This item appeared in the Greensburg Daily Tribune of November 9, 1909: FATAL ACCIDENT TO TWO MEN IN INDIANA MINE Failure to place a sufficient number of posts under the workings in a room of No. 3 mine at Graceton is given as the cause of an accident there last Saturday afternoon that cost the lives of two men. The dead: JOHN H. FAITH, aged 42 years and married, leaving a wife and six children. JOHN REBAVICH, a Slav, aged 27 years and single. Faith worked in the Graceton mines five years, but of late he had been employed at a mine at Blairsville, returning to Graceton on Friday. The props for his room were delivered, but it was learned after the accident that all had not been placed. The bodies of Faith and Rebavich were brought to the surface, a distance of 2,000 feet, and taken to a side track from where they were removed to their home. Coroner James S. Hammers, of Indiana, visited the mine Saturday evening, going to Graceton in his automobile. He viewed the bodies of the dead men, talked with a number (of men) who had been at work that day and decided that as death had been accidental, no inquest would be necessary. Mine Inspector Roger Hampson of Punxsutawney spent Monday at Graceton. John H. Faith formerly resided in Indiana. He is a son of "Tip" Faith, who had lived in Greensburg for some years past, and is remembered as "Young Tip." The funeral was held at 1 o'clock Tuesday afternoon in the Lutheran church at Coral, the services being conducted by Rev. Shaffer of Homer City. Bill in Ohio