RATES OF ADVERTISING: One Square, one Inch, one week... 1 00 One Square, one Inch, one month. S 00 One Sqnare, one inch, 8 months.... 6 00 One Square, one Inch, one year .. 10 00 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. . uvoiy ocluoiJiiuy by Fore J. E. WENK. j in Smearbangb 4 Wenk Building, KLM BTREKf, TIOH1UTA, TA. PUBLICAN. ia, il.00 A Vw, Strictly la AdvaaM. atered m rpcoikI-oUbr matter at the office at TloneMa. a subscription received for a shorter dod than three months. Correspondence solicited, but no notloe 111 be taken of anonymous oonimunica ms. Always give your name. VOL. XLIII. NO. 37. TIONESTA, PA., WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1910. $1.00 PER ANNUM. st KB BOROUGH OFFICERS. 'urgexa.J, D. W. Keck. tsticesvfthe react O. A. Randall, D. )iuJ"v S.W.Landers, J. T. Dalp, '.. Win. Ninearbaugh, ..it T Calhoun, A. B. iy--v instable j'ark, olleclor Jod. i oo Dirt rt). I man, Q. Jan., I J. iett, Joseph J. i. ocowaon, n. m . J. J. Landers,' J. i'ORKST COUNTY OFFICERS. Member of Congress N. P.Wheeler. Member of Senate J. IC. P. llall. Assembly . It. Mochllng. President Judge Win. K. Rice. Associate Judge P. C. Hill, Samuel Oil. Frot honolary, Register dt Recorder, de. J. C. (lelHt. A'AeriT-S- R- Maxwell. Treasurer Gou. W. Holonmn. Commissioners Win. II. Harrison, J. M. Zuendel, 11. II. McClellan. District Kttorney M. A. CarrlngT. Jury OoinmUtioners Ernest Hibble, Lewis Wagner. Coroner Dr. M. C Kerr. Countv Auditors George II. Warden, A. O. Gregg and J. P. Kelly. Oountv Surveyor ). W. Clrk. Count) Superintendent t). W. Morrl- on. llMular Trrma ( Caart. Fourth Monday of February. Third Monday of May. Fourth Monday of September. Third Monday of November. Regular Meeting of County Commis sioners 1st and 3d Tuesdays of month. Ckarrb ni Hnbbnlh HrkMl. Presbyterian Sabbath School at 9:46 a. m.t M. K. Sabbath School at 10:00 a. m. Preaching In M. K. Church every Sab bath even tug by Rev. W. O. Calhoun. Preaching In the F. M. Church every Sabbath evening at the usual hour. Rev. E. L. Monroe, Pastor. Preaching in the Presbvtorlan church every Sabbath at .11:00 s. in. and 7:30 p. m. "Rev. U. A. liailoy, Pa-tor. The regular meetings of the W. C. T. U. are held at the headquarters ou the seooml and fourth Tuesdays of each month. BUSINESS DIRECTORY. TV . N EST A LODU K, No. 369, 1. 0. 0. F. M eets every Tuesday evening, in Odd Fellows' Hall, Partridge building. CWX. GEORGE STOW POST, No.274 O. A. R. Meets 1st Tuesday after noon of each month at 3 o'clock. CAPT. OEOROE STOW CORPS, No. 137, W. R. C, meets first and third Wednesday evening of each month. TF. BITCH KY, . ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Tionesta, Pa. MA. CARRINQEU, Attorney and Counaellor-at-Law. Otliee over Forest County National Bank Building, TIONESTA, PA. CURTIS M. 8HAWKEY, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Warren, Pa. Practice in Forest Co. AO BROWN, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Office In Arner Building, Cor. Elm and Bridge Sis., Tionesta, Pa. FRANKS. HUNTER, D.D. 8. Rooms over Citizens Nat. Bank, TIONESTA, PA. DR. F.J. BOVARD, Physician A Surgeon, TIONESTA, PA. Eves Tested and Glasses Fitted. D R. J. B. SIGGINS. Physician and Surgeon, OIL CITY, PA. HOTEL WEAVER, C. F. WEAVER, Proprietor. Modern and up-to-date in all its ap pointments. Every convenience and comfort provided for tho traveling public CENTRAL HOUSE, R. A. FULTON, Proprietor, Tionseta, Pa. This is the most centrally located hotel in the place, and has all the modern improvements. No pains will be spared to make it a pleaNant stopping place for the traveling public pUIL. 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 yivon to mending, and prices rea sonable. Electric Oil Guaranteed for Rheumatism, Sprains, Sore Feet, Pains. to. At all dealers Strong and Garfield, 4, the Best Waterproof Shoe marie for men. Wfi arfi sole agent. LAMMERS OIL CITY, PA. LIMP Miss Madeline Swift Marries Paymaster George Auld. Marriage la Sequel to Army Scandal. Bride Was Formerly. Engaged to Harry D. Storer At Hop, In Charles town, Auld Had Quarrel With Dr. Edward S. Cowles, and Was After ward Courtmartialed. Miss Madeline Grey Swift, youngest daughter of Rear Admiral William B. Swift, U. S. N., and Paymaster Ceorgo Perclval, U. S. N., were married ut tho Mimmer homo of tho Swifts in Rich field Springs, N. Y. Since Miss Swift dismissed Harry V. Storer of Atlanta, Ga., and Pay master Auld mysteriously assaulted Dr. Edward Spencer Cowles at a navy hop In Charlestown, Mass., last Decem ber, the young couple have been try in? to keep their romance from the public. Miss Swift nnd Mr. Storer were to have been married In December, 100!). When Mr. Storer w nt to Boston, it was announced that the wedding had been postponed Indefinitely because of the Illness of Miss Swift. On Dee. 1 Paymaster Auld met Dr. Cowles at a hop In tho home of .Medical Director Howard Ames, in Charlestown, nnd Intimated to htm that, his presence was not desired. Ac cording to the statement of Dr. Cowles, he wa-i leaving with his wife when Paymaster Auld struck him, knocking him against a door. Charges were made against Pay master Auld nnd Assistant Surgeon A. P. Uobnett and thry were found guilty on some of the. counts against them. Theylr sentences were commuted by the secretary of the navy to loss ot numbers. BARGE CANAL ROUTE Lyons Had Riited Fund of $1,000 to Secure the Change. The stute canal board, according to a telegram received at Lyons, N. Y lias decided In favor of the so-called "northern" or "combination" route for I ho barge canal through Lyons and Newark. The contract through Lyons Is known as contract 48 and com mences near Central-Hudson bridge, cutting through the fiiir grounds of the Wayne county agriculture society, running through Clyde river to the Lyons Milling company's plant, taking that plant and the Lyon's creamery. From this point It will follow clos'S to the bed of the Erie canal until It passes under the Central-Hudson bridge between Lyons and Newark, from whence It will take the southerly route through Newark. This route will drain a vast acreage of swamp lands in the vicinity of Lyons. It is the route the people have been after, and to fight to secure which, the vil lige raised a fund of $1 000 at the tax payer's election last May. Had the "southern" route been selected the canal would have been built up on top of the ground and would have cut across Geneva street south of Lyons. LOCOMOTIVE EXPLODED Three Men Killed and Three Others Badly Injured. The exploding boiler of a freight lo comotive rose from Its tracks at 30th street, Altonln, Pa., on the Pennsji. vanla railroad and falling over the ad Joining track, was struck, while yet In midair by the locomotive of a train coming up from behind. The remark able wreck that was caused brought death to three trainmen and caused in juries to three others. The first engine btruck the falling boiler and hurled It over an embank ment 300 feet from where It had left the engine trucks. The impact derail ed two locomotives hauling the ex press train and threw them against the freight train, knocking over sever al freight cars. Railroad shop experts who examined the exploded boiler Immediately after the accident declared that the explo sion was caused by low water. DOLLAR BILL BROUGHT BRIDE Soldier In Philippines Wrote Name on Money and Girl Replied, George H. Oaudet, of Rochester, N, , a travelling salseman, and Minn lary A. Welch, of Syracuse, are to be married at St. Patrick's church on Monday, after a romance which be gan nearly eleven years ago, when Miss Welch was only fifteen year old. At that time Gaudot was In the hos pital corps, attached to the 17th In fantry, U, S. A., stationed one hundred and fifty miles from Manila, up In the mountains. He wrote his name on a dollar bill and some months later re ceived a postcard from Miss Weich, In to whose hands the money fell. His enlistment expired in 1902, and he lived several years in San Francis co. On coming east Gaudet called on Miss Welch, and their engagement followed. Gaudet formerly resided at Lawrence, Mass. Johnstone Killed by a Fj. Ralph .Tuhnstone, the wellknown avi ator, was fatally Injured by a drop of eight hundred feet in his runaway bi plane at Overland park, Denver. Ho tiied to remove his helmet after he struck the earth, gave a few gasps and died. BEATS HIS FATHER TO DEATH Throws Body Into Well While Victim Still Breathes. Benjamin Smith, who was anestcd on suspicion of having murdered his father Charles C. Smith, a farmer, who lived near Muncle, Ind., has confessed. . According to young Smith he and his father had quarrelled ever the tjnestlon as to wether or not. the young man should pay $2 a week for board ut home. The young man struck his father on tho head with a brick felling him to the ground, hut not Killing him. Then he struck his father repeatedly with the brick until he thought be was dead. Next he loaded his father into a buggy nnd started for, an old well on the farm nearby. That was about 7 o'clock In the evening. On tho way to the well, however, the father revived a little and manged to put his arms around the son's neck thereupon the latter beat his father over the head with the brick, and con tinned to strike his parent again and again until he felt certain that he was dead. However, the son thinks thac his father was not dead when he threw him Into the well. OSSIFIED" MAN MARRIED Wedded to Woman Who Nursed Him - In Almshouse. William C. Slthens, an Inmate of the Montgomery county almshouse at Black Bock, known ns the "ossified man," by reason of his crippled condition, due to rheumatism, disappeared from the institution on Monday, cametoNor rlstown. Pa., and obtained a license to marry Mrs. Alice Murray, a widow, of Conshohocken, who had nursed hlrn for months at the county home. They were married, It now develops, at the home of Slthens' sister, Mrs. George I'ennell. In Oak street, Norris lown, by the Rev. R. M. Howells of the Oak Street Methodist church. HIT BY LINE DRIVE Baseball Player Struck on Back of Neck and Died from Injury, Edward K. Ward, best known as "Pop" Ward, a former football and star baseball player of the WUkcs-Barre, Pa., high school, died at the Reterat hospital at Wilkes-Parre from Injuries caused by being struck by a batted ball. He was playing with the Retreat team towards the end of the season and was trying to dodge a line drive when It struck him on the back or the neck and knocked him senseless. He has been In the hospital since. BEATS STORK TO AMERICA Russian Woman Hurries That Son Might Be Born In "Free Land," When Mrs. Leah Rosenthal reached New York Saturday from Russia shg was hurriedly removed in an ambu lance to a hospital, where she is await ing the arrival of tho newest member 'if the family. She made I he voyage at this critical time because her husband, who came to New York a few months ago, has al ready grown so fond of America that lie wrote his wife that the child must not be horn anywhere else than on American soil. COUNT TOLTOY DEAD Aged Author Was Unconscious When Wife Entered Death Chamber. Count Tolstoy, who died Sunday at Asiapovo, passed away ten days after he had left his home at Yasnayi Poliana in search of solitude and peace of soul. The physicians allowed his wife and family to enter the death chamber but the count was unconscious. There were tlx doctors In attendance, two of them being heart specialists, who had been summoned from Moscow on Fri day. Their presence drew a charac teristic remark from the patient Sat urday when he was recovering from the second of the three violent cardiac attacks which preceded his last hours. Discoverer of Natural Gas Dead. John E. Ford, who was widely known In Western New York is dead at his home in Bradford, Pa. At tho outbreak ol the civil war Mr. Ford en listed as a private In the 150th Penn sylvania regiment and had the dis tinction of having served as personal guard to President Llncrln at the hit ter's home in Washington for two years. John E. Ford, was born in Connects it "2 yer.rs ago, and was the man who first discovered natural gas In Penn sylvania. He is survived by his widow and three daughters. Teachers May Form Union, A general plan to unionise teachers in the public schools that .started sometime ago In St. Louis Is to he giv en consideration by the teacher's al liance at Its meeting next week at Oswego. The grade teachers have a petition before tho board for an in crease of salary nnd there are some of those who believe that it would come more quickly If they were aflili nted with a general labor union organ izntion. Crlppen's Father Dead. Myron 11. Crlppen, the aged father tf Dr. H. II. Cripp;n, under sentence of death in London, fur the murder of his wile-, died in Los Angeles, Cal.. frlen!les and penniless. Hi3 death, duo to the Infirmities of age, was hnstitned h gi ief over his sou's crime. He was SO years old. FIND LEW FIANCEE Trunk Murder Mystery Leads tc Bridgefield, Conn. Woman Vho Was Engaged to Ma ry Lewis Was a Professional Nurse, and Wedding Was Supposed to Take Place In 1905 Miss Enrlght Did Not Know Suspected Man In 1902, When Murder Was Supposed to Have Been Committed. New York, Nov. 22. The search for William Lewis, the man who is want ed by the police In connection with the finding of a corpse In a trunk, left for eight years In the basement of a tene ment in West 31th street, led to R!dge field, Conn. Miss Ellen Enrlght, a trained nurse, Is living there with her sister and h'is been taking care of- a sick relative since last July, f ha was engaged to a William Lewis back in 1905, but Lewis disappeared In January of that year, the day before ha and Miss Enrlght were to have been married. Miss Enrlght said Inst night that tho William Lewis she knew was a sales man for a cut glass house Tho name of the firm she had never been told. Lewis lived tt 214 West 124th street. Did Not Know Him In 902. She declared she did not know him ns early as 1902, when the murder of the man in ths trunk is supposed to have been committed. She raid that Lewis, the salesman, had never told her of any enmity towards anyone of such a sort as to account for the trunk murder. "He never told me that he had been i waiter," sle said, "and I don't be lieve he ever was one." MIhb Enrlght said that Lewis had not given her any Intimation that he was not going to be on hand for tho wedding. At that time Miss Enrlght lived In Brooklyn and for two weeks she and her family looked for him to reappear. When he did not they searched for him at his rooms in New York and elsewhere. But they heard nothing of him, el her then or since. A picture of the William Lewis who Is supposed to have owned he trunk in which the body was fo-.md was shown to Miss Enrlght. She paid that it did not look like the William Lewis sho had known. HUNTING FORTAFT TURKEY Herbert Voss Scouring Connecticut For Thirty-Pound Bird. Winsted, Conn., Nov. 22. President Taft's Thanksgiving turkey this year will undoubtedly be a Connecticut bird. Horace Voss of Westerly, R. I., who has furnished the turkey for ev ery prof-ldent from Grant to Taft, is scouring Southeasten Connecticut for the best. In the turkey line. He has not made his selection yet, but he says the White House gobbler will not weigh less than 30 pounds. More than once Voss has selected a nutmog turkey In preference to one from his own stnto. HUNTERS KILL FORTY DEER Berkshire County Season Opened Yes terday and Closes Saturday. Pitttfield, Mass., Nov. 22. Fully 40 deer, the majority does, were killed yesterday in Berks-hire county at the opening of the deer season, which will last until sunset Saturday. A majority of the deer killed were on the Hoosnc range between the Hoiisntonlc and. Connecticut valleys, where deer have populated the hills after escaping from the big Whitney preserve on October mountain. Hunt ers from al! over Masschusetts came Into Western hills yesterday. One brought 10 hunters to Beeket. Henry G. Thompson Dies In Paris. New Haven, Conn., Nov. 22. News was received In this city of the death In Paris of Henry Grant Thompson following an operation for appendicit is, which was performed Saturdav, Mr. Thompson, who was 50 years old. was vice president and treasurer of the II. O. Thompson Manufacturing company of New Haven and was a prominent clubman, Hold Troops In Readiness. Washington, Nov. 22. General Leon ard Wood, chief of staff of the armv, has directed Brigadier General nalph W. Hoyt, commanding the department of Texas, wtn headquarters nt Fort Sam Houston, to hold troops In readi ness to aid Governor Campbell of Tex as In enforcing the neutrality laws along the Mexican border, in the event of tho governor needing assistance. Two regiments of Infantry, ten troops of cavalry and three batteries of field artillery are available for service in case they are needed. Do Not Eat Cold Storage Turkey. Washington. Nov. 22. Dr. Harvey W. Wiley, the government pure food specialist, has given out this Thanks giving proclamation: "Eat thy fl on Thanksgiving day) forge Wiley and the microbe but do not eat cold storage turkey." Kills Fa.her-tn.lw In Duel. Lexington, Kv., Nov. 22. Thomas Miller, aged CO years, was (hot and killed bv his son-in-law, D. D. WbiHt man. The two men bad a duel over a small money nialUr. LEFT HIS BRIDE PENNILESS Young Husband Held For Court on . Girl Wife's Complaint. Philadelphia, Nov. 22. David Levy, 19 years old, of 1209 Snyder avenue, W'ib held under $400 bill for court by Magistrate Scott, In the Central po lice station on the charge of neglect ing to support Ida Levy, his bride of nine months. "How long is It since your husband has given you any money?" said Mag istrate Scott. He has never given me any money since we were married," replied tho Rl'-I. "Well," S5i!d the maglstraie to tho defendant, "you have had a line time rf it, my boy, and you should be fishamed of yo-irself to think that a henllhy ytung man like you would not do all In your power to keep thi wom an you promised to love, honor and obey, Instead of humiliating her bv forcing her to return to her parents." KAISER OPENS ACADEMY Emperor Makes One of His Character Istic Addresses to Cadets. Berlin, Nv. 12. The kaiser In open ing the paval academy at Flens berg, PruFla, delivered another of those moral speeches which are char acteristic of blm at times. After warn ing the naval cadets against the uss of alcohol and remarking that "a fight er needs strong nerves" and that "the nation which consumes the least alco hol will be found in the fore front when it comes to the business of war," the emperor read out a cabinet order, in which, addressing the cadeis as "my comrades," he called upon them to do their duty cheerfully and acquire the character of "complete men." "Our time,' added the kalaer, "re quires full-fledged men, nay men of steel." The emperor concluded by telling the cadets that they should work fo aa to acquire a strictly moral view of life founded on a religious basis. WOMAN OPERATOR SHOOTS DETECTIVE Claims Man Attacked Her When She Was Returning Horn;. Monongahela, Pa., Nov. 22. Shortly nfter last midnight, while on her way home, Miss Iv.i r.ush, a telegraph op erator Was attacked bv a man whom she claims she did not recognize. Pull ing a revolver from her rnufT, Miss Bush fired once at the ground and another shot over the head of her as sailant as she eluded his grasp, but failed to frighten him Jn this way. She put the third bullet through his lody. When help came, bringing lights, the man who had fallen to the ground with the third shot, was rec ognized by Miss Bush as Harry A. Smith, a railroad detective, well known in the Monongahela valley, nnd whom she claims has for weeks been molesting her from work at night and It was for Smith, the young woman admits, she was carrying the revolver. Miss Rush is employed in a railroal signal tower five miles below the town and when her work is done she rides into Monongahela on the caboose of a freight train, reaching here shortly aft er midnight each day. She claims Smith, who Is now In a hospital In a serious condition, recently tried to break Into the tower where she worka nt night. Miss Hush has been placed under $2,000 bail. Friends of Smith claim the Rush woman recently ;iiarreled with Smith and phot him dawn when the got an opportunity. WILL RAISE MONITOR Vessel Which Was Sunk During Ord nance Test Will Bo Floated, Washington, Nov. 22. Chief Con structor Richard M. Watt, chief of the bureau of construction nnd repair of the navy yard, has returned from Norfolk, where he Inspected the con dition of the monitor Puritan, which was Bunk In the Newport News middle ground last Tuesday during an ord nance teat, The forward part of the monitor, he raid, was awash up to the top of tho larbelte. Her stern, however. Is in fllghtly deeper water raising as far as the turret guns. Illds have been invited from civilian wrecking companies for raising the monitor. Remove Stomach of Stabbed Man. Mason City, Iowa, Nov. 22. Virgil Crowe stabbed and fatally Injured Pat rick Leonard here at an early hour yes terday morning. Surgeons removed Leonard's stomach, sewed It up and then replaced it. Crowe is under ar rest. Officer Fatally Wounds Assailant. Dekalb, HI., Nov. 22. Five men who attacked Officer Lindsay last night were flred upon by the officer, John MrOienn received a wound In tlieabdo jnen which probably will prove fatal. The others escaped. Smciter CasMer a Suicide. Ioia, Kan.. Nov. 22. Gordon Calla way, cashier at the Cockcrill smelters, near Lnlmrpc, Kan., killed hinuelf in Gas City. His accounts have not been questioned. THE flEMMAl 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 Spare. Wednesday. In his report as president of the American federation of labor, read at St Louis, Samuel Gompers attacked President Taft as an enemy of labor. Count Leo Tolstoy Is seriously ill at the llt'.e railroad station at Asta fova, about 80 miles from his home at Gashaya Poliana; his daughter Is act ing as his nurse. Henry H. Rogers returned after a seven months' visit to Europe and pre dicted that this country would have a war with Japan before tho comple tion or the Panama canal. Many persons were killed or wound ed in Leon, Nicaragua, when govern ment troops called cut to suppress a political demonstration swept the streets with grape and canister. Thursday. Count Leo Tolstoy, a dispatch from Tua, Russia, says, is suffering from bronchltii, but s in no immediate danger. In a naval experiment to test the ef fect of an unconfined explosion of nitroglycerine-gelatine, the monitor Puritan was badly damaged in Hamp ton roads. A verdict of not guilty was found by the Jury in the second trial at Nashville, Tenn., of Robin .1. Cooper, on the charge of murdering ex-Senator E. W. Carmick, the Judge direct ing bucIi action on the reconimenda tion of the attorney general. Henry B. Faven, former teller of the People's National Bank of Roxbury, Mass., pleaded guilty to abstracting $7,300 from the bank, and was sent enced to five year's imprisonment. Friday. President Taft inspected the Cule bra cut and dined with President Arosemena of Pannma. The crisis In the Illness of Count Leo Tolstoy was passed and his temp erature became lower. The treasurer of a savings bank at Lenox, Mass., was killed nnd his broth er Injured by the overturning of an automobile at Lenox. A dispatch from Berlin says that Germany will permit the importation of foreign livestock In order to coun teract the high prices for meat now prevailing. The monitor Puritan, which was subjected to high explosive tests ou Tuesday, was not raised from her po sit loh on the flats of Hampton Koads. where she settled after the explosions; pontoons may le to be used to float the vessel. Saturday. A motorman was killed and threo other persons were injured In a col lision between trolley cars near Nurth boro, Mass. A dispt.t"h from London says the specifications for the new steamship for the Curard line call for the largest vessel in t'e world. The fleet of German torpedo boats cnt out to search the North sea for the balloon Saar, wiih three men on board, returned without news. Henry L. Siinison, defeated Repub lican candidate for governor, certified to the secretary cf state at Albany that he spent $1,292.63 In aid of his candidacy. Ralph Johnstone, the aviator, hold er of the worid's altitude record, fell .Ive hundred feet to the eanh In a Wright aeroplane at Denver, and was Instantly killed. Monday. Miss Edwlna Post of Bnxiklyn made a flight with Claude Grahame Whlte, the English aviator, at Phila delphia. Mr. Roosevelt vi-slted the White House for the first time since he left It as president, and otbeiwlse spent a busy day In War-hinglon. Lieutenant A. G. Caffee and three other men were killed by the explo sion of a navy gun at the Indian I load proving ground, near Washington. Secretary Wilson of the department of agriculture, In a speech at Chicago, blamed the homesteader of the Vest In part for the present high cost of living. The 110 suffragettes, who were ar rested in London in their attempt to force an audience with Premier As qulth, were discharged, much to their chagrin. Tuesday. Henry Martyn Hoyt, counsellor for tho state department, died in Wash ington. Governor-elect Eugene N. Foss of Massachusetts demanded that Senator Lodge withdraw from the field for re election, declaring that otherwise ho would start a sti-tewlde campaign to defeat the senator. Premier Uriand of France was as saulted while attending the ledicallon of a statue to Jules Ferry, in the Tul lerles Garden, Purls; be was Mruck In the face twice, but not seriously in jured; his assailant narrowly cscnp. d being beateu to death by thu infuriat ed mob. TAFT HOMEWARD BOUND Cruisers Encountered the Tail of Northwester That Howled 40 Miles an Hour. On board the U. S. cruiser Montana, via wireless via Charleston and Nor folk, Nov. 22. The armored cruiser Tennessee and Montana, carrying the president and his party, late Sunday ran into the first bad weather they have experienced since they left Pana ma on their trip home. The cruisers encountered the tail of a northwester that howled around them for 40 miles or more. Both vessels battled against th northerly gale end the heavy wind nnd seas with engines slowed down to 13 knots. The storm hit them off the roast of Florida. The storm has gono down and only a moderote sea Is run ning. All through the rough weather. President Taft enjoyed himself im mensely. He is ' a good sailor" and the blow did not bother him at all. Everyone In the prei-.idential party is well. The prospects are for good weather oft Hatteras. It Is expected that the cruisers will reach Norfolk to day. INDIANS SHOT FROM AMBUSH Trouble Occurred When Cattle man Put Stock on Reservation. Helena, Mont., Nov. 22. Word has reached here of a fatal quarrel be tween cattlemen and Indians on Crow reservation, which resulted !n the kill ing of two Indians and wounding of two others. Trouble has been brewing for some time because the cattlemen are barred from the use of the reser vation under the new law. They put their stock on the reservation anyway end the Indians were making a round1 up of the cattle for the purpose of col lecting a fine of a dollar a head when they were attackwi by the stock men.. The sheriff and a posse has gone from Red Lodge to apprehend seven suspected "attlemen, who are charged with firing from ambush. The district attorney's office is also making investi gation. Trout Fry Prospects Bright. Harrisburg, Pa., Nov. 22. William E. Meehan, state commissioner of fish eries, estimates that the collection of trout eggs this winter will be the best ever known and that 13,000,000 eggs will be gathered. This is greater than the collection by the United States government and indicates an abund ance of trout fry for next season. Crippen to Hang Tomorrow. Iiondon, Nov. 22. The home office has refused to grant a reprieve to Dr. Hawley Harvey Crlppen, who Is to be hanged tomorrow for the murder of bis wife Cora, better known as Hello Elmore, the actress. The pelillon was presented to the authorities u day or two ago. MARKET REPORT New York Provision Market. New York, Nov. 21. WHEAT No. 2 red, f. o. b., 95 C, No. 2 hard, winter, $1.02Vi. CORN No. 2 red, f. o. b., domestic. 67 OATS - No. 2 white, in elevator, 37c; white, on track, STVsfiL PORK Mess, 1 19.00. BUTTER Creamery specials, S2V433c; do, extras, SOU-c; state dairy, good to prime, 272'.'c; fac tory firsts, 24!!24VaC. CHEESE State specials, 15 17 c. vEUGS State and Pennsylvania, r.25r.c. POTATOES Long Island. $1.5001 $2.00; state, In bag, $1.40 1.50. Buffalo Provision Market. Buffalo, Nov. 21. WHEAT No. I northern, carloads, $1.17; No. 2 red, 93c. CORN No. 2 yellow, 59c f. o. b. afloat; No. 3 yellow, FiSVjc. OATS No. 2. whlto 36 f. o. b, afloat; No. 3 white 3.r)',.e. FLOUR Fancy blended patent, per bbl., $6.0n'U6.75; winter family, ratent, $5.25f'6.00. BUTTER Creamery, western tubs, "2'fcc; state creamery, fair to good, 29?f30c. CHEESE Good to choice. 15Vi 16c. EGGS State, selected whltti, 4.'c. TOTATOES White, choir o to faul ty, per bu 50c. East Buffalo Livestock Market. CATTLE Prime steers, $6.50 G.75; good to choice butcher steers, $5.00(5.."(; choice cows, $1.7jfir5.00; choice heifers, $5.50'3 "i.75; common to fair heifers, $4.005.00; common to fair bulls, $3.25fM.OO; choice veals, $1(1.00(810.25; fair to good, $!.00C( 9.70. SHEEP AND LAMBS Clipped yearlings, $4,5055.00; clipped. weth crs, $3.75(rK00. HOGS Light YoiWrs. $7.2f!7.20; heavy hogs, $t.2; pigs, $7.3r7.40. Buffalo hay Market . - ' Timothy, No. 1, new. on track. $l9.noi 19.50; No. 2 timothy. HmH 18.00; ttraw, whoat and; oat, f