NEWSPAPERS: BURLEY BOYS' DEATHS DUE TO RECKLESS SHOOTING, THE CORONER'S JURY DECIDES 1919, Connellsville, Fayette Co., PA Contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by Patricia Homlish. m2mhomlish@ezol.com USGENWEB NOTICE: Printing this file by non-commercial individuals and libraries is encouraged, as long as all notices and submitter information is included. Any other use, including copying files to other sites requires permission from the submitters PRIOR to uploading to any other sites. We encourage links to the state and county table of contents. Friday, February 21, 1919, The Daily Courier, Connellsville Pa. This article is not complete. A entire section is torn out, but I am sure the article would be on microfish somewhere. BURLEY BOYS' DEATHS DUE TO RECKLESS SHOOTING, THE CORONER'S JURY DECIDES One of the Victims of Tragedy Near Sodom on the Evening of February 7 Believes Gunman Was Member of Railroad Shifting Crew That Albert and William Burley came to their death by gunshot wounds inflected through the reckless shooting of Harry Halley and that from the evidence we recommend that the said Harry Hilley be held to await the action of the grand jury and the Juvenile court, was the finding of the jury which this afternoon probed the killing of one of the boys and the fatal wounding of the other along the Youghiogheny river near the old Sodom shops the evening of February 7. Save for the testimony of the mother, Mrs. Jerry Burley, there was no evidence of intent on the part of the Halley boy, who is now in jail in Uniontown. Several other witnesses declared the boy was just shooting into the river from a pile of ties along the bank of the stream, while one said he was shooting at telegraph poles, tin cans, stones and other objects in an apparently aimless manner. Mrs. Burley told the jury that Albert, who died at the hospital from intestinal wounds, told her that he had shouted to the person on the bank (who it was he did not know) to be careful where he was firing and that the reply came back that he intended to shoot the other one, too, meaning William who was wounded in the head and died a few minutes afterward. Testimony by railroad men who were shifting cars in the vicinity at the time, also that of Mrs. Burley was the same on one point-that it was dark, or almost so. The railroaders testified that the shooting took place between 6 and 6:30 o'clock. The testimony of all was that the (something about a fire but a whole paragraph is missing.) The testimony developed that the wounded Burley boy thought it was one of the railroad men that had shot him and that he demanded to know why when they made their way to the scene to learn what the trouble was. How the Halley boy was at first connected with the shooting at all was not divulged. All the railroad men said they did not know who the boy with the gun was. They had heard his name afterward, they said. After his arrest, at his home, the Halley boy, according to the testimony of Policeman D. H. Turner and Deputy Sheriff Martin F. Murphy, at first denied any knowledge of the shooting. Then he admitted that he had purchased a gun, unknown to his parents., Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Halley. At first he told the officers the gun was hidden near Dull's livery stable. When it was not found there, he said it had been stolen. Later, to Deputy Sheriff Murphy, he confessed, the witness said, that he had hidden it near Fayette Field, under a board. He accompanied the officers to the spot and the weapon, a repeating rifle was found. It was exhibited at the inquest. Other witnesses called were Lewis E. Welling, conductor of the shifting crew of engine 1109, E. J. Love, George H. Fuehrer, E. L. Frye and C. E. Lunnen, members of the crews, and the father of the Halley boy. It was Conductor Welling who heard the shout of the wounded boy and told the others about it. He said he did not hear a shot after the boy called. This was in contradiction to the testimony of the mother who said that Albert was wounded first and William shot dead next, according to what the wounded boy told her. Brakeman E. L. Frye testified to going to the river bank, picking William up in his arms and carrying him to the shifting engine in which he was taken to the baggage room at the Baltimore & Ohio station, where he died in a few minutes. He was shot in the head. The mother had the boy's head in her lap when he reached the river, the boy said. The work of his being shot had been carried home by Albert, the wounded boy, who told her William was dead and that some one had shot them like dogs. Flagman Lunnen told the jury that he saw the boy with the gun walk down the tracks and across to the river bank previous to the shooting. He said he was firing at poles, cans, and other objects and that it sounded like a machine gun. On the jury were Edward L. Duggan, E. C. Moore, J. B. Kurtz, Irwin Prinkey, J. C. Henry and E. D. Wolfe.