THE FOREST REPUBLICAN. RATES OF ADVERTISING) One Square, one inch, one weok...f 1 00 One Square, one inch, one month.. 8 00 One Square, one inch, 3 months...- 6 00 One Square, one inch, one year ..... 10 0 0 Two Squares, one year 15 00 Quarter Column, one year 80 00 Hal Column, one year. 50 00 One Column, one year 100 00 Legal advertisements ten cents per line each Insertion. We do fino Job Printing of every de scription at reasonable rates, but it's cash on delivery. PubliHhed every Wednesday by J. E. WENK. Offioe in Smearbaugh & Wenk Building, LM BTRKBT, TIONESTA, PA. Tern S 1.00 A Year, Hlrlotly la Mvuh. Entered m sooond-olass matter at the post-ofDce at Tlonesls. No subscription received for a shorter period than three months. Correspondence solicited, but no notloe will be taken of anonymous communica tions. Always give your name. Fore PUBL VOL. XLV. NO. 39. TIONESTA, PA., WEDNESDAY, NOVMEBEIl 20, 1912. $1.00 PER ANNUM. st .LE CAN. BOROUGH OFFICERS.. Burgess. J. O. Dunn. Justices of lite react 0. A. Randall, D. W. Clark. Gtnmcumen. J. W, Tiandors, J. T. Dale, O, B. Kohlnson. Win. Smesrbaugh, K. J. Hopkins, G. K. Wstson, A. It. Kelly. Constable li. L. Znver. Collector W. H. Hood. School Director W. G. Iuiel, J. K. Clark, 8. M. Henry, Q Jainiesou, D. 11. Blum. FOREST COUNTY OFFICERS. Member of Congress P. M.Hpeer. Member of .Senate J. 1C. P. Hall. Assembly W. J. Cmnpuell. President Judge V. 1). Hinckley. Associate Judges Harnuel Aul, Joseph M. Morgan. Prothonotary, Register t Recorder, te. -8. K. Maxwell. Sheriff Wm. H. Hood. Treasurer W. H. Brar.ee. Oommtssioners-W in. H. Harrison, J. C. Hoowden, H. H. MoClellan. District Attorney M. A. Carrlnger. Jury Oommissioners-r1 B. Eden, A. M. Moore. Coroner Dr. M. 0 Kerr. Countv Auditors George B. Warden, ,A. C. Gregg and 8. V. Hhields. County Surveyor Roy 8. Brsden. County Superintendent J. O. Carson. Itrsulur Terns f !r. Fourth Monday of February. Third Monday of May. Fourth Mondsy of September. Third Monday of November. Regular Meetings of County Commis sioners 1st and 3d Tuesdays of nwntu.. Chart o4 Hsbbath Mchsal. Presbyterian Sabbath School at 9:46 a. m.: M. E.8abbath School at 10:00 a. in. Preaching in M. E. Church every Sab bath evening by Rev. W. 8. Burton. Preaching in the F. M. ChurCh every Sabbath evening at the usual hour. Rev. O. A. Garrett, Pastor. , Preaublng in the Presbyterian church every Sabbmli at 11:00 a. in. and 7:30 p. in. Rev. H. A. Bailey, 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. . N EST A LO DG E, No. 89, 1. 0. 0. F. A Meets every Tuesday evening, in Odd Fellows' Hall, Partridge building. CAPT. GEORGE STOW POST, No. 274 O. A. R. Meets 1st Tuesday after noon of eaoh month at 3 o'clock. CAVT. GEORGE STOW CORPS, No. 137, W. R. C, meets first and third Wednesday evening of each month. : p TF. RITCHEY. ATTORN EY-AT-L AW, Tlonesta, Pa. MA. CARRINGER, Attorney and Counsellor-at-Law. Oinie over Forest County National Bank Building, TIONESTA, PA. CURTIS M. SHAWKEY, . ATTORN EY-AT- LAW, Warren, Pa. Practice in Forest Co. AO BROWN, ATTORN EY-AT-LAW. Olliceln Arner Building, Cor. Elm . and Bridge 8ts., Tlonesta, Pa. FRANK 8. HUNTER, D. D. 8 Rooms over Citizen's Nat. Rank. IIONESTA, PA. DR. F. J. BOVARD, ' Physician A Surgeon, TIONESTA, PA. Eyes Tented and Glasses Fitted. D R. J. B. BIGGINS. Physician and Surgeon, OIL CITY, PA. DR. M. W. EASTON, OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN, of Oil City, Pa., will visit Tionesta every WeduoHday. See him at the Central House. Selling bones and treatment of nervous aud chronic diseases a specialty. Greatest success in all kinds of cbroulo diseases. HOTEL WEAVER. J. B. PIERCE, 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. Tionseta, Pa. This is the mostcentrally located hotel in the place, 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 SHOEMAKER. 8bop over R. L. Haslet's grocery store on Elm street. Is prepared to do all Kinds of custom work from the finest to the coarsest and guarantees his work to give perfoct satisfaction. Prompt atten tion given to mending, and prices rea sonable. JAMES HASLET, GENERAL MERCHANT Furniture Dealer, AND UNDERTAKER. TIONESTA. PENN mum fr nn t rrh f V W- IV kVUIUIglls thai never fliVlrarino' ttritrht Umn fl.m from the beat Triole-Refinid 1 Peoniy Irani, Crude Oil Family Favorite Oil Your dealer gel, it In barrels direct from our refineries. FREE-320 pate book-ill bout oil. WAVERLY OIL WORKS CO. Pittsburgh, Pa. Guoliaes Labriuett CHICHESTER S PILLS W. I II K 111 A MON O llllAMI. A lniirirNt. Ask fnr ll.f IMOH.TFR ir vonr lHAMO.n lilt AM I'll l H.f r years known as Best, Safest, A Iwiys Keliil-le SOLD 6Y DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE J.mdu nl Ank your ItrucirUt ff X tilHit. tor's IHumnn J Ttrund l'llla In lit d ni .oltl mrtailitAV Ixiors, Kcalcl with Hlue Rilibuit. V TnLe no uthpp. ltur of vonr CULGARS FAIL TO PIERCE LINE Turks Fiiht Depsrately Save Constantinople to CITY IN GREAT EXCITEMENT Nailm Pasha Reports Enemy's Re pulse Cholera I Killing Thousands of Ottoman 312 Turk Blown Up. On the teeth of a we.it wlnd.comlna dowu the valleys from the Tchatladja furls la borne to the ear of those In the plaKiie stricken city of Constanti nople the sound of faraway ariiiiery lire. The housetops of the capital are black with people straining every ear to the far-olT booming. The city is tense with excitement. 'This dispatch from Nazlm Pasha, who Is commander at the front, was IsHiied: ' "The battle which begun with a Bul garian infantry attack continued until an hour past sunset. The enemy, who advanced particularly to the front ol our right and center, was repulsed hy out inrantry and artillery tire. Three Bulgarian batteries were destroyed." The sultan telegraphed hU con gratulations to Nazlm Pasha, who re plied Baying that bis majesty's mes sage was received with capers by the troops whose condition and morale are -excellent. The papers profess to have olflcinj Inlojmation that the Turks won a great victory. The left wing of tho Bulgarians Is said to have been de stroyed and the Bulgarian right wing is represented to be in a difficult posi tion. Eight thousand Bulgarians, the papers say, have been captnied. Sev eral guns and a quantity of munition;) were taken. The Turks are said to be marching toward Muradll. The Turkish fleet co operated with the land forces in re polling the enemy. The battleships, according to the current reports, fired on the Bulgarians from both the Black sea and the Sea of Marmora. Persons who have arrived in the capital report unexplained movements of the Turkish troops behind the Tchatladja lines. One person says that several thousand.! have been leaving the lines and several hundreds of others are moving toward Constanti nople. At a meeting of the ambassadors of the powers It was decided to land men from the warships to guard the ap proaches to the Pareila district and the embassies; The men later came ashore in full campaigning kit, bring ing a Maxim gun. The official explanation of the meas ure states that it is intended to check the nervousness caused by the firing. The German harbor defense ship Loreley, which ig stained here, is going to Haldar Pasha to guard the station on the Anatolian railroad. The villager:) from the naighL jrhoud of the firing line, flockius to the up;-or Bosphorui, are legion. They arc- n panic and numbers are begging li,r admission to the grounds of the am bassadors' summer residences at Therapia, Biyukdereand Yenikeui. The Spanl.h ambassador has opened his gardens at Diyukdere to them. Cholera Knocks Out Thousands. A dispatch from Constantinople says :hat Ali Riza Pasha is hopelessly ill of cholera at Hademketii. Thousands of sick persons and hundreds of dead bodies are lying on the platform of the station there. Nothing is being done, In fact, nothing can be done to fight the epidemic. The correspondent of the Lokal An telger say3 that among the Bulgarian people not only the failure to capture Adrianople but the quite unjustifiable postponement of a decision before Con jtantlnople have produced a feeling of depression. The correspondent says; "On my way here (Roumania) I was everywhere asked by anxious people what was the cause of the absence of further announcements of victories, The simple explanation Is that the Bulgarians sent their last mnn and their last rifle to the front. Tho mormons losses since the battle of Kirk-Kl'i.-aeh have made a deep Im pression upon the Bulgarian people. The wounded are not sufficiently cared Tor. "It Is strange thnt in spite of tha Bulgarian victories the feeling of dis like Bgalnst the officers' corps is arls Ins In the rank and file of King Ferdi nand's army as well as among' the people. "The relationship between tile Serv Im and the Bulgarian soldiers Is not larmonioux. T.e officers of both armies avoid one another. Consider ing the position of the war it would seem folly for the Turks to enter peace negotiations at this Juncture, for the le.t Bulgarian troops have been decimated." 312 Turks Blown Up. News was received in Athens of a terrible death dealing explosion of a powder magazine at Salonlca. Three hundred and twelve Turks were killed, some being blown to pieces. Four hun dred and thirty Turks were wounded. The Turk! h magazine was ne'ir the barracks where the Turkish prisoners of war were confined. The losse.t were among tho;.e prisoners. It Is stated that the explosion was an act of re venge perpt rated by the bands of the outlaws Sandansky and Mondjoff ah the result or the Turks killing many of their men. "Nell Rose" Girl, Future Po!l3 cf Mo House r. ,.v :. MISS ELEANOR WILSON. Miss Eleanor Wilson, daughter of the president-elect, has selected the of ficial color for the White House during the next administration. The color Is a blend of American beauty ard cerise and is named "Nell Rose" in honor of Miss Eleanor. CHANNEL CLEARED BY JULY Paanma Canal Likely to Be Finished Before 1915. Practical completion of the Panama canal by July 1, 19 W, Is assured, ac cording to the annual report of Colonel George W. Goetbals, chief engineer of the Panama canal. On that date, la opite of several slides in Culehra cut during the last year, the excavation in the cut will be completed and by Aug. 1, 1913, the spillway at datum dam will be fin ished. The report intimates that the open ing of the canal for business may be advanced from .Ian. 1, litis, which was the date predicted by Colonel Gocthals some time ago. Some time next summer or fall, no exact date being specified, water may be allowed to pass into the channel and a vessel will pass from the At lantic to the Pacific. The vessel will not be the Oregon nor any other famous ship, but will be one of the many small water craft in daily use by the canal builders and probably the only passengers will be Colonel George W. Gocthals and the staff of American engineers, 'who, for the past eight years, have been carry, ing on the greatest engineering work the world has ever seen. KILLS TWO AND SELF Pittsburg Man Shoots Former Wife and Present Mate. Torn between the love of two wo men, one of whom he had divorced, In sanely Jealous of his bride and dis couraged because his business career seemed doomed to failure. John Addi son Matthews, an Insurance solicitor, thirty-seven years old, shot and killed Mrs. Blanche Gilger, thirty-five years old, of Salem, Clarion county; his wife, Mrs. Pauline Metzler Matthews, thirty one, and then sent a bullet crashing through his own brain in his apart ments on the Northslde, Pittsburg. .Matthews and his wife died Instant ly, Mrs. Gilger dying shortly after her removal to the Allegheny General hos pital. .Matthews left two notes, one a note to his brother, George B. Matthews, of .MpKees Rocks, In which he donu plained of his luck, the other a will in which he made provision for his burial, In neither did he mention his Inten tion to add a double murder to his act of Belf-destructlon. WANTING BOYSLAYS GIRL Disappointed Parents Confess Crime and Are Held For Murder. Disappointed because their ten days' old baby was a boy when they wanted a girl, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kipp of Cin cinnati, each twenty-two years old, wrapped the child in a shawl and tossed him Into the Ohio river. They were arrested and the husband vonfessed, blaming his wife for want dig to dispose of the child. When ar raigned In court their cases were con tinued to Nov. 27. Tots Asphyxiated, Parents at Lecture. At Philadelphia two girls, Annie, aged four years, and Jennie, aged two, children of Mans and Marie Nil son, were found asphyxiated with gas. The children had bfea put to bed early while their parents went to a lecture and the eldest had evidently attempted to light the gas. Longworth Loses by 97 Votes. The olticial count of Hamilton coun ty shows that Congressman Longworth, son-in-law of Colonel Theodore Roose velt, was defeated tor congress In the First Ohio district by Stanley Bowdio, Democ rat, by ninety-seven votes. Taft Urges Six-Year Term. In a speech at New York President Taft paid an elonuf iit tribute to Wood row Wilson. He uwed a six-y ear term for the chief executive. K vKit: EXTRA SESSION MIDDLEJF APRIL President-elect Announces Plan For Tariff Revision SPENDS VACATION IN BERMUDA Wilson Says He Has Determined on Special Session That Business Inter ests May Know What to Expect. President-elect Wilson before sail ing on Saturday for a four weeka' vacation in Bermuda announced that he will call congress together in ex traordinary session not later than April 13 of next year to revise the tariff. In his statement he says that he has determined upon this course not only because he was elected on a platform which declared for an immediate downward revision of the tariff sched ules, but also because he feels it is due to the business interests of the country that they should be relieved of all uncertainty as to what the gen eral purpose of the incoming adminis tration Is. While the platform adopted at Balti more declared that the Democratic party believes that any other tariff than the one designed for revenue pur poses is unconstitutional cognizance was taken of the fact that a policy of protection has bo ingrained itself into the commercial interests of this coun try that it would be unwise to attempt anything more than a gradual elimina tion of the duties considered ob noxious. The demand that this gradu al reduction be instituted immediately was nevertheless unequivocal. Beyond his bald ptatenient that he will call an extraordinary session the president-elect has made no comment on the situation other than that so far as he was concerned the pledges of his, party and its platform would be car ried out. Governor Wilson sailed on the Bermudian mid wHl stay until Dec. 15. He will call upon the governor of Ber muda and request him that he be per mitted to spend his time there with out recognition of his official status either as governor of New Jersey or as president-elect of the United States. The governor was accompanied by Mrs. Wilson and their two younger daughters, the Misses Jessie and Eleanor Wilson. TAFT FIXES PANAMA RATES Tolls Will Be Ssme as Those in Force at Suez Canal. A proclamation by President Taft fixes the rates that foreign shipping of the world shall pay for passage through the Panama canal. The procla mation, made under authority of the canal act, passed by congress in August, establishes a merchant vessel rate of $1.20 per net ton of actual carrying capacity, with a reduction of 40 per cent on ships in ballast. The rates named In the proclamation are practically the same as those which will be in force at the Suez canal next year. American coastwise shipping was ex empted from toll payment by con gress. It was to this provision of the act that Great Britain diplomatically protesters, but no reference to the in cident was made in the president's proclamation. SAVED CY CHILD'S COUGH Father Awakened Just in Time to Es cape From Blazing House. The coughing of one of his children probably saved the lives of Finley Moore, his wife and live little ones when an attempt was made to burn the building at Zelienople, Pa. According to Mr. Moore he was awakened by hearing one of his chil dren coughing. Getting out of bed he went to the room occupied by his five children and found it filled with smoke. Mr. Moore says he carried his children from the room and gave the alarm. Firemen made the dis covery that the carpets In every room on the first floor had been saturated with oil. CIGARET FIEND ACQUITTED Judge Tells Jury Murder Was Due to Tobacco Habit. Judge Briimni at Pottsville, Pa., ;n charging tho Jury In the case In which Edward Radler was charged with tho murder of Charles Williams following S quarrel over a girl, instructed that the fact that Radler was a cigaret fiend must be taken into consideration. The Judge said the fact that he smoked a pound of tobneco each week In making cigarets was proor, in bis mind, that Radler's brain was aft'eeld and really caused the murder. The Jury returned a verdict of not guilty and requested the j'.Kl.'V' to make tho defendant swear never to smoke an other cigaret. Report on Nov. 25. The wage arbitration committee settling the dispute between eastern railroads and its engineers will make its report on N'av. 25. ' "Sicclng' Yuan on Russia. President Yuau Sli'l Kal of China is being urged by his countrymen to wage war against Russia. Martial Law Again, Martial law is again in effect In the Cabin creek (V. Va.) coal district. One Retires, Otiiei Succeeds as Pennsylvania Head S iMl'EL REA. JAMES M'CREA. At a meeting of the directors of the Pennsylvania Railroad company at Philadelphia President McCrea re signed to take effect Jan. 1. Vice President Samuel Rea was elected to succeed him. James McCrea was elected president of the railroad in January, 1907, following the death of President A. J. Cassatt. Friends of President McCrea say that his action was voluntary. POLICE REPORT CLUE T0MANIAC Believed Slaysr ot Utile Boys Will Bo Caught That the self-styled homicidal ma niac signing himself "Dennlsson" whose postcards and letters written to Chief of Police Gilson of Lackawanna, N. Y., and to George Josephs, father of one of his victims, whose decomposed body was found In a cesspool in Lack awanna, has more than a dozen mur ders to his credit in now an almost es tablished fact. He writes of having killed "twelve besides" the Josephs lad. The body of younsj Josephs was found in sixteen parts, the skull being the last portion recovered. The flesh had entirely disappeared from it. It does not appear that the body had been carved or chopped up, but that it had become dismembered in the twelve months it has lain in the slime after the murderer had first assaulted and then strangled the little lad on the night of Oct. 12, 1911, when the boy was last Been alive. That a clue of importance has been obtained which would lead to the ap prehension of the murderer of Josephs was not denied by Chief of Police Gilson. He said that an accurate de scription of the man suspected of mur dering the lad had been obtained. How accurate may be deduced from his statement that "If the brute does not commit suicide he can't get away." It Is believed the man is now in Buffalo. "TAR PARTY" VERDICT Jury Finds Welch Guilty on Charge of Painting Girl. Tho Jury In the case of Ernest Welch, charged with participation in tho tarring of Minnio La Valley at West Clarkxficld, O., Aug. 30, returned a verdict of guilty of assault and bat tery. Judge Garver In his charge said that If it was shown that more than two of the men at the tarring were masked a conviction for "riotous conspiracy" would be possible. Foosevelt Wins by 66. California complete gave Roosevelt a pin ra 1 i t v over Wilson of fiii, in con siderably more than r00,(llii) votes The- e figures were official from all "but three counties. PITTSBURG MARKETS. Butter Prints, :',:l.i?,; tubs, 34 fi :',:. Eggs Selected, I'.Sifi 40. Poultry Hens, alive, 13. Cattle -Choice, $!l.2.1ifi !).."0; prime, $S..".n9.10; good. S.40; tidy butchers, Jll.V.Vn 7.-"0; fair, $"..50Tj C.."0; common. $ l.ilOffi ." . r. 0 ; common to good fat bulls, li. . "id; common to go'id fat cows, $3 -ft 6.25; heifers, $4ft7.50; fresh cows and springers, $25'iG5. Sheep and Lambs Prime wethers, R25rf'4.35; pond mixed, $3.804.20; fair mixed, $:'..",.((:!. 75; culls and com mon. $2fi 2.5U; lambs, $4.5nf7.25; veal calves, $10f) Hi. 75; heavy and thin cahts, $i;.H.fi 7.50. I Ions Prime heavy, f 7..S-5ft 7.!)0 ; heavy mixed, J7.S9 ffi7.S5; mediums aud heavy Yorkers, 7.75r 7.80; light Yorkers, $7.40fr7.C5; pigs, i;Tt,7.25; roughs. $6.15S7; stas, ICC6.50. HALF AWAKE, SH00TSJ50THER Miss Myers Mistook Her Parent For a Burglar GIRL ON VERGE OF COLLAPSE Greensburg (Pa.) Girl and W. R. Cuth bert Released by Trenton (N. J.) Police Shooting on Sleeping Car. The Trenton (N. J.) police feel satis fied that the shooting of .Mrs. Rappe .Myers, wife of the proprietor of a Greensburg (Pa.) hotel, by her daugh ter, Gladys Elizabeth Myers, was an accident. The shooting occurred on a sleeping car of a Pennsylvania rail road train while the train was near Bristol, Pa., bound for New York. .Miss Myers and W. R. Cuthhert, sixty years old, of Lynchburg, Va., were detained . temporarily by the Trenton police and later released. It was thought at first that Cuth bert was concerned in some way with the shooting, as he was found with Miss Myer3 at the side of the wound ed woman a few seconds after the shot was fired. Later he explained that ho had been standing on the front plat form of the car next in the rear and had run in when he heard the shot. Miss Myers, who Is twenty years old, was on the way to New York to pur chase a trousseau for her coining wed ding to J. Ulair Dillard of Salem, Va., a druggist. She had a casket of Jewels which she was taking to New York to have repaired and matched, and when she heard her mother re-entering their sec tion, after Mrs. Myers had gone for a few minutes to the dressing room, she took her revolver from -under her pillow and fired, thinking a burglar was after the gems. She was half awake at the time. "Miss Myers told me she dreamed a burglar was pulling aside the curtain of her berth," said Cuthbert, "and that she reached under her pillow to get the revolver and shot her mother. It seems that Mrs. Myers was about to enter the berth at the moment her daughter dreamed she saw a burglar In the aisle. Miss Myers says she was startled aud fired before she was fully awake." Miss Myers Is on the verge of a nervous collapse as a result of her shocking experience. She constantly sobs for her mother and the most loving ministrations of her relatives fall to comfort her In her grief and solf-condemnatlon. Only twenty years old, and striking ly beautiful, the young girl has aged in appearance ten years within the past twenty-four hours. She Is on tho verge of collapse anil cries out con stantly in her remorse for having fired the shot that ended her mother's life. TRIPS ON SKULL AND BONES Remains of Girl Missing Over Two Years Found Under Leaves. "With the rinding of a skull and tho bones of a girl In underbrush near Punxsutawney, Pa., the mystery sur rounding the disappearance of Yemima Hill, thirteen years old, from her home in Rattle Hollow, June 25, 1910, has been partly "cleared. John Straltiss, passing through a clump of woods, stumbled on some thing buried beneath leaves. He un covered a huniau skull and bones of a human form. Coroner Sayers gives it as his opin ion that the little girl had been car ried to the spot where her skeleton was found and there attacked and killed, her assailant covering the body with leaves and brush. DUN'S REVIEW OF TRADE Business Continues Rapidly to Gain Despite Opposing Influences. Dun's Review of Trade says this week: "Uuslness continues to expand un checked by the trouble in tho llalkaus with Its grave European complications. and its remarkable development has furnished new proof that true national prosperity springs from the soil. The domestic ami foreign demand for iron and steel products Ls even larger th:in before with all previous records broken. "The railroads are making every ef fort to move promptly the tremendous tralllc of the country and at the same time are making due preparation for the requirements of the future. There re also signs of preparation for the opening of the Panama canal." WASH DAY PROVES DEADLY Steam From Boiling Clothes Over comes Woman and Kills Child. Joseph Sunseri, the fourteen iiionlh old child of .Mrs. Frauk Sunserl of Mouessen, Pa., Is dead ami the mot her is in a cmiiiiiose condition from carbonate oxide poisoning, duo to being suffocated by steam while boiling clothes. While nursing the child Mrs. Sun serl fell asleep and the steam from the wash boiler came through the open door, lilling the room. Woman Gets Long Ride on Bumpers. Mrs. George Hill was forced to travel fifteen miles standing on '.he bumpers of a freight car in a train which got In mot ion while she w;is climbing :er it a:- I! blo( ked a Wilkes-Hane (.rft.) Kt'ett. TABLES SHOWING RESULTS OF THEJLECTIONS Popular and Electoral Votes for President, the Governors Chosen and Their Pluralities, the Political Complexion ol the Next Senate and House. The tabulation ot the results of. the election has been made, and it is now possible to get a comprehensive idea of Just how the various States ballot ed. The accompanying tables Bhow the votes for Presidential electors in every State In the Union, giving the elec toral and popular votes for Wilson, Roosevelt and Taft, and the popular votes for Debs and Chafln. Also the make-up of the next Senate, and a re capitulation of the standing of the next House. One table shows the Govern ors elected and their pluralities. An impressive table shows the Presiden tial vote with the Solid South elimi nated. Valuable for comparative pur. poses are the two other tables. Popular Vote for President at Election of 1908. Taft. Urynn. Chnfln. Debs. StntP. Rep. Dt'in. i'ro. Bne. Alabama 25.&i5 7U74 1.347 Arkansas 67.7H1 K.M 1,151 6.7W) California 2U,3!l 1J7.4H2 11,770 a.fi.",9 Oolnrailo lL'3,7i 1XIM4 fi.5"9 7.974 Connecticut .. 112.SI6 (W.iVi 2,3M) 6,113 Peluwnre 2.1. o7 677 210 Florida W.ft-,4 31, H4 1.3M 8.747 Georgia 41.t;:2 Vl.XM 1.07.9 6M Idaho 5l'.i;"i7 aii.WS 8.IIH3 fi.40.1 Illinois K'J.'XH 4r.o,si0 2!.W4 34.711 Indiana ,'Us.M 3::L''1:J K1145 13.470 Iowa 275.210 200.771 9.SI17 K.2S7 Kansns I!i7,2l VM.l'ifl 6.IWI J2.420 Kentucky .... 235,711 214,fl!i2 6.SS7 4.OT.0 Louisiana S.fl.'.S tl3.5i;S J.6.1S Maine W.IM 37..403 1.4S7 1.7:'.S Maryland 11B.513 3.303 2,3il Massachusetts 205.WI'. l.w.MJ 4,374 1 0,779 Michigan 3:13.313 174.313 10.705 11.527 Minnesota .... 1!I5,S.15 lov.4ol 10,114 14.409 Mississippi ... 4..ia fio.S7lt 1.041 Missouri 340.1115 3-09 4.215 15.3'"1 Montana 32,3:a 2!,3-., 8J7 S.S55 Nebraska 120,!f.i7 131.099 5,179 3.524 Nevada 10.214 lo.ra 2.029 New llanip.... 53.144 33.0.",5 !)05 1,299 New York .... S7O.O70 (!i!7.4i;S 22.M7 SS.4BI New Jcrsov... 2iS.2!'S 12.522 4,930 10,249 North Carolina 114.S24 130.92H m 8:17 North Dak.... 57.741 32.935 1,15s 2,424 Ohio P72.312 5"2,721 11,402 33,795 Oklahoma .... 1I0.55S 122. 4i 21,779 Orcnon I'.2.5::0 3V.0I9 2.0SI 7.339 Pnnnsylvnnln.. 745.779 4ls.7v5 30.W4 33.913 Ithode Island. 43.942 24.700 1.01S 1,35 Bo. Carolina.. 3.903 fi2,2S 100 Ho. Dakota.... B7.4ia ' 40,2i!rt 4,039 2.R40 Tennessee .... 118,519 135.RI9 20S 1.SS1 Texas 5.0f2 210.737 t'tah 61.015 42.flol 4.S95 Vermont 39.5."2 lU'.ifi 799 Virelnla 52.573 S2.9H! 1.111 TVnshliiKton .. 100.002 fis.iiol 4.700 14.177 West Virginia. 137.W9 111.4H 5.139 3.079 Ci'lsronsln 247,717 100.1132 11,504 2S.104 Wyoming 2O.S40 11.91S 60 1,715 Total ...7.677.021 6.405.1S2 250.4SI 412.330 Convert Gives Up Burglar Tools. Converted by the Salvation army, a burglar stood before the congregation 0t the hall In Spokane, Wash.-, and drew forth two revolvers, an electric (lash, a Jimmy and other parts of a burglar'B out lit. He said that he had Intended to rob some stores, because he was hungry, until he heard their music. Wonderful Sarah Bernhardt. Sarah llernhardt often has said it Is her enthusiasm and continued interest in life mid work to which she ascribes her youthful appearance. Now she has a new enthusiasm the moving pictures. For years she refused to pose before the moving picture cam era. Then she gave her consent and acted "Camlllo'' before a long string of film recently In Paris. She could hardly restrain her eagerness to see the finished pictures, and when they were Bliown to her she insisted the whole play be repeated several times. Kdmond llostand nccompanled her to tho exhibition, nnd when she had de lightedly watched the films run off sev eral times she turned to him with all the enthusiasm of a chorus girl, say ing, "Now, what next Is there for me to do?" Lincoln's Superb Oratory. In an address by .Joseph II. Choate on the occasion of his eightieth birth day, Mr. Choate spoke thus of Mr. Lin coln's celebrated speech in Cooper Tnion, In lSCO: "With an awkward form and most ungainly address, ha Flood tliero with a lit 1 1 o trepidation, not very prepossessing; but when ha came to stienk It was as a flashlight. Not only his whole personality and his fr.cn lighted lip, but ho seemed to lighten up tin' audience, nnd for ono hour or an hour nnd a quarter he dis cussed tho great questions of the day nnd held the audience In tho hollow of his band " Even In Those Days. Tho children stood In awe before one of the museum mummies. At last the elder whispered to her father, "Why Is the old woman wrapped up in bandages? Did alio die of an ac cident?" ltefore he could reply the younger girl snld, "Oh, yes! She must have been run over by a motor cnr. There's the number 'li. O. 1-5 til.' " Professional. Bomb Throwers. Tho Chdiesr corps of trained bomb throwers reminds us that our own regiment of Grenadier guards takes Its name from tho grenades or small bombs which In early days they hurled at tho enemy in an assault. And this primitive duty is also com memorated lu a flaming grenade em broidered on wio collars of their tunics. London Chronicle.