THE MILLHEIM JOURNAL, PUBLISHED FY FRY Till RSDAY liY R. A. BUMILLER. Office in the Now Journal Building, Penn St.,near Hartman's foundry. §ll.OO PER ANNUM, IN ADVANCE, OB $1.25 IP NOT PAID IN ADVANCE. AcceitaMe CorresjoMeiice Solicited Address letters to MTU.HF.IM JOURNAL. B US INK S S OA BBS. AHARTER, Auctioneer, MILLHEIM, PA. JOHN F. HARTER, Practical Dentist, Ofllcc opposite the Methoillst Church. MAIN STREET, MILLHEIM PA. D. 11. MINGLE, Physician & Surgeon, Ofllice on Mam Street. MILI.IIEIM, PA J. SPRINGER, Fashionable Barber, Shop oppoisite tho Miliheim Banking House. MAIN STREET, MILLHEIM, PA. JQR. GEO. S. FRANK, Physician & Surgeon, EEBERSBURG, PA. Professional calls promptly answered. 3m D. H. Hastings. W. F. lieeder JJASTINGS & REEDER, Atlornejs-at-Law, BELLEFOXTE, PA. Offlee on Allegheny Street, two doors east of the office ocupied by the late liriu of Yocum A Hastings. C. T. Alexander. C. M. Bower. A LEXANDER & BOWER, Attorneys-at-Law, BELLEFONTE, PA. Office in Carman's new building. GEO. L. LEE, Physician & Surgeon, MADISONJ3URG, PA. Office opposite the Lutheran. Church. c - HEINLE, Attorney-at-Law BELLEFONTE, PA. • Practices in all the courts of Centre county. Special attention to Collections. Consultations n German or English. J.A.Beaver. J. W. Gephart. "pVEAVER & GEPHART, Attorneys-at-Law, BELLEFONTE, PA. Office on Alleghany Street. North of High Street HOUSE, ALLEGHENY ST.,' BELLEFONTE, PA. O. G. McMILLEN, PROPRIETOR. Good Sample Room on First Floor. Free Buss to and from all trains. Special rates to witnesses and jurors. QUMMINS HOUSE, BISHOP STREET, BELLEFONT, PA., EMANUEL BROWN, PROPRIETOR. House newly refitted and refurnished. Ev erything done to make guests comfortable. Rates moderate. Patronage respectfully solici ted. My JRVIN HOUSE, (Most Central Hotel in the city.) CORNER OF MAIN AND JAY STREETS, v TH LOCK HAVEN, PA. S.WOODS CALDWELL PROPRIETOR. Good Sample Rooms for Commercial Travel ers on first floor. QT. ELMO HOTEL, i\os. 317 & 319 ARCH ST., PHILADELPHIA.! RATESREHnCEMQS2.OO PER DAY. The traveling public will still find at this Hotel the same liberal provision for their com fort. It is located in the Immediate centres of business and places of amusement and the dif ferent Rail-Road depots, as well as all parts ol the city, are easily accessible by street Cars constantly passing tire doors. It offers special inducements to those visiting the city for busi ness or pleasure. Your patronage respectfully solicited. Jos. M. Feger, Proprietor. JpEABODT HOTEL, 9thSt. South of Chestnut, PHILADELPHIA. One Square South of the New Post Office, one half Square from Walnut St. Theatre and in the very business centre of the city. On the American and European plans. • Good rooms from 50cts to $3.00 per day. Remodel ed and newly furnished. W PAINE, M. D., 46-ly Owner & Proprietor. R. A. BUMILLER, Editor. VOL. 58. MISS PHIPPINS' PACK- ET. Mr. Wardlaw gave rae su3h a cool reception when 1 laid before him the state of my feelings with regard to his daughter Elbe, that I suspended my visits to her. Not that I intended to give her up by any means ; for a few years' hard work and close application, 1 firmly be lieved, would place me on a footing to meet, even Silas Wardlaw's worldly minded scruples. I remembered how Jacob had toiled his way to a wife—two of theui, in fact - and, animated by the example, I was bending every energy to win one su • perior to them both, when one day a piece of news came that poiuted out a shorter cut to happiness. 15y the death of a distant relative I had come in for a legacy of fifty thous and dollars and could have the money, so the letter said, any time I called for it. I kept my good luck a secret—at least, told nobody but my landlady, Mrs. Trevit, she promising not to whisper it. The executor who had the money lived iu a town some miles distant. I could easily ride there and bacK in a day, and resolved to start on the fol lowing morning ; Mrs. Trivet kindly offering, for greater safety,to fix a but ton to my inside breast-pocket, a ser vice of which I thaukfully availed my self. The journey, till I had nearly reach ed home again, was without iucideut worthy of recital. The executor, after taking my re ceipt, had promptly handed me the crisp notes, which I carefully bestow ed in the pocket secured by Mrs. Triv et's button. The last few miles of the road lay a- Jrng the margiu of a river, and it w ? as here, just as the sun was going down, that my thoughts were interrupted by a piercing shriek, followed by loud cries for help. Springing from my horse, and fast ening the rein quickly to a branch, I ran to the spit whence the sounds pro ceeded. • Mr. Tagax, an old gentleman recent ly come to lodge at Mrs. Trivet's,stood on the river's bank calling wildly for assistance. "For Heaven's sake, save her I" he appealed, as I reached the spot. "I know not who she is ; I was sitting here reading when I heard her out cry." A glance explaioed the situation. A young and singularly beautiful woman was struggling iu the water, in momentary peril of being swept beyond the reach of help. I was ou the point of plunging to her rescue, when Jfr. Tagax caught my arm, and said, "You'll endanger your own life if you venture iu with all your clothing." I felt the force of the suggestion,and throwing my coat to Mr. Tagax, leap ed into the river. A few strokes brought me in reach of the imperilled lady, who was appar ently fast sinking. Catching one of her wrists, I placed her hand on my shoulder, and bidding her keep it there, started to swim to the shore. She followed my instructions with singular presence of mind, and in less than a minute we stood safely on the bank. I looked iound for Jfr. Tagax, but he was nowhere to be seen. My coat, too, with the fifty thousand dollars in the pocket, was equally in visible. I uttered a half-suppressed exclama tion, and was about to leave the rescu ed lady to herself, and start on a wild search for my missing property, when I bethought me that most likely Mr. Tagax, in his excitement, had run to call additional help, carrying my coat along with him. Doubtless both would tumd up in good season. Miss Philyra Phippins—that was the name the young lady gave ine—was re siding, she said, for the summer,in the neignborhood ; and while taking her favorite walk that evening, she had stopped to pluck a wild flower on the riyer bank, and catching her foot, had tripped and fallen over. I hurried home, hoping to find Mr. Tagax with my coat there before me ; but, to my chagrin, he had not yet re turned. I retraced the way to the scene of the accident, but be was nowhere to be found, nor could I discover anyone who had seen him since early in the after noon. I hurried back to Mrs. Trivet's, but still lie had not returned. I looked for him in all sorts of likely and unlikely places, but could get trace of him in none. At last the truth dawned upon mo painfully that I had been robbed, and MILLHEIM, PA. THURSDAY, JULY 10., 1884. that. Mr. Tagax, in spite of his venora hie looks, was no better than lie should be. To make a long story short, I saw no moro of Mr. Tagax. From the executor, who was a meth odical man of business, I obtained the numbers of the notes he had paid me, of which I at once advertised a full description, ottering a reward for their restoration. In ;ay trouble, I did not forget, to call on Miss Fbippins, who was not on ly lavish in her thanks, but. profuse in expressions of sympathy for mv lss, while her reprobation of the villiun that bad caused it was even greater than my own. One day I happened to mention to her that business would call me to the town on the morrow. "Might I trouble you with a little commission V" she asked. "I shall esteem it a pleasure, not a trouble," 1 replied. Excusing herself, she returned, after a brief absence, with a sealed packet in her hand. "Here are some papers I wish deliv ered to my guardian," she said. "You'll find his address on the envel ope." Promising to see them safely in hand I took a cordial leave,receiying a press ing invitation to call on my return. Next morning fouud me in the early traiu. At the end of a couple of hours we stopped for refreshments. In getting at my pocketbook I took out Miss Fhippins' packet, and held it an instant in my hand. "This way a moment,if you please," said a man, who, drawing my arm in his, led me to u private room, and said, "I am a detective. I saw a packet in your possession just now, the address on which attracted my attention. Per mit me to look at it." 1 placed it in his hand. Without a word, he began to rip it open. "Stop !" I exclaimed, indignantly. "That was entrusted to me by a lady, and I cannot suffer it to be tampered with." The answer was a peculiar smile as the man proceeded with his work, and drew from the envelope a bundle, not of papers, but of bank-notes, which he and his companion inspected eagerly. "A vouug man was robbed of these lately—at least, they bear the advertis ed numbers," remarked the detective. "And it was I who was robbed of them !" I exclaimed, as my eyes fol lowed his. The two laughed incredulously. "There is a gentleman in this place who knows me," 1 replied. And I gave his name. My friend was sent for, and at once identified me. "Oho !—it's plain enougli now !" said the detective, when I had told ray story. "Mr. Tagax and Miss Philyra Phippins are only aliases for two of a nortorious baud of thieves. The for mer, most likely through the indiscre tion of your landlady, became aware that you were about to receive a sum of money, and probably had his eyes open when she sawed on the button ; and the drowning scene was all a pre concerted trick. Not caring to have the money about him in case of cap ture, Mr. Tagax managed to convey it to Miss Philyra the same night ; and she afterwards took the bold course of making you the messenger to lodge it safely in the hands of the accomplish ed rascal who acts as banker for the gang." The two officers returned with me in the hope of meeting the fair Philyra, but tho pretty bird had already flown. Now that I was prepared to renew negotiations on a ca3h basis, I found Mr. Ward law quite an altered man. As for Effie—bless her faithful heart! —1 was all the same to her, fortune or no fortune. WHAT THE DISEASE WAS. Duinley came into the dining-room and casting a sweeping glance over the table, jammed down into his chair and muttered under his breath : "Liver again, of course. We've bad liver every morning for two weeks." "What's the matter, Mr. Dumley ?" asked the landlady ; "arn't you feeling well this morning ?" "No, madam," he replied, shortly, "I am suffering with liver complaint." THE DIFFERENCE. New York Broker—"No, dear,l can not take you to Saratoga this year." His Wife—" You can't, indeed ? I should like to know why." "I can't afford it." "The idea ! Why, the Simpersins are going to Newport just the same as usual, and Simpersin has failed, too." "Exactly my dear, and I haven't." "Well ?" "Why, I have to stay at home aud pay my debts." A PAPER FOR THBHOME CIRCLE. PICKINGS, Blaine is 00. Tilden is 70. Butler is 00. llowitt is 02. Arthur is 53. Edmunds is 50. Sec. Lincoln is 43. Payne, of Ohio, is 71. There are 9,000 French Canadians in Lowell, Mass. Fig brandy is the natne of a new Calafomia drink. Brazil's navy consists of 3,000 men and fifty vessels. The first copper cent was coined in New Ilaven in 1687. In the English northeastern ports 137 ocean steamships are idle. The first printing press in the United States was worked in 1020. The first steam engine on the conti nent was brought from England in 1753. "The average of a locomotive is thir ty years," said an old Erie Railroad engineer. The Germans increase their navy. Many new vessels are now under con struction. There are 81,717 clergymen and 17,- 207,878 church communicants in the United States. The number of lives lost through dis asters in the first quarter of the present year was 2,154. Tiie late John Collamore, of Boston, left to his family an estate worth more than 81,010,000. Francis Jfurphy has secured more than 4,000 signatures to his temper ance pledge in Chicago. Two slaves formerly owned by Jeff Davis now own his plantation, for which they paid $200,000. The first telegraphic instrument was successfully operated by S. F. B. Morse, the inventor, in 1835. The National Association of Ama teur Oarsmen hold their next annual regatta at Watkins, August 12 and 13. Ten and one- half pouuds of coffee were imported last year,for every man, woman and child in this couutry. Thousands of horses and mules have been killed in the upper swamp coun ties of Mississippi by buffalo gnats. Of a class of 12 young ladies in an academy in Hampton, N. H., a few years ago, 8 liaye died of consumption. There are 450,000,000 Christian now in the world. At the end nf the first century there were only 500,000. A Baltimore man has been sentenc ed to three months' imprisonment and to pay a fine of $25 for lying in a horse trade. The health record of Cincinnatti is reported to have greatly improved since the flood cleansed the unwholesome districts. Within the last nine years 800 churches have been burned iti Ameri ca, mostly through a defective heating apparatus. Ac2ording to the Medical, suicides by drowning are more frequent during the summer, while hanging and poisoning in winter. In the Public Garden of Boston this spring there are 50,000 pansies, 15,000 daisies, 500 forget-me-nots, 1,500 Can terbury bells, and 4,000 tulips. A once wealthy drunkard lost his for tune by profligacy, became a hermit and the other day starved to death at Leominster, Mass. METRICAL, BUT NOT MUSICAL. "You look like a poet," laughed the funny editor, as the handsomely dressed youngster entered. The boy smiled and began fumbling in his pocket. "Maybe you write songs, too, "sug gested the newspaper man. "Yes; sometimes," was the an swer. "Have you got one for me ?'* "Yes, I think / have." "is it sung by long or short me tre?" By this time the young man had fished out a document, which he threw down, yelling excitedly: "Neither, my friend, it is sung by the gas metre. It was a gas bill for $lO. To spend two or three moments on rising and retiring, in rapid frictions of the whole surface of the body with the hands is a more health-promoting op eration, for most persons, than a daily cold water bath. MR. VANDERBILT'S VIEWS. He Discusses the Causes of the Recent Panic. "Making Money Too Fast"—Over doing Business—Building Un necessary Roads—Floating Worthless Securities—A Cheerful Outlook. '1 had a pleasant though not speedy voyage across ill the Baltic,' said Mr. Vanderbilt, 'and received a number of dispatches at Queeuslown and others at Liverpool concerning the financial troubles in New York. After reading and considering these and studying the news given in the papers I was not at all surprised at what had happened. 'lt was merely the result ot overdo ing business. Trust companies and other moneyed interests baye for a long time past loaned large amounts of sur plus money to builJ the railroads and float bonds and other securities that were not needed by the country. The people in .the United States have for some years been making money too fast. They have not stopped to see what value they were getting, but a large class in the community have, as a rule, and iu many cases familiar to us, all made large amounts by placing on the market securities which in ordinary times would be considered worthless. '1 hope,' said Mr. Vanderbilt, 'we shall all profit by it, and that in the fu ture our money institutions will keep themselves within the law and be care ful what securities they deal in. We have seen railroad men, bankers and others controlling large amounts of money not only loaning their credit to these tilings, but asking from others encouragement and aid for what any thinking man well knew .was not need ed. 'We have seen moneyed meu me the means of institutions with which they happened to be connected for their own benefit,and now the day of judgemnet has come home to them. All sorts of schemes are used and fail, one after an other, to bolster up unsound projects, and the innocent shareholder who has already been swindled out ot large sums is made to believe that a little further aid will bring it all back. 'I must not be understood as saying,' Mr. Vandeibilt added, 'or as meaning that there are no good things left.There are plenty of them .but iuvestors should use more judgement in their invest ments. The truth is, people want to make money too fast. There is hardly a good dividend paying investment that is not sound. The one thing need ful in many cases i 3 to get honest men to administer them, and not men who want to make a fortune every year per sonally in stock speculations. 'lf the people owning property would look more to the character of the men employed to govern it, we should not so often as we do hear of these panics. 1 hope now the financial scare has been sufficiently great to enable those who have survived to know the difference be tween a good thing and a bad one. Con fidence in good things is all that is wanted. It is only the confidence given to bad ones that destroys the good. 'No one regrets more than myself,' Mr: Yanderbilt said, 'the existence of these disturbances, inasmuch as so many innocent people must of necessity suffer. Every one has his own ideas of the causes of such calamities. I haye given you my views. If they lead any one to reflect before action, I shall have been fully repaid for the expression of my thoughts. I hope all will go well, and though the storm has had a large sweep and carried much before it, I have not yet made up my mind to aban don hope for the future. I feel sure that a sound recoyery is not far ahead of us. It will surely coine." A 31ATCII. Mr. Clewdrop was slowly walking down Alabama street when he saw one of his friends wildly striding toward him. "What is your hurry ?" asked Mr. C., catching him by the coat. "Don't stop me !" yelled the other, struggling to get free,"turn me loose." "Anything wrong ?" gasped Clew drop. "No, no, but let me go." "What are you rushing so for V" "Oh, hang it I'm walking for a match." "If that's all," smiled Clewdrop, feeling in his vest pocket, "I can give you oue without your walking yourself to death for a match." TIIE CLANS GATHERING. "Where is the bar ?" asked a gen tleman, hurriedly, as he registered at a Chicago hotel. "Just around to the left, sir." "Where is the bar ?" asked anoth er gentleman, at the same place a moment later. "Just around to the left, sir." "Where is the ba " "Just around to the left, sir. By Jove," the clerk continued, "the dele gates are beginning to come in.' Terms, SI.OO per Year, in Advance. Starting a Newspaper. Did you over start a paper ? No ? Well,you ought to try it. Falling down stairs with a stove on top of you is nothing to be compared to it In point of excitement. The name of the paper was the /ferine, and it was started to 'fill a long-felt want/ Jerry Cochrane was ray partner. There were several very comfortable things about that pa per. For instance, Jerry and I always knew on Monday that we wouldn't have enough money to pay the hands off on .Saturday, and we never did. The hands knew it. too, and so their nerves were never shocked by a disappoint ment. We ran that way for awhile, getting more deeply into debt all the time. At last, one morning, I entered the office and found Jerry looking rath er solemn. 'Jerry,' says I,'you want a partner.' 'Yes, we need a now one. Hob,' he rejoined. 'A business man,' said he. 'A financier,' I observed. 'A man who can take hold of the tiling and turn it into money,' he concluded. Then I'll get the man you want,' 1 said, and introduced Frank Hitchcock, the Sheriff. Jerry said Frank was the very man he had been thinking of, so we in stalled him at once, sir. lie ran the paper with the greatest success until he had turned it entirely into money. When we wound up the concern there was nothing left but two passes one to Cincinnati and one to Burling ton. We divided them, and went in different directions. 'I got to Burlington feeling pretty bad. I was about 200,000 miles in debt, having managed to owe everybody I knew. I would haye owed the strang ers, too, only I had no way of making their acquaintance. One day I remark ed to Mrs. Burdette that I'd go over and see if I couldn't get a job on tbe Hawk eye. I postponed it for awhile and one day the business manager came over tc offer me a place. I could haye hugged the man, but I didn't want to be demonstrative, so I held back rather coyly. lie asked me if I had anything in view, and I told him I had. It was the truth, as I had an idea of going out to the poorhouse, if I could gft a ride on the cars ; I was too proud to walk. Well, he urged me, and I finally agreed to take the matter into consideration. I was to go in at 6 o'clock the next afternoon, and I bid him a chilly good day. For fear I'd miss the train, I was down there at a quarter to four, but when I entered the Hawkeye office I walked in like a lord and called the business manager 'Charley' slapping him familiarly on the back. I tell you his offeriug the place gave me a great moral advantage, and I used it, the re sult being that I was allowed the usual pricely salary of a reporter. I worked along for awhile, and finally Vrot an interest in the Hawkeye. A curious thing happened after awhile, which has caused me to laugh many a time. There was four of us on the edi torial page, Frank Hattou, John F. White and John Burdette, my brother. Frank was the first one taken from that glorious band, and he became First z\.s sistant Postmaster-General.John White followed by becoming Postm;ister of Burlington, and my brother was then api>ointed collector in the first internal revenue district of Ohio. Frank was born m Cadiz, White in Ravenna, and my brother in Cincinnati, all in the same State. I was from Pennsylvania and didn't get anything. It men for offices.'—Burdette. The Uselessne3s of Profanity. 'Suppose you Are given to a habit of profanity,' says Prof. Swing, 'you enter luto conversation with a maD who nev er swears; in other words a gentleman. By and by you begin to perceive that he is the superior man. Your remarks haye a tame, flat, feeble sound to your owuears. Your cheeks begin to burn with a sense of your friend's excellence. Your pert little oaths sound rough and coarse and vulgar, as they are. They begin to drop out of your sentences, ashamed to remain in the company of good, honest English words, until, as you discover that you are carrying on your part of the conversation without swearing you feel easier, and your in tellectual stature is increased by a foot. Just observe this, my boy, and see if I am not right. 'But you will rip out some time, oh, yes, in some way you will. I know some good men—some of the best in the world—who will 'coufound it,' and in New England even a deacon has been known, under a terrible strain, to 'condemn it.' But as a rule, my son, don't do it. It isn't an evidence of smartness or worldly wisdom. Any fool can swear. And a great many fools do. I, my son V Ah, if I could only gather up all the useless, uncalled for, ineffective swears I dropped along the pathway of ray life I know 1 would remote- stumbling-blocks from many inexperienced feet, and my own heart would be lighter by a toil than it is to day. But if you are going to be a fool j i.>t because other men have been, oh, my son, my son, what an awful, what a colossal, wbat a hopeless fool you will be.' SUBSCRIBE for the JOURNAL. NO. 27- NEWSPAPER LAWS. If subscribers order the discontinuation of newspapers, the punllt-lwts may cottfiuue to send thetn until all arrearages are paid. If su User I hers refuse or neglect to take their newspapers from the (>file to w hlCh they are sent they are held resptntsi hie until they have settled the bills and ordered them discontinued. If subscribers move to other places without In 1 forming the publisher, and the newspapers ar sent to the former place, they are res|>oubible. I ADVERTISING RATRB. 1 wk. 1 mo. I 3 mos. 6 mos. 1 year 1 square *u no $4 UO $5 uo $6 00 SBOO licoluinn 400 6 001 10 00 15 00 18 C 0 % " 700 10 00 1500 3000 4000 1 " 10 00 15 00 1 25 00 45 00 75 00 One inch makes a square. Administrators and Executors' Notices $2.50. Transient adver. tlseinents and locals 10 cents per line for first insertion and 5 cunts per line for each addition al insertion. Health Maxims. Nature is very much like a shiftless child who, the more he is helped the more he looks for it. The more medi cine a man takes,the more be wiil have to take, whether it be anodyne, tonic or alterative. The thinnest veil er silk handkerchief thrown over the face while riding or walking against a cold wind is a remarkably comfortable pro tection. Exercise to the extent of great fa tigue does more harm than good. A hearty meal, taken while excess ively fatigued, has often destroyed health. Chilliness of body often dampens the spirits, sours the and renders the whole man unlovely. Cleanliness in all the surrounding pf a E family mansion pays richly in many ways, in good health, moral elevation, personal comfort, and dollars and cents besides. Life is warmth, growth, repair and power to labor, and all these are derived from the food we eat and fluids we drink and these should be good. Nine-tenths of the inmates of insane asylums who recover are those who are sent within a year of the first manifes tation of their infirmity. The worst cold may be promptly cur ed if, within twenty-four hours after it has been taken, the patient will keep warm in bed and eat little or nothing for a day or two. In going out into a colder air keep the mouth resolutely closed, and walk briskly for a few minutes,thus prevent ing a chilliness which is always the pre cursor of a cold. The portion of the body which most requires protection against the cold and wind is that between the shoulder blades behind, as it is at that point the lungs are attached to the body and the blood is easily chilled. A good cleansing of the entire body with soap and warm water once a week is all the bathing the/iuman system re quires for purposes of health, inordi nary circumstances. At every period of life, at all seasons of the year, and from the tropics to the poles, in clime and country the temper ature of the human body in health is the same to a degree, that is, ninety eight of Fahrenheit; hence we should eat in the winter mainly of warming food, such as meats, fats, oils, sugar and all the grains, farinas and starches; in summer, the fruits and berries and melons and vegetables of the field, the garden and the orchard .which cool and open and ventilate the system. AN EMPTY TIN CAN. ✓ ■ Picked up by two Tramps In the Oil Regions with Startling Re sults. Two tramps begged some coffee at a store in Warren, Pa They had an old tin can,in which they said they intend ed to boil it. They took tbe coffee and went to an out-of-the-way spot near the gas works. One of them began to build a fire, and the other placed the can on tbe ground. Seating himself on the can, he watched his companion busying himself with the fire. When the latter was ready the tramp who had built it picked up a stone and jok ingly exclaimed to the other one : "Get up there and produce the sup per !" At the same time he tossed the stone toward his companion. It sti uck the can with considerable force, and instant ly there was a terrible explosion. The tramp who was sitting on tbe can was thrown several feet in the air, and the • other oue was knocked down by the concussion. The latter jumped up and run away. The other one was picked up and carried to the county poorhouse. His hips and thighs aud the lower part of his back were literally torn away. He at first gave his name as Robert El lis, but on being told that he would die he said that Ellis wa9 not his name. He then gaye to the authorities another name, which is that of a member of one of the most prominent families in Pennsylvania. The authorities will not roveal it, at the request of the dy ing tramp. The can which the tramps had pick ed up was an empty uitro glycerine can. Enough of the compound re mained in it to cause the explosion as stated, only a few drops being required to prove extremely destructive. Simi lar explosions through the careless dis posal of empty caus are not uncommon in the oil regions. AN OLD FABLE REVISED. "Look here, waiter," called a feeder at a city resturant, "look ot the hair I found in this turtle soup." "Yes, l see. You have beard of that famous race between the turtle and the hare ?" "Yes. What of it ?" "Why, in this case the hair and tur* tie came in even."