Republican News Item. VOL. XV. NO. 41 ALIENATION , SUITSETTLED Dr. McKim is to Be Paid an Annuity. A. 6. VANDERBILT INVOLVED Accused Father-in-Law and New York Millionaire of Alienating Affections of His Wife. It was learned in Baltimore that Dr. Smith Hollins McKim will not in stitute proceedings for the alienation of the affections of his wife, who was recently granted a divorce. An agree ment was signed in New York to this effect. Those who were to have been de fendants are Dr. McKim's father-in law, Dr. Isaac E. Emerson, of Balti more; his former wife, Dr. Emerson's daughter, and Alfred G. Vanderbilt. The agreement was the result of a conference held in the office of Hersh field & Wolf, lawyers. Papers were signed at this confer ence which release Mr. Vanderbilt, Dr. Emerson, his daughter and Mrs. Frederick McCormick from any legal action resultant from Mrs. McKim divorcing her husband. Dr. McKim was awarded a sum of money which will be paid in semi-annual instal ments, as well as a lump sum which was awarded chiefly for counsel fees. When questioned about the matter, Mr. Hershfleld said: "I can say this much," he said, "that there has been consummated an arrangement by which Dr. McKim has agreed to end all existing and possible litigation rel ative to the alleged alienation of his wife's affections. That is all." The agreement reached was the re sult of a series of conferences that have been held for some time. Reports have been made from time to time that Dr. McKim intended to bring suit against Mr. Vanderbilt for alleged alienation of his wife's affections, and there have also appeared reports that an engagement existed between Mrs. Jut linn and Vniderbilt. Mrs. McKim and Mrs. McCormick were great friends, and it. Is hinted that Captain Emerson may marry Mrs. McCormick when he secures his di vorce. It is understood that the sum in volved will be paid semi-annually and will be so payable until Dr. McKim's death, with the proviso, of course, that no action of any kind is brought by him against any of those mentioned. It is further understood that should Dr. McKim die within five years a sum of money is to be paid to his sis ter, but that if he should live for that length of time and die thereafter, the payment of the annuity shall cease. APPROVES INDIAN STATUE House Agrees to Resolution For Fig ure In New York Harbor. The Goulden resolution providing for a heroic statue of the North Amer ican Indian on a federal reservation in New York harbor, was agreed to by the house. The Improved Order of Red Men had endorsed the bill. The project, which involves no ex pense to the government, was started in 1909 in New York, at a meeting of army officers, Indian "warriors"" and well known New Yorkers at the home of Rodman Wanamaker, of Philadel phia. Carrie Nation Near Death. According to word r ceived by Eu reka Springs friends of Carrie Nation, under treatment at a sanitarium in Leavenworth, Kan., she Is unconscious the greater portion of the time. The physicians say she can survive only a few days. FIRST NATIONAL BANK, HTJGHESYILLE, IF.A.. CAPITAL STOCK $50,000 W. C. FRONTZ President. Surplus and FRANK A. REEDER, Cashier. Net Profits, 75.000. DIRECTORS: Transacts a General Front®, John C. Laird, C. W. Sones, Banking Business. W. C.Frontz, Frank A.Reeder, Jacob Per, „ Lyman Myers, W. T. Reedy, Peter Frontz, Accounts oflndivid- j. A , a Ball> John Bull uals and Firms solicited. Safe Deposite Boxes for Rent, One Dollar per Year. 3 per cent. INTEREST PAID ON TIME DEPOSITS. LAPORTE, SULLIVAN COUNTY PA. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1910. MRS. SMITH H. M'KIM. Said to Be Engaged to Alfred G. Vanderbilt. PAID $35 AND SAW~ HUSBAND MURDERED Wife's Confession to Sister Heard in Court. That she paid $35 to have her hus band put out of the way and stood and saw him murdered, was the ad mission credited to Mrs. Lena Cusu mano by her sister, when the latter testified at the trial of Mrs. Cusumano on the murder charge in the superior court in Plymouth, Mass. The sister, Mrs. Accuisa de Legart, of Boston, testified that Mrs. Cusu mano visited her home a few days be fore the body of Frank Cusumano was found in the surf, at Sunset Beach, Hull, and in discussing his disappear ance, said: "My head told me to have him kill ed. I paid $35 and had him killed." "Are you sure he is dead? Aren't they fooling you?" the sister asked. The reply of Mrs. Cusumano, as given by the witness, was: "I saw it done with my own eyes. They gave him one blow in the neck with the axe." "Where is he buried?" the ques tioner persisted, according to her tes timony. "He isn't buried, but wrapped in a quilt tied with wire and thrown into the sea at 3 o'clock at night," Mrs. Cusumano is said to have replied. Son Marries Father. A unique marriage ceremony was one which was performed in Malone, N. Y., when Rev. E. Scott Farley, pas tor of the First Baptist church at Herkimer, officiated at the wedding of his father, Rev. E. J. Farley, pastor of the First Baptist church of Oneonta, to Miss Katherine Hawley, of this vil lage. It Is the first time In the matri monial annals of northern New York that a son has been the officiating clergyman at tlie marriage of his own father. LORDS VETO BILL UP IN COMMONS 'A •———— Is Measure on Which Govern ment Appealed to People. HISTORY IN THE MAKIN6 Historic Change In Great Britain'i Constitution Will Come With Iti Adoption. Premier Asquith introduced in the house of commons in London the gov ernment bill to abolish the veto powei of the house of lords. If it passes ii will accomplish a historic change in the parliamentary system of Great Britain. The greatest controversy known in England for several generations be gan with both sides apparently deter mined not to yield except to superioi force. A full house faced Mr. Asquith when he rose to make the customary explanatory statement on the intro duction of a measure of such moment Tickets for seats in the public galler ies had been exhausted weeks before and the diplomatic and peers bal conies were thronged with interested ones. The premier lost no time in letting the opposition know that he felt the country was behind him, and therefore did not hesitate to reintroduce the bill without a change of a word in the form in which it had its first read ing last year. The measure, he said had gone before the electorate at the recent elections and had been en dorsed by the return of its support ers to the house of commons with s majority of 126. Mr. Asquith declared that when the lords rejected the budget of 1909 they committed political suicide. History would say that it was the most stu pendous act of political blindness evei perpetrated. Hereditary in origin, ir responsible In the exercise of its pow ers and overwhelmingly partisan it) its actual composition—that was the body to which the law intrusted th€ right to delay and check the consld ered decisions of elected represents tives of the people. The premier said he did not propose to dispense with a second chamber. They had already suffered enough from the evils of what was practically a single-chamber government; but the country required an immediate remedy for the present evil, and could not await a release from tho dangerous and intolerable situation until the long and laborious process necessary for the creation of a new second chambei had been completed. Mr. Asquith was followed by A. J Balfour. The leader of the opposition commented upon the absence of aj) evidence of a confclliatory spirit in the premier's speech. All were agreed he said, that there should be a modifi cation of the relation of the twt houses, but the reconstruction of the house of lords should be the subject of cautious deliberation. The bica meral system must prevail, and the hptise of commons must be the pre dominant partner. "Mr. Balfour said he was convinced that some leaves of hereditary was necessary for the second chamber. He desired a peaceful arrangement, and he would do much so that a great struggle might be settled without con troversial violence, which it was es pecially desirable to avoid in a coro nation year; but there were some is sues so great that 110 compromise was possible, and if fouerht out they must be carried over tho heads of the Un ionist party. Brown Defeats Wolgast. Knock-Out Brown, of New York, de feated Ad Wolg.ist, lightweight cham pion, in a six-round fight in Philadel phia. Brown carried the battle to Wolgast In every roun-1 IT I vas wonderfully strong and aggressive and Wolgast took many hard knocks. It was Wol gast's stamina and ring generalship that prevented Brown from knocking him out, but at that on several occa sions the champion was hard pressed. Gets Thirty Years For Murder. The jury in the case of Cyrene Leo Hammond, in Mays Landing, N. J., who was charged with the murder of Henry Foote in Atlantic City, in No vember last, returned a verdict of guilty of murder in the second degree. The court sentenced Hammond to a term of thirty years in the state prison at hard labor. Wedded 91 Years; Woman Dies. Mrs. Francis Esper, 108 years old, said to be the oldest woman In Colo rado, died in the arms of her 111- year-old husband from burns received when her clothing caught fire from an open grate at her bona in Flor ence, Colo. Mr. and Mrs. Esper had been mar ried ninety-one years. RECIPROCITY OR EXTRASESSION Tatt Issues an Ultimatum tn Congress. ALSO WARNS DEMOCRATS . ifiif Ceclares Attempt to Revise Tariff as Rider to Reciprocity Treaty Will Be Promptly Vetoed. Through Representative McCall, of Massachusetts, President Taft notifies congress and the country of his inten tion to call a special session of con gress in the event of the failure by the senate to vote on the Canadian reciprocity agreement. The president's determination in this matter is clearly disclosed In a formal statement given out by the Massachusetts representative as he was leaving the White House after a conference with Mr. Taft. Opponents of the reciprocity plan in the senate have been hoping that the special ses sion talk would prove groundless, but the statement knocks the last prop from under them on this score. Representative McCall, obviously speaking by authority of the president, not only makes it clear that congress will be called back if the senate fails to vote on the agreement, but also serves notice that members who block action on reciprocity at this ses sion will be held responsible for any business depression or disturbance that may result from attempted tariff revision by the Democrats in a spe cial session. The McCall statement goes further. Through it President Taft emphasizes his warning to the Republican party that unless they are prepared now to yield something in the Interest of a reasonable policy of protection an op position will spring up that will wipe from the statute books "the last trace of a protective tariff." The McCall statement conveys a plain intimation to the Democrats that President Taft will veto any tariff re vision that is not in keeping with his own -*heorj» of protective principles. This obviously is intended as a warn ing to the Democrats that any at tempt by them to tack the reciprocity treaty to a radical tariff revision measure in a special session would be blocked by executive action when the measure reaches the White House. Representative McCall's statement makes It apparent that Mr. Taft is not talking special session by way of a threat. The president's attitude is pre cisely as outlined in these dispatches more than a week ago. He feels obli gated under the formal agreement with Canada to call a special session in the event of the failure of congress to act before March 4 next. The agreement between the two countries pledges each to use its "ut most efforts" to bring about the pas sage of the legislation. The president feels that his power to call an extra ordinary session of congress Is includ ed in this "utmost efforts" pledge and that he is in honor bound to fill it. TO HONOR CARDINAL Will Erect Gibbons Hall at Catholic University at Washington. A movement is to be projected by the American hierarchy of the Catho lic church to erect a $200,000 building at the Catholic university at Washing ton, to be known as the Cardinal Gib bone hall. This gift to the university is tc commemorate the fiftieth anniversary of Cardinal Gibbon's ordination to the priesthood and his twenty-fifth yeai as a member of the Sacred College ol Cardinals. The funds to meet the cost of this building will be collected in all of the Catholic dioceses in the United States. Ground will be broken on June 30, which will be the cardinal's anniver sary day. The building will be of gray stone, in Tudor Gothic arcltecture. It will have a frontage of nearly 20fl feet on Michigan avenue and will ex tend along the west line of the univer sity grounds. Gibbons hall will be used for dormitories and administration of flees. Takes Himself to Jail. It was a much surprised man when Warden Collins, of the Northampton county jail, in South Bethlehem, Pa. opened the prison door in response to a knock and was then handed a paper committing the bearer, James McGuire, to Jail for thirty days. Mc Guire promised Squire Enrlght that he would goto jail without an escort. Lyncher Gets Fifteen Years. Oliver Timmons, the third man tc be tried on the charge of murder in connection with the lynching of Carl Etherington, the Anti-Saloon league detective, in Newark, Ohio, last July, was sentenced to serve fifteen yeari in the Ohio penitentiary. He was con- DR. HARVEY W. WILEY. Chemist Calls Us a Nation of Drug Fiends. I I @ 1810, by American Press Association. Calls U. S. Nation of Drug Fiends. After Dr. H. W. Wiley, the noted ] chemist of the department of agri-j culture, declared in New York | that we are a "nation of drug fiends" ; and are wasting billions of dollars ow ing to careless regard for health. Dr. Eugene H. Porter, commissioner of health of New York state; Processor A. C. Abbott, of the department of hy giene at the University of Pennsylva nia; George L. Flanders, president of the Association of State and National Food and Dairy Departments, and oth- j er eminent men at the luncheon of the Republican club made Insistent de mands for a national health board. | "We don't seem to care anything about our health," said Dr. Wiley. "We are the drug habit nation. We don't feel satisfied unless we take "some thing for everything.' We are a coun try of drug fiends, drug slaves. The present indiscriminate sale of drugs threatens the public health fully as seriously as does impure food." Archbishop Ryan's Funeral. One of the most imposing funeral hervices that ever took place in Phila-: delphia occurred when the body of the Most Rev. Patrick J. Ryan, archbishop , of Philadelphia, was interred beneath ! the high altar of the Cathedral of St. ! Peter and St. Paul. The services began with the chant-: ing of the divine office. The anti- | phonarians who performed this office included Cardinal Gibbons, surround ed by his assistants in gorgeous vest-; inents. With the end of the services the officiating clergymen retired to the aacrlsty, where the procession for tho pontifical mass of requiem was form- : ed. Last came the officers of the mass, including Cardinal Gibbons, who pre sided, and Bishop Prendergast, auxil iary of this archdiocese, who was tho celebrant. With them walked Monsignor Fal conio, the papal delegate to the Unit ed States, representing the pope, and Archbishop Glennon, of St. Louis, w..0 preached the funeral perm on. With the return of the cortege to the cathedral tiie body oi* the arch bishop was conveyed to the crypt. I Rothschild Left $145,000,C00. The Neue Freie Pi esse figures that the estate of Baron Albert von Ro hs child, who died in Vienna on Suaday, is worth $145,000,000. Would Revise Tariff at tixtra Session. If an extra session of congress is called by President Taft the Demo crats of the house will start at once to revise several schedules oi' the Payne-Aldrich tariff act. An authorita tive statement to this effect was made by Representative Underwood, of Ala bama, who has been selected as chair man of the new committee ou ways and means. COLES jSSh —' HARnWARF tf buying lianl whatever it may be—"shall I buy? Don't ponder over these things nor spend your time looking at pictures in "cheap goods" mail-order catalogs. Come to our store and let us solve the problem. We have a fine variety of standard goods to choose from. When you think of HARDWARE think of COLE'S. SANITARY PLUMBING. We give special attention to Piping, Steam, Hot Water and Ilot Air Heating. General job work and repairing In all branches, prompt ly and skillfully executed Samuel Cole, - Dushore, Pa. gtnteUM*" . YEAR MINISTER VINDICATED BY CHURCH JURY Woman Accused Him of Im proper Conduct. After a spicy trial before an eccle siastical body of the central Pennsyl vania conference of the Methodist Episcopal church, which lasted nine hours, Ilev. Harry Daniels, pastor of the West Street Methodist Episcopal church, of York, I'a., and chairman of the Anti-Saloon league, was acquit ted of charges of alleged improper conduct, made by Mrs. Edward M. Strom, a pretty young woman, for merly a probationer of his church. Mrs. Schrom previously made an af fidavit befoie a local alderman, charg ing her former pastor with attempting to induce her to come into his parlor for purposes unbecoming the Christian minister. The woman alleges that Rev. Dan iels, after she had entered the par sonage, pulled down the blinds and locked the door so that outsiders couldn't peer in. She threatened to make an outcry, which prevented him from attempting further liberties. When these rumors became current upon the street, Rev. Daniels asked to be heard before a church council that he might vindicate himself against the charges. Rev. Dr. W. W. Evans, superintendent of the Harris burg district, called a meeting and ap pointed an ecclesiastical jury to hear and try the case. After hearing both sides, Rev. Dan iels was found to be "not guilty" and that there were evidences of conspir acy, as he had proven a complete alibi as to the dates made in the charges upon which the offenses were alleged to have been committed. BOSS COX INDICTED Cincinnati Political Leader Is Charg ed With Perjury. George 13. Cox, banker and so-called political boss of Hamilton county, was indicted by the Hamilton county grand jury in Cincinnati, 0., on a charge of perjury. The charge was made a result of a comparison of a record of the 19' 6 grand jury with testimony given out by John A. Gibson, a former county treasurer. Cox testified in 10:'6 that he ha.l not receive ! any portion of the gra tuities which the rta'e iarestlsaii n commission discovered lir.d been nil by verlous b inks to a: 10.-.si thro :or mer county treasurers. Shot His Brother* Charles Avery, twenty-two years of age, shot his brother Calvin, thirty seven years old, at the.homo of the latter in Noblesville, lad. Bad feeling had exieted between the two brothers, and when Charles went to the home of Calvin they met with revolvers. Nine shots were fired. Cal vin was shot through the right breast and a lung penetrated. He can live only a short time. He is married and is the father of six children. Charles Avery is unmarried. He escaped. Rich Farmer Shot to Death. Jeremiah Shaffer, sixty years old," one of the wealthiest farmers in the vicinity of Somerset, Pa., was mys teriously shot and killed near his home. The bullet entered the back of his head and there is no clue to the murderer. State troopers with blood hounds aer Investigating. George IV.'s Gold Robe For George V. King George V.of Great Britain has decided to wear at the coronation the imperial mantle worn by George IV. instead of ttiat worn by Edward VII. It is in a state of perfect pre-erva tlon, is made of the finest cloth of gold and is surrounded with a ieep fringe of pure gold threads.