Bellefonte, Pa., March 13, 1908. Fearful Holocaust at North Collin- wood, 0., School DEATH ROLL NUMBERS 167 Cleveland, O., March 6.—As a result of the disaster which swept.into eter- pity approximately one-third of the school children of North Collinwood, near Cleveland. O., the death roll num- bered 167. When the flames were discovered. the teachers, who throughout seem to have acted with courage and self-pos- session and to have struggled he- roical!ly for the safety of their pupils, marshaled the little ones into column for the “fire drill,” which they had | often practiced. Unfortunately the line of march in this exercise had aiways led to the front door, and the children had not been trained to seek any other exit. | The fire came from a furnace situated | directly under this part of the Suild- | ing. When the children reached the | foot of the stairs they found the flames close upon them, and so swift a rush was made for the door that in an in stant a tightly packed mass of chil! dren was piled up against it. From | that second none of those who were upon any portion of the first flight of | stairs had a chance for their lives. The children at the foot of the stairs | attempted to fight their way back | to the floor above, while those who were coming down shoved them merci- lessly back into the flames below. In an Instant there was a frightful panic, with 200 of the pupils fighting for their lives. Most of those who were killed died here. The greater part of | those who escaped managed to turn back and reached the fire escape, and the windows in the rear. For supreme horror the scenes that were enacted around the rear door of the fll-fated schoolhouse have had few parallels. Little children lay six and eight deep. while men and women struggled with desperation to release | them, until they were compelled to give way before the flames and smoke. | One woman found her own daughter | fn this press and stroked her hair in | the effort to keep the flames away. She failed, and the child was burned to death while her mother looked on. An investigation conducted by the Collinwood school board at which a | number of survivors of the horror told | their stories brought forth these facts: | That one of the inner doors at the | west entrance of the school was closed | and fastened while children were pil- | ing up against it in the passage; wing partitions in the vestibule narrowed the exit by at least three feet; the flames came first from a closet below | the stairway at the east entrance; the closet contained lime and sawdust; three little girls had been found hiding in play in the closet earlier in the morning: there was but one fire es- cape and that its use never was taught as a part of the fire drill. Survivors among the teachers estimate that only two or three minutes passed from the time of the alarm until all escape was cut off. The building was a [fair sample of the kind of school construc: tion’ in use in small towns. The halls and stairways were enclosed between interior brick walls, forming a huge flue through which the flames shot up with great rapidity. | { | | Inland Harbor Assured. Representatives of the secretary of war met the officials of the Cape May Real Estate company in Philadelphia, when the latter paid to Assistant Unit- ed States Treasurer Bosler $100,000 in cash in consideration of securing a ‘much deeper channel to the inland harbor at Cape May, where the com: pany has dredged an area of about 500 acres. This inner harbor, which is now be- ing dredged to a depth of forty feet, becomes available to commerce when the government constructs a channel coanecting it with deep water of the Atlantic ocean. This channel will have a width of 850 feet and a depth of from twenty-five to forty feet, suffi- clent to admit the largest vessels of ‘the merchant marine or the greatest battleships. Nine Chinese to Hang. Warry Charles. one of the wealthiest and most influential Chinamen of Bos- ton, and eight of his countrymen, said to he notorious “Hatchetmen,” were found guilty by a jury in the superior eriminal court of first degree murder on four counts, alleging the killing of four Chinamen in Boston on Aug. 2 last. A tenth defendant died suddenly in his cell last Tuesday. The murders grew out of a long- standing feud between the Hip Sing Fong and On Leong Tong, rival Chi- nese societies. According to one witness, Warry Charles proposed sending to New York, Philadelphia and Chicago for *Hatchetmen” who were unknown to do the killing, as they would be better able to escape. Pitchfork Handle Penetrated Abdomen William Eberscie, a farmer living pear Duncannon, Pa., fell out of a hay mow, striking his stomach against the handle of a pitchfork, which penetrat- ed his abdomen. His injuries are be- lieved to be fatal. Found $200 Pearl in Neck of a Pig. A big pearl was found in the neck of a pig he was dressing by William Weaver, a Bayonne, N. J. butcher The gem was appraised at $200 by 2 jeweler. U. 8. Senator Proctor Dead. | A Bell Ridden Town. United States Senator Redfield Proc-' 4 well known tourist of the world tor, of Vermont, died at his apartments ' pag grated as his opinion that Lucerne in Washington, D. C., after a short ill-| is the most bell ridden town in Europe. ness, following an attack of grip. The | He had assuredly never been to senator's son, Governor Fletcher Proc! gohwyz To begin with. the countless tor, of Vermont, who was summoned ' .4itje that pass through the streets in to the city, was at the bedside when gh. gyuall hours of the morning on the senator passed away. Senator | y.ir way to or from the upland pas- Proctor was seventy-seven vears old. | tras wear bells as big as buckets. The senator had been ill and con- 4, here are church bells too. A fine fined to his room at the Champlain | seal they are, no doubt. but the noble apartment in this city for about a! ,.4 of pell ringing either never existed week. His ailment was diagnosed 88 pr 155 been lost here. The bells are the grip. which later developed into rung by being smitten or banged to- pleurisy with pneumonic complica-| gether by two small boys, whose legs tions which affected the heart, and po ,jainly visible—an alluring mark which in his enfeebled condition prov- | for an alr gun—through the open ou soe much for his powers of el louvres of the church tower, the ce. : unds produced being abo - Senator Proctor is survived by his il Ks Proguced of : Shop 2s ity wife. two sons, Fletcher D. Prector, governor of Vermont, and Rerfield | in full play. The petformance begins . | at 4:30 a. m. and continues until early Proctor. Jr., and a daughter, Miss Bm- | ..i.0 at 5. and if there is a funeral— ily D. Proctor. which is every other day or so—there will he another sustained burst of mel- Receiver For Railroad Company. ody from 6 to 7. During the remainder | A bill was filed in the U. 8. circuit | o¢" pe day the ringing is varied and | court at Baltimore, Md.. by the Bowl ent, but it lacks the irritating | ee} ing Green Trust Co. of New York, |, wer of the early morning exercises. | asking the appointment of receivers g. ar or later public opinion will be | for the Western Maryland railroad. Kipling at Work. ling's den at Brattleboro, Vi. before ne deserted America for England aud saw him at his work. He sat at bis table in a revolving chair. | bad a brook in my hand and said nothing un- jess 1 was spoken to. for | was enjoy- ing a great privilege that was granted to no one eise but his wife. He would write for a moment. perhaps for ten or fifteen minutes at a time. If be was writing verses he would hum very softly to himself an air which proba- bly kept the rhythm in his mind. When writing prose, he was silent. but often he would lay down his pen. whirl round in his chair and chat for awhile. It might be something relat- ing to the subject he was treating or bear no relation to it. Suddenly he would wheel back again, and his pen would fairly fly over the paper. He can easily concentrate his thoughts and as easily descend from cloud land to the commonplace of the day, though in his mind and on his lips nothing is ever commonplace. Some of his poems | he has written when speeding in a Pullman car at the rate of sixty miles an hour.” —Pacific Monthly. | the effects of gas which | been unoccupied for some time. A Judge Thomas J. Morris appointed President Benjamin F. Bush, the rail- road having filed an answer admitting the allegations in the bill of complaint and assenting to the receivership. The allegation of the Bowling Green Trust company is that the Western Maryland will he unable to meet fixed charzes due April 1, amounting to $1,250,000, The Western Maryland was bought fn 1902 by what was known as the Fuller syndicate, acting for the Gould interest, the price paid being $8.000.- 000. At that time the road was indebt- ed to Baltimore city on account of mortgages and accrued interest to the extent of $12.000,000. Gas In Tunnel Kills Four. Four men are dead and ten others aroused. Those boys will be dragged | - re from their perch. figuratively if not | Birds Shot With Water. literally, and peace and quiet will reign | Shooting a humming bird with the in the eponymous capital of the con- | smallest bird shot made is out of the federacy.—Blackwood’s Magazine. | question for the tiniest seeds of lead eee would destroy his coat. The only way Wolves of the Sea. | in which the bird can be captured for Of all the inhabitants of the ocean i commercial purposes is to shoot him few are more destructive than the sea | with a drop of water from a blowgun wolf, a kind of dolphin which attains | or a fine jet from a small syringe. when full grown a length of fourteen | Skillfully directed. the water stuns feet and a weight of 3,000 pounds. him. He falls into a silken net and A swift swimmer, it is quick in its | before he recovers consciousness is movements, cunning as a fox and has | suspended over a cyanide jar. This an insatiable appetite. It feeds on the | must be done quickly. for if he comes young of seal. whale and walrus and | to his senses before the cyanide whiff also on the tongue of the adult whale. | snuffs out his life he is sure to ruin When a mother walrus perceives a | his plumage in his struggles to escape. sea wolf, she endeavors to throw her | cub on to an iceberg if one is near. | were taken to a hospital suffering from | overcame | them while at work in the Pennsyl- | vania railroad tunnel at Baltimore, Md. | A number of others were affected, but | managed to reach the entrance to the tunnel and the safety of fresh air before being overcome. The accumu-| lation of gas is said to have been due | to the fact that the exhaust fan de- i pended upon to carry off the gas and | smoke from trains using the tunnel] was out of order and had not heen | working for several days. Of the dead | one was the white foreman of the gang | and the others were negro laborers. i | 1 A Double Lynching. i Two negroes, Curry Robertson and John Henry, were lynched near Haw: | kinsville. Ga., and their bodies burned. | They were charged with the murder of | Mr. and Mrs. Warren Hart. One of the negroes confessed to the | srime and said the motive was rob- bery. Robertson and Henry were ar rested Wednesday, following the d's covery of the body of Warren Hart, His wife was lying in a dying condi tion. The negroes were taken from the county jail and hanged to a tree. Af ter the lynching the bodies were cut down and burned. There is no excite ment as a result of the lynching. Vaccination Kills Little Girl. A victim of vaccination, nine months-old Viola Marguerite Lusby, of Philadelphia, died from blood poi goning, which is declared to have been the direct result of her inocula: tion with the vaccine virus three weeks ago. Before she was vaccinat: ed the baby was strong and healthy, but two days after the operation sores broke out in various parts of the body and Dr. J. W. Thatcher who was call- ed in and who treated her up until the time of her death, said that the blood poisoning was caused entirely by vaccination. Two Meet Fiery Death. The bodies of Lydia Carter, of Bor dentown, and William Fleck, of Roeb- ling, were found in the ruins of a farmhouse between Florence and Roebling. near Burlington, N. J., which was destroyed by fire Sunday night. The burned building was on what is known as the English farm and had farmer who looked into the ruins saw the body of the Carter woman and later the coroner in making an exami- nation found the body of Fleck. The pair were seen together Saturday. Custer’s Trusty Messenger Dead. Thomas J. Callan, whom General Cus ter sent for reinforcements when his command was entrapped by Indians on the Little Big Horn river, in Mon: tana, and who led a relief force back to the place where Custer and his men had been slaughtered, died at Yonk- ers, N. Y. Callan received a medal from congress in recognition of his bravery in making the dash for rein forcements for Custer Rich Man's Son a Firebug. Dallas Willard, son of a wealthy res {dent of Paine, O., confessed at La. crosse, Wis., that he was a pyromaniac and that it was he who had start ed a number of destructive fires at Lacrosse and West Salem. He was sentenced to the state reformatory at Green Bay for two years. will Be Paid In Full, The depositors of the Leechburg Banking company at Kittanning, Pa, wili be pald in full, according to a statement given out by the Safe De- posit & Title Guaranty company, re- ceiver for the closed institution. Shot to Death While He Slept. Fred. Dolph, of Clinton, Ia., was shot to death while he slept. His head was blown off with a shotgun, placed against his cheek. Mrs. Dolph is up- | ment later the dog's owner inquired Failing this, she gets it on top of her head and swims with it above water. | But this is vain. Diving far below, the fish of prey comes up with tremendous force, striking the frantic mother a terrific blow and jolting the cub off | her head inte the water. Here it falls | an easy victim to the assailant and 5 soon devoured. In its work of destruction the sea | wolf is frequently aided by the thrash- er. a fish which can deliver a terrible | blow with its tail. Got Something For Nothing. Mark Twain told how he got some- | thing for nothing one day in the early sixties when he needed the money. He | walked into a hotel and was petting a | strange dog. General Nelson A. Miies, | who chanced to be present, offered him $10 for the canine. “To be frank,” said the humorist to | General Miles, “I haven't really got any right to sell you this animal, but if | you'll give me $3 you may take the pup | away when I'm not looking, and I'll not tell who took it.” The bargain was closed. and General Miles took the dog to his room. A mo- for his pet, and Mark Twain offered to find the animal for $3. The humorist then went to General Miles’ room and explained all, had the dog returned to him, gave the army officer back his money and returned the canine to its origina) owner, thereby making $3. How to Get Poor Quick. Do not try to save your loose change. It Is too small an amount to put in the savings bank. It would not amount to much anyway, and there is great com- fort in spending it. Just wait until you get sufficient worth while before you deposit it. Do not try to economize. It is an in- fernal nuisance to always try to save a few cents here and there. Besides, you will get the reputation of being mean and stingy. You want everybody to think you are generous. Just look out for today. Have a good time as you go along. Just use your money yourself. Don’t deprive your- self for the sake of laying up some- thing for other people to fight over. Besides, you are sure of today. You might not be alive tomorrow.—Success Magazine. Helping the Postoffice. In a history of the great advance in postal methods accomplished by Sir Rowland Hill is given this anecdote: To the postoffice of at that time tiny Ambleside came one day a well to do man to buy a stamp to put on the let- ter he was about to post. “Is this new reform going to last?” he asked the postmaster. “Certainly,” was the re- ply. “It Is quite established.” “Oh, well, then.” said the man, resolved to give the thing generous support, “give me three stamps!” His Bachelor's Degree. “I'm so happy,” said Mrs. Oldcastle. “My son is to get his bachelor’s degree this year.” “Is he?" replied Ler hostess. “Well, 1 can't blame you for feelin’ as you do about it. 1 never thought much of that snippy Wilson girl he's been goin’ with. How did you get the match broke off 7’—Chicago Record-Herald. Smoothing the Way. “My lawyer told me he thought I would have a hard time establishing my claims under the will.” “What did you say?” “1 asked him how much more money he wanted.” When They Are Quiet. “1 like to go to church.” “Why? “Well, it's comforting to see a man keep a hundred women or so quiet for an hour.”—Bohemian, Old men's eyes are like old men's memories; they are strongest fot der arrest. things a long way off.—Eliot. Humming birds vary in size from spee- fmens perhaps half as large as a spar. row to those scarcely bigger than a bee. The quickest eye cannot follow them in full flight. It is only when, though stiil fiying furiously. they are practically motioniess over flowers that the best marksman can bring them to earth.—New York Press. The Feeding of Dogs. “No doz kept indoors and indeed very few outside should be fed on meat nor should he be fed from the table at mealtimes, as he will soon become a nuisance, especially when there are visitors. If he is always fed at the conclusion of a certain meal— dinner, for instance—he will wait pa- tiently until the prescribed time. It is a good plan to feed after one's midday meal, giving plenty of green vegeta- bles. bread and potatoes, with a very few scraps of finely cut meat, the whole well mixed and some gravy poured over it. If two meals are given, one should be at breakfast time and one in the evening. One should con- | sist of only a little oatmeal and milk or a plece of dry dog biscuit. “At no time should the dog have more than he will eat. and if he leaves anything on his plate except the pat- tern his allowance should be reduced or a meal omitted.”—Suburban Life. The Shoulder Strap. If it were possible to compile such data it would be extremely interesting to know to what extent women have influenced the uniforms and equip- ment of their fighting states. A little instance in point is the steel curb shouider strap of the British cavalry. When Sir George Luck was setting out for Kandahar during the Afghan | operations Lady Luck, knowing prob- ably something of the fighting methods of the tribesmen, whose four foot knife can cut clean from shoulder to belt, sewed a couple of steel curb chains under each of the shoulder straps on her husband's tunic. As a protection from sword cuts these proved so ef- fective that at the end of the campaign Sir George made a report in relation thereto, with the result that they were adopted as a permanent feature of the cavalry uniform.—Harper's Weekly. Seized Her Opportunity. He was not a very rapid wooer, and she was getting a bit anxious. Again he called, and they sat togeth- er in the parlor, “just those two.” A loud rap came at the front door. “Oh, bother!” she said. “Who can be calling?’ “Say you're out.” said the deceiver. “Oh. no; that would be untrue.” mur- mured the ingenuous one. “Then say you're engaged,” he urged. “Oh, may I, Charlie?’ she cried as she threw herself in his arms. And the man kept on knocking at the front door.—Illustrated Bits. A Rejection Slip. “Sir,” said the shivering beggar, stopping the prosperous magazine ed- {tor on the street. “I have a long, sad story” — “Sorry,” briskly replied the maga+ zine editor, passing on, “but we are only open for short, funny stories now; full of the other kind.”—Success Maga- zine. No Thanks. “] broke a record today. Had the last word with a woman.” “Didn't think it possible. How'd fit happen?” “Why, 1 said to a woman in the car. ‘Madam, have my seat’ —Philadel- phia Ledger. Good Trade. “Oh, my business is good,” sald the trombone player. “In fact, I am al- ways blowing about it.” “Well, I'm sooted with mine, too,” sald the chimney sweep. “And mine is out of sight,” said the Do one thing at a time and the big things first.—Lincoln. | “] have lounged in Rudyard Kip- | - Bellefonte Shoe Emporium. ER Warm Shoes for cold feet. We have them in all kinds. A full and complete line of Good Warm Slippers. Felt Sole Slippers make a present that will be appreciated. We have anything in. the Shoe line that you may need. PRICES RIGHT. Come and see. Yeager & Davis BELLEFONTE, PA. Lyon &. Company. EARLY SPRING -- OPENING Everything New in Dress Goods, all the new shades for Spring and Summer, in Silk, Wool and Wash Materials. A tl Everything new in Cloths, Voiles and Herringbone weaves in black and all the new colors. New Ginghams in plain and mercerized, checks and plaid, all new colors, from 12 1-2 to 35 cents per yard. LINENS. Linens in white, blue, pink and natural colors. Silk Pongees in all New Shades. SHIRT WAISTS. The finest assortment in short and long sleeves, open front or back, handsomely trimmed in lace and embroidery or both, from 95 cents up. Finest Embroideries and Laces in matched widths with sheer fine white goods to match. Wait for our opening in Lace Curtains, Heavy Draperies and the newest in figur- ed Mattings. See our fine line of Ingrain Carpets. New Linoleum in handsome patterns, prices always the lowest. LYON & COMPANY, 17-12 Allegheny St., Bellefonte, Pa. Cea