
Fort Worth Daily
Gazette
Fort
Worth, Texas
Thursday,
October 6, 1892
pg
3
WILL
NEVER MONKEY MORE.
Sherman,
Tex., Oct. 5 - (Special) - The killing
of Barney Way by S. W. Van Wagoner, which
occurred about
midnight
last night, is the absorbing topic on the
streets to-day. Four balls were fired into
deceased's body
and
he lived only a few minutes. The affray was
brought about by family troubles, Van Wagoner
believing that
Way
had despoiled his home. As he raised his
pistol Van Wagoner said: "You will never
monkey with another
man's
wife."
Fort Worth Daily
Gazette
Fort
Worth, Texas
Friday,
October 7, 1892
pg
5
Taken
From Potter's Field
Sherman,
Tex., Oct. 6 - (Special) - Barney Way, the
barber who was shot and killed here by S. F.
Van Wagoner over some family
troubles, was buried in Potter's Field, but
the sporting fraternity to-day dug up the
remains, dressed them in a
new suit of clothing and gave him a Christian
burial in the city cemetery, conducted by a
Baptist clergyman.

The Sunday
Gazetteer
Sunday, October 9, 1892
SHERMAN TRAGEDY
Barney Way, a Barber, Shot Down by Van
Waggoner, Another Barber
Tuesday
night about 10 o'clock, Sanford Van
Waggoner, a barber, who has a shop
in Sherman on the north side of the square,
entered Charles Bay's
saloon on North Travis street, stepping
around the partition screen and
fired 4 shots in rapid succession at Barney
Way.
Way wheeled around,
reeled and fell, but in a moment got to his
feet and ran, spitting out
great mouthfuls of blood as he went, finally
falling and expiring in
the rear court of the saloon.
Van Waggoner walked out on the street,
and when arrested by Policeman James
Anderson, still had the pistol in
his hand. He had very little to say,
but the few words he said to
the officers were enough to show that
domestic trouble was at the
bottom of it all.
The limp and blood-covered body of the dead
man
was placed on an improvised stretcher and
taken to the undertaking
establishment of A. Harrington. There
was an idle throng on the
streets for a while until the undertaker
locked his door, the saloon in
which it occurred closed and then the
excitement died out. Some
months since the deceased was first employed
by Van Waggoner to work in
his barber shop on the north side of the
square. Two or 3 weeks
ago he was finally discharged from
employment at the shop, and since
that time he has been at work for J.B.
Beaver, on North Travis street.
Van Waggoner was seen at his cell this
morning by a reporter and in substance he
said:
"Eighteen
years ago I was married to my second wife,
Mahala Moffatt, in Wise
county. I think that I have always
loved her better than my own
life, and notwithstanding the recent shadows
that have in the past
rested over our home, I have ever lived in
the hopes of reconciliation
and peace. Yes, we had some trouble at
Ft. Worth, but in that I
am the most to blame. Unfortunately in
a strange city my wife
became acquainted with some women against
whom there was much talk, and
before it could be stopped my wife's name
was tangled up in the gossip,
but that is a part of the dead past, and it
is neither here nor there
in the events which directly lead up to the
affair last night.
We, that is, my wife and I, had a
little quarrel. It
started off insignificantly at first and
finally ended in a regular old
family household quarrel. I began to
suspicion Barney Way of
being a go-between - that is, a tale bearer.
He was discharged
from my employ because I could not trust him
with the money. I
was not, however, until a week, or about
that matter ago, that
gathering circumstances convinced me that I
had formed the right
impression in regard to Way.
"Last night at about 9 o'clock I met
Way on the street and we had quite a
conversation about George Kolb.
I did not mention my suspicions to
him. I went home and
took a paper with me. My wife and I
have not been getting along
very nicely, but it was in hopes that I
could please her in some way
and thereby make it possible for
reconciliation that I had taken this
paper with an interesting item in it to her.
She did not take the
paper from me. I pulled off my
clothes, but I never went to bed.
A perfect frenzy of unrest took
possession of me. I dressed
an came back up town. I was not really
away of where I was going
or what I wanted to do. I went into
the place where I found him
(Way). I did not go in there with the
intent to kill him, but the
sight of him drove me frantic with an
uncontrollable desire to kill
him, and you tell me I did so. Nothing
that I may have said do I
wish you to construe as a charge against the
fidelity of my wife.
Oh, God, I would rather die than to
know that our differences
were irreconcilable."
The prisoner was deeply agitated as he
spoke.
He is a man of perhaps 47 years of
age, is a native of Missouri,
served through the war as a Union soldier.
He has 5 children, all
sons. They lived in various places in
Texas but came from Galena,
Kansas, to Sherman about a year ago.
Van Waggoner is a member of
the Christian church and is a very devout
man, often holding services.
He is a member of the G.A.R. and is
now drawing a pension.
The
deceased was a man of perhaps 32 years of
age. His home was
originally in Michigan. From thence he
went to Wichita, Kansas,
where his wife died and left him with 2
little children, who are now in
the hands of some of his relatives, whose
whereabouts no one in Sherman
knows. Neither are the whereabouts of
his people in Michigan
known.


The
Galveston Daily News
Galveston,
Texas
Saturday,
December 3, 1892
pg
6
STATE
SPECIALS CONDENSED
The
Van Wagner murder trial is in progress at
Sherman.
The Austin Weekly
Statesman
Austin,
Texas
Thursday,
December 8, 1892
pg
7
Van
Wagoner Convicted.
Special
to The Statesman
Sherman,
Dec. 3 - The jury in the S.J. Van Wagoner case
for the murder of Barney Way returned a
verdict this evening finding
him guilty in the second degree and assessing
his punishment at five years in the
penitentiary.

Convict Record, Texas State
Penitentiary, 1875 - 1945
at Huntsville, Walker County, Texas
Registered No.
|
8782
|
Name
|
S. F. Van
Waggoner
|
Age
|
46
|
Height
|
5' 4 1/8"
|
Weight |
1934
|
Complexion
|
Dark
|
Eyes
|
Grey
|
Hair
|
Dark
|
Marks on Person
|
Vac. mark left
arm
Boil scar right temple
Mole on chest
Knife scar left thigh
Ax scar left foot
|
Marital Relations
|
Yes
|
Use of Tobacco
|
No
|
Habits
|
Temp
|
Education
|
Poor
|
Able to Read
|
Yes
|
Able to Write
|
Yes
|
No. Years in
School
|
1
|
Date of Birth
|
1846
|
Birthplace
|
Mo
|
Birthplace of
Father
|
Ill
|
Birthplace of
Mother
|
Ind
|
Occupation
|
Barber
|
Time of
Conviction
|
Dec 6, 1892
|
Offense
|
Murder 2nd
|
Term of
Imprisonment
|
5 years
|
County
|
Grayson
|
Residence
|
Sherman
|
Plea
|
Not Guilty
|
When Received
|
Dec 19, 1892
|
Expiration of
Sentence
|
Dec 6, 1897
|
Remarks
|
Discharged April
6, 1897
|

|