RATES OF ADVERTISING! One Square, one Inch, one week... f 1 00 One Square, one ineb, one month- 8 00 One Square, one inch, 8 month.... 6 00 One Square, one Inch, one year .... 10 (0 Two Squares, one year. ............... IS 00 Quarter Column, one year 80 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. a every Wednesday by J. E. WENK. a in Smearbaugh dc enk Building, LH BTHKltT, TIONBSTA, FA. i, 11.00 A Year, Strictly la Advue. ntnrod aa Reoonri-olaM matter at the .(office at Tloneata. t No subscription received for a shorter ...iriod than three months,. Correspondence solicited', but no notloe will be taken of anonymous oommunlca lion. Always give your name. pORE EPUBLICAN VOL. XLIII. NO. .36. TIONESTA, PA., WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1910. $1.00 PER ANNUM. R ST ) BOROUGH OFFICERS. Jiurgesa.J. D. W. Bock. -Justices of the react O.A. Randall, D. Clark. wmneumen. J. W. landers, J. T. Dale, i.?1 Kobloson, Win. Nmearbaugh, 'k Joyce, W. O. Caluouo, A. 11, (bable Charles Clark. OoUlclor W. H. Hood. SaAoo't Director J. O. Scowden, It. M. rman, Q. Jainleson, J. J, Landers, J. , Cjleint, Joseph Clark. JORgST COUNTY OFFICERS. ,Mnnber of Congress N . P. Wheeler. Member of Senate J. IC. P. Hall. Assembly K. H. M (willing. President Judge Win. K. Rice. Appexate Jwiges-V. C. li 111, Samuel Pro! honotary, Register & Recorder, de. -J. C. OelsU MeritrS. R. Maxwell. Treasurer (Jeu. W. Holoman. Commissioners Win. II. Harrison, J. M. Zunndel, II. II. McClallan. District Attorney M. A. Carringsr. Jury Commissioners Ernest Slbble, , Lewis Warner. Coroner Dr. M. C Kerr. County Auditors George H. Warden, A. C. Gregg and J. P. Klly. County Purveyor D. W. Clark. ; County HuperinUndent I). W. Morri j son. Kraalar Trrua f ('rt. Fourth Monday of February. Third Monday of May. Fourth Monday of September. v Third Monday of November. Regular Mewling of County Commis sioners 1st and 3d Tuesdays of month. I b.rck and Hbbath Nch..l. Presbyterian Sabbath School at 9:46 a. m. t M. K. 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 Sablwth evening at the usual hour. Rev. K. L. Monroe, Pastor. Preaching in the Presbvterlan church every Nablmtli at H:iH) a. in. and 7:30 p. in. Rev. H. A. liailey, Pa-tor. , The regular meetings of the W. C. T. I V. are hold at the headquarters on the second and fourth Tuesdays of each month. BUSINESS DIRECTORY. 'PI' NESTA LOIHJE, No. 369,1.0. O.K. A M eeU every Tuesday evening, in Odd Fellows' Hall, Partridge building. CAPT. GKOROK STOW POST, No.274 O. A. R. Meets 1st Tuesday after noon ofeai'h month at 3 o'clock. CAPT. GKORGE STOW CORPS, No. 137, W. R. C, meets first and third Wednesday evening of each month. TF. RITCHEY. . ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Tionesta, Pa. MA. CARKINGER, Attorney and Counsellor-at-Law. OifiVe over Forest County National Bank Building, TIONESTA, PA. CURTIS M. SHAWKEY, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Warren, Pa. Practice in Forest Co. AO BROWN, ATTORN EY-AT-LA W, Office In Arner Building, Cor. Elm and Bridge Sis., Tionesta, Pa. FRANK 8. HUNTER, D. D. 8. Rooms over Citizens Nat. Rank, TIONESTA, PA. DR. F. J. BOVARD, Physician A Surgeon, TIONESTA, PA. Eyes Tested and Glasses Fitted. D R. J. B. SIOOINS. Physician and surgeon, OIL CITY, PA. HOTEL WEAVER, V. F. WEAVER, Proprietor. Modern and up-to-date in all its ap pointments. Every convenience and ' comfort provided for the traveling public. CENTRAL HOUSE, R. A. FULTON, Proprietor, Tlonsela, Pa. Tills is the most centrally located hotel in the place, and lias all the modem Improvements. No pains will be spared to make it a pleasant stopping place for the traveling public. pHIL. EMERT FANCY BOOT A SHOEMAKER. Shop over R. L. Haslet's grocery store on Elm street. Is prepared to do all Kinds of custom work from the finest to the coarsest and guarantees his work to give perfect satisfaction. Prompt atten tion (riven to mending, and prices rea sonable. Electrlo Oil. Guaranteed for Rheumatism, Sprains, Sore Feet, Paiim.Ao. At all dealers Strong and Garfield, the Best Waterproof Shoe made lor men. "Yfi ar sole agent. LAMMERS OIL CITY, PA. OF IV Olean Woman Held for the Kil ling of Her Sister. Victim'! Body Was Found to Be In a Terribly Mutilfted Condition. Brother States That There Was Con siderable lll-Feeling Between the Sitters Accused Woman Indiffer ent to Frightful Description of Sister's Injuries. Mary O'Connor, aged 65 years, of Olean, N. Y., who was found In a terribly mutilated condition by her sister, Mrs. Mirgaret Dean, on the evening of No vember 10th, d'lod at the Olean Gener al hospital Saturday morning, at 8:45. The autopsy revealed a much worse condition than wa first thought. Two ribs were broken, fix teeth knockc' out, and her body from tho waist up was one mass of bruises. District Attorney George W. Cole and Chief of Police Thorne gave Mrs. Dean a searching examination but learned no new facts concerning the crime. Mrs. Dean, who is a sister cf tho dead woman, still holds firmly to her first story, that she was not home at Mie time of the crime. Martin O'Connor, a brother of Mrs. Dean and Mrs. O'Connor, Is authority for the statement that there was a, epiarrcl at the house where the deed was committed, on Thursday after noon, between htm and his sister, Mrs. Dean when he requested that a ihlrd sister, Caroline O'Connor, who I? a cripple, be brought from bis home to live with the slaters at Olean. During the quarrel, Mrs. Dean told Martin that he must take "that thing away too," referring to her sister, Mary. Some months ago an action for an accounting was brought by Mrs. LVan against her brother, Martin O'Connor. After two days of Investigation by Chief of Police Thorne and District At torney Cole, it was decided to have a warrant issued charging Mrs. Dean with murder in the first degree. Pa trolman Allen read the warrant to Mrs. Dean in her cell and t?he said "Is my sister dead?" She was brought before Justice Shaffer and r.sked for counsel. She sent for Attorney Allen J. Hastings. Mrs. Dean was held for the grand Jury by Police Justice ShalTer charged with the murder of her sister. Mary O'Connor. She remained Indfferent to the terrible descriptions of the doctor and police officers and contin ually aided her counsel during the cross examination of witnesses. DEATH OF TWO BROTHERS Authorities Suspect That Mm Were Given Poison. District Attorney Simons of Wayne county, Pa., and Justice of the Peace Smith of White Mills, Ta., had some physicians perform an au topsy on the bodies of the two weak minded brothers, Edward and Charles Kunkle, who are Biispccted of having been poisoned. The body of Edward, aged 42, and Charles, aged 49, were found, the first In the barn and the second under a bed. Tho brothers were farmhands and lived with their 70-year-old father, Frank Kunkle, who Is also a farm hand. When the bodies were found by a domestic, the father manifested so much Indifference that suspicions were aroused. It is known that the men gave much trouble to their father and that recently he was heard to remark that he wished he was able to place his boys in some Institution. It seems that it was hours after the body of Edward Kunkle was found that the body of Charles was discov ered under the bed. In the meantime a local constable had Bearched the house and he asserted that when he did bo there was no body under the bed. MILLS TO RESUME Little Falls Knit Goods Manufacturing Company Will Start Business Shortly. At a hearing before Federal Judgo Kay at Norwich, N. Y it was an nounced that the chief creditors of Robert MacKinnon, the Little Falls Unit good? manufacturer, who recent ly failed with liabilities of $2,000,000, have reached an understanding as a result of which the big mills of the coriKiration at Little Falls will shortly resume operations under tho direction of the trustee. Representatives of a majority of the creditors met in New York and an agreement was reached. At the hear ing in court this agreement was sub mitted to Judge nay and it met with bis approval. The operation of tho mills will continue until the sale of the property is effected. This action will result in a hotter price for the proerty when it Is Bold. The appearance of Mr. MacKinnon on his pe-tltion to be discharged in bankruptcy brought out some Inside facts about his investments in min ing ventures which are claimed to have played a part !n his financial collapse". Americans Purchase Big Ranch. J. M. Chum and A. J. Ylek, who have extensive ranch and livestock holdings in Southwest Texas, have just purchased a ranch of one and one half million acres In Northern Mexico, near the Arizona border. They will Stock the ranch with cattle. ACCUSED BLACK HAND MURDER Prosperous Italian Shot Down In Street of Middletown. Dominlck Morone, a prosperous shoemaker In tho Italian colony in Middlotown, N. Y., was murdered in the streets of that city Sunday night by two strangers, who are believed to have been emlssprles of the New York lllack Hand organization. Morone, who was 40 years old, has been in this country 15 years. He re Bided in New York for years, but sev eral months ago left that city and went to the little country village of Chester.' It was stated by his fellow country men here that he left New York be cause he feared vengeance of some organization. After spending some time In Chester Morone removed to this city. Sunday afternoon two ttrangers made their appearance In the Italian section and and Inquired where Mo rone resided. They were told and ihey went to a spot near Morone's bouse In School street. After the men had watched Morone's house for hours, he appeared and locking his door walked up the street. The two strangers followed him. At the corner of School and Cot tage streets, where a score of persons were passing, one of the strangers called to Morone. He turned around and as he did so the men pulled re volver and commenced firing. Morone turned and ran up the street for 50 feet and then fell on tho side walk dead. A bullet had passed through his heart and another through his abdomen. The murderers ran In the opposite direction and no traces of them were found by tho police, though it Is be lieved ihey mndo their way back to NVw York by way of a freight train, which was pacing near the scene. GIRL AS CAPITAL PRIZE Wants to Sell 10,000 Ttickets at $1 a Ticket. Miss Livingstone, of Tacoma, Wash., aged 20. years, who Is recently from Petoslty, Mich., and born in Virginia, offered herself as a capital prize In n lottery which she lequests one of the local newspapers or some society to conduct. She says the law does not prevent lottery prizes offering them selves. Getting her ideas from the play "The Lottery Man," Miss Livingston praises to sell 10,000 tickets at a dollar each. The man getting tho lucky number will be entitled to hur and half the money. If the winner be unwilling to mar ry her, he forfeits his half; if she be unwilling to marry hi in, she forfeits her half. If both are unwilling, they divide the money. She wants foreign ers barred. Should a married man win, she will be released from marrying tho winner. The girl declares she Is In earnest, her motive being "I need the money." Her relatives are dead. Since leav ing high school she has been em ployed as a bookkeeper. The girl has black hair, blue eyes, rosy cheeks and a trim figure. HOSPITAL NOT OPENED All Efforts to Obtain Water Supply Are Unavailing. The opening of the county tubercu losis hospital at East Bloomfield, N. Y., again has been postponed indefinitely on account of the failure to locate a water supply. A well-digger from Naples, after several days of futile effort threw up the job in disgust, and Pennsylvania well-diggers then were called in. A depth of 125 feet has been reached without results. If a depth of 225 feet is reached without result, the work will be abandoned. If water cannot bo secured by digging, it will be neces sary to pipe water from a spring over half a mile away. A right of way for a pipe line has been secured. ROMEO AND JULIET They Ask Forgiveness and All Is Hap piness and Peace. As a sequel to the elopement of Jo seph Juestlno with Miss Jessie DeSain, a comely piald of seventeen summers, last June, the couple reurned lo Lyons, N. Y., to ask parential forgiveness, having been away nearly six monthi. Miss De Sain was the belle of tin Italian colony on Madison and Aside streets. Her father was a prosperous Italian and did not. look with favrr upon the courtship of Juestino. On? dark night U June, Juestino pot a lad der and put it up to (he bedroom win dow of bis lady love. She came skit ping down to meet him and away tho air went to Pennsylvania where they remained until Saturday. Born and Died In Same Room, John Realty died at Latrobe, Pa, in the same room In which he wa horn 84 years ago. He was a grand son of Penjamin Realty, who crossed the Delaware with George Washing ton to ta!;e part In the battle of Tren ton. The family had lived oi tho Real ty farm here for more than a hundred years. Gypsies Prepare for Winter. A large band of Gypsies in several covered wagons passed through Nun da, N. J., and will locate for the winter two miles east of the village on the Wesle-Ralley farm. They have a large double tent which Ihey will line with tray and locate war a piece of woods for a wind breaker. Several young children are in the the party. is Known to Have Been (n Vicinity Where Girl Was Murdered. Little Marie Smith's Body Wai BrouQht to Police Headquarters In Closed Wagon and Laid Out In the Chief's Private Office, and Wher Suspect Was Brought In and Showr Corps He Broke Down, but Declare:4 He Was Innocent of Any Wrong doing. Asbury, Park, N. J., Nov. 15. Thorn as Williams, alia lllack Diamond. Ihf negro arrested on suspicion of havln1? murdered 10-ycar-old Marie Smith, th Asbury Park schoolgirl, made a state mcnt to the police, which has been partly disproved. In th!o statement he undertook tc establish an alibi accounting in de tall for his movements last Wednes day, when the crime is believed tc have been committed.. It was shown from lnvestlgatlor that Cluck Diamond was In the im mediate vicinity of the wood at abonl the time Marie was trudiring horn from school Wedne-day morning. Williams was committed by Police Justice John A. Ilnrden without bail No date has been 6et for coroner's in quest. At 5 o'clock last evening, the bodv of the murdered girl was brought tc police headquarters in a covered wag on and laid out in Chief of Policf Smith's private office. Williams wat brought from his cell and taken tc the room where his eyes fell upon thf victim. The negro broke down and declared before God that ho bad never harmed her. Last night there was a big crowd about the jail in which Williams U confined. The guard has been doubled and a special cordon of officers re malned on duty all night. ATTORNEYS CONFER Will Decide Date For Preliminary Hearing In Schenck Poisoning Case. Wheeling, W. Va., Nov. 15. At a conference of attorneys for the state nnd the defense to be held today the time of the preliminary hearing of Mrs. Farnsworth Schenck, charged with the attempted poisoning of her huf. band, John O. Schenck, the millionaire packer, will be decided upon. Attorney J. P. O'Brien, chief coun sel for Mi 3 defense, stated that report ed Interviews with Mrs. Schenck ap pearing In out-of-town papers were ab solutely false. Ho said that no news paper man had seen her sinca her ar rest and that she has not and would not give any statement for publica tion. Dr. Gregory Ackerman, the physi ilan who first attended Mrs. Schenck, who Is now in Chicago, will return to his home here on the 21st instant. He is an Important witness for the state nnd the defense will also put him on the stand. It is claimed that he pre scribed medicine for Mr. Schomck, which contained a small amount of arsenic and that It was given with the knowledge of the patient. It Is said that the glass in which this mediclno wa3 given tho patient was also used to give him wnter, and that when it was discovered that it contained arsenic after Dr. Ackerman had been discharged from the case, the water remaining In the glass was poured back in the wti f lithla water and that wes analyzed by the chemists at Johns Hopkins. According to the reports from Mr. Schenck's bedside, be Is very weak nnd his pulse remains very high. However, a (iradna! Improvement is anticipated by the attending physi cian until finally he will once more have regained his strength and old time health. PLEADS GUILTY TO SPYING German Officer Then Took Oath Not to Repeat Offense and Was Discharged. Winchester. Kngbind, Nov. 15. Lieutenant Siegfried Helm, the Ger man army officer who was arrested last September on a charge of spying on the fortifications at Portsmouth, was arraigned in court here. He plead ed guilty and was bound over in $250. lie took an oath not to repeat tho of fense. At about the time Lieutenant Helm was arrested in Kngiand, two Knglish oMicers were arrested In Germany on n similar charge. Their trial will come up next month. The Knglisli govern ment will be represenled at tho trial. MURDER SUSPECT CAUGHT Man Alleged tc Have Killed Middle town Shoemaker Is Arrested. Middletown, N. Y., Nov. 15..-Michael Cosmo, alias Michael I). Tucanslo, 3S years old, formerly of New York, who is alleged to have shot and killed Dom inlck Morone, a well-to-do shoemaker, In a crowded street In this city Sun day evening and who wis raptured at Goshen, eight miles away, Just half an hour after the slio-.liig. was ar raigned before Hecoidor Thompson, charged with murder !n the fir.st de gree. His examination was adjourned un til Nov. 1!'. Cosmo hai infused lo tuy a word and has not oafeii or drank since his .irresL gro SUSPECTED MR. AND f,',83. CHRIST? Efforts to Effect Reconciliation Be tween Couple Have Failed. CHRISTYS TO LIVE APART Artist Says Efforts For Reconciliation Have Gone For Naught. Zane3Villo, O., Nov. 15. In spite of the hopes of relatives that a settle ment could be effected between the two people, there 1s to be no recon ciliation between Howard Chandler Christy, artist and illustrator, and his wire, Mrs. Maybell? . Christy. Mr. Christy was seen at his home at Dun can Falls, near Zaaesville. and asked when his wile was coming back home to live. "As far as I know, and from tho prsent indications, fhe will never re turn to Duncan Falls," said the anlst. "I will not Join her In New York, nor will our daughter, Natalie. Mrs. Christy has made no arrangements at all for coming to Duncan Falls, and I am making no arrangements whatever for going away. My work is so heavy that I have to stay hero If It Is to be dene. "I do not know if she will he here for Thanksgiving or Christmas. Sho has written nothing about It. Like bo mrny things undertaken with the best ot intentions and with the sincerest of motives, those arrangements have gone for nothing." HAS REVOLUTION WELL IN HAND President Estrada Says There Is No Occasion for Alarm. Colon, Nov. 15. Reports reaching hero declare that Western Nicaragua is In the grip of a new revolution. The trouble Is said to have broken out Sun day in Corlnto and Loon, where the Conscnatives in political meetings denounced the lie v.' Estrada govern ment because It Ins not granted all (he refotms proinifed as quickly as th Conservatives think it oir;ht. In Leon and Oorinto street fighting occurred between troops and mobs that formed when political demon strations were ordcird abandoned by the police. Many wero killed and wounded In both cities. Leon Is the seat of the Conservative party. The outbreaks in Leon and Corinto have no definite aim or leader. It it presumed there will be no sorlous con seo.uences. The politicians who start ed rioting were mostly leadtrs of the Conservative nnd Liberal parlies who seek to "insurge" against tlm govern ment, which has prohibited public po litical meetings until the reconstruc tion of the government has been com pleted. Tho troops have the situation well in hand. President F.stinda has been Inform ed of outbreaks, but he declares there is no occasion for alarm. The Ivor ganlzation of the gover .ient Is pro ceeding rapidly. Crops are being plant ed and there will be a fair coffee yield, despite the ravages of the recent war. OCTOBER EXPORTS re Larger Than Any Other Month In History of Our Foreign Trade. Washington, Nov. IV According to the bureau of statistics, October ex ports are larger than In any other month in th? history of our forolgn trade while the imports are about 000,0(10 ess than In October of last year and $:!!,0')0,000 less than in March eif the present year. The total value vf the Imports and exports of tlie I'liiied Stales show:) for the month of October, lftll), im ports, ?12?,Si:S,448; exports, $208,057, 7S5. Bryan Not a Candidate. Kansas City, Mo., Nov. I.I. If tho advantage gained in the recent elec tion Is used properly a Democratic victory In the next national election is to be expected, according to Mr. llryan, but he will not bo the fortunate; presidential cindldate. Mr. Ilrynn ex pressed these views ut tbo Union depot i ' i THE NEWSjUMMARY 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 Tim to Soar. Wednesday, The hanging of Dr. Crippen has boen postponed until Nov. ?.V, Mr. Newton is drafting a petition for a re prleve to the home secretary. Mr. Taft signed a two years' Icaso or the Peabodv house at Heverly, Mass., for ths Bummer White House. Hubert Latham established what was said to be a record for over-city llight by circling Baltimore in an An toinette aeroplane; he won prizes of (5,500. Young woman, afflicted with de mentia, which Impelled her to act con trary to her intent, was Identified ut r.ellevue hospital, New York city, by her husband. Strike of Methodist church volun teer choir causes dissension in a con gregation at Flushing, N. Y. Thursday. Police attacked mobs of strikers In South Wales and a hundred persons were hurt. A million slips of paper demanding general suffrage were thrown at the carriage of King Albert of Delglum. An agreement has been reached by the arbitrators of the Philadelphia Transit company's dispute with its employes. A suit against the Standard Oil com pany of Indiana was called at Jackson ville, Tenn.; there are 1,500 count and the possible penalties roach 950, 000,000. Several firemen and a girl were In jured In a fire which destroyed four buildings In Toronto. The bodies of 35 men were found in the north entry, where Tuesday's explosion in Mine No. 3 of the Victtir American Fuel company at Delagua, Colo., originated. Friday. The Mexican ambassador has de manded reparation from the American government for the lynching of a Mex ican citizen in Texas; crowds in the capital made demonstrations against the United States. Twenty-six persons were convicted of conspiracy to kill the Kniperor of Japan, and capital punishment was urged. Sixty-one persons were killed and more thun 400 were wounded In the re cent revolution in Lisbon. . . It was reported in Washington that Secretary Dickinson would advocate, in his message, the purchase of 5 or 10 aeroplanes for the army. A man was killed and peveral others were reported missing at a $250,00) oil tank explosion fire in Constable Hook. Saturday. Tho conference of American and Canadian reciprocity commissioners adjourned in Ottawa to meet again in Washington in January; both sides express the belief that a treaty will result. Several villages In Eastern Franco have been inundated by rivers over flowing their banks. A dispatch from Winnipeg says great anxiety Is felt for two hundred fishermen who are reluming from the Northern fishing stations on Lake Win nipeg on the steamer Wolverine, which has not been heard from In ten days. Secretary MacVeagh, It was an nounced at Washington, had decided to cut the estimates for the treasury department to the lowest possible fig ure. Monday. General Monteagudo of the Mural Guard of Cuba was charged with being implicated in the shooting of Pinto Guerra. It was said In St. Petersburg that Count Leo Tolstoy had been found In Tula province; It was reported that the countess had attempted suicide. The American manager of a realty company, it was reported at Mexico City, fired into a crowd of anti-American rioters who was stoning his resi dence, killing a fourteen-year-old boy and wounding a policeman. Secretary llallinger, In his annual report, suggests that the Cunningham claims, which were largely responsible for the Hallinger-Plnchot Inquiry, be submitted to the circuit court of ap peals of the District of Columbia for adjudication. Tuesday. It was announced that Nathan Straus had given 95P.OOO to the Tuber culosis Preventorium for Children at Farmlngdale, N. .1. The Itev. Dr. Ferdinand O. Zesch collapsed In his pupil, in Jamaica, and died in a few minutes. General Valladares, leader of tho insurgent movement at Amapala, Hon duras, has offered to surrender to tho government troops. Several persons were seriously In jured In a riot between Cat holies' and Socialists at Modern, Italy. A warrant formally charging the right end of the Helh.iny colic foot ball team with minder in connection with the devth of the captain of the West Virginia university team on Sat urday was huued ut Wheel! iw.. W. Va, TAFT AT CULEBRA CUT Will Remain on the Isthmus Four Days Inspjctlng Canal Work. Colon, Nor. 15. The armored cruls cr Tennessee with Prwldeat Taft and party aboard arrived in the harbor early yeHterday morning. The presi dent and all the members of the party were well. The president boarded a tug and when he landed was received by a commission from the Panama government headed by Foreign Secre tary Body, who made an address ol welcome. The president was also met by a committee of canal officers headed by Lieutenant Colonel Goethals. Tho Drltlsh minister to Panama, Claudo Mallett, and Frederick A. Pezet, the Peruvian minister, were also on hand to meet Mr. Taft The preMdent proceeded at once to Culebra, about IP miles from Panama, He was entertained there by Lieuten ant Colonel Goethals. According to the program. President. Taft will remain on the Isthmus about four days, returning to Charleston, S. C, on No. 22. Tho party consists of the president, his brother, Charles P, Tift, Secretary Norton, a military and a naval aide, n physician, a stenogra pher and half a dozen newspaper men. TO SLAUGHTER BUFFALOES Royal Hunters Will Not Be Permitted to Kill Animals In Montana. Helena, Mont., Nov. 15. Armed with an opinion from the attorney gen eral that the killing or rounding up nnd shipping from the state of the re mainder of the Pablo herd of buffalo, would be violative of the state laws, Camo Warden Avare left here last night for the Flathead reservation to prevent any such action by ihe party of Royal Canadian hunters now en route to Montana for that purpose. The original herd was sold to the Canadian government several years ago and annual roundups followed with the result that with the excep tion of 30 or 40 all were corralled and shipped across the line to a reserve created by the Canadian government Recently thj Canadian government, granted permission to a party of Royal ists to come over and slaughter the rest. Protests poured in to the state ollicials and, being referred to the at torney general, he holds that the ani mals have reverted to the wild state and cannot now be hunted, killed or Rhlppeel. Serious trouble may follow any at tempt by the Canadians to slaughter them as intended. Wants Thaw Transferred. Albany, Nov. 15. Attorney General O'Malley has filed in the court of ap peals affidavits in opposition to the appeal of Mrs. Mary C. Thaw In her application for the transfer of her son, Harry K. Thaw, from the Matteawan state hospital for criminal insane to some other asylum within the state. Canal Navlqation Closed. Albany. Nov. 15. The canals of the state closed for navigation today. Ef forts are being made by the state de partment of public works to have ca nal boats now en route reach their destination before the water In the ca nals is withdrawn. MARKET REPORT New York Provision Market. New York, Nov. 14. WHEAT No. 2 red, f. o. b., !)6c; No. 2 hard, winter, 91.01 Vic. CORN No. 2 red, f. o. b., domestic. 57 0. OATS No. 2 white, In elevator, 38c; white, on track, 37'jU41. PORK Mess, 919.50. HUTTF.R Creamery specials, 3c; do, extras, 3l'c; state dairy, good to prime, 27(ff2!c; fac tory firsts, 24 5J24Vic. CHEKSK! State specials, 15 Vi 17c. EGGS State and Pennsylvania, F052c. POTATOES Long Island, 92.1 2.12; state, per bag, 9l.251.50. Buffalo Provision Market. Buffalo, Nov. 14. WHEAT No. 1 northern, carloads, 91.10; No. 2 red, 55c. CORN No. 2 yellow, 57c f. o. b. nfioat; No. 3 yellow, fi6Mc. OATS No. 2 white, 3Cc f. o. b. afloat; No. 3 white, C.ric. FLOUR Fancy blended patent, per bbl., 96 0nfj)6.75; winter family, patent, 95.25fr6.00. IUJTTF.Il Creamery, western tubs, "2',2c; state creamery, fair to good, SOW 30c. CHEESE Good to choice. 15V4 16c. EGGS State, selected white, 41 42c. POTATOES White, choico to fan cy," per bu., 50c. East Buffalo Livestock Market. CATTLE Prime steers, 96.500 C.75; good to choice butcher steers, 95.255.85; choice cows, 9 4.755.0O; choice heifers, $5.50iij 5.05; common to fair hellers, 94.t''Ki 5.25; common to fair bulls, 93.25fff4.00; choice veals, 91t.0011.25; fair to good, 10.00 10.50. SHEEP AND LAMPS Clipped yearlings, 95.005.25; clipped woth ers, R2.Vi4.00. HOGS Light Yorkers, 97.857.90; heavy bogs, 97.!0; pigs, 93.00(08.10. Buffalo Hay Market. Timothy, No. 1, new, on track. fiv.vvw iz.ov, io. s iiinotny, jii.uui" . 18.00; straw, wheat and oat. tT'WfJw i I .OA