{ title: 'The Ogdensburg journal. (Ogdensburg, N.Y.) 1868-1916, November 21, 1911, Page 1, Image 1', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85054113/1911-11-21/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85054113/1911-11-21/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85054113/1911-11-21/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85054113/1911-11-21/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Northern NY Library Network
' • ;- - --. iA is. -~«- WSSKXiT ESTABLISHED 18*0. DAI T .Y ESTABLISHED 18R5. fi\\. * ... , - ....... « 1 THE CIGAR THAT HAS REMOVED ITSELF FROM THE REALMS OF COMPETITION X inn t + «• T3$£**'-**- '. GO-CARTS READY -FOR— Your Inspection Brass Beds — AT— 1 SPECIAL PRICES • • I L MGSILLIS [ I Furniture Company, t HOTEL LONGACRE NEW YORK CITY. 47th St., Just Off Broadway. EXCLUSIVELY BACHELOR. Convenient to Everything. ABSOLUTELY FIREPROOF. Library, Billiard Hall and Restaurant in Connection. All Rooms Handsomely Furnished. 15 Rooms, -$1.00 per day. 100 Rooms, with. Private Bath, ?1.50 per day..* 50 Rooms, with. Private Bath, ?2.00 per day. W. H. ANDERSON, Optician. Hart* Water St. . Corner of Forfi. oaDENSBURGj N-.*- Ey« Wflht uttcd by app*ov«i acie* into method and s»*«'» P»P« f '? ftttctf. Eya §!*»•«» \^ f i•c** c ' nl, * We Are Headquarters for REMINGTON-ARMS U. M. C. Co. Ammunition ...also... Plitaiers —and — OGDENSEURG, N. Y„ TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1911. TORONTO WEATHER ; SEJ»0R.TH- Westerly to northwesterly. winds?;;^. , fair; a little lower temperature: JAW-.\ Governor to Brant Stay if Ho mess. INQUIRY IHie AFFIOAVST, Detective Goes to Washington to In- vestigate Paul's Alleged Repudiation! of Hjs Testimony That Henry Clay Admitted to Him He Had Killed Hia Wife on Auto Trip. Richmond, \Va. Nov. 21.—-If Henry Clay Beattie, Jr., will publicly confess that he murdered his wife, Louise, Governor Mann probably will grant a thirty days' stay of execution. There is a well founded belief on the part of certain authorities peculiarly interested in the case that the mur- derer»will admit bis guilt to the world before Friday, the day decreed by the court for him to forfeit his life. An intimate friend of the Beattie family soisided a person closely con- nected with the prosecution as to the chances of obtaining a. reprieve if Henry would confess. ^ The frieM was informed that if the Beattie family -requested the person in question to visit Henry for the pur- pose of receiving the admission of guilt the good offices of the governor would be sought in regard to a stay. It was made plain, however, that only through urgent request from Beattie or his im- mediate family would this person seels u confession. Beattie is known to have remarked! to one of his counsel that, if he must die, before meeting death he would like to hold the hand of the man ap- pealed to by the friend of the family. The„ desire is strange in view of the fact that this person was largely in- strumental in the conviction of Beafc- tie, but the wife slayer appeared to appreciate that an absolutely unpreju- diced and fair spirit characterised the man's attitude. Unreasonable as it may seem, it is contended by those who ought to know that Henry has had more confidence in this person, whose, name cannot be divulged at present, than he evinced iu his own attorneys. Rumor has it that Henry has already confessed in secret to the minister of his family church, the Rev. Mr. Ben jamm. Dennis, but the pastor not only refuses to confirm or deny the report, but declines to discuss, his relations with Beattie even to warm persouml friends. \It is too sacred a matter,\ the Rev. Mr. Dennis is alleged to have com- mented to a frieud, \for me' to have a right or desire to talk about in any respect.\ So far the father of the condemned young man has declined to make a- formal statement regarding his son's case. \I had contemplated issuing a state ment to the newspapers; and consulted my lawyers, Messrs. Hill Carter and Harry M. Smith, Jr., about it. Both of them urged that it would not be ad- visable. Despite their arguments I prepared a statement to be presented, to the public, but on the advice of a few intimate friends I tore it up. If Henry has anything to say it will toe given out by him against the earnest wishes of his counsel.\ It was said Governor Mann orig- inally contemplated showing leniency to Beattie and was prepared to allow him until Dec. 15 in which to prepare for the execution, but the affidavit of Paul D. Beattie, first cousin of Henry and the state's principal witness, de daring he perjured himself on the wit- ness stand during the trial, is thought to have defeated the very purpose for which-it was designed.. A detective has left for \Washington to investigate the affidavit made by Paul Beattie. It is believed arrests may result oh charges, of forgery or perjury and possibly blackmail. JUKES H. WMEBSOI. Who Threatens to Use U. S. Troops if Illinois Grants Packers Delay. v>>% I'/ Photo by American Press Association. CASTRO NOT DEFEATED? \ You\ Duck Hunters can find these things at i.l.teifflli.6. & Ford St PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM. r CfesiuS end beautifies tho natf. Promotes \a tacuiiafit growth. Never Bails to- Eestore_ Gray Haft toit* TQUtMul.jGol.or . . Cures'.scalp diseases Ic hair falling. 50c,itnd.yUX>at Druggists . Willemstad Hears Denial of Rout in Venezuela. , , Willemstad, Curacao, Nov. 21.—In- formation from reliable sources con- tradicts th3 report that former Presi- dent Castro at the head of a body of revolutionists had been disastrously de- feated near San Cristobal. Castro's whereabouts are unknown, but a recent dispatch from Caracas said he was living on his old planta- tion ,at Cuouta, in Columbia, near tlie border. PLANS HEAVIER WARSHIPS- General Board-t to Ask; Congress For Two of 30,000 Tons Each,. Washington, Nov.. 2t—Ilougli plans for two huge battleships will „be laid before, congress when it coh.vene,s. The projected' ships are to.-* be of 30.- 090 tons displacement,, armed with ten foui'teeii-ineh rifles, each twenty feet long, with broad- belts of the highest type of hardened armor and v/ii& steaming capacity enough to carry them back and forth across the.Atlantic. Auto Driver Killed,.,.- Savannah, Ga., Nov. 21.—Driver Mc- $ay was -killed- while practicing- In-,a Case car on the Vanderbilt cup course. PACKERS TO FAG Judge Postpones Hearing as lefend'an' Mi lay, Chicago, Nov. 21.—Judge Carpenter postponed the trial of the packers un- til Wednesday as a result of their ac- tion in seeking writs of habeas corpus from Judge Kohlsaat, who refused to grant them. The packers and their counsel are holding almost continuous conferences In an effort to escape trial on the gov- ernments chargea of violation of the Sherman law. It is said they are planning two methods of obtaining delay. One is an appeal to the \United States supreme court and the other a petition in the state courts for writs of habeas cor- pus. The United States district attorney, James N. Wilkerson, declared that if a state court attempted to interfere he wc-uld call for federal troops if nee- esaary to enforce the United States district court's orders. The government attorneys' attitude is one of gratification over the progress of the legal battle. They believe they have the packers where they must face trial, with no more opportunity to ob- tain delay on jurisdictional or other pleas. LIVE ON 7 CENTS A DAY. iREZ AlAR^EL PASO Firing at First Indicates At- tack hy Rebels. FOUND TO BE CELEBRATION. Royestas, However, Gather In Force on American Side, Prepared to Dash In- to Mexico on First Favorable Oppor- tunity—Government Rushes Troops North to Border. El Paso, Tex.,- Nov. 21.—Incessant firing in Ciudad Juarez awoke the business men of Juarez and the citi zehs of El Paso with a start. The firing was equal to that which marked the opening of the battle of J u i rez in April last, when the town fei' into the hands of Maderists. Only few saloons had opened in Jui vez for business when the fight began and these closed at once and the in mates began hurrying to El Paso. El Pasons hurried to the bridges coa necting the two cities, expecting to sec the fight. As an attack had been ev pected on Juarez from the Reyesta* ifc was considered certain that a battle had opened. Firing continued through the wes,t ern and northwestern part of Juarez for almost an hour. Then it was learn ed that the \fight\ was in celebration of the anniversary of the opening ot the Maderists' revolution a year ago at Parral and Gomezialacio, and also to celebrate the arrival in Juarez of a hvin* dred additional troops as re-enforce- ments for the garrison. Rebels Assemble on Border. Laredo,' Tex., Nov. 21.—More than 1,0.00 armed Mexican revolutionists art scattered along the Texas side of the Rio Grande within fifty miles of Lare- do, awaiting a favorable opportunity to cross into Mexico and attack Nuevo Laredo. . The- seditious movement is wide- spread in northern Mexico and: among the Mexicans in Texas. - A large arm- ed body of Reyesta rehels is also in the vicinity of'Lampasas, fifty miles south of here. The Mexican government is rushing trainload after trainload of soldiers to the border, and more than G,000 fed- erals will be massed along the frontier within the next forty-eight hours. Girls In Training School Make New Record In Economy. Cincinnati, Nov. 21.—Several young women, pupils of the senior class of the Cincinnati Kindergarten Training school, who were recently placed in charge of a model flat furnished by the Cincinnati school board, have demon- strated how schoolgirls can live on 7 cents a day each. The girls did their own housekeeping, marketed and prepared their meals, in addition to attending to their class du- des. POOR MOTHERS PENSIONED. Illinois Pays First Funds to Help Keep Children. Chicago, Nov. 21.—Thenew state law pensioning deserving poor, mothers with families has become operative. Forty mothers, most of-them widows, received checks for amounts ranging from §18 to $12Q. The pension act allows $5 to §10 a mouth for each child. The. pension allows the mothers to keep the fam- ily together and exercise-the care nec- essary for growing children. . TAFT'S GOLD BETTER. Hilles Also III, and Neither Goes to Office. Washington, Nov. 21.—President Taff remained in the private part of the White House, doctoring his cold. His uondition is said to he improving slow- ly, but is not satisfactory. The president received no callers nor ilid he transact any official • business. Charles D. Hilles, secretary to the president. Is. also ill from a severe cold, and was not at his office. SEVENTEEN DEAD IN MINE. Jour Others May Not Live as Result of Gas Explosion. Blueiielfl, W. Va., Nov. 21.—Seven- teen bodies were taken from the Vivian inine of -the Bottom Coal, company, uear Welch, and four men rescued dive*-may not recover. • \- • it is believed the , accident: was .due |o the explosion-of a pocket of gas. Santo DominQo ;Presio!ent Slain. • Santo Domingo City, Nov. 21.—-Presi- dent Caceras has- been assassinated.. Arms Seized In Texas. Washington, • Nov. 21.—A supply of arms and ammunition apparently in- tended for tlie Reyes adherents has been found at Laredo, Tex. Officers of the war department and the civil authorities have been requested to seize them.. Information received here indicates that the proposed revolutionary move- ment is well organized and that con- siderable assistance is expected from the American side of the line. It is believed here that the arrest of General Bernardo Beyes will break the backbone of the movement. BORDEN WON BY ONLY 25,857. Returns In Canada Show Conservative Victory Was Slender. Ottawa, Out., Nov. 21.—Missing offi- cial returns of the Canadian. election which have just been received by the superintendent of elections show a grand total vote of 636,654 for the Con- servatives and 010,797 for the Liberals, a popular majority for. the government of 25,852,:• .-•- ..; , The .Liberals carried five and the' Conservatives four provinces. Notwithstanding-,the, close vote at large, the Conservatives have fifty ma- jority in the house. . Mfife'QtMED Ofl TRAlti ROOF. More Than Hundred.-Passengers Held , , Fast .In Quggmire. . Duluth, Minn.,... Nov;.. 2i.-~-Lacking water..and food, more,than a hundred passengers,, several of them wnmen, ai;e marooned! on-;the roof of a Soo line passenger train Whieh;,has settled'for seven feet in. a ^quagmire twenty-one miles east of Moose lake., : - . • They are in,.aj).erilous ; plight,v..swept by a jaorthwest gale which promises a snowfall before a rescue party can reach them..., . ON TURKEYS. Farmers' Wives ScJiemjng to Force-Up -. .,- ••- • *• Prices. Evansville, Ind., Nov. 21.—Farmers' wives in southern Indiana and west- ern Kentucky have launched a move- ment to hold pack the crop of Thanks- giving and Christmas turkeys for bet- ter prices. In the markets the quotations made to shippers are.6 to 8 cents. lower,.than they were a year ago. The low prices are disappointing, ,and the women be- lieve it is possible for them to force up the prices. . Yale Men In Court Saturday! ; • New aav»PV: Contiif Nov.- 21,^-TIie five, iale -students;-, the Princeton stu- dent andj thevWfl-New-York city busi- ness men., arrested- af-tec the Hjrperioh theater riot will be tried Saturday. jftOB SCUFF.- Banker Who Fights to Rliake Russia Recognize Passports of U. S. Jews. FORCE IN issacre ot Aliens at Shensi Brings WILL PROTECT FOREIGNERS. MAY REGAIN LOST RANK. Emperor Is Expected -to Forgive Neph- ew Who Wedded Commoner. Vienna, Nov. 21.—Emperor Francis Jospph. it is believed, will forgive his nephew, Ferdinand Charles, who was deprived of his rank of archduke be- cause he married . without the em- peror's consent, and restore his rank and ennoble his wife. Last October Archduke Ferdinand, who had renounced all privileges as a member of the imperial family, wed- ded Pvosa Czubor, the daughter of a professor of engineering. Ho assum- ed the surname of Burg and received an annuity of 40,000 crowns from fhs emperor. Defense Bellies iefts^ani! Slate Attacks Imulf. Springfield. Mass., Nov. 21.-rA new line of evidence by both sides was started in the trial of Bertram;. G. Spencer in the superior court here upon the opening of the second week oflhe case. Through the testimony of Dr. Rob- ert P. M. Ames an effort was made to show that the prisoner in commit- ting the many thefts with which he has been accused did not really keep the property he stole. Dr. Ames testified that there were stolen from his house rings, watches, silverware, knives, forks, spoons, soup ladles, dishes, stickpins, a lady'.s high button shoe and a pocketbook contain^ ing cash. \Did you get your property back?\ he Was asked. \Yes: nearly all of it:\ District -Attorney Callahan showed the-witness a certificate-of good health signed by hini with regard tft.gpencer's physical condition at the time he- ap- plied for a position as street car con- ductor in Springfield.. \You would not pass a man who had palsy,, defective . vision Or a perma- nent-nervous disease?\ \Certainly not.\ ': THREE DIE IN CHAIR. Brown, .Fal!atta;.and -Schermertiorh Pay Death Penalty. Ossining, N. Y., Nov. 21.-=-Three men convicted of murder were put to death in. the electric chair at Sing Stag prison. • -• Those who died were Bert L. Br6wn, a negrOj who killed his half \brother in a, saloon in Rye,. N. Y h on- Jan, .13, 1910,. iu a dispute over a few cents tasked; at craps; Pietro Falletta, who billed Louis Levine, a nonagenarian, in his. tailor shop at -Portchesfer to -rob him, ; and Frank- Sehermeuhoru, who killed fflss Sarah Breymei.% a gover- ness, ..employed in the home- of Barnes Comptonj at Mlllbrook, Where he work- ed as a eoa'chman. HALTED BY FLOOD. Water Surrounds Tripoli Like Moat, Stopping Operations. Tripoli, Nov. 21.—-Flooded .condition of. the countryside has put a sto'p to active operations for the present, Wa- ter surrounds the city, like a moat. .... The Turks fired two, shells over the city, iffit J)0\th -burst in the air, causing no damage. \ ,,_ .. The cruiser Carlo. Alberto bsnjbardstl the point from which .the shells wero lired. Japanese Also ...Put . Marines Ashore, Fearing Chinese Masses Will Rise. Peking Hears Russia Is Preparing to,-. Invade Capital—Court Refuses, to Flee to Jehoi. Tientsin, Nov. 2>%.— : Confirmation of the reports of massacres of foreign missionaries at Shensi has resulted in the landing of American marines at Chefoo, according to information that has just been received here. .; Japanese warships have landed- air equal force to aid in the protection of ilieiis, it being feared that when word of the Shensi massacre spreads, the Chinese masses, who are bitterly ^op- posed to all foreigners, will rise against them. * • - - Dispatches .from- Peking say that the legations have learned semiofficially that Russia, -alarmed at the dubious-! uess of the situation and the military- disposition of other powers* is prepar- ing to mobilize reserves in the: Pacific provinces of eastern Siberia and march on Peking. It is understood that the Pekinese court refuses to go to Jehpl, though this is the only way to give Yuan Shih Kal a free hand. The winter court has formally open^ ed, and all the princes, dukes and Mon- golian nobles were -ordered to attend in fullest ceremonial garb. Yuan, although cheerful, is always guarded. It Is known positively that revolutionary agents here are awaiting an opportunity to kill him with a bomb. . Telegraphic communication is more frequently interrupted in the.provinces and they are becoming continually more isolated. The Peking situation is not iikely 'to become more settled until some one backs up Yuan Shih Kai with a few millions. The movement to induce the court to withdraw to Jehbl has the most in% fluential support and is gaining ground. The promoters urge Yuan Shih Eai to tell the prince regent that the pro-* tection of the imperial family is not to be guaranteed while they are in Pe^ king and to recommend to them to withdraw in deference to popular de- mand as a sign of good* faith. Afterward the national convention is to be summoned to decide whether there is to be a republic or a limited monarchy. The promoters-wish friend- ly foreign advice to be givea to the court in this direction. Fierce fighting has been in. progress^ at Hankow. The imperial troops have sustained heavy.- losses. • Nothing is known as to the casualties of the rebels. YOU CANNOT BtGIN TO fM* j| AG1NE THE pELIC(Ot)S^ '-\-h \ 1 NESS OF At Until you have: tHed: them for'* I yourself. Purchase a package ; I and you will continue to be a constant customer. Spid byj H '„'*£ ON TRIAL FOR HER LIFE. Mrs. Gertrude Patterson\ Will Plead Self Defense; Denver, Nov. 21.—Gertrude Gibson Patterson, who on Sept. 25 shot and killed her husband,, Charles A. Patter- son, while they Were walking together in a suburb near a sanitarium in which Patterson was a patient, was placed on trial for her life here. Mrs. Patterson will plead self de- fense, alleging her husband attempted to take her life. That the quarrel was over a suit for alienation of Mrs. Pat- terson's, affections, which the young husband, it is said, contemplated.bring- ing against-a wealthy..man from Chu cago, and that the kiliing resulted from Patterson's .refusal- to drop the.,a-fl'aii\ will be the contention of the state. SCORES S COLLEGES. Arnherst Professor Declares Them \Old Maid Factories.\ Boston, Nov. 21.—Denouncing col- leges as \old maid'factories'' and blam- iug women for being so fond of socie- ty and automobiles that-they cannot find time to raise families, Dr.- Robert J. Sprague of \Amherst Agricultural college has found what he considers one- of the greatest evils of higher ed- ucation. . . - - \The professional woman has money of her own; she need not get i t froM a busbaiid;\ he said. \Is it a wonder that she dreads to ..exchange for de- pendency, for a husband With aft in- come perhaps smaller than her own, for ( the•monotony of a home and for the cares of babies?\ DEER KILLED BY AUTO. Speeding CSr Breaks rleck of Buck = Fascinated by Headlights. .Fort Plain,, is 1 - S S., Nov;* 21.—Harold Gray, an enthusiastic motorist of this village, while speeding along a moun- tain road north -©* bere after dark suddenly came :upon a, giant-, buck standing squarely in\ his path and watching, with r fascinating, intehtness the .rapidly approaching headlights of tiieca:r.:.> . ;-v .'•• •- >. -.-.*-*•-..>-. \. i G i\KV tJiJ'ed.-; te». a-vdid 1 a collision, but tlie car .struct ths deer squarely, break- ing its neck. 'THE HOUSE OF QUA:t-ifY.\ j Lehigh Valley produced-: i } 6fi.%|gi tons coal. .' . • \ ' s . D,. L,, & W, prc-duesd 849,4-14 tona coal. Delaware & Hudson pfoduelsd 6-16;- 169 tons coal. ' , ?\'\.;..'' ' Ontario & Western produced- 193> 834 tens coal. We represent the \top ndtcliers-.'* You cannot go wrqng if yqujjuy* Leigh filey '* It burns-^—it, lasts^it satisfies. THE OLD PARISH STORE. Telephone No. 60. Saratoga Club Coffee, per lb- ... .40<*. New Dill Pickles, per doz..-...-.\...12ft. Sweet Cider, per gal,..:.,,..,.. ,3Q$. Fancy Large Queen Olivet, pint,.30c; Raisins (hot a se.ed).pkg-, 15cv Canned Asparagus Tips ...:.. .25c. Canned Asparagus- (whole).. ,30c. Fresh Canned Shrimps 15 and 25&i Canned Mushrooms,. Ser\ can..:.'. .-$'§& Canned Pimentoes,. pjer can.:.,.. 20cV Fancy, Comb Honey. \ .............,.. 20cji New Bloater Maekerjel, per lb 22c§. Burnhain's Clam Ch/owder, can.. .20(ji All kinds qf Cfeani/Cheese; Cfeaynij ery Butter and Strictly Fresh Bggi..'« Sealshipt Oyster^i/daiiyi - •• .i -/ S:H,l|§fteM& Fancy Groceries and Meats, ; 97 FORD ST. 'PHONE 25d-Wi wlj9,t ii means >: l.i ; when we.say fc* : «* y - Positive Satisfaction If Youi.ac Skcplical 1M CSTABLI8HID lOL . ^Ji