Church  of  Christian  Scientists  79.37 

First  National  Bank,  Suterville,  Pa.  25.00 
First     Catholic     Slovak     Union     of 

Braddock  and  vicinity    554.20 

First  Catholic    Slovak  Union   of  A. 

Lodge,   No.  368    1.00 

Footedale   U.    S.    School    25.00 

Fosdick,    L 5.00 

Foster,   C.  F 10.00 

Forest  Lumber  Company    15.00 

Forester,    Henrietta   M 3.00 

Fownes,    W.    C 50.00 

Foultz,   W.   L 1.00 

Fourth  M.  P.   Church 7.35 

Fox,    Wm 10.00 

Fowler  Company,  J.  D 10.00 

Forrest,    John    25.00 

Floro,    Bruno    5.00 

Fourth  U.  P.   Church    21.56 

Foster,   G.  W 5. 00 

Folk,   F.   B 1.00 

Floral  Club  of  2nd  Presb.  Church.  35.00 

Furey,    Wm.    M 10.00 


22 


NAME.  AMOUNT. 

Tullaysar,   F.   Y $  5.00 

Furlong,    Wm.   H 5.00 

F.  M.    L 5.00 

Fry,  R.  M 5.00 

Grayson,  Thomas  Wray,  M.  D 5.00 

Gardner-Governor    Company     10.00 

Garvey,    Rt.    Rev.   E.   A 20.00 

<rwyn  Gas  Burner  &  Eng.  Co 5.00 

Garrett,    J.    G 5.00 

Gardner,    Henry    1.00 

Grace   Chapel   Sunday   School    8.43 

Gaither,    Paul   H 10.00 

Garmen,     C 10.00 

Galloway   Coal    Company    5.00 

Grace    Church    6.25 

Grace    Church,    additional    1.00 

Greensburg  M.  E.  Sunday  School.  .  45.80 

German  Savings  &  Deposit  Bank.  .  25.00 

Greensburg  Hdwe.   &   S.   Company.  5.00 

Gensenlister,    E 10.00 

Green,  W.  G 10.00 

German  Leiderkranz    50.00 

Gerecter,  Prof.  L,  Arcadium  Benefit  27.10 

Gerwig,    C.    W 10.00 

George   Anton    10.00 

George,   Rev.   H.  H 5.00 

German    Evang.    Prot.    Church....  114.87 

Greig,   J.  Howard    3.00 

George,    J .25 

Geiger,   Fred    10.00 

Gemanzio,   Amano    .50 

Gemmeis,  J.  M 10.00 

German  American  Alliance    10.00 

German   Lutheran   Church    8.02 

Gribben,    Ira    5.00 

Grier,    Ellen     10.00 

Gwinner,    Fred     25.00 

Gillespie,    Stanley   A 5.00 

Griffith,    Webster    „  10.00 

Girard,    D.    T 10.00 

Glidden,    F.    A 5.00 

Grier,    Harriet    H 15.00 

Gills,  J.  K.,  Company 25.00 

Gibbons,    P.    C 5.00 

Gibson,  Mrs.  A.  B 5.00 

Gismonde,    Michael    .50 

Giovannitti,    Giuseppe     1.00 

Griffey,  James  M 1.00 

Gillalgar,    Mrs .25 

Gordon,    Louis,   Jr 25.00 

Gawern,    W.   J 10.00 

Glocker,    B 25.00 

Goehring,    Max    5.00 

Groitzsch,    May    3.00 

Goodman  Engine   &  Machine  Co...  10.00 

Grove    City   College,    Music    Dept.  .  50.00 

Gorgon,  L.  C.,  M.  D 1.00 

Gordon,  G.  W 1.00 

Gorzynski,    Rev.   Jan 7.75 

Goodyear  Tire  &  Rubber  Co 5.00 

Guthrie,    George   W 25.00 

Grubbs,    T.    S 10.00 

Guthrie,    Dotty     5.00 

Gulentz,    Charles    10.00 

Guckert,    W.    F 75.60 

Guisers.    Frank   A 5.00 

Gunning,    J 10.00 

Gumbert,   A.  C 5.00 

G.  C.  K 1.00 

G.    L 500.00 

Harris,    William    &    Son 20.00 

Harris,    Mrs 1.00 

Hanna,    Miss    1.00 

Hamburger,    Phillip     25.00 

Harper,  John  A 20.00 

Hanlin  Union   Sunday  School 5.00 

Haller,    Samuel   P 25.00 

Harrington,    Wm 5.00 

Hauch,    Gustave  W 5.00 

Hart,  Chas.  E 3.00 

Harrison,    J 3.00 


NAME.  AMOUNT. 

Hall,    Frank   R.,    Treasurer    8         21.00 

Hampton,    H.   A 5.00 

Hall,    Robert   C 25.00 

Hanneshagen,    H 10.00 

Harbison,    M.   L 5.00 

Haye,    Margaret   I.  25  00 

Hack,    W.    C 2.00 

Hartnett,    C.   J 5.00 

Hanselman,    L 1.00 

Hammer,    Oscar     10.00 

Hardy,    David    10.00 

Habers,   Louis  J.,   Treasurer 10.00 

Haber    Bros 5.00 

H.   S.  A.   S 50.00 

Harmon,    A.   D 10.00 

Hardy,    Alice    C 5.00 

Hartzell   Bros 10.00 

Hague,    Frank   D 1.00 

Hay,    Ruth     10.00 

Ha'ndcock,   C.   E 1.00 

Hand,  William  J 10.00 

Harbaugh,    Charles    .T    25.00 

Harbison,    S.   P.    Estate    100.00 

Henry,    Jennie    1 1.00 

Hewitt,   Mrs.   A.   M 5.00 

Herb    Bros.    &    Martin    15.00 

'  Henry,    S.    A 1.00 

Heller,    A 2.00 

Hemmick,   Harry   0 1.00 

Herron,    W.   A 10.00 

Hertzog,    Rev.  T.  J 9.00 

Herron   School,    Venetia,    Pa 5.00 

Hellerman  &  Waugh 5.00 

Hench,    J.    B 2.00 

Herbert,  Victor 10.00 

Herskovitz,  Jacob 2.00 

Heggmann,    W.   H 10.00 

Herman,  Mrs.  C.  A 5.00 

Herron,    Annie    R 5.00 

Herz,    George     10.00 

Hertzberg,   Mrs.  William    2.00 

Heisey,    A.    H.    &    Company 50.00 

Herr,    Edward    M 15.00 

Hertzog,   Rev.   Francis  J 5.25 

Herrmann,   John    10.00 

Heinz,     H.     J.     Company 250.00 

Hebron    Presbyterian    Church 11.00 

Headquarters  Ft.   Robinson,   Nebr. .  15.00 

Herrlinger  &  Company 5.00 

Hyde,    W.    H 10.00 

Herwitz,    William 3.00 

Heinz,    H.    J.    Co.,    Employees....  164.66 

Hilton,    J.    R 5.00 

Hieber,    Dr.    H.    G 5.00 

Hicks,    J.   D 2.50 

Hill,  Rev.  John  J 5.00 

Higgs,   Miss   Nellie    1.00 

Hice,  Mrs.  Henry 5.00 

Hiliary,    W.    P 2.00 

Hill,    W.    R 2.00 

Hilson,    Henry     .25 

Hornberger,  J.  B.  L 50.00 

Holmes,   Mrs.   Letitia    50. Oo 

Hollenbeck,    J.    W 10.00 

Hoffman,    Joseph    H 5.00 

Hoffman,    Julius    5.00 

Holtzman,   L.   F 10.00 

Houlden,    Robert    T 5.00 

Hungarian   Relief    Society    12.00 

Houch,   Henry    5.00 

Rowland,    F.    B 1.00 

Hoeton,   S.  M 5.00 

Howard    Electric    Company    2.00 

Homer,    E.   W 10.00 

Hogg,    Elizabeth    E 10.00 

Hoffman,   P.  Y 5.00 

Hopkins,    H.    V 2.00 

Hoffman,    R.    A ".  .  5.42 

Holy  Trinity   Epis.    Oh.,   Houtzdale  3.00 

Horton,    A.    W 10.00 

Hodgson,    C.   Percy    2.00 

23 


NAME.  AMOUNT. 

Hogg,    Mrs.   W.  A $  5.00 

HI.    Pokladnik    S.av.   Ev.   Jed 25.00 

Hopkinson,    Jos.    W 5.00 

Hopkinson,     S 1.00 

Haugh  Mfg.  Company,  Charles  N.  .  10.00 

Hunter,   Miss  M.  B 2.00 

Hull,    S.    A 1.00 

Hurst,   Frank  H 5.00 

Hungarian- American  People's  Voice 
(Contributions  received  through).  .      1,145.38 

Hisey,    S.   R 5.00 

Humes,    J.    E 1.00 

Hughes,    C.    M 5.00 

Humble,    H.   E 5.00 

Hussey,    D.    B 5.00 

Hunter,    J.   M.,   Rector   St.    Mary's, 

pa 2.46 

Hungarian    Sick    Benefit    Society..  30.00 

Humphries,    E.    A 50.00 

Hurst,    W.    P 10.00 

Huston,    J.    J 3.00 

Hungarian  Government  Grant  (Darr 
Mine  sufferers'  share  of  grant 
of  $6,000.00  made  by  the  Hun- 
garian Government  for  the  suf- 
ferers by  the  Monongah,  Darr 

and    Naomi    mine    disasters) 3,772.00 

H.  L.   M 10.00 

Ingham,    W.    S 10.00 

Irlbacher,    Joseph    3.00 

Immaculate  Heart  Church 59.50 

Imperial  Hotel,  A.  L.  Bowden,  Pro.  253.30 

Independent  Congregational  Church  17.00 
Independent  Order  of  Odd  Fellows — 

Fort  Necessity  Lodge,  No.  254.  .  10.00 
Improved    Order   Heptaspphs — 

Allegheny   Conclave,    No.    603...  5.00 

Amity  Council,  No.  98 2.00 

Birmingham    Council,    No.    417..  5.00 

Colonial  Conclave,   No.  453    2.00 

Chartiers  Valley   Con.,   No.    568.  5.00 

Conclave    No.    488     5.55 

Dauphin  Conclave,  No.  96 2.00 

Duquesne    Conclave,    No.    69....  10.00 

East   End   Conclave,    No.    79....  10.00 

Ethel   Conclave,   No.   314 5.00 

Friendship    Conclave,    No.    3....  10.00 

Fifth   Avenue   Conclave,    No.    74.  10.00 

Fidelity  Conclave,   No.    130    ....  5.00 

Jas.K.  Moorhead  Conclave. No. 82  10.00 

Kittanning  Conclave,  No.  186    ..  10.00 

Lemke   Conclave,    No.   664 25.00 

McKees  Rocks  Conclave,  No.  92.  5.00 

North    Side   Conclave,   No.    85...  5.00 

Penn   Conclave,    No.    59 5.00 

Reading  Conclave,   No.   67    2.50 

Rising   Sun   Conclave,   No.    121..    ,          5.00 

Ting   Conclave,    No.    164 10.00 

West  Side  Conclave,   No.  211...  10.00 

Wilmerding  Conclave,   No.   337.  .  5.00 

Irwin,   R.  W 10.00 

Irwin  &  Company 15.00 

Indiana   Lumber  &    Supply  Co .... 

Irwin  Foundry  &  Mine  Car  Co.  ...  10.00 

Iron   City    Produce    Co 10.00 

Iron  City  Fire  Works    • 5.00 

Iroquois  Rifle   Club    10.00 

Ironsides  Company,  The 25.00 

Imperial  Order  of  Red  Men,  Bea- 
ver Tribe,  No.  62  2.00 

Irish,   F.   C 50.00 

Jarris,    Sam'l 5.00 

Jarvis,   W.   J 2.00 

Jackson,    Jno.    B 100.00 

Jarrett,    Geo.    C 1.00 

Jamison,    Sr.,   W.  F 5.00 

James,    John    5.00 

James,    Enoch    5.00 

Jamison,  W.  J 10.00 

Jamison   Coal    &    Coke   Co 100.00 

James,    Edgar     10.00 


NAME.  AMOUNT. 

Jeannette    Turn  Verein    $  25.00 

Jeffries,    H.    E 10.00 

Johnstown    Tribune    Pub.    Co 10.00 

Jones,  H.  M 5.00 

Jchnstone,   Stewart 10.00 

Johnston,    Supt.,   Jesse  K 10.00 

Jones,    Henry  0 5.00 

John,   David  L 1.00 

Jones,    Owen    2.00 

Johnson,   Dr.   S.   C 2.00 

Jones,   Mary  McM 50.00 

Joyce,    J .25 

Jones,    Fremont   C 5.00 

Jobson,    George   B 2.00 

Jolly  Literary   Society    28.00 

Jones,  J.  G 5.00 

Jones,  A.  L .25 

Joseph  &  Teiss  Co 10.00 

Junction  School 6.55 

Jr.  Order  United  Am.  Mechanics — 

Allegheny    Council,    No.    112....  10.00 

Chosen  Friends  Council,  No.  86.  1.00 

Dawson    Council,    No.   75 25.00 

Henderson  Gylord  Coun.,  No.  316  5.00 

Purity   Council,    No.    554    5.00 

South  Side  Council,  No.  133.  .  .  .  10.00 

Wanamie   Council,   No.   549    5.00 

Welcome    Council,    No.    134 10.00 

J.    C 1.00 

J.    H 2.00 

J.    H 1.00 

J.  M.  B 5.00 

Kaunt,  M.  M 5.00 

Kazin,  John 2.00 

Kemerer,    Treasurer,    Monte   J 25.00 

Knapp,    F.    M 5.00 

Krausslack,   J.   L 5.00 

Kerr  &  Snodgrass 25.00 

Keiser,   F.  J 10.00 

Kentuckian,     A 1.00 

Kensley,    Edw.  L 10.00 

Kerner,   E.  H 1.00 

Kenyon,  Hazel  E 10.00 

Keane,    F 30.00 

Kane,  John  E 5.00 

Kelley,   J.   G 5.00 

Klein-Logan   Co 25.00 

Kenney,  F.  C 5.00 

Klein,   William   C 5.00 

Kelly  Foundry   &    Machine    Co 10.00 

Kelley,    Wm 5.00 

Keller,    Philip    10.00 

Keller,   P.   P 5.00 

Keitz,   Earnest  R 5.00 

Kendricks,    George   H 1.00 

Kerfoot,  Christiana 5.00 

Kervis  Grain  Co.,  S 5.00 

Keppelmann,    E.    P 1.00 

Keafer,   Jacob    1.00 

Kenzig,    J.    F 5.00 

Kenney,    Anthony  H 10.00 

Klein,'  C 5.00 

Kepler  and  others,   A.    S 5.00 

Kernohan,   R.   B 5.00 

Kreps,    J.    E 5.00 

Kemp,    Agnes     1.00 

Kenyes   Bros -  ..  5.00 

Kephart,    Samuel  A 5.00 

Keller,   Ferdinand    5.00 

Kellough,  Robert 5.00 

Kellner,    John    .25 

Kelly   Bros 5.00 

Keystone  Coal  &  Coke  Co.,  Greens- 
burg  Mine  No.  1  Employes 44.00 

Kirkpatrick  &  Co.,  Allen 50.00 

Klindworth,  John  L 5.00 

Kinch,  D.  B 5.00 

Kinzec,     E 1.00 

Kissick,    Mrs.    E 10.00 

Klixline,   Emil    5.00 

Kittell,    Wm 5.00 


24 


NAME. 


AMOUNT. 
.  .$  1.00 

1.00 
1.00 


King,  Joseph  H 

King,  James 

Kipgen,  E.  H 

Knights    of    Columbus — 

Jeannette  Council,   No.   1222    .  .  .  25.00 

Monongahela  Council,   No.  491..  25.00 

Knights   of  Malta,    Omar   Com'dery  25.00 

Knights  Templar,  Pgh.  Com.  No.  1.  25.00 

Knights    of    Pythias — 

Athens  Lodge,    No.   455 5.00 

Americus   Lodge,    No.   320 10.00 

Aliquippa    Lodge    10.00 

Beaverdale  Lodge,   No.  29 6.00 

Brady   Lodge   No.   417 5.00 

Claysville  Lodge,  No.  121 5.00 

Chivalric   Lodge,    No.    475 1.00 

Federal   Lodge,    No.    373    5.00 

Fountain  Lodge,  No.  443    5.00 

Garrett   Lodge,    No.    60 5.00 

Glen  Richey  Lodge,  No.  383 5.00 

Grove  City  Lodge,  No.  35 5.00 

Hylas  Lodge,   No.  474    10.00 

Highland  Lodge,  No.  19 8.00 

Justus  Lodge,  No.  395 5.00 

Joppa  Lodge,   No.   396 10.00 

.    Kittanning  Lodge,  No.   321 10.00 

Lorena  Lodge,    No.    198    5.00 

Leechburg  Lodge,   No.    250 10.00 

Leader  Lodge,    No.    342 5.00 

Lily  of  the  Valley  Lodge,  No.  26  5.00 

Lily  Lodge,  No.  206    5.00 

Lodge   No.    289    2.00 

Madoc  Lodge,  No.  229 10.00 

Millersburg  Lodge,    No.   457    .  .  .  2.00 

Midway  Lodge,  No.  509 5.00 

Mt.  Sinai  Lodge,  No.   480    10.00 

Mountain  Lodge,   No.   84    4.25 

Myrtle  Lodge,    No.   240 5.00 

New  Kensington  Lodge,   No.   81.  5.00 

Nickel   Plate   Lodge,    No.    433...  2.50 

Pioneer  Lodge,  No.  471    5.00 

Roscoe  Lodge,  No.  180 10.00 

Success    Lodge    5.00 

Smithton   Lodge,    No.    328    5.00 

Silver  Cliff  Lodge,  No.  300 10.00 

Springhill  Lodge,  No.  136 10.00 

Social  Lodge,   No.  351 5.00 

Smoky  City  Lodge,   No.   392 5.00 

Wampum  Lodge,  No.  440 10.00 

Water  Cure  Lodge,   No.   99 5.00 

Waverly  Lodge,   No.   145    5.00 

West  Elizabeth  Lodge,  No.  442 .  .  5.00 
Knights  of  St.  George* — 

St.   Mary's  Branch,  No.  3 10. 00 

St.   Augustine's  Branch,   No.  5..  25.00 

St.   Martin's  Branch,  No.  11 10.00 

Holy  Trinity,   No.   13 10.00 

Koegler,    F.    E 10.00 

Kossler,    Augusta   M 5.00 

Korb,  William    5.00 

Koeber,    Henry    25.00 

Knodell,  W.  H 5.00 

Knox,   Wm.  F 10.00 

Knox,    M.   P 10.00 

Kohen,   F.  P 5.00 

Koontz,  W.  H 10.00 

Knott,  Joseph  W 10.00 

Kottivitz   &    Co.,   A.    S 3.00 

Kochs,    Theo.  A 5.00 

Knoxville  Presbyterian   Sunday   Sc.  25.00 

Koenig,    Albert    5.00 

Kuhn  &  Company,  W.  R 10.00 

Kunkel,   H.   T 5.00 

Kunkert,  C.  W 5.00 

K 2.00 

K 2.00 

Lancaster  Trust  Company    25.00 

Lamburg,    H.    A 10.00 

Lake    Erie    Ore    Company 10.00 

Ladies'   M.  S.  S.  of  St.  J.  Church.  5.00 

Ladies'    Relief  Soc.   of   Allegheny..  100.00 


25 


NAME.  AMOUNT. 

Lamb,   Rev.  Jas.  H $  1.00 

Laughlin,    G.   M 250.00 

Lamanna,   Nicola    .25 

Ladies'  Aux.  Soc.  Tree  of  Life  Con.  10.00 

Laughlin,   Alex 50.00 

Lake    Carriers'    Oil    Company 5.00 

Laird,   John  H 2.00 

Lawson,   J.    S 1.00 

Land,  Phillip 2.00 

Lawrence   Nat.    Gas   Co.    Employees  21.00 
Ladies'  Catholic  Benevolent  Assn. — 

Branch  No.    85    10.00 

Branch  No.    637    5.80 

Branch  No.    655    10.00 

Branch   No.    115    5.00 

Branch   No.    486    161.15 

Branch  No.    261    10.00 

Branch  No.    794    (St.   Michaels).  5.00 

Branch   No.   63,   Donora    16.00 

Lewis,    Florence    R 10.00 

Lapley,    D.    F 25.00 

Lerman,    W.    P 1.00 

Lenhart   Sons,    Geo.   W 10.00 

Lee,   John    10.00 

Lewis  &  Company,  T.  J 5.00 

Lyle,  James    5.00 

Lewis,   George    25.00 

Leibert,   Jos.   M 1.00 

Leppla,  P.  F 1.00 

Lenart,    W .25 

Levson,  H 1.00 

Leach,     James    M .50 

Leader  Publishing    Company    (Sub- 
scriptions received  through)  ....  51.00 
Leisenring  Plant,   No.   2,   employees  120.50 

Little,   Mary  E 1.00 

Linduff,.  John 5.00 

Lincoln  Avenue  M.   E.   Church.  .  .  .  26.00 

Linnenbrink,    T 1.00 

Lindbom,  Oscar 5.00 

Lincoln  Coal  &   Coke  Co 300.00 

Lohr,  G.  W 3.00 

Long  Run  -Church 10.00 

Logan  &  Company,  A.  J 25.00 

Logan-Gregg  Hardware  Company.  .  50.00 

Lyons,   J.   B 5.00 

Loxterman,    Jos.    B 5.00 

Lowry,    S.    0 10.00 

Lowrie,  James 5.00 

Loyd,    S.    S 5.00 

Logan,    Park   V 5.00 

Lovell    Manufacturing    Company...  25.00 

Long,   Cyrus  T 5.00 

Lawrenceville   Presb.    Sabbath   Sch.  25.60 

Loxley,   B.   Ogden    5.00 

Lowmans'   Sons 10.00 

Love,    Thomas    1.00 

Loucks,    Chas.   H 5.00 

Longshoremen  Assn.,  Local  No.  752  50.00 

Louis  Trauger  Trust 25.00 

Lutheran  Church,  Confluence,   Pa.  .  4.00 

Luettinger,    Wm 1.00 

Lousks,    Mary  A 10.00 

Marsh,   J.  W 10.00 

Marsh,   A.  L 1.00 

Matzene  &   Evans    5.00 

Malone,   Lee  L 25.00 

Maloney,   Mrs.  Wm 1.00 

Marshall,   W.   B 10.00 

Manevich,     Stanley     .50 

Maxwell,  W.  T.    (Tribune  Press)..  5.00 

Marwick,   Mitchell  &  Company....  5.00 

Martin,  Mrs.  Rev.  D.  C 10.00 

Martindale,  L.  V 5.00 

Mackey   Baking   Co.,    Thomas    R. .  .  25.00 

Manister  Iron   Works   Company.  .  .  25.00 

Maffett,   Mary  W 1.00 

Markle,  Emma  F 4.00 

Magnet  Furniture  Company 10.00 

Malsbergn,    Geo.    N 5.00 

Marble  &  Carew  Company. 


NAME.  AMOUNT. 

MacMurchy,    J.    A 8  5.00 

Maxwell,     M.     J 10.00 

Marshall,    John    .* 1.00 

Mackie  Grocer  Company,  Albert.  .  .  5.00 

Macfarlane,  James  R 10.00 

Maize,  Maj.  W.  R 5.00 

Maple  Avenue  Baptist   Church....  12.00 

Maglieri,    Michael    10.00 

Maglieri,  John .25 

Marks  &  Goldenson    1.00 

Marinelli,   G .25 

Mancino,    Giovanni    1.00 

Madison  Mercantile  Company 2.00 

Merchants  &  M.  Club,  Ellwood  City  23.00 

Mehard,    S.   S 10.00 

Meyer,  J.  J 5.00 

Myers,   John  S 10.00 

Mellon,  Thomas 1.00 

Meister,   Chas 2.00 

Merchants'    Association    100.00 

Meyer,    H.   H 10.00 

Myler,   Grant  A 5.00 

Mehard,    S.   S 10.00 

Metcalf,  Jr.,  Wm 25.00 

Metcalf,   Jr.,   Mrs.  Wm .  25.00 

Meeds   Company,  James  B 5.00 

Meehan,   W.   E 5.00 

Meyer,    A.    L 5.00 

Meyers,    John    B 5.00 

Meyer,    Rev.   Theo 4.25 

Methodist     Protestant     Church....  24.50 

Methodist  Epis.  Ch.,  Roscoe,  Pa.  .  .  2.50 

Myers,    John    5.00 

Miller,  Adelaide  S 5.00 

Miner,   W.    H 25.00 

Miller,  M.  G 1.00 

Michel,    C.    N 5.00 

Mills,  Geo.  A .50 

Miller,   J.   P.   K 25.00 

Miller,   Chas 1.00 

Miles,    Geo .50 

Mill  Creek  Presbyterian  Church.  .  .  10.00 
Miners  of  the  Madison,  Arona,   Se- 
wickley      and      Keystone      Shaft 
Mines    of    the    Keystone    Coal    & 

Coke  Co 750.00 

Miami  Coal  Company    20.00 

Miners   of  Marquette   Coal   Co 32.25 

Miller,    Mrs.    Lena    2.00 

Mitchell,   Mrs .50 

Miller,  L .25 

Missner   Brothers    1.00 

Mifflinburg     Bank     10.00 

Miners  of  Germania  Mine    28.00 

Moorhead,  Jr.,  John 10.00 

Morrow,   J.  C 25.00 

Moore,  Lee  C 25.00 

Moore,  Mrs.  A.  M 10.00 

Mosart   Club   Benefit    Concert 424.50 

Moorhead,  James  S 10.00 

Machling,  A.  A 5.00 

Morgan,   D.  W.    10.00 

Monongahela      River      Consolidated 

Coal   &   Coke   Company 1,000.00 

Morgan,  J.  N 2.00 

Mowry,    Robert    2.00 

Moving   Picture   Co.   Benefit   Enter- 
tainment,  Smithton 20.55 

Molter,   J .25 

Mt.  Moriah  Council  No.  2,  R.  &  S. 

M.  M 10.00 

Monaco,    Antonio    Di .50 

Morford,    R.   E .50 

Morris,  W.  C 1.00 

Morris,    F.    E 1.00 

Morrell,  Geo.  W 1.00 

Morrison,    L 5.00 

Monongahela  M.  E.  Church 15.00 

Mutchler,    Dennis    1.00 

Murray,    Thos 1.00 

Munn  Lumber  Company 20.00 

Murphy   Company,   G.   C 5.00 


NAME.  AMOUNT. 

Murphy,  Henry  J $  5.00 

M.  Me 2.00 

M.  H.  H 1.00 

McFarland  Lumber  Co.  employees.  15.00 

McCarthy,  John  F 2.00 

McMasters,    Jas.   V 25.00 

McNair,   John  W 10.00 

McClave-Brooks    Company 25.00 

McCandless,  S.  E 5.00 

Mcllvain,   Chas.  G 25.00 

McLaughlin,    Jas.    Edw 10  00 

McElwain,    W.   A 5.00 

McCandless   &    Sons,    W.    G 50.00 

McElwain,   Matilda    5.00 

McCartney,  J.  L 5.00 

McCann,   Mame    1.00 

McCarr,  J 2.00 

McClafferty,   Mrs.  Ellen 5  00 

McCaleb,    W.    S 5  00 

McCarthy,   W.  H 3.00 

McClay,    Mrs.    Samuel    10.00 

McClain,    F 5.00 

McCaffrey,  Chas 2.00 

McCleery  &  Company,  Richard  H.  .  4  00 

McClean,   R.  F 1.50 

McKean,  Mrs.  A.  C 1.00 

McMyler   Manufacturing   Company.  10.00 

McKenna  Bros.  Brass  Company.  .  .  25.00 

McKenzie,    W.    G 1.00 

McKeesport  Produce   Company.  .  5.00 

McKelvy,  W.  M 25.00 

McKee    Estate,    R.    W 5.00 

McPherson,   Donald  P 2.50 

McSweeney,    N 10.00 

McPherson,   S.  A 3.00 

McKee,   Mrs.  Francis  J 25.00 

McGrew,  Wm .50 

McKinney,  J.  1 5.00 

McBride,    J.   L 2.00 

McMichaels,  Mr.  and  Mrs 5.00 

McGill,  Martha  A.  K 10.00 

McClintock,    John    0 5.00 

McKnight,   W.   A 1.00 

McKnight  Hardware  Co.,   Samuel.  .  10.00 

McMiller,  Jos.  M 5.00 

McNichol,  J.  P.   &  Brother.  .  25  00 

McMillen,    H '.25 

McDirmind,   Geo.  H 1.00 

McDonald,    James     2.00 

McDowell   &   Company    10.00 

McColly,    E.   A 1.00 

McCort,   E.  A 2.00 

McDonald,    John    - 25.25 

McDonald,  A.  J 5.00 

McCloskey,    F.    P 5.00 

McSanth,   C.  A 5.00 

McGoldrick,   Frank    5.00 

McConway  &   Torley   Company.  .  .  .  100.00 

McCulloch,  W.  M 25.00 

McClurg  &   Company,  James 25.00 

McClure  Sons  &  Company,  G.  M.  .  .  25.00 

McClurg,    W.   H 25.00 

McCune,  Mrs.  Mary  H 25.00 

McCune,   P.  W 1.00 

McCune,   W 1.00 

McClure,   J.   H 5.00 

Nally,  John  M 3.00 

Nagel,  Charles 5.00 

National   Insurance    Company 100.00 

Nardiello,    Grario    .25 

Neumerster,   A.   M 1.00 

Newcomer,  H.  C 5.00 

Nevins,    C.    L 4.00 

New  Salem  Sunday  School 13.65 

New  Eureka  Carriage  &  Harn.  Co..  5.00 

New  Pittsburgh  Coal  Co.  Office  Emp.  50.00 
Nixon  Theatre  Benefit  (given  by  the 
Theatrical  Men  of  Pittsburgh  and 
Traveling  Companies  and  Artists 
playing  at  Pittsburgh  Theatres 
December  27th,  1907,  under  the 

direction    of    Thomas-   F.    Kirk.  2,261.95 


NAME.  AMOUNT. 

Nuttridge,    Thomas    $  1.00 

Nicholson,   William    5.00 

Nickel,    George    10.00 

Nwbaum,  John  H 2.00 

Ne.iss,   C.  J 1.00 

Nicholson,   Mrs.   Adam    25.00 

Nichols,   Jno.   B 1.00 

Nichols,   Mrs.  Martha    2.00 

Norris,   Francis   E 10.00 

Nobbs    Company,    Grant    C 10.00 

Noss,  Theo.  B 5.00 

Nottingham    Branch    of    Pittsburgh 

Coal    Company    Relief    Dept 20.00 

Null,  Jas.  H 1.00 

Oatman,    Henry    1.00 

Oakland  Presb.  S.  S.,  Pittsburg.  .  .  5.00 

Getting,   W.  H 5.00 

Olmstead,  Catherine  S 25.00 

Oehmler,  H.  O.  C 5.00 

Obendorf,  Edward 5.00 

Oncken,  John  P 1.00 

O'Neil  &    Company,    M 5.00 

O'Neil     &    Company,    J.    0 10.00 

Ober,    Chas.    F 5.00 

O'Neil,    Frances     5.00 

Owens  &  Ferguson    5.00 

Overholt,  B.  F 15.00 

Oberdich,   W.   E .50 

Ord.  of  B.  Conductors,  Div.  No.  326  2.00 
Order  Kokoal  (Darr  Mine  suffer- 
ers' share  of  fund  subscribed  by 
members  for  sufferers  by  Monon- 
gah,  Darr  and  Naomi  Mine  dis- 
asters)    414.59 

O'Brien,  W.  D 10.00 

Orringer,  Oscar 3.00 

Oliver,    C.   E 1.00 

Oliver,    Geo.  T 100.00 

Oil  Well  Supply  Company 100.00 

Osborn,   G.   E 1.00 

Osborn,    Mate     5.00 

Ocean   Coal   Company   Employees.  .  112.20 

O.  Y.  C.  P.  U.  of  Bethel  U.  P.  Ch.  11.50 

Osburn   &    Company,    B.    M 2.00 

Orr,   J.   H 5.00 

O.  E.  S.  Mosaic  Chapter  No.  50 — 

Benefit    Entertainment    35.25 

O.   of  E.    S.   Lorenena   Orr  Chapter 

No.    18    10.00 

Parley,   John    10.00 

Park,  D.  E 100.00 

Paul,    Mrs.  John    10.00 

Pratt,   W.   D 1.00 

Patterson,  A.  H 10.00 

Patterson,    J.    G 50.00 

Patrick,   F.  A 1.00 

Pappert,    William    10.00 

Platt,    W.   G „ 10.00 

Patterson,   Peter    5.00 

Parken,  W.  F 5.00 

Paff,  George  A 5.00 

Patterson,  Agnes  A 5.00 

Parshall,  W.  J 50.00 

Palmer,  J.  E 10.00 

Parry,   W.  W 5.00 

Patterson,   Mrs.  P.  M 5.00 

Parise,    D .25 

Paden,   Thos .50 

Peoples   Loan   Company    25.00 

Pemmell,    Thomas    5.00 

Pershing,    Helen   B 5.00 

Petee,  J.  E 2.00 

Petty,    Mrs.    L .55 

Phelan,  Jas.  B 10.00 

Prendergast   Company    25.00 

Pender,   John   C 25.00 

Presbyterian  Church,  Dubois,  Pa.  .  11.00 

Pew,    J.    N 50.00 

Pease,    I.    M 2.00 

Peterson,  Geo 1.00 

Perryopolis    W.    C.    T.    U ..  10.00 


NAME.  AMOUNT. 

Presbyterian  Church    $          25.00 

Peairs,    W.   F 5.00 

Petters,  D .50 

Pittsburgh  Valve  Foundry  &  Con- 
struction Co 100.00 

Pittsburgh  Union  Stock  Yards  Co..  100.00 

Phillips  Mine   &   Mill   Supply  Co..  100.00 

Phillips,   Elias    5.00 

Pitcairn,    Bobert    25.00 

Pittsburgh  Plate  Glass  Company..  250.00 

Price,  W.   G 10.00 

Pitcairn,  Edward 10.00 

Pillsbury-Washburn     F.      M.     Mfg. 

Co.,    Ltd 5.00 

Pittsburg    Brewing    Company 100.00 

Pittsburg  Provision  &  Packing  Co.  100.09 

Pitts,    E.   W 10.00 

Pizzano,  Angelo .50 

Pittsburgh  Gage   &    Sup.    Company.  250.00 

Pittsburgh  &   Eastern  Coal  Co ....  100.00 

Pittsburgh  &  Erie  Coal  Company..  100.00 

Pittsburgh   Malleable   Iron  Co 25.00 

Pitcairn,    Bobert    5.00 

Phillippi,  Max 5.00 

Pride  of  Clearfield  Lodge,  No.  47.  .  10.00 

Pilling,   Sr.,  Geo.  P 8.13 

Pie,     Trocaccioli     .25 

Priolo,   Antonio    .25 

Prince,    J.   W 1.00 

Phillips,   D.   K 5.00 

Pittsburgh   Coal    Company 20,000.00 

Pittsburgh  Gazette-Times  Fund — 
Darr  Mine  Sufferers'  share  of 
Fund  raised  for  sufferers  from 
Monongah  and  Darr  Mine  disas- 
ters    55.00 

Pittsburgh  Gazette-Times  Fund — 
Darr  Mine  Sufferers'  share  of 


fund    raised      for      sufferers      by 
Naomi  and  Darr  Mine  disasters. 


9.13 


27 


Pittsburgh    Gazette-Times   Fund — 
fund    raised      for      sufferers      by 

Darr  Mine  disaster    422.16 

Pittsburgh    Gazette-Times   Fund — 
Darr   Mine    sufferers'     share      of 
fund  raised  for   the   sufferers   by 
the   Naomi,   Monongah  and  Darr 

Mine  disasters 93.44 

Porter,  H.  K.  Co 100.00 

Postmaster  and   Employes,    Sharon, 

Pa 13.00 

Pryor,  W.   S 3.00 

Pollard,    Thomas    2.00 

Plymouth,  Pa.,  Borough  &  Township 
Benefit  Concert  and  Miscella- 
neous Contributions  642.89 

Provost,  B.  P 1.00 

•Pittsburgh  Coal   Company   Betail 

Yards    Employees    112.00 

Pittsburgh  Coal  Company  General 

Office    Employees     524.50 

Protected  Home  Circle — 

Bennett    Circle    No.    120 5.00 

Coraopolis    Circle    No.    352 2.00 

Hill   Top  Circle  No.   122 2.00 

Homewood  Circle  No.  119    15.00 

South    Side   Circle  No.    112 5.00 

Purtill,  Michael 5.00 

Quinn,    P.    J 10.00 

Bamsey,   Jenet  E 5.00 

Bamsey,    O .25 

Baithel,   H 5.00 

Bamborger,    W.   K 5.00 

Bandicel,   Loreto    .25 

Beformed  Church    18.25 

Bepublican  Printing  Company   ....  5.00 

Beed,   C.   L 2.00 

Beed,   Mrs.  Emma  B 5.00 

Beed,  Dr.  I.  B 5.00 

Bennie,    Chas 5.00 

Beese,   A.   B 2.00 

Beid,   A.   B 5.00 


NAME. 


AMOUNT. 


NAME. 


AMOUNT. 


Reamer,   W.  D $  5.00 

Remaley,  W.  J 5.00 

Reiser,    G 3.00 

Rhea,    C.   J 1.00 

Rendine,   R.   V 2.00 

Reinhold,    Mrs.    Bruno    1.00 

Reed,    F.    0 5.00 

Rechtin  &  Bro.,  Louis  E 1.00 

Reiss    Coal   Company,    C 100.00 

Ritts,   Bud  V 1.00 

Ritchey,    Francis  B 10.00 

Ritchey,  W.  J 25.00 

Ritchey,   Ellen   C 10.00 

Rieger,  Chris 10.00 

Rich,  Jr.,  G.  Barrett   1.00 

Rihn,  Edw.  J 10.00 

Richwine,  Mrs.  Win.  A 1.00 

Rihn,  Mrs.  C.  P 3.00 

Rihn,    Thoe.    L 1.00 

Rihn,  Leo.  J 1.00 

Riverside  Tailoring  Company 10.00 

Rice.   John  P 1.00 

Riesenman,  John  M 5.00 

Ridgway   Dynamo  &   Engine   Co...  100.00 

Rieck  Company,  The  Edw.  E 10.00 

Rodd,    Thomas     20.00 

Robb,   Jno.  A 5.00 

Robertson,    P 3.00 

Ross,    Charles    2.00 

Rosenberg,    R 2.00 

Robison,  John  W 5.00 

Routledge,    S.   J 10.00 

Robbins,  Jos 10.00 

Rosenberg,   Max    100 

Rothberg,  M.  E 2.00 

Robinson,   F.   M 5.00 

Robinson,   Mrs.   Nancy    5.00 

Roceretos  Orchestra    3.00 

Robinson,   Wm 5.00 

Rothenbach,    Fred 5.00 

Robbins,    Leon  J ,.  5.00 

Rose  &  Fisher 10.00 

Robinson  &  Company,   Charles  C.  .  .  .  1.00 

Rogers,   S.  W 1.00 

Rogan,    Z.   C 1.00 

Roe    Stephens   Mfg.   Company 5.00 

Rosedale  Foundry  &  Machine  Co..  10.00 

Root,    Frederick   W 2.00 

Rosensteel  &  Son,  Chas.  N 5.00 

Robbins,   A 1.00 

Rosemond,  Fred  L 25.00 

Rodibaugh,    S.   D 1^00 

Russell,   Jr.,   R ; 2.00 

Rush,  J 1.00 

Ruehl,   John  H.   F 5.00 

Rudolph,    John     5.00 

Russell,    M.   D.,   John   McD 5.00 

Rutsek,    Peter    50.00 

Russell,    J.   P 5.00 

Rynd,  Margaret 5.00 

St.    Paul's    Conference     Society     of 

St.  Vincent  De  Paul,  Pittsburgh.  50.00 

Sandusky,    Ohio,    Ladies   of 207.24 

St.   Joseph's  Church,  Mt.  Oliver.  .  .  46.60 
St.   Lawrence's     Episcopal    Church, 

Osceola  Mills,  Pa .  3.26 

St.  James  R.  C.  Church 55.00 

St.   Stephen's      Episcopal      Church, 

McKeesport,     Pa 11.60 

St.  James   Episcopal    Mission,    Mc- 
Keesport,   Pa 5.00 

St.   Andrew's     Episcopal     Mission, 

McKeesport,   Pa 5.00 

St.  Vincent  DePaul  Society,  Church 

of    the    Epiphany    25.00 

St.   Luke's   Episcopal   Church    ....  24.64 

St.  Phillips  Church,  Crafton,  Pa.  .  .  65.00 

St.  John's  Chapel    4.00 

S.  &  A.  Society .50 

Straight  Creek  Coal  &  Coke  Co...  10.00 

Shaffer,    Israel    1.00 


St.   Peter's    Episcopal    Church,    Un- 

iontown,  Pa $  30.00 

St.  John's    R.    C.    Church,     Union- 
town,  Pa 48.00 

St.   Peter's  P.  E.  Church 100.00 

Si.  Barnabas      Episcopal      Church, 

Tarentum,  Pa 5.00 

St.   Vincent  DePaul  Society,  Bloom- 
field  Council    5.00 

St.  John's  E.  Church 1.88 

St.  John's   P.    E.    Church 4.50 

St.  Andrew's      Episcopal      Church, 

New  Kensington,   Pa 3.25 

St.   James'    Memorial    Church 3.13 

St.  John's  Church,   Franklin,   Pa.  .  23.16 

Stauffer,    Walter    F 2.00 

Staab,     Sr.,    Gottfried     10.00 

St.   Mary's  Greek  Catholic  Congre- 
gation,   New    Salem,    Pa 41.70 

St.   Vincent   DePaul    Society 10.00 

St.   Andrew's  Church    46.50 

Stauffer  &   Company,  J.  R 100.00 

Shaner,    D 1.00 

Strasser,   G .25 

St.    Savonis  Church,  Dubois,  Pa...  13.85 

St.   Peter's   Germ.   Lutheran   Ch...  13.00 

Stauft,  D.  B 10.00 

St.    Vincent    DePaul    Conference    of 

St.  Michael's  Parish 10.00 

Saltsburg   Coal   Mining   Company.  .  46.69 

Shaw,   Wilson  A 25. UO 

St.   Wendelin   Church    20.00 

St.  Joseph's    Church,    Renova 7.62 

St.   Mary's    Church     43.85 

St.  Vincent    DePaul    Sacred    Heart 

Consistory    50.00 

St.   John's    E.     Church     14.00 

Schambeig,    Sol 2.00 

St.   Xavier's  Alumni,   Beatty,    Pa..  10.00 

Slaine,    Geo 5.00 

Stauffer,  J.   S 5.00 

St.    Mary's    Guild .  5.00 

Shafer,    C.  A 2.50 

St.   Peter's  Slovac,  L.  C 10.00 

Schatz,   Amelia    5.00 

Schaffer,    C.   A 5.00 

St.  Peter's  and  St.  Paul's  Church.  20.00 

St.   Vincent  Parish,  Beatty,  Pa.  ...  66.00 
St.   Mary's  Roman  Catholic  Church, 

Rankin,  Pa 6.00 

St.   Pius'   Church,  McKeesport,  Pa.  25.00 

St.   Mary's  Church,  Patton,  Pa.  ...  40.00 

St.   John  Baptist  Society 2.00 

Swanger,   Peter    10.00 

Shaw,   Lorenz    1.00 

See,  Lee 5.00 

Swede    Hill    Bible     Class,     Greens- 
burg,   Pa 2.00 

Sterling    Oil    Company    2.00 

Sleeth,    Prof.   G.    M 2.00 

Schweiburz,  A.  L 5.00 

Stewart  &  Company,  J.   M 10.00 

Spreyer,  Peter 2.00 

Schenk,  Wilbur 10.00 

Seiler  Company,  John    5.00 

Stephenson,   Elizabeth  Y 100.00 

Speer,   C.   M 3.00 

Snyder,   George    5.00 

Schein,    Saul    3.00 

Sheller,    F.    N 2.00 

Stenger,  Mrs.  B.  J 5.00 

Sheehan,  P.  J 5.00 

Seymour,    John    5.00 

Swenson,  John 5.00 

Semple,  Frank 25.00 

Sykes,  John  M 2.50 

Stevenson   &   Foster   Company 50.00 

Sheldon,  J.  P 1.00 

Speer,   A.   M.,   M.  D 15.00 

Speer,    John   Z 25.00 

Schell,  John  E 10.00 


N  A  ME. 


AMOU  XT. 


NAME. 


AMOUNT. 


Skelley,  H.  C.  and  J.   K  .........  5  10.00 

Sellers,    P.   J  ...................  5.00 

Stephen  Bayard  Lodge    ..........  25.00 

Stewart,  H.   M  .................  20.00 

Semple,    J.   B  ..................  5.00 

Scheidenhelm,    A.    G  ............  10.00 

Seifert,    Herman    ...............  2.00 

Stewart,    Robert   E  ..............  5.00 

Sheridan,   A.   L  .................  1.00 

Sheldon  Dry  Goods  Company  .....  50.00 

St.  Wendelinus,  No.  162   .........  10.00 

Slavonic  Assembly,   No.   31  .......  10.00 

Sheppard,    E.   F  ................  5.00 

Steen,    A.   B  ...................  5.00 

Steen,   J.  B  ....................  5.00 

Sternherz,  V  ...................  2.00 

Stefano,  Guiseppe    ..............  .50 

Steffey,   H.   F  ..................  .25 

Schweekart,   Jul  A  ..............  10.00 

Sederski,   Jos.  1  ................  1.00 

Sheff,  R.  E  ....................  .25 

Senibower,  J.  M.,  Collected  by....  6.40 

Steel   Car  Forge   Co.   Employees...  7.50 

Smith,    C.    C  ...................  5.00 

Sipe  &   Company,   James  B  .......  15.00 

Schmitt,    Rudolph    ..............  10.00 

Schnitzer,  Mrs.  B  ...............  1.00 

Singer,  W.  H  ..................  100.00 

Spigelmier  &  Company,  A.  J  ......  5.00 

Spindle,  B.  L  ..................  5.00 

Stimmel,  W.   S  ................  25.00 

Smith,  Robert  W  ...............  10.00 

Spittingen,    G.    T  ...............  1.00 

Sisters  of  Mercy,  N.  S.,  Pittsburgh  1.00 

Schmidt,    Geo  ..................  5.00 

Schmidt,   A  ....................  5.00 

Smith,    J.    C  ...................  10.00 

Smith,    W.    G  ..................  1.00 

Springer,    Dr.    C.    M  .............  10.00 

Swift  &  Company,  North  Side  Br.  .  50.00 

Stiffey  &   Sons,    S.   D  ............  5.00 

Shiels  &   Company,   Chas.  F  ......  3.00 

Schmidt,   Dr.   O.   L  ..............  10.00 

Spring  Garden  Boro  Public  School.  8.15 

Smith,  D.  A  ...................  1.00 

Smithton  Dramat.  Club  Ben.   Conct.  76.00 

Soisson,  A.  D  ..................  10.00 

So.  Greensburg  M.  E.  Sunday  Sch.  7.26 

Sanders,  Lizzie  C  ...............  2.00 

Shoemacker,    D.    W  .............  5.00 

Scott,  Oliver  S  .................  5.00 

Snow,    Neil  W  .................  10.00 

Snow,    George     .................  5.00 

Solomon   &    Company,    K  ..........  25.00 

Stotz,   Edward    .................  10.UO 

Stoebener,   Geo.  H  ..............  5.00 

Sommerville,    G.    A  .............  5.00 

Stockhauser,  Joseph    ............  5.00 

Stoner,   Marcus  W  ..............  5.00 

Stone,  P.  R  ....................  5.00 

Stoner,    J.    M  ..................  25.00 

Slov.  Kotol  Podp.  Ocist  Panny 

Marie    ......................  1.00 

Sommerfield   Mach.   Mfg.   Co  ......  5.00 

Stollsteimer,    L  .................  3.00 

Southern  Roller  Stave  &  Head.  Co.  10.00 

Somers,   Fitler  &  Todd  Company.  .  50.00 

Stone,    Nat  ....................  5.00 

Society  of  St.  Anne,  St.  Wences- 

laus   Bohemian    Congregation....  10.00 

Short,    John    ...................  .25 

Shofnosky,    Alex  ...............  10.00 

Soppitt,    Edw  ..................  5.00 

Slovensky,   I.   Kitolicky    .........  5.00 

Schmucker,   Joseph    .............  3.18 

Schmucker  &   Gammeter  ..........  5.00 

Shummiskie,    Ludwig    ...........  .50 

Sunday  Sch.  Children  of  Cecil,  Pa..  10.33 

Schulze,  Frank  A  ...............  2.00 

Stnart,    James    C  ...............  10.00 

Strub,  Leonard  ................  1.00 


Stuart,    Edwin    S $  100.00 

Shunk   Plow   Company    5.00 

Sutter,  J.  J 5.00 

Schluederberg,    George   W 50.00 

Sutman,  H.  C.  &   Company 10.00 

Sunday  School  Peter  &  Paul's  Ch.  71.50 

Shuman,   Jesse  J 5.00 

Shutz,  A.  J 5.00 

Sunday  School  S.  Class  First  Swed- 
ish Evang.   Church    2.00 

Sundstrom,    Newton    2.00 

Suter,   Mike    2.00 

Shuman,  J.   E.   T 14.75 

Stybe,    Dr.    C.    J 5.00 

S 5.00 

Taylor,  E.  J 50.00 

Tack  Bros 5.00 

Tanney,   W.   H 1.00 

Tabernacle  Presbyterian   Church...  60.00 

Traverse  City  Gas  Company 2.00 

Thayer,    H.    N.    Company »       1.00 

Taylor,   M.  H 100.00 

Taylor,  Henry    5  00 

Traeger,    Charles  H 5.00 

Taylor,    William    .50 

Traffic  Club  of  Pittsburgh 50.00 

Tyler,    C.    A 2.00 

Tener,   Annie   F 50.00 

Tener,   Stephen  W 10.00 

Teurney,   William    1.00 

Treat,  Charles  Orrin 5.00 

Tillinghast,   Z.  H 10.00 

Tinder,    Samuel    1.00 

Trinity  Lutheran   Sunday   School.  .  25.00 

Trinity  P.  E.  Church    42.10 

Trinity  Church,  New  Haven,  Pa ...  5.20 

Tribune,   The    63.80 

Taylorstown  M.   E.   Church — 

Junior  Missionary  Society 25.00 

Ten  Broek,  Gerrit  E 5.00 

Thompson,  J.  V 100.00 

Thomson,  Cora  A 20.00 

Todt,   John  F 2.00 

Torley,    Mrs.    Francis   B 100.00 

Townsend,    Ed   P 10.00 

Thompson,    Robert    5.00 

Thomas,   Barnett  A 5.00 

Thornton,  Wm.  P 1.00 

Thompson,    R.   V 5.00 

Thomas,  Rev.  J.  R 5.00 

Thomas,    Lydia   T 1.00 

Tyrone  Presb.  S.  Sch.,  Dawson,  Pa.  12.00 

Tonawanda  Iron  &   Steel  Company.  25.00 

Toft,   George  N 2.00 

Typographical    Union    No.    7 25.00 

Thompson,   W.   B 10.00 

Todd,    George    1.00 

Tolomei  Domenico  Di '        .25 

Trump,     Isabel     10.00 

Troutman,   A.  E 10.00 

Umstead,    Jacob    1.00 

Ulrich,   W.  W 5.00 

United  E.  S.  School,  Salisbury,  Pa.  5.00 

United   States  Sanitary  Mfg.   Co. .  .  25.00 

United  States  Life  Insurance  Co.  .  5.00 

Union  Fishing  Club    25.00 

Ulrich,  S.  H 5.00 

United    Brethren     Sunday      School, 

Wilkinsburg,  Pa 11.17 

Union  League  Club  of  Allegheny.  .  10.00 

United  Real   Estate   Company 20.00 

United  Presbyterian  Church,  Union- 
town,  Pa 15.00 

United  Engineering  &  Fdry.  Co...  100.00 
United    Brethren     Sunday     School, 

Arona,  Pa 9.47 

Unitarian  Church,   Marietta,   O.  .  .  .  4.00 

United  Presbyterian    Church 3.00 


29 


NAME. 

United  Mine  Workers  of  America — 

District  No.   5    $ 

District  No.   12    

United  Mine  Workers  of  America. 
United  Mine  Workers  of  America — 

Local    Union    No.    422    

Charles  Demierbe  L.  U.  No.  1319 
Felix  McCartney  L.  U.  No.   1352 

Hugh  Campbell  L.  U.  No.  795.  . 

Joe   Bendle   L.   U.   No.   539 

Local  Union  No.   1198    

Local  Union  No.   1214    

Local  Union  No.  2148    

Local   Union  No.   1188    

Local  Union  No.     583    

Local  Union  No.  2353    

Local  Union  No.      854    

Local  Union  No.   1446    

Local  Union  No.  1481    

Local  Union  No.   1982    

Local  Union  No.  2021    

Local  Union  No.  2144    

Local  Union  No.   1344    

Local  Union  No.      849    

Local  Union  No.      349    

Local  Union  No.  2355    

Local  Union  No.   1382    

Local  Union  No.   1718    

Local  Union  No.  2254 

Local  Union  No.     235    

Local  Union  No.  2168    

Local  Union  No.   1241    

Local  Union  No.   2244    

Local  Union  No.      168    

Local  Union  No.   1973    

Local  Union  No.  2049    

Local  Union  No.        59    

Local  Union  No.  2272    

Local  Union  No.   1924    

Local  Union  No.  2102    

Local  Union  No.  2050    

Local  Union  No.   1826    

Local  Union  No.  2086    

Local  Union  No.  1344    

Local  Union  No.     818    

Local  Union  No.  2354    

Local  Union  No.        51    

Local  Union  No.   1943    

Local  Union  No.   1812    

Local  Union  No.   1447    

Local  Union  No.   1976    

Local  Union  No.   1355    

Local  Union  No.   1712    

Local  Union  No.   1201    

Local  Union  No.   1361    

Local  Union  No.        79    

Local  Union  No.     274    

Local   Union  No.   2087    

Local  Union  No.  2264 

Local  Union  No.   1648    

Local  Union  No.      615    

Local  Union  No.   1892    

Local  Union  No.      761    

Local  Union  No.   1678    

Local  Union  No.   1173    

Local  Union  No.     408 

Local  Union  No.  2303    

Local  Union  No.  2364    

Vance,   Glenn  G 

Vanderbilt    Sunday    School    ...... 

Valerio,     Giovanni     

Valerio,    Tony    

Valley   Presbyterian   Church 

Verona  Tool  Works    

Vilsack,  W.  W 

Vienna  Grange  No.  1537,  Ohio.  .  .  . 
Vinton   Colliery   Co.,    Employees.  .  . 

Von   Arx,    Emil    

Ward,   Miss    

Wall,    Jo 

Watt,   G.  F 


AMOUNT.  NAME  AMOUNT 

Walthour,  W.  J.   .                                 .  .8  1  00 

700.00  Ward,    Mary  C 5.00 

1,000.00  Waag,  Mrs.  Rosa    5.00 

1,000.00  Wardrop,    Robt    10.00 

Ward  Bros 5  Of> 

40.00  Wanetick,    M 1.00 

15.00  Wallace,  Augusta  H 11  00 

20.00  Watterson,  A.  V.  D 10.00 

75.00  Walsh,  Mrs.  M 1.00 

40.00  Wattles  &  Sons,  W.  W 50  00 

24.00  Walsh,   Jr.,   Morris    5  00 

35.00  Walsh,   Thos.   A 5  00 

78.00  Walsh,    Morris    5.00 

15.00  Walsh,   J.   V 5.00 

10.00  Wyman,  James  G 15  00 

5.00  Wattles,  W.  Warren 5.00 

75.00  Wallace,  Jno.  L 1.00 

75.00  Wainwright,   Abigail  E 25.00 

5.00  Ward,   John    10.00 

5.00  Wagner,    Fred    5.00 

20.00  Walker,  Joseph    1.00 

25.00  Waynesburg   South  Ward   School.  .  7.00 

2.00  Wallis,   W.   L 10.00 

25.00  Washington  Coal  &  Coke  Co 1,000.00 

10.00  Wachter,    F.   J 1.00 

10.00  Waddell,  W.  W 5.00 

25.00  Ward-Sommerville  Co.,   Inc 5.00 

40.00  Welles,    Charlotte  R 5.00 

2.00  Weninger,   E.   E 5.00 

50.00  Weber,  H.  C 5.00 

10.00  West,    D.    K 10  00 

10.00  Wells,  C.  Penfield 2.00 

20.00  Weiler  Bros 10.00 

25.00  Western   Savings  &  Deposit  Bank.  10.00 

10.00  Weber,   S.   C 25.00 

10.00  Whysseier,  J.  F 5.00 

10.00  Weiss,   Mathias    100.00 

2.50  Wehner,    Frederick    10.00 

20.00  Weddell,    George    1.00 

115.15  Weir    Grocery    Company     1.00 

15.00  Westminster      Presbyterian     S.     S., 

10.00            Greensburg,  Pa 28.70 

5.00  Welty  and  others,  H.  T 20.00 

1.00  Wehrle,   Charles  J 1.00 

5.00  West   Newton  Relief   Committee.  .  .  191.90 

20.00  Westfield  Presbyterian  Church.  .  .  .  32.50 

75.00  Weisser,   J 1.00 

35.00  Westmoreland  Bg.   Co 2.00 

10.00  W.   C.  T.  U.,  Burgettstown 11.00 

10.00  Wellington   Hotel   employees    15.00 

10.00  Widow     5.00 

15.00  Wilson,  Dr.  Loyal  W 5.00 

35.00  Wilson  Bros.  Lumber  Co 50.00 

10.00  Wilson  Produce   Co 10.00 

15.00  Wilson,   A.   &   S 25.00 

45.00  White,    Edward    10.00 

25.00  Wilkinsburg  Royal  Arch,  Chap.  285  30.00 

80.00  Willson,    John   A 10.00 

25.00  Wiegel,  John  C 10.00 

50.00  Wittmer,    W.    L 5.00 

88.50  Wilson,    C.   J 10.00 

40.00  Williamson,   Mr.   and  Mrs.  Jas.  .  .  .  5.00 

25.00  Wickiner,    Henry    2.00 

25.00  White,  F.  J 1.00 

5.00  Wright,   T.  W 5.00 

35.00  Williams,   W.   E 1.00 

10.00  Williams,  Mrs.  M.  F 5.00 

25.00  Winter,    Edward    5.00 

5.00  Wilson  &  Grable '  10.00 

14.57  White  Mills  Conclave  No.  499....  2.00 

2.00  Wright,  G.  K 10.00 

.50  Williams  Co.,   Joseph    10.00 

14.50  Wilson,  John    25.00 

50.00  Wilson,    R.    J 5.00 

50.00  White   Dental   Mfg.    Co.,    S.    S 50.00 

16.75  Witherspoon,   Laura  J .50 

344.26  Wieler,    G.   A 5.00 

5.00  Wiley,  C.  S .50 

1.00  White,   Geo.  H 5.00 

35.00  Williamsburg  Sunday  School 5.60 

5.00  Wolf,    Rev.   R.   C .  5.00 

30 


NAME 


AMOUNT 


Woolridge,  N.  S $  5.00 

Woodwell,  John  and  Bertha  M.  .  .  .  10.00 

Wolff,    Lydia    C 5.00 

Woodward,  Jas.  F 10.00 

Wonsettler,   C.  E 3.00 

Woodford,  W.  L 5.00 

Woods,  J.  H 10.00 

Wolfe,  R.  W 1.00 

Workmen  of  Black  &   Laird 11.00 

Woods,   Lawrence  C 5.00 

W.    S.   B 1.00 

W.   M.   W 1.00 

Ypsilanti  Reed  Furniture  Co.    Emp.  18.00 

Tester,  P.  0 5.00 

Young   People's   Society  of   St.   Pe- 
ter's German  Lutheran  Church.  .  12.50 
Young  People's  Christian  Union  of 
United  Presbyterian  Church,   La- 
trobe,  Pa 19.04 


NAME  AMOUNT 

Young,   Geo.  T $  2.00 

Young,  Win.  F 1.00 

Young  Ladies'     Sodality     St.     Paul 

Ev.  Lutheran  Church    15.50 

Young,    Charles    5.00 

Young  Ladies'  Sodality  of  St.  Wen- 

ceslaus  Church    10.00 

Young    People's.   Christian     Union 

First  U.  P.  Church 12.40 

Zang,   Rinehardt  M 5.00 

Zeller,    Albert    T.,    M.    D 5.00 

Zelienople  &  Harmony  Pres.  Ch. .  .  13.26 

Zimmer,   J.   H 1.00 

Z .25 


Total $97,062.53 


APPENDIX. 


Although  not  strictly  germane  to  this  report,  and  without  attempt- 
ing a  complete  statement,  it  seems  appropriate  in  this  connection,  as  well 
as  important,  to  record  some  particulars  as  to  several  coal  mine  disasters, 
and  the  public  relief -funds  distributed  to  the  dependents  of  the  victims, 
while  the  information  is  still  available. 

The  Avondale  Colliery  disaster,  on  September  6th,  1869,  was  caused 
by  fire  rushing  up  the  single  shaft  and  burning  the  head-house.  The  108 
entombed  miners  and  2  rescuers  were  suffocated.  It  led  to  the  passing  of 
an  act  toy  the  next  State  Legislature,  regulating  coal-mine  ventilation 
and  requiring  two  shafts  and  the  fan  system  for  each  mine.  Not  includ- 
ing the  dependents  living  in  Europe,  whose  number  could  not  be  learned, 
there  were  72  widows  and  their  153  children  living  near  the  colliery. 
About  $155,825.10  were  systematically  distributed  by  the  Avondale  Mine 
Eelief  Committee  of  Plymouth. 

"The  Twin  Shafts "  Colliery  disaster,  at  Pittston,  Pa.,  on  June  28th, 
1896,  was  caused  by  a  "squeeze,"  or  sinking  of  the  rock  strata  above 
the  coal  measures,  by  which  58  miners  perished,  leaving  124  dependent 
widows  and  children.  A  relief  fund  of  $74,037.89  net  and  supplies  esti- 
mated at  $2,800.00  were  distributed  on  a  plan,  extending  over  a  period 
of  ten  years,  at  an  expense  in  handling  of  $1,250.00. 

The  Harwick  Mine  explosion,  at  Cheswick,  near  Pittsburgh,  occurred 
January  21st,  1904,  when  184  were  killed  and  but  one  escaped  alive. 
There  were  95  dependent  widows  with  228  children  and  56  other  de- 
pendents, making  a  total  of  379  dependents,  to  whom  a  fund  of  $110,247.93 
net  was  distributed.  The  expense  of  disbursement  was  $1,466.97.  Of  this 
fund,  Mr.  Andrew  Carnegie  gave  $50,000,  under  his  offer  to  duplicate, 
dollar  for  dollar,  the  public  contributions. 

By  the  Monongah  Mine  explosion,  at  Fairmont,  West  Va.,  December 
6th,  1907,  362  miners  were  killed  (including  3  rescuers).  They  left  801 
dependents,  consisting  of  136  widows  and  widowed  mothers  in  the 
United  States  and  106  in  Europe;  and  of  their  children,  318  in  the 
United  States  and  182  in  Europe,  and  of  other  dependents  18  in  United 
States  and  51  in  Europe.  To  these  a  relief  fund  of  $149,071.99  net  was 
distributed.  The  expenses  of  collection  were  $2,810.89  and  of  distribu- 
tion $2,378.84. 

31 


A  mine-explosion  in  the  Naomi  Mine  of  the  United  Coal  Company, 
near  Belle  Vernon,  Pa.,  on  December  1st,  1907,  killed  34  miners.  Of  these, 
18  left  widows  (10  in  United  States  and  8  in  Europe),  with  29  children 
(12  in  United  States  and  17  in  Europe);  16  were  unmarried,  leaving 
42  fathers  and  mothers  and  other  dependents  (30  in  Europe  and  12  in 
America).  The  total  number  of  dependents  was  89.  The  United  Coal 
Company  declined  to  appeal  to  the  public  for  assistance  and  assumed  to 
themselves  the  task  of  aiding  the  dependents.  They  paid  two-thirds  of 
the  expense  of  burying  the  dead  ($1,700.00),  and  distributed  $13,500. 
Besides  this,  the  Naomi  Belief  Committee  of  Fayette  City  paid  over  in 
life  insurance  benefits  $3,400.00,  that  is  $100  for  each  of  the  34  men 
killed.  The  Woman 's  Relief  Committee  of  Fayette  City  also  paid  $200.00 
to  each  of  the  10  widows,  resident  in  the  United  States,  besides  dis- 
tributing a  considerable  amount  of  family  supplies. 

One  hundred  and  sixty-one  men  were  killed  by  an  explosion  in  the 
Marianna  Mine  of  the  Pittsburg-Buffalo  Company  at  Marianna,  Wash- 
ington County,  Pa.,  November  28th,  1908,  leaving  56  widows  and  112 
children  residing  in  America,  and  other  "dependents  the  number  of 
which  is  unknown,  residing  in  Europe.  A  fund  of  $34,715.22  was  con- 
tributed by  the  public  for  the  relief  of  the  sufferers,  of  which  the  Pitts- 
burg-Buffalo  Company  gave  $5,000.00,  and  is  being  administered  by  a 
Belief  Committee  formed  at  Washington,  Pa. 

By  an  explosion  in  the  Lick  Branch  Mine,  near  Bluefield,  W.  Va., 
December  29th,  1908,  51  miners  perished.  Again  on  January  12th,  1909, 
two  weeks  later,  another  explosion  cost  66  more  lives.  Of  the  117  vic- 
tims, 7  were  unidentified,  57  were  unmarried,  leaving  as  dependents  2 
fathers  and  8  widowed  mothers;  53  left  widows  with  109  children.  Total 
number  of  dependents  receiving  aid,  162.  A  relief  fund  of  $24,247.50  net 
was  distributed  by  the  Lick-Branch  Mine  Belief  Committee.  The  expense 
of  handling  the  Belief  Fund,  $2,461.16. 

By  a  fire,  which  burned  the  buildings  over  the  shaft,  wrecked  the 
fan-system  and  set  fire  to  the  coal  in  the  mine,  operated  by  the  Saint 
Paul  Coal  Company,  at  Cherry,  111.,  on  November  13th,  1909,  258  miners 
were  suffocated.  The  number  of  widows,  171;  number  of  children,  445; 
number  of  other  dependents,  25.  The  total  number  of  dependents  re- 
ceiving relief,  641.  The  total  amount  of  relief  funds  contributed,  $285,- 
000.00.  The  amount  expended  to  June  20th,  1910,  about  $30,000.00. 
The  Cherry  Belief  Commission  has  just  been  organized.  They  propose 
to  distribute  the  balance  of  the  fund  to  the  dependents  partly  in  lump 
sum  allotments,  but  chiefly  in  pension  payments.  It  is  expected  that, 
under  this  arrangement,  each  family,  where  there  are  young  children, 
can  be  carried  until  the  children  are  old  enough  to  support  themselves 
and  the  family.  In  addition  to  benefits  from  the  general  relief  fund, 
the  Saint  Paul  Coal  Company  paid  to  each  widow  a  compensation  of 
$1,800  on  the  basis  of  the  British  Compensation  Law,  viz.,  three  times 
the  annual  wage  of  the  miner.  It  is  at  present  too  early  to  give  any 
but  a  partial  report. 


32 


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