i. Bellefonte, Pa., Fed. 8, 1901. EH SSSR, BY THE WAYSIDE. Pa ust to go to church an’ pray, An’ in class meetin’ have a say, Had fam’ly wuship ev'ry night An’ iried to raise us boys up right, The preacher called him “Brother Todd," An’ said he was a child of God, “Id bin ann ’inted 'mong the saints And cleansed from all his sinful taints, An’ that same preacher ust to be At our house purty frekently, To read a chapter o' the Word An’ pray ontil I bet they heard His supplieations flyin’ 'roun Clear to the other end o’ town. An’ then he'd stay far dinner. My, But how he'd make the chicken fly, And praise ma’s cookin’, an’ she'd smile An’ ou his waitin’ plate’d pile More provender, an’ he'd jes’ flop His jaws an’ never holler “Stop,” An’ never break away ontil He hadn’t no more space to fill, But, as I was saying’, pa Was jes’ a Christian up to taw, But, since the time he got to be A polertician, somehow he Thinks more 0’ gettin’ office place Than of the means o’ savin’ grace, Don’t never go to church no more Nor kneel down on the fam’ly, floor, With us around, an’ ask the Lord To temper the avengin’ sword To us shorn lambs, an’ shed the light (’ grace upon us day an’ night. ° Ma says he's backslid from the fold, That on the throne he’s slipped his hold, An’ he is that way cause she knows No polertician ever goes To heaven, an’ she's skeered that he Is founderin’ in the sintul sea. But I've a sort o' Christian hope He's yet a-hangin’ to a rope, To pull back to the fold agin When he has got his fill 0’ sin, The rope a-bein’ ruther slim Fur sich a hefty fish as him, But he hangs to it, true as steel— He asts a blessin’ every meal. — Barton Adams, in Denver Post. AT THE “BLOODY ANGLE.” On the afternoon of May 11th, 1864, the advance force of the Union army, moving through the Wilderness toward Richmond, was lying on muddy ground a short dis- tance north of Spottsylvania Court House. Rain drenched the soldiers, and at dark a cold wind set to blowing in among. the black trunks of the scattering trees. It lifted the heavy folds of the canvas shelters which the men had dejectedly spread and crawled under, and drove them out one by one. The soldiers coaxed the uncertain camp-fires. Sometimes a nest of rubbishy twigs would toss up a tiny flame which could be induced to take notice of the wet, naked branches that were arranged tempt- ingly about it. In this case there was a living blaze,and dozens of soldiers deserted their own private mounds of steaming ruin and delightedly crowded round. For the most part, however, this camp on the eve of battle was wholly miserable in appear- ance; it reeked with discomfort, which the army endured with mingled sulkiness and good humor. At about nine o’clock in the evening orders came to pick up and move. The regiments were expected to march with absolute stillness, The rank and file knew that the real advance was beginning, which would end in an attack on some point, supposed to he vulnerable, of the enemy’s line of works, and this knowledge cheered them by lending importance to their movements. That slight numbness of the heart which is the first effect of an impending struggle toughened them against the dreariness of their labor. The steady progress through the rainy darkness con- tinued still like a river. The men trudged along without thought or conversation. As it was now the seventh day of fighting in the Wilderness, many were so worn ont that they fell asleep as they walked, and Bropped their muskets from their shoulders with a little rasping thud. The only oth- er sounds were distant ones—the muffled rattle and bump from the artillery brigade, and the noise of axe blows where Lee’s soldiers were chopping timber to clog the approaches to their barricades, Once during the night a stampede oc- ¢urred in the ranks of the Ninety-ninth Pennsylvania Regiment of the Second Army Corps. A soldier of the pioneers ac- cidentally ‘discharged his musket. This frightened the horses of some staff officers of General Birney’s; avd set up analarm which, sent a dozen mounted men charging back into the regiment. There was a be- wildered rush out of the column to clear the way for the galloping horses, but al- most immediately the thing was under- stood. The men mechanically re-formed, and when the staff officers, returning to the front of the division with a swift tread of horses’ hoofs and rattle of bridle.chains, rode past them the privates pleased them- selves by making certain’ remarks ina low tone of voice. Sergeant John H. Fasnacht —it is the story of his part in the events led up to by the night march which is be- ing told—--was in Company A of the Ninety- ninth. It was not until between one and two o'clock in the morning, he remembers, “that the order was given to, halt and to “right by file’ into the line-of-battle, after which every man knew that he was privi- leged to sleep on his arms until dawn. Sergeant Fasnacht was awakened by a dig in the ribs from an officer’s sword. It was still raining; mist drifted through the woods in great clouds; and in the half day- light the army was gesting in motion. Sol- diers asked stupidly, as they straightened ‘out their positions: = ‘‘What does this mean?!’ {apa They knew well enough what it meant. . The others answered vaguely. as if to mani- fest only a speculative interest in the out- come : arty ; Tan ‘Dunno. . Where are we going ?’’. The enemy’s works were supposed to be less than a mile in their front. The men planged into a heavy swamp, which must be passed, overgrown with briery entangle- ments and vexatious trees. A little way on the ground was covered with dense marsh-grass, tall,thick bladed; and musket balls sped through the blades with pro- ‘longed moaning. Fasnacht was ‘behind his company as file-closer. He bad no indi-. vidual plans at this moment, but shared the general forward-going impulse that carried the whole army rapidly on through the misty, impenetrable wood toward the place from which the bullets came. The “sounds of fring grew louder. Here and there a soldier fell suddenly. as if hit from behind by a club. The others paid no at- tention to these incidents. They marched doggedly on, and their persistence brought them at last into the open clearing with the defences of the enemy in full view—a dark line extending to right and left under the fog, which was blackened just here by the sluggish smoke of camp-fires. Somebody shouted out a cheer. It was against orders to make any noise, but oth- ers unrestrainedly took up the cry, and, as if this were the signal, began to run for the works. At the same instant there was a commotion over there also; riflemen show- ed their heads, and doubled. shel fire Confederate flag was pi p< all. The sight of this instant made another man of Sergeant Fasnacht. He became a partisan leader who has des- perate schemes beyond the ordinary pur- poses of a movement. The earthworks looked formidable enough even before they “had been tested. To take them was, per- haps, impossible; yet this was already an accomplished fact in the sergeant’s mind. He had borne his share in their capture, and now, in his mind’s eye, he saw him- self engaged alone in an enterprise more dangerous yet. The bearer of those colors was his prisoner; he had captured the rebel flag. This idea flashed upon the sergeant all in one confused moment, and then took shapein a definite determination. But as he ran round the right of his company and sprang ahead of the men, he appeared only one among a mad group who were rushing straight at an invincible earth-wall which had promised their destruction. The wall doled out destruction to the lines of soldiers, one by one. The charge resolved itself into a problem of distance versus volley firing, complicated by ithe consideration of those who fell. As the ranks were thinned, so the bullets did more terrible execution among the sur- vivors. Then came an entirely new aspect of the charge. The attacking force had reached a barricade of felled trees, lying with limbs outward toward the Union soldiers. Be- hind this was a ditch filled with water, and from the opposite side of the ditch rose the earthworks, with the men in dirty gray discharging their bayoneted muskets in rain and smoke—and the flag waving over all. The few men that were ahead were caught fast in the first entanglement; but as they faltered, struggling, the mass of the line crashed heavily against their backs and pushed them through into the ditch. Now details of war went out from sight, lost in the blind fighting on the part of masses of men. Fasnacht had felt him- self hurled forward into the diteh. Vividly he saw for a brief second bayonets being eagerly thrust out to pierce his chest. He felt, rather than believed, that these would not touch him; struck down the soldier di- rectly in front of him with the butt of his musket, and found himself standiug on top of the earth-mound. The flag was only a few feet away. He rushed at the color- bearer, a tall man who was holding the flag high; with outstretched arm he yelled to him to surrender. A section of the fighting came between them. The man with the colors and the soldiers about him dropped inside the de- fences and ran off toward some woods. Be- fore Fasnacht could fellow the smoke and fog bad hidden them. The ground on both sides of the works was choked with troops. Fasnacht's regiment, entangled with the enemy in among some shelter-tents of blankets and canvas, was tearing a way through by the use of bayonet and butt toward a battery which had opened fire at short range. The sergeant, intent upon his business of theday, avoided the bloody confusion here and set off alone toward the woods. He reasoned that as there was an open gap on the right of the Union battle- line, the color-hearer would try to escape on that side. He took a course through the empty woods which would head off the party with the flag. Although he could see nothing but the glistening trunks of trees, he felt sure that the flag would not escape him, and so con- tinued for perhaps a hundred and fifty yards at a stumbling run, impatiently pushing aside briery shrubs, breathlessly going on. Then appeared in front of him, through an arch of the trees, the color- bearer carrying his flag. Five or six men, his color-guard, were just behind him. Fasnacht threw his musket to his shoulder, pressing his finger against the trigger. The gun was not loaded. The other saw him. “Surrender !'” panted Sergeant Fas- nacht. The tall man said: ‘‘Don’t shoot. I surrender.’”’ The men with him made no motion to fire. Doubtless their guns were not loaded. . The tall man reached out the flag on its stick, which the sergeant, still keeping his formidable musket cocked, let fall at his feet. He told the men of the color-guard: to drop their arms, and they did so, (ites is “Get to the rear,’ continued hein a cool fashionj and as soon as the Conled- erates had passed round him and disappear- ed, he turned his attention to the captured prize. - It was old! with service, inscribed sergeant grinned ‘in his good humor. He. was delighted with ‘himself at that mo- ment. Standing on the staff he ripped the flag off and stuffed it away under his loose blouse. «ion ood {1 10 aiar i “You had better let me have that,’’ somebody said behind him. Turning with a jerk he saw the colonel of his regiment some distance away, and, farther off, some of his comrades coming through the woods. serious, gloomy face, and, as 1f the move- meut were mechanical, eontinued to erowd the flag into his bosom. (7 iat ad Keep: it," said the’ colonel,’ with a laugh. RY al ady or ane ‘The Northerti regiments were crowding through the woods and charging across the open space in ‘the direction f a second line ‘of works. Fasnacht went along with them, and in five ‘minutes’ fell; wounded in ‘the knee by a nmiusket-ball. ‘The rest of that day he was ‘destined 110¢'to ‘do, but to’ be ‘done with. The battle-flag,” however, of the Louisiana ‘Tigers ‘was in’ his: army blouse. This ‘went. far to sustain’ him as began to carry him to the rear.’ EE They had not gone above hall a mile when a provost guard met them and said that orders were for the carriers to, leave the wounded together on the ground, and return to their regiments. Fasnacht was accordingly set down like a bundle in 'a place where hundreds of the wounded had been gathered. As it happened, the ene- my’s artillery had the range, and the ser- geant shared in an ordeal of exploding shell before ‘which the most dare-devil of them all was, of necessity, quite cold. This was not funny, but the men who joke fear. After a time the stretcher-bearers came again, They carried Fasnacht to an ambulance, in which he was driven to a little grove in the rear, by a stream of wa- ter and a cornfield on a rising hill. There, with some of the others, all left-overs from an overcrowded hospital, he slept the night squad of Confederate cavalry rode up and made them prisoners. ‘We're goin’ to wait for the ambulances your people ’11 send over for yer, so we’ll ave something to ride you Yanks in style to Richmond,’’ said a communicative man. He teased the prisoners which he told ung ub high “above 1 ‘tainty of prison—as to | ‘with the names of battles and the title of the regiment, Second Louisiana Tigers. The He stared at the mounted officer with a the men with stretchers picked him up and found material for wit in their own frantic. of May 12th. In the morning, early, a |. hidden treasure. Fasvachs, however, groaned 5 loudly Hat ae Confederate good-naturedly lefs him alone. The still wadded in hig blouse, rs Itice for -wouhded § i 4 % The sergeant forgot to dream :about ibby Prison or Belle Isle as the morning passed. He wanted to look at his flag. There was nothing he wanted so much— not even freedom from pain or the cer- spread the discol- ored beauty of the thing before him. At last there came an oportunity when the prisoners were deserted; only there were six of the enemy lying wounded among themselves, and from these the operation must be shrewdly hidden. Fasnacht pull- ed off his blouse. Tho hospital steward ‘helped him, keeping his back between the wounded Confederates and the sight. He spread the flag over his legs and pulled an army blanket over it. ‘The hospital stew- ard set to work opening the lining of the blouse, which was packed with cotton. He worked out all the cotton, and, after a time, the two folded up the flag compactly and sewed it inside the lining. Days passed, during which the sergeant listened to the dull conversations of the wounded, which gradually came to sound like the chatter of a single voice endlessly repeating the same thing. The booming of cannon was often heard, but always faintly, as if from a great distance. Just before sunset, however, after one of these days of captivity and waiting. a soldier suddenly sat up and shouted. “Look up there on the hill,”’ he called out. On the hill beyond the cornfield a piece of artillery was unlimbering. Infantry in blue uniform were marching over the brow of the hill. Here ended the succession of incidents in the military career of Sergeant John H. Fasnacht (later a’ lieutenant of United States Volunteers, ) during whieh he had won the Congressional Medal of Honor. Recaptured by this detachment of Federal troops, which had heen sent to the relief of the wounded prisoners, he was sent on to Washington, where, on the wall beside his cot in the army hcepital, the flag of the Tigers was hung. It was then, inconversa- tion with his visitors about the capture of the flag, that the sergeant learned that the point of the works where his exploit had been performed was already renowned as the ‘Bloody Angle’ of Spottsylvania. —By Carl Hovey, in Everybody's Magazine. $15,000 Pension to a Hermit. Bradenall Will Put $10,000 Into a Monument Over the Grave of His Wife. Anthony Bradenall, otherwise known as Anthony Hull, of near Millstone, Md., who disappeared fifteen yeais ago, after a trial in Hagerstown for stealing chickens, of which he was acquitted on his own testi- mony, was found on Thursday living in a hut in Berkeley county, West Virginia, where he subsists on herbs and wild meats, sleeps on a bed of straw, but keeps up a roaring fire for company. His hair is long, clothing in tatters, and he has not worn a pair of shoes for fifteen years, but tramps about barefooted in all kinds of weather. Twenty-five years ago he stole a blind girl, a Miss Myers, from her home near Millstone, carried her ten miles to the home of a minister and forced him to per- form the marriage ceremony at the point of an old army pistol that had not been load- ed for several years. He then carried his wife back to her mother and devoted him- self to supporting the family by converting cross-ties, hoop-poles, shingles, etc., into money wherever he could find them with- out the owner's consent. The government has just granted Bra- denall a pension of $5 a month and back pay amounting to more than $15,000, $10,- 000 of which he intends to put into a monument over his wite’s grave. He in- tends to give $5,000 to ‘‘Aunt Katie’ Man- ning, an old woman living west of Mill. stone, who has lost all record of her birth and who is supposed to he abouta hun- dred years old, and in perfect health, for allowing him one winter to cut her fire- wood in exchange for a place to sleep and his victuals, as he put it. He was in the battle of Gettysburg and received wounds in;his head that affected his reason. He enlisted from Franklin county, Pa., where he was born and raised. Underground Buildings. Stories Below ‘the Curb Line a Featuve in New Office Structures. #3 4 ' A building rising a hundred feet above the ‘carb line in the business part of New York City is:an imposing and valuable hit of real estate. Evgineers are construct- ing two such buildings below the curb line. These new subterranean buildings ‘will provide in their basement, sub-base- ment, cellar and sub-cellar—their four stories, iin other. words—>55,000.square feet of new floor space. At the very mo lerate rental of $2 per year per square foot there is an’ increment in rental value alone of more: than + $110,000 a year, : which; is a handsome return on $2,000,000, While this new floor space may not be in demand for offices, it will naturally be in great: demand for the accomodation of the enormous machinery plant which, under modern conditions, is necessary 0 the. maintenance of a great office building. The space now utilized’ for ‘this machinery | will: naturally be available underthe new condition for other and more remuperative uses, in which the archives, of corpora- peril of fire.’ ‘So’ ‘shat in‘ spite of the iex- pense of sub:constractiow; which is natural- the air. on account of the cost of caissons and the limited number of workmen who can atone time work in the caissons, in the end : new underground. floor space will be found substantially clear gain... Certainly the foundations of the entire structure, which will forever rest on hed- rock can never be shaken or disturbed by the construction of a railway tunnel, Swallowed False Teeth. Chewing molassas candy with false teeth nearly cost Ira. Keene, of Dover, N. H., his life. While biting off a piece Mr. Keene broke the plate of his false teeth in halves. He swallowed one half of the late. : va 2 ‘Quickly following the accident, a physi- cian ‘was sent for, who applied the usual remedies, but they failed to relieve the pa- tient. The physician worked bard to alle- viate Mr. Keene's distress, but was unsuc- cessful. : The sufferer was taken to Boston, and in the afternoon ' the surgeons at the Massa- chusetts General hospital opened the stom- ach and removed the teeth. It was pronounced the most delicate oper- ration performed at the institution for some time, but the physicians said on Friday that Mr. Keene would recover. tions ‘may be Kept beyond the remotest | ly greater than that. of building np into any other building ‘whatsoever, or ever by ‘Fatal Results May Often be Correctly Ascribed to It. The death of John R. Beart at 5127 Wa- hash avenhe on Sunday Hlastiates a point that has been dwelt upon for years b rm pad on. Mr. Beart i Angust last had a struggle with a bull dog and was bitten in three places. e strug- glein itself was of a character to produce nervous exhaustion, to say nothing of the mutilation by the dog. Upon examina- tion it was shown that the dog was not afflicted with rabbies. Mr. Beart recover- ed from the immediate effects of the strug- gle and returned to work. But a week ago he was taken ill and grew steadly worse to the end. Those in attendance believe that he died of fear of hydrophobia. There is no dispute as to the main facts in the case. The dog that attacked Mr. Beart did not have any disease. Mr. Beart had no symptoms of hydrophobia, but he lived for months in horror of the most dreaded of diseases, and this resulted in conditions that caused death. If the dog that made the attack on Mr. Beart had been killed, as in usual in such cases, the case would undoubtedly bave been catalogued in the hydrophobia list. As the case stands it gives strength to the theory that a great many of the so-called cases of rabies are produced solely by fear. Without discussing any of the theories as to rabies advanced in recent years, it may be safely asserted that the disease it- self is extremely rare. In forty years in Paris there were reported only ninety-four cases of hydrophobia. In the whole of France, with a population of 36,000,000, there were reported in six years 107 cases. Investigation showed chat not more than 5 per cent. of persons bitten by rabid dogs became hydrophobic. In the city of New York there were reported in six years twenty-two cases of hydrophobia. The number of deaths is not reported. Those who have made close investigation have arrived at the conclusion that where any heavy clothing covers the part bitten there is little danger, even from the most rabid dog. But the belief that the bite of a hydrophobic dog is necessarily fatal and that death comes in a horrible way is so common that a man bitten by any dog gives his imagination free rein and suffers such mental torture as to make him a prey to other forms of disease. Dogs are subject to so many diseases re- garding which the majority of people have absolutely no information that even the most harmless animals are regarded with suspicion. Even a dog that has lost its master on the street often becomes so excit- ed that pedestrians call on policemen to shoot it. Certain diseases common to the dog fam- ily are manifested in ecnvulsions or fits. and by the ignorant a dog so afflicted is pronounced mad and treated accordingly. A dog trained to high spirits and pugnac- ity sometimes turns from a conflict with another dog to bite the man who inter- feres. That dog is forthwith pronounced mad and the wound is cauterized, whereas if the bite were by a cat or a horse no at tention would be paid to it and no alarm would be felt. The dog is more closely associated with men, women and children than any other domestic animal. It is trained to watch- fulness, to resistance, to attack and de- fence, and at the same time it is expected to observe many of the amenities of life disregarded by men and women, If a dog mopes with a distemper, or exhibits any symptons of any common disease, it is treated as a mad dog, and often in a way to push the poor brute to the extremity of fary. Thousands of people in the country dis- triots are bitten by dogs every year, and no thought is given to the matter. Those engaged in training dogs are bitten fre- quently, and they think no more of the slight hurts than the hostler who is nip- ped by a horse thinks of his bruises or wounds. In the city a bite by any dog becomes the subject of such anxiety as to induce absolute fzar. ; The truth is that the bite of a dog is no more harmful than the bite or scratch of a cat or the bite of a horse, but the people of this day have inherited from supersti- tious ages such horror of the word hydro- phobia that the dog which is at once the pet of children and the terror of burglarsin its health usnally finds no commiseration or even human consideration in its illness. From the Chicago Inter-Ocean. Filling the Army, Five Thousand Recruits Wanted. 1,800 Officers to be Named by the President. 7 There will be no delay at the war de- partment in ‘executing the army reorgani- zation law. The reorganization scheme en- grossed almost the entire attention of mili- tary authorities on Friday, and the result will be officially promulgated in general orders as soon as the bill ‘shall ‘have ‘been signed by the president. The matters which will receive the earliest attention are the appointments of the. general and field officers and the recruitment of ten ad- ditional regiments of infantry and cavalry authorized by thebill: Recruiting stations have been established at all the principal centres of population, and all available officers in this country have been assigned to recruiting duty. There is an iinmediate demand for at least 5,000 recruits to meet deficiencies in the Philippines, eaused by the necessary discharge of the entire vol- unteer forces by the 30th of June at the latest, vio 7503 crud Des hineg dedi sei ABOUT 1,800 OFFICERS TO BE NAMED, ''/ All the principal appointments provided for in the bill praetically have been deocid- <2 npon by the president. A list of these nominations has been ade out at the war department, and will be submitted to the Senate without delay. In case the bill is tigned this week, which is confidently ex- pected, the appointments already agreed apon will be sent to the Senate early next ‘week, possibly Monday. These appoint- ‘ments will ‘include’ ‘a lieutenant general; four major generals, nine brigadier generals and the colonels and other officers essen- tial to the organization of the ten new reg- iments. The impression prevails at the war department ' that General Miles will undoubtedly receive the lieutenant. gener- aley and that Generals MacArthur, Wood, Wade and Young are most likely to. be made major generals, ‘although i6 is possi- ble that General Merriam may be ‘'substi- tuted for one of the four named. = Among the officers mentioned as likely to receive commissions as brigadier generals are Generals Bates, Wheaton, Chaffee, Sch- Schwan, Arnold, Rodgers and Wood (if the last named does not secure the higher grade.) - ; Including line and staff, the president will have to appoint aboat 1,800 officers to meet the requirements of the new law. There is great pressure to secure these ap- pointments, and the president will be ex- ceedingly busy for some time to come in making his selections from among the al- most countless applicants either for pro- motions or original appointments. / Harvard Lad Dropped Dead While Box- ing. Be. Curtis L. Crane Received a Tap From His Chum and Almost Instantly Expired. Doctor Summoned Ex- presses the Opinion That the Blow Was Not the ; Cause of Death. 2 A sad accident occurred at Cambridge, Mass., Saturday afternoon in a Craigie Hall room, when Curtis L. Crane of Brook- line fell dead while boxing with George R. Ainsworth, a student at Lawrence Scien- tific School. Crane and Ainsworth were old friends. They went to school at Brookline and from the earliest days of their boyhood were the closest of chums. Crane and Ainsworth, with four other Harvard men, assemhled in Ainsworth’s room in Craigie Hall about 3 o'clock. They were laughing and joking and enjoy- ing themselves. Some one suggested the gloves and Crane and Ainsworth were not averse to making a little sport for their friends. Accordingly the gloves were brought out. The two men went at each other lightly at first, but in a few minutes they had warmed up to their work and were fur- nishing plenty of amusement to those who were looking on. Ainsworth, however, seemed to be getting the worst of it. He is a slightly built chap, and with a shorter reach than his opponent, he found things going hard against him. Crane pushed Sm hard and landed several hlows on the ace. . After the men had been boxing about four minutes and Ainsworth succeeded in landing only a few blows on his opponent’s body he struck him a snap blow in the face. With a groan Crane sank back against the mantel and then fell uncon- scious to the floor. Dr. Bailey, the col- lege physician, was summoned, and in eight minutes after the accident occurred he was on the scene. But the man was dead. An autopsy was held at which it wasde- cided that he had died of heart disease in as mach as the one side of his heart was very much larger than the other. All who witnessed the accident asserted that the blow which Ainsworth gave Crane was not enongh in itself to have resulted in his death. It was the merest tap, and was delivered in such a manner that it fell with almost no force. Dr. Bailey said that Crane’s death could not have been caused by the blow. “There were no external evidences,”’ he said, ‘‘of violence. Lots of Gold. Americans Are Tempted by “Fortunes” Abroad, but Rarely Get Them. It is very gratifying to read that a young woman of Bridgeport has fallen heir to a fortune of $20,000,000 now *‘in chan- cery’’ in England. In these days, when all industry is supposed to he sharing the general activity, it would have been a seri- ous break in the continuity if the business of inheriting estates in chancery had failed to keep up with the general hoom. Every- body in this country knows about estates in chancery. The general belief is that chancery 1s a large chamber in the safe de- posit department of the Bank of Eugland, where is gathered the gold accumulated through generations past by all who have relatives in American. As a rule this gold comes in lamps of from $20,000,000 to $30,000,000, but at times the fortunes run up to $50,000,000 each. No one knows how ‘much is piled np there, but it is evi- dently much more than all the gold in the world. That’s one of the interesting de- tails about it. Only a few petty obstacles stand between this gold and those in America who want it. Hire a lawyer or some other adventurer and send him to Europe at your own expense and you will find out what the obstacles are. They are liable to range all the way from not being any money to not being any claim on it. Rainbow chasers and chancery claimants flock together. -Theyare alter the same pot of gold and it is ahout as easy for one to tind it as for theother. Farmer Assassinated. Thomas McHenry, of near Royersburg, was the Victim. At 1 oclock Sunday morning Thomas McHenry, a well-to-do lumber merchant and farmer residing near Royershurg, Col- umbia county, was shot by “an unknown in, and death ensued six hours later. Mr. McHenry was aroused from his sleep by a noise in his barn and he arose, dress- ed and went to the building to investigate. As he neared the place a shot rang out and McHenry : dropped. The . bullet struck him just above the heart and came out of his back. Mrs. McHenry at onced sum- moned aid and the victim was taken into his home. = He was conscious for ‘an’ hour bat ‘was unable ‘to: name. the murderer. He then lapsed into an unconscions state, in which condition he remained until his death at 7 o'clock. It is ‘the ‘general be- lief that it’ was a coldblooded murder, al though every precaution . had; been taken to make it appear as a [frustrated robbery. Several sacks of flour had been taken from the bari and ‘placed’ outside so it would appear that they weve left beliind ‘because of the hurried departure after the shooting. The assassin was tracked for some distance and it was evident that he had no_convey- ance, ‘and therefore, could not have taken away the sacks of flour ‘with; which he sought te cover up the murder... («0 _ No arrests have been made, by the au- hotties, nor is any reason given for the murder. It is ramored that sensational developements may follow." Mr. McHen- ry was 35 years of age and leaves a wife and six children: - .... oooh re 0 Pork Was “Doctored.? An Entire Family Poisoned and: One Member. Dead Asa result of eating ‘pork, supposed ‘to have been *‘doctored’” ‘with some sort of presgrvatle, a whole family was poigoned unday. evening in Pittsburg. One mem- ber is dead and five others seriously ill.’ ‘Dead —Mi1s. Ann Fox, widow of a form well known coal operator... fo Seriously Ill—Mis. Ellen Cuddy, wid: owed daughter of Mrs. Fox ; Ella McCart- ney, a granddaughter of Mrs. Fox; Thomas Cuddy, a grandson ; James 'T. Fox, a son; Harry M. Fox, a son of James Fox. The family, who live at No. 2 Lavark | street, West knd, all ate of spare ribs for supper Sunday night, and within a shoré time afterward, all were writhing in agony. Fortunately a neighbor noticed Mais. Fox in the yard vomiting. Upon in- vestigation she found members of the fam- ily scattered all through the house, each suffering and helpless. ‘She summoned the family physician, Dr. Ryall, and his prump; attention saved ali except Mrs, ox, who died during the night. The others, though still in a critical condition, ap Fesbver.t GLE alge TY ‘The physician says their is no doubt that boracic and salicylic acid in the preserva- tive was the cause of the trouble. With the Feet to the East. An Old-time Burial Practice Which Has Now Fallen Very Largely Into Disuse. Sie. There was recently reprinted in the ‘‘Sun’’ from a western newspaper a para- graph about the disinterment and reburial of a body in a cemetery, because it had been buried in the wrong way, says the New York ‘‘Sun.”’” The undertaker,”’ so the paragraph said, ‘‘was a new wan a¢ business, and the body was placed with its feet to the west. The relatives re-ealled the fact, and would not be satisfied auntil the remains were exhumed and turned ‘with the feet to the east, in accordance with the popular custom." New York undertakers say that here- abouts bodies are buried according to the situation of the burial plot : with the feet to the path in front, however that may bring the body with regard to the points of the compass. It was a common custom in old times to bury the dead with the feet to the east, so that when they should rise on the day of resurrection they would rise fac- ing whence the summons was expected. There are, it is said, whole churchyards filled with dead, all facing the east ; but with the growth of cities, and of cemeteries outside of churchyard baring grounds, this practice fell into disuse. Cemeteries were variously situated, to start with ;and then they were laid out in such a manner as to bring the land within them most ad- vantageously into use. Obviously, for il- lustration, of a double tier of lots joining at the back and each tier facing otf a path, one tier of lots would face one way, and the other tier in exactly the opposite way. A body buried in one of these lots, facing either way, wounld be buried with the feet to the path upon which the lot fronted ; so that the bodies in the two tiers of this double tier of lots would face in exactly opposite directions, and it might be that neither faced exactly east. In laying out cemeteries there are likely to be curving roads, and there might be roads crossing diagonally ; with the result of some plots of irregular shape and some triangular ; and these are likely to be found in cemeteries some circular plots. In a circular plot that was enclosed by other land, it might be that the grades would be made with the feet toward the monament at the center of the plot; if, as would more likely be the case, the circular plot had a path around it, then the bodies would be placed with their head to the central monument and their feet to the path, the graves radiating from the center, and so lying as to the points of the com- pass, in various directions. In triangular plots the bodies might not be interred with feet to a path, but lengthwise of the plot in its longest section ; in this or other irregular plots they would be buried as they could be most appropriately to the plot. But in most lots it is impossible to bury the body with the feet to the path and this is now without regard to the compass points substantially the common practice. And if a body were disinterred from one lot and reinterred in another it would, upon its reinterment be placed with its feet to the frout of the new lot whether this faced in the same direction as the old one or not. It is the location of the lot that governs ; the practice being to bury with the feet and thus. of course, the face, toward the path. But while the direction in which bodies shall lie buried is nowadays commonly thus determined, there are those who still prefer to be buried facing east, and who accomplish that result simply by buying a lot that faces in that direction- Mrs. Nation’s Husband. He is an Old Soldier, but Has Lost the Fighting Tem- per Which His Wife Retains. Mrs. Nation was not lacking in finaneial aid to fight her case. Aside from the as- sistance she received from the various W. C. T. U. organizations throughout the eoun- try, it is said that the people in Chicago, New York, Cincinnati and Kausas City also sent money to aid ber. David Nation, the kind-faced old veter- an, who is hent with a weight of 72 years, was a constant visitor at the jail. While true, he was not permitted to enter the bastile because of the quarantine, but this fact did not deter him from slowly wend- ing his way over the hard pavement three times a day, and, no matter how cold the weather, he stood just belew his wife’s cell window and conversed with her abont the news of the day and the progress her at- torneys were making in her behalf. Through him’ the_ prisoner communicated with the outside world. Mr. Nation is himself a total abstainer. but forall that he is not in sympathy with his wife’s radical measures to bring about reform. The old war veteran himself acknowledged this, find the wife also’ was ‘well ‘aware of the act. i PRN « Tita OE BIEng Turning Brewn Like a Filipino. Ponta n —— NBR dcr Be . Mrs. Rose Lowe, 28 years old was taken suddenly ill at her howe, 505 Second ave- nue, New York, a few days ago. A physi- cian who was called in to attend her found that she was suffering from a contraction of the small glands in the region of the kid- neys. She became worse,and Tuesday was removed to Bellevue hospital, where it was found that all: the ‘glands in the body had become - more. or, less. contracted and that ber skin had turned to a dark brown color giving the woman the appearance of a bronze statue. The disease from which she is suffering, is known as ‘‘Addison’s disease’’ from the celebrated Eoglish phy- sician of that name, who discovered 1t. Cases of it are rare, and many leading phy- sicians have been to see Mrs. Lowe. They say that she will die. i Bits Prd ff 3 WHE 7s EES TE AL Ld BT aL Bumped His Mead, Now 11 Right, boii Missiiell oh Moen y Holly, N Jo who has been running a farm near Jobs- town, has Pot ering from a which affected his ‘speech and also caused temporary “aberration ¢f ‘mind. In: order that he might receive the attention of his sister he was removed to Mount Holly, A few days ago he fell ont of bed and struek his head a severe blow on the floor, and since that time his mind and speech have been restored. The jar evidently re- moved a blood clot. ; A Startler. “Just came from downtown. Saw 19 men killed.” : *‘Good gracious! Where?” “In the latest high-class melodrama.” —Cleveland Plain Dealer. ————————————— His Past “Ever in amateur theatricals ?’’ “Just once.” “What part did you take!" | ‘‘Me ? I took all the abuse. I was stage manager, you see.”’—Indianapolis Press. -——Some people interpret ‘‘taking up their cross” by getting cross early in the morning and staying that way all day.