... f y" rv. Cue 8juare, oue Inch, oue mouth-. 8 00 One Square, one inch, 3 months.... 6 00 One Square, one inch, one year 10 1 0 Two Squares, one year IS 00 Quarter Column, one year 80 00 Half Column, one year 60 00 One Column, one year 100 00 Legal advertisements ten eenta per Hue each insertion. We do line Job Printing of very de scription at reasonable rates, but it's cash on delivery. QUEST LEPU XLV. NO. -46. TIONESTA, PA., WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 8, 1913. $1.00 PER ANNUM. E BLICAN. IPs mm i iff ikW 111 U 1.1 1 1. sler General Inaugurated ;slem New Years Day HE FIRST PACKAGE flphia John Wanamaker, Postmaster. General, Urges al Telegraph Be Next Step. ight ou New Years eve General hrank II. Hitch- ashlngton mailed the first uder the provisions of the la post system, thuB Ipan e new Bervlce. kes of the last hour of 19K f away when the postmaster epped up to the window newly painted inscription 'ost Packages" and handed cial "first package." At th lent the parcels post serv wned for business in every In the United States open ir. er General Hitchcock' Stained a silver loving cup stout box. The package I to E. M. Morgan, post f city of New York, and ide its Journey to New sent back to Washing tved and preserved inf seum to commemorate of the parcels post Philadelphia, es incident to, flie f the parcelspost delphla poslofflee rnier postmaster mry, 1 86ff. In the ngton AJraham the United claifiation of 5 freedom to 191.1. under rock's proc Ions of the are email f the ex- fidelity pie are rt some V never lward. long ?s of ns els ed )'o This Year's President ot the Swiss Republic V V EDOUARD Ml'LLEH. BAILEY'S LAST EFFORT In Farewell . Speech Texan Roasts Hearst and I. and R. Senator Bailey of Texas iu his fare well speech In the senate referred to W. R. Hearst as a "moral pervert, a pplitlcal degenerate ami a political coward." When Senator Ashurst, a Democrat, Jumped to his feet to protest against this attack upon a friend of his Mr. Bailey waved him aside with the declaration that he would not tolerate any interruption in the defense of "that miserable dog." Altogether Senator Bailey's attack on Hearst was the most bitter that has been heard on any man In the senate in a long time. It was only one of many spectacular features of the Texas senator's swan song. The speech itself, which lasted for almost four hours, was a final attack by Senator Bailey upon the initiative and referen dum. SULZER THE GOVERNOR Murphy Has No Influence Over New York Executive. Governor Sulzer of New York hasi declared his freedom from the in flucnce of Charles V. Murphy. "I am the Democratic leader of this state," said Governor Sulzer. "The people ordered this at the polls and I stand on the verdict. I cannot succeed in doing what I want as governor un less I am the Democratic leader. If any Democrat challenges this leader ship let him come out in the open. The people will decide." This declaration from Governor Sul .er wa3 prompted by an Inquiry of 'hat he would do If his proposed in . ?stigatlon of state departments in- , 'Wed anv f tne appointees of arles P. .Murphy. "I have been ting for that question," said the rnor, "and 1 might as well answer w and for all time." STRO TO FIGHT I ADMITTANCE ir Cancels Plans to ' lack to Europe ,'itro, the ex-dictator of 'e up his mind that he : ed by the government ' tates and that honor ' -.ay here and fight for ' paying us what be cial call. 'eral was not a pas- V last Saturday on eh lie had booked before the Unlt ;'t on Jan. 10 and iorge G. Battle, stain a writ of udge Holt has enator O'Gorman's jcomo interested in .iient and had decided . no Just reason for pre-ex-dictator from making idy of us. lie therefore sent to. Ellis A, Content of his firm who lk with General Castro. The . wan delighted that someone nine forward to take an Interest is case. He said thai if an Aiueri , citizen desired to petition the bits to inquire into the Justice of his jortation he would be pleased to 'eel his steamship reservation, r. Battle appeared befo ' " -dge ' as the petitioner f ral ro. The attorney for)N -tl-r was H. Snowden Mire ler of the law firm. M as a citizen a ed as counsel ' writ contains 'lat General C vithout just . land and tr r his count i'hln any GIVEN CHANCE FOR FREEDOM 1 Bail For Ironworkers Placed at $1,100,000 SUPERSEDEAS WRIT ALLOWED Court of Appeals Fixes Bond at $10, . 000 For Each Year of Sentence Im- , posed Amount Too High to Free All. ! . Bonds aggregating $1,100,000 must be given if the labor leaders convicted of conspiracy to transport dynamite are to take advantage of the granting of a writ of supersedeas by tbo United States circuit court of appeals in Chi cago, i Whether this sum can be obtained was admitted by counsel for the de fendants to be a matter of doubt, but they expressed belief that at least some of it could be procured enough to accomplish the liberty of President Frank M. Ryan and a few others until decision has been reached on an ai peal, for the filing of which the court granted sixty days. ! The decision Involves only thirty two of the thlrty-threo men In the penitentiary, as Herbert S. Hockin will not' appeal. i Judges Baker and Herman heard the arguments and the decision was given orally by Judge Baker. He took or. caslon to intimate that undue haste was manifested in Indlanap:ilis in com mitting the defendants to prison. I The writ was issued largely on the point raised by the defense that the ironworkers were convicted of a con tinuing offense, conspiracy to commit offenses continuously. In fixing the amount of bail, the court was in fluenced by the fact that the offenses involved are not extraditable. A basis ot $10,000 for each year's sentence was used by the court In fixing the bond. As Ryan was sen tenced to serve Beven years, hU bond was fixed at $70,000 and the same ratio was pref.rved throughout. ', Peeling potatoes In the kitchen, car. penterlng and constructing steel buildings In the federal penitentiary at Leavenworth Kan., were some of the' regular duties assigned to the thirty-three labor union officials con victed in the dynamite conspiracy. -Olaf A. Tveitmoe was assigned to do kitchen work, among his first duties being the peeling of potatoes. Frank M. Ryan, president of the union, was assigned to work In the carpenter shop. Peter J. Smith of Cleveland also was assigned to the carpenter shop. 1 Because of his feeble condition Henry W. I.egleitner of Denver, one of the ironworkers' executive board members, was given oitdoor work. He will assist in the manufacture of bricks for new prison buildings. Another ironworkers' official who was taken off his trade was Eugene Clancy of San Francisco. As Clancy's health Is not good It was decided to allow him to work In the storeroom. Other prisoners were given jobs on steel construction work. ACCUSED OF FIRING AT WIFE Man Said to Have Shot Daughter in Trying to Kill Her Mother. H. W. Hutzell of Keystone Junction, Pa., was brought to Jail at Somerset, accused of attempting to kill his wife Clara. Hutzell threatened to shoot her, it is alleged, and she sought refuge oe hind a door. Attempting to send a bullet through the door after her Hut sell, It is alleged, shot Mrs. Sarah Komp, a daughter, in the right arm. After the shooting Hutzell was hit on the head with a poker by his eighteen-year-old son Oscar, it is said, and knocked to the floor. SAYS GOD COMMANDED IT Pullman Allows Trolley Car to I Run . Over His Arm. Harry Pullman, aged twenty-three, of Brooklyn, N. Y confessed to the most unique act In the history of Buf falo's fanatical freaks. In a sworn statement he said God commanded him to cut off one of his arms, and following instructions he lay on a car track in Sout,h Division street and allowed a trolley car to run over him. Pullman was found In a semiconscious condition. TAFT SHAKES7,052 HANDS New Year's Reception at White House Brilliant Affair. Surrounded by his family, 'members if the "cabinet and a distinguished company President Taft held his last New Year's reception in the White House. When the last person In the line had greeted the president the olliclal counters said 7,0."2 persons hud shaken bands with him. That figure was a little below the White House record. Three Men Die in Hotel Fire. At Keystone, W. Va., James I.. Reynolds, a lumberman, and two other lumbermen, unidentified, were J- nnA a number of Unfrocked as Rector of the Episcopal Church , ., " ... '.'1 ' 7, REV. DR. A. G. MORTIMER. DR. MORTIMER UNFROCKED Bishop Rhinelander Makes Public Notice of Deposition. In a statement issued by Bishop Rhinelander at Philadelphia the an nouncement was made that Rev. Dr. Alfred G. .Mortimer, formerly rector of St. Mark's Protestant Episcopal church, has been deposed from the ministry. Notice of the unfrocking was for warded to each priest of the eastern diocese of Pennsylvania. The notice will be sent to every 'bishop of the church in America. MARS BEAUTY FOR LIFE Domestic Employs Novel Meant to Hide Her Crime. That she smeared acid upon her face, disfiguring it forever, so as to support the story she would tell her mistress after she had stolen jewelry valued at $1,000 from the latter, was confessed to the police by Mary Ma- ticavitch, aged twenty, a domestic em ployed In the home of William Beitler, 3510 Perrysville avenue, Pittsburg. The girl had stolen the jewels and then for Bix hours, suffering all the while from the burns upon her face, she repeated over and over to de tectives the story of how a negro had committed the theft after he had thrown the acid in her face. DUN'S REVIEVVOF TRADE Bank Clearings For Week Show Falling Off. Dun's Review of Trade says this week: "This week's statement of bank clearings at the leading cities of the United States displays a considerable contraction as compared with the two preceding years, the total aggregation being only $2.74,722,616. a loss of 6.8 per cent compared with the same week last year, and 7.5 per cent com pared with the corresponding week in 1911. "These decreases, however, are al most, if not wholly, due to the fact that the week in the two previous years included heavy payments through the banks of the first three and four days, respectively, in Janu ary, whereas this ye.ir there was only one day." DAVIS BURIED SUNDAY Senator's Death Causes Peculiar Political Situation In Arkansas. Funeral services for the late United States Senator Jeff Davis were con ducted Sunday afternoon at Little Rock, Ark. The body was placed In the family burial plot in Russellville. The death of Senator Davis on the eve of the ratification of his re-election by the legislature causes a pe culiar political situation. It 13 possible a special primary will he called to select a successor for the full term, beginning March 4 next. As an alter native, it is suggested the legislature has power to name a senator. Woman Ineligible For Position. In an opinion handed down by Attorney General J. P. Hall and sent to the Mercer (Pa.) county com missioners Miss Merle HasBcl. ap pointed last Thursday to the position of mercantile appraiser, Is ineligible. Miss Hassel is a daughter of Commls sioner John Hassel. Gives Mortgage For $10,000,000. A $4ii,U'',oo0 mortgage, covering the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad com pany's property in the state, entered of record in Somerset, Pa., Is alleged to presage big improvements by that road In Somerset and vicinity. PITTSBURG MARKETS. Butter 'I'riniH, :i7V6: tubs, ltd f 37. Eggs--Selected, 2S-in'a. Poultry Hens, live, 1 8. Cattle Choice, $ST.",ft9; prime, $8.2o?(8.65; good, $".".'( 8.2."i; tidy butchers, $6.7U5i i.'.'J; fair, $6i6.:0; common, $r,6; common to good fat bulls, $lfi B.T.'i;. .common to good fat cows, $::i6.2.".; heirers, $U0ft7.'rU; SEVEN KILLED ON HOODOO BRIDGE Engine Goes Through Structure For Third Disaster HIGH WATER WEAKENED PILING 6ix Men Seriously Injured Financial Loss Half a Million and Chesapeake and Ohio's Service Badly Crippled. A Chesapeake and Ohio engine of the heaviest type pulling westbound freight train Xo. 99 plunged through a temporary bridge spanning the Guyan river at Guyandotte on the eastern edge of Huntington, V. Va. Seven men were hurled to death and a half dozen more seriously hurt. The dead are: F. E. Webber, engineer. Henry White, watchman. Charles Had. lie, bridge worker. Emmett Wood, bridge worker. James Crawford, bridge worker. Charles Coyner, bridge worker. J. G. Wheeler, bridge worker. The financial loss, It Is estimated, will reach a half million dollars. Freight traffic on the road has been completely tied up and passenger traf fic was resumed after a delay of sev eral hours by the use of tracks of the Baltimore and Ohio railroad. The Guyandotte bridge, the scene of the disaster, was known to railroad men as a hoodoo bridge, this accident making the third fatal accident on this structure. The railroad officials claim that the collapse of the bridge was due to the piling being under mined by the high stage of water now prevailing in Guyan river. Fifteen men were working on the bridge and eleven of them went down, five being rescued from the river. The others fell under the engine and cars. So far it has been impossible to re cover the bodies of any of the victims. A passenger train had passed safely over the bridge a fe-v minutes before the crash, but the fireman and brake- man of the freight train seemed to have a premonition of danger and walked across the bridge In advance. To this they owe their lives. The break came as the engine reached the middle spnn and one car plunged fifty feet Into the swollen stream with it. The ironwork of the bridge is a total loss and It will require several weeks to replace the structure so that direct traffic may be resumed. INCREASES SOIL FERTILITY Hill's Experiments May Revolutionize Agriculture In Northwest. Into the greenhouses of James J. Hill in the rear of his residence In St. Paul, where the railroad man, without the knowledge of the world, has been carrying on for the last two months an experiment expected to revolutionize agriculture, six men representing commercial and financial Minneapolis were guided to witness astonishing results in wheat, oats and barley culture, achieved by new chemical soil analysis and its practical application. Phosphorus has been found to be the great essential plant food lacking in the soil of the northwest. Mr. Hill has found the way, he told the Minne apolis men, to Increase soli fertility. A trainload of dirt was brought Into St. Paul in November. Only F. R. Crane, agricultural expert in the Great Northern road employ, who col lected soil from 387 Minnesota and North Dakota farms, and a few others concerned with the work knew what was going on. Small experimental farms were then prepared. "This Is what we have done by ex perimenting on farms in the north west," said Mr. Hill, handing a typo written sheet showing that 1,141 bush els more grain was grown on the ex periment farms operated scientifically as compared with the number of bush els obtained by the farmers from the farms Indicated. PALZER BEATEN UP McCarty Wins World's Heavyweight Champion Title. Speed and cleverness won I.uther McCarthy the title of heavyweight champion of the world when he de feated Al Pal.er In the Vernon (Cal.) arena. The tight was bo one sided that Jiel'erefT Eyion stpppeJ i-"Tri'ttW Hgnteenm ronna to Bave trie reeling Palzer from further punishment. Mc. Carty, Palzer's curly haired superior, was smiling and scarcely scratched when the fight ended. Palzer's eyes were almost closed, his mouth, nuse, cheek and ears cut and he preseuled u bloody and but ter e J appearance. Only bis capacity for standing punishment saved htm from being knocked out, for McCarty lauded on his Jaw repeatedly. Women Open Headquarters. The Pennsylvania State Woman Suffrage association opened head quarters in Harrisburg for thecoming inn of the legislature, i Mrs. HOP PILLOWS. Their Efficacy as a Sleep Inducer as Shown on An Elevated Train. A man who suffered from sleepless ness picked up In Austria recently what seemed to him to be the best remedy he had ever found, dt was nothing more or less than a pillow stuffed with hops. An Austrian peas ant woman, recommended It not alone as a sleep producer but as a beauti fler as well. Returning to this country the man bought some New York State hops, famous for their beer making quali ties, but to his surprise they did not work as well as the hops he had tried abroad. He found out by experiment that hops that made good beer didn't necessarily produce good sleep. After he had sampled a lot of dif ferent kinds of hops he found that by mixing hops grown In Bohemia with nops grown In California and Oregon he got a combination which teemed to answer all purposes in thj sleep producing line. W He decided that he had hit it right when he took a couple ot, pillows he had stuffed with this combination In his office downtown home with him on the elevated. He got in -at Rector street carrying the pillow nd sat In one of the double seats. ,,Two men and a messenger boy sat Vith him. At Fifty-ninth street all three were in profound slumber. Several other persons who had been reading news papers near him were In evident dis tress iu their efforts to keep aifake. Inquiry at different drug . stores seemed to indicate that thenop pil low idea was a new one, though hops have long been known to have sleep inducing qualities, as shown artlcii larly in the case of beer. According to those who have tried hop pillows, you get all the soporific qualities of the hops In this way without break ing any temperance pledges orguffer Ing any harmful effects. New,York Sun. Burned Out a Squirrel Family. C. II. Brown of Maiden kindled a fire in a parlor stove that had .not been used before this winter and" 'as a result a family ot squirrels wi burned out of their home and the firo department made a hurried visit to the Brown residence. Near by thete Is heavily wooded land where squir rels abound. The squirrels' nest In cluded a bushel of sticks, loaves and moss and the chimney was effectual ly blocked when Mr. Brown attempted",, to start the fire. While the Inmates, of the house were wondering at the smoke that filled the rooms a passer' Kir ti-no ciirnrlunil tn flnif flnmnn Rhnnt. ing from the chimney and he rang an alarm. No serious damage was oc casioned and as no dead squirrels were found It is presumed that they escaped. Boston Transcript. Historic Engine Saved. When fire destroyed a passenger train and the train shed at the Chattanooga-Nashville station It threaten ed the old engine, General, of civil war fame, which has stood In the sta-, tlon shed for a number of years. Fire- men directed their principal efforts '. to u anil siicceeaea in muhiik me relic. The story of the race through Dixie between the General, manned ( by Andrews's raiders, trying to get out of the Confederate lines, and the Texas, and the capture of the General is one of the most stirring Incidents of the war. For many years the Gun em! has been kept in good repair (in the Chattanooga station. Chattanix er. Granite of the South. When one speaks of granite the mind naturally reverts to Vermont. It Is difficult to associate granite with any section of North America outside New England, yet it must now be ac knowledged to the credit of the South that Georgia, North Carolina, Mary land and Virginia are producing large quantities of stone of good quality which Insures the South a place In the market at any rate. The annual output is now worth about $3,500,000 and the Industry Is growing. It niay be of comparative Interest to know that New England's output Js about $9,000,000 worth of stone annually. Chicago Tribune. Maine Clam Diggers. Clam diggers In the , vicinity of Portland lire now receiving more for their Mams than they evor have bo fore. The dealers themselves are not getting any more for the shocked varieties, but the diggers are making a good thing out oT tbo b alves. The price paid tiros from $1.75 to $2 a iaNiisJirtSTerage of 25 cents better than they have received before. The diggers havo declared that owing to the scarcity of shell fish and the smallness of them they must receive a greater price. Kennebec Journal. Sir Reynard's MisAdventure. C. K. Shields at Koxbury, Krunkliu County, jun't one year ayo caught a gray fox In a trap, keeping the animal until the early Hummer of 1!U0, when he let his foxshlp run at larr. A few days hro when looking over bis traps he was surprised to have same fnx In liii possession, rnogV the very sum ppot as the ' time. Philadelphia Record. I new use ior a The Rev. C. 11. C pitallields, has cr jff his church tnr . i ii. . Ev