Page:Newspaper writing and editing.djvu/220

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  • sulted in the disastrous wreck on the

Cincinnati, Lake Huron, and Western railroad at Wilmington, a suburb of Cincinnati, early this morning, when fifteen persons lost their lives and fifteen others were seriously injured.

The wreck was caused by the failure of the head brakeman on the freight, Otto Hansen, to close the switch to the siding. [etc.]


(5)


Lead of Story in Evening Paper on Second Day.

Cincinnati, O., Nov. 14.—Three separate investigations were begun today into the cause of the Wilmington wreck on the Cincinnati, Lake Huron and Western railroad, which killed fifteen and severely injured as many more, with a view to fixing the blame on those responsible and to punishing them. The Williams County grand jury under order of Judge Hanty began to investigate the wreck, while Coroner Hardy and District Attorney Collum worked on the matter independently.


Lack of important additions to facts in the first story often makes the lead of the "follow-up" story less striking in new features than those given above, but the very absence of new facts in itself has some news value, as is shown by the two following leads:


(1)


Lead of Story in Evening Paper.


When Mrs. Herman Hansen, Hampshire Apartments, widow of a former director of the so-called "bread trust," unlocked her bedroom door early this morning in answer to a plea "the baby is dying," she was faced by a masked burglar, who pointed a revolver at her. She had supposed that the voice was that of her son and that his child was very ill.