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DIED FROM HIS WOUNDS.
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Pearl P. Turner, Victim of Murderous Assault,
Brought Here for Burial Yesterday.
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Pearl P. Turner, former Red Oak man died at 3 o’clock Monday afternoon
at Indianola, Nebraska, from a gunshot wound received Nov. 9. Mr. and
Mrs. Turner were driving home in their car, after a visit to Indianola,
when Mrs. Turner’s brother, Geo. Morris, stepped out of the long grass
armed with a shotgun. He stepped around behind the car and told Turner
he was going to get him,
Turner threw up his arm and the charge of the shot struck the underside
of his upper arm and entered the left side of his chest.
Martin Morris then appeared
with a revolver, asked his brother whether he had done the job. Mrs.
Turner’s screams brought Pearl out of a faint and he stepped on the
starter and drove the car a mile to his home. There was difficulty in
getting a doctor, and he lay for three hours without attention other
than that which Mrs. Turner and neighbors could give him. The Morris
boys are in jail, charged with murder, and the community is all
excitement. Turner and Morris had some difficulty last spring while
Morris was living at the Turner place, but there had been no trouble
since.
The funeral was held at the home of Mr. Turner’s father, H. Turner, 607
Valley-st., yesterday (Thursday) afternoon at 2:30 o’clock. Rev. L. P.
Goodwin preached the sermon and the pallbearers were C. C. Ingmand, L.
C. Haldeman, W. A. Umphrey, W. E. Zimmerman, O. F. Hallcock and Frank
Beeson. Burial was in Red Oak Evergreen cemetery.
Pearl Turner was born at Indianola, Iowa, April 15, 1869, and came to
this county with his parents when four years old. He farmed for several
years, then moved to Red Oak. He was married here, June 11, 1907, to
Valda Starr, who died in 1909. Three years ago he moved to Nebraska, and
a year later was married to Miss Morris, who survives him. Other
surviving relatives are his father, H. Turner, and two brothers,
Clarence C. Turner, of Red Oak, and Robert Turner of Laramie, Wyoming.
THE SUN, Red Oak, Iowa, Friday, December 2, 1921. |