Bellefonte, Pa., Nov. 27, 1896. MY CREED. ALEXANDER MCLECD. What's good and pure in any creed I take and make it mine. Whatever serves a human need I hold to be divine. I ask no proof that bread is bread, And none that meat is meat. Whate're agrees with heart and head That food T mean to eat. Man sunectifies the holiest robe: Truth sanetifies the Look. The purest temples on this globe Are mountain, grove and hrook. That spot of earth where®re it be, To me is holy ground Where man is striving to be tree— Freedom or death has found. . The crown upon an empty head I hold as cap of fool. The scepter from whien wisdom’s fled Has lost the right to rule. The purple robe on coward’s back Does not inspire my awe. The ermine and the coat of black I honor not as law, I try the king, the judge, the priest The common man and woman. From the mightiest to the least, By one great law—the human. I find true men where're 1 look Of every creed and nation. Mid sons of toil in darkest nook, As in the loftiest station. The man wo has no faith in wan I hold unworthy trast, Fhe man who does the best his can Will stand among the jnst, Whatever creed serves man the best I hold the hesi of creeds. I recognize no other trust, Of faith than life and deeds, The trath that elevates the mind And purifies te heart, That teaches love of all mankind And blunts adiliction’s dart. hat dries the orphan’ widow's tear And ait Flat tenth, withiont ado? ates thelr loss — i ike as gold from dross, POLLY ANSON'S “YRISH CHAIN. BY MARTHA MCCULLOCH-WILLIAMS, “I don’t really sce how Polly had the face todo it! Weall know what made her piece this quilt,” Mrs. Gartley said, in a half-whisper, to her next ncighbor, Mrs. Carter, as they stood by their chairs eying the blue and white expanse. 2 ti :8—sh! She'll hear you,’ ‘Mya. Car-| seem to | ter returned. “Besides, it don’t me quite faiv to say that. Polly's been al- ways a good industrious girl ; she made quilts and cushions and tidies long hefore Len Baxter ever came to see her.” “But she made this a purpose to take home to housckeepin’ with him,’ Mrs. Gartley persisted. “If I had been in her mother’s place, I'd never in the world have made all this to-do of a quiltin’ over it. Do you know, iliey’ve even invited Len to come with the other boys this evenin’? 1] must say that shows mighty little pride— the way things stand.” “So do I,” said a third woman, Miss Maria Agnew, coming up behind the others and bending over the quilt. they've stretched this tight in the frames !” she went on. “We won't have any ends to our fingers left time we quilt it in the rose pattern ; and that’s the only thing the | least fit for the Irish chain.” “If I'd asked my neighbors to help me, it would have been on something easier,” Mrs. Gartley assented, tapping the taut surface. “Everybody knows a quiltin’ ought to be mostly a Ivolic ; but then Mrs. Anson was always the greatest manager ; she'll give us a fine dinner, and get the worth of it in work.” “If you grudge it, you might have staid i away : that’s what I'd do in that case,” Mrs. Carter said, so pointedly the others looked a thought abashed.~ After a minute she spoke more gently ; *‘I think it is | hardly fair, and certainly not kind, to talk so about Polly, when we really know nothing more than that for six months Len | Baxter seemed to have eyes for no one clse, and then all at once came here no more. Nobody knows the reason. Polly may have refused him—"’ “She didn’t I” Mrs. Gartley said, with startling energy. “It ain'tdikely. an’ him the hest chance in the county. ownin’ land all round the Anson place,” Miss Agnew supplemented. “I shall always believe,”” she went on, “Polly must have made fun of him ter somebody, an’ he got ahold of it. You know she’s a sassy piece, an’ jest 's full of mischief as she cun live ; an’ Len he's mighty high-strung—all the Baxters ever I saw was that way. While I W’leeve Polly would of took him at the drap of a hat, I think she wanted sorter to act in- dependent to other folks, an’ let on as she didn’t keer about whether she ever seen him again or not. I said all along, how easy it would be for somebody to go an’ | make trouble—"’ “Oh, pshaw ! Miss Maria. You old maids are always makin’ up romances,’ Mis. Gartley broke in, eagerly, but with a curious down look. ‘‘’Ain’t Len got the same right to flirt, or even change his mind, as any other young fellow ? We all know they do it, even them that have not got half he has to make it worth a woman's while to take ‘em. I said first, as I siy now, he just go tired and quit. Polly won't die of it, neither ; but nobody can make me believe she wouldn't give her eye-teeth to have him back again.” ‘Of comse you say that. You don’t want ter admit Dora Gartley’s wearin’ Polly's old shoes,” Miss Agnew said, a thought tartly, looking across the room as she spoke. ‘Lor!’ she went on, ‘Dora does look washed out side o’ Polly !' You better tell her not ter go close ter her when the boys come in.’ “But Dora is really very stylish.”” Mrs. Carter said, kindly. Mis. Gartley moved away in high dud- geon. Across the room she stopped to say to Mrs. Squire Bell that she did think old maids ought to be shut up in asviums like lunatics ; they were so poison cantanker- ous, they spoiled whatever they came to, and they would go everywhere in spite of faith. _— Mrs. Bell only smiled. She was a kind motherly woman, with thick silver-white hair. Polly was her god-child, and she knew cnongh of the deeps and shallows of | the quilting got on famously. current gossip to comprehend something of what was working in the Gartley mind. There were at least twenty women be- tween eighteen and sixty gathered there in the Anson dining-room. It had hig wooden beams in the ceiling. The quilt swung by ropes running up to staples in the beams. quilting there, in place of using the parlor or the big square light chambers, of which she had so many. Indeed, she had the greatest plenty of room everywhere. The back piazza, that to-day would serve for dining-room, was twelve feet wide, and | ran the length of the house. I open windows you could see the long table | there, already sprewd with fine linen and glass and silver and china. Through the windows came, too, wafts “My! but] of ripe October air. Frost had fallen the | warm the nipped asters and chrysan- [‘themums held up their heads afresh, and i late rose-buds unfolded to faint-hued | blossoms, but the sweeter for their pale- ness. Some deep blue flowers, too—a | lustier sort of forget-me-not—had come | out plentifully along their lower branches. | Polly had stuck a knot of them in her belt, | and another among her straw-yellow braids. {She had a dimpled rose-leaf face, lit by dancing dark eyes. Perhaps she did not [ know nor care how much the blue flowerets i accented her piquant loveliness. She had been very wretched ever since the quilting was bruited, though she felt the force of what her mother said of it. | Yes, the neighbors—some of them, at least | —would gloat over what they called her | disappointment. She had meant to keep Because of them Mrs. Anson did all her, Through the week before, but now it was warm—so | N | would begin with shaking the cat in the | master-piece of stitchery. “I wouldn’t have such a thing as that | at my house, not for the world! It's so old-fashioned and tacky,” Dora Gartley said to Jennie Crewe. Jennie did not answer at once. She was round and rosy— { next to Polly Anson, easily the prettiest | girl in the room. “I don’t see the harm,’’ she said at last. | ‘Of course there ain’t anything really in | it, but I’ve heard grandma say she never knew it fail when she was young, and | folks believed in it, that the one the cat | | jumped out by was always the one to marry first.” | “You have got it wrong, Jinny !"’ Polly i | said, coming up to them with her tortoise- | | ; “ | shell kitten in her arms. She had tied a : blue ribbon about its | throat, the contact of silk and fur brought lout all its white roundness. ‘No! lare half right,” she went on. *‘That is worse, you know, ever so much worse, than being all wrong. We about the quilt for shaking, a man next a ‘maid, and whoever puss jumps hetween are {in honor bound to marry each other, or! else discredit the sign.” © “Then I'll take care whom 1 stand be- Dora blushed anh looked down Several young men | away. | consciously. neck—the color . [ matched exactly the flowers in her hair. i | As the little creature nestled against her | You | must stand ! side,” Jennie said, laughing. Polly darted | were | “Accept my congratulations, please,’ | Polly said to them, with a brave smile, as they turned about. The rest followed her | lead, crowding about the chosen pair, | shaking hands and felicitating them until | Len was half wild. Polly’s gay speeches, | | her winsome smiles, stung him like a lash. | Normally he was a sane, self-contained . young fellow ; but sanity and self-restraint | are apt to fall when they come under great | strain after months of torturing unrest. He had loved her—ah heavens ! how he had : loved !—loved her still in the face of that which should slay the strongest love. She | knew his love, had betrayed it, and now mocked him with light words, lighter laughter, as though she rejoiced to show him how little his presence or his ahsence | could mean to her. As time went on to supper and the danc- ing, Len’s purpose grew fixed ; he would shame and wound Polly as she was wound- It was warmer than at mid-day, {ing him. | the sky thick with scuddiug clouds, and a | damp south wind at play in the painted ; trees. Belated crickets piped desolately, : the peacocks in the oak-trees now and again | gave their raucous night cry.. But within | all was frolic, flitting figures, and merry noise. The fiddlers were a thought late, else already the oaken floor would resound with rhythmic feet. out on the back piazza. great friends—good comrades, indeed. They | secret all her small housewifely prepara- (coming through the door, Len Baxter the | had not met for two weeks, hence had | tions, but the Gartleys were forever run- [ning in, and both mother and daughter (had fine eyes for spying, and tongues | I liberal in telling of what the eyes had | So the neighborhood had come to | seen. understand that Polly was ‘‘fixin’ to get | married.” That was the same as though her engagement had heen announced. Then | when the cloud came—all at once, and un- Laccountably—she had writhed in the thought of how gossip would roll the news ! of it under the tongue. «That is, when the first intolerable ache let her think of anything beyond loss of her lover. Even yet she did not quite know how she had lived through the weeks | when first Den rode past the house every + day without ever so ‘much as looking to- wards it. They seemed to her now like a ' big black blur. fully the most trival detail of her happy time. Gspecially the last week : she remembered the very look and flavor of the ! strawberries Len brought her—the first ' from his fine beds ; she could smell the jasmine in the garden, and hear the robins singing in the honeysuckle arbor down at the farther end of it. Her father’s sly jokes, too, and the twinkle in his eye as he reminded her of certain old antipathies to the Baxter name. They dated hack to Grandfather Baxter. who wasa high, stern- ly pious old soul, and had reproved Polly { for dancing, when she could no more help it than an elf or a will-o’-the-wisp. She could see, too, her mother’s look of brooding content. From the first Len had won upon her; he had told Polly more being sure of her mother’s countenance he dared to persist with her She had carried herself high and proudiy towards him— now she could not rejoice enough in the thought. And how she had laughed when her namesake, black Polly Anson, who [now lived and worked upon the Gartley place, had come begging “Miss Polly’ to | write a letter for her ! “Hit got ter be er sorter lub-letter,’’ the | black girl explained, sheepishly. *‘An’ I | mought git de hang on hit hetter'n our ! Miss Dora.” . Tt was an odd sort of love-letter, afier iall. Black Polly was, it seemed, in a strait betwixt affection and interest. ‘I | thinks heap de most ub Tanm,” she con- fided. ‘*But den ole man Gawge Rick he’s { gut lan’ an’ mules, an’ he so ole he aiu’t | gwine lib no mighty long. Sorter fix hit so Taum’ll unnerstan’ dat, Miss Polly. 1 | do’ "ant dat po’ nigger ter think no less of hisse’f ‘n he kin he’p.”’ | So Polly wrote, after a proper introduc- tion, smiling vet piteous as her hand traced the words : “Don’t think. dear Tom, I don’t love vou better than all the world. Ido; I would marry you gladly, only it happens you have not much of anything, and I can marry another man who has a great deal. Maybe that ought not to make any difference, but it does—all the differ- ence in the world. I want to have things and be somebody without waiting and of them. So don’t think any more of Your loving POLLY ANSON.” “Now you must make your mark there,” Polly the white had said, after she had written the name with a great flourish. Black Polly drew back, the picture of wounded dignity, saying : Polly I' I's ’stonished at you, I'is! You { don’ reckon I’s gwine sen’ nobody er lub- I always did thought you had de mos’ | raisin’ ob anybody ’bout yore, hut dat ain’t no good way ter do.” Properly crushed, Polly had addressed the letter, in her best business hand, to Thomas Montgomery, cousin, and the young master of black Polly’s discarded swain. She was about to add ‘‘colored” black Polly broke in : ‘Tain’t no need ter put nothin’ else letter my own se’f. I's good ter see him at meetin’ Sund’y ; den hit cain’t go wrong.’ “Then why not tell him?’ Polly asked. *‘It seems to me that would be so much better,”’ and again black Polly had stood upon her dignity. ‘Why ! He took an’ writ ter me,’ she had said, ‘‘an’fotcht de letter plum ter my house! Reckon I gwine gib him back answer dest in talk ? My heabenly Marster ! better 'n dat.’’ After the black girl had gone, Polly had sat, smiling and dimpling, framing in her mind the story of her letter-writing as she wonld tell it to Len next time he came. And he had never come, though only that morning he had begged most earnestly for a serious answer, and had said, significant- ly, as he went away, ‘‘If you are ohstinate- ly silent when I come to-morrow, I—why, I shall take silence for consent.’ He was coming to-day with the other ! neighborhood youth. He had met her mother at the gate yesterday, and almost (compelled her to ask him. After all, | Polly was glad of it. They had met casual- | ly outside twenty times, but she pined for a chance to show him she could see hin unmoved, as a chance guest, here where he | had been a lover. In spite of the rose patterns difficulty, By dinner- time the workers were on the last reaches tof it ; they might, with a thought more diligence, have had it out of the frames. But nobody wanted that to happen until the hoys came in: then fun and frolie Yet her mind kept faith- | than once, indeed, that it was only through | comed yere ‘case hit ‘peared ter me you working until I am so old I can get no good | “Wy, Miss | [letter wid er mark ter hit, same lek hit! i was dest one er dem whar tells de news ? | Esquire, and had ' smiled as she wrote the name ; she knew another Thomas Montgomery—he was her | to the address, when | dar, Miss Polly ; I'll gib dat nigger he’s | Miss Polly ! I t’ought fer sho’ you knowed | | foremost among them. As he hurried to- { ward them Dora said, hastily. ‘I do hope Polly won’t think strange of it, but, you know, Len goes with me every- | where now.” | again. | come up to her, but turned half-way across the room and went to Mrs. Bell. | stood just back of that good woman’s chair, with the kitten’s head peeping in the hol- low of her neck. Her face was turned "away ; she was talking gayly with Jack Bell, who had fetched her a great sheaf of golden-yellow chrysanthemums. “Aba! 1 understand, Jack,” saying. ‘These were never meant for me | —never in the world. But really Marian WMontgomery ought to be here. will come. after all. iler note said she would, if only Tom got home in time to | fetch her, It was aggravating his being a { grand-juryman at just this time. You see. that is what you get for being wicked and needing juries and things, you men. Your | sweethearts are missing when you'd like to sce them most.’’ Len’s face hardened, his heart likewise, : but he shook hands with Polly in the most friendly and casual fashion, talked lightly with her for a minute, and ended by tak- ing the kitten out of her arms. ‘I protest against this fine fellow,” he said. “What does he know about deep things like fortane-telling? Where is my old friend Tip? He's a cat of sense and judgment. Besides, I have a sort of sneak- ing notion that he is not above showing favors to Ins friends.” “In that case I will go and find him,’ ‘Polly said, demurely. Then over hier i shoulder, as she vanished : “Of course you will stand beside Dora, Mr. Baxter. Take your places, all, and be ready to shake the minute I come back.” By this time the quilt was outof the frames, lying in a crumply blue and white heap upon a chair at the side of the room. Four gay young fellows seized it, took each a corner, and stretched it foursquare, call- | ing as they stretched, each to the girl of his choice, to come and stand at his elbow. ' Then the other young people ranged them- selves about the edges, albeit some of the girls made a feint of pulling away from their cheosing swains. Dora Gartley blushed and bridled as Len took her arn with gentle insistence. She even hung back a trifle, saying, in a loud whisper : “Oh, I hate to do it—so foolish, vou “Oh, come along!” he said. a theught impatiently. “This way : on the side next the door. Tip is certain to make for that, and I want--"’ What he wanted Miss learned, for as the word left his mouth a dappér young fellow and a very pretty girl came hurriedly through the door. They (were still in riding-gear, and the girl's . cheeks had {long gallop. Over the chorus of welcome Len caught the young man’s words : { ‘“‘Here’s the place for you Polly ! Hand over Tip, and squeeze in at my clbow.”’ “I won’t squeeze in’ anywhere,’’ Polly retorted, making a face at him, and hold- ing fast to Tip. veteran of a hundred fights, and at least a dozen shakings. Huddled against Polly's breast, he blinked and yawned as though the whole matter was a bore to him. testing miaow, as though asking what the ~ world was coming to, when this frivolous i disrespect was shown to his years and whiskers. “Hold tight now !”” Polly cried out to | those about the quilt, lifting Tip above her head, “and tossing him lightly upon its clastic surface. He rebounded like a ball, then scrambled to his feet. and looked about him with an air of questioning dis- dain. ing grew stronger when, after a compre- {hensive survey, Tip lay down with his i head between his paws, blinking lazily. { and with faintly twitching ears. “Why don’t you shake?’ Polly called, with dancing eyes. She stood away from | the quilt, her hands hanging at her sides. She had agreed to stand up with Jack Bell; { now she thrust Marian Montgomery in the place in her sted. Tom Montgomery had | i managed to place himself upon Jennie Crewe’s other hand, to the discomposure of Ned Lattimer, who had taken her out. ‘Shake !”’ Polly cried again. Jack Bell heaved a sigh. “Do you think anything short of an earthquake will move Tip?” he asked, tragically. most coaxing voice : ‘Come, Tip! Good old Tip ! Come ! Come !”’ | “Of all the unfair things !'—"" Polly be- gan, then stopped short. It scemed as if a cyclone had struck the quilt. It shook and writhed, it rose and fell in balloony over in the dizziest fashion. Agile veteran that he was, it took him full three minutes to get upon his feet, claw and paw his way toward the edge, and gather himself for a , spring through the line of shakers. Now he headed this way, now that ; and cach of the young men could speak for laughing was crying and calling out: ““Tip ! Here, Tip I! “Mice, Tip If your friends ¥"’ ‘This way, old man !" Polly was dancing up and down in glee. With twinkling eyes she ran back of Len and Miss Gartley, pursed her mouth, and i made a little soft sound that Tip knew for a summons to dinner. He was going to- ward Tom Montgomery and Jennie Crewe. At Polly’s call he turned square about and made a flying leap to reach her. It took him almost against Miss Gartley’s face ; so close, indeed, she cried out in fear, then smiled to note that the cat had passed i directly between herself and young Baxter. | Then she dropped her eyes | Len made as though he would | Polly | she was | Maybe she | know ! And there is really nothing in it.’ | Gartley never! the quick red that told of « Tip was the grizzled ! He; purred uncertainly, and gave out a pro- Everybody laughed, and the laugh- Len held out one hand, saying, in his | wayes that sent poor Tip rolling over and | “Don’t you know. | much to tell and hear. Talking eagerly, | they went up and down the long reach | never noting that some one else had come | out upon it. and stood motionless under the lantern which lighted the far end. ‘Stop a minute, Montgomery. I have something that belongs to you—-something it may interest Miss Poily to see,” the man { under the lantern said, as they came up to him. Polly caught her breath sharply as { he spoke, but said, gayly : ‘Why, Mr. | Baxter ! Have you turned burglar, or got | yourself made a special grand-juryman to | find out Tom’s pet sins 2° “Never mind how I came hy it,” Len said, recklessly. “It isonly a letter : I dare say you both remember it.” *Never saw it in my life, ‘Tom said, | promptly, beginning to run his eve over the crumpled and greasy sheet. “Oh! 1 {say ! This is—Good Lord !"” he cried out as he sensed what was written and caught i the name below. Holding it fast. he faced about and caught Polly’s hand. “Do you | know anything of this document?’ he asked, nodding toward the paper she had read over his arm. Polly’s head went up proudiy. She save Len a long glance, then said. in her clearest key, ‘I know when and how it was written 3 for the rest you must ask some one else.” : " “Wheis it??? Tom asked. Polly laughed as: she answered. 1 . think she is Mrs. George Ricks still, though the old man has been dead two weeks. But Ill ask her. She is in the kitchen helping Aunt Ailsa. Polly! Black Polly! Do come here and tell Mr. Montgomery some- thing about a letter you had me write.” Black Polly came out, wiping hier hands upon her mourning Hgock, and made her manners to the gentlemen before she open- ed her mouth to say : “‘Shucks ! Miss Polly, T do” ‘anter hare yo’ feelin's, hut dat dar letter wuz sho conjured. I hadn’ mon gut home wid hit when I lay hic down dar on de shelf, an” mammy she took "nn spilt hot fat all on de cornder ob hit. Den I taken hit up ter Miss Dora at de ‘great house, and she copied hit out fer me, an’ put in some mo’ I had done thought ! cerbout. Den when I went ter meetin’ ! th’ough de rain, erpurpose ter gib hit ter dat dar Taum, dar he wuz, done married, [an’ had fotched his wife erlong. So ter git (eben, I ups an’ marries ole man Gawge “den an’ dar.” “Read the letter, aloud I” imperiously. to Len. i He began it in a shaken voice ; but be- fore he had got through three sentences "black Polly flung up her hands, crying , out, “Dat de ve’'y same letter you writ fer | me ; de ve’y one 1 lef” fer Miss Dora ter} burn up !”’ “I think that explanation explains,” Tow Montgomery said, with a bow. diaw- ing his cousin’s hand through his arm and walking away . : Polly and Len were married next Twelfth-night. The Gartleys were hidden | to the wedding. but somehow found it con- venient to go for a distant visit about that time. Mrs. Carter and good Mrs. Bell ex- tcelled even themselves in the wedding- ake and the cut paper for trimming it, cand Marian Montgomery and Jennie Crewe were brideinaids worthy the bride. Tip wore a new collar with a big white how on it, and black Polly. no longer a discon- solate relict, was full of mysterious conse- | quence in her place as head of the volun-. teer waiting-maids. Everybody agreed i that Polly had donc well, and Len even better ; also that no bride need want a! finer setting out than Polly would take to her new home. . “But this T shall say to the last day in i the mornin,”” Mrs. Bell confided to Mus. | Carter : ‘‘Polly may have a heap finer . I things, and things worth more money, but if T was in her place I'd not set any of “em beside that Ivish chain. If that hadn’c i been to be quilted just when and as it was. vou’ll never make me helieve we wouldn't : be danein® at somebody else’s weddin.’ —Harper’s Bazar. Polly said, A Former Pennsylvania Boy's Successfal Career. i The governor-elect of Wisconsin, Major i Edward Scofield, was horn near Clearfield, ' Pa., in 1842. | was an Irishman, engaged in farming and lumbering. The hoy attended public school, and later an academy at Clearfield. “When Scofield was 13 he found occupation | at the printing office of the Indiana ** Demo- | crat, of Indiana, Pa. In 1858 he worked | i for another newspaper at Breokville, Pa. { In 1861 he tendered his services to his i country, and entered the army as a private | { in the Eleventh regiment, Pennsylvania re- | . R | | serves. Re-enlisting, he followed the | | Army of the Potomac to Virginia. For | gallantry at the battle of Fredericksburg [he was promoted to a first lieutenancy. | | At Gettysburg he was commissioned captain | of Co. K., Eleventh Pennsylvania reserves, ‘‘for meritorious conduct upon the field.” Captured after the battle of the Wilderness, | he was at last paroled. Returning home broken down in health, he found a commis- sion of major awaiting him ‘‘for gallant | conduct in the battle of the Wilderness.” i At-the close —of-the war Mr. Scofield was 23 years old. He next became an assistant | engineer on the work of the Allegheny Val- ley railroad. In I86R he went to Chicago and finally became interested in the lum- | ber business at Oconto., Wis., and through thrift and industry soon found himself at the head of a very large business. In 1887 Polly had strolled with Tom Montgomery The cousins were | ing his life. heated chair given out. | His father, Isaac Scofield, | | Major Scofield was clected to the state sen- ate from the First district of Wisconsin. | In 1894 his fitness for the governorship | found many advocates. ——Subseribe for the WATCHMAN. Tortured to Death. Practical Joke Which Cost an Attorney and Politi- cian of lowa His LifeWhen He Joined the Elks—The Jovial Members Placed Him In a Chair With a Shect Iron Seat—Heated the Same With a Lamp—He was Horribly Burred, and Blood Foisoning’Finally Cost Him His Life. E. W. Curry, Chairman of the Demo- cratic State Central Committee, died at the Savoy Hotel in Des Moines, lo., last Friday | where he has been ill for two months. Mr. | Curry’s death is the result of injuries receiv- ed while being initiated into a Des Moines Lodge'of Elks, blood poisoning having fol- lowed his injuries. > As part of the ceremony he was seated in a chair, with a thin iron seat, and a large lighted lamp placed under it. It was ex- pected that he would furnish some amuse- ment, as it was thought he would jump out of the chair when the heat became un- bearable. But he did not jump. With some friends he had been merry- making in the afterncon, and when he went into the hall he was much under the influ- ence of liquor. It is thought that when he | was placed in the chair and blindfolded his sensibilities were so far beniumbed that he | | was burned severely without knowing it or being able to move. SPECTATORS SAW HIM COOK. The spectators saw him fairly cook for some time, wondering at his nerve, until they discovered smoke rising from the chair. Then he was taken out of it, and found to be burned horribly. He was tak- en to his hotel and cared for by the best physicians. At his own request it was given out that he was suffering from anoth- { er ailment, and the true story did not leak out till afterwards. maeh mystery about it. Even yet there is Blood poisoning set in soon, and from | | that time on there was little hope of sav- He grew worse steadily, and | | for a large part of the last month of his life was unconscious. He manifested wonder- ‘ful vitality, and lived a week after the doe- tors pronounced his death a matter of only a few hours. The story of how his injuries were con- tracted was given out hy members of the Elks Lodge, after an evening paper had published a much more sensational story. It was that, instead of a- heated chalr, he was placed on an electrical chair. and a light currant turned on, in the expectation of making Lim squirm. He showed no discomfort. and the cur- rent was increased several tines without producing an apparent effect. Then the smoke was seen, and he was taken out. half electrocuted. A STORY PRINTED AND BENIED. The story was printed in great detail and denied promptly, and the story about the The mystery has caused a great sensation. The Elks after their session had noth-ing to uy except to repeat their carlier version. There has heen no disposition on the part of Mr. Cuiry’s femily to blame the members of the order, who have done all in their power for him during his illness. Mis. Curry and her daughter, the only members of the family, carnestly desired that Mr. Currys frequently expressed wish that the truth should never he made pub- lic should be carried out. : Mr. Curry lived at Leon, Ia., and was a prominent lawyer in Southern Towa: He was 4% vears old and had been a leader in State politics for several years. He wasa close friend of C. A. Walsh, Secretary of the National Committee, and an andent silver man. Laughter a Disease. An Actual Case of a Man Who Began Laughing from His Toes Upward. Do you laugh? ‘Then vou have been at- tacked by a disease, for laughteris a dis- ase. cases which have come under the notice of eminent neurologists. even moderate laughter a symptom of ner- vous hysteria. . People have died of laughter. Irom Austria comes’a curious account of a man suffering from a nervous disease that mani- fested itself in paroxy=ms of laughter. The | patient was thirty years of age and had | heen subject for three years to fits of laughter, which ocemrred at tirst every two or three months, gradually increasing in frequency to a dozen or more a day. The attacks occurred especially hetween 9 in the evening and 6:30 in the morning, and in greatest frequency between 5 and 6:30 o'clock. In the intervals between the attacks, and immediately before and afterward, the man was perfectly well. | The attack commenced with a tickling sen- , sation arising from the toes of the left foot. The patient would fall to the groufd; where he could lie down. At the height of the attack the patient first smiled and then laughed aloud without any appa- rent cause for the excessive merriment. The entire act occupied about two mom- Lents, Bryan's Engagement. Will Begin His Series of Lectures in Atlanta Next Month—Subject Not Broken. SPRINGFIELD, Mo., Nov. 22.—The party of distinguished hunters returned from their expedition in Taney county last night. A large crowd was at the depot to receive the late presidential candidate. When he stepped from the platform of the | car he was greeted with cheers. The entire party attended a play in the | opera house last night. The theatre was packed to the doors, and, when Bryan ap- peared in a box, accompanied hy Senator Jones, Governor Stone, Chairman Cook and others, the crowd went wild. There was a continual cry for a speech from Bryan. and he delivered a short address, speaking mostly on the silver question. He said the Republican party had adver- tised its goods, and unless the goods are as good as advertised the people would not buy the same quality again in 1900. Mr. Bryan left at 11:15 o'clock last night for Kansas City en route to Lincoln, and will arrive in Denver Tuesday morning. He stated to a correspondent that he will deliver a series of lectures, but he has not as vet selected his subject, althongh silver will nov be omitted. He will make his first appearance at Atlanta next month. A Cracksman’s Great Discovery. “I'Ve cracked more than 70 safes in my | time,’’ said a Chicago burglar to. Sheriff Pease the other night while awaiting trans- | fer to the Joliet penitentinry to serve a: seven-year sentence, ‘but I've never used anything except powder. dynamite and nitroglycerine. If I live to finish this bit at Joliet, I'll do a little work afterward that will astonish the boys. [ can cut through almost any safe in Chicago inside of two hours with cleetrigity, ~and without making enough noise to’ waken a cat. [ got that pointer from the electrical display at the World's fair, and I've been working at it ever since. It ix entirely feasible I'll prove it to yoa by and by.’ —Chicago | Times- Herald. This has been proven by numerous | They have declared | FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN: 9 Mrs. D. H. Marsh of Groton, N. Y., has ! heen elected president of the First National | bank of that city, to fill the vacancy by the death of her hushand. Mrs. Marsh has | been one of the stockholders and directors. | The office of bank president has never be- | fore been held by a woman in that part of ' the country. Almost the first thing one notices is that | storm collars are much in evidence for hoth | capes and coats of fur and that the wrap in stole effect which made its debut last win- | ter is receiving great attention in this, its | second, season. Capes, too, are growing larger ; and muffs—well, these are of im- mense size and in every shape conceivable. The bicycle craze has had a decided in- I fluence in making the wasp waist less fash- ionable. For years the I'rench and Ameri- | can women not endowed with small waists | have resorted to every available means to | secure that chic appearance so dear to every | feminine heart, and of which a small waist | has always heen a leading feature. They have listened courteously to the warning against tight lacing and given | their corsets an extra twist as a commen- ‘tary. The laws of health have little | weight when they do not harmonize with | the laws of fashion. : With fashion’s decree that outdoor sports (of all sorts are the proper caper for the | women of to-day to follow comes the loosen- ing of corset strings and the adoption of a corset built upon the natural figure, which | is very different from the extremely high- | bust corset with the long waistline and | narrow hips, which invariably throws the bust and hips out of place. Fivery person ought to know that super- fluous flesh which is compressed in any part of the body must go somewhere. The pitiable contrast between a small waist, protruding hips and a two prominent ab- doman has heen in evidence too long. A change ought to be hailed with delight, not ouly by the women, to whom it means better health, a move pleasing figure and casy carriage, hut by the manufacturer and | retailer. It is notorious that the vetailer has many corsets returned with the complaint, ‘These corsets have been broken at the waist, and I've only worn them two or three times.” In order to retain the pat- vonage of the customer the merchant must give her a new pair of corsets, while, as a matter of fact. it was not that the corset had given poor service, but that in the first place the customer had insisted upon pur- chasing a corset inadequate to the propor- tions of her tigure. The English woman has always shown sood sense in ue selection of her corset, buying from the coset standard, that of comfortably fitting the hips rather than squeezing the waist. The accepted waist measure for this season is fully three inches larger than has Leen in vogue, the length of the front measuring about 12 inches, the corset tapering up over the hips. One of the newest corsets designed by the French is much, shorter than those in vogue the past season, with the addition of silk eldstic webbing extending from the up- per line of the bust cup to a sharp point Just below the line of the waist cither side i of the clasp. Revers on the newest bodiees it is observed have square or curved corners : the sharp | pointed triangle is now rarely seen. There is no end to the varieties in sleeves ; but anything which has some soit of a small puff at the top and is close-titting below ix in the mode. To clean carpets have some hot soapy water and a woolen cloth. Wring the cloth partially out and rub well. Then take a cotton cloth, tightly wrung out of water, and rub well. It will make a car- pet like new, and is much pleasanter to use than oxgall. A dainty table is a mark of gowd hreed- ing, and an untidy table proclaims to all beholders a lack in the housewife of all the finer sensibilities. It really does not take a great deal more time, and not much more rouble to set the table attractively and to I serve the food in a daihty, appetizing way, "and the gain is inestimable. A little (green for garnishing the . meat plate can always be procured; water is plen- tiful in most places, soap is cheap and jevery day is twenty-four hours long. Iso that there is [linen on the table. There is no place | where thoughtful care is more needed or | move productive of gratifving results. | Make the children learn to he careful of the cloth and the napkins, they can be taught to be neat at the table’ as well as in | dress. . The fashionable neck hows of mull and , chiffon are not only a pretty addition to ! the corsage, but a great hoon to beauty, as they lend a charm to the face by softening the features. The upper teeth should be brushed down- ~wards, and the lower teeth upwards from i the gums. Do not brush the teeth cross- | ways, as they are apt to become loosened, rand the gums will also suffer. The inside {of the teeth should also be brushed in the same way. Tepid water is the best to use . both for cleaning the teeth and rinsing thé . mouth out afterwards. The toothbrush should be small and { curved, so that the brush can get in all the | interstices of the teeth. It should not be | too hard, and, when a new toothbrush is purchased, it should be soaked in water for i several hours before using. If the brush is dried on a towel after being used, and stood up on end in the air, it will last much longer. Toothbrushes should never be kept in a closed receptacle. {Tooth powders should be chosen with great discretion. For general use the fol- lowing will be found a very good powder : Mix together hali an ounce of powdered bark, a quarter of an ounce of myrrh, one drachm of camphor and one ounce of pre- pared chalk.. Another simple receipt is as follows : Add two ounces of camphorated chalk, two drachms of very fine powdered borax, half an ounce of powdered orrisroot "and half adrachm of powdered myrrh ; mix . the ingredients thoroughly together, and ‘ keep the powder in a bottle. All good [ur capes are rather short and almost as wide as those of last year, while the cheap ones are long as the old fashioned { coachman’s cape in spite of the decline in the dress sleeves. The collars are much higher, quite covering the back of the head { with points behind and on each side. The | smartest linings are of moires and satins in i plain colors, but light plaid or stripe being { almost as desirable, 1f not quite so new. [ The pelerine shape is worn, there heing two i long ends in front, and a plain back fitted i in at the waistline. In seal it is very ele- { gant, the fullness flaring over the arms and | broad sable collar lying upon the should- ers about the standing one of seal. small excuse for soiled - st maa