RATES OF ADVt.. . One Square, one Inch, one week... l Published every Wednesday by J. E. WENK. FORE One Square, one Inch, one month. 3 00 One Square, one inch, 8 months. .... 5 00 One Square, one Inch, one year ..... 10 1 0 Two Squares, one year .. IS 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. BUBL in Smearbaugh & Weak Building, BLH BTRbBT, TIONKHTA., FA, Trraia, 81.00 A Year, Mlrlclly la Advaae. Entered as second-class matter at the post-office at TioneHla. No subsorlptluD received for shorter period than three months. Correspondence solicited, but no notice will be taken of anonymous communica tions. Always give your name. VOL. XLVII. NO. 21. TIONESTA, PA., WEDNESDAY, JULY 15, 19U. $1.00 PER ANNUM. THE FOREST REPUBLICAN. ST ICAN. BOROUGH OFFICERS. Burgess. S. D. Irwin. Justices of the Peace C. A. Randall, D. W. Clark. Cuunmmen.J. W. Landers, O. B. Rob inson, R. J. Hopkins, U. F. Watson, O. W. Holemsn,3. U. Mate, Charles Clark, Oonslable L. L. Zuver. Collector W. il. Hood. School Directors Vf . C. Iuiel, J. R. Clark, S. M. Henry, Q. Jamleson, D. H. Blum. FOREST COUNTY OFFICER. S. Member of Congress V) '. J. Rulings. Member of Senate J. 1C. P. Hall. Assembly A. R. Meohllng. President Judge W. D. U inckley. Associate Jwlgesti&muel Aul, Joseph M. Morgan. Pr othonotary, Register & Recorder, 'f. -8. R. Maxwell. Uheriff Wm. H. Hood. Treasurer Yf. H. Brar.ee. Commissioners Wm. H. Harrison, J. C. Hoowden, II. II. MoClellan. District Kttorney M. A. Oarringer. Jury Commissioners J. B. Eden, A.M. . Moore. Coroner Dr. M. 0 Kerr. Countv Auditor George H. Warden, A. C. Gregg and H. V. Shields. County iShirvejor Roy S. Braden. Count Superintendeni-i.O. Carson. Regular Term of Caurt. Third Monday of February. Third Monday of May. Third Monday of September. Third Monday of November. Regular Meetings of County Commis sioners 1st and 3d Tuesdays of month. Church and Mabbath Heboel. Presbyterian Sabbath School at 9:45 a. m. t M. E. Sabbath School at 10:00 a. m. Preaching in M. K. Church every Sab bath evening by Rev. H. L. Dunlavey. Preaching in the F. M. Church every Sabbath evening at the UHual hour. Rev. M. E. Woleott, Pastor. Preaching in the Presbyterian church every Sabbath at 11:00 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. Rev. H. A. Bailey, Pastor. The regular meetings of the W. C. T. D. are held at the headquarters on the second and fourth Tuesdays of each month. ft BUSINESS DIRECTORY. TI'.NESTA LODGE, No. 369, 1. 0.O.F. 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 eauli month at 3 o'clock. CAPT. GEORGE 8TOW CORPS, No. 137, W. R. C, meets first and third Wednesday evening of each month. T. F. RITCHEY, ATTORN EY-AT-LAW, Tlonesta, Pa. MA. CARRINGER, Attorney and Counsellor-at-Law. Office over Forest County National Bauk Building, TIONESTA, PA. CURTIS M. SHAWKEY, ATTORN EY-AT- LAW, Warren, Pa. Practice m Forest Co. AO BROWN, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Office In Arnor Building, Cor. Elm and Bridge Sts., Tlonesta, fa. FRANK S. 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. Phvsiclan and Surireon. OIL CITY, PA. HOTEL WEAVER, S. E. PIERCE, Proprietor, Modern aud up-to-date In all its ap pointments. Every convenience ana comfort provided Tor tbe traveling puuuo, R. A. FULTON, Proprietor. Tlonseta, 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 ror the traveling puuuo. pHIL. EMERT Flltrv RIKIT . SIIOF.M AKER Shopovor R. L. Haslet's grocery store rn Vtn ntt-anf lia rtmnurhfl tn lin all Kinds of custom work from the finest to tbe coarsest and guarantees nis worn 10 give perfect satisfaction. Prompt atten tion given u uienuiug, uu pnuoa rea sonable. JAMES HASLET, GENERAL MERCHANT. Furniture Dealer, AND UNDERTAKER. TIONESTA. PENN CHICHESTER S PILLS V r 'I UK III A MONO II It A Ml. A Ilrncicl-t- A-.kfrl II M ill-s-TKH lIAMONI IIIMNI) IMM.tt, I. lib VMlb ktuiwn as llest. Safe!, A Iwivs KHiil-l SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE i.....ti nt.i..ii.Hl ni rrr DrTIIRNFO. tO YEARS' CXPERIIfUE. Our CHARCES ARI THE LOWEST. Html mU-l, pholu ov nki-trli lor u.ur.-h unit fr.w reiiot-L fill tUiU'lltuMltty. INFRINGEMENT BUHH romlitrt.Hl U-forw nil court rtnt olilalniHl Iliniuirll . ...... ...I n TBint.UlUKS. PEN SIONS and COPYRIGHTS quickly obtaUwiL Opposite U. 8. Patent union, WASHINUTUPI, u. K. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy . Cures Cold Croup and WfeoopiDR Cough. I.uiIU-nI Auk your liruint lor a i lil.olifM.1'r'H IHitninnil Tiriiinl I'lll. in I.N d an I (.old mrulliAV scilr.l with lthie Kii ln. Y I'nLn nit ithip. Itiir of Tnur V wi.iiiiiiiii,iiim ii, M lUgPfT DICTATOR MAY LEAVE THIS WEEK i Members o! His Cabinet Pre cede Him Out of Country j i HUERTA WOULD SAVE NATION Flight Planned to Avert Further, Bloodshed and Bring Revolt to Endl Carbajal Slated to Succeed Dictator Robert Esteva-Ruiz, Mexican bu!I secretary of foreign affairs in the cabj iuet of General Huerta, is the latest high official of the present govern! nient to reach Vera Cruz on his way abroad. Esteva-Ruiz said that Huerta In tends to. resign the provisional presl. demy and leave Mexico and thus; save the country from any more oil the horrors of civil war. The capture id possible sacking of Mexico City, Is believed, would be prevented by Hucrta's moving out. Huerta, he said, will surrender tha government to Francisco Carbajal, tin new minister of foreign, affairs, who, In turn, will step aside, when tlui time conies, for some other provisional president wholly acceptable to the Constitutionalists. j Just when the change will coma Esteva-Ruiz said he did not know, "The president did not make me his confidant," 'ie declared. He was convinced, however, that Huerta would lay down his power this week and it would not surprise hir.i, he said, if his resignation were an nounced today. Carbajal, he added, was suggested as provisional president by the Ameri can delegation at the Niagara Falls mediation conference a.nd agreed to by Huerta's delegates and the South American mediators, while the Consti tutionalists Indirectly had conveyed the idea that he would be acceptable to Carranza. Like Porfiro Diaz, who (led from hla country in the hope that his going might avert a long and costly civil war, Huerta, according to Esteva-Ruiz, has decided to yield to superior num bers. Ho l Huerta and General Blanquet, Hs minister of war, knew that longer resistance was futile. He expected Blanquet would leave Mexico City, perhaps when Huerta lied, but not before. The sub-secretary of foreign affairs professed still to maintain his connee tion with the Government. He had been named, he said, special ambas sador to Argentina, Brazil and Chile to convey to those countries tlio thanks of the Mexican republic for their efforts toward mediation. Esteva-Ruiz did not explain why an had chosen a journey from Mexico City to the coast through the Ameri can lines rather than to Puerto Mex ico, except to say that the Vera Cruz route was shorter and offered a bet ter opportunity to catch his boat. De La Lama, the finance minister, said that the reason he chose the Vera Cruz route was the insistence of Huerta, wiio told hira that by going through the American lines openly and frankly he would show the world tflat the agreement reached at Niagara Falls was not a farce so far as Huer ta and the United Stales were con cerned, and that relations between the two countries were again friendly. This knowledge has given rise to the suggestion that Huerta himself, once he decides to leave his capital, also may pass through General Fu:i- Eton's lines and out beneath the guns of Rear Admiral Badger's ships. SENDS COMPANY NICKEL Woman Missed First Ride In Fifteen Years; Thinks She's Cheating. Believing she had cheated the Pitts burgh Rallrays company out of five cents because she had omitted, for the first time in fifteen yeurs, to ride on a street car, an unidentified woman dispatched a note to Inspector Flan- nigan with five cents enclosed. The note follows: "My Dear Sir I have been riding on your cars for the last fifteen years and in that time I do not think there was one day when I did not ride at least once. Yesterday I failed. Since then I have been feeling rather queer Enclosed ycu will find the nickel I fear you were cheated of." World's End Set For Oct. 20. The end of the world has been set for Oct. 20, according to the Millennia Dawn sect, which held a meeting In Sharon, Pa., and decided to make ar rangements for the finish. One mem ber of the cult, Mrs. Elizabeth Robin son, an enthusiastic believer, later dis posed of her property for $2,500. Sim says she will retain $500 to keep hr from need until the fatal day and the remainder she will distribute to tha poor. Mine Foreman's Home Dynamited The home of Henry Sweinsberg, mine foreman at Largo, Ta., was dyna mited and the house was wrecked. Sweinsberg, his wife and child were the only occupants ot the house and they were not injured. Some time ago there was a strike at the Large mine. Cherries Drug on Market. For the first time in a number cf years cherries are a drug on the mar ket In Altojna. Pa. The crop is tho heaviest in a decade. Dr. Edwin Carman and Wife Yf 1 "!". -I I I i . CONGRESS Wilson to Fight For Selections. The senr'e committee on banking and currency voted, 7 to 4, to report unfavorably the nomination of Thomas D. Jones of Chicago for the federal re serve board. The committee also went on record i.i favor of holding up the nomination of Paul M. Warburg unMl he consents to appear before the com mittee. This was the answer of the commit tee to the president's public criticism of Its methods in holding up the nomination of meu connected with "big business." The Issue between the president and the committee over the reserve boa nomination Is thus squarely joined and a bitter fight is In prospect. What Did Lind Get? How much did the Wilson adminis tration pay John Lind for his services in Mexico and for acting as adviser of President Wilson and Secretary of State Bryan when the relations be tween the two countries were almost at the breaking point? This question is agitating Republi cans, and it is likely that in a day or so a resolution will be offered in the house calling on the secretary of state to Indicate the amount paid Mr. Lind and whether he is still on the pay roll Salem Gets Federal Aid. By a vote of 161 to 66 the house con furred In the 'senate amendment to the sundry civil bill appropriating $200,000 for the relief of the Salem fire sufferers. Despite the fact that the appropriation was recommended by President Wilson, such Democrats as Underwood, Rainey and Fitzgerald opposed it. AUTOISTS DASHED TO DEATH Two Persons Killed and Two Fatally Injured West Virginia Disaster, Two persons were killed and five injured, two probably fatally, when an automobile got beyond control of the chauffeur on a curve In the road near Morgantown, W. Va., and dashed into the side of a hill. All the occu pants were hurled from the car. Wlnfield F. McKay, aged sixty-five, of Ravenswood, W. Va., and Winfield McKay, his grandson, of Fairmont, W. Va., were killed. The injured are: Dr. H. C. McKay, Fairmont, internal injuries, will die; John White, Fairmont, skull fractured, will die; Dorothy McKay, elevea. daughter of Dr. McKay and sister of Wlnfield, leg broken; R. M. Bailey and Grim Knox, Fairmont, cuts and bruises. DEATH HITS SUPREME BENCH Heart Disease Vacates Justice Lur ton's Seat. Heart disease caused the death of Associate Justice Horace Harmon Lurton of tne United States supreme court at one of the Atlantic City (N. J.) hotels. Asthma brought oil the heart trouble. Not until a few hours before his death did the justice complain of being ill and apparently ho was en joying his usual good health. His wife and son, Horace H. Lur ton, Jr., of Nashville, were at the bed Bide. The body was taken to Clarksburg, Tenn., for interment. It was at that city that Justice Lurton began the practice of law and liver for twenty years. Nonunion Men Stoned. A Rochester (Pa.) mob stoned non union men intended for the Westing house shops who started disorder in the coaches of a passenger train. 6 c? ft COLORED MAID , ONLY HOPE LEFT Prosecution's Evidence Against Mrs. Carman Fades Away GIRL HARASSED BY SLEUTHS Prosecutor and Detectives Are Hoping Cella Coleman Will Change Her Testimony and Accuse Prisoner. When doubt was thrown on tin testimony of George Golder and El- wood Bardes, the two witnesses whose Btorles at the Inquest at Freeport, N. Y caused the authorities to arrest Mrs. Florence Carman, the prosecu tion's case against the physician's wife charged with the murder of Mrai Louise Bailey became so weak that it is said the prosecutor fears to go bo fore the grand Jury for an Indictment.1 The doubts of the prosecution as regards the strength of their case was expressed by Assistant Attorney Weeks, who . went so far as to say that Mrs. Carman might be freed next Monday If more evidence cannot be produced. Golder has made an affidavit practi cally repudiating his Identification of the doctor's wife as the woman he saw on the porch a few minutes before the murder, and Flora Raynor, a young woman of this village, says that Bardes was with her at a time so close to that of the murder that it seems impossible, if her story is true, that he could have seen and heard all that he testified to. It is. barely possible that District Attorney Smith has evidence in re serve which he intends to produce at a strategic moment, but as the case stands superficially nobody in Free- 'port believes that Mrs. Carman could be Indicted, much less convicted. Take, for example, the comment of ex-Judge Wallace of Freeport: "No testimony connecting Mrs. Car man with the killing of Mrs. Bailey has been offered that approaches the dignity of evidence. Any judge would be compelled to direct a jury to acquit the defendant." District Attorney Smith, disappoint ed and chagrined by the crumbling of the foundations of his case, tried to secure a postponement of the hearing set for July 13 by Coroner Norton. Mr. Smith wanted a week's delay, but George M. Levy, counsel for Mrs. Car man, would not consent. Mr. Levy's position was that the county author ities after eight days' investigation put Mrs. Carman in jail charged with murder and that it would be unjust to dilly dally any further. "If they've got any real evidence," said Levy, "let them bring It Into court. They are afraid. They know 1 can tear to pieces every story they have set up. They've got nothing in the world but suspicion of motive the circumstance of a jealous woman who used a dictograph to overhear her husband's conversations with wo men patients." The truth is that the prosecution is concentrating upon a rather fright ened colored woman, who has sudden ly become of enormous Importance to District Attorney Smith and W. J. Burns. -Cella Coleman, Mrs. Carman's cook, has suddenly become the im portant figure in the case. At the inquest Cella stuck to it that she was at work In the kitchen from supper time until the murder an hour or more and that Mrs. Carman did not pass through the kitchen or go by the kitchen door. Mrs. Carman conducted herself when they went to take her to jail as everybody In Freeport felt certain she would do. She came quietly from her bedroom and faced the officers with her head up and her shoulders thrown back. There were tears In her eyes, but there was not a quaver in her voice. She did not tremble or display the least Indication of a nervou3 breakdown. Her tears sprang, no doubt, from grief over her mother's dangerous condition and from emotion caused by Dr. Carman's lack of composure a.) much as from her own plight. The mother, Mrs. Piatt Conklin, Is so 111 of heart disease that the doctors feared the news of Mrs. Carman's arrest might end her life. Dr. Carman wept unrestrainedly. THREE BUBONIC DEATHS Fourth Plague Case In New Orleans Results Fatally. Another death from the bubonic plague was announced by the public health service officers, making a total of four cases and three deaths since the outbreak of the disease In New Orleans on June 27. The lust victim was Leon De Jean, a negro boy. Dr. W. P. O'Reilly, city health of ficer, issued an order to undertakers that no burial permits should be is sued until an investigation into tho cause of death had been made by fed eral health oll'.cers. Twenty Have Close Call. Twenty men had narrow escapes from burning to death when their lumber camp near Crown, Pa., wag burned to the ground. Anti-Trust Program Opposed. Trade bodies of thirty-six states In a referendum vote opposed the admin istration's anti-trust program. 4 Maud Ballington Booth Talk ing For Suffrage Li- N f i 1914. by American Press Association. It is generally conceded In Newport, R. I that the gathering of notable women at Marble House is bound to do much for the suffrage cause, in which Mrs. O. H. P. Belmont is so deeply Interested. The picture shows Mrs. Maud Ballington Booth, head 'A the Volunteers of America, making a spirited suffrage speech. TWO WOMEN DROWN Fall From Raft Into Monongahela River Aid Comes Too Late. Within sight of the husband and father of one of them, who were un able to help them, two women camp ers of Homevllle fell from a raft in Peters creek near the Wilson (Pa.) station on the Monongahela river and drowned in ten feet of water. The dead are; Mrs. Lucy Forrester, aged thirty-eight, wire of William For rester, and Mrs. Sadie Kearney, twenty-eight, wife of Charles Kearney. STREET DANCING FETE Pittsburgh Stages Unique Event For Visiting Real Estate Delegates. An Impromptu street carnival, rival ling anything of the sort ever given In Pittsburgh and believed to be the first where the revellers danced in the street, brought to a close the enter tainment program of the convention of the National Association ot Real Estate Exchanges, which has been lu progress for three days at the Hotel Schenley. The fete was held on Grant boule vard between Forbes strcrt and Fifth avenue and on the adjoining Schenley lawn. It Is estimated that more than 5,000 persons took part. IRON AND STEEL TAKE TURN Trade Shows Betterment and Price Is Strengthened. Dun's Review of Trade says this week: "Irregularity still characterizes the business Bi'uation. Favorable reports predominate and general conditions afford encouragement, although the volume, of new business is of moderate proportions. "Indlciitl- is of Improvement are noted In Iron and Bteel, where a turn for the better Is at lust apparent. The betterment Is accompanied by some strengthening of price and few manu facturers are disposed to book future contracts at present figures." M. E. Ingalls Dies. M. E. Ingalls, former head of the Big Four railroad, died following treat ment of ulcerated tooth. MARKET QUOTATIONS Chicago, July 14. Hogs Receipts, 28,000. Light, $8.60 9; mixed, $8.50(f9; heavy, $8.:i.r,ifi) 9; rough, $8.30&8.45; pigs, $7.80(fi 8.80. Cattle Receipts, 15,000. BeeveB, $5.70(19.85; cows and hellers, $8.90(ij) 9.15. Sheep Receipts, 22,000. Sheep, $5.30(&6.10; yearlings, $5.907.35. Wheat July, 77. Corn July, 69. Oats July, 38. Pittsburgh, July 14. Cattle Choice, $8.25(?i 9.60; prime, $8.80 9.25; good, $8.50ffi 8.80; com mon, $6f&7; common to good fat bulls, 5.50(&7; common to good fat cows, $3.507.26; fresh cows and springers, I40(i7S. Sheep and Lambs Prime wethers, $6fj6.25; good mixed, $5.50(5.90; fair mixed, $5(5.40; culls and common, $2(1:1.50; spring lumhs, $U(!i9; veal calves, $10.50ill; heavy and thin calves, $70 8. Hogs Prime heavy hogs, $9.20 9.25; heavy mixed, $9.25(19.30; medi ums, heavy Yorkers, light Yorkers, $9.40; pigs, $9.45(i9.50; roughs, $7.'.o 1(8; stags, $7(fi7.25. Butter Prints, 30. Eggs Fresh, 24. Poultry Live hens, 17(1 18. Cleveland, July 14. Calves Good to choice, $ll(fi 11.50; lair to good, $10(ill; heavy and com mon, $6(9. Cuttle Choice Tut steers, $8.351 8.5( good to choice, $S(iS.50; milch ers :uul springers, $50(i80. II Yorkers, $9.15; mlx-d, $9.16; pijrs, $9.15; stags, $6.75. MAGAZINE MEN SUED War Department Alleges Military Secrets Were Printed. Warrants for the arrest of Charles K. Field, editor of the Somerset maga zine, and former president of the Bo hemian club; Riley A. Scott, a writer; Robert J. Fowler, aviator, and Ray S. Duhem, a photographer, were is sued at the request of John W. Pres ton, United States attorney in San Francisco. The charge against all three Is the disclosure of military secrets and the penalty is ten years' Imprisonment cr a $10,000 fine for such disclosure if made abroad and one year or a $1,0J0 fine If made in the United States. In April Sunset published an articla entitled "Can the Panama Canal Be Destroyed From the Air?" Reproduc tions of photographs taken from en aeroplane and showing some of tbi fortifications of the canal zone and of the San Francisco Presidio accom panied the text. MEAT PRICES TO SOAR Big Grain Crop Will Not Afford Any Relief, Say Packers. Meat prices will rise above the rec ord figures of recent years despite the huge grain crop, Chicago packing house representatives asserted. Thev Bay that the present scarcity ot cattle and the effect of dry weather on grazing lands will more than offset the enormous grain yield. A beef price of 16 (nts to tho butcher was predicted as an early pos sibility and it was pointed out by on of the packing house men that cattle even now are higher than for Bonio time. Scarcity of grass-fed cattle was referred to as one cause for the pre dicted advance. The dry summer In the west last year Is the chief cause of the prese-.t scanty supply on the hoof. Another factor Is that the demand for meat exceeds the supply. BIG RAIL ORDER PLACED Pennsylvania Awards 100,000 Tons r-ei" This Year's Needs. The Pennsylvania Railroad company awarded contracts for 100,000 tons of Bteel rails to cover the requirements of the system for 1914. The orders were placed with the following companies: United States Steel corporation, 44,000 tons; Penn sylvania Steel company, 22,000; Cam bria Steel company, 22,000; Lacka wanna Steel company, 6,000; Bethle hem Steel company, 6,000. All these rails will be 100 pounds except 15,000 tons of 120 pounds. The latter will be used on tho main line. Escaped Prisoners Captured. Earl Hess, "Joe" Sterling and "Joe" Williams, three prisoners who mado a dash for liberty as they were being tken back to the Crawford county (Pa.) jail after being sentenced to the reform school, are again bchiad bars. Curran't Mistake. It was dilliciilt to subdue the high spirits of John I'hllpot Currun, the Irish lawyer and wit Indeed, many of Ills most liillllimt witticisms were tittered In the stnid nnd somewhat musty iismosplieie of the courtroom. On one occiislou when Curran was making tin elaborate argument In chan cery Lord Clnre brought u largo New foundland dog upon the bench with him, nnd during tho progress of the nr giiineiit ho iiill niiicli more attention to the dog than to the barrister. Grad ually tlm chancellor lost nil regard for even ordinary courtesy. In tho most Important part of the case ho turned himself quite aside and began to fon dle tho nulinal. Curran stopped nt once. "Go on, Mr. Curran; go on," snld Lord Clare. "I beg n thousand pardons, my lord," replied tho wit. "I took It for grunted that your lordship wus employed In consultation." Physical Energy. Study of the blood furnished tho clew to Julius Robert Mayer for his discovery of that fundamental law of physics, the law of conservation of en ergy. Mayer observed, while travel ing as a ship's surgeon in the tropica Hint tlio venous blood of his patients (In the days wlien blood letting was still in general vogue) was appreciably brighter In color tlinn In ordinary practice In the tempera to zone. From this ho concluded there was n defi nite relation between (he chemical action going on In tho blood and the amount of work or heat furnished by the body, nnd thus, following up his nrgiiinctit point by point, he was finally led to the conclusion that the total nmoiint of energy of n given system Is constant, that enemy can neither lie created nor destroyed, but only con verted from one form into another. Japan Censors Books. In Japan the i-cnsui'shlp of novels Is not exercised by the libraries, but by u government olllclal who is empower ed to prosecute offending authors as well as forbid tho sale of their books. Not long ago tho author of u Japanese novel culled "The (livat Cily" was brought before the conns for giving too realistic a description of life In To kyo. Ills counsel used the old argu ments about the Indefensible rights of literature nnd the ennobling of every thing by art. But tho case was given HUM I list tin- author, l:en some of Mollero's works havo been forbidden to circulate In Japan, tlio ground of offense being the lack of respect shown by wives toward their husbands and by sons toward their fathers. STORM TAKES THREE LIVES Scranton, Pa., Visited by Cloudburst Streams Overrun Banks. With three believed dead, hundreds homeless, thousands of dollars' worth of property damaged, Scranton, Pa., and vicinity was visited by a cloud burst that tied up most of the traffic on the railroads for three days. Scores were rescued from their homes by the police reserves. The storm was accompanied by terrific thunder aud lightning. Driven by a stiff wind the streets were booh Hooded. The storm continued un abated for two hours. An hour after it had ceased Roaring brook and the Lackawanna river be gan to rise with such rapidity that tha water soon reached the front porches of the houses. L. W. Stanton, Frank A. Butler, Ray Ellis and Frank Durkin were standing on the bank of Roaring brook when the water washed the ground from under their feet and they were swept into midstream. They clung to a tree that was floating downstream. Ellis was rescued three miles further down, but tho others are be lieved to have perished. Cats Guard Corpse. With two large black cats sitting on her body and eight other felines curled up around It, Miss Sarah Starr, an eccentric recluse, seventy-nine years old, was found dead in her home In Philadelphia. When patrolmen en tered the room where the body of the woman was lying the cats sprang upon them as if to protect their mistress and a lively battle ensued. An officer drew his revolver and shot live cats. Cow Attacks Little Girl. While playing in a field near her home, Mary, the eight-year-old daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. George Fahren bach of Windfall, near Kane, Ta., probably was Injured fatally when Bhe was attacked by a cow owned by her father. The animal hooked Its horn In her mouth tearing away the side of her face and part of her nose. The child was rescued from the cow by a neighbor. Hunt Guns and Find Much Silk. Michael Querlerrl, aged thirty-five, chief packer at the Altoona (Pa.) silk mill, was arraigned for larceny. Game wardens, In searching his home near Hollldaysburg for arms, found thou sands of dollars' worth of silks packed up and ready to be shipped to a "feuce." Querlerrl Is Bald to have cut from ten to twenty yards Irom pieces of silk delivered to him to pack. Aged Minister Takes Young Wife. At Huntington, W. Va., a romance culminated when Rev. C. H. Lakln, aged seventy-six, one of the veteran ministers of the Methodist Episcopal church, was married to Miss Nora Quinn, who is thirty-six years hla junior. Miss Quinn, It is said, after listening to one of ills sermons sought an Introduction to the minister. Man Thought Dead Returns. Sheridan Temple, aged forty-five, who disappeared from Beaver, Pa., four years ago, is back in town. A body found In the Ohio river six months after Temple left town was buried as that of Temple, although no definite identification was made. Temple Bald lie has been wandering over the country. Prospective Bridegroom Robbed. Joseph L. Bogu., a Polish barber who recently went to live in Washing ton, Pa., withdrew about $750 from a Pittsburgh bank, intending to marry. He was waylaid, knocked unconscious and robbed of $731. He was able to give little information about the hold up as he did not Bee the man who attacked. Woman, 101, Answer Call. Mrs. Ma.-tha Crise, aged 101, tho oldest inhabitant of Somerset county Pa., died in her home in Mlddlecreek township. She celebrated her one hundred and first birthday last May 15. Although Mrs. Crise passed the century mark she was a cripplo from infancy. Buttons Start Fire. Two metal buttons rubbing together, causing a spark in a benzine washer at the dyeing establishment In Al toona, Pu., of A. Freedman, are be lieved to luivo caused a tire which do Btroyed tlie plant and the possibly fatal burning of Freedman. Deserted Baby Along Driveway. A three-month-old baby was found abandoned In a driveway in a wooded district ubove the old Magee home stead In Forbes street, Pittsburgh. Two men mero attracted by cries and discovered the baby wrapped in woolen garments. Big Melon Is Cut. In order to avoid subscribing for stock In the regional reserve bank, under tho new currency system, In excess of Its own capital stock, tho First National Bank of Uliiontown, I'll., declared a dividend of 700 per cent. Crowbar Through Thigh. Michael Yurecskl, Croightou, is In Allegheny Valley hospital, Tarentuui, Pu., us I he result of an odd in cident In a mine at Creiditon. Ho was hold ing a crowbar when a freight car hit tho bar. driving It through Iii3 thigh. Pittsburgh Bank Looted. Herman F. Iton hers and George Y. lloiinelster, employes of the Colonial Trust company ot Pittsburgh, said to have confessed robbing the vault ot $S.",,U00, were placed in jail in default of boud. v