THE FOREST REPUBLICAN. RATES Of ADVERTISING One Square, one Inoh, one week... J 1 00 One Square, one Inch, one month- S 00 One Sqnare, one inoh, 8 months...- 6 00 Ono Square, one inch, one year ..... 10 10 Two Squares, 16 00 Quarter Column, one year 80 00 Half Column, one year - 60 00 One Column, one year 100 00 Legal advertisements ten cents per Una each insertion. We do fine Job Printing of every de scription at reasonable rates, but lt'a oasb on delivery. Published every Wednesday by J. C. WENK. Office in Smearbaugh & Wenk Building, SLM STBEKT, TI0H18TA, TA. Republican, Tern, $1.00 A Year, Strictly laAdvaaM. Entered second-class matter at the post-o (Doe at TloDesla. No subscription received for a ahorter period than three months. . Correspondence solloited, but no notloe will be taken of anonymoufcoommunloa lions. Always give your name. VOL. XLIV. NO. 8. HONEST A, PA., WEDNESDAY, APRIL 19, 1911. $1.00 PER ANNUM. Fore BOROUGH OFFICERS. Bwaeit.S. D. W. Reck. Justices of the .Peace C. A. Randall, D. W. Clark. Oouneiimen. J. W. Landers, J. T. Dale, O. 11. Robinson, Wm. Smearbaugh, R. J. Hopkins, W. O. Calhoun, A. ii Kelly. Constable Charles Clark. OjlleetorW. U. Hood. ScAoot Director J. O. Soowden, R. M Herman, Q. Jamleaon, J. J. Landers, 1. O. Uelst, Joseph Clark. FOREST COUNTY OFFICERS. Member of OongreuV, M. Speer. Member of Senate 3. It. P. Hall. Assembly W. J. Campbell. President Judae W. D. Ulnckley. Associate Judges P. C. Hill, Samuel Aul. Prothonotary, Register & Recorder, de. -J. C. Oelst. Sheriff . R. Maxwell. Treasurer Geo. W. Uolenian. Commxssioners Wm. H. Harrison, J. M. Zuendel, II. H. MoClellan. District Attorney M. A. Carrlnger. Jury Commissioners Ernest Blbble, Lewis Wagner. Coroner Dr. M. O Kerr. . County Auditore-OaoTgo H. Warden, A. C. Oregg and J. P. Kelly. County Surveyor D. W. Clark. County Superintendent U. W. Morri son. UeaaUr Tens f Crt. Fourth Monday of February. Third Monday of May. Fourth Monday of September. Third Monday of November. Regular Meetings of County Commis sioners 1st and 3d Tuesdays of month. Ckarcih mi Habbalh Cfekeel. Presbyterian Sabbath School at 0:46 a. m. t M. K. Sabbath School at 10:00 a. in. Preaching in M. E. Church every Sab bath evening by Rev. W. O. Calhoun. Preaching in the F. M. Church every Sabbath evening at the usual hour. Rev. O. A. Garrett, Psstor. Preaching in the Presby4erlan churoh every Sabbath at 11:00 a. m. and 7:30 p. in. Rev. H. A. Hailey, Pastor. The regular meetings of the W. O. T. U. are held at the headquarters on the second and fourth Tuesdays of each month. BUSINESS DIRECTORY. TV . N ESTA LODU E, No. 869, 1. 0. 0. F. M eeta every Tuesday evening, in Odd Fellows' Hall, Partridge building. CAPT. GEORGE STOW POST, No. 274 Q. A. K. Meets 1st Tuesday after noon of each month at 3 o'clock. CAPT. GEORGE STOW CORPS, No. 187, W. R. C, meets first and third Wednesday evening of each month. F. RITCHEY. ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Tlonesta, Pa. MA. CARRINGER, Attorney and Counsellor-at-Law. Offlue over Forest County National Bank Building, TIONESTA, PA. CURTIS M. SHAWKEY," ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Warren, Pa. Practice in Forest Co. AO BROWN, ATTORN E Y-AT-LA W. Office in Arner Building, Cor. Elm and Bridge Sts., Tlonesta, Pa. FRANK 8. HUNTER, D. D. 8. Rooms over Citizens Nat. Bank, HON ESTA, PA. DR. F. J. BOVARD, Physician A Surgeon. TIONESTA, PA. Eyes Tested and Glasses Fitted. D R. J. B. BIGGINS, Physician and Surgeon, OIL CITY, PA. HOTEL WEAVER, C. F. WEAVER, Proprietor. Modern and up-to-date in all lis ap pointments. Every convenience and comfort provided for the traveling public CENTRAL HOUSE, R. A. FULTON, Proprietor, Tlonseta, Pa. This is the mostcentrally located hotel in the place, and baa all the modern 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 aluds of? custom work from the finest to the coarsest and guarantees bis work to give perfect satisfaction. Prompt atten tion given to mending, and prices rea sonable. Fred. Grettenberger GENERAL BLACKSMITH & MACHINIST. All work pertaining to Machinery, En gines, Oil Well Tools, Gas or Water Pit tings and Oeneral BlHckHinithing prompt ly done at Low Rates. Repairing Mill Machinery given special attention, and satisfaction guaranteed. Shop in rear of aud just west of the Shaw House, Tidioute, Pa. Your patronage solicited. FRED. GRETTENBERGER WeJl Paper I am now in position to meet all requirements for good interior deco rating of tbe latest and up-to-date designs. I bave the finest collection of over Two Thousand WALL PAPER Samples to select from. Also a stock Of Wall Paper, Paints and Yarnlsh. New goods and prices right. Call and see. Supplies for all makes of Sewing Machines. G. F. RODDA, Next Door to the Fruit Store, Elm Street, Tionesta, Pa. ENDS LIFEIITH ACID Despondent Girl Takes Her Life at Corry, Pa. Every Effort Made to Save the Life of the Young Woman Proved Unavail Ing Was In Mllburn Private Hos pital When the Deed Waa Commit ted Coroner Returna Verdict of Suicide Other Items of General In terest to the Busy Reader. Miss Lottie Dugan, aged 21 years, a resident of Youngsville, committed oulclde al the MilVirn Private hos pital at Corry, Pa., Sunday morning. Tho girl is said to have been em ployed as a - domestic in various homes there for several years and waa always bright and cheerful. Re cently she became despondent and then went to the hospital. It is said. She arose as usual and about 10 o'clock, took a bottle containing car bolic acid and swallowed the con tents. Prompt medical attention waa unavailing, and she passed away in n i;hort time. The coroner's Inquest found that she came to her death by suicide. CORNING MAN SUICIDES Waa Wanted In Milwaukee, Wit., For Forgery. Charles Tapper, who was a glass worker in Coining, N. Y killed himself by sending a bullet into his brain after wounding Patrolmen Will iam Coolcy and naymond Brooder of the Corning police force, who had placed him undtr arrest. Tapper had for several months been In Milwaukee but returned to Corning Tuesday. Thursday the Corning police were advised from Mil waukee to arrest Tapper for being Implicated In a forgery there. Cooley and Brooder went to the home of John Tapper, a brother, and enquired lor Charles Tapper. As they were preparing to search the houso the fugitive escaped from the rear of the building. The officers started In hot pursuit, and he rnenedi Are on them with a revolver. A. running fight followed, in which Brooder was Ehot through tho shoulder and Cooley In the arm. Tapper escaped in the darkness, but 11 was evident from a trail of blood that he was wounded. Later he was discovered hiding in Hie barn of Charles Reynolds. Ho was overcome with exhaustion and covered with Wood. The police were notified, and as the officers surround ed the barn. Tapper, thinking he was about to be arrested for tho murder of an officer, placed the revolver to his hend and blew out his brains. Phillips Commits Suicide. Addison Phillips', the Oakfleld (N. Y.) farmer charged with murdering his mother-iR-lnw, Mrs. George Addi son, at Wst Parre, N. Y., committed suicide Filday morning, by hanging himself in his cell in the Jail at Al bion, N. Y. Phillips had been shot while trying to escape after the crime nnd some fear had been expressed that he would not recover. H-j seemed, however, to be out of danger and was lodged In a cell next to Salvatore In crimona, tho Italian who is held for the murder of a countryman some time ago. Railroad Planning For Right of Way. The Hornell & Dansvlllo Railroad company is obtemlng options for tho purchase of a right of way along the east side of Lincoln street in Dan ville, N. Y, to be used for the con structlon of Its road. A few yeara ago this company applied to the court for permission to construct its road along Lincoln street, but at (hat time, at the request of adjoining property owners, the board of trustees took up the matter and opposed the appropri ating of a street for railroad pur noses and the court sustained the vil lage authorities on this question. Miss Hlgglns to Be Married. Word was received at Oloan, N. Y., of the engagement of Miss Josephine Iliggins, only daughter of the late Governor Iliggins, to M. Emllo Hove laque of Paris. Miss Hlgglns has been touring Europe for the past few months. The young couple met two years ago in Egypt and have been very close friends ever sinco and . to some the announcement of the en gagement is no surprise. Woman Educator Dies. Mary Jane Grey Hyde founder ot tho Lady Jane Grey school of Blng hamton, N. Y., a woman's seminary famed throughout the country, died Ot her home in that city after a long Illness. Among the graduates of her school are some of the foremost so ciety women ot the day. Interment will be in Utica. She is survived by two daughters, Mary R. and Jane B. Hyde. County Official Sentenced. Otis D. Patrick, former clerk of Cortland county, N. Y., and Stephen K. Jones, formerly his deputy, were sentenced to serve Jail terms of six months and to pay fines of $230 by Justice George F. Lyon of the su preme court. They were convicted of contempt of coirt in connection with fraudulent Jury drawing in 1S03. The defendants say thoy will appeal. KING ALFONSO Leaves Madrid For Bordeaux to Consult a Physician. KING ALFONSO ILL Left Madrid For Bordeaux to Con suit a Physician. King Alfonso of Spain left Madrid Sunday night for Bordeaux, France, where he has gone to consult a phv- siclan. Tbe nature of his ailment is not made public. It Is reported here that Morrocan rebels have taken Fez and are sack Ing the city. LABORERS AWFUL PLIGHT Falls Down a Grain Chute and Stands on His Head Alt Night Until Rescued. A strange accident that caused1 its victim to stand on its head all night occurred to Charles Stokes, a laborer, at Auburn. N. Y., last Sunday night, when seeking a place to sleep In the barn of Attorney John Hunter. He poked his hend Into a grain chute in the lofts and fell forward diving into the dark tube. His arms were Jammed against the sides ami he struck the chaff at the bottom, the softness of which prola- bly saved him a broken neck. His shouts were unheard and after strug- gling to exhaustion he gave up the fight ami was held a prisoner all night. Early In tho morning Dwight May comber, a enretaker, found StoKta, who had been his -companion yester day, and with tbe aid of the police rescued the man and sent him to the city hospital. He will recover. C. W. GOODYEAR DEAD Able Lawyer and Successful Captain of Industry Dies of Bright'! Disease. Charles W. Goodyear, whose namo was familiar to every Buffalontan first as the able lawyer, later us the successful captain of industry, head of vast enterprises in lumber, railroading. Iron, steel and coal; em ployer ot thousands, lies dead at hU home in Buffalo. Although the newR ot Mr. Good year's death shocks the business and financial world, in which he was a prominent figure, his demise was not unexpected. A few days after his birthday, October 13, he was con fined to his bed with an attack of Brlght's disease and from that date he practically relinquished his many activities. Mr. Goodyear was one of the build ers of the Buffalo & Susquehanna railroad. ASKED TO RESIGN Two Officers of Excise Department Forced Out of Position. Commissioner Farley of the New York state excise department has re quested and received the resignations of Henry A. Soule of Allegany,' Cat taraugus county, first deputy com mission, and Forter Merrinian of Al bany, second deputy commissioner, who received salaries of ?5,000 and $3,000, respectively. Twenty-five of the 00 special agents in the department have also been dis missed. Several of the special veterans or exempt firemen are plan ning to contest their dismissals in the courts. Special agent receive an annual salary of $1,300 a year' and expenses and are classified under civil service competitive lists. Carried a Fortune With Him. An elderly man found by the police vhlle wandering about the streets ith wandering about tho streets with $200,000 worth of securities and valuable jewelry in liN possession, has been Identified by Dr. Halsey J. Howe, a retired dentist, of 09 East Third street, Dunkirk, N. Y. J. M. Connors, a former resident of Dun kirk, made t!ie identification. Said to Be Short In Accounts. Fred A. Salmon, a wellknown real estate broker of Hornell, N. Y., is un der arrest there on the charge of grand larceny, second degree, pre ferred by the Aetna Insurance com pany through Special Agent Cassidy of P.uffalo. It is alleged Sal men la many hundreds of dollars short in his accounts. Tho specific charge Is the larceny of $S'2. A' w :4 :J'' HOLD G G Mexican Regulars Are Unable to Dislodge the Insurrectos. Hurricane of Bullets Fly Through Douglas and a Few Citizens Are Hit, None Seriously Whole Sec tion of the City Is Deserted by tho People Custom House Was Under Heavy Fire Cavalrymen Hit by Stray Bullets. Douglas, Ariz., April 18. A battle opening yesterday morning at 6 o'clock waged practically all day In Agua Prieta opposite this point. The rebels still hold their position and have captured two federal rapid fire guns. The loss of life has been heavy, the federal loss last evening being estimated at from 100 to 200. At 1 o'clock the rchel commander at. Agua Prieta, estimated the federal d?ad at 75. The rebel losses were at the time 20 dead and .r0 wounded. The rebels had brought 20 dead Into the town of Agua Prieta and the fed erals' loss must be a great deal heavl or. The federal troops disregarded tbe United States government's warn ings and threw promises into the fire, elevated their aim end bullets car ried far Into Douglas. Section of City Deserted. Th whole section of the city be tween Fifth street, and the border line was deserted. The American custom house was under" heavy fire and the citizens sheltered there took refuge in a deep ditch. Jack Hamilton, 14 years old, from Naco, Ariz., standing on a building at the comer of Sixth street end Rail- read avenue, half a mile north of the International line, was struck by a spent mauser bullet. It pierced his coat and shirt and the point entered the flesh of tho left breast. The boy gamely gnt up and pulled the bullet out and put It in his pocket for a sou venir. Oscar K. Goll of Tombstone, a news paper man. was shot In the side of the head on Fourth street. He was the first American wounded on the Amer ican side during the battle yester day. The bullet cut a long gash in Ihe scalp along the side of his head. Dullets stmck the residence of Robert Rae on Fifth street end A. W. Darr, secretary of the Y. M. C. A , on Eighth street. 1 be families moved out. Colonel Shuuk, commanding the American troops, said he could not do anything about It, having no orders from Washington. The Second Street school in Doug las was under fire all morning. No attempt was made to hold school there or at the Seventh street school. The American custom house was under heavy fire. American officials took refuge In a hie ditch along the rail road tracks. The schools were dis missed at noon. Rome cavalry horses bolted and ran across the line Into Agua Prieta. The cavalry was down to Fifth street, where they were sheltered by adobe buildings. In the first attack the federals were repulsed. After a short rest they at tacked again, then hesitated for a short time and' resumed the attack the third time. The re-st of the day the fighting was almost continuous. The bullets hailed thick in various parts of Douglas and many people were struck. The first attempt of tho federal Mexican troops lo retake the port of Agua Prieta from the rebels resulted in their repulse. The first battle raged for two hours, commencing at 0:30, the federals crossing the open country and attacking the rebel trenches. Heavy Firing Is Renewed. By 9:30 heavy firing was renewed, although the federal machine guns were heard no more and had been put out of commission. .The rebel trenches along the International line were en gaged. More than 1.."-00 federals were pitted against the rebel garrison of 1,000. At 10:30 the firing had censod with the federals holding every position occu pied at Ihe beglnlng of thi? batttle. The rebels began digging trenches at once. Red Lopez reported the rebel losses in tho trenches light. He said the federals In ndvanclng across the onen ground had lost heavily. At 11 a m. firing again begin to the north and southwest, but no machine guns were In action. Lopez said the federal right wing ex tended from the International line, two miles east of Douglas-, In a semi circle to a point due south of Agua rrlcta. Six hundred rebWs occupied rillp pits with fi00 yards range of the federal lines. The rebel lino conform ed to that of the federals. NARROWLY ESCAPED DEATH Cousin of King of Italy In Gas Ex plosion In Palace at Florence. Rome, April IS. The Count of Tur in, cousin of the king and brother of tho Duke of the Abruzl, had a narrow escape at Florence while he was taking his bath in the PitU palace the gas tube of the heating apparatus In tho room exploded and knocked a hole in the ceiling of the bath room. A heavy piece of plastering fell from a point just abovo where the count was standing. He partly escaped by dodglng,.but was struck by some frag ment sand slightly injured. APPROPRIATION BILL Etate Budget Carries $25,486,821 as Compared With $25,348,589 Last Year. Albany, April 18. Majority Leader Alfred P. Smlih of the assembly In troduced the annual appropriation bill. It carrlps appropriations amounting to $25,480,821, as compared with $25 346.189, the total of the annual ap propriation bill signed by Governor Hughes last year, f an increase of i1.18.2fi2. 9 Put tbe Democratic legislators call attention to this small increase In view of the fact that the lait legisla- lure made provision for the expend! lure of $"87,3", which must fall up on the Democratic administration. WARSHIP FOR DELAGOA BAY Trouble Expected In Portuguese Col ony of Mozambique. Capetown, April 18. The British cruiser Forte hns been ordered to Dp lagoa bay in consequence of trouble In the Portuguese colony of Mozam blque, which Is ten times as large as Portugal itserf. It Is stated that there Is a condition of anarchy there owing to the fact -that many residents re main loyal to King Manuel. The people who nre In favor of the new republican provisional govern ment of Portugal demand the ex pulsion of the Royalists. Mozambique, or Portuguese East Africa, as 1t is officially known, ad Joins British South Africa. EDITOR HARDEN MARRIES AGAIN Got $10,000 For Alienate of First Wife's Affection. New York, April 18. Percival 1.. Hardeu, editor of the Club Fellow. who recently sued William T. Hoops broker, for $15o,nno damages for alien ating the affections of his wife, Maud Sullivan Harden, now Mrs. Hoops, and who was award-ed $10,000 dam ages by a jury before Justice Pendle ton of the sup.'eme court, Is to marry again, according to dispatches from Chicago. Matyd Doris Merce, a former mem ber of the Earl and Girl company, oh lalned a license to marry Harden there yesterday. Mabel Mercer, whose father is George Mercer, the custodian of pub lic buildings, Allegheny county, Pa., four years ago ran away from the Midnight- mission In Germantown, where she hat? been placed because of what was said at the time to be parental opposition attentions paid her by Curl Born Traeger, son of a former partner of Andrew Carnegie and a ward of Henry C. Flick. She came to New York, where sho obtained a position with the Karl and Girl company. She Is 22 years old. Harden' first wife va3 Maude Alene Sullivan, a. cloak model whom he married In Chicago, Nov. 1, 1900. On January 21, 1908, she obtained n divorce nnd the next day married William T. Hoops, a broker of this city. MISS MORGAN PLANS INQUIRY Daughter of Financier Will Investi gate Condition In Irwin Strike Field. Pittsburg, April 18. It is reported that among the party scheduled to make van Investigation of conditions among the destitute, tent sheltered families of the Irwin coal field today will be Mls-s Anna T. Morgan, daugh ter of J. Pierpont Morgan. Miss Morgan has for some time been (showing interest in sociological work, hnving for its object the Improvement of living conditions among the tollers. It Is announced she will be accompa nied by several Kastern magazine writers. EDITOR GETS A BAD BEATING Owner of Local Gas Plant, Whom He Criticised, Assaulted Him. Oakland City, Ind., April 18. J. W. Cockrum, editor of the Journal and president of the Indiana Republican Editorial association, is suffering from a beating administered yesterday by Robert Jamelson, owners of the local gas plant. Cockrum criticised the company be cause of the quality of gas it was fur nishing and Jamelson attacked and beat him badly leaving him Insensi ble on the ground. Though badly In jured, he will recover. TOGO WILL VISIT AMERICA Japanese Admiral Commanded Ml" kado's Fleet In Russo-Japanese War, Washington. April 18. At the Invi tation of the state department Ad miral Togo, who commanded the Japanese fleet In the Russo Japanese war. will visit the I'nlted States this summer on his way back to Japan from London, where he will be a mem ber of the special Japanese mission to tbe coronation of King George General Nogl, who c.ptured Pott Ar thur, and who will also go to London on the same mission- ,was unable to uccept the American Invitation. THE NEWSSUMMARY 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. Twenty lives were lost when tho small coast steamer Iroquois found ered off Coal Island, British Colum bia. The loss caused by the Ilro which destroyed the Yoshlwara at Toklo was placed at $3,000,000; five persons wore reported killed. Advices from Berlin indicated that Ihe German potash m inufacturera would make terms fixing the price with the American representatives. A dispatch from Agua Prlesti stat ed unless peace was soon reached In Mexico all the Northern states of the republic would experience a disastrous famine. Thursday. A diver inspected the Prinzess Ireno and the owners estlmattd the loss to dale at more than $80,000. A British board of trade report, com paring conditions of the working class In England and America, shows that a higher standard ot comfort prevails here. Serious rioting occurred In the de partment of Marne, following the French senate's decision to suppress all territorial delimitations regarding champagne. Max Blanck and Isaac Harris, own ers of tho Triangle Shirtwaist com pany, were indicted for the manslaugh ter of two of the 146 victims of the Asch buil("ng fire, In New York, whose deains, it was testified, were due to a locked door on the ninth floor. Friday. M. Prier flew in a monoplane from London to Paris In 4 hours 8 minutes; the distance is about 290 miles. Tornadoes destroyed many build ings In Oklahoma and Kansas towns; several score of persons were report ed dead and Injured. Real estate on Broadway, once own ed, It is said, by Mrs. Puttner, and now valued at $2,000,000, may be the subject of litigation by persons In Halifax, Boston and California. Judge William S. Kenyon was elect ed United States senator to succeed the late Senator Jonathan P. Do'.livor on the sixty-feventh baAlot In the Iowa legislature. President Taft will send the noml nation of ex-Governor Curtis Guild, Jr, of Massachusetts as ambassador to Russia to the senate; W. W. Rockhill, now ambassador to Russia, will be transferred to Turkey. Saturday. John McLnne, formerly governor of New Hampshire, died from cirrhosis of the liver at Southern Pines, N. C. A'reavy wind storm caused heavy damage in St. Louis; tornadoes were reported in a number of states. Edward Hir.es of Chicago was quot Cd as boasting that he "put Lorimer over" by a witnpss in tho Illinois bri bery investigation at Springfield. A dispatch from Lunenburg, N. S., stated that seventy vessels left port to compete for the first time with Gloucester, Mass., fishermen off the Grand Banks. A dispatch from Epernay, France, jitated tint comparative quiet pre vailed among tne wine growers or me department of Marne; millions of bot tle of champiigne were reported to have been destroyed during tho riots. Monday. Tho agreement for the, loan of $.10,- 000,000 to China is signed at I'ckln. House Democrats take steps to push inquiry Into the various govern mental d( partments. Miss Ola Humphrey. American act ress, becomes tho bride ot Prince Ibrahim Hassan In London. Washington believes tho next step in the Mexican revolution will force the United States to interfere. Representative Kitchen declares Democrats favor reciprocity as first move against tho protective tariff. Seven states out of eleven yet to take action are needed for the rati fication of the income tax amend ment. Tuesday. Pastor Rus.-icll ot Brooklyn accept ed a call to tho London Tabernacle, Paddlngton. Outward quiet prevails in the cham pagne wine region ot France, but there are indications of further dis order. Major General Wood telegraphed the commander of (lie army of the army In Texas not to cross the Amer ican-Mexican border line under any circumstances. The balloon N'ordhauson exploded near Dresden, after rarrying off nnd injuring a spectator In a premature ascent; four occupants fell through a roof and were badly hurt. A dispatch from Chihuahua, Mexi co, stated that forty rebels were kill ed and more than one hundred wounded in a battle near Sauz can yon; the federals reported a loss of five killed. RECENT DEATHS. Charles A. Hill was born in Chenango county. N. Y., August 27, 1831. and died at his home in Tionesta, Pa., April 17 liill, having reached the age of 7!) years, 7 months and 20 days. In 1843 his parents moved from New York state to Tidioute, ho coming with them but located in Hickory township where he had secured employment in the lumber woods, The same year he was united in marriage with Mary J., daughter of Wil liam and Nancy (Gates) Wolcott, one of the early settlers of this county. To them were born nine children, six of whom, Mrs. Peter Lindal, of Sherman, N. Y., Truman L., of Hickory township, Perry C, Mrs. James Butler, Mrs. J. A. Adams, and Mrs. Urban Mong, of Tio nesta, survive to comfort their aged mother. Also twoidopted children, S. W. Farmer, of Thjjute, and Mrs, Ger trude Mong, of Fairport, Olff. Mr. Hill was a man of more than or Jmary ability and from his youth was grAtly interest ed in the problems which concerned the prosperity of the nation. It is not sur prising then that while he had been mar ried for fourteen years and had a family dependent upon him, and a borne that was exceptionally pleasant, ho respond ed to the call of the President and en listed on August 11, 1802, in Company U, Slird Regiment, Pennsylvania Volun teers, and with his loyal and patriotio soul stirred with tho conditions of the time, made a most brave and faithful soldier, participating in the battles of Fredericksburg, Chnncellorsville and the Wilderness, in this last battle his right hand was shattered by a rebel bullet and on account of this wound he was honor ably discharged after two and one-half years of service. In his military life he sustained the proud record of the Hill family, his father having been a soldier in the War of 1812 and faithfully served the Government during that struggle, lie was a charter member of Captain Geo. Stow Post, No. 274, of the G. A. R. serving as its commander for many years. After he returned home he worked for some time at his trade, that of a black smith, and in 1SU0 joined the tide that was sweeping toward the western states and for the next seven years was a resi dent of Lodi, Wisconsin. The memories of the old aud familiar scenes in Pennsyl vania made him dissatisfied with the west, and with his family he returned to this vicinity and purchased the farm formerly owned by his father-in-law, now the property of the County, and continu ed to reside there until about seventeen years ago when he disposed of it and purchased a home in Tionesta. While living on the farm he filled with great acceptability a number of local offices in the township and in 1881 was elected an Associate Judge of the county. While filling this position he had the oppor tunity of emphasizing the temperance principles which he had espoused years before, and no license was granted by his voice while he was on the bench. In his home life he was an ideal husband and father, and the children who mourn his death, can not fail to be comforted by the precious memories of his kindness to each and all. He was a man of re fined sensibilities, the coarse and impure word had no place in his vocabulary, and his soul was often filled with righteous indignation at the estimate of life held by too muny, lie had the privilege ol being raised in a christian homo, his father, Frederick Hill, being a devoted member of tho Frco Will Baptist Church and one of his brothers was a minister in that denomination. In 1849, Rev. Smith, a clergyman of that faith, was holding a meeting in Hast Hickory, and Mr. Hill was converted and united with that church, but afterwards withdrew from that organization. A few years later he united with the Methodist Epis copal church and since 1878 has been an ollicial in the sumo. For many years he held an exhorters license and held meet ings in several places with pleasure and profit to his hearers. Ho was loyal to the church of his choice and the pastor could always rely upon his presence and support, ho was especially gifted in pray er and those who knew him best will al ways remember with satisfaction tho petitions he offered in the public congre gation. At the time of his death he was filling the position of Court Crier, having -been appointed to this office scvcrul years ago. For the past seven years he has not been in good health, but with the exception of an occasional attack of accute kidney trouble, he baa been ablo to be on the street almost every day and when he was taken sick last V ednesday it was hoped that lie would soon rally and be ablo to attend to bis duties, but he steadily failed and on Monday morning his spirit left his weary body ns gently as the dow rises from the petals of the June rose. Besido his widow and children he is survived by one brother, Gcorgo T., of Ostrandcr, Washington, fourteen grand-children and eleven grentgrand-childreu. Funer al services will bo held at his late homo this Wednesday at 2 p. m., with inter ment in the Mt. Collins cemetery, Rev. W. O. Calhoun oliiciating. SHERIFF ASSISTS A PRIEST Supports Church Official In Conflict With Congregation. Pottsville, Pa., April 18. With the aid of the county sheriff and an In juncMon from the court, tho Rev. A. J. Kamlnsky, pastor of the Greek Catholic chii'ch at Mlnersville, per formed services yesterday. When the priest w-nt to the church st Sunday morning he found tha iloors barred against him and ent rance was secured with the aid of n axe. Criminal prorecution for forc ible entry was brought against Father Kamlnsky, who retaliated with In junction proceedings. EXPLOSION BURNS FOUR MEN Perkins Clue ractory at Lansdale I Partly Wrecked. Lnnsdalo, Pa., April IS. n explo sion at the works of the Perkins Glua company, In this horough, caused se rious hums to J. W. Jernlgnn, Oscar fernigan, Tobhs Hiinsberger and Tor- y Williams. II Is thought Mr. Huns- "i-Rer will p-t recover. Dr. J. W. Bowman was railed to treat, the in jured. con.sicierablc portion of the build. ing wis ionioii -hed and tho loss will be $5,0'J0 or more, .