RATES OF ADVEHTI8IHCI One Square, one Inob, oneweek... 1 00 One Square, one inch, one months S 00 One Square, one lnch,-8 months..,.. 6 00 One Square, one inch, one year .... 10 10 Two Squares, one year ........ 16 00 Quarter Column, one year ., SO 00 Half Column, one year. 60 00 One Column, one year ......... 100 00'' Legal advertisements-ten cents per line' each insertion. We do fine Job Printing of every de scription at reasonable rates, but It's cash on delivery. Published every Wednesday by J. C. WENK. Offioe in Smewbangh & Wenk Building, LM STRBBT, TIOHESTA, TA, Tera fl.OO A Vw, Burlotly la MWi Entered as seoond-olaai mattervt the post-office at TloneBla. No ubacrlptlon received for ahorter period than three months. Correspondence solicited, but no notloe will be taken of anonymous communica tion. Always give your name. Fori PUBIv VOL. XLIV. NO. 28. TIONESTA, PA., WEDNESDAY, "SEPTEMBER 6, 1911. $1.00 PER ANNUM. THE FOREST REPUBLICAN. XCAN. BOROUGH OFFICERS. Surges. J. D. W. Rook. Justices of the Peoet O. A. Randall, D. W. Clark. , Oouneimen.3, W, Landers, J. T. Dale, O. B. Robinson, Wm. Smearbaugh, R. J. Hopkins, W. O. Calhoun, A, 11. Kelly. Const able Charles Clark. Collector W. H. Hood. School Directors J. O. Soowden, R. M. Herman, Q. Jainleson, J. J. .Landers, J. O. Gelst, Joseph Clark. FOREST COUNTY OFFICERS. Member of Congress V. M. 8 peer. Member of Senate J. K. P. Hall. Assembly W. J. Campbell. President Judge W. I). Hinckley. Associate Judge-P. C. Hill, Samuel Aul. Prolhonotary , Register Jt Recorder, de. J. P. fJnlL 8heritrB. R. Maxwell. Treasurer Geo. W. Holenian. Commissioners V m . H. Harrison, J. M. Zuendel, II, H. McClellan. District Attorney M. A. Carrlnger. Jury Commissioners Ernest Slbble, Lewis Wagner. Coroner Dr. M. C Kerr. County Auditors-George H. Warden, A. C. Uregg and J. P. Kelly. County Surveyor D. W. Clark. County Superintendent D, W. Morri son. Keslr Terns f Caart. Fourth Monday of February. Third Monday of May. Fourth Monday of September. Third Monday of November. Regular Meetings of County Commis sioners 1st and 8d Tuesdays of montn. Charea Sabbath Bchaal. ftrfesbyterlan Sabbath School at 9:45 a. m. t M.K. Sabbath School at 10:00 a. m. Preaohlng in M. E. Church every Sab bath evening by Rev. W. O. Calhoun. Preaching in the F. M. Church every Sabbath evening at the usual hour. Rev. U. A, Uarrelt, Pastor. Preaohlng in the Presbyterian churoh every Sabbath at 11:00 a. m. aud 7:30 p. m. Kev. U. A. llalley, Pastor. The regular meetings of the W. C. T. U. are held at the headquarters on the second and fourth Tuesdays of each . month. - BUSINESS DIRECTORY. TP. NEST A LODGE, No.B69,I.O.O.F. M eeta every Tuesday evening, In Odd Fellows' Hall, Partridge building. CAPT. GEORGE STOW POST, No. 274 G. A. K. Meets 1st Tuesday after noon of each month at 3 o'clock. CAPT. GEORGE STOW CORPS, No. 137, W. R. C, meets firet and third Wednesday evening of each month. F. RITCHEY, ATTOKN E Y-AT-L A W, Tloneata, Pa. MA. CARRINGER, Attorney and Counse!lor-at-Law. Office over Forest County National Bank Building, TIONESTA, PA. CURTIS M. 8HAWKEY, ATTORN EY-AT- LAW, Warren, Pa. Practice in Forest Co. AC BROWN, ATTORN EY-AT -LA W. Office In Arner Building, Cor. Elm and Bridge Sts., Tlonesta, Pa. FRANK 8. HUNTER, D. D. S. Rooms over Citizens Nat. Bank, TIONESTA, 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 its ap pointments. Every convenience and comfort provided for the traveling public. CENTRAL HOUSE, R. A. FULTON, Proprietor, Tlonseta, Pa. This is the most centrally located hotel in the plaoe, and has 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 BHOEMAKER. Shop over R. L. Haslet's grooery store on Elm street. Is prepared to do all Kinds of custom work from the finest to the coarsest and guarantees his work to ?;lve perfect satisfaction. Prompt atten ion given to mending, and prloes rea sonable. Fred. Grettenborgor GENERAL BLACKSMITH & MACHINIST. All work pertaining to Machinery, En gines, Oil Well Tools, Gas or Water Fit tings and General Blacksmlthiug prompt ly done at Low Kates. Repairing Mill Machinery given special attention, and satisfaction guaranteed. Shop In rear of and just west of the Shaw House, Tidioute, Pa. Your patronage solicited. FRED. GRETTENBERGER WaJl Paper I have just received Two Thousand Kolis of 1911 WALL PAPER Now is the time to get your paper ing done before the spring rush. Then it will be almost impossible to get a Caperhanger and that will delay your ousecleaniog. Wall Paper, Window Shades, OH Cloth, Paints, Oil, Varnish, Sewing Machine Supplies and Notions. G. F. RODDA, Next Dflot to the Fruit Store, Elm Street, Tlonesta, Pa. YOUNG LAD POISONED Dies In Agony After Drinking Oil of Wintergreen. Boy Found the Bottle of Oil on the Shelf and After He Had Tasted of It Drank All There Was In the Bot tle Doctor Was 8ummoned, but His Efforts Proved Unavailing and the Little Fellow Died Other News Items. George Barnard, the three-year-old on of T. E. Barnard, who resides In Mt. Morris, N. Y., died Saturday morn ing from the effects -of drinking a :pinntlty of oil of. wintergreen. The little boy was playing In the house with his brother and sister Fri day evening while his mother was busy In another part of the home. He found a bottle of oil on a shelf and after he had tasted of It drank all there was in the bottle. He was Immediately taken with cramps In the stomach and Dr. G. C. Flsk was hurriedly called. Everything possible was done for the youngster, hut he had drnnk so much of the oil that mod leal aid was of no avail. Ho died after suffering great pain during (he night. BARLEY AND FLAX Canadians Plant Enormous Acreage In Anticipation of Reciprocity Agreement Becoming a Law. The Dominion Immigration depart ment has just Issued nn official state ment based upon the reports of its agents in the prairie provinces, show ing that the farmers of those pro' Incos, In anticipation of the reciproci ty agreement becoming law, planted an enormous crop of barley and flax this year and will bo prepared to export great nuant:!es of flaxseed and bar ley to the United States this fall, if the government Is returned to power and reciprocity goes through parlia ment. The barley acreage In Sas katchewan and Manitoba Is 1,2000,000 acres, or an estimate of 36,000,00,0 bushels, while the flax acreage In Sas katchewan Is 700,000 acres, with an estimated yield of 8,400,000 bushels. The- exportable surplus of flaxseed will bo seven and a halt million bushels. AGED FARMER DROPS DEAD Thought His Wife Had Been Struck by a Passenger Train. Oscar Fox, un aged farmor, living In Danube, near Little Falls, N. Y dropped dead ar, the result of fright at a moment when he thought Lis wife had been struck by a West Shore train Fox, with his wife, was attempting to drive their cows from the railroad tracks, whero they had wandered from the pasture. He was on one side of the tracks imd his wife on the other. They heard the oncoming train and their efforts to eret the animals out of danger were rewarded as the train ap proached. Rut In the excitement the aged woman fell. It seemed to her husband on the opposite sjde she had fallen In front of the train. In his frantic efforts to reach her he was stricken with heart failure and toppled over dead. Ills wife was unharmed. "Dips" Reap a Harvest at Hornell. With the 22,000 visitors in Hornell attending the fair, thieves reaped a harvest. Among the losses reported were: P.. D. Maon of Fresno, Gal., $."0, which was taken from his pocket as he was alighting from a Buffalo train at the Erie depot. Whllu mingling with tho big crowd at the fair grounds William Robblns of Greenwood, wag touched for $43. Elmer Ferry of Al mond, mourns the loss of $110; Will lam Doherty was robbed of $C0, and a dozen others have reported losses ranging from $! to $20. Arrested For Toting Gun. The first arrest under the new law, regulating the carrying of weapons, was made at Hornell, N. Y., Sunday when the police picked up Edwin Han tcoin, 1." years old, who ran away from his homo In Elmlra. Patrolman Dniley saw the boy lounging about the streets with his hip pocket bulg ing out in a suspicious manner. He searched the boy and found a 32-call-ber revolver. The boy was locked up. He declines to state where he got th gun and what he Intended to do with it Have Developed Smallpox. Three cases of smallpox have devel oped In the town of Rexvile and It was learned that thousands of people who vlBlted the Hornet! fair were ex posed during the week. Following their return from the fair two mem bers of the Smith family and one of the Slocum. fau.Ily of Rexvllle were taken seriouslv ill. Dr. Bennett, the health officer, finds they are suffering from smallpox. Shot at Woman Storekeeper. Because Mrs. Blols, whose husband conducts a store In Wellsboro, Pa., would not open It up Saturday night to Boll a man named Stryker from Match Creek a sack of peanuts, he drew a re volver and fired at her, narrowly miss lug his mark. He is under arrest, charged with attempt to kill. He had been drinking at the time. FRANK GOTCH Victor In Great Wrestling Match In Two Straight Falls. 1 7WMiM;M 3SS . t - LIGHTING COMPANY SOLD Madison County Gas and Electric Company Bought In Bankruptcy Proceedings. The Madison Countv Gas and Elec tric company was sold In bankruptcy proceedings last week at the court house In Swnmpsville, N. Y., for $125, M0 to Charles H. Tyler of Boston, representing the Boston bond holders' committee of the Hudson Ulver Water Power company, of which the Madison County company was a subsidiary con cern. The sale was conducted by Senator Harvey D. Hlnman of Binghamton as special master, having been appointed by Judge Ray. The property consists of gas and electric lighting systems In Oneida and the electric system in Ganastoia. The sale closes the affairs of the Hudson River Water Power company. The other properties In Saratoga and adjoining counties were sold ear lier In the week at Rallston Springs for $7,500,000 and bid In for the same committee. TROUT SEASON CLOSED Anglers Report Fishing For Speckled Beauties Vcy Poor This Year. The season during which trout can be legally taken from the waters of New York state came to nn end Fri day night and the speckled beauties will now be under the protection of the law until next April. As a rule anglers who have been out In quest of trout this year have been disappointed, as they found the fishing very poor. The open season In the Adiromlacks for deer hunting Is from Sept. 16 to Oct. 31. Aviator Dashed to Death, John J. Frisble, wellknown as a parachute Jumper and as an avi ator, was killed at Norton, Kan., when his aeroplane dashed 100 feet to earth at th3 fair grounds. Frisble Is the 17th aviator to lose his life since flying In heavler-than-alr ma chines began. Of this number 10 hava been killed In the United States. The hissing and Jeering of an Impa tient crowd of spectators. It may be said, drove Frisble to his death. Two Suffocated In Sewer. Rexford D. Lyon and Oliver K. Har wood, civil engineers, were suffocated In the sewer In Syracuse. Their deaths occurred at the corner of South Clinton and Glfford streets. The two men went Into the sewer to make measurements. While thore .they were overcome by gas and died before assistance could reach them. Child Scalded to Death. Theodore Kubink, three years old, was playing In the kitchen of Mrs. Krelmmel, next door to his mother's house in North Olean, N. Y. He back ed into a washboiler of scalding water standing on the floor. The shrieks of tha child brought help quickly, but It came too late. The little fellow lived for several hours In terrible agony. Crops Are Generally Light. Early season Indications of bumper crops did not generally materialize In Niagara county. The long draught and the terrific windstorm raised hav oc with orchards. Peaches, apples, ?ears, beans, tomatoes and potatoes are all showing a lighter yield than was expected. Gowanda Postmaster Dead. William N. Wallace, postmaster of Gowanda, N. Y., Is dead at his home m Chapel street. Mr. Wallaco was f5 years old and had been postmaster of Gowanda for 13 years. Ha was one of the most prominent Republicans In Western New York. Allegany Oil Fields. In the Allegany county (N. Y.) oil field during August here sixteen wells wore completed, with a new produc tion of 12 barrels. Nine wells were dry. At present there are 13 rigs building and 12 wells drilling. Home Burns While Family Are Away. Fire destroyed a house owned and occupied In ISath, N. Y., oaiiy Sunday morning. Both Mr. and Mrs. Covell were In Hornell at the time and the cause of the fire is not known. GOTCH BEATS HACK First Fall In 14 M in, 18 1-5 Sec. and'Second In 5 Min. 32 1-5 Sec- Russian Lion Was Untrained and Hog Fat and Was a Beaten Man When He Entered the Ring First Fail Gained on a Reverse Body Hold and Wrist Lock Iowa Farmer, Secured Second Fall by His Fatal Toe Hold. Chicago, Sept. 5. Outgamed, out strengthened and outfought, George Hackenschmldi, the Russian Hon, yes terday afternoon laid down his hope of the world's wrestling championship to Frank Gotch, world's champion. The first fall came In 14 minutes 18 1-5 seconds on a reverse body hold and wrist lock. Tho second fall came In 5 minutes 32 1-5 seconds, Gotch using his fatal toe hold that won him the championship three years ago. Hackenschmldt, untrained, was hog fat. He had no chance whatever. He was a beaten man when he entered the ring. Gotch Trained to the Minute. Gotch, trained to the minute, beat Hack at every stage of the game. The masterful strength which Hack was supposed to possess did not show to advantage when Gotch clasped tho Hon. The Iowa farmer was simply too good for the Russian. He pitted phys ical strength against a man who had practically no strength. The result was Inevitable. The second and final fall came S) quickly that the great crowd failed to appreciate the fact that the match was ended. The wrestlers had spar red for an opening. Like a flash Gotch caught the Russian around his legs, spun him around and dropped him on his stomach. Gotch's head was at the lion's feet and his legs wero wrapped about Hack's body. He worried the Russian for a few moments about the legs and then. In a twinkling, threw both bands a round Hack's left foot. There was a quirk sharp twist. A look of In tense pain passed over Hack's face. Iowa Farmer Too Strong. He sought to break; he sought to tear his pained leg from Gotch's grip, but the Iowa farmer was too strong. He twisted again and Hack gave up. Hack broke the hold before the Iowau, could apply leverage. Hack broke a crotch hold and camo to his feet. Gotch said after the bout: "Honest, I did not think It would be so easy. I expected to win, but not with the ease with which the feat actually was ac complished. I had not been In tho ring three minutes when I knew that Hack was even less to be feared than he was three years ago. "I have nothing to say," the defeat ed Russian grunted'. NEGOTIATIONS RESUMED Germany Has Received RevUed An swer of France to Her Proposals In Moroccan Affair. Berlin, Sept. 5. The negotiations over Moroccan affairs which have been suspended for some days were ro sumed when the French ambassador M. Cambon, handed to the German for eign minister, Herr Von Klderlln Waechter, the written statement out lining the revised answer of France to the German proposals. The foreign minister In accepting them said that he would submit the matter at once to. the Imperial chan cellor and that the answer of Germany would be given within as brief a time as possible under the circumstances. Later Dr. Von Bethmann llollweg, the chancellor, left Berlin for the pur pose of Joining the kaiser at Kiel. It Is presumed that, the documents will be back In town tomorrowbut there will be no developments In the mean time so far as known. In the Interim there is a distinct feel ing of uneasiness and prices on the bourse declined sharply, although noth ing Is actually known as to tho character of the French reply. Th3 uneasiness Is of a general nature. DR. HILL LEAVES BERLIN Former American Ambassador Goes to Switzerland With His Family, Berlin, Sept. 5. Dr. David Jayne Hill, the former American ambassador to Germany, started for Switzerland with his family yesterday afternoon. Before leaving he took luncheon with Herr von Kidorlin Waechter, the for eign secretary. All the members of the American embassy were present. Many friends gathered, at tho rail road station to say goodbye to Dr. Hill and hlsf wife. The kaiser was repre sented by his master of ceremonies and Von Kiderlin Waechter and the undersecretaries represented the for eign office. Many bouquets were pre sented to Mrs. Hill. GENERAL REYES ROBBED Moh of Maderistas Forcibly Take 3,000 Pesos From Opposition Candidate. Mexico City, Sept. 5. Stormed and forcibly robbed of 3,000 pesos by a mob of Maderistas In the principal Btreet of the capital, General Bernardo Reyes, candidate for presidency in op position to Francisco I. Madero, wa. forced to abandon an effert to address his constituents and run the gauntlet of a Jeering crowd upon whom the po lice had received ordurs not to lire except as a last resort! TAFT A BUSY MAN Put In Seven Hours of Play on First Clear Day at Beverly. Beverly, Sept, 5 President Tafi crammed In seven hours of play yes terday, the' first clear day of his Btay at Beverly. fter he set out for My opia club house In the morning he did not return until late In the afternoon. All morning he stuck to golf and lunched at the club house as the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Buckner Walllngford. friends from Cincinnati. In the after noon he attended the Myopia horse show. When Mr. Taft arrived at Paramet ta he went at once to his study to work upon the address for the West ern trip. He did not leave off work until dinner time. He played seven hours yesterday and that Is undoubtedly the record for his vacation this year. Sunday he got up aboard the Mayflower at 6 o'clock to review a case. . It was learned that the case was that of Lieutenant Robert G. Ruther ford, II. S. A., who had been sent enced by a court martial to dismissal for alleged irregularities in the mess fund which was intrusted to him. The president, after spending sev eral hours In reviewing this testi mony, reversed the sentence of dis missal and order that Lieutenant Rutherford be reduced 50 numbers In rank. CHINA DEVASTATED BY SUMMER FLOODS Half a Million People Homeless, Bodies He Unburied. Peking, Sept. 5. Summer floods along the Yangtseklang and Its tribu taries, and also other great rivers, are repeating In various provinces the conditions In Anhwel and Klangsu, which have not yet been relieved. In the province of Anhwel early in Aug ust hundreds of thousands of acres of rice were destroyed by the floods and half a million persons were ren dered homeless. Many thousands of square miles are now submerged and the bodies of hun dreds of persons lie unburied. The Chinese government as well as special committees, is subscribing relief funds, which Is a new departure for the administration and shows the advancement toward modern ways, but the project for nttacklng the root of the evil, control of the watersways and the reclaiming of lands, has only up to the present been suggested and mildly discussed. Hence a repetition of these horrors may be expected each year, according to C. D. Jameson, the American e glneer, sent by the Red Cross to Chi na to study the situation. SOLDIERS' GRAVES ROBBED Body of 1812 Veteran Stolen From Port McArthur (Ohio) Cemetery. Kenton, O., Sept. 6. Discovery has been made that graves In the For; Mc Arthur cemetery, west of Kenton, have been opened. Investigation dis closes the fact that the body of oaa soldier of the war of 1812 had been removed. Fresh dirt on other graves shows what Is thought to be evi dence of the work of grave robbers. The cemetery marks tho resting place of many soldiers of the early In dian wars and also of the War cf IS 1 2. The cemetery Is one the Blta of old Fort McArthur, built by General Hull when he made his march through this section on the way to Detroit. Assails Sleeping Victims. Lumberton, N. C, Sept. 5. Cray Tolar, a wealthy lumberman, was prob ably fatally Injured and his wife made the victim of an attempted assault by a colored man, who entered tho To lar home In the suburbs early today. The couple were asleep. DREADNOUGHTS READY SOON Florida and Utah, Most Powerful American Ships, Almost Finished. Washington, Sept.. 5. The sister dreadnoughts Florida and Utah, the mightiest warships In the American navy, will be in fighting trim ly Nov. 15, nccordnlg to the calculations of the naval experts. Within a week the Utah, Jtuit placed In commission, will enter tho docks of the New York navy yard to receive tho finishing touches. This work Involves the Installation of conning towers and the sights for the guns. As much se crecy surrounds these devices, they are Invariably constructed at a gov ernment yard Instead of In the plant of a private builder. The Florida will be placed In com mission about Sept. 15 and will be ready for active service simultane ously with the Utah. These two floating fortresses will be attached to the first division of the Atlantic fleet, the Florida becom ing the regular flagship of the di vision. Two Girls Drowned. Wllkes-Barre, Pa., Sept. 5. While stepping from a crowded rowboat Into a canoe In the middle of the Susque hanna river at Falls, a ummer re sort, Miss Anna Llewellyn, acd 19, and Miss Kthel Evans,, aged 13, of West Pittston, wero drowned. NEWSY PARAGRAPHS Summary of the Week's News of the World. Happenings From All Parts of th Globe Put Into Shape For Easy Reading What All the World li Talking About Cream of the News Culled From Long Dispatches. Wednesday. T. J. O'Brien, the American ambas sador at Tokio, Is entertained by Thomas Sammons, the consul general at Yokohama. Charleston, S. C, and Savannah, Ga., were damaged by a hurricane. Several lives were lost and property was damaged to the extent of millions of dollars. President Taft Is busy preparing taiiff speeches which he Is to deliver on his twenty-four-state tour next month as the first blows In the 1912 campaign. Paul Beattle testified that Henry Clay Beattle, Jr., confessed to wife murder, while Mrs. Owen, mother of the slain woman, tells of her daugh ter's unhappy married life. Thursday. The first anniversary of the annexa tlon of Corea to Japan was celebrat ed at Seoul with public rejoicings. A secret offensive and defensive a I llance was reported to have been signed between Chill and Colombia. Mayor Gaynor's excise policy praised by the mayor of Binghamton, roused the cheers of the stata liquor dealers' convention in that city. It was reported In Berlin that four American crulters, the Saratoga, the Olyrapla, the Brooklyn and the Ral eigh, were about to be sold to the Turkish government. At least seven deaths and $1,000 000 damage to property were reported In Charleston, S. C; the Clyde liner Apache arrived there from New York after a perilous voyage. Friday. Military activities near the French and German boundaries cause an im mense sensation In Belgium. A Mt. Vernon (N. Y.) youth risked his life off the Maine coast In a vain effort to save a girl when theiir canoe capsized. Lehigh Valley railroad attorneys said in Manchester, N. Y., the train wreck tlv're would probably cost the road $7-r0.000 In damages. Sir Thomas Whitney, premier of On tario, expressed the belief that the American sponsors of reciprocity ar tlcipated ultimate annexation. Francisco I. Mndero, Jr., was noml nated for the presidency by the Con- stitutlonal Progressives of Mexico at the party convention, held fn the cap ital. Saturday. Suit was filed by the federal gov ernment In Detroit against Michigan members of the alleged lumber trust France named her terms to Ger many by offering specific portions of the French Conio In exchange for ab solute recognition of her rights in Morocco. The Republicans or Alabama, in state convention at Birmingham, in dorsed the administration of President Taft and Instructed its delegates to support him in the next national con vention. Reports camo from Paris and other cities In France of serious discontent among the people bv reason of the high cost of food; paraders marched through the streets and, iu some in stances, rioting resulted. Monday. James R. Keene, who Is ill In Lon don, suffered a relapse. Nine balloons were entered for the International race at Kansas City on Oct. 5. Seven men were drowned In a col lision between a freight steamer and n launch at Toledo. Lew Simmons, an old-time minstrel, was struck by a trolley car and killed nt Reading, Ta. Harry N. Atwood, In Boston, an nounced his entry in the San Francisco-New York flight. Joseph S. Cummlncs fell 300 feet In a monoplano Into Dorchester hay, but escaped with bruises. .Toao Chagas formed a cabinet for Portugal to succeed the provisional ministry, which resigned on Aug. 28. Tuesday. Six miners were killed In a cago accident In the Black Rock mine, near Ilutte, Mont. The complete roster of the new Chagius administration in Lisbon was published. Governor Deneen of Illinois suf fered a broken leg In Springfield when he Jumped from his automobile. Maron, the French aviator, was kill ed near Chartres by a fall of 600 feet, caused by the sudden failure of his motor. It was announced lit Washington that t lie sister dreadnoughts, Florida and Utah ,thu largest battleships in the navy, would be In lighting trim y Nov. 15. The agitation In France for lower food rr'ees showed signs of subsid ing; government measures were strin gent and negotiations between agi tators and storekeepers were frequent ly successful. The Filial Chinaman. ' Many examples of Chinese filial piety strike the occidental render as ridicu lous. There is the famous story of Lao Lnltsu, which Mr. R. F. Johnston repsats In his "Lion aud Dragon In Northern China." Lao's parents lived to such extreme old age that be was himself a toothless old man while they were both still alive. "Conceiv ing it his duty to divert their atten tion from their weight of years aud approaching end, he dressed himself up In the clothes of a child and played about In his parents' presence ' with the object of making them think they were still a young married couple con templating the innocent gambols of their Infant son." A similar case Is that of Wang P'ou, whose mother bad att unconquerable dread of thunder aud lightning. When she died she was buried in a mountain forest, and thereafter, when a violent thunderstorm occurred, Wang T'ou, heedless of the wind and rnln, would hurry to her grave and throw himself to his knees. "I am here to protect you, dear mother," he would say. "Do not be afraid." Making a Gunstock. A party of men were out hunting, and an old woodsman who was with them broke his gunstock In Home way or other. It wus Just about nightfall when the accident occurred, and inas much as be was very anxious to do some shooting early the next morning he decided to fix up his shooting iron. Fluding a walnut fence rnll, he set to work. His only tools wero nu ax and a big pocket knife. All night long he labored vigorously at his task, and by morning the gunstock was finished and back In place and worked like a thnrm. "How did you do It?" asked one of the number, greatly surprised. "Very easy," was this old hunter's reply. "No trouble at all. Just get a piece of wood about the size and kind that you want and then whittle away all that you want whittled away. When you have all tho wood cut off that you don't want yon have a gun stock." Kansas City Journal. The Msaiur. The ancient Judge sat before the scales of worth. "Bring forth the royal treasure!" he cried, aud the hurrying slaves poured luto tho huge pan sacks of golden metal, caskets of sparkling gems until it seemed us if all of the wealth of earth were there. Yet the balance never stirred. "Let the learning of the nges be add ed," came the order, and tons upon tons of the wisdom of sages, philoso phers, scientists and poets was heaped uihu the pile. And still the great arm of the scales remained high In air. "Add now the men of power and high position," snld tho Judge, "and the scale will fall." But all in vain. "But what Is on the other side that outweighs nil these?" asked one. "It Is character," said tho Judge. rortul. A Good Sleeper. Talleyrand used to tell an extraordi nary story of the lmpnsslveuess of Louis XVIII. When he was minister of foreign affairs a courier ruino to him one evening bearing unpleasant news, and ho therefore postponed tho communication of It to the king till next morning, wheu he explained that he was afraid the tidings might have disturbed his majesty's sleep. Tho king replied: "Nothing disturbs my sleep, as you may see from this In stance. The most dreadful blow of my life was my brother's death. Tho courier who brought this drendfid news arrived at 8 o'clock In the even ing. For many hours I was quite overcome, but nt midnight I went to bed n lid slept my usual eight hours." The story is told by tho iHichesso de Dlno, Talleyrand's niece, In her mem oirs. Sons of Butchers. Three of the stained glass windows In tho hall of tho Butcher Guild, Lon don, contain the portraits of Cardinal Wolsey, William Shakespeare nnd Daniel Defoe In recognition of their connection with tho meat trade. The cardinal was the son of a "re spectable" butcher nt Ipswich, in Suf folk, and "the Immortal bard" assisted while a youngster a butcher in his na tive town of Stratford-on-Avon. Defoe, nowadays known as the au thor of "llolilnson Crusoe," but In his day nn adventurer nnd secret agent of his government, was the son of u butcher In Fore street and n member of tho guild. National Provlsloner. Time, but No Money. Street Missionary My good friend, why Idle away tho precious hours In this fashion? Don't you know that time Is money? Loafer Don't you believe It, guv'nor. If that was so I should be a bloomln' mllllonhalr, I should. I've been doing time on and orf ever since I was a nipper. London Mall. The Mean Thing, "riijills Is the meanest kind of a gos sip." "What makes you think so?" "Because she never tells you apy thlng herself, but gets you to tell her all you know." A Poor Plan. The trouble with some men who reach thu top is that they ro light on over nnd down the other side. Chica go Record-Herald. A Parting Shot. Cabby (badly worsted In tho dispute) Well, I 'opes ns the ne.' four wheeler ye tikes, mum, will bo au 'curse! runtb. -