Republican News Item. VOL. XIY. NO 49 FIRST NATIONAL BANK, ZEXUO-IHIES-VXXaLIE], CAPITAL STOCK I $50,000 W. C. FRONTZ President. Surplus and FRANK A. REEDER, Cashier. Net Profits, 75 - 000 * DIRECTORS: Transacts a General Wm - Frontz > John c - LaU ' d ' C " w * ? 0 T n , es ' „ ~ . wC. Front/., Frank A.Reeder, Jacob Per, Banking Business. AV. T. Reedy, Peter Fronb, Accountsoflndivid- j g Bull, John Ball. uals and Firms solicited. Safe Deposite Boxes for Rent, One Dollar per Year. 3 per cent. INTEREST PAID ON TIME DEPOSITS. cole's *mlh —~ Up-To-Date HARDWARE stove, washer, cutlery, gun," —or 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 t'"" k ~112 COLE'S. SANITARY PLUMBING. We give spdcial 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. Season's Best Dress Goods There's nothing lacking in our Dress Goods Department, We can't imagine how you can fail to find what you want here at any paice from 50c to $2.00. Stocks are large and varied; fabrics are new, many of them are exclusive. The prices are down to the low est notch. Serges, Htnriettas, Batistes, Wool Taffetas, Panamas, Diagonals, Striped effects, Tussah lioyal and neat Fancy Suitings. Ladies' Kid Gloves. In all the wanted styles of Gloves and fashionable new shades for spring wear. Good gloves for SI,OO. The very best for sl.f>o Ladies' New Suits and Gowns. From scores of shoppers, buyers" would be more accurate, we hear expressions of delight at the attractive styles we are showing at the low prices they are marked. Dress Trimmings. In the new desirable styles for all sorts of gowns and waists are here in full force. Black, white and colored bands and appliques in rich designs. Gold and silver iffects in bands and all-overs. Fancy yoking, etc. Fancy Dress Silks* And Foulards in all the newest colorings, neat designs in light and dark shades. Cheyney's shower-proof Foulards are the most serviceable made. Beautiful patterns, 211 inches wide for 85c a yard. SHOPBELL DRY GOODS CO., 313 PINE STREET, WILLIAMSPORT - PENN'A. PRINTING TO PLEASE * a L u,c me we TTtem Office. LAPORTE, SULLIVAN COUNTY PA. FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 1910. FOREST FIRE GIVES LAPORTE A SCARE Ravaging Flames Threaten To Destroy Buildings. Last Saturday evening the alarm of fire was sounded in Laporte, and a lire in the woods came raging up the hill from the border of the Lake. There was a furious cold wind which drove the fire directly toward Ford's Cottage, the Cem etery, the School House and the Gansel Cottage. It was realizb at onee by those who reached the fire, that it must be stopped, or very serious damage done to the town. The bells were rung and a call for help telephoned to Tannery Town which was quickly responded to. Men and women also came to fight the fire; but fire cannot be fought to much advantage without water, and none was near, but many brought pails full, and very soon active hands were raking away leaves, and pounding the advancing (lames with wet hemlock branches. When it was possible back fire ing was resorted to, but not much could be done back firing against the wind, and it seemed at times that it would be impossible to save the buildings. About midnight it was thought the lire was so much subdued that a few could handle it, but that was a mistake. The fire got a new start, and the bells were rung again, and the fire fighters came back, but it was found that the fire had ap proached much nearer to the build ings and the danger was greater than ever. The wind blew a per fect gale and drove before it showers of sparks starting new fires which luul to be extinguished at once. It was after four o'clock in the morning before it was fully checked, and even then it has to be watched. Some of the workers remained un til daylight bofore the fire was com pletly extinguished. The citizens of the Borough appreciated very highly the assistance rendered by the active residents of the Tannery Village. It is satisfactory to know that the fire has so completly cleaned up the woods in that section that no danger from lire is apprehended from that direction again. Ed. Kennedy Believed to Have Been Robbed. Says the Towanda Daily Review —Ed. Kennedy a lumberman from Kicketts, is believed to have been robbed in Towanda Monday night, lie was found on the sidewalk in the rear of the Keystone opera house by a boy, who notified Special Officer D. W. Allen, who took Kennedy to the lockup. Kennedy was very much intox icated, and was unconscious to all that took place. Yesterday morn ing when arraigned before Burgess Foust on the charge of intoxication he made a statement which was found to l>e true, and which shows that some one "touched him" for his money. He came to Towanda on the even ing train Monday, and had s24.(>r» in his possession. The last he re membered about his money he had SIO, but when taken into custody he had only a dollar which was in another pocket. Burgess Frost sus pended sentence. Chief Miller has made an in vestigation, and is satisfied that Kennedy was robbed. Lopez Man in Trouble. Alex Honjkulich of Lopez was brought to this place Tuesday and lodged in the jail on the charge of assault and cruelty preferred by his wife. After a short sojourn in the county safety vault he dug up the price of freedom and was allowed togo his way. Mr. Honjkulich is a native of Austria Hungary. ORDER REHEARIN6S ON TRUST GASES Supreme Court Action Puts Off Decision on Government Suits for a Year Perhaps NO EXPLANATION IS OFFERED The Court Desires a Full Bench to Decide Them —With Two Vacan cies the Court is Evenly Divided— Interest in Brewer's Successor. Washington, D. C., April 19. —In the brief announcement that the cases of the government against the Standard Oil Company and the American Tobac co Company were ordered for rehear ing, the Supreme Court demonstrated the absoluteness of its power and threw the industrial world backward in Its history at least a twelvemonth. This decision is taken to mean that the court is divided 4 to 3 on these Important cases. Whether the court j stood for or against the Government is of course purely a matter of specu lation, but the report current at the Capitol to-day was that three of the Justices had stood for the Govern ment's contentions and three againßt j them, with one member of the court | undecided. This would make at 4 to 1 3 decision whichever way the one un i decided member voted, and it is be lieved that the court came to the con clusion that at least a majority of the full court of nine ought to be behind decisions of so great importance to ; the business world. ! Late this afternoon President Taft let It be known that this action of ; the court had not in any way altered , his intentions with regard to the filling j of the vacancy caused by the death of | Justice Brewer two weeks ago. No I date was set for the rehearing, but in | the natural course of events It can I hardly come much, If any, before the | Christmas recess. The order In the two great trust cases completely surprised all in the courtroom. It is another evidence of the absolute secrecy which surrounds the doings of the Supreme Court, that not an Inkling of what was to come had reached even the closest of the court attaches. BEVEN DIE IN AGONY. Three Women and Four Men Succumb from Wood Alcohol. Westerly, K. 1., April 18. —As a re sult of drinking whiskey of the "made while-you-wait" brand three women and four men are dead in or near this city, and so great is the excitement over the tragedies that Attorney Gen eral Greenough, at Providence, has ordered an investigation into the deaths and also of all places in which so-called medicinal whiskey Is made and sold. The Dead. DOUGHERTY, EDWARD, Pawca tuck, Conn. HOOD, CHARLES H„ Pawcatuck, Conn. LARROW, HENRY, Pawcatuck, Conn. MURRAY, MRS. ELLEN, Westerly, R. I. PERRIN, W. D„ Hopklnton, R. I. TUCKER, MRS. ALBERT, Wester ly, R. I. HUGHES DEMANDS INQUIRY. Calls for Legislative Investigation Into Bribery. Albany, N. Y., April 18. —In a spe cial message Gov. Hughes called on the Legislature to follow up through a general Investigation the trails of legislative corruption laid bare by the Allds bribery trial and the Hotchklss investigation into the business meth ods employed by the fire insurance companies. "They have caused every honest citizen to tinge with shame and in dignation, and have made irresistible the demand that every proper means should be employed to purge and to purify," said the Governor In his mes sage. The message was formulated by the Governor after a report summarizing the results of his investigation had been submitted to him by State Super intendent of Insurance Hotchklss. JOY RIDERS IN ENGINE KILLED. Four Bodies Found In Wreck at Foot of Steep Embankment. Oil City, Pa., April 19.—1n the wreck of a locomotive found at the foot of a steep embankment on the Baltimore ft Ohio narrow gauge line, between Shlppenvllle and Clarion, the bodies of four men were found. There were those of Engineer Kel ley. Fireman Watsoti of Foxburg, D. Dennlson and M. Neuland of Luclnda. The latter were friends of the engi neer and fireman. The wreck occur red during the night at a time when no other trains were moving, and it Is believed the party was having a Joy riue va the englnn cab. FOUR MEN CLIMB MOUNIM'ILEy Members of Fairbanks Expedi tion Reach Summit After a Month's Work COOK DATA WAS NOT FOUND Tom Lloyd's Party from Fairbanks Got to the Summit on April 3 After a Month's Effort—Two Peaks Visit ed —Cut Steps in Ice for 4,000 Feet. Fairbanks, Alaska, April 19.—Tho party consisting of Thomas Lloyd and three companions which left here three months or so ago to attempt the ascent of Mount McKinley, the highest mountain In North America, has suc ceeded In its purpose. The summit was reached on April 3 after a month of steady climbing from the base of the mountain. The party left Fairbanks on Decem ber 22. They established a camp at the base of the peak in March. No trace of Dr. Cook's ascent could be found on either peak and no re cords were discovered. Thomas Lloyd led the party. His companions on the perilous ascent were W. R. Taylor, Charles McQoni srle and Daniel Patterson. There were six other men In the party, but they were left in charge of the four camps which were established on the way to ward the top of the Great Peak. According to Lloyd no trouble was experienced In making the ascent for the first 12,000 feet. The next 4,000 feet, however, was covered only after steps had been hewn out of a solid sheet of ice. The final dash was made by the four men from the last camp which had been established at tho lt>,ooo foot level. The expedition was financed by August Peterson and William McPhee of Fairbanks when the Cook contro versy was raging. The obstacles encountered were not so great as had been predicted. Four camps were established during the as cent and a trail was blazed all the way to the crest. Up to 12,000 feet the climbing did not present unusual diffi culties. For the next 4,000 feet the way led over a steep Ice field which at first seemed to forbid further progress, but over which upon exploration it was found possible to establish a path. The final dash to the top was made from the 16,000 foot camp. Mount McKinley terminates In twin peaks of equal height, one somewhat rounded and covered with snow, the other com posed of bare and wind swept rock. On the rocky peak the Fairbanks climbers placed an American flag in a monument of stones. The expedition was provided with Dr. Cook's maps and books and at tempted to follow and verify his route, but failed to do so. In the centre of a great Alaskan wilderness, 20,300 feet high, stands Mount McKinley, In latltlde G3 de grees, longitude 151 degrees west, forming the apex of a great watershed. EDITOR KILLS MAYOR. Result of Three Years of 111 Feeling In Morehouse, Mo. Morehouse, Mo., April 18. —Claude B. Hay. editor of the Hustler, a local newspaper, shot and killed in the main highway Dr. L. \V. Hart, the Mayor of Morehouse. The tragedy marks an epoch In a feud that has lasted three years and has involved all of the public men In this part of Missouri in one phase or another of the bitter controversy. The friends of the leaders in both factious say to night they fear for further conse quences, owing to the wrought-up state of the community. Hay and Hart both come from old and prominent families of this State, and each has been influential In town and county politics. NO MORE COEDS AT TUFTS. Trustees Adopt Reports In Favor of Separating the Sexes. Boston, April 14. —Separation of the sexes at Tufts College was decided upon by the trustees after a special committee of the trustees had report ed to the full board of recommenda tion for the establishment of a wom en's department at the college next fall, to be known eventually as the Jackson College for Women. The com mittee urges that action be taken at once to raise the necessary funds. Loses Life from a Canoe. Pittsburg, Pa., April 12.—William Knlpe, 17 years old, of Wilkinsburg, was drowned when he and his brother in-law, Ernest M. Johnson, opened the canoeing season in the Allegheny Riv er. The men of whom they rented a canoe had argued that It was pressing the season, and had tried to persuade them to take a skiff. 75C PER YEAR MUTUAL CHARGED WITH EVADING LAW Superintendent Hotchkiss' Re port Filed at Albany Says It Merits Severe Criticism MORE PAID THAN RECEIVED Accusations Against the Insurance Company Were Made After a Long Investigation of Its Business with Evidence to Support Them. Albany, N. Y., April 19—The .Mu tual Life Insurance Company, as late as 1908, was evading the Armstrong Law (which its Irregularities helped to place on the statute books after the Hughes Investigation, by making Il legal payments to its agents for ob taining new business. The Board of Directors of the Mu tual Life Insurance Company, acting under the advice of Joseph H. Choate and James McKeen, In 1908, squand ered nearly a quarter of a million of the policy holders' dollars by "com promising" the suits against McCurdy and others, exceedingly $0,000,000, but reduced by counter claims to $3,000,- 000, the compromise costing $250,000 more than the company received. The Mutual Life Insurance Com pany at the end of 1908 understated its liabilities by more than half a mil lion dollars. These accusations, with direct evi dence to support them, are made in a report which has been placed on iiie here by State Superintendent of In surance Hotchklss after a searching Investigation of the company's busi ness for the years 1906-7-8. "The company merits severe criti cism" for those palpable infractions of the law," the report reads, although In other ways the investigation re vealed valuable reforms. The woist offence, the report declares, was squandering $250,000, under the legal guidance of Choate and McKeen. The committee's statement advising the compromise was, in Superintend ent Hotchkiss's mind, "untrue in at least two particulars and deceptive in one more." Concerning the first-named viola tion of the Armstrong Law, the report says: "The examiners find that during the year 1908 the company paid for supervision of old business," the sum of $354,114. There is no record at the home office of the company which satisfactorily explains what was done in return for the expenditure of this money. "The company claims It was paid In good faith to various agents for look ing after business already on the booka, to prevent the lapsing of poli cies. The examiners state, however, that an investigation of a few of the branch agencies, which received a considerable part of this amount, leads to the inevitable conclusion that the money was paid, not for supervising old business, but substantially In the form of business to those agents who were most successful in securing new business." It is pointed out that In this way the salutary purposes of Section 97 can be utterly defeated. "The examiners also note that in 1903, during a campaign for the elec tion of directors, the company In creased its agents' advances by more than double the amount paid during any other quarter of the year, and that during the same period the man agers expended $168,351 more than they had been authorized to expend by the Committee of the Board of Di rectors." SEE THEIR MOTHER SLAIN. Two Children Are Eye Witnesses to Their Father's Crime. New Rochelle, N. Y., April 18. —Mil- ton Wood, a Janitor in a mat factory at North Pelham, went to 51 Winy ah avenue, New Rochelle, where his wife went to live after she had left him two weeks ago, and shot her four times. One bullet pierced her heart and killed her Instantly. The crimes was witnessed by Wood's two children and Thomas King. AVood acknowledged the crime, and the re volver was found in his pocket. Wood and his wife, who are negroes, came to New Rochelle from the West Indies several years ago. MRS. SAYLER GUILTY. Dr. Miller Too—Her Sentence Three Years for Manslaughter. Watseka, 111., April 18.—Mrs. Lucy Sayler and Dr. William R. Miller were found guilty of killing J. Byron Say ler, Mrs. Sayler's husband, July V. last.. The Jurors after deliberating thirty six hours fixed the crime as man slaughter, and directed, as is their legal privilege in this State, that Mrs. Sayler be imprisoned for three years •nM Dr. Miller for twelve years.