THE FOREST REPUBLICAN. RATES OPADVERTISINCl Ons Square, one inch, one week... f 1 00 One Square, one Inch, one month." t 00 One Sqaare, one Inch, 8 month....' ' 00 One Square, one Inch, one year.. M 1040 Two Squares, on year IS 00 Quarter Column, one year SO 00 Half Column, one year 00 00 One Column, one year .......... 100 00 Legal advertisements ten cents oerlln Published every Wednesday by J. E. WENK. Offioe in Smearbaugh h Wenk Building, ' BLH ITBMT, TIOHBSTA, TA. Teraa, 11.00 A Vwr, Strictly U A4ti Entered a seoond-olass matter at the poet-offloe at Tlonesta. ' No subscription received for a shorter period than three month. Correspondence aollolted, bat no notlott will be taken of anonymoua eommunlosH lions. Alwaya give your name. , each Insertion. We do fine Job Printing of nan in VOL. XLIV. NO. 32. TIONESTA, PA., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1911. $1.00 PER ANNUM. scription at reasonable rates, but It' eaab on aeiivery. Republican. BOROUGH OFFICKRb.. BwratA.S. D. W. Reflk. Juetieet oflht Feoee-Q. A. Randall, D, W. fllark. CbttncMtnen. J.W, Lander, J. T. Dale, O. B. Robinson, Wd. Bmearbaugn, R. J. Hopkins, W. 0. Calhoun, A. 11 Kelly. ObntableChhTm Clark. Collector W. H. Hood. School Director J. 0. Boowden, R. M Herman, Q. Jatnieson, J, J. Landers, C. Oelit, Joseph Clark. FOREST COUNTY OFFICERS. Member of OongruiY. M. Speer. Member of denote J. K. P. Hall. Aisembly W. J. Campbell. PruritUnt Jv.daeW. D. Ulncklev. Aetoente Judget-Y. C. Hill, Hamnel Aul. Prolkonotary,Regiterdt Recorder, de, J. U. ueist. tiherir8. R. Maxwell. 7Yuurr Oho. W. Holeman. Ctmmmtonori-Wra. H. Harrison, J, M. Zuendel, U. U. MoClellan. nintrwt Aftonuv-M. A. Carrlneer. Jury Oommisiionere Ernest Kibble, Lewis Wagner. flnmrjrr Dr. H. O Kerr. CtwiV Auditors George H. Warden, A. C. Gregg a'jd J. P. Kelly. Clnuntu ';.i-vevor D. W. Clark. County Superintendent-D. W. Morrl on. Kaanlur Ttm f Crt. Fourth Monday of February. Third Monday of May. Fourth Monday of September. Third Monday of November. Regular Meeting of County- Com mis stoners 1st ana ttu xooeusys oi monin Ckarch mui 8bkBlh HckMl. Presbyterian Sabbath School at 9:45 a. m. t M. E. Sabbath School at 10:00 a. m Preaqhlng In M. E. Church every Sab bath evening by Rev. W. O. Calhoun. Preaohlng In the F. M. Church every Babbatn evening at me usual nour. iter, U. A. Garrett. Pastor. Preaching in the Presbyterian ohurob every Babbatn at u:w a. m. an i;w p m. Rev. H. A. Hal ev. Factor. The regular meetings of the W. C. T, U. are held at the headquarter on the second and rourtn Tuesdays oi eacn month. BUSINESS DIRECTORY. rpj.NESTA LODGE. No. 869. 1. 0. 0. F, 1 M eels everyTuesday evening, In Odd Fellows' Halt, cartridge Dunuiug. O APT. GEORGE STQ POST, No. 274 J G. A. R. Meets lsrhwday after noon of each month at so clock. APT. GEORGE STOW C0RP8. No, W 137, W. R. C, meets first and third Wedueaday evening or eacn montn. TF. RITCHEY, . ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Tlonesta, Pa. MA. CARRINGER, Attorney and Counsellor-at-Law. Olllce over Forest County National Bank Uulldiug, TIONESTA, PA. CURTIS M. SHAWKEY, ATTORN E Y-AT-LA W. Warren, Pa. Praotiee in Forest Co. AO BROWN, ATTORN EY-AT -LAW. Offloeln Arner Building, Cor. Elm and Bridge Uta., Tlonesta, ra. 'RANK 8. HUNTER, D. D. 8. Rooms over CltlZWis Nat. Dank, TI0NE8TA, PA. DR. F. J. BOVARD, Phvalolan A Surgeon. TIONESTA, PA. Eyes Tested and Glasses Fitted. - D R. J. B. BIGGINS, Phvalolan and Surgeon, OIL CITY, PA. HOTEL WEAVER, O. F. WEAVER, Proprietor, Modern and up-to-date in all Its ap pointments. Every convenience and comfort provided for the traveling public OENTRAL HOUSE. R. A. FU LTON. Proprietor. Tlonseta, 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 pleasant stopping place for tne traveling public pHIL. EMERT FANCY BOOT A SHOEMAKER. Shop over R. L. Haslet's grocery store on Elm Btreet. Is prepared to do all cinds of custom work from the finest to the coarsest and guarantees his work to ?;1 ve perfect satisfaction. Proin pt atten Ion given to mending, and price rea sonable. - Fred. Grottonborger " v GENERAL BLACKSMITH & MACHINIST. All work pertaining to Machinery, En gines, Oil Well'ToolH, Gas or Water Fit- tings and General Blacksmithing prompt ly done at Low Rates. Repairing Mill Machinery given special attention, and satisfaction guaranteed. Shop in rear of and Just west of the Shaw House, Tidloute, Pa, Your patronage solicited. . FRED. GRETTENBERGER WaJl Paper I have just received Two Thousand Holla of 1Q1 1 WALL PAPEB 'No ia the time to get your paper ing done before the spring rush. Then it will be almost impossible to get Eaperbanger and that will delay your ousecleaning. Wall Taper, Window Shades, Oil Cloth, Paints, Oil, Varnish, Sewing Machine Supplies and Notions. G. F. RODDA, Next Door to the Fruit Store, Elm Street, Tlonesta, fa. 1 FLOHCIIMS Hundreds of Men Search Ruins In Austin For the Dead. Many Pathetic Incidents and Acta of Heroism Are Recorded In This Ter, rible blsaster That Wiped Out So Many Lives In the Little Pennsyl vanla Village 8urvlvori Delving Into the Dsbrls, Looking For Bodies of Relative and Friend. The town of Austin, Pa., today la practically a desert. Two mini nture streams of water trickle through the mnln streets and are mute testimonials of the solid wall of lllllong of gallons of water that swept away Austin Saturday. The state constabulary arrived here and they are patrolling the town and sur rounding country. Fifty men have been sworn In as deputy police and are aiding In the search for bodies. Over a hundred bodies have been recovered and there Is a great need of coffins. The school house on tho hill has been converted Into a morguo and U Is crammed with bodies. Bodlos nro raid to have been seen as far as 10 miles south of Austin and a great many of them will never be recovered as they will be swept down In the mountain creeks to the Susquehanna river. The flood has covered up every thing with wreckage end not iven a foundation or cellar remains. Kx cent for the bank building the site of Austin Is a leveled mnsa of buildings and bits of wreckage. ' Fires burned among piles rf driftwood and many bodies were burnod. At the Duflulo & Susquehanna car shops a great pile of bodies Is be lieved to have been caught beneath tho wreckage. Relief trains have been sent from VIlllamRKrt. Port Allegheny, St Mary's, Olean, Corning. Carloton and Condersiwrt. Three carloads of provisions and clothing were sent from Wllllamsport and the citizens have raised over thousand dollars aj a relief fund. All the cities In the state are banding In contributions to Austin. The tents sent by the state depart. merit proved a godsend. It rained a'l Sunday and the Injured women and children were sheltered by the tents, The state department also sent a re lief train with 15 physicians and 20 nurses. Dr. Sykes Is In charge. Dr. Trainer of Wllllamsport is the head of another relief corps of doctors and nurses. Many of those who escaped from the wall of witer and the fires are ly ing at the point of death from the ter rible Injuries they have received. A number of amputations of legs and arms have already been made. Dr. Matsuay lost his entire family in the flood. He Is on the ground now, one of the bravest of the remaining citi zens of Austin. Word received here from Costello, a small village ten miles south of Austin, states that ten of Its residents lost their lives In tho flood which de scended from Austin on them. Fifty buildings were WHshed away. STEAM DERRICK AT WORK Clearing Wreckage Around Goodyear Pond, Where Many Dead Are Thought to Be Buried. ' A big ateara derrick was put to work on the broken end) of the Buf falo & Susquehanna railroad and the work of clearing the wreckage around the Goodyear pond, where many per sona are supposed to be burled, ia progressing rapidly. With the arrival at Austin of a car load of coffins the grimness of the tragedy which has practically ' oblit erated that town was Impressed upon the survivors Mid a considerable num ber of workers began anew their ef forts to mine deeply Into the hard hills of debris. Many evidences of the tremendous power of the lood were seen by the workers In. the town. Engines weigh ing 25 tons were rolled along the ground, an immense steel hopper waa carried a half mile and thrown through tho side of a house and steel freight cars were bent double. The greatest damage was done by the piles of cut lumber swept before the flood. ,The acted as a great bat tering ram which swept buildings rom their foundations and' unques tionably caused the deaths of scores who otherwise might havo escaped fter' surviving tho first rush of the water. Investigation into the cause of the breaking of the dam will be started once, according to ' officials In charge of the work of rescue. That hore had been constant danger of the catastrophe of Saturday, due to the Instability of the structure and of the great water pressuro, was known to many residents of the towns and thorough Investigation la demanded v many of the survivors. One of the mcst pathetic In the long list of tragedies Is the case of Joseph -eeman. a night worker, who was sleep at his home and did not hear the alarm. When the rush of water wallowed up hli little home, he was tossed out upon- a pile of Heating de- rls and eventually floated to a land ing, a mile and a half below the vll- ige. Wounded and bruised, he made hia ay back, only to find that his wifo and four children had perished in the water. Leen.an went violently In- eane. His mvlnga were pitiful. Sev eral Tnen were required to hold him. TRIED TO SAVE PARENTS Daughter Was Guiding Old Couple to Place of Safety When Church Fell Upon Them. The manner In which the people of Austin lost their Uvea la typified In the case of the family of State Sen ator Frank K. Baldwin. His slater, Mrs. M. C. Collins, had a few seconds' more warning than many. Her father end mother, Mr. and Mrs. John Bald win, were In their home In Turner street, which' lay between the dam and the chief thoroughfare Mrs. Collins thought Immediately that her father was crippled and that her mother was 'very Infirm and al most blind. She ran to their house, roused them and started along the sidewalk that led to one of the cross ftreets to til? hills. Their way waa past the Presbyterian church and as they passed this building the ap proaching column reached them. A man who rtood upon one of the Ufe hillsides saw the church topple and fall upon the three as the daugh ter urged her parents along the street There is not the slightest doubt but what Mrs. Collins could have saved herself. But she died with her father and mother. ' As the quiet men and women tramp cnelr the flat plain where the water rushed 30 feet deep Saturday afternoon tho question that came to many minds was, "Where are the children?" Here and there was a boy who scrambled over the wreckage or a girl who stood silently looking on, but there was nothing like the curi ous lot of youngsters that the author ities expect at the place of a disaster. All these milling towns of this state are plentifully supplied with children. The only anwer seemed to be that when those heaps are cleared away great number of small bodies will be brought out. Saturday, of course, school was not In session and tho children were scattered ovejt the town. CITIZENS WERE WORRIED Always Afraid That Some Day the Dam Would Give Way. The dam that split Into eight pieces was not an old structure. It was placed below an antljue wooden crib, a trifle over two years ngo. But there have been murmurings against the heavy bulk of water that it restrained even In spite of Its newness. The women of the town especially have worried about the diy when It might break. The men were disposed to laugh at these fears. Last spring there was an alarm, when It was thought that the brink was ready to give way. The water poured over it ao freely and with such violence that a man on horse back galloped down the valley, cry Ing the warning that another rider once gave in a flood In this Etate. At that time the people ran to the over hanging hills, but there wis ho need for their fears. The flood did not come.- But when the alarm was over and the townspeople went out to V-ok nt the barrier it was found that the concrete had slipped down something like IS inches. After that the notches were cut In the upper sur face to lessen the pressure by per. mittlng a large volume of water to trickle over the edge. But when the state officials came to examine the broken fragments It was found that one of those notches had been filled up completely with coa crete and that work was In progress on the other. Five feet of new con crete was found In this gap and the forms were up for more. Work had been done upon It on Saturday. The examination of Farley Gannett, engineer for the state water supply commission, shewed that one chunk of concrete, weighing perhaps a ton and a half had been projected down. (stream for 100 feet. Another much longer section lay 60 feet out of the plumb line of the dam. Mr. Oannett found a man, who, from the hillside, saw that burst of the wall. SAW THE DAM BREAK Coudertport Man Was on Near Hill side When Water Burst Out. John Newman, a politician of Coudersport," said the state engineer, told me he was driving along the hill side away fr.om the dam. His com panion turned back to look at the flood of water. It seems to me that there's one awful lot of water coming over to day," said Newman. "That's right," agreed his driver, and then as they looked, Newman shouted: "By God! there It goes!" The big lump popped out of place and catapulted down the stream. Then like the cracking of a whip the other snapped out. In another sec ond the great mass of wood pulp was being flicked into the air like matches. It went up like a cloud. The smoke stacks of the Bayless Paper company were hidden behind the spray and cracking logs." The chunk that popped so far down was the first to give way. It was tho top half of a section ripped off as cleanly as If it had been sawed. The exposed surface and base that remain ed in place showed today that It had not been roughened. It apparently marked the end of a day's work in the construction and the only way In hich the next day's section had been welded to it was by four twisted iron bars, which were pressed downward today. Mr. Gannett was not willing' to say what he thought nod - caused the break. ' He will 'make a close Inspec tion of the designs before he makes his report to the water supply com mission. The dam was owned by the Bay- ,e8 Puln PaPr company, which has Its headquarters In Binghamtort, N. Y. The vast amount of water confined above the dam was used In the pro cesses of washing pulp after Its chem- leal treatments before It la turned In to paper. DAVIS GAVE ALARM Saved Many Live by Telephoning to Town Before Water Arrived. After the false alarm of last sprli.g the Inhabitants of Austin decided that In the event of another flood they must place no reliance upon the speed of a horse's hoofs and the strength of a man's voice to warn them. It waa agreed that one long blaet from the whistle of the Standard Wood company, which had its kindling yards' perhaps an eighth of a mile below Main street, should be the sig nal for the people to spread out of the valley and to climb the hills. They went further and asked Harry Davis, the general factotum around Cora Brooks' road house, which is the near est building to the dam except the pulp mills, to keep an eye out for danger sign; In his leisure moments. Saturday morning Davis went up to (Hke a look at the dam with Fred An derson, superintendent of the mills The handy man around the road house did not like the looks of it, he said, and he went to his Job a little bit worried. He went to the win dow more frequently In the lull In bust- ness around tho noon hour. It was a few mlnutos after 2 p. m. that he heard the sound of which the town had been in dreed. One look was enough to show him that the break had happened. ' He ran to the telephone as he had agreed to do and got the telephone central, where a young woman named Lena Blnkey had the receiver across her hair. He gave the traditional warning just as everyone else wno had the chance gave it. They had been thinking a lot about the Johnstown disaster, had these Austin people and in ever case iney appear to nave ioi- lowed the action of history. 'PHONE GIRLS GOT BUSY Spread the Alarm Over Wire and Then Rushed to Safety, 'The dam has burst," yelled Har- ry Into the telephone. "Quit yer kid ding," said Mifs Blnkey. "He says the dam has burst," she repeated to her co-worker, Katherine Lyons, at the next desk. "I tell you it has," shouted Davis, Something in the way he said It made Lena believe It this time and sho and Miss Lyons lost no time In spreading the alarm. Thev called tin the Stand ard Wood company, told the man who answered to send out his warning and then began calling everyone they could reach. Miss Blnkey waited till she saw the wall of water coming and then she ran Into the streets. Miss Lyons stuck to her switchboard until sho saw the steeple of tho Presbyterian church drop. Then she clattered down the stairs. She stayed so long that she forgot her pocketbook. But I it was Just a step to the higher ground for the bank building wns the last one at the western end or Main street and she came out all right, as did Miss Blnkey. Somehow the men . at the kindling yards did not sound the flood signal. Instead of one long blast there came eight short toots and then a sus tained whistle. ' That was the town fire signal. ' Tho immediate result was that the inhabitants leisurely laid down their tasks and rtrolled out to see where the blaze was. From the flat valley they looked up Into the sky to see where the sparks were flying. Only one group was active. That waa the volunteer fire department. They yanked the single hose cart of the town into Main street, trotted on witn it ana wniried around the cor- ner into Kauioad avenue, the chief thoroughfare, that cut off at right an- gles along the banks of Freeman Run, the creek that went over the dum ana men rippiea tnrougn the town vim a wimn oi not more tnan a lozen feet.- The firemen turned up the valley and raced right at the wave that was spreading towards them. WARNED FIREMENOF DANGER Fire Fighters Escaped to Safety, but Four School Girls Were Swept . to Death. John Dezlel, a Carpenter and mov ing picture man, was standing upon the high ground nt the west, on Good year's hill. He saw that the men below could not see md he shouted with all his might' You can see how close this hill is to the valley when you know they heard him. dropped their ropes and ran to his place of safety. The hose cart was scooped up a minute later. Dezlel's sister was be side lilm. She screamed and pointed down to Main street, where four bchool girls were walking along arm in arm, looking into the sky for sparks. As they watched these four were caught In the force of the wood and water and hurled against the brick bulldliiKS. Their bodies have not been recovered. Just before this Tarn Lawler, who kept bar at the Commercial House, came to tho door to see where the fire was. He gathered an Idea of the real disaster from the noise that came from above. Lawler's house was only a few doors away and he. threw off hi apron and made for It. He grab bed up his eleven months old baby, called to his wife and she ran out' with another child, three years old. They were caught just where the current swerved from the course of Freeman Run and borne to the op- poslte hlllfide. Lawler held hla baby very close and linked one arm through hla wife's. She held the other child hand. ' The four were found 2.P00 yard down the valley, lying Just out of reach of the water. The wife was dead and ao was the little girl, but Lawler had kept hold of tho baby, The tiny little peraon was still breathing when the rescuers came, The father's Injuries were the most revere of any of tho3e who are no in the Northern Pennsylvania hos pital. Joe McKinney's three-year-old boy was carrleu out of the house by his mother and they were caught up to-. gether. The mother hell her boy above the water and che waa dead when they found her. But the young Bter looked up at the man who grasp ed Ms arm and said: "Is that thing coming again. My mamma could not hold me any longer. She could not na"L ,uruw- POLICE ARREST VANDALS Eight Have Been Caught and Strict Guard I Maintained Around Wreckage. For the flr3t time the constabulary found that it had to deal with vandals who poked among the ruins Where a strict guard was .not in force. Eight arrests were made and the prisoners wpp arraigned before Justice John, son." They had to be locked up In the school house for the Jail waa swept away. As a result of these cases of larceny, the cavalry police have mounted their ponies and have es t&bllshed patrol routes over the wholo area where the wreckage lies. No one is being allowed to cross over the valley without an escort and the orders are to drive any one out; even the men and women who had houses in the desolated tract and to ride after and capture anyone who does not take advantage of the first warning Frank and George Bayless, the heads of the concern, have, been ex. pected in town, but word came that they were conllned to their beds in Binghamton, N. Y., where the com pany has Its chief ofl'.ces. as a result of the shock of the disaster, The office of the milla here was tossed downstream In the impact of the pulp wood that headed the wave. The company's safe which was rolled over In the sweep of the waters has not been Injured. It will be opened today and It la believed a consider able sum of money will be found In side. The end of the month was to have been and 'he 400 employes woul1 have drawn their money late Saturday afternoon. George Bayless sent wrd to V. N. Hamlin, the mill superintendent, to gather all the hands and to pay them today. Extra money has been sent to meet the emergency. Hamlin himself did nt suffer a great deal f'-om the flood. HU house was In what Is known Is known as Bayless flow, a short dls' tance below the mill and It was close egaliu-t the fringe of the valloy, In comparative safety. Hamlin was bruised In the flood, but nls Injuries were not serious enough to keep him in the hospital after to- day. His instructions from President Bayless are to clear enough of the pulp wood away to keep the mill busv. Most of the plant itself was not damaged badly enough to hold up work. ADOPTS SHOT GUN POLICY Allen Warns Thieves In Advertise ment and Guards His Pittsfield Farm Day and Night Pittsfield. Oct. 3. William Russell Allen of Pittsfield and St. Louis, arm- ed with a gun, Is guarding thr? vegeta- ble garden nnd potato field at his stock farm near here day and nieht. Several nights ago thieves visited Mr. Allen's gardens and carried away Meveral waeon loads of veretnhls. H has oflered a reward of 50 for the arrest of the thieves. In his advertisement Mr. Allen tays: "As many of our new citizens and some of the older ones fear not the puny majesty of the law, the shot gun policy of self-defense will be adopted and trespassers, thieves and vandals are warned." Wheat That Grow Like Corn. A. E. Cushman of Baicom, N. Y has a large quantity of Egyptian wheat which he raised on his farm this year. The stalks and leaves closely resemble common corn. Tho stalks and an dnnadnanadnnathethe stalks grow aobut four feet high, and l''e wheat Is of a superior quality, Mr. Cushman plans to raise a large crop next year. Its Degree. Mrs. Blowlt Are you planning on expensive gown? Mrs. Knowlt Well, It will take nt least five courses nnd his favorite dishes to get It. Harper's Bazar. Too Unoartain. Salvation Lassie (whose laddie Is on top of the bus) You'll get my fare ttbove. Conductor Sorry, miss, but I mu't wait till I gut therel-Everybody's Weekly. Believe In tho better side of men. It Is optimism that really saves people. llacluren. THE NEWSSUMMARY Short Items From Various Parts of the World. Record of Many Happening Condensed and Put In Small Space and Ar ranged With 8peclal Regard For the Convenience of the Reader Who Ha Little Time to Spare. Wednesday. Dlmitry Bogroff, tho Premier Stolypln, was Kiev. assassin of hanged at Several hundred additional changes hi the New York charter bill were Introduced at Albany by Assembly man Foley. Dr. Jamce A. Pettlt, a prominent physician in Virginia, waj killed ay Benjamin Hubbard because of an old grudge. It was annenced that the navy de partment win give the two new dreadnoughts opportunity to engage in battle practice at an early day. W. A. Post, head of the Newport News Shipbuilding company, said his firm would not bid on the new bat tleshlps because of the new 8-hour law. Thursday. The Bank of Egypt failed In I.on don; its assets wer esaid to be worth $10,000,000. Its liabilities being stat ed at $7,500,000. A battle between Chinese troops and rebels occurred' on Sunday ten miles south of Chengtu; the insur gents suffered the greater loss. Senora Julia M. Creel, sister-in-law of the Mexican statesman and one of the richest women In that coun try, died In her California home. Governor Dix removed Lawrence Greaser, president of tho borough o' Queens, New York city, for neglect of duty. Incompetence and Inefficiency. A cable dispatch from Madrid, Spain, savs that Don Jaime, second son of King Alfonso, has recovered his hearing. Friday. Atwood and Ely, aviators, were In an aerial collision at the Canton, O., meet and both were injured. Several deaths were reported among the men Injured by the explosion on board the Libcrte on Monday at Tou lon. At least ten persons wore drowned when an auto bus broke through a parapet on a Paris bridge and fell In to the Seine. Four persons were killed and1 13 injured by an explosion of rockets andi bombs In a church nt Guadalajara. Mex.. while festivities attending "the arrival of Madero were In progress. The department of justice filed suit in the federal court at Denver against the so-called lumber trust, alleging conspiracy to restrain trada In at least 20 states. Saturday. A dispatch from China announced that foreigners would be permitted to leave Chengtu within a few days. The assembly at Albany passed the New York city charter bill after four hours of debate, by a vote of 76 to 57. It M-as predicted that the coming general ejection In Mexico would be accomplished without serious disorder In any part of the republic. The Builders" association declared strike werepn fliei verge of settlement nearly every large building in New York city and may throw 50,000 men out of work. Matters In the Irish rallwaymen's strike were on the verge of settlement when the roads refused to reinstate the strikers In their old places, and then a deadlock was created. Monday. The brother of the deposed shah lost 200 men killed and wounded in battle in Persia. M. Billdavsky, a Russian astron omer, discovered a new comet In the constellation of Leo. Italian warships began a bombard ment of Tripoli aiid troops were land ed on Turkish roll at Prevsa. Governor ix at Albany signed a pardon for Captain Peter C. Halns, Jr., who killed William E. Annls in 1908. Thousands of shopmen on the Har- an lines dropped their tools and quit ork quietly at the hour ordered by their union. Tho trial of Miss Annie Crawford, held in New Orleans, will not begin for at least two weeks, the district attorney annouhced. Tuesday. The Ferris direct nomination bill passed the assembly. Tho German steamship, tha Koenlg Frlcderlch August, Is ashore off the coast of France, near Boulogne. Ofllclals of the Illinois Central rail road say that many of th- striking tnop men aro ready to return to work. Jack Johnson, in an interview ca bled from Paris, reiterated his deter mination to retlro permanently from the prize ring. City chemist at New Orleans finds twice as much poison In the body of Elsie Crawford ns her accused sister admitted giving her. Three Turkish worships were sunk at tho mouth of the Dardanelles, ac cording to a report received at the Italian ministry of marine . ADMIRAL SCHLEY Famous 8a.'lor Suddenly Expire In New York City. r REPORTED BATTLES FALSE No Naval Engagements Have Oc eurred Between Italian and Turk. Constantinople, Oct. 3. All com. munication with Tripoli has ceased and the town is believed to have been captured. It was announced here that all re ports of bombardments of Turkish ports by Italian fleets and of naval engagements between the warships of Turkey and Italy are unfounded. A Turkish sailing ship has been stopped in the Gulf of Salerno and tnwed into the port of Salerno, where the crew Is detained. The promise made by Emperor Will iam of Germany to renew his efforts In the direction of intervention be tween Turkey and Italy was qualified by the condition "If clrcumstancos permit of such Intervention." The people and the newspapers hero are very much pleased and en couraged at the sympathetic attitude of the foreign pros towards Turkey and the almost universal condemna tion of the Italian aggression. It I hoped here that this universal out burst of feeling will turn to Turkey' advantage and lead to Intervention. Meanwhile there Is no slackening of enthusiasm among the people In the resolution to defenl Turkey' honor. Interests and Integrity to tho government has decided on an ex- bitter end. It is belLeved that the tensive mobilization of troops in or der to be prepared for eventualities. RODGERS HELD UP AGAIN Machine Was Damaged and Aviator Slightly Hurt In Fall to Earth. Huntington. Ind., Oct. 3. C. P. nodgers, the coast-to-coast aviator. Is tied up here with a broken machine and with slight Injuries which he re ceived In a fall. After a night of much needed rest. Rodgers resumed his flight from a field half a mile south of here and had Just Rot Into the air when tho wind whipped his machine anl he lort control and It dived to the ground In a nearby wheat field. Both planes were badly damaged1, Its carrying wheels were twisted and broken and Rodgers himself was Rightly Injured. He may be delayed a considerable period. Rodgers hud flown about half a mile and was near the water works tower when tho treacherous winds at- tanked his machine. He was flylne about r0 feet high when the aeroplane darted to the earth. Ihe aviator's In Juries are not. serious. MARKET REPORT New York Provlilon Marktt New York, Oct. i. WHEAT No. 2, f. o. b., i'Vc. CORN No. 2, f. o. b., 52 'ic. OATS Standard, 62c. ': PORK Mess., $17.00017.50. BUTTER Creamery tpeolalf. ?ic; extras. 23c. EGGS Freshly gathered, extras. 2"(?T2Sc. Buffalo Provision Market Buffalo, Oct. 2. WHEAT No. 2 white, 9Sc; No. 3 red. $1.00. CORN No. 2 yellow, 75V4c; No. 3 yellow, 75c. OATS No. 2 whlt 62c; No. 8 white, Slc. Fl.OPR 'ancy blended patent, per Dm., TB.'i'i'tf h.i .; winter ramiiy, patent, S.i.OOjf 3.i5. BUTTER Creamery, western tubs, extra, ZS'.ic; creamery, state, fair to good, 24(?T2iic. EGGS State hennery, mixed, 29c. CHEESE Good to choice, ne, Miff 14 Vic. POTATOES Home grown, fanoy, per bu., "((&' 7"-c. East Buffalo Livestock Market. CATTLE Prime steers, $7,600 7.7."; 1,200 to 1,400 lb. steers, $,.75(i? C.tiii; choice fat cows, fl.75iff5.00; choice heifers, $.1.50 5.7d; export bulls, $4.SO(ff5.00: choice veals. $.i5 if 10.00; fair to good, $9.00(fT9.5O. HOGS Light Workers, $B.iH(n.uu; heavy hogs, Jii.SlOffi 7.00; pigs, $6.25 6.40. SHEEP AND LAMBS Choice spring lamlis. J(i.t)0j b.io; mixed sheep, $3.50(1.15. Buffalo Hay Market Timothy, No. 1, on track, $21.00 22.00; No. 2 timothy,' do., $19.00fi 20.00; straw, wheat and oat, $7,000 :.50.