RATES OF ADVERTISING! One Square, one inch, one week... 100 One Square, one inch, one month.. 3 00 One Square, one inch, 3 months...- 6 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 .. (0 00 One Column, one year 100 00 Legal advertisements ten cents per line each insertion. We do fino Job Printing of every de scription at reasonable rates, but It's cash on delivery. Published every Wednesday by For J. E. WENK. PUBLICAN. alt in Smearbaugh & Wenk Building, W.M BTKBKT, TIONESTA, FA. Tern f 1.00 A Ymi, Mlrlctly In Adnnt, No subscription received for a shorter period tliau three moAhs. Correspondence solicited, but no notioe will be taken of anonymous communica tion. Always (jive your name. VOL. XL. NO. 2. TIONESTA, PA., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 27, 1907. $1.00. PER ANNUM. .Re est BOROUGH OFFlCERb. Ritvn f T Pamnn. Justices of the Peace C. A. Randall, D. W. Clark. Oouneumen. J. W. Landers, Geo. Hole . man, O. T. Andorson, Wm. Sniqarbaugli, K. W. Bowman, J. W.'Jamieson, W. J. Campbull. Qpnstable-Vf. H. Hood. Collector W. H. Hood. .Sr.hool Director! J. O. Scowden, T. F. Kltchey, S. M. Henry, Dr. J. C. Dunn, Q. JamjeHon, J. J. tuders. FOREST COUNTY OFFICERS. Member of Congress K.P. Wheeler. Member of NenaleJ. K, P. Hall. AssembluW. D. Shields. President Judge W. M. Llndsey. ' Associate Judges F. X. Kreltler, P. C. Hill. Prothonotary ', Register & Recorder, . -J. . UflNt. tHierilf.A. W. Ktronp. Treasurer W. H. Harrison. ' Commissioners Leonard Aguew, An drew Wolf, Philip Kinort. - District Attorney . O. Brown. - Jury Pommtmoners J. B. Eden, H. II. McClellan.' . Coroner Vf C. Y. Detar. ' County Auditors W. H. Stiles, K. L. HaugIS 8. T.'Carsou. ' . County-Surveyor D. Vt . Clmi. County Superintendent U. W. Morri son. . Itcfulur Term ml Court. .Fourth Moncffcy of February. Third Monday of May. l'ourll) Monday OI nepioinuer. Third Monday of November. Regular Meetings of County Commis- ml.xn, fat anil (111 'PllUBllltVH HI ttlOflth. . Church bb4 Mnbbnth Mckool. Presbyterian Sabbath School at 9:48 a. Preaching in M. K. Church every Sab- bath evening by Rev. W. O. Calhoun. . ' Preaching in the F. M. Church every Bul.hutli auanino- at tlio llHiml hour. KeV. H. D. Call, Pastor. The regular meetings of the W. C. T. ' U. are held at the headquarters on the second and fourth Tuesdays of each mi'Uth. BUSINESS DIRECTORY. pV. N EST A LO I)G E, No. 309, 1. 0. 0. F. ' 1 Meet every Tuesday evening, in Odd Fellows' Hall, Partridge building. CAPT. GEO ROE STOW POST, No. 271 G. A, R. Meet 1st and 3d Monday evening in each month. CAp'r. GEORGE STOW CORPS, No. 187, W. R. C, meets first and third Wednesday evening of each month. KARL K. WENK, DENTIST. TIONESTA, PA. ' All work guaranteed. Rooms over Forest County National Bank. IITCHEY A CARRINGER. i ATTORN EYS-AT-LAW, Tlonesta, Pa. CURTIS M. SHAWKEY, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Warren, Pa. Practice in Forest Co. AO BROWN, ATTORN EY-AT-LAW, Office In Arner Building, Cor. Elm and Bridge Sts., Tlonesta, Pa. UK. F. J. BOVARD, Physician A Surgeon, ' TIONESTA, PA. DR. J. C. DUNN. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON, and DRUGGIST. Ollice over store. ' Tlonesta, Pa. Professional calis prompt ly responded to at all hours of day or nighl. Resldeuce Kim St., between Grove's grocery and Gerow's restaurant. D R. J. B. SIGGINS. Physiciau and Surgeon, OIL CITY, PA. HOTEL WEAVER, E. A. WEAVER, Proprietor. This hotel, formerly the Lawrence House, has undergone a poinpletechange, and is now furnished with all the mod ern improvements. Heated and lighted throughout with natural gas, bathrooniB, hot and cold water, etc. The comforts of ' guests never neglected. CENTRAL HOUSE, GEROW A GEROW Proprietor. Tlonsela, Pa. This is the most centrally located uotol in the place, and has all the modern improvements. No pains will be spared to make itfc pleasant stopping place for the traveling public. First class Liverv in connection. . piIIL. EMERT FANCY BOOT A SHOEMAKER. Shop In Walters building, Cor. Elm Bnd Walnut streets, Is prepared to do all Kinds of custom work Irom the finest to the coarsest and guarantees his work to give perfect satisfaction. Prompt atten tion given to mending, and prices rea sonable. JiUIES HASLET, GENERAL MERCHANTS, Furniture Dealers, AND UNDERTAKERS. TIONESTA. PENN WHITE PINE Flooring, Siding, . and material for Window Casings and Inside Work. A good supply to select from always in stock. Call on or address. s. J. LANDERS, TIONESTA. PA. Vlm.trin rill (Jimmnteed for Rheumatism, Sprains, Sore i1 oot, rains, xo. &i an uuuiura WAR SAID TO BE ENDED. President Bonilla of Honduras Fled From the Field. Sudden 8top In Thaw Trial Wreckers Derailed Train Gambler Killed Prosecuting Attorney Search For Kidnaped Boy Channel Tunnel Project Dead. President Manuel Bonilla of Hon duras has fled from the battlefield and the Centrnl American war has practically ended, according to cable dispatches received In Washington by the Nlcaraguan minister, Mr. Corea. The fall of the Hondurnn capital, Tegucigalpa, is predicted by the Ntc ar;i yuan secretary of foreign affairs, Mr. Gamez. The cablegram from the secretary of foreign affairs follows: '"Choluteca taken. Salvadorean and liondiiran combined armies defeated. President Bonilla hidden in San Lor enzo with 200 men. Sent steamers to cu lit lire them. Tegucigalpa will be taken tomorrow." When shown the dispatch announc ing that President Bonilla had fled from Honduras by boat, Minister Corea expressed the opinion that the fugitive president would go to Salva dor and recruit his army for a second attack on Nicaragua unless the United States and Mexico exercised their good offices to the extent of insisting that Salvador and Guatemala main tain neutrality. If this is done, Mr. Corea Bays, the war Is ended; otherwise he is firmly convinced that it will be only a ques tion of a short time until hostilities are again resumed. The government is without further ndvlces concerning the capture of Choluteca, which is expected short ly. Choluteca Is one of the most strongly fortified towns of Honduras. It is on the Choluteca river, about three miles from the gulf of Fonseca. Wreckers Derailed Train.- A committee of the Pennsylvania railroad which has been investigating the cause of the derailment of the Chi cago limited Friday at Stewart, Pa., near Pittsburg, after taking testimony of the train crew and tht crews which passed the point of dora.nent pre vious to the accident authorized the following statement: "The wreck was caused by some person or persons removing the bolt and tleplates joining two rails and turning one of them inward so as to throw the train oil the track. The work was evidently that of one with knowledge of tracks and signals, as the 'bond wire' which completes the electric signal circuit was carefully kept Intact, thereby causing the sig nals to show 'safe' Instead of 'dan ger' as they would have shown had this contact been broken. "The tools found near the scene of the accident were such as are used In laying track but were not the stand ard tools used by the Pennsylvania Railroad company; nor were they the property of the company. The place selected for the derailment seems to have been chosen with a view of throwing the train off the track and at the same time guarding, as far as pos sible, against the loss of life, as the point where the train ran off the track Is one of the few on the Pitthsburg di vision where there is no embankment over which the train could plunge." Exports of Dairy and Meat Products. The total exports of meats, dairy products and food animals from Unit ed States last year aggregated $230, 000,000 In value, according to a state ment by the bureau of statistics of the department of commerce and la bor. This represents an increase of $7G,nO0,0O0 or 45 per cent during the decade 189G to 190G. More than GO per cent of the last year's exports went to the United Kingdom. Even this large percentage, however, is less than that of a decade ago, when Great Britain took over 70 per cent of Amer ican exports. Of the $250,000,000 worth of meats, dairy products and food animals passing out of the Unit ed States last year $40,000,000 was in live animals, $58,000,000 worth in lard. $3G,000,000 In bacon, $25,000,000 in fresh beef, $21,000,000 in hnms, $18, 000,000 in oleomargarine, $14,000,000 in pork other than bacon and hams, $1,500,000 in butter and $2,500,000 in cheese. Nurse Girl Tried For Murder. A murder trial presenting features of unusual interest was begun at Car niel, N. Y., on Monday, when Jennie Burch, a 14-year-old girl was called upon to answer the charge of pois oning Wilbur Winship, a 2-year-old child, whose nurse she was. The girl lias Indian blood In her veins, her grandfather, Phllo Burch, being a half breed Mohawk. She was employed by Herbert Winship of Patterson, N. Y., ns nurse for his Infant and seemed very fond of the child. Last Septem ber It is alleged she set Are to her employer's barn and gave the infant a pencil sprinkled with atryclmlue. She tried to commit suicide. The de fense will be insanity. Settlement of Fugitive Brewer's Bond. The board of supervisors of Cayuga county, New York, last week voted to accept $0,000 In settlement of the bond of Herman Bartels, brewer, who i'.ed pending sentence after being con victed of attempted arson at Auburn on April 2!, 1900. Bartels is still in Canada. His sister- and daughter guve bonds for $13,000, but the county was unable to recover on executions. Proposed Mary Rogers Monument. The proposal to erect a monument In the cemetery in Hooalck Falls, N. Y., over the grave of Mary Rogers, who was executed for the murder of her husband near Bennington, received a setback when the firm which has the order for the monument received a let ter from Rev. F. A. McCramer, head of the Augustinian order at Hooslck Falls, which has charge of the ceme tery. The monument, which was con tracted for Borne time ago, by persons whose names have not been disclosed, was to have cost $P10, and is now nearly completed. It is a rough-faced granite shaft, bearing a scroll for the Inscription. No inscription has been placed as yet on the scroll. The letter from Father McCramer declares explicitly that the monument will not be received at the cemetery, and adds: "You may notify any one interested that no stone of any kind will mark the grave of Mary Rogers while her body Is in our cemetery." Eugene Sullivan, head of the firm which is building the monument, said that he would communicate with the parties who gave him the order and await their Instructions regarding the disposition of the stone. He de eltned to say from what source the order for the monument was received. Gambler Killed Prosecuting Attorney. Following an attack on an alleged gambling house at Fort Worth, Tex., County Attorney Jefferson D. Mc Lean was shot and killed and Hamll P. Scott, a member of the attacking party, was fatally wounded by Will iam Thompson, proprietor of the re sort. Half an hour later Thompson was surrounded in a lumber yard and cap tured after a desperate fight in which he Buffered bullet wounds that may prove fatal. McLean had been an implacable foe to gambling. He had led a hun dred attacks on resorts. Last fall the gamblers opposed him at the polls, but he was re-elected. He was a son of ex-Congressman McLean, the first railroad commissioner of Texas. There is talk of ordering every gambler out of Fort Worth. ' Severer measures are advocated In some cases. Two Gifts by Mrs. Sage. Announcement was made of two gifts to philanthropic or educational institutions by Mrs. Russell Sage. The first and largest was a gift of $150,000 to the American Seamen's Friend society to erect a new sailors' home and institute in New York. The second gift was of $75,000 to the Syrian Protestant college of Beirut. Syria. Mrs. Sage has also promised to give a building to the association for the relief of respectable and indigent fe males in New York and to provide an annex to the building given by Miss Helen Gould to the sailors of the American navy which adjoins the New York navy yard In Brooklyn. Channel Tunnel Project Dead. The project of tunnelling the Eng lish channel received its death blow, at least for a long time to come, by the announcement of the government's well considered decision against the enterprise. The premier, in announc ing his decision, said: "Even if the military dangers could be completely guarded against there would be a feeling of Insecurity, leading to con stant demands for increased naval ind military expenditure and creating a feeling of alarm Injurious to the country's commercial and political in terests, which would not be compen sated for by the advantages of the tunnel." Awaiting Judge Fitzgerald's Decision. This week may see the appointment of a commission to pass upon the mental condition of Harry K. Thaw and the consequent interruption for some time of his trial before a jury for killing Stanford White. Justice Fitzgerald now has the affidavits of both Bides and may be ready to an nounce his decision soon as to the reference of the question of Thaw's sanity to a commission of experts. If he determines against such a course, the trial will go on. In that event, as practically all the evidence has been given, a verdict should not be far off. Search For Little Horace Marvin. The Delaware detectives who have been endavoring to locate Horace Marvin, Jr., appear to be working on an important new line of inquiry en tirely independent of Dr. Marvin and are keeping out of public view. "The trouble with the people of the country," said the doctor, "Is that they are looking for a big boy instead of a baby. Horace was but three and a half years old and not a large baby at that." General Attack on Europeans. Dispatches from Morocco City say the assassination of Dr. Mauchnmp, who was connected with the French geodetic mission there, was followed By a general attack upon Europeans besieged in their houses and that the British consular agent was forced to fire and killed two persons. The paslia finally sent troops, who drove off the mob. Tho troops are still guarding the houses, although comparative calm has been restored. Taft Sails For Panama. Secretary Taft, who with a party of congressmen and engineers sailed for the Panama canal zone Sunday aboard the dispatch boat Mayflower, is due at Colon March :!0. The trip will in sludo visits to Havana and San Juan. Mr. Taft expects to return to Hump ica Roads April 22. . . . TROOPS FOR MOROCCO. Will Immediately Cross the Al gerian Frontier, Occupation of Oudja Will Continue Till Full Satisfaction Has Been Ac corded French Demands Includs Punishment of Murderer of Dr. Mau champ and Indemnity For Family. Paris, March 26. The Moroccan sit uation, which has been forced into the background for a year past by acute Internal problems, has been brought to the front by the assassination In Morocco City of Dr. Mauchamp, a French subject, and a lively debate is anticipated in the chamber of depu ties today. Members of the chamber from the department of Saone et oire, where Dr. Mauchamp lived, will interpellate the government. One of them, M. Fernand Dubief, Radical Socialist, is in possession of a number of letters from the doctor in which he complains bitterly of his abandonment by the French authorities, giving Instances of their slackness and inactivity. It is expected that extracts from these letters will be read. Furthermore, the Socialists are li able to seize this opportunity to at tack the government in retaliation for their recent defeat in the matter of the strike by the. electricians of Paris. The ministry is fully alive to the importance of the situation and is ready to offer a full explanation to the chamber. The decision of the cabinet to send French troops to occupy Oudja, in Morocco, was unanimous. The occu pation of this point will be continued until full satisfaction has been ac corded. The French demands include the punishment of the murderer of Dr. Mauchamp, indemnity for the family of the victim, and the appropriation of a large sum for the foundation of a charitable institution in Morocco in memory of Dr. Mauchamp. The decision means that troops will immediately cross the Algerian frontier from Tlemsen, where consid erable forces of all arms are sta tioned. The action was taken in or der to compel a Moorish response to the repeated demands of France for the repression of disorder and repara tion for abuses of power, crimes and assaults affecting French citizens res ident in Morocco. The Moroccan government has per sistently refused to execute the agree ments concluded, with France in MOl and 1902 and has absolutely ignored the French government's representa tions. Annual Appropriation Bill. Albany, March 2G. The annual ap propriation bill was reported to the senate by the finance committee last night, was advanced without debate to third reading and will be discussed on the order of final passage probably later In the week. The total appro priations provided by the bill as it comes to the senate is $20,02G,233.54, as compared with last year's total of $19,729,430.94, an increase of $296, 79G.G0. This year's hill, as It passed the assembly, provided for a total of $20,299,252.0G. The senate finance committee has reduced the assembly bill by $273,018.52. Barker Remains Checker Champion. Boston, March 2G. Charles F. Bar ker of Boston successfully defended his title as national checker champion last night in the final game with Aug ust J. Heffner, also of this city. Bar ker receives the first prize, $150. The other money winners In the tourna ment were: Heffner, $100; R. L. S. Head, Bronxvllle, N. Y., $80; H. V. Reynolds, Syracuse, N. Y., $G0, these four finishing in the major division; H. Zink of Boston, $30; Willis A. Hill, Lowell, $40, and George Andrews of Boston, $20, the last three finishing in that order in the minor division. President Newman a Witness. New York, March 2G. President Newman of the New York Central railroad was a witness before the grand jury in conectlon with the jury's investigation of the fatal wreck of the Brewster express on the Harlem di vision on Feb. 16. Other witnesses Included Vice Presidents Brown and Wilgus, Superintendent Queereauk, two engineers of the New York, New Haven & Hartford railroad and all the Central's engineers who had operated electric engines over the new electric line previous to the time of the wreck. Death of a Veterans Editor. Cooperstown, N. Y., March 26. Samuel M. Shaw, who for more than 60 years was editor of the Freeman's Journal of this village, died here last night. He was 84 years old. Mr. Shaw was for many years a prominent figure In Democratic state politics. From 1810 to 1851 he was one of the editors and owners of the Albany Ar gus. Ashes Deposited In Vault of Dank. Boonvillc, Ind., March 26. The Boonvillo National bank received a novel deposit, when the cashier ac cepted a box containing the crematory ashes of Dr. Charles Keegan, who died last week. Dr. Keegan founded the bank In 1874 and continued to be a large stockholder. It was the re quest of Dr. Keegan that his ashes be kept In the vault of the bank be founded. BRIEF SESSION OF COURT. Justice Fitzgerald Arrived Late and Announced Adjournment Till Wednesday. New York, March 2G. In anticipa tion of some action on the part of Justice Fitzgerald regarding the ap pointment of a lunacy commission for Harry K. Thaw, District Attorney Jer ome and all of the counsel for the de fense were present in the criminal branch of the supreme court yester day morning at 11 o'clock. Justice Fitzgerald had fixed that hour for notifying the lawyers in case he should desire further evidence from either side or an argument of any sort. The defendant's family were all In court Mrs. Evelyn Nesbit Thaw came down town alone and entered the Criminal Courts building entirely unaccompanied. Mrs. William Thaw and her two daughters, the Countess of Yarmouth and Mrs. George L. Car negie, arrived together and Edward Thaw appeared soon thereafter. There was a long wait for Justice Fitzgerald, who did not arrive until after 3 o'clock in the afternoon. By this time, the women members of the Thaw family had become tired out and had returned to their hotels. When the judge finally took his place on the bench he merely went through the formality of having the court session adjourned until Wednesday morning at 10:30 o'clock, the hour set lust Fri day for the jury to make its reappear ance in the case. Justice Fitzgerald made no an nouncement whatever to the attorneys and they vouchsafed none. The cere monies In court occupied less than two minutes. ' Justice Fitzgerald Is not expected to make his decision known until court assembles on Wednesday morning. If he decides to appoint a commission he will probably first excuse the jurors Indefinitely, informing them that they will be duly notified when their pres ence is again desired. Then after the jury retires he will formally announce the appointment of a commission. If the judge decides not to appoint a commission he may make no other an nouncement than to direct that the trial proceed. Cossacks Dislike Hangmen's Work. St. Petersburg, March 2G. The question of drumhead courts martial, the Institution of which forms the bit terest grievance of the Liberals against the Stolypin ministry, was raised In the lower house of parlia ment on a motion of the Constitutional Democrats for the appointment of a committee to draft and submit Imme diately a bill providing for the aboli tion of this summary procedure. It was feared that the Introduction of this subject in the house would stir the radicals to such a pitch of passion as to threaten the continued existence of the douma, but the debate was con ducted with surprising decorum and self restraint. Several opposition ora tors narrated the heroic deaths of vari ous persons condemned by drumhead courts martial and a Cosack deputy demanded that the army "be no longer used for hangmen's work." National Wrestling Championship. Newark, N. J., March 26. For the first time In the history of the sport competitors are crossing the conti nent to participate in a contest for the national amateur wrestling cham pionship. Such a contest will take place under the auspices of the Na tional Turn Vereln in Newark next Thursday nnd Saturday nights. George Mohnert, the present champion, will be met by Edgar Frank, the Pacific coast champion. Among others who will compete are Frank Vance of Se attle, Jimmy Meagher of Buffalo, Charlie Schrbneher and George R. Strohn of the New Britain Y. M. C. A. and several members of the Chi cago Y. M. C. A., as well as a number of New York men. Body Found Hanging to Gas Fixture. Rochester, March 2G. A man who committed suicide at the Kendall House, Wat kins, Sunday, Is believed to have been a resident of this city. Ho registered there Saturday night under the name of James Moore and his body was found yesterday morning hanging to the gas fixture In his room. He had used a sheet for a rope. The police department was no tified last night that papers found on the body indicated that his home was In this city. Cannot Get Corn to Market. Washington, March 2G. Vlco Pres ident Fairbanks, who called on the president yesterday, stated in reply to a question as lie left he president's office that tho railny situation con tinued bad, so far as the congestion of traffic was concerned. He stated that he had been unable to get, corn from his farm to market and that his brother, who has a farm In Central Il linois, is making the same complaint. Fighting In Venezuela. Washington, March 2(i. Cablegrams received at tho slate department yes terday leport that lighting has been going on at Ponptnbb, In Venezuela, where General Pcnalosa hist week was reported to have started an insur rection against Castro's government. Honduran Capital Captured. Washington, March 2G. Senor Corea, the Nlcaraguan minister, lust night received a dispatch from Pres ident Zelaya of Nicaragua announcing the capture and occupation of Tegue clgalpa, the capital of Honduras. SUMf.URy OF THE NEWS. Short Items From Various Parts of the World. Record of Many Happenings Condensed and Put In Small Space and Ar ranged With Special Regard For the Convenience of the Reader Who Has Little, Time to Spars. President Roosevelt defied the For-Iker-Dlck machine In Ohio by appoint ing John G. Sater United States Judge for the Southern district of Ohio M. Naudin, an expert on wireless telegraphy, ascribed the loss of the Jena at Toulon to an accumulation ot Hertzian waves in her powder maga zine. Central American reports said Sal vador has joined Honduras in war against Nicaragua and that the Nic araguans have captured Trujllli, a port in Honduras. Mayor McClellan, in honor of the 70th birthday of Grover Cleveland, re quested the board of aldermen to give to the plaza at the Manhattan ent rance of the new Manhattan bridge the name of Cleveland square. Thursday. Thomas Bailey Aldrich, a poet and writer, died in Boston after an opera tion. Capture of Trujllli, Honduras, by Nicaragua, rouses fear in Washington that American Interests may be en dangered. Attorney General Jackson called on the New York, Ontario & Western railroad to refund $117,101 paid by the state on a damage claim. Dr. Luclen Hoton of Antwerp de fended American meat, saying condi tions in packing houses here were no worse than In other countries. Justice Fitzgerald adjourned the Thaw trial to hear affidavits from op posing counsel so he can determine whether or not to appoint a lunacy commission. Friday. Nicaragua will seek to gain tho sup port of Ecuador and possibly Vene zuela in her war with Honduras. An explosion in the Emporium pow der mills, two miles west of Empor ium, Pa., caused the death of six men. Fifty-seven Indictments were re turned against Abraham Ruef, politi cal "boss" of San Francisco, charged with bribery. But for losses sustained In the Pittsburg flood March would have been the banner mouth for earnings In the history of the steel trust. Joshua Harrison was sentenced at Elizabeth City, N. C, to 20 years' im prisonment for the kidnaping and mur der of Kenneth Beaseley two years ago. Saturday. Decision of the British government against tho Channel tunnel has killed the project. In the first Transvaal parliament legislators clashed over language, while anti-Asiatic proposals were pushed to the front. It was announced In San Francisco that the supervisors who testified against Abraham Iteuf In the graft scandal will receive Immunity. One million dollars in American se curities were stolen from a mall bag on the Savoie en route to Paris, nnd one of the band of robbers confessed. Testimony before the Investigating commission at Harrlsburg, Pa., show ed that on some Items the contractor for the state Capitol made a profit of more than 4,300 per cent. Tuesday. Sacking of towns In Moldavia by peasants continues unabated and the revolt Is assuming an anarchistic char acter . Plana by the Vickers company for gas engines that, would make coming warships funnelless greatly Interested naval architects In London Fears of Insecurity In tho time of war leads England to defeat the pro ject for a tunnel under the channel, which was favored by business men. Major Louis L. Seaman said Eng land was waging a campaign here against the Belgian administration In the Congo preparatory to seizing the country herself. Former Senator T. Ralph Burton, Just out of prison, declared In a speech at Abilene, Kan., that President Roosevelt and the sugar trust were re sponsible for his prosecution. Tuesday. One of the ami veterans at tho Sol diers' Homo in Ieavenworth, Kan., who were poisoned from eating hash, died Sunday. Choluteca, the tiost strongly for tified town In HiKiduras, has Seen captured by Nicaraguans and Presi dent Bonilla Is In flight. Fashionable Pittsburg women are plunged in woe because of a strike of tailors, which means that gowns won't bp finished In time for Easter. Harry K. Thaw gives out a state ment from I1I3 cell In tho Tombs in New York denying that there ha been a quarrel among his counsel. Six students are killed and seven teen persons injured in collision be tween Overland Limited and special train on the Santa Fe at Los Anneles. Six "Black Hand' men attacked a fruit merchant who had refused their damajids In a street In Bellefontaine, Ohio, and in a runnlii fight oue man was killed and sever, il wounded. Killed Child she loved. Parents Say That Nurse Girl Gave Hr Charge a Poisoned Peach. Carmel, N. Y., March 26. Seven jurors have been obtained fpr the trial of 15-year-old Jennie Ruth Burch, the Indian girl who stands charged with murdering the infant, Wilbur Winship, by feeding him a poisoned peach. There was a panel of 250 talesmen when court opened. The girl, accom panied by her mother, sat through the proceedings nervously twisting her handkerchief but smiling occasionally. Most of the talesmen wanted to be excused, saying that they could not send a girl to the electric cha'r. The seven men seated are: James H. Barrett, Alonzo Booth, Silas T. Hoag, William J. Bishop, John Atter, Robert K. Austin and William Barrett. Court was late in convening be cause Joseph Barry, who was bringing the prisoner from the White Plains jail to Carmel, met with a breakdown on the trolley road. The sheriff and his prisoner returned to White Plains and took a train to Brewster, whence they made a record drive to Carmel. It was said that Mr. and Mrs. Win ship, parents of the child alleged to have been murdered, hr ve told their friends that they have no desire to have the girl executed, but want her taken to some Institution. Jennie Burch was a nurse in the Winship family at Cowls' Corner and almost from the time of the birth of Wilbur nursed pnd cared for him. He was 3 years old when he ate a peach, which It was subsequently found contained strychnine and Iodine. As the child died Jennie fell across his hndv, and, according to the family, said that she had poisoned the peach, that she wished to die and could not benr to leave her little charge behind. Sodus Murdsr Trial. Rochester, March 2G. Conflicting testimony was given by William Meagher, stenographer to Chief of police Hayden, and Police Sergeant Frank Mehle, both of whom were re called. Meagher said Mehle spoke of a timetable that had been picked up outside of the house where Schultze nnd the other defendants were ar rested. Mehle denied having made any such statement. Mrs. Ida Rol Ilan, daughter-in-law of the woman who kept the boarding house where the men were arrested, testified that early en the evening of March 28. 1906, a mm called at the house and went to the room where the defend ants were afterwards arrested. Sho said this man spoke to one of the oc cupants of the room known as "Kelly." Agency for the Redemption of i I Government f Bonds. The Warren National Bank is asencv for the re demption of the Govern- Z ment Bonds now being X ii ii .i n a. I P cauea Dy tne oecreiary oi . . the Treasury, and have the '. very best facilities for the '. '. i prompt collection ot 4 per 4. CUIU. UUUU3 VI I Nankini; by Mail a t Specialty. 4 Per Cent. Paid on Savings Accounts. Warren National Bank, .X. J New Building, Corner of Second T and Liberty Streets, T I I Warren, 1'eiM'a. I IIIKKCTOIIS. Hon. Nelson P. Wheeler, Kndeavor Jerry Crary, Warren I,ee S. Clnugb, " Hon. Wm. I). BrowD, C. Horton Smith,. Andrew llnrtzel, Ttuviil W tinntv. Khefflpld Wsrreu Watson I). Hiuckloy, Kj., " Ueo. F. Walanii, Tiom uiwta C. Ncliiminell'enir. Wsrren Charles W. JamisHon, " A. T. Suntield, " ChwrleH I'hKHB, " 1. N. Parnile, " F. K. Il,-rtz(il, " William K. Kico, Ksq., " L Miner v. trary, OFFICKIM. (G. N. Parmlee, President. p F. K. Hertzel, Vice President. j K. 11. Lainpo, Cashier. L J. M. Sonne, Paying Teller. P N. C. Hill, Receiving Teller M'M'M''H''M-f