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WEEKLY ESTABLISHED 1830. DAILY ESTABLISHED 1855. OGDEMSBURG. N. Y., FRIDAY, MARCH 3, 1911. TORONTO WEATHER REPORT. Moderate winds; fair; not mu'eh. change in temperature. The Supremacy | ® ...Of... S % Is the natural out- growth of twenty- ® six years devoted § exclusively to the g manufacture of § inpeno: BARCALO IRON AND BRASS BEDS Ready for Your Inspection. The Bed guaranteed £o? SS years against breakage. Let us just sho^v you the Bar- calo Bod with the unhreafcabLs corners. Watch us test the corners or V £ any Barcalo Bed with a h«avr I! A hammer. You cannot brealc them. A jolt, a blow, n bad wrench likely will snap an ordinary cast iron corner. You run no risJc with a Bar- calo. II a Barcalo braaks we flive you a new one. Barcalo Process Guaranteed Finish insures a pexiaanently handsome bed. On the head bar of every Barcalo Brass Bed Is our Guaranteed Finish Seal. We have exclusive designs of dignity and beauty, ready to show you. -ESTATE OF- 100 Tons of Marsh Hay ox Good -Qual= ity for Cattle. Per Ton a? ihe North* tup Farm. Per Ton Deliv- ered in Qg- densburg. HARD AND SOFT SPLIT WOOD At $2.50 and $2.00. Dimension Timber and Lumber. River Street, OGDENSBURG, N, •Phone 120—I. Oibson=KeIock Laundry, * 435 Gathering Street. SHIRTS, COLLARS AND CUFFS LAUNDERED, also FAMILY WASHING, ROUGH, DRY OR FINISHED. HOTEL AND RESTAURANT WORK A Specialty, DRY CLEANING, CLEANING AND PRESSING by Sanitary Method. PROMPT SERVICE AND SATISFAC- TION GUARANTEED. 'Phone 153—W. FRED VV. MITCHELL, Manager, W. H. ANDERSON, Optician. jmmfe. North. Water St. \>Wtllillfe Corner of ForC. ^^^^^i^ OGDENSBURG, N. Y. ^ffi*P^ Eye sight tested by approved selef) t!Uc methods, an<3 glasses properh. fttted. Eye glasses and spectacles =r reasonable prlcta. They Had Balded Famine Di? frlcf In China. COOPED OP IH WALLED GUY. Captors Apply Torch to Buildings, and Men Dio After Killing Eight Cap- tives They Hold For Ransom—H Was a Punishmont Peculiarly Chi- nese That Was Meted Out. Victoria, B. O., March 2.—Rendered desperate by hunger, bands of hun- dreds of starving refugees are rovhip through the famine stricken area of China, plundering and killing, and n reign of terror prevails, according to persons who arrived here on the Tarn- ha Maru, which has just reached port from the orient. At Kunshan, a walled village within fifty miles of Shanghai, the villagers after a desperate raid, in which store? were looted and many killed, meted out punishment peculiarly Chinese in its callousness to the raiding refugees. A band of more than 500 are report- ed to have been surrounded iu a com- pound and burned to death. The refugees had taken possession of Kunshan and for two days ran- sacked th» stores of everything eat- able, killing or wounding all who re- sisted. Many villagers were slain, and oth- ers were taken prisoners and held for ransom. When the raiders moved on to plunder Che next village the Kun- shan people had a council of war and offered to pursue the fugitives. They came up with them in a small village and surrounded the houses. The gates were locked, the house;- fired and the 500 were burned alive. 1 The refugees brought five prisoners- into the compound In view of tlio lie siegers and threatened to kill them unless the siege was raised, and on the villagers pressing them back ti the burning buildings they slowly hacked the five men t o death. Three other prisoners were tied tr stakes in the burning building and were burned with their captors. IH!i HAYS HAMMOND. Spatial Ambassador to Coronation Ceremonies Rents Hansion in London. f *v © 1911, by American Pi ess Association. HAMMOND'S LONDON HOUSE. HE WON'T HANG OLD MAN. Minnesota's Governor Against Capita; Punishment For Any One. St. Paul, Minn., March 2.—In spite of the demand of the Lesuenr county grand jury that Governor A. O. Eber- hart set the date for the hanging of Martin O'Malley, an aged veteran, con- victed of poisoning his two stepchi! dren, the governor has steadfastly re- fused to comply. He is awaiting ac- tion by the legislature on the anti- capital punishment bill, which already has been passed by the house. Governor Eberhart does not believe in hanging. He is bending every ef- fort to have the 'senate pass the bill to abolish the death penalty. DIDN'T WORRY; DIED AT 107, Woman Who Laughed at Trouble Ac- tive a Moment Before End. New York, March 2. — Mrs. Bella Goldberg, 107 years old, died suddenlj at her house, 155 Attorney street, in (he arms of her husband Solomon, whr is ninety-seven years old. The aged woman had been bright and active uj to the moment before her end. \Don't worry,\ was the principle upon which Mrs. Goldberg lived anrl which she always said was the causr of her long lease on life. \Laugh al trouble, and when affliction comes be lieve that it is God's will and all foi the best,\ she would say. .DENTIST FOR SIX-DAY-OLD. Baby Conley, Born on Washington's Birthday, Has Tooth Pulled. York, Pa., March 2.—The infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Eli Conley, though less than a week old, has al- ready been i n the hands of the dentist. Teething, the terror of babyhood, usually does not come along below the age of ten or twelve months, but this precocious youngster when only six days old had a tooth pulled. fN DANGER FOR R. BACON. Investigator Digging For Evidence Falls Into Pit. London, March 2.— Dr. Owen, tlw American who is digging the bed oi the river Wye for evidence revealed in a cipher in Shakespeare's works that Robert Bacon wrote them, Spenser':.- \Faerie Queene\ and a few other odd items, fell into a pit on his head. A fellow Investigator rescued htm, cov- ered with mud. \A break i n the fall,\ said Dr. Owen, \saved me from breaking my neck.\ To Cross Continent In Truck. Denver, March 2.—Dr. A. L. \West- ward, of New York, a special agent of the United States department of agri- culture, has left here for the Pacific coast in a five ton automobile truck. Following his arrival at San Francisco Dr. \Westgard will start on a return trip t o New York. He expects to finish his trip across the continent by Au- gust Special Ambassador May Have the Burdett-Coutts Mansion. London, March 2.—John Hays Ham- mond has rented the house of the late Baroness Burdett-Coutts, in Piccadilly, for his official residence as special am- bassador of the United States at the coronation. The house, which i s one of the mo^t famoiis mansions in the west end, was inherited by the baroness from the Duchess of St. Albans and is now the property of her husband, Mr. Burdett- Coutts. It was here that the ashes of Sir Henry Irving lay in stale in 19'Ki before their removal to Westminster abbey. Pretty Girl Discharged Because She Romped With Pupils. Butler, Pa., March 2.—Miss Kittle McCandless, twenty-one, a pretty teach er at East Butler, who has been asked to resign by the school board becausy she was the playmate of her pupils, may enjoin the board in order to hold her place and prove there was nothing improper in her actions. Four women testified against her. About fifteen cit- izens and all the pupils defended her. Mrs. John Wallace and Mrs. W. S. Brandon testified to seeing her join hands with the children in a wall/; about a big bonfire which she helped to make, take part in the making of torches and join with the pupils in a torch parade through the school build- ing and scampering down a ladder. Mrs. Wallace said the young woman did not avoid a display of her stock- ings in making the descent of the lad der. Mrs. Brandon, wife of a member of the board, testified that one day re- cently she saw the teaeher kicking a small cigar box which the pupils were playing with and that \she kicked rath- er high.\ « It was charged that Miss McCandless had bought a pipe for one of the boys. Miss McCandless explained she had caught the boy smoking and had taken the pipe from him and broken it. She learned the pipe belonged t o his broth- er and bought a new one. \LAME DUCK\ B0UTELL LANDS Old Guard Republican Named as Min- ister to Portugal. Washington, March 2.—The president has sent to the senate the appoint- ment of Henry S. Boutell of Illinois ,as minister to Portugal, a post which pays $10,000 a year. He will succeed Henry T. Gage of California, who gives up the post because of ill health. Mr. Boutell, who is a leading mem- 'her of the \lame duck\ club, has repre- sented Illinois in the house for nearly fourteen years. He was a prominent member of the ways and means com- mittee and the committee on rules. THEY DANCED TOO LATE. Sixteen Sorority Girls Are Suspended For Their Fun. Indianapolis, Ind., March 2.—Because they danced until about ten minutes sifter midnight instead of stopping promptly at 12 o'clock, as required by a college regulation, sixteen Butler col- lege co-eds were suspended by Presi- dent T. C. Howe. All are active members of the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. Uruguay's Next President. Montevideo, Uruguay, March 2.— .lose Battle y Ordonez has been elect- ed president of Uruguay, to succeed Dr. Olandlo Williman, who succeeded Senor Battle In 1007. SFIOHTBLAZi LS ESOA! \Fireproof\ Building of Mount St, Mary's College Destroyed. HOT A STUDENT IS INJURED, Heroic Work of Sisters Gets All tho Pupils Safely Out of the Five Story Structure, Which Was Gutted by Flames—Water Pressure Is Insuffi- cient to Do Any Good. Plainfield, N. J., March 2.—Thirty Sisters of Mercy and 100 convent col- lege girls, lightly attired, were forced to flee into the cold outdoors when fire swept from top to bottom Mount St. Mary's college, a Catholic institu- tion on a mountain just outside of Plainfield. The five story stone and brick building, supposed to be fire- proof, which comprised dormitories and schoolrooms, was gutted by flames, only the stone walls being left stand- ing. In addition to the nuns and the • rang women pupils of the college, there were in the building a small L-lass of young boys, none more than twelve years of age; Father Baldwin, the resident priest; a janitor and the hitter's wife. At the first alarm the nuns dragged up lines of fire hose and tried t o fight the flames. The violent wind sweeping the moun- tain top fanned the blaze into too fierce a conflagration, and the sisters were obliged t o run for safety. Father Baldwin superintended the work of marching out every one in the building. The young women pupils of the college average between sixteen and twenty years of age. The priest and nuns hurriedly gath- ered the class of small boys and ush- ered them out of doors. Fearless sis- ters hurried from one dormitory to another while the flames were snap- ping showers of sparks i n the hall and saw that every sleeper had been arous- ?d and sent out. The fire apparatus in the building proved insufficient to check the fire. Fire companies responded, but the pressure was too low to put a good stream on the fire. The shivering girls were placed in automobiles and other vehicles which rushed to the fire and were taken to St. Joseph's convent in North Plain- field and St. Mary's convent in Plain- field. The building, which cost $300,000. was orffy three years old, but tho school was founded seventy-five years ago. The college will be rebuilt at once. The only thing left remaining when the blaze died out was a statue of the Virgin Mary at the entrance to the main hall. There was not a mark on it. Sister Logori, who had been ill for several weeks, was carried out of the building by Police Chief Kielly and re- moved to St. Joseph's rectory. Her death i s expected at any hour. ROASTED THE KAISER. Wurzburg Professor Had Been Chosen to Toast Him. Berlin, March 2.—At a dinner at Wurzburg university, in celebration of the approaching ninetieth birthday of Prince Regent Luitpold of Bavaria, Professor Fritz Kegel, who had been selected to propose a toast t o Emperor William, criticised his majesty severe- ly, saying that he found it unpleas- ant to be required to toast a person with whom such fault could be found. It was with difficulty that several generals and other officers of the army were prevented from abruptly retiring from the hall i n protest. WIFE BEATER IN TEARS. Sentenced to Bo Lashed, Vainly Begs Mercy In Baltimore Court. Baltimore, March 2.—Frank MeCau- ley struck his wife seven or eight- times, choked her and took from her more than .$20. Judge Duffy sentenced McCauley to five lashes at the whipping post and imprisonment in jail. McCauley, with tears streamiug down his face, vainly begged for mercy. It was the second sentence of a wife beater t o the post by Judge Duffy with- in a month. ONE DYING AFTER FIRE. Blaze at Binghamton Causes $50,000 Damage to Newspaper Plant. Binghamton, N. Y., March 2.—Fire caused .$50,000 damage to the plant of the Sunday Binghamtonian and the Vail Ballou Book Publishing company. William Squires, an employee of the newspaper, was burned so that he probably will die. Yet His Head Is Not Stone. Springfield, Mass., March 2.—A dump cart laden with sand ran over the head of James Dynan, the driver •When Dynan recovered consciousness a physician found no injuries. The unconscious state, the physician said, resulted from-the fall from the driver'* seat. GAPT, E. S. WRIBHT. U. S. Cavalryman Who Heads Detachment That Guards Mexican Border. Photo by American Press Association. REBELS STILL ARE ACTIVE. Seven Mexican Towns Have Been Oc- cupied and Taxed. Naco, Ariz., March 2.—Small bands of insurrectos are extremely active to the south of here. Reliable reports say they recently have taken seven towns. They are Sinoquipe, Kanamachi, Tue- peca, Panchita, Aconchi, Baviacora and Canadanacha. The rebels have levied taxes on the towns captured. The local passenger train from here to Cananea, Mexico, carried three ma- chine guns and about 70,000 rounds of ammunition. This indicates that a rebel assault on that big mining center is thought t o be imminent. A detachment of First United States cavalry under Captain E. S. Wright is guarding the frontier and watching to prevent the rebels from coming into the United States. HUNT ON LSI Disguised as Employees The Will Watch For Thieves, New York, March 2.—Detectives dis- guised as stewards and sailors are on their way to Europe on the Hamburg- American liner Amerika to watch the movements of the persons aboard the vessel in their search for the $125,000 worth of jewels that were stolen from Mrs. Maldwin Drummond on board the vessel Saturday night or early Sunday morning. - There i s a strong belief that the gems are still on the ship. It is thought possible, too, that some of the passengers might be in league with the thieves; that they may know where they are on the liner if they are secreted there and try to obtain them and get them ashore in Europe. Most of the detectives are Pinkerton men. A number of women are also on the vessel for at least four trips unless the jewels are recovered in the mean- time. ANSWERS AD.; WEDS PROXY. Burns Turns Over to Friends Replies of Girls Hs Won't Marry. Wilkesbarre, Pa., March 2.—Peter Burns of Swoyersville, who a short time ago advertised for a wife, receiv- ed so many applications that he turn- ed over to friends those he did not like. As a result the wedding of Charles Turner and Miss Susie Gallagher of Swoyersville i s announced. Miss Gallagher answered the adver- tisement. She is winsome and attrac- tive, but Burns decided he did not want t o marry her. He introduced her to Turner. Still l urning Out Jews. St. Petersburg, March 2.—Thus far 2,000 Jews have been expelled from Tchernigoff. Fifty-one Jewish families have been listed for expulsion from Cheliabinse, Most of the men are grain agents at the wheat exchange. Joke Chokes Girl. New York, March 2.— Miss Bertha Michaelson of 427 St. Ann's avenue laughed at a joke of her small brother Alfred at the supper table and a piece of steak lodged in her windpipe. She tJioked, and Dr. Gallon of Lincoln his- pital found the girl almost unconscious nud after some difficulty removed the steak. Carrers Dies From Accident. New York, March 2.—John Marven Carrere, the architect who designed many large structures in this city, is dead as the result of an automobile accident on Feb. 12, in which he sus- tained an injury of the brain. The di- rect cause of death Avas concussion of <he brain. ,_ laron von Arkovy Charged With Stealing Platinum. MED WITH BRASS C< KMUCKS ,V \In My Country,\ He Says, \They Are Commonly Carried by Gentlemen.\ Came Over With Lord Camoys and Beresford to Attend the Gould Wed- ding—Arrested at the Plaza. New York, JMarch 2. — Describing himself as a Hungarian baron, Rich- ard von Arkovy journeyed to the Jef- ferson Market police court i n an auto- mobile and was arraigned on the charge of stealing two platinum cruci- bles valued at $900 and also of carry- ing brass knuckles. The prisoner's counsel told the court that Von Arkovy had meant no harm in carrying the weapon. Magistrate Corrigan held the prisoner in $1,000 bail. Von Arkovy was then called upon to answer the charge of grand larceny, which grew out of his alleged pawn- ing of the two platinum crucibles be- longing to Julio S. Jarron. Magistrate Corrigan held the prisoner in $3,000 bail for examination on this charge. The baron furnished both bonds. The baron attributes his arrest to spite work. The brass knuckles, which, by the way, are silver plated, he asserts, have been carried by him a long time. \In my country,\ he said, \they are commonly carried by gentlemen. 1 never dreamed that i t was against the law to carry them here.\ The baron says he came here with Lord Camoys, the Hon. Seaton Robert Beresford and other members of the Lord Decies wedding party. He was arrested at the Plaza hotel. The baron when arrested created a scene, shouting so loudly in protest that his voice could be heard all through the corridor and the adjacent rooms of the hotel. Von Arkovy said that eighteen months ago he married Miss Elsie Schroeder, daughter of a wealthy brewer, who inherited a $70,- 000 legacy and a big income from her father. On the way over on the Lusitania, he said, he installed a roulette wheel and Avon $1,600 from the Englishmen of Lord Decies' party. He was present, he said, at the boxing bout between Mr. Beresford and Anthony J. Drexel at the Gould home in Bakewood. He said he was enrolled in the Welling- ton club of London and the Backet and Tennis clubs here, but his name does not appear on the list of mem- bers. He was graduated from Buda- pest, Munich and Oxford, he said. JOHNNY ISN'T KIDNAPED. He Played Hookey and Now Is Afraid to Go Home. New York, March 2.—Instead of be- ing held prisoner by kidnapers, as his parents insisted, Johnny Lamanelly, aged seven, doesn't dare to venture home. Some of Johnny's school friends told him a holiday had been declared, and tie gave a yell of delight and spent a delightful day in the streets near his home, 307 East One Hundred and Third street, until he learned that the holiday story was a mistake. He went farther from home. The father and mother reported their •son missing to the police. Both were firm in the belief that he had been kidnaped. Later the father was at Second avenue and One Hundred and Third street when he spied Johnny peeping out of a doorway. The father started after the truant, but Johnny outstripped him. \He'll come home when he gets real hungry,\ the father said. \There'll be things doing when he does too.\ COMA VICTIM RALLIES. Opens His Eyes For a Few Seconds and Then Relapses. South Norwalk. Conn., March 2.— Wilb'am Shirdivene, who has been scientifically dead but physically alive for the past seven days, rallied for a few seconds, opening his eyes and seeming to recognize his family. He then relapsed into Ms peculiar state of coma, in which no respiration or pulse is distinguishable. Dife can only be detected by use of needles or electric- ity. The doctors believe there is a chance of the patient living should he emerge from his coma. MILLIONAIRE A SUICIDE. Fred K, Maus, Steel Man, Shoots Him- self In Chicago Home. Chicago, March 2.—Fred K. Maus, millionaire director of the Scully Steel and Iron company; shot and killed him- self at his home here. Mr. Maus had been despondent since the death of his wife several years ago. He leaA-es IAVO daughters, Mrs. George Duquette of Chicago and Mrs. W. H. O'Brien of New York city. OCOQGGOQGOGOGGGGQGQOOOOQOtt O We Have p AN ATTRACTIVE STORE, b GOOD SERVICE, •Q g PROFIT SHARING CERTIFI- ES CATES, O But the life of our business ic in the QUALITY OF OUR GOODS. WE KNOW IT. Q A Fine Line of PETERSON IMPORTED PIPES on display. 1 Jones-Mcintosh I Tobacco Company, w \The House of Quality.\ COGOOQOOQOOQQOOOQO0QG9OOG* For Lent FRESH CAUGHT BULLHEADS, YELLOW PIKE, PICKEREL, \ CISCO ES, \ BLUEFISH, \=* J\ rv : HALIBUT, ~ f^3| SALT SALMON, \T-f; ; SALT CODFISH and SALT MACKEREL. FRESH OYSTERS, SOLID MEATS, S.HUHoskins. Fresh Groceries and Meats, 97 Ford Street. Telephone 25S W, in Coal Is Coslly-That's Sure. If you have been, no doubt It Has Cost You Dollars. After the first ton, what? Another try for satisfaction? Not if you have tried ' Every Ton Must Satisfy You-- That is Our Guarantee. Do you know of another firm that guarantees its coal? Edward DeroeUe, Established 1872, t YOU CM GIVE AWRY An old suit of clothes, but you have to pay to get rid of your Coal Ashes. Therefore buy' Lehigh Valley IT'S HIGH IN CARBON, IT'S LOW IN ASH. Some time you'll come to us. Why not today? Geo. Hail Coal Co. The Old Parish Store. Telephone No. 60.