srg Bellefonte, Pa., March 22, 1907. OVER AND OVER AGAIN, Over and over again, ' No matter which way I turn, Ialways find in the book of life Some lesson | have to learn, 1 must take my turn at the mill, I must grind out the golden grain, I must work at my task with a resolute will Over and over again. We cannot measure the need Of even the tiniest flower, Nor check the flow of the golden sands That run through a single hour; But the morning dews must fall, And the sun and the summer rain Must do their part, and perform it all Over and over again. Over and over again The brook through the meadow flows. And over and over again The ponderous mill-wheel goes. Once doing will not suffice, Though doing be not in vain, And a blessing failing us once or twice May come if we try again. The path that has once been trod Is never so rough to the feet, And the lesson we once have learned Is never #o hard to repeat. Though sorrowful tears must fall, And the heart to its depths be driven With storm and tempest, we need them all To render us mect for heaven, ~Josermise Porrarp, TO A LOST CHILD. My little child, so long away, Hast thou forgotten me? And does some Mother Soul in heaven Play kissing games With thee? Then does it seem, the playing done, The hour is come for rest, And that as yellow as the moon Thy head lies on her breast. I bid you hold him, Mother Soul, As if he were your own; 1 bid thee soflly, softly lie, 0 child that I have known! — Harper's Bazar, THE BRIDGE ACROSS THE YEARS. John was expected on the five o'clock stage. Mrs. John had been there three days now, and John’s father and mother were almost packed up—so Mrs. John said. The auction would be to-morrow at nine o'clock, and with John there to see tbat things “hustled’’—which last was really unnec- essary to mention, for John’s very presence meant ‘hustle’ —with John there, then, the whole thing onght to be over by one o'clock, and they off in season to catch the alternoon express. And what a time it bad been—those three days ! Mrs. John, resting in the big chair on the front porch, thought of those days with ofmplacency—that they were over. Grandpa and Grandma Burton, hovering over old treasures in the attic, thought of them with terrified dismay —that they bad ever begun. “I am coming up on Tuesday.” Mrs. John bad written. ‘‘We have been think- ing for some time that you and father ought not to be left alone up there on the farm any longer. Now don’t worry about the packing. I shall bring Marie, and you won’t have to lilt your finger. John will come Thursday night, and he there for the auction on Friday. By that time we shall have picked out what 1+ worth saving, and everything will be ready for him to take matters in band. I think he has already written to the auctioneer, vo tell [father to give himself no uneasiness on that score. “John says he thinks we can bave you back here with us by Friday night, or Sat- urday at the latest. Yon know John's way, 80 you may he sure there will be no tiresome delay. Your rooms here will be all ready before I leave, so that part will be all right. “This may seem a bit sudden to you, but you know we have always told you that the time was surely coming when you couldn’t live alone any longer. John thinks it bas come now; and, as said be- fore, you know John, so, after all, you won't be surprised at his going right ahead with things. We shall do everything pos- sible to make you comfortable, and I am sure yon will be very happy here. “‘Good-by, then, until Tuesday. With love to both of you. Eprri.”’ That had heen the beginning. To Grand- pa aud Grandma Barton it had come like a thunderclap on a clear day. They had known, to be sure, that son John frowned & little at their lonely life; bat that there shounld come this sudden transplanting, this ruthless twisting and tearing of roots that for sixty years had heen burrowing deeper and deeper—it was almost beyoovd one's comprehension. And there was the auction ! “We sha'n't need that, anyway,” Grandma Burton bad said at once. “What few things we don’t want to keep [ shall give away. Aa auction, indeed ! Pray, what have we to sell ?"’ “Hm’m ! To be sure, to be sure,’ her hasband bad murmured; but his face was troubled, and later he had said,apologetical- ih: “Yon see, Hannah, there’s the farm things. We don’t need them.’ On Tuesday Mre. John and the somewhat awesome Marie—to whom Grandpa and Grandma Burton never could learn not to courtesy—arrived ; and almost at once Grandma Burton discovered that not only “farm things,”’ but such precions treasures as the hair wreath and the parlor-set were auctiouable. In fact, everything the house contained, except their clothing and a few crayon portraits, seemed to be in the same y. “Bat, mother dear,” Mrs. John had re- turned, with a laugh, in response to Grand- ma Barton’s horrified remonstrances, ‘‘jnst wait until you see your rooms, and how fall they are of beautiful thinge, and then you'll understand.’’ ‘‘But they won’t bhe—these,”’ the old voice had quavered; and Mrs. Jobn had laughed again, and had patted her mother- in-law’s cheek, aud had echoed—but with a different shade of meaning—‘‘No, they certainly won't be these !”’ In the attic now, on a worn black trunk sat the little old man, and down on the Rous before an antiquated cradle knelt his e. “They was all rocked in it, Seth,” she was saying, ‘‘Jobn and the twinsand my two little girls; and now there ain’t any one loft only John—and the cradle.” “I know, Hannah, but you ain’t usin’ that nowadaye, so you don’t really need it,” comforted the old man. ‘‘But there's my big chair now-—geems as though we jest oughter take that. Why, there ain’s a day goes by that I don’t set in is I" “But John's wife says there's better ones there, Seth,” soothed the old woman in her turn, ‘‘as much as four or five of ’em right in our rooms.’ “So she did, so she did !"” murmured the man. “I’m an ongrateful thing ;s0 I be.” There was a long pause. The old man drummed with his fingers on the trunk and watched a cloud sail across the skylight. The woman gently swung the cradle to and fro. “If only they wa’n’t goin’ ter be—sold!" she choked, after a time. “I can look at ‘em, and feel of em, and—and remember every dress I've bad since I was a girl; and there's that hair wreath—seems as if I jest couldn't let that go, Seth. ‘‘Why, there's your hair, and John's, and some of the twins,’ and—"’ ‘“There, there, dear; now I jest wouldn't fret,’’ cut in the old man, quickly. ‘Like enough when you get used ter them other things on the wall you'll like em even bet- ier than the bair wreath. John’s wife says she’s taken lots of pains and fixed 'em up with pictures and curtains and everythin’ | nice,”’ went on Seth, talking very fast. | “Why, Hannah, it’s you that’s being on- | grateful now, dear!" | “So 'tis, so tis, Seth, and it ain’t right and I know it. I ain't a-goin’ ter do go no more; now see !"" And she hravely turned her back on the cradle and walked, head ereot, toward the attio stairs. John came at five o'clock. He engulfed the little old man and the little old woman in a bearlite hug, and breezily demanded what they]had been doing to themselves to make them look =o forlorn. In the very next hreath, however, he answered his own question, and declared that it was hecause they had heen living all cooped up alone so long—=o it was; and that it was high time it was stopped, and that he bad come to do it ! Whereupon the old man and the old woman smiled bravely and told each other what a good, good son they had, to he sare ! Friday dawned clear, and not ton warm —an ideal auction-day. Long hefore nine o'clock the yard was full of teams and the house of people. Among them all, how- ever, there was no sign of the bent old man and the erect little old woman, the owners of the property to be sold. John and Mrs. John were not a little distnrbed—they had lost their father and mother. Nine o'clock came, and with it began the strident call of the auctionner. Men laughed and joked over their bids, aod women looked on and gossiped, adding a bid of their own now and then. Every- where was the son of the house, and things went through with a rush. Up-stairs, in tbe darkest corner of the attic—which had been cleared of goods—sat, hand in haod on an old packing-box, a little old man and a lit. tle old weman who winced and shrank to- gether every time tbe ‘‘Goiog, going, gone !" floated up to them from the yard below. At half past one the last wagon rumbled out of the yard, and five minutes later Mr. John gave a relieved ory. “Ob, there you are ! Why, mother, fath- er, where have you been?’ There was no reply. The old man chok- ed back a cough and bent to flick a bit of dust from his coat. The old woman turn- ed and crept away, her erect little figure looking suddenly bent and old. ‘Why, what—"' began John, as his fath- er, too, turned away. ‘‘Why, Edith, youn don’t suppose—"' he stopped with a help- less frown. ‘Perfectly watural, my dear, perfectly natal,’ returned Mrs. Joun, lightly. “We'll get them away immediately. It'll be all right when once they are started.” Some hoars later a very tired old wan and a still more tired old woman crept into a pair of sumptuous canopy-topped twin 8. There was only one remark. “Why, Seth, mine ain’t feathers a mite ! Is yours?" There was no reply. Tired nature had triumphed —Seth was asleep. They made a brave fight, those two. They told themselves that the chairs were easier, the carpeis softer, aud the pictares prettier than those that had gone under the hammer that day as they =at band in hand in the attic. They assured each other that the nvaccustomed richness of window and bed hangings and the profusion of strange vases and statuettes did not make them afraid to stir lest they soil or hreak some- thing. They insisted to each other that they were not homesick, aud that they were perfectly satisfied as they were. And yet— When no one was looking Grandpa Bur- ton tried chair after chair, and wondered why there was only one particular chair in the whole world that jast exactly *‘fitted;” aud when the twilight hour came Grandma Burton wondered what she wonld give to be able just to sit by the old cradle and talk with the past. The newspapers said it was a most mar- vellous escape for the whole family. They gave a detailed account of how the beauti- ful residence of the Honorabl: Jobn Bar- ton, with all its costly furnishings, had burned to the gronnd,and of how the entire family was saved, makiog special mention of the honorable gentleman’s aged father and mother. No one was injured. [fortu- nately, avd the family had taken up a tem- porary residence in the nearest hotel. It was understood that Mr. Burton would Begin rebuilding at once. e newspapers were right—M-. Burton did begin rebuilding at once; in fact, the ashes of the Burton mansion were not cold before John Barton began to interview architects and contraotors. “It'll be *way ahead of the old one,’ he confided to his wife enthusiastically. Mrs. John sighed. *‘I know, dear,” she began, plaintively; “‘but, don’s yon see ? it won’t be the same —it can’t be. Why, some of those things we've bad ever since we were married. They seemed a part of me, John. I was used to them. I had grown up with some of them—those candlesticks of mamma's, for instance, that she had when I was a bis of a baby. Do you think money can bay another pair that—that were hers?’ And Mrs. John barst into tears. “Come, come, dear,” protested her hus- band, with a hasty caress and a nervous glance at the clock—he was due at the bank in ten minutes. ‘‘Don’t fret about what can’t be helped; besides’’—and he laughed whimsically—*‘youn must look out or you'll be getting as bad as mother over her bair wreath !”’ And with another hasty pat on her shoulder he was gone. Mrs. John suddenly stopped her crying. She lowered her bandkerchief Te fixedly at an old print on the wall apposite. The hotel—though strictly modern in coi- sine and management— was an old one,and prided itself on the quaintness of its old- time furnishings. ust what the print represented Mrs. John could not have told, though her eyes did not swerve from its face for five long minutes. What she did things. Now there's them quilts with all | my dress pieces in 'em—a piece of "most | see was a silent, dismantled farmbouse,and a listle old man and a little old woman with drawn faces and damb lips. Was it possible ? Had she indeed been so blind ? , Mrs. John rose to ber feet, bathed her eyes, straightened her veck-bow, and cross- ed the ball to Grandma Barton's room. “Well, mother, and how are youn getting along?’ she asked, oheerily. tle old woman, eagerly. it seers kind of nataral like; mebbe it's almost like his at home.”’ It was a good beginning, and Mrs. Jobn made the most of it. Under her skillful guidance Grandma Burton, in less than five minutes, had gone from the chair to the old clock which her father used to wind, and from the clock to the bureau where she kept the dead twins’ listle white shoes and bonnets. She told, too, of the cherished parlor chairs and marble-topped table, and of how she and father had saved and saved for years to buy them; and even now, as she talked, her voice rang with pride of possession—though for only a moment; it shook then with the remembrance of loss, There was no complaint, it i< true, no audible longing for lost trensares. There was only the unwonted joy of pouring into sympathetic ears the story of things loved and lost—things the very mention of which brought sweet faint echoes of voices long gince silent. “There, there,” hroke off the little old woman at last, “how Iam runnin’ on! But, somehow, somethin’ set me to talkin’ ter-day. Mebbe "twas that chair that's like yer father's,” she hazarded. “Maybe is wae,” agreed Mrs. quietly, as she 10%e to her feet. The new house came on apace. In a wonderfully «hort tin.e John Burton began to urge his wife to see ahont rogs and hang- ings. It was then that Mrs. John called him to one side and said a lew horried but very earnest worde—words that made the Honorable John open wide his eyes. “But, Edith,” he remonstrated, ‘‘are | you crazy ? | The things . re scattered over half a dozen Ctownships; vesides, I haven't the least idea where the anctioneer’s list is—if I saved it | at all.” ‘Never mind, dear; I may try, surely,” begged Mrs. John; and her husband langh- ed and reached for his check-book. “Try ? Of conte yon may try ! And here's this hy way of wishing you good luck,” he finished, as he handed her an oblong bit of paper thas would go far to- ward smoothing the most difficult of ways. “You dear !"’ cried Mrs. John. *‘And now I'm going to work.” . It was at about this time that Mre, John John, and hoarding school; John was absorbed in husiness and house-building, and Grandpa and Grandma Barton were contented and well cared for. There really seemed to he no reason why Mrs. John shon!d not go away, if she wished—and she apparently did wish. It was at about this time, too, that cer- tain Vermont villages—one of which was the Honorable John Burton's birthplace— were stirred to sudden interest and action. A persistent, smiling-faced woman had dropped into their midst—a woman who drove from house to house, and who, in every cave, left behind her a sworn ally and friend, pledged to serve her cause. Little by little,in an unoeed room in the village hotel there began to accumulate a motley collection—a clock.a marble-topped table, a cradle,a patchwork quilt, a bureau, a bair wreath, a chair worn with age and use. And as this collection grew in size and fame, only that family which could not add to it counted itself abused and unfortu- pate, xo reat was the spell that the per- sistent, smiling faced woman had cast about her. Just before the Barton house was finish- ed Mis. John came back to town. She bad to hurry a little about the last of the dec: orations and furnishings to make up for loat time; but there came a day when the place was pronounced ready for occupancy. It was then that Mrs. John hurried into Grandpa and Grandma Burton’s rooms at the hotel. ‘‘Come, dears,’’ she said, gayly. ‘“‘The house is all ready, and we're going home.” ‘Done? Soroon ?’* faltered Grandma Burton, who had not heen told very much concerning the new home's progress. “Why, how quick they bave built ie 1? There was a note of regret in the trem. ulous old voice, hut Mrs. John did not seem to notice. The old man, too, rose from his chair with a long sigh—and again Mrs. Jobo did not seem to notice. ‘Yes, dearie, yes, it’s all very nice and fine,” xaid Grandma Burton, wearily, half an hour later as she trudged through the samptpous parlors and halls of the new house; “but, if you don’t mind, I guess I'll go to my room, davghter. I'm tired —terrible tired.” : *Up the stairs and along the ball trailed the little procession—Mrs. John, John, the hent old man, and the little old woman. At the end of the hall Mrs. John pansed a moment, then flung a door wide open. There was a gasp and a quick step for- ward; then came the sudden illamination of two wrinkled old faces. “John! Edith 2'—it was a ery of mingled joy and wonder. There was no reply. Mis. John had closed the door and lefe them there with their treasures.—By Eleanor P. Porter, in Harper's Bazar. ——An upcounntry business man was once introduced to Abbot Lawrence. *‘Mr. Smith,’ said Mr. Lawrence, with a musing air. ‘I don’t think I know you, pt 11 h ell, you ought to,’ was the reply. “I've traded with you for twenty veo ‘‘Always paid your bills, perhaps?’ “Of course.” “That accounts for it,” said Mr. Law- rence. ‘‘I know the others.” ——AnR American and a Scotchman were on a high kill in Scotland and the Scoteh- man was bragging of the extent of view. “I suppose you can see America from hereon a fine day?'’ eaid the American, gly. A aye, further than that,”’ was the re- y. “Farther than that?” ‘““Aye! on a fine nicht we can see the mune.” —*‘He’s positively the worst actor I ever saw,"’ said the first manager; ‘a regu- lar ham, in facs.”’ “Oh,” soggested the other; ‘‘perbaps he'll get over his faults in time.”’ “No: he's a haw that can’t be cured.” —— ‘Money bas wings and flies away, ‘I’ve heard,” said the man with a scar ; ‘‘But I've put lots of dough ina flying ne Yet it never has flown very far.” It simply couldn’t he done ! | i i | *‘Jest as nice as can be, daughter—and | and multiply it bv nine. ain’t this room pretty ?'’ returned the lit- | choose two, which multiplied by nine will, “Do youn know, | of course, give us eighteen. | i | 1 i | | | i went away. The children were at college | Fan Wah Figures. SOME CURIOUS AND INTERESTING FACTS ABOUT THE FIGURE NINE. Write down in a row all the numerals except eight, thus: 1 23456179 Now choose any one of these numerals Suppose we Then multiply your row of figures by because of that chair there. Seth says it's | this: 12345679 18 98765432 12345679 22222 The answer, you see, 1s all twos. if you bad chosen three the answer then would bave been all threes— and =o on. Another carious fact i= that if you write down any number tn three figures and then reverse those figures and subtract the lesser amount, you will find that the middle fignre of the amount of the answer is al ways nine: Pry it thus, write. ........coreonerirnrnnnss 763 Now reverse them. .....c.cceceeriirercrren 367 Now reverse again, hat this time add to the AIOUBE Lo ini 693 1089 Your answers will always be the same, 1,089 —except in one instavee, if the first two figures you write are alike and the last figure next in regular order as 778, EBT, 776, 998. In that case you will get 99 for your an- swer, but by again adding thie, and then adding this sum reversed you come back to your 1,089, Example: 76 Reversed 677 Substracted 99 99 Added 198 Reversed 891 Added 1089 Of the many curious results reached by the various combinations of the number 9, the following iv not the least remarkable: Take any number yon please (provided the number does not read the same back- | ward as forward) and, baving written it down, write it backward, that is, make the last figure of the firss the first fignre of the second, and so on, so that the Gis figure of the first shall be the last of the second; subtract the lesser from the greater, and multiply the remainder, or difference, hy any number yon please. From the product thus obtained rah ont any one figure ( pro- vided the figure i< not 9) and add together the remaining figures, as if they were all units, If the sum contains mere than one figure, repeat the operation, than is, add together the figures of the sum as if they were all unite, and continue to thus repeat until the sum is expressed hy a single figure ruhbzd ont will always be what it is required to make 9 when added to this final figure. For instance, soppose the sum of the figures of the product when added togeth- er, after rubbing out one figure, he 157; thie, being expressed hy more than one figure, is again added—1 and 5 and 7 make 13; this, again, being likewise more than one fignie, is again added—1 und 3 make 4. Therefore the fignre rubbed ont was 5, that being the number required to make 9 So, if the final figure be 6, the figuie rubbed ont was 3; if the final figure rubbed out was 7; if the final figore he 9,the figure rubbed out was 0. Thie result will never fail. An amusing game can be built up on this. One of a party, without knowing what were the nunthers used, or the fig- nres rubbed out, hy the others,can instant. ly declare the latter, in each case, upon be- ing told what is the final figure of the cal- caiation.—[ Saint Nicholas. The Stars on Coins. Numismatists probably will be interest- ed in an explanation made by Acting Director of the Mint R. E. Preston of the reason the stars ou the coins of the United States bave six points; while those on the flag have but five. The question was raised by Elizabeth S. Dickinson, of Lexington, Mass., in a letter to Captain Ross of the revenne cutter serv- foe, who in tarn referred it to Mr. Preston. In kis explanation the acting director said: “In English heraldry six or more points denote a star. The earliest examples of colonial coins all have the six-pointed siar, which is correct, according to English her- aldry. It is presumed that when the time came to adopt designs for the coins of the united States, English heraldry was con- sulted, and the colonial coins were follow- ed in matters of detail like the stars. The flag of the United States, as you are aware, is made up very largely from the coat-of- arms of Washiogton. Where both the stripes and stars are found, the stars bave but five points. Washington was a member of the com- mittee for designing the flag, and probably had these stars in mind when the d war under construction, and no doubt his opinion would control the other members of the committee. On the five franc piece of the French Republic stars with six points will be found. There are other examples besides the flag and the coins where the stars differ in the number of points. The stars oa the eat seal and the President of the United tates are five pointed, while on the seal of the Hounse of Representatives they are six-pointed. ; The thirteen stars on the obverse of the present half and quarter-dollar are six- pointed, while on the reverse they are five- nted. Ib explanation of this difference would state that the reverse of the pres- ent half and quarter-dollar is a copy of the great seal, except that the'clouds are omit- ted. It is evident that heraldry has not taken a very strong hold in these matters in the United States; therefore it is not in the power of anyone to say withouta douht why the difference in th2stars oo the flag and the coins. So far as we know, with the exception of the reverse of the present half and quarter. dollar, the stars on our coins are copied from the colonial coins, which were, no doubt, made after the manuer of English heraldry, while the flag was made up alter the a of Washington’s coat.of-arms, containing three five-pointed stars.— [Washington Post.] ——*“I think,"’ said the reporter, ‘‘i.at the public would like to know how you manage to such a great age.’’ “By perseverance,” replied the centena- rian. *‘I jest kept on livin’.”’ | i That Leviathan. As tothe depth to which whales can de- =cend, opinions have changed considerably of late years. It was once supposed that they went down to great depths; hut the effects of pressure would manifestly render this quite impessible; and in the opinion of the great authority, Frank Bullen, a depth of one hundred yards is probably their ex- treme limit. port from the fact that the food of most species consists of animals living on or near tie surface; and likewise by the practical experience of whalers in connection with the amount of line taken out by harpooned whales. The sperm-whale, which feeds on larze cuttlefishes, seems, however, in sone degree, to be an exception; there heing circumstantial evidence that these mon- asters, in certain instances, touch the ocean bottem, although at what depth is still an- kuown. Modern observation has thrown much new light on the “spouting.” or breathing, of whales In this connection it is perhap« almost saperflaous to mention that the water, or spray, included in the ‘pout’ i= merely adventitious, and due either to the condensed maiz are of the breath, or to the creature beginning to *‘hlow’’ hefare reaching the surface. Kecent photographs of spouting whalex nave demonstrated not only that there is great difference in the form of the spount, hutalso that the height to which it aseend« is much less than for merly snpposed ; even that of the *‘sulphur bottom,” or Sibbald's whale —the huogest member of the whole group—averaging not more than fourteen feet, althongh oceasion- ally reaching as much as twenty feet. Whether the reference in Psalm 104 10 “that leviathan, whom thou hast made to play therein,’ really relates to the gamhbols of torquals or hamphacks in the Red Sea or not, certain it ist! at cetaceans of every | kind are among the moat playful and spor- tive of all animals. The greatest adept at these sportive performances is undoabtedly the humpbacked whale, which delights 10 throw its huge carcase clear out of the water, to lie on its side with one of the long white flippers standing vertically out of the water like a gigantic sword, or to ‘dance’ upright, with ite head raised above the surface. The sperm-whale is, however, not far behind in this respect,and when “‘hreaching’’ shoots its sixty feet af leagth to a height above the surface sufhi- cient to render iteell vigihle from the mast head ata distance of hall a dozen miles, — Review. 18 DEAD IN FLAMES AND FLOOD Terrified By Factory Fire, Scores Leap Into the Water. Wheeling, W. Va., March 18, — lost their lives in the early morning fire that occurred at the plant of the Warwick Pottery company, which is located in the flooded district. Because of the water surrounding the burning district jt was impossible for the fire apparatus to reach the scene. The firemen pressed into ser- vice all the boats that could be se: cured and carried the lines of hose to the burning building by this means. They did heroic work and not only fought the fire but assisted in rescuing many persons. Had the drowned persons remained in their homes none of them would have met death. The buildings occu: pied by the unfortunate victims were not touched by the flames. The ex plosion that started the fire is what terrified the people living in the vi cinity. No sooner had the report of the ex: plosion occurred than people com: menced leaping from the windows into the water. Not all of those who met death were drowned by jumping into the water. Five of them were drown: ed by the upsetting of a boat that was carrying them to a place of safety. WORKING FOR TAFT Friends Say He Will Get Ohic Nomi nation For Presidency. Washington, March 19.—That Wil liam Howard Taft, of Ohio, will go be fore the next Republican national con vention as a candidate for the presi dential nomination, with many, if not all, of the 46 delegates from his own state of Ohio behind him, is regarded here as a pretty safe political wager. Senator Foraker, it is declared, will not be a candidate for first honors next year, and it is said that his sup- port will be thrown to Mr. Taft. With Ohio solidly behind him, the adminis tration favorable to his candidacy and approved by conservatives who look askance upon some of the Roosevelt policies, the friends of Mr. Taft be lieve that he looms up head and shoulders above all others whose names have been mentioned as likely candidates. KILLED BY CANNED PEACHES Two Boys Dead and Mother Dying From Ptomaine Poisoning. Richmond, Va., March 18.—As a re sult of ptomaine poisoning, caused by eating canned peaches, Melvin Ives, 13 vears old, and Leonard Lee Ives, 7 years old, sons of Mr. and Mrs, W. W, Ives, of Hampton, Va., are dead, and their mother is believed to be dying. The mother and boys were stricken last Wednesday. President's Summer Plans. Washington, March 19.—Tentative plans for the president's summer at Oyster Bay have been disoussed at the White House. As now contem- plated he will leave Washington for that place somewhere between the 20th and 25th of June. If he can con- viently get away earlier he will do so. A trip to Indianapolis and Lansing, Mich, and two trips to the Jamestown exposition are on the program before the president's vacation begins. Archie Roosevelt Sits Up. Washington, March 18. — Archie Roosevelt's condition is still improv- ing. and Surgeon General Rixey an- qounced that the quarantine restric- tions imposed on account of the boy's illness will be raised in a few days. Archie sat up in bed. Theodore Roose- velt, Jr., arrived from Harvard and will remain at the White House until after Easter f i i i capitol in a progressive manner. | Eighteen persons are known to have | the legislators should realize that such GROUNDS FOR THE CAPITOL | Bill For. the Enlargement Well on This conclusion receives sup- | Its Way to Final Passage. rr Harrisburg, Pa., March 18. — The change in public sentiment among members of the senate and the house of representatives in favor of the en- argement of Capitol Park noted two weeks ago, is much more pronounced at present than it was then. The Fox bill has passed the senate by a vote of 33 to 7. When it comes up in the house, which it probably will this week or next, it is believed that whatever opposition there was will have disappeared because the members have come to better realize the neces- sity of making the improvement now and because they have learned that the sentiment of the people of the state generally is favorable. Several of the leading daily papers in Philadelphia have taken the trouble to inform themselves of the exact sit- uation with the result that they are all heartily in favor of the Fox bill In a recent editorial article the Phila- delphia Inquirer, the one out-and-out Republican organ among the dailies of Philadelphia, most heartily approved the measure. The Republican Philadelphia Press on Sunday, March 10, in a leading edi- torial said, “The present legislature has a unique opportunity to carry out a great public improvement in Harris- burg through the passage of the bill intreduced by Senator Fox appropriat- ing an adequate sum to develop a park east of the state capitol. There should be no hesitancy on the part of the legislature to secure now what should have been secured two years ago. None of those who are back of the park project either connived at or stood for the enormous expenditure on the capi- tol; but they have in season and out of season insisted that the legislature meet the situation created by the new And a park as is contemplated is not only a benefit to Harrisburg but to the state at large.” In an editorial published Monday, March i1, the Democratic Philadelphia Record said regarding the capitol ex- tension bili: “There is hardly a doubt that the house will concur in the ac- tion of the senate. The state is rich and can afford to be liberal, especially if there is money of the taxpayers al- ready on hand to cover more exigent needs.” The Philadelphia Public Ledger, in- dependent in politics, said in an edi- torial article published on Tuesday, March 12: “The extension of Capitol Park, as provided in the bill, which has already passed the senate. is so far from extravagance that it is really a measure of economy. * * * [t is sheer waste to erect a capitol build- ing and have it encompassed by squalor and desolation. The land be- tween the capitol and the railroad can stili be secured at a very moder- ate cost, and its addition to the public grounds ought not to be deferred until its occupation by the growing industry of Harrisburg shall make its acquisi- tion still more urgent and much more expensive. Philadelphia has had many examples of large public improvements of this kind too long deferred, as in the failure to reserve sufficient space ground the city hall. The legislature will be greatly at fault if it refuses the present opportunity to make a really great city of that neglected cap: tal of Pennsylvania. * © * Harris- burg in its situation and surroundings has the making of a most attractive city. The state has done little or noth- ing for it, treating it generally as a mere railway station. The present project is not for the benefit of the residents alone, though it will be a direct help and encouragement to them in their own civic enterprise. It is rather a duty to Pennsylvania. The present legislature probably cannot re- cover the money spent on the new capitol, but it can do much to com- pensate for the excessive expenditure by providing such surroundings for tho building as will make it in the time to come a delight and pride to the whole state.” Not a few doubting legislators were eonvinead of the propriety of voting for Senator Fox's bill by an illustrated lecture given by J. Horace McFarland in the hall of the house of representa- tives last Wednesday night. By means of more than 100 lantern slides’ Mr. McFarland showed how the capitol at Washington and the capitols of various states in the Union are sur- rounded by beautiful grounds, afford- ing fine views of those great struc- tures. He also showed the squalid and unattractive condition of the section lying immediately back of Pennsylva- nia’s new state capitol which it is pro- posed to take and clear off. Mr. McFarland further showed how the city of Harrisburg proposes to give for this great improvement streets of the city amounting to more than nine acres of land, or more than one-third of all that it is proposed to utilize for the enlargement of the park. He also showed how within the last five vears Harrisburg and its citizens have spent many million dollars to im. prove the city, in building a modern sewer system, providing pure water, many hundreds of acres of fine parks and 40 miles of well-paved, clean streets, of which the legislators, state officials and employes who spend the whole or a portion of the year here have the same use as the citizens of Harrisburg, the same use as though the state had helped to pay for these great improvements, which it has not