n RATES v. One Square, one flic. One Square, one inch. One Sqnare, one Inch, 8. One Square, one Inch, one r Two Squares, one year.,....... Quarter Column, one year Half Column, one year One Column, one year M Legal advertisements ten cents ps. each insertion. We do fine Job Printing of every 'w soription at reasonable rates, but it'a oaa, on delivery. ' TDBII 1 . 11' ( OL. XXXIX. NO. 43. TIONESTA, PA., WEDNESDAY JANUARY 9, 1907. . ;$1.00. PER ANNUM. , t- , . . . ' - hz D, ,U.T. W, In. T, )ann a of ecb TORY.- I9.I.O.O.F. ning.inOdd iding. OST.No.274 8d Monday JORPS, No. st and 'bird .month. SESTA, PA. Rooms over ik. IER. J-AT-LAW, Tloneata, Pa. , arren, Pa. f-AT-LAW. : a. Cor. Elm Pa. f Surgeon, )NESTA, pa. ( SURGEON. Hoe over store. ,1 calls prompt .urs of day or Ht.. between w's restaurant. Im' T). 3 diseases of the Be hours oy ap tl8 CENTER ST. t diseases of the Throat. Special ! ttlnsr or ft lasses, !Kn. m..7-H d. m j 16 CENTEK ST, ar. s n GO.!BTHROWNINABANK : - : I Casb.'er Killed antf the Aisas- . ' " sin Blown to Bits. Fugitive From, Justice Taken New T York Legislature Seven Yeara Fop Incendiary Earthquake Loaiea Re pudiated 35 Dead In Rock Island , Wreck Death In Hotel Fire. With the finding Sunday of the personal effects of the man who threw the bomb In the Fourth Street Na- . e. tloual bank at Philadelphia on Satur day, killing Cashier W. Z.! McLear Mid himself, there la little doubt left In the minds ot the police that he was Rollo Steele of Garner, la. - The bomb thrower Is found to have slept Friday night at the GrantHouse, a hostelry on the outskirts of the Tenderlolu, frequented mostly tjP re sectable . working people. He (regis .cred as J. R. Steele of New York. Ilarly on Friday night he engaged a 50 lent room.. He carried a grip which le refused to allow the colored por er to carry to the room. When detectives 'searched the room unday they found several yardfc of ow fuse, a number of detonating I ps, a revolver, a box of cartridges, a I imber of tools and dome clothing. iere wag a suit bearing the tag of a ilcago clothing house and a pair of t erallg marked with the name, of a t. ncliurg, Va., merchant There wns J-.lsofi waybill for a box shipped Over me Houtnern railway. As Rollo Steele Is reported to have been in Chicago and Lynchburg, and at the- latter place lately, the police are practically sure ot lyomb thrower's identity. . . It is probable that none 'of those hurt by the explosion will die Will lam J. Crump, the negro messenger ot the bank,' is the most dangerously in jured and was on Sunday operated on to save his eyesight., His erej will never regain their normal state. The police Saturday found A frunch of keys in a fragment of the clothes of tbe bambthrower. It bore a tig1 mark ed "R. 'Steele, Garner, la." badge of the Modern Woodmen of the World was also found which, it is' thoug'u, belonged to him. Those who know Steele well say that for some time he had. been experi menting with .explosives and" electric batteries He frequently talked in a way that indicated thoughts of violent acts. Steele failed 10 years ago Ls a con crete contractor. He has had sickness J In his rurally and been in deljt and his menus' it'i'fl say mat ne prooaoiy was driven to desperation by his reverses. : Alleged Mine Swindler Arrested. R. V Flower, alias C. d. Dalney, who bit been a fugitive from New York slice 1903, where he is wanted to answgr charges of grand larceny and Bin- (idling credulous investors out of about $1,000,000 on alleged bogus mining Operations, was arrested In Philadelphia Friday by Detective Ser geant MtConvllle of New! York and sevfr?.l ileal officers.- '''..- ' FlowerUwho the detectives say is 'Surgeon, J the- greaAst mine swindler of the OIL CITY, PA. I tiEtg, wa -, captured in a room In one ot the bleieSiee buildings in the cen . .u.V,. . ,. , , , ter oi iiiBiiiy, woe re n ueveiopeu ne has been 1'cated for some time. Un der the na e of Professor Oxford, the detectives fiy, he was Beeklilr to se cure (mona from Investors' uy repre- epntl tg he had a-chemical spro- ess rod ent I Tl Khei t h could make diamonds 'reclous stones .and a na- ther rlck.1. . arror.of Flower ends a chase "t'e dej.tives i and postal autfaorl " vfch carried them through Mex- ltraj America, parts of South i and Canada, besides many f in the -United States. I The Week In Congress. 'discussion of tbe Brownsville, ; ftalr htch resulted in the dls fronv the army of a battalion ro troops by the president will ue tfils week, to he the topic of ! ount Interest in' the senate. . Jer events set down for the week: senate are a speech by Mr. Ov- 'i-'SLOan theauestlpn Jf grtB'.B rights, growing out of the Jt'p; i,se agitation; a speech on Wednes-' y by Mr. McCnmber in support of b service pension bill, and a vote on Thursday on Senator La Follette's bill Vegulating .the hours of service on I jkilroadi. Among the measures which will re ceive committee attentlonn tne nouse 13 the ship subBldy blll.'TJiere Is rf i newpd effort to reach a compromise oi this measure and again some promise. & that direction. . Ncuy York Lealelature. - -V , The uewly elected senate and as sembly of New York convened Wed nesday at noon to begin the 130th ses sion of the state legislature, effected organization in both houses by the election of the nominees of the Re publican .caucuses, received tne nrst annual messago of the new governor, Charles E. Hughes, and adjourned as usi'il for one week, until next Wednes- i i MT evening-'. ' v i iader. Senator Raines, as president ffiro tempore of tne senate, and Speak er -James W. Wadsworth, Jr., of the assembly, both of -whornwere re elected, Will arran6 b' hments cf committee nie" ' tts ' V of committee n eVj'ut. "ig at In t':o heart if the business sec tion was blowi out about 8 o'clock Sunday night. North Water street la a narrow thoi lUghfare leading oft from Main str 't. After a car fu' Investigation the cause of the explosion is still a mys tery, but Is believed to have been 'caused by a dynamite bomb. The building wheii the explosion took place was occupied by a large shoe repairing shopj , . - Seven Yeani For an Incendiary. .- Seven years Imprisonment and a fine of $2,000 snd costs was the sent ence at .Trenton,.- N. . J., by Jus tice Rellstabon David H. Brand, convicted of .attempting to burn his store on July 2,. 1905.. The costs it is estimated will -amount to $3,000. Judge Rellstab fixed ball at $50,000 pending an appeal. "Brand cdllapsed la court and had to be carried to Jail by a constable. John Brand, a broth er, convicted on a similar charge, also senteqiea. Earthquake Losses Repudiated, j All the British insurance companies have repudiated their liabilities arising from : thf earthquake at Valparaiso last year J Speaking at a meeting of the' Royal Iilurance company cf Liver pool, thekhalrman said that .In terms of the ralparalso policies differed from thse of San Fronclsoj. tho company s, he added, had all agreed to resli the Valparaiso claims and lawsuit .had been commenced. . , McCarren Trial Postponed. ,THe pub-committee appointed to try Senator McCarren and the state com mitteemen from Kings county for political treachery during the last campaign assembled at New .York on Thursday and adjourned untfl Feb. 14.' Thjs step was taken because of legtl steps of McCarren and his col leagues who have begun an action to test the authority of the state com mittee to expel Its members or to in vestigate their political opinions. ' Gunboat For Naval Militia. .The little linked States . gunboat Sandoval, intended for the use of the naval militia on Lake Ontario, reached her dock In New York City last Thurs day, having arrived from- Norfolk under the command of Lieutenant E. N; Walbrldge, and manned, by members of the Second Separate div ision of the naval militia of Rochester, N. Y. The Sandoval was captured at Guantanamo during the Spanish-American war. She. will be repaired in New York and proceed, to Lake Ontar io in the spring. - , ., Record Year Fpr Immigrants. .The fiscal yei)rjnded June 30, 1906, produced a word eclipsing all former ones Id Immigration ' ' During that period the population of the United States was increased by the addition of 1,100,735 Immigrant aliens, whilst 03,018 non-Immigrant aliens entered Its ports, making the to tal admissions 1,166,353. - Tbe Increase over last year's record, ot 1.059,755 (1,026,499 aliens plus 33, 265 transits) was 106,598. Great Year For Deer In Canada. . Last year was a great year for deer hunting in Canada. By latest returns received by the Grand Trunk railway system, whose lines tap some of the best hunting grounds, the sportsmen had better luck last year than in 1905. Compared with the total weight of the carcasses of deer for 1905, the season last fall shows an increase of 11,820 pounds. A conservative estimate of the nutnber of deer killed last season In the highlands of Ontario is 11,000. 35 Dead In Rock Island Wrecks Thirty-five persons, all Mexicans but three, were killed, 55 persons were in jured and the bodies of 30 Mexicans were incinerated Wednesday, in a head-on collision ot two passenger trains or the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific railroad near Volland, Kan. The wreck occurred while both trains were running slowly on a curve in a cut where the grade was step. Ralaull's Stronghold Taken. Zinat, Ralsuli's stronghold, near Tangier, was practically destroyed by fire and fell into the hands of the troops of the sultan Sunday after 'a short and almost bloodless fight. "Raisull and his 700 followers suc ceeded Jn eluding capture and reach feif the mountains despite the elaborate -planu of War Minister Gabbas to pre vent their, escape. Three Deaths In" Hotel Fire. Three lives were lost In a fire that destroyed the' American hotel at Del hi, .Nf Y., early Sunday. r The dead are: iWilliam kf Inter, druggist? Mrs. Anna Winter, his wife; John O'Connor, tailor. 4 All were residents of Delhi and permanent guests at the hotel. They had lived In felhl for years and were prominent in tbe business community. Inquiry Into Harrlman Roads. The Interstate commerce commls sfoii on Wednesday will meet at Chi cap? to resume . its inquiry into- the Harximan railroads. This hearing durfng two days 'in New York brought out some unusually Interesting test! mJny, but the evidence forthcoming is expected "to be more important . in eiiowlngVu detail the financial opera tions of tbe big Hurriman system. National Automobile Show. " The national automobile show will pe opened at Madi'Bon Square Garden, frew York, on Saturday. Especially (elaborate, plans bnve been made lo 'make this the largest exhibition ot lis . kind since the invention ot the mo'.or kX OkSTOCKTRUISFER Declare '. Hot Unconstitutif;?! by C rt of Last Resort. " . . It- A ; ; . .. . -r Justice K "'' Disposed of All the Ob jections the Statute Case jWai Brought Ly a Citizen of Connecticut ' to-'Seegre. ftversal of RulTigV'ol New York 0urts. 1 jM ,Wahlngtonj Jan. 8. In lecidinj the csBe, of Albvt J. Hatch verii Ed ward Reardon.pe latter a pfafcff ofll cer of New Ytjrk, favorably'tq Rear ,don, the supremo court of the" United States passed upon the validity of the stock transfer' lax law, in ijffect hold ing it.to be not in' eontravention of th constitution and thus sustaining the decision of the' aurreme court of New -York. , - V; ' , i f The case, was brought 1) Hatch oc a writ of error, to secure areversal o1 the rulIng8 .of the. New fork courti by which ho -was refused release or writs of haeas corpus. Tbe statute imposes a fine and imprisonment for failure to pay the requble fee on all Btock transfers made in tie state. .- Hatch Is a citizen of CJnecticut and It is charged that in Ju ir H905, be sold to another ConnectinV man eorae shares without affixing .-.lamps. When arrested Hatch immeately applied for a writ of habeas rled the matter to the sort. The question raised forcement of the law one of liberty ad 'p: iipus and car- ourt cf last re- as that the en would deprive operty without due process of Uiw, Kile it was ar gued that the New Ylrk state consti tution had also been (violated in that the amendment to tlii tax laws under which proceeding f. XIb . had lain for only one day Instead of three on the tables of members if the New York legislature. Justice .Holmes di posed of all the objections to the Ne ' York statute in succession. Of, the contention that a tax on sales is a ti : on property, he said in part: "W'lia ever the right oi parties engaged Injcommerce among the states, a sale l'Pends in part on the law of the .ste where it takes place for Its valldit. , and in the courts of that state, at ie t for the mode of proof. No one rmld contest the power to enact a iatute of frauds for such transactions. therefore the state may make parties ay for the help of Its laws, so far this objection Is concerned.' With reference -th the argument that tne tax is an interference with Inter state commerce he jmtlined the court's position as follows! "There is not a ibadow. of a ground for calling the transaction described such commerce, .'the bargain was not affected In an-y way, legally or prac tlcally, by the fft that the parties happened to have come from another state before they inade it. It does not appear that the petitioner came Into New York to sell his stock, as it was put in his behrlf. It appears only that he sold after coming into the state. But we are far from implying that it would iave made, any differ ence if he had couie to New York with the supposed intent neot any bargain was niaae." POSTOFFICE FRAUD OK TJ$, House Passed a Bill Providing For Judicial Review. ,'; Washington, Jan. 8. -rThe 'homse passed a bill providing for a Judicial I review of orders1 excluding persona from the use of the United States mall facilities, after a debate lasting most of the session. This debate was par ticipated In by Representatives- Crum packer (Ind.), the author of the bill; Overstreet (Ind.)', Dalzell (Pa.), Lit tlefield (Me.), Perkins (N. Y.), and Mann (111..), who led the opposition. In arguing that the bill should be passed, Mr. Crumpacker said the pow-' er given the postmaster general, un der the statutes, to issue fraud orders was not all in the nature of adminis trative discretion. It partook rather of the nature of a aollce power for the regulation of the morals of the people of the country. . ".'' Mr. Mann read Several advertise ments whlcB he said seemed to show that concerns were still doing busi ness which VBbt to'come within tha scope of fraud orders. He said the bill was defective and . that' there should be no. permitting doubtful con cerns to fleece the public. , XT ' Judgment Against Hyde and Others. Albany, Jati. 8.-The court of appeala affirmed by default the interlocutory Judgment of the lower Court Overrul ing the demurrer of James Idzen (Hyde and others as officers' Of the Equitable Life Assurance ' society to the complaint . of Mary p. Young of Saratoga Springs. c Mrs.' Young sued to compel restitution ett funds of, the society which she alleged were wasted during the Hyde administration. At torneys for Mrs, tho court merely dismiss the appeal but to this former Senator Brackett, counsel for Mrs. K'oung,sbJected and Judgment waa entered. An appeal in volving 'practically the Bame parties, that of Young h. the Equitable Life Assurance wciety, Alexander and others, is dovn for argument In the court of apr;als today. ' 3 'ark Denies Report. Jan. 8. Commissioner 1 last night that he had. by President Roose DtWeooe lo 4'-tl'icg tho str'.t od the ralUM to Teiaa .' Chlcag Clark Ach, I been refcii'ts'.e velt to (s his .oonmn'lip niror 1 y--vlheri PsoJUn I B LOyiS TO HAV CAM?,' LE. Wealthy Churchman1 to F!e duce Veni'cVi' Tower at $ W.C00 4. r -t' -St. LouIhJ Jan. fc. A St. Louis mil lionaire, FvS.JiiflinGtbiv wIH Rftitlfy personal- whlmii by spendlngj $40,000 to-see In this ally a reproduction of tho Campanile' at Venice. ffte tower is to be 200 feet high and wf be sit- uated between' theauditoriu& and the' chapel of the Second Eaptiast church, which Is to be constructed Kings Highway and Washington bi vard. This corner Is one of tuif highest points In the city, and "Lud's Tower," as the members of the church have al ready named the edifice, will be a land mark. It will serve the purpose of a monunent to Its builder. -The tower will be so solidly con structed that 'the elements are not expected to Injure it for centuries. It will have many windows and observa Hon qnenlngs. It is not Mr. Ludlng ton's idea that the room in the tower shall be wasted. Instead there will be eight floors fitted up and furnished. The second floor will be a meeting room for deacons and board members, As a finishing feature it Is probable that a set of chimes will be installed and that the tower will regulate time in the West End residence-district, ' Requisition For William Stlnson. Albany, Jan. 8. Governor Hughes granted a requisition for William Stln son of Terre Haute, Ind., on the charge of burglary. Stlnson was the vice president of the National Mine Work ers of America for the 11th, dlBtrict of Indiana. On Christmas day a burg lary was committed in the office of John H. Kennedy, Harrison, Ind., and cheeks and money orders for upwards of $000 to $700 were taken. Stlnson, it Is alleged, the next day cashed one of the checks In Terre Haute. Later in Chicago he told John Mitchell, pres ident of the United Mine Workers, that he was going to New York city. Mr. Mitchell saw in the papers an ac count of the robbery and that Stlnson was suspected. He telegraphed to Mr, Kennedy, .who notified the Ne, York police. Stlnson was arrested as a vag rant at Mt. Morris. N. Y.( Dec. 31. Some of the checks and money orders, It is alleged, were found in bis posses sion. Troops Sent to Scene of Strike. City of Mexico, Jan. 8 A special train carrying two regiments of sol diers bas juBt left for Arlzaba, Vera Cruz. Strikers in the textile factory there have burned the company's store to the ground and It is said are threat ening to destroy, the mill. The prop erty is owned by A. Garcln, a French citizen. It was thought that the tex tile strike had been amicably settled through the intervention of President Diaz and Vice President Corral, but it appears that a number of men are dissatisfied with the terms. The town is about 40 miles southeast of the City of Mexico and Is one of the most im portant towns of the state ot Vera Cruz. ' , Decision In Street Car Case. 'Washington, Jan. 8. Supreme court of the United States affirmed the de cision of the United -States circuit court, Nortlffrn district of Ohio, in the Cleveland street car case. The de cision holds the franchise ot tbe Cleve land Electric company' expires March 12, 1905, but Die Forest City coiriftny s enjoined from using the old com pany's tracks. MARKET REPORT. New York Provision Market. New York, Jan. 7, WHEAT No. 2 red, 88c f. o. afloat; No.-l northern Duluth, 88 c. i. f. Buffalo. CORN No. 2 corn, 490 f. o, afloat: No. '2 yellow. 490 new. OATS Mixed oatlj 26 t 82 lbs., 39&39c; clipped white, 36 to 40 lbs, 4044c. PORK Moss, $17.50018.50; family, $18.50(5)19.00. ' ' - HAY Shipping. 8590c; good to choice, $1.05 1.15. y CHEESE State full cream, fancy, 14o. "''..' EGGS State and Pennsylvania, 30c. POTATOES State and Western, $1.25.1.45. " , ,. t ' - ' ' feuftalo Provision Market. tS: " , ' Buffalo, Jan. 7. ' 1 WHEAT No. ' 1 northern carloads, 84&c; No. 2 red, 76&c. CORN No. 2 CPinK 45H46c f. o. b. afloat; No. 2 yellow, 47c. OATS No. 2 white, 39&39y4C f. a b. afloat; No. 3whlt6.384f 38c. FLOUR JTancy blended, patent per bid. $455.&t) winter famllcr, puient'. $4.154.80. -s ;, v ' BUTTEft .Cv?ra!N- -western ex tr . f'uln. ?,2ei state and PeRDByl- vantb crtaroery, Slo; dairy, cbatc. to fancy. 28429c. - . CHEESE -AFancy full cream, 14c; toni to cholcel3g13ttc. -jjqGS Selected white, 30c. , POTATOES .Home grown, fancy, per bu., 43045c; fir to good, 4042o. East Buffalo Llvttock Market. CATTLKi-Cholce exSirt steers, $5.75 ST. de sought to have6 00; Kooa u cii0iU stcuer Bieera, $4 o5(tl-, IUCUIUMJ 'Vt' BlOCIOj $3 65414 00; Mr to sood FHws, $.-50 &4 50; good to choice ho;ior3,- $4 85 6 75- good butcher bulls, $3.500O; choice veals, $9.259.50; fair to good, 18.75fiii9.00. ' ' v - SHEET' AND LAMBS Choice lambs, $7.908.00; cholca .year lings, $6.50&C.85; mixed Bheep, $j.00 5.65. HOGS Best Yorkers, $6.756.80; medium and heavy hogs, $6.706.75; pigs, lisht, $(f!SD6.95. . . Buffalo Hay Market. Choice timothy. $18.5019.00; No. 1 tlinotnv, I17.a018.00; No. 2 tlnr othy. $15 5016.Q0,bet clover mixed, 15.lU((Ht).UU. - . " POINTED PARAGRAPHS. Summary of ItieVeek'i News M ,of the Worlds.. . ilv: . ,' rv Cream eft the Ne9 Culle . f:crr Long Dispatches sjbd Put In Proper' 6haps For the Hurried ReadeiVho Is Too 'Busy to Reat(tho Longer Reports , a'nrf Desires io Keep p6ted. - - . Wednesday, la the fighb at Touopah, Nev.,' be tween Joe Gaus and Kid Herman of Chicago Gans won by a' knockout" In the eighth round. - Hearst men and Mayof McClellan are anxiously aStfTng 'developments in the movement lo ha-f 9' the' mayoral ty ballots recoft ' .a: ' ., - John D. ftoci'.";'ller quotes Lamar tine: "I have' set ii very little,, evil In the world, Mr' -'X. rameiffber the good," tor a -. V -a r.'s AeBUmenK W. 8, w. on- i ioh Cleveland real estate man, !; uujked In a Pittsbus&J hotel by a t)1', who won, W "confi dence, and in tiij in'd bo badly .hat he is expected to tV Metrqpoiltan ,,,, ''Insurance com pany lets contract for teel to be used In the construction of ihe 50-story building to be erected 1n New" 'jtotk. which will be the liin'.icst ttilldlng iji L-. Thursday. f-"f-"-w"" ,. John D. Rockefeller mnke it New Year's gift of neatly "Ji.yiiO.OOO to the University of Chicago, increasing, his total benefactionB to $19,416,922.. Recent railway horr'irH stir up the Interstate conimereroomyilsslon which prepares a sensational-report asking drastic legislation from cofigresa.', ' ' " Archblshon -liv: '1 ' at ' his- New Year's celebration ta WiTailglpaia. likened the Frenojvo ,,uj;aiis for1 the government's treatment of the Ro man Catholic church, : ., Congress will ,bft asked by the American Association :f iili'Ativaiice ment of Science to esta.lUli.-aumt forest reserves tit tl;i- White Moun tain and Southern App;iJachian region, Friday.' New Hampshire l;i itunjibmikB deadlock at polls and.eiucts Charjes M.- FJoyd, Republican, .governor, Girl shoots atijudo in St. Louis court in plan of two Sisters to slay the Jurist and then commit suicide. James McCrea of ,FIttsourg was elected president of the Pennsylvania railroad to succeed the late A.. J. Cas': satt. ' . ' ". . Reports have been brought try Alex andria, says a cable dispatch, tuat.the' mahdi Is alive and Is preparhrg to re conquer Algeria, Tunis and Egypt. Talking o a government official, James J. Hill says whenever he goes on a rail J -'rney be is constantly fear ful that be may be killed 4ja wreck. Saturday. London Throne, noeording tto a c&bla dispatch, says that: the )uke and Duchess ot Marlborough t are 4 recon ciled. . ' -v . Wonder was expressed r aftc't; the Roosevelt had been placed In dryilock that she had stood the trip back from the Arctic regions. , ' '-. Major General Von.der LaunHz, pre fect of police of St. Petersburg, ivas as sasslnated by a young man, who' was in turn killed by an officer. -.In Gnesen, Prussia, thetrlal has be gun of a member of the Prussian house of lords, a member of the lowejr.housb' and other persons accused of renewing Polish agitation. Attorney General Jackson withdrew the appointment of Gherardl Davis to act as his representative in proceed ings to compel William R. Hearst file another statement of his campa expenditures. ' Monday. Count Leo Tolstoi expressed feJlr in an Interview Jest Japan should! yet make Christian nations her vasslls. Natural gas supply of Cleveland was cut off by -an explosion, leaving thousands shivering in the midst ?fa cold wave- without either light or Attorneys far Mayor McClellanob talned a"' court order stopping wroceed Ings In the quo warranto petition for the recount of the votes in Mie contest Harted by W. R. Hearst,' Interstate commerce commission hearirjs in New YorV in Harrlman mct.iti'ende(f for Ve present, with V'ifiluni RockefeIlr-under subpoena to g.v detalls'-of big stock purchase and isaWi K Bomb, hurled hy a gold-seeking crank, wrecks Philadelphia's loading bank, blows its hurlcr and the cailer trf atoms' and malms six other? and causes a panic during the busiest hour .of the da - ' ' Tuesday. Cuban papers discussed the proposal for n protectorate form of government mil warntH) the natives not to oppose "V .. . . . .. . .. lVinia uoiuniau anu Alexander Berkiuan wero. arrested on a charge of Inciting to violence against the gov- ernnifti"" Engliers on Uie Pennsylvania's East river tunnel construct f machine to foe artlllcial rock into the ground and stop flow of air. Railroads and the Interstate com merce commission are engaged In a struggle lor the mastery under the new rate) regulation law. The Bt-fimer City of Tanama, for the safety of which fears were felt In San Francisco, was reported as sighted off Maiatlan, Mexico, apparently all right. Finding- Most Interestluar Chapter. Women as n class are credited with , haying no scruples about opening a book at the middle or end or anywhere else tliey may expect to find the most Interesting chapter. A frequent fern nlno visitor at libraries was overheard revealing to a friend of her own sex her secret of locating at once the most thrilling chapter in any book, no mat ter' how unfamiliar one may be with It. "You simply close It tight," she said,, ?nud glance along tbe edge of the leaves. ' It Is seldom, Indeed, that you do not notice a distinct line, or even more than one, caused by n numbei of edges soiled slightly . more than those about them. Open the book there aud you have the beat chapter." ' A librarian explained this by saying that the reading and rereading of the par ticularly interesting chapters of a book naturally cuuso certain pages and their edges to be more soiled. Of course the ' longer the book bus been In circula tion tbe more distinct are the marks. Philadelphia Record. , . , A Bit of FnlryUnd. Cruising down Mllford sound, New' Zealand, when..tlio clouds are clenrlng after a showetT the mountains are like and fenrful, they are lneed everywhere xvlth the streaming silver of cloud boru cascades. One day we watched .rtenyldrty- tourney. of one of these cat-' nracts. ItJjwung from the very top ot . . , . . .... UiCfXlon rocK,.a).3,wo root perpenuic ular wall.,' Long -nud slender and glint- ft, libn frlnect til tha aim If fall atl-ltlpht . down over n.r btit never readied us. It bad dropped, suy, 1,000 feet, when it was caught by the. wind, swayed this --ryniid that, and finally blown clean away, dissolving 'in misty rain. We steamed right under it, or, rather, un der the place frhere it ought to have been, and experienced the peculiar sen pntiou of looking straight up at a wa terfall that, as the launch skipper put it, "never fell anywhere." Four Track News,' . .' v ' , j . j Eer Food. i ' 'Sutterjijlujljydro carbon, and all ex-. cesRe.otiUare stored up as fat In the POUr, l-l f;iU3 UUCIfcJ Uliu yyjni. w work to thoso who eat heartily of It. For any one mulcted with consumption butter cookery- If .T'cnty of fat can be digested, Is one of the best ways of curlnj? tbe disease Bhould it be in Its early sti-s ff of keeping It at bay It . ndvn'umL1' It is not economy to spare the butter' at titbit even to the healthy people. Butter ' l not a simple fat composed merely. of one sort. It is a mixture of nd7ess'tlittn seven different sorts ot fats", atuno more complex oil can be takeivlhiui this. ' For dyBpcptic a,nd llverl(?ople pood bread and but ter, nlojiK fc ltli fi:ult7hould Invariably W-iilts. ,rnstry for such people is only nnothr naor poison, and biscuits Are its often us not baked with lord. t ., EUmbrth Ctrtrt, ftlaeatocfclnsT. Elizabeth Carter (1717-180C) was one tho orlirlnnl "blue stockings" ot whom a bioK'rupher 'says; "A perfect knowledge of F?ncbj ncqnlred nt an eurly oko frora-i Huguenot refugee minister nt Canterbury, was the foun dation of Elizabeth Carter's education. Her fa.tUui.''tauKht her,- together with her lrother.Latln, Greek and Hebrew, thousli tlii .slwness of her apprehen slou. tired jjirt- his putUwce. Italian, Spanish nud German she taught herself without any assistance, aud later in life she set herself to learn Portuguese, but for want of books she made no l brent prou'n-M. lastly Hhe taught her- mt Arabic T!illkAru,,f ulc" tlpnary, contabiiiii; nrlous "innings ot words which :!. whero lia(l.b, l'nproperly translated. - ' ' j 1 , .j, - , The IconorlaKla Baraacii Howe. Twk'kenhnm belonged .successively t Sir William Stanhope, who enlarged it considerably; to Mr. Welbore Ellis, aft- erwnrd Lord Mendip, ana lastly to Baroness Howe, xnis iniiy was so much annoyed nt the ;cuyiDer of plK" grluis who enmo to nee the ptace that sbo razed It to the ground, cut down tho trees ana euueavoreu to ouim-ruio . all vestiges of Its former distinguished occupant London Notes and Queries. , Names and Divorces. An Australian divorce court' Judgo thlnkB that there Is a subtle connec tion between high soundlug feminine baptismal numes and matrlmortlitl un hnpplnes. He has noticed that the names which generally come under bis ' Judicial cognlzanco are Gladys, GweK- ' dolen, Ermyntrude and tbe like and that ho seldom or never in his official capacity hears of a Mary or Strldget A Tame" or a Jake. "Was 'that a bonafldo piece that Ethelluda was playing?" asked Mr. Curarox. ' "Certain ly," answered his wife. "That was a selection from Wagner." ' "Well, of course I wouldn't express any' doubts In company, but half tho timo I can't tell whether Ethelluda Is playing a. tune or a practical Joke. Washington Star. Ouly Thinks So. "Does that young Featherbead play poker?" asked Robinson of a mutual acquaintance. . "No,'was the reply, "but bo tbluks that lie doen, and wo are careful not to undeceive hliu." Cincinnati Tribune. A Retort Courteoan. Student There must lie some mis take In my examination marking. 1 don't t'l'uk I deserve nn absolute zero. Professor-Neither do I, but It Is tho lowest mark I am nllowed to give. . New York Times. Consciousness of error Im to a certain extent 11 cqinsclimsuess of lindens' ' lutf, and cirrt'ctioii of error ," est proof of energy nn ' dr. 0- , A. I ( 4