RATES OF ADVERTISING; One Squire, one inch, oneweek... 1 00 One Square, one inch, one month.. 3 00 One Sqaare, one inch, 8 months..... 5 00 One Square, one inch, one year ..... 10 00 Two Squares, one year 16 00 Quarter Column, one year SO 00 Half Column, one year. 60 00 One Column, one year 100 00 Legal advertisements ten cents per line each insertion. We do fine Job Printing of every de scription at reasonable rates, but it's cash on delivery. Published every Wednesday by J. E. WENK. ' Offloe in Bmoarbangh k Wenk Building, ELM 8TBKKT, TIONESTA, FA. Forest Republ Tern 81.00 A Year, Htrlelly Adruee. No subscription received for shorter period than three months. Correspondence solicited, but no notloe will be taken of anonymous communica tions. Always give your name. VOL. XXXIX. NO. 52. TIONESTA, PA., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13, 1907. $1.00. PER ANNUM. T(T. A M . BOROUGH OFFICERS. Burgess. S . T. Carson. Justices of the Peace V. A. Randall, D. W. Clark, Oouncumen. J. W, Landers, Geo. Uole man, U. T. Anderson, Wm. Stnearbaiigb, y.. W. Bowman, J, W. Jamieson, W. J. Campbell. Constable W. II. Hood. Collector W. H. Ilood. Svhool Director J. O. Soowden, T. K. Kltehey, H. M. Henry, Dr. J. O.Dunn, Q. Jamieson, J. J. Landers. FOREST COUNTY OFFICERS. Member of Congress N . P.Wheeler! Member of Senate 1. K. P, Hall. Assembly W. U. Shields. President Judge W, M. LindBey. Associate Judges P. X. Kreitler, P. C. Hill. Prothonotary, Register t Recorder, te. J. C. C eist. mherff A. W. Rtroup. Treasurer W. 11. Harrison. Commissioners Leonard Agnew, An drew Wolf, Philip Kmert. District Attorney A. C. Brown. Jury Commissioners 3. B. Eden, II. II. MeClellan. Coroner Dr C. Y. Detar. County Audit Vf. H. Stiles, K. L. Haugh, S. T. Carson. County Surveyor D. W. Clark. County Nuperintendent). W. Morri son. 11 ocular Terns ef Court. Fourth Monday of February. Third Monday of May. Fourth Monday of September. Third Monday of November. Regular Meetings of County Commis sioners 1st and 8d Tuesdays of montn. Ubarob ami Mabbnth Mebeel. Presbyterian Sabbath School at 9:46 a. in. i M. E. Sabbath School at 10:00 a. m. Preaching in M. E. Church every Sab bath evening by Rev. W. O. Calhoun. Preaching In the F. M. Church every Sabbath evening at the usual hour.' Rev. U. D. Call, Pastor. The regular meetings of the W. O. T. U. are held at the headquarters on the second and fourth Tuesdays of each month. BUSINESS DIRECTORY. TM N ESTA LODUK, No. 869, 1. 0. 0. F. 1 Mets every Tuesday evening, in Odd Fellows' Hall, Partridge building. CAPT. GEORGE STOW POST. No. 274 G. A, H. Meets 1st and 8d Monday evening in each month. CAPT. GEORGE STOW CORPS, No. 137, W. R. C, meets first and third Weduesday evening of each month. KARL E. WENK, DENTIST, TIONESTA, PA. All work guaranteed. Rooms over Forest County National Bank. RITCHEY A CARRINGER. ATTORNKYS-AT-LAW, Tlonesra, Pa. CURTIS M. 8HAWKEY, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Warren, Pa. - Praotioe in Forest Co. AO BROWN, ATTO RN E Y-AT-L A W. Office in Arner Building, Cor. Elm and Bridge Sts., Tionesta, Pa. u R. F. J. BOVARD, FuVBlclan Burgeon, TIONESTA, PA. DR. J. C. DUNN, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, and DRUGGIST. Office over store, Tlonesta, Pa. Professional calls prompt ly responded to at all hours of day or night. Residence Elm St., between Grove's grocery aud Gerow's restaurant. D R. J. B. SIGGINS, Physician and surgeon, OIL CITY, PA. HOTEL WEAVER, E. A. WEAVER, Proprietor. This hotel, formerly the Lawrence House, has undergone a complete change, and is now furnished with all the mod ern improvements. Heated and lighted throughout with natural gas, bathrooms, hot and cold water, etc. The comforts of guests never neglected. CENTRAL HOUSE, GEKOW A GEROW Proprietor. Tlonsela, Pa. This is the mostcentrally located hotel in the place, and has all the modem improvements. No pains will be spared to make It a pleasant stopping place for the traveling public First class Livery in connection. pHIL. EMERT FANCY BOOT & SHOEMAKER. Shop in Waltors building, Cor. Elm and Walnut streets, Is prepared to do all Kinds of custom work Iroin the finest to the coarsest and guarantees his work to give perfect satisfaction. Prompt atten tion given to mending, and prices rea sonable. JAMES HASLET, GENERAL MERCHANTS, Furniture Dealers, AND UNDERTAKERS. TIONESTA, PENN WHITE PINE Flooring, Siding, and material for Window Casings . and Inside Work. A good Bupply to select from always in 9tock. Call on or address. , JAS. J. LANDERS, TIONESTA, PA. Ti 1 . I - SMI 1 ........ .1 , flV -III i a -In. U.. iMlU Fool, Pains, i. At All dWlers MRSJHAWAGAINCALLED Abraham Hummel and Howard Nesbit to Be Subpoenaed. Increased Rates on Grain Train Went Over Embankment John Alexander Dowle's Funeral Telephone Merger Stayed -- Perkins Pays Back Insur ance Money Adams Jury Disagreed. Court proceedings Friday occupied less than Ave minutes and District At torney Jerome returned at once to his office and began preparing for his re buttal testimony. Almost his first move was to have a subpoena served upon Mrs. Evelyn Nesbit Thaw requir ing her to produce In court any letters she may have In her possession writ ten by Stanford White. District Attorney Jerome doubtless will again summon Abraham Hummel to the Bland to testify as to the affida vits Evelyn Nesbit is alleged to have signed, changing Thaw with cruelties because she "would not tell lies" about Stanford White. The prosecutor at tempted to Introduce this testimony by interrupting young Mrs. Thaw's narra tive, but the testimony was barred at that time. Mr. Jerome believes that upon rebuttal Justice Fitzgerald will allow him a much wider latitude than was granted on cross-examination. Howard Nesbit was with the dis trict attorney on Friday and It is said that he will be called to the stand to testify that his sister told him Thaw treated her cruelly while she was abroad In 1901! because she again "would not tell lies about Stanford White." Mr. Jerome hopes that through the brother he can corrobor ate the testimony he expects to elicit from Abraham Hummel, 'the latter be ing under Indictment at the present time for alleged subornation of per iury iii the Dodge-Morse divorce case. . Despite Mr. Jerome's hope for a ter mination of this long-drawn-out case within the next week, few of those who have kept track of the trial are willing to hazard a prediction that the end is less than two weeks away. Many rumors were current of a ser .oii8 estrangement between the de fendant's family and his wife, and of the reported desire of the former to bring about a separation of the young couple In the event of a verdict ac quitting Thaw of the charge of mur der. It has also been a matter of com ment that Inasmuch as two experts have declared Thaw was insane tit the time of his marriage, the cere mony might be declared void anl annulled. Under such circumstances the will and codicil, in which Mrs. Thaw Is left the main portion of her husband's estate, would also be void Increased Grain Rates. Announcement was made by the Pennsylvania Railroad company of the new rates on lake grain shipments which will become effective with the opening of navigation April 15. The rates agreed upon, which will go Into effect at Buffalo April 15, are as follows: To New York. Old. New. Wheat '. 5 5V4 Rye 5 5V4 Flax 5 6 Corn 4 4 Barley 4 4 Oats 3 ft 3 To Philadelphia. Old. New. Wheat 4.7 5.2 Flaxseed 4.7 5.2 Rye ' 4.7 4.95 Corn 4.2 4.55 Barley 4.3 4.55 Oats 3.3 3.55 The trunk line traffic officials have not arranged the commodity freight rates, but the rates on manufactured Iron have been increased about 30 cents per ton. The minimum rate in classified freight, it is announced, will be changed so as to increase the weight of carloads from 30,000 to 40, 000. Train Went Over Embankment. Train No. 33 oa the Western New York & Pennsylvania division of the Pennsylvania railroad was wrecked on Wednesday night between Irvlneton and Warren, Pa. The train plunged over a 25-foot embankment and nine persons were Injured, none fatally. The train was running behind a freight from Irvlneton to Warren and when three-quarters of a mile from Warren the freight ran onto a siding to allow the passenger train to pass. After the freight was on the siding the passenger started through the switch, which is set from a tower about a quarter of a mile away. The switch was not entirely closed and two cars were thrown from the rails and down an embankment into a pond. Near the railroad track runs a pipe line of the Pennsylvania Gas company, carrying 200 pounds pressure. This line was broken and the coaches filled with natural gas. There were four passengers in the rear coach which turned completely over and they nar rowly escaped suffocation by gas fumes. Had the lamps In the coaches been lighted an explosion would have taken place. Telephone Merger Stayed. That a contract was entered into be tween the United States Independent Telephone Co. of Rochester and the American Telephone & Telegraph Co. whereby the stock and securities of the former were to be transferred to the latter; that the New Jersey Trust company was the authorized agent of the so-called Bell Telephone company to conduct the negotiations, and that the transfer would have been oonsum matsd lata In February had it nol been stopped by the injunction pro ceedlngs begun by Attorney Genera! JackBon, were among the disclosures at the hearing before Joseph A Law son Albany. The investigation is for the pur pose of ascertaining whether the pro posed transfer of stock would be in violation of the anti-trust law of thlt state. A copy of the contract of sale was admitted in evidence. Adjournment was taken until March 18 at the office of the attorney gen son of Albany. Funeral of Deposed Leader. A touch of the ostentation that mark ed the rule of John Alexander Dowie In the Christian Apostolic Catholic church In Zion, near Chicago, which fee founded, will be observed during the funeral service of the de posed leader. The white robed choir, which was shorn of its vestments when Overseer Voliva assumed control in Zlon City, will take an active part In the ceremonies, which will be on Thursday in Zion Tabernacle. Judge V. V. Barnes, one of the few elders oi the church who remained faithful to Dowie, will conduct the services and will deliver the funeral sermon. Dur ing Tuesday and Wednesday the body will lie in state in the reception hall of Shlloh house, the Dowie residence. The burial will be at Lake Mound cemetery, at Zlon City, beside the grave of Dowle's daughter, who died several years ago of burns caused by the explosion of an alcohol lamp. Perkins Pays Back Campaign Money. George W. Perkins, former first vice president of the New York Life com pany and now a member of the firm of J. P. Morgan & Co., has sent to the New York Life his personal check for $54,019.19 to reimburse the company for the Republican campaign contri bution made from its funds In 1904, in connection with which Mr. Perkins was recently made defendant on a charge of larceny. Announcement of the restitution of the principal of $48,500 and Interest to date was made by President Alexander E. Orr of the New York Life, to whom Mr. Perkins Wednesday, before leaving on a trip to the South, ad dressed a letter inclosing the check. President Orr also made public the let ter, which explains itself. Statement by Mayor Schmltz. Mayor Schmltz has Issued a state ment addressed to the people of San Francisco. After stating that "as a matter of course" he has not expected fair treatment by the newspapers, he relates at length the conference on the Japanese question held at Washing ton between the president and the school board of that city and himself. The mayor asserts that without sur rendering any of the rights of the peo ple, he and the school board succeed ed In opening the way for the immedi ate exclusion of Japanese laborers as well as for a more stringent treaty and an absolute exclusion law at the next session of congress. Spooner as Counsel For Hill. It was learned at St. Paul, Minn., from an authority regarded as unim peachable that John C. Spooner of Wisconsin will become general coun sel for all the diversified interests of James J. Hill. The Great Northern president offered this position to Spooner six months ago, and the Wis consin senator, it Is said, agreed to ac cept on condition that he retain his senatorshlp till May 1. The salary of the senator's new post Is understood to be $50,000 a year. He probably will have his offices in New York city. Elihu Root, secretary of Btate, Is said to have declined the place. Adams Jury Discharged. The Jury in the trial of. Steve Adams at Wallace, Idaho, for the murder of Fred Tyler, after being in deliberation since 11 o'clock Wednes day forenoon, Thursday night at 7:10 announced through Foreman George Ellers that It was impossible to agree on a verdict and was discharged by Judge Woods. The Jury for many hours stood 7 for conviction and 5 for acquittal. Mr. Hearst Seriously III. William Randolph Hearst Is seri ously ill at his home in New York city, and his engagements for some time to come have been cancelled. The editor's illness was made known when the 14th assembly district, Brooklyn, Independence League Club cancelled a meeting at which he was to have spoken. Mr. Hearst recently con tracted a severe cold. Kelsey Before Judiciary Committee. State Superintendent of Insurance In New York state, Otto Kelsey, whose removal from office has been recom mended by Governor Hughes, h: ex pected to appear before the statu sen ate Judiciary -committee at Albany next Wednesday in his own defense. Grave of Nancy Hanks Lincoln. Govervnor Hanly of Indiana has signed the bill under which the state will take charge of the grounds in which is located the grave of Nancy Hanks Lincoln, the mother of Abra ham Lincoln. Archie on Way to Recovery. Marked improvement Is shown In the condition of Archie Roosevelt, the president's son, who Is III with diph theria, and he Is now believed to be out of danger. President Roosevelt outwitted the senators who opposed his forest pres ervation poliy by creating great for est reserves before the act forbidding this course becomes a law. ATTACKS WIFE'S STORY. Mr. Jerome Greatly Hampered by Rules of Evidence. District Attorney Tried to Show by Dr. Rudolph Witthaus That There Is No Poison Known to Science That Would Cause the Effects Described In Mrs. Thaw's Evidence. New York, March 12. On the first day of the state's rebuttal in the trial of Harry K. Thaw District Attorney Jerome came to a temporary stand still against the practically solid wall he rules of evidence have built around the story of Evelyn Nesbit Thaw. Mr. Jerome began to attack this story as soon as court opened. There ensued a well-nigh incessant fight between the prosecutor and Del phln M. Delmns, leading counsel for the defense, at the end of which Jus tice Fitzgerald upheld the rule laid down at the beginning of the trial that young Mrs. Thaw's story is admis sible only as tending to show the ef fect it might have had In unbalancing the defendant's mind and that its truth or falsity is immaterial. Mr. Jerome tried to avoid this rule by declaring that he was endeavoring merely to show by Inference, by cir cumstantial evidence as to details of the story, that Mrs. Thaw could not possibly have told the story to her husband. Although he will doubtless be blocked by the same rule when the time comes, it is said that he may at tempt in the Bame way to prove an allb for Stanford White on the night he is alleged to have maltreated young Miss Nesbit. Nine-tenths of the day's sessions were spent in arguments and in nearly every instance Mr. Delmas won his point as to the law, while Mr. Jerome in the arguments got before the Jury a knowledge of what his witnesses would have testified to had they been permitted. The district attorney call ed 10 witnesses during the day, but aside from obtaining from the state's eye-witnesses to the tragedy the opin ions that Thaw seemed rational the night he shot and killed Stanford White, little real headway was made. Ethel Thomas' Suit Against Thaw. Lining up all his forces in rebuttal, Mr. Jerome decided to open his fight upon the defense by attacking the story told the jury by Evelyn Nesbit Thaw. He called to the stand Freder ick Longfellow and asked him first about the case in which Ethel Thomas is alleged to have sued Thaw for dam ages because of crueltreatnient. Mr. Delmas objected to questions along this line under the professional privi lege of lawyer and client, but before Justice Fitzgerald sustained the ob jection and ruled out the evidence, Mr. Jerome declared: "The story of the girl tied to the bedpost and whipped by Thaw is the story of Ethel Thomas. This poor girl is now dead." Here Mr. Delmas In terposed an objection to the district at torney's remarks and the latter began an attack along different line. He showed Mr. Longfellow the pho tographic copy of the affidavit Evelyn Nesbit is said to have signed in the of fice of Abraham Hummel alleging that Thaw treated her cruelly while abroad in 1903 because she "would not tell lies against Stanford White." Mr. Jerome followed this up by asking the witness if Mrs. Thaw did not turn over to him certain papers to which she had subscribed. Mr. Longfellow said she had. There was a long contro versy between Mr. Jerome and Mr. Delmas, at the conclusion of which Mr. Longfellow brought his entire exam ination to naught by declaring that Mrs. Thaw never showed him a paper similar In any way to the Hummel affi davit. He thereupon was excused without cross-examination. Police officers who saw Thaw the night of the tragedy declared he acted rationally. "More Rational Than Irrational." Captain Hodglns of the "Tender loin" precinct qualified his answer to the question by saying only that "for a man who had just committed mur der, Thaw acted rationally." This was stricken out and he then said: "Well, his eyes had a stare and a gaze such as they show as I now look at them." This answer also was stricken tut and finally the captain declared: "Well, he seemed more rational than irrational and that's the best answer I can give you." Many of the witnesses called by the state during the presentation of the case in chief were recalled. All de clared Thaw seemed to them to be ra tional. During the afternoon recess Mr. Jer ome sprung something of a sensation by calling to the stand Dr. Rudolph Witthaus, a chemist and expert In poisons. The district attorney framed a hypothetical question covering Eve lyn Nesbit's description of her night with Stanford White in the 24th street studio house and asked If there was any known poison which would cause insensibility in two minutes and per mit the quick recovery testified to by Thaw's wife. Around this vital point, which wound up means by which the prosecutor could attack the truth or falsity of Mrs. Thaw's story, argument raged for an hour or more. Mr. Jerome pleaded wi h Justice Fitzgerald at great length. Mr. Jerome Insisted that he was not attacking the truth of the story. He W8 3 calling for an expert opinion, he bsi erted, to the effect that no known drug would produce the effect testified to by Mrs. Thaw. MATERIAL EVIDENCE OF SOUL. Physicians Claim to Have Demonstrat ed Its Existence. Boston, March 12. His curiosity aroused while present at the bedside of dying patients, Dr. Duncan Mac dougall of Haverhill, Mass., aided by four physicians of high professional standing, has been for the past six years In a private Banitarlum near Bos ton, conducting experiments to discov er the existence or non-existence of a "soul" In the human body. As concrete results, It Is claimed the mysterious human soul has at last been catalogued upon scientific princi ples, just as is the heart and all vital organs of the body, as an actual, ma terial thing; that when this soul flits' from the body it diminishes the weight of the body by a certain measur able amount, and that this amount can be weighed In actual pounds or frac tions of pounds. The difference between the weight of the live human body and the body a moment after death, or when the soul has quitted it, was found to he from one-half ounce to one ounce; and to this, it Is said, there can be no other possible solution except that it is the weight of the human soul. In every case the loss was shown after all known scientific deductions, such as the loss of air, of moisture and of all excretions and secretions of the body, has been taken into considera tion. The method of finding this result was to place the dying patient in bed upon one of the platforms of a pair of scales made expressly for the experi ments, with an equal weight In the op posite platform. These scales were so delicately con structed as to be sensitive to a weight of less than one-tenth of an ounce. In every case when the soul was set free by death the platform opposite the one in which lay the subject of the test foil suddenly just as naturally would have happened If a weight had been taken from the opposing bal ance. The figures on the dial Index indicated the diminution in weight. Fined For Selling Diseased Meat. Burlington, Vt., March 12. The Consolidated Rendering company, which owns and operates the Burling ton Rendering company's plant here, pleaded guilty In the Chittenden coun ty court to four indictments charging it with selling and having in its pos session diseased meat. It was fined a total of $3,000 costs. The Indictments contained 400 counts, to 34 of which the company pleaded guilty. The re maining counts with the Indictments on similar charges returned by the grand jury against L. E. Brigam, man ager of the Burlington plant, will be quashed upon the payment of the fines imposed. Told Where His Body Would Be Found Utica, Jan, 12.John Celestie, an Ital ian in Herkimer, left a letter under his pillow saying he was going to commit suicide, told where his body would be found and advised the person who should go to receive it to take a wit ness for fear he would be charged with murder. When the lot which he in dicated was visited, Celestie was found wounded. He died, not know ing where to locate his heart and had fired too low. Prison Ship Martyrs' Monument. New York, March 12. The special committee to select a design for the prison ship martyrs' monument award ed the contract to a Brooklyn construc tion company. The price fill be $172, 000 and the monument will be erected In Fort Green Park, Brooklyn. It was designed by Stanford White and will be 200 feet high and constructed of granite. The committee includes Governor Hughes and Mayor McClel lan. Saw Cuts Man Nearly In Two. Oxford, Conn., March 12. Stephen Sterjam slipped and fell across a log which was being carried toward a big buzz saw In a sawmill here and was almost cut in two before the machin ery was stopped. The saw tore through four ribs, cut into the man's lungs and scratched the outer .portions of his heart. Sterjam's left arm also was broken, but immediate surgical aid was provided and It is thought he has a chance of recovery. Was an Organizer of Railway Clerks. Washington, March 12. The posj offlce department confirms the fact that Hugh H. Shang, a railway clerk), has been given three days to Bhow cause why he should not be dismissed for stirring discontent among postal employes and disobedience. He fig ured In the organization of the Broth erhood of Railway Clerks, a new body. Receiver For Knitting Company. Utica, N. . Y.. March UV The Mo hawk Valley Knitting company of Mo hawk will go into the hands of a re ceiver. Several of the larne creditors appeared by counsel before United States Judge Ray at Norwich and as'ied that a receiver he appointed. Wliile the capital stock of the corn pa ly Is $r(n,000 the liabilities, It Is sa d, will run nearly $230,000. Miss Johnson Weds March 23. Cleveland, March 1 2. The wedding of Miss Elizabeth Flotnnoy Johnson, da ighter of Mayor and Mrs. Tom L. Jo mson, to Slgnor Frederlco Marian! of Milan, Italy, will take place on Sat urlay, March 2:!. at the family res' de ice, 2343 Euclid avenue. The wed ding will be quiet and only the Imme diate families will be present. SHORTER NEWS ITEMS. Pithy Paragraphs Chronicling the Week's Doings. Long Dispatches From Various Parts of the World Shorn of Their Padding and Only Facts Given In as Few Words as Possible For the Benefit of the Hurried Reader. Sir Alexander Swettenham, gov ernor of Jamaica has definitely re signed his post. - Navy officers declared that British navy target practice scores were far Inferior to those made by Americans. E. H. Harriman astonished the in terstate commerce commissioners by paying them a "social visit" In Wash ington. Sailors of the Sylph sent flowers to Archie Roosevelt, Bon of the president, who Is ill with diphtheria at the White House. Twenty-five hundred children of pub lic school No. 80 in New York march ed from the blazing building, few of them knowing it was on Are. Thursday, Mrs. Daniel Rhoades Hanna, daughter-in-law of the late Senator Hanna of Ohio, has brought suit for divorce, charging cruelty nnd abandonment. . Grover Cleveland submitted a brief to the Association of Life Insurance Presidents condemning certain threat ened legislation. General Booth, head of the Salvation Army, who arrived , from England, wants $3,000,000 for his work, saying he does not care if It is tainted. Mrs. William Thaw broke down and cried while narrating on the witness stand the change in her son following his trip to EniopM with Evelyn in 1903. Abraham Ruef, under indictment In San Francisco, failed to appear when his case was called and the court an nounced that his $50,000 bond will be forfeited if he does not appear. Friday. Former Senator Spooner was chosen as counsel to all of James J. Hill's financial interests. Captain Louis Wendel, First battery, National Guard, N. Y., will be tried by court martial on the findings of the court of Inquiry. Counsel in the suit against Mrs. Mary Baker G. Eddy's managers plan to compel the aged Christian Scientist leader to appear before a magistrate. E. H. Harrlman's visit to Washing ton was to seek for common grounds on which he and President Roosevelt could stand concerning the relations between the government and railroads. The Jury in the case of the people against James and Philip Stroher, charged with the murder of William F. Bywaters, their brother-in-law, at Culpepper, Va., reported a verdict of not guilty. Saturday. George W. Perkins has paid back to the New York Life Insurance company $31,019.19 campaign contribution. Claims of victory are made by both Honduras and Nicaragua in reporting recent events of the Central American conflict. . Saratoga, N. Y., has been definitely decided upon for the natlonat encamp ment of the Grand Army of the Repub lic this year. With her route heavily guarded by police the Empress Dowager of Russia arrived In England to visit her sister, Queen Alexandra. George D. Burton, an electrical engi neer, will sue the New York surface, elevated and subway companies for $10,000,000, charging infringement of trolley patents. Monday. Judge John Woodward told the Chautauqun society of Buffalo that coriiorate abuses were due to lack of individual responsibility. John Alexander Dowie, founder and deposed leader of the Christian Catho lic church and Zlon City, died in his Zlon City home Saturday. Action by the California legislature and consequent Irritation In Japan have hampered the settlement of the Japanese school question. Judge Kimbraiigh of Danville, 111., dismissed the manslaughter charge against Will J. Davis, based on the Iroquois theater fire in Chicago. London's county council elections, resulting In a Unionist victory, have caused the Liberal government to mod ify their plan of attack on the house of lords. Tuesday. First all-steel wreck and fireproof postal car is placed on route between New York and Washington. All the great naval powers will be represented in the 100 war vessels as sembled at the opening of the James town exposition. The boiler of a Pennsylvania loco motive exploded at Metuchen, N. J., and three men were killed and a num ber of others hurt. To escape from high prices, pro prietors of hotels and restaurants In New York plan a $10,000,000 company to handle all supplies. Cuban Liberals are excited over the apparent majority In the election law commission in favor of allowing for eigners to vote in municipal elections. T.'he New York slate tax board re poited $18,900,000 due In franchise taes add recommended that franchise ho ders bo required to pay this tax before having case review"'1 Blowing: the Medical experts are calling the at tention of the public to the importance of performing the nose blowing opera tion In a scientific aud hygienic manner. First one nostril and then the other should be blown without undue vio lence. Doctors state that the two nasal passages should never lie closed at the same time. If they are obstructed, as In the case of a cold, the back of the throat is filled with compressed air, and this, together with the discharge ami the microbes which it contains, may be driven through the eustnchlal tube into the middle ear and lend to serious resirfts. A great authority on the subject used to forbid his patients to blow their noses when suffering from a cold. The eourse Is hardly one which will commend Itself to those In the habit of catching colds. The best advice would seem to be that when It Is necessary to blow the nose the blowing should be done gently. London Mall. lllntory if the Typewriter. "The history of the typewriter Is In t west lug." said an inventor. "The first patented machine was Henry Mill's. It wus as big as a bureau and made no popular appeal. This was in England in 1714. The lirst type bar machine was made hi America. Its Inventor was A. II. Beach. The patent was taken out in 1N."(5. The Beach type writer was not practical. The first practical typewriter was Invented by Latham Sholes In LSI'.". Sholes had for partner.) S. W. Soule and Carlos Gild deu, but these two men became dis couraged nnd dropped out. It wusn't till some years later that Sholes got his machine ready for the market. Then he took it to a big firm of kuii makers, the Kcmiiigtous, and it at once liegan tu se'.l dm a large scale. Sholes re mained in the employ of the Iteming tul.H up to the time of his death." iteNiii, The re-'in of thc'slioemaker aud fid dler Is obtained from different species of the Hi- tree as the Scots U r, the larch and the balsam fir of Canada. It is well known that n resinous Juice exudes from Ihesc trees, which hardens into solid tears. The clear Juice Itself, before it has ilrieil up by coming to the sur:'.-M-. is known in commerce as tur-perili'-e ami Is in the main composed of oil of turpentine and resin. When the Juice Is distilled, the oil comes over, and l!;e resin remains behind. When the distillation Is carried on to dryness, common resin Is formed, but when water Is mixed with It while yet fluid the ivsulliiij; mass Is the variety called yellow resin, which is more preferred for most purposes because It Is more ductile than the former, owing prob ably to its containing some oil. ";,Vf HH? ,7V 4 7c Paid on Interest Accounts 4 SOME PEOPLE CALL THRIFT LUCK. Thou sands ot thrifty men and women have built up savings accounts in banks that have not only made them independent but placed them in a class looked upon a3 lucky. Yet there was no luck only thrift and econo my and a determination to succeed. This bank encour ages thrift by accepting de posits in any amount from $1 up and paying interest at the rate ot 4 l'ER CENT. COM POUNDED EVERY SIX MONTHS. Warren National Bank, New Building, Corner of Second and Liberty Streets, Warren, Pcnn'a milECTOItM. Oeo. F. Walaon O. N. Farmlee Jrry Crary Churles Chase David W. Beaty A. T. Sonneld (' Hchimnielfeng Minor D. Crary V'atson I. Hinckley V. E. Hertzel Audrew Hertzel William K. Rice l ee 8. Clouub O. Horton Smith Uon.W. 1). Brown Chun. W. Jamiseon Hon. Nelson 1'. Wheeler OFFICEKN. G. N. Farmlee. President. F. K. Hertzt'1, Vice President. K. II. I.ainpo, Cashier. J. M. Sonne, Paying Teller. N. C. Hill, Receiving Teller. ,Y 1 v ft I u