Bellefonte, Pa., October Ii. 1907. HOW WE SAVED FOR A HOME. Amelia, we could buy a home, if we should try real hard, 80 don't use butter any more, we'll spread our bread with lard, No more from rented house to house, improv ident we Il roam. Quick, put the furnace fire out. for a home, "Twould do us good, both you and me, to get a little thinner ; For breakfast we will eat stale bread, and have cold tea for dinner, Think how luxuriously we'll fare beneath our paid-tor dome. We'll iive oo fifiy cents a week while saving for & home, We're saving You might take in some washiog, wife, and keep some boarders, too, Then do plain sewing half the night, when other work is through. No more vacation days for us by woods or ocean's foam ; No trolley rides shall take our dimes. We're saving for a home. Amelia, you did nobly, dear, you led a frugal life, And now you lie beneath a slab marked “Sacred to my Wife," And while your weary body rests beneath the churchyard loam My second wife and I reside within the saved for home, = Blsic Duncan Yale, SAVING THE CHILD. ‘James Hennessy !'- calls the olerk. Jimmy stands there beside she big police- man who dragged kim out of a dry-goods box some time between midnight and dawn. He in barefooted, and his frayed and ragged tronsers are miles soo big for him. They are held over his diminutive nakedness by a single suspender Litobed over a thin little shoulder. Such feelings as be bas known in bis gray life have vi- brated chiefly between hatred and fear. A hand is raised as a sign that the officer who has taken him into custody is 80 be sworn, and Jimmy dodges. That is instinot. Jimmy bas been dodging all his life. The story is told in the nsnal stolid po- lice way. There are a few formal phrases about “‘exposed and neglected" and “‘im- proges gumdianship,” bat, of course, this s beyond Jimmy's ken. He is simply a concerned, cowering voung animal. Then a man in & black gown, who sits up in a big chair, begins to talk to him. The startliog thing to Jimmy is that he is neither being ounrsed at nor reviled. This man, who is Joking 80 earnestly at him, is speaking quietly, kindly. Jimmy kuows little of church but this, maybe, is thepriest. There is a queer stirring within his ssanted litsle being. A new pucker comes to bir pinched face. His fists go suddenly to his eyes, when, strangest of all, his diny, tear-bedewed hand is taken gently hy the gowned man. Jimmy then looks into the man’s eyes. He sees something there bet ter than a bed, better even shan the food he oraved, a something for which he bas dambly starved all bis shors, miserable life—a ray of human kindoess and sympa- thy, This birthright of childhood bas ever wen denied him. With his advent in the Children’s Cours, and hy the finding of that cours which gives him a good howe a vew life begins and James Hennessy, erstwhile of Corlear’s Hook, is saved to the State. This story is not au uncommon ope. It is one of the commonest of the common in that great hnmane tribunal, where eachday children are being released from the will- stoues thas evil environment aud neglectful parents bave set about their necks. Here no fortunes are heing litigated, nor is the fight made for the freedom or punishment of grown-ups, whose babits avd vices are fixed. The prize is of richer worth, —our futare citizenship. For the problem of the child is the problem of the State. Into this conrt crowds more of human interest thao in any other court of the world. Before its bar is constantly passing a great procession of haman incoogruoities, scenes vibrant with pathos and humor. For both pathos and humor consists in the perception of incongruities. It is the sins of the parents and the sins of the living conditions that the overerowded city forces ou its children that here stand ous most strikingly. The real culprit is more often the delinquent parents than the delinquent ohild. The sight of a child trosting to a saloon two or three times daily, pail in hand, to procure the family supply of beer—a familiar one in a great city—im- peaches the parent for a criminal indiffer- euce. Small wouder that the child's moral perceptions are obliterated, and hia instincts perverted in such surroundings ! Itisin the streets, the vice sown streets, that the child learns to gamble, to swear, to steal. He cannot help it. He must employ the ways of his companions if he is tosurvive among them. And the ways of his companions lead oftenest to the Chil- ands Court. ; ¢ who mits in judgment here is charg- ed with great ibilities. He knows that often on his decision rests the blight- ing or making of a life. In fact, bere the judge is a big father in time of greatest peed to the multitude of small boys, tearful or sullen, and small girls, hysterical or coldly indifferent, who are baled before him each day to answer charges of lawbreaking that ron —charges the gamut of the Penal Code from the ordi. big nary mischief! of irrepressible th to burglary and attempts at ii Curiously enough, each one of the score end more of children who bave been brought here for attempted suicide has been a girl. Between the appearance of Jimmy and that of the sinartly dressed youngster in koickerboukery boss case is a called, there is a striking contrast. defendant and bis father have hetero only a few minutes before in a big antomo- bile, for the hoy has been released on bail after having been arrested she day before for breaking a street lamp while playing hall, The obarge is read by the judge who, in this common sense court, is prosecutor, judge and jury combined. “Did you break the lamp ?'’ aaked the jodge as he calle Robbie to him and mo- tions to the officer to keep she self-import- ant father outside the rail. “Yee, sir,” is the boy’s simple, straight- forward response, and it does the hears of the Court good. Robbie's father fames. The boy’s hon- esty bas thrust him to the verge of oplexy. Such truthfulness will never do for Robbie in business ! “What do youn say that for ? You know ou did not do it I" And the father and thrusts out a card with a Riverside Drive address engraved upon is. The judge casts the card aside in disgust. “Your has been manly enough so tell she trash, and yet you, bis father, think so listle of hima that you woald bave him come into a court of law and tell a lie. You are nos fit to bave sach a son !" Robbie's elder gloweringly pays a fine and as they walk out of cours to the wait- ing sutomobile, Robbie looks deeply ashamed for both. Robbie's handicap is his father. This man’s sin is only a little less grievous in the eyes of the Court than the criminal negleot of she father of the boy who was found sleeping in the dry- goods box, for Robbie's father should have kuown better and Robbie is being raised in luxary. In this great sbhow-place of parental deliquencies, such parents are constantly oi revealed under she X- rays of jadical investigation. A passive, slovenly dressed woman drops iuto she witness chair. She, so the repors goes, is the ‘*leaser’’ of hall a dozen crowd- ed tenements in the sweat shop distrios. That is, she applies the screws to the help- less tenants for the real owner, who perhaps lives in a fine house on ope of the avenues aud moves in high sociesy. Her thirteen- year-old son is charged with being an haibitaal truant. “*The school records show that your hoy has broken the law hy heing ahsent from school for more than a year,’’ the Coars informs her. When the sentence is interpreted to her, she shrugs ber heavy shoulders and mildly replies : “*Mayhe he wasn’s feeling well.” Of what avail is reason against such stolidity as this ? Her indifference, however, suddenly disappears as her boy is led away to the truant school. ‘Ob, my Izzy ! My Izzy!" she cries ; but the ory comes from no ma- ternal impulse, —her Izzy has helped in the collection of the rents. A freckle-faced adventurer from one of the worst districts is accused of hurling a hrick through the window of a Chinaman's laoudry. “I did is, Chudge, bat de Chink ain’t Kot no provers '' is his ingenious answer to the charge, Aloyeius, for 80 his name has been writ. ten in his baptisinal lines, ies made to nn- derstand that he will fare better by a straightforward plea than by trying to dodge bebind the technicalities of toe law. He is led to an noderstanding, also, before the lesson is over, that even Chinamen have rights, and be ig obliged to humble nimsell so far as to take the reluctant Chinaman by she haod and beg his pardon. ‘This, too, after his father has agreed to pay for the glass. To teach boys and girls to respect the rights of others is io the ground- work course of our children’s courts. Aloyrinn in released on parole, which aieaus that the hand of she Court rests over bim and that for any trapsgression of the strict live of conduoce that i= laid down he may be brought back at once and comwis- ted to an iostitusion. There is not to be a «ingle day of ‘*hooky,”’ and she report of the Parole Officer, on the day that he is to reappear in court, most show that he has heen an exemplary little citizen. For the Children’s Court is often called *‘the coors of ove more chance,’ and little boys aod girls are not packed off to iustitations un- less there is absolutely no other prospect for reformation, for there is always the danger that they will be turned oat auto- matons or if they go to the old harrack re- formatories, that they will suffer by con- tamivation. It is ever remembered that the child is the creature of environmens and of oppor- tanity. The court is often a potent factor in improving both. Frequently one of the conditions of the release on parole is that the parents shall move into a different neighborhood to give their children another chance in better surroundings. Eighsy- five per cent of these paroled children do so well that their commitment to an insti- tution is not necessary. Au affrighted urchin of ten, who ran off with a pair of shoes that were hauging in trout of a store, climbs up in frons of the bench. Ap avxious, worn mother, who sees him now for the first time since he was taken into custody, lays a trembling band on his arm. Care and the marks of drudgery are on her face. She is a scrub- woman and bas a family of five thas the father has deserted. e little fellow's eyes fill. “Judge, I took em for me listle sister,” be quavers. The sister is there, two years yonuger than the defendant. She shows her sym- path, hy Belding via hand and pasting him on the cheek. e stolen shoes are pro- duced and. sure enough, they are about Emma’s size, and Emma's toes are show- ing. A paivs-takivg inqoiry proves the boy’s story true. From some unukvown source the price of shose stolen shoes is dropped into tbe complainant’s hand and he leaves couit,grumbling in his beard. Au agent of a charitable society becomes inter ested, and, following she hoy’s arrest aud arraigoment, things will look up in thas home, An uokempt Italian mother shofiles in with a child, placid avd unwinking, un one arm, while she leads a reluctans youngster, not at all bad-looking, with the other hand. She says Tony is a bad boy, oh, a very bad boy. Tony, who is all of nine, gazes at his mother in weoder as she wonla swear him futo an institation—the ‘‘collegio,’’ as it is known to the Italians of this class. To them, putting their boy away into a re- formatory is sending bim to college aud olssimes the parent who is able to do this is looked upon with envy by his neighbors. For they reason that there the children will be fed, clothed and taught a trade, at public ex Ot course, when Tony is to help in the breadwinning, his parents will want him back. The baby, who has heen staring with round eyes at the policeman who hovers pear, bogine on a sudden to wail. Poor listle Tony, Tony the culpris, the male- factor, then patiently draws a feeding-bos- tle from the pockes of his jagkes and pute it into the baby’s hand. cries cease aod the mother’s im ment of Tony's character flowe volubly on. Tbe judge is “Yes, I'll used to all this. “Stop!” be commands. send your bey away, but your husband will be ander an order 0 pay the city each week the full amount this cbild’s support. I! he fails to do this he will be sent to prison.” ‘When this is borne in upon the mother she suddenly finde that Tony has some re- deeming qualities and she finishes by say- ing that she guesses she will give Tony an- other chance. A ‘‘collegio’ that is free is one thing, but a ‘‘col '* for which one must pay two precious dollars every week, —ob, no, it is not desirable. So Tony makes hia way home, back to his old job of nursing the baby. The philosophy with which some of the small Jn acoeps the matter of their arrest and arrsigument is a study by itself. Constant contact with bard itions has pushes | often developed this stoic calmness, and the trails of tears are not #0 numerous as might be expected. One youngster who has dropped into a policernan’s arms as he crawled from she fanlighs of a grocery he bas robbed coolly tells the judge that he’d leas thet be put away ' than go back to the that fate gave him for a home. . Soblinsky’’ is the euphonions name of a youth who is charged with the heinous offense of using a sliog-shot in a public park. He, in fact, bad aimed ata Spiros and hit a peddler, and patorally latter was wroth. The judge explains how dangerous it is $0 throw missiles iu a public place. Again it is the lesson of the rights of others, and that the higger the orowd, the less are the rights of the individ. ual. Bo often is this lesson told to the | youth thas the city would suppress and repress. “How did you come todo it?'’ the Court finally asks Now “Coffee” belongs to that large class | of boys who in their eager search for infor- mation devoar everythiug readable shat comes within their reach. Neither his father nor his mother could read or write English, bus Coffee’ is rapidly waking ap for any deficiency in thas direction. “‘Caffee’’ squares his listle shonlders and looking the Judge straight in the eye asks : “Didn't I read in the papers shat the | bird season was open ?'’ A thin, white-faced little girl of eleven is brought forward hy one of the officers of the Children’s Society. ‘‘Mother and fath- er drank most of the time,’’ says the of. | ficer; ‘‘the three of them live ina little | dark ball-hed-room,—cook, eat and sleep there. No fis piace for her.” The judge asks for the parents, who shuffle forward. The man tries to assume a bravado hearing, but he soon weakens | before the judge's merciless questions, Yes, | he does drink —onoe in a while—-he coun: | fesses, and then, with pathetic shame, | acknowledges that his wife is diouk “'pret- | ty often.” He admits that he earns from six to eight dollars a week—-when he works, | The judge torus to the unkempt, blear- | eyed woman, whose shaking hand, a« she takes the nath, hetrays her pitiable condi: | tion. After a few questions the judge says | that he will send the child to a home where | towards her support. | “'Oh, judge, please don’t take her away | from me | I swear I'll never touch another drop—dou’'t take my listle lamb from we.”’ | The woman’s voice rises to a hysterical | wail. The little girl begins so ory and | presses close to her mother’s side. ‘‘Mam- | ma, mamma,’ she sobs; and there is love, | the real heart-ory for the mother, in her voioe and caress. | Something suddenly olouds the judge's | spectacles ; he has to wipe them witha! hand that trembles, Bat he knows thas he is right; this child ' must be saved, for there are other details | in the officer’s story that show the horror | of such a home for the girl. The mother's | oath will be broken within twenty-four | hoars; it does not mean true repentance. So the Conrt rales shat the listle girl shall | 20 to the Proteoctory, and the pitifal listle group moves away from the desk, the child clinging to ber mother notil the last mo. ment, The case of a girl of fifteen, whose face is darkened with evil knowledge prematurely | gained, is called next. The mother, a foolish-looking oreature, stands indifferent | to the whole wretched recital. As her un- | fortunate daughter is led past her on her | way to a reformatory institutson the moth er in heard to whisper in her ear : ‘Never mind, Florence ; the lower yon fall, she higher you'll kounce.’’ An extreme oase? Yes, perhaps, but there are constautly being revealed offenses of parents against their children that are little less startling. There are, of course, offenders plainly and typically oriminal : the hardened young Dick Tarpins, the trained and skill fal pickpockets and other children who have heen raised in a generation of crim. inals,hovs of ten piping up to confess men’s ans. Bot even in these cases all hope is not lost, for in is all environment rather than heredity has been the coutrolling force. —By Ernest K. Coulter, in the De. lineator. How to make the most and best of life, how to preserve the health and increase the vital powers. how to avoid the pitfalls of disease; these are things every one wants to know, fs is the kaowledge of these things, taught in Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medical Adviser which makes she work protuisally priceless to men and women. is great hook, containing 1008 pages, is went free on receipt of stamps to pay ex- pense of mailing only. Send 21 one-cent stamps for the book in paper covers, or 31 ~tawps for cloth binding, to Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. ~——1It's lucky to bave a rabbit's foot. At least the rabhit thinks =o. ¥ ~—'‘A busy man is vever too busy to tell yon how busy he is.” -——— In some circles a gentleman is a man who gets drank with a dress suit on, Given Nine Months For Manslaughter. Hartford, Conn., Oct. 5.—Engineer Jerome Wilson and Conductor David C. Maroney, charged with manslaugh- ter, were found guilty in the eriminal superior court and sentenced to nine months each in jail. Wilson and Ma roney were in charge of the passenger train which on June 23 collided with a work train in this city, killing 10 persons and injuring 40. Hammered Dynamite; Head Blown Of Buffalo, N. Y., Oct. 7.—Benjamin Formato, foreman of a gang of labor- ers, was blasting slag at the Union Furnace company’s plant. While driv- ing a 25-pound dynamite cartridge in to a drill hole he decided to hammer it in with a sledge. Formato’s head was blown off. Anthony Tomillo also was killed and five other men were injured. Child's Assailant Killed by Father. Newton, Miss, Oct. 8. — William Bender, a negro, who attempted to as- sault a 6-year-old white girl, was kill ed by the child's father, Benjamin Coker, a planter, who came upon him while he was attempting to make his escape, and fired a charge of buckshot into his head. Two Fatally Injured In Duel. Pittsburg, Oct. 7.—Levi Jones, 63 years old, and William Carpenter, 34 years old, are dying in a hospital from injuries received in a duel with a knife and an ice pick as weapons. The fight was prompted, it is said, by jealousy A POTTERSVILLE EPISODE. T was at the fall elections that the feud begun in Pottersville. John Grant, the village blacksmith, a big, rawboned fellow of enormous muscle, whose family had hailed from Nova Scotia, had dared to oppose Judge Weaver, candidate for the legis- lature. From the judge's point of view the worst feature of this presumptu- ous antagonism was its success. Judge Weaver had been defeated by the nar- row margin of one vote, and bitterness was ever thereafter to rankle in his heart. Another source of vexation for the judge was the attachment which he could not fail to see existed between his daughter Nellle, a girl of pretty face, medium height, plump person HE GENEROUSLY OFFERED TO FIGHT THEM. and many suitors, on the one hand and Willis Wenham, son of the first select- man, who was in the midst of his course at one of the big eastern uni- versities. Selectman Wenham was another of Judge Weaver's political opponents; but, though the judge never forgave one who crossed his will, this was not the reason for his opposing the match between his daughter Nellle and the selectman’s son Willis. The judge was a man of means, while Selectman Wenham, though possessed of a mod- erate competency, could leave but a small sum at his demise to each of his numerous family, of which Willis composed exactly one-thirteenth. With young Wenham absent at col- lege, the judge was able to give his undivided attention to the village blacksmith. He was willing to bide his time, for he knew John Grant to be one of those men who with unfail- ing regularity get themselves into a beastly state of Intoxication just once every twelve months. For a full week it was the blacksmith's custom to wrestle with John Barleycorn, quite willing to be overcome. The only article in the warrant for the last town meeting over which there had not been more or less con- test was that which called for the erection of a town lockup. It was gen- erally conceded that Pottersville had reached that stage in a town's progress where a jail is demanded for the pres- ervation of peace and order. An out- sider might have objected that there had been no arrest made in the little village excepting of boys on truancy charges since the convening of the last town meeting, but this would have been regarded as a Machiavellian at- tempt at Impeding the wheels of progress. So the new structure had risen triumphantly, with not so much as a hint of graft, under the super- vision of the selectmen, and, although the suggestion of building had come from the mouth of Judge Weaver, none sang the praise of conception and exe- cution more loudly than the village blacksmith. It was at the fall elections, as we have said, that the feud started be- tween John Grant and Judge Weaver. It was not until the approach of the following spring that the latter found the sought for chance to “get back” at the smith. One morning in early Feb- ruary the blacksmith failed to show up at his place of business. A line of six or more impatient teamsters set out to look up the reason. At Henry Come's hostelry, known as the Come Inn, they found it. Red eyed &nd maudlin, mostly oblivious to the cares of this world, yet occasionaily burst- ing into tears and hiccoughs as he ex- postulated against the hard fate that had carried an uncie of his away on the wrong side of a log drive thirty years before, was the village black- smith, leaning for sympathy and sup- port against the rose colored, reeking bar over which the liquors of Come Inn were served. John Grant refused to do therefor as provided and laid down in the statutes of the state. Judge Weaw er forced the unwilling constables, aft. er considerable goading, to action. The blacksmith, snoring in slumber, was dragged out of the woods and cast Inte the new lockup. On the following morning he had sobered up sufficiently to appear before the court, which in Pottersville meant Judge Weaver, Two of the constables swore to hav- ing seen John Grant very drunk and disorderly at the Come Inn. There was no defense. The blacksmith even pleaded gullty with a certain amount of elation. Apparently the one uncom- fortable feature of the affair to him was the long and maliciously worded tarangue which, behind the dignity of the law, Judge Weaver delivered to the prisoner, closing by sentencing him to sixty days in Pottersville jail and fininz him $6.76 costs. . There was a beatific smile on the highly colored face of the prisoner as he was led off to the lockup, closely guarded by quite unnecessary consta- bles, after offering to work out the fine by shoeing the yoke of oxen kept to aid the paupers in their work on the town farm. The proffer had been re- fused with a great show of dignity. It would have required no great ef- fort for the burly prisoner to tear down the bars which covered the windows of the jail and which were rather more for decoration than for anything else, but other thoughts were in his mind. He was, for the first time In his life, a prisoner. It was the duty of the town to which he had paid poll and property taxes for more years than he could really remember to provide him with bed and board. The experience was not only novel, but also distinctly pleasing, vesting him with a sense of new importance. It was easier than working, this jafl life, and after the first week in the well warmed lockup he began to look forward with regret to the time when he must leave It. With the passing of the first fort- night of the sixty days’ confinement this state of affairs, however, began 2 pall on him. He found that a vacation may be of too long duration. He be- gan to pine for work. Furthermore, his pride was seriously affected. On two or three occasions Jailer Gibson on leaving the lockup after bringing in the blacksmiih’s supper had forgotten to lock the door after him. The pris- oner remonstrated in forcible language at this inattention to duty. “I'm goin’ to be locked up nights hereafter, Jim Gibson,” he said, knit- ting the red skin of his forehead into n mass of frowning wrinkles, “an’ I want you to understan’ it. Think of me stayin’ in jail without bein’ locked up! Ain't 1 got a right to be locked up? “I'll put a spring lock on the door tomorrow, Joka, an’ then if I go away an’ forget to lock the door you can close it an’ lock It any time you want.” “Well, Jim, all I ask’s to be locked up like I ought to be,” answered the mollified prisoner. “That's all I ask.” “Yes, an’ I'll do more than that,” continued the constable. “I'll have that lock 80's you can open it from the inside with a nail. Nobody but us need know, an’ you can step outside any time you want to. I'm doin’ this,” he went on hastily, “’cause I don’t want you to get sick while you're in my charge. Prisoners get all the ex- ercise they want in ev'ry well regu- lated jail, an’ I ain't goin’ to have no one say the Pottersville jail's behin’ the times.” “No, nor I nuther!"” agreed the black- smith heartily. “Have some tobacco, Jim? Jaller Gibson took a pipeful of the contents of the blue and tinsel pack- age extended to him, and, rolling it in the palm of his hand, sat down to have a further chat with the prisoner. “See here. John,” he began, “the boys aroun’ Pottersville are gettin’ mighty hard up f'r a horseshoer. They don’t want to go out of town f'r one thing. ‘Sides, they couldn't get nobody nearer nor Spencer, an’ that's most forty mile away. We've been a-talkin’ it over at the grocery store, an’ we de- cided to ask you if you wouldn't like to do a little work here. We could fix up a place where you could do shoein’ real slick.” “I don't know's I'd object to it, Jim," deliberated the blacksmith, “providin’ the boys didn’t think twas lettin’ me down on my sixty days.” “No one would think that, John,” in- terpolated the constable. “Why, 'twould be just a favor to you, if you'd do it. It's mighty slipp'ry on the roads, an’ it's hard on the horses’ feet. There's more'n fifty on 'em need sharpenin’. "Twould be just a stroke of common humanity on your part, John, if you'd do it.” “Well, you go ahead an’ fix the things up,” agreed the prisoner, “an’ | reckon twill be all right.” The next day a portable forge was obtained, and a huge pair of bellows set up. The smith donned his apron and did a rattling business. On the day following he shod Judge Weaver's trotting horse Kelleck, 2:18, who had earned his record at the county fair the previous year. The blacksmith al- so shod the yoke of oxen from the town farm. For a week he was forced to turn away trade dally and even be- gan to talk of hiring an assistant. People who lived midway between Pottersville and Spencer who had been in the habit of going to Spencer now came to see the strange spectacle of a Jail prisoner doing horseshoeing. John Grant had more business than ever before. He offered, if the town author- ities would arrest and send to jall some tramp who knew something about the work, to hire him as assist- t and even to pay the town for his keep. The coustables, though enjoined to be on the alert, falled to find such f personage. In the meantime Willis Wenham came home from the university for a fortnight’s vacation. His attentions to Nellie Weaver once more became a source of annoyance to the judge. Sympathy in Pottersville, as it is apt t be in any town, was with the young people. In some way it got rumored around the town that Nellie's life at home was made none of the pleasant- est by her father. Further comment was aroused when the postmaster gave out that Miss Nellie had returned one of Wrangle's (the wealthy summer vis- itor’s) letters unopened. The incident showed a further progress in the stand taken by the energetic young lady ewaingt the plan of her father to mar- ry her to the aforesaid Wrangle In- ead of to young Wenham. The crisis was reached early in April. There had been an ice storm during the night, making the roads as slip- pery as glass. Unfortunate indeed was the horse that with unsharpened shoes had to venture on them. Trade was brisk at the improvised blacksmith shop, and John Grant had all the work he could handle. Judge Weaver's trot- ter Kelleck was late In getting into line, so that it was nearly nightfall, with a bitter wind blowing from the northeast, when the prisoner black- smith at last stripped Kelleck of his shoes and commenced with his usual expedition the task of reshoeing. Three shoes had been nailed to Kel- leck's prancing hoofs when an excla- mation from the judge drew the atten- tion of the walters and loafers to a couple dashing by at high speed In a familiar sleigh. They were Willis Wenham and Judge Weaver's daugh- ter Nellle. As they turned up the road where, two and a half miles distant, the house of the minister was situate, it dawned on the company that they were witnesses of an elopement. There was ample time for the angry Judge to overtake the couple, provided John Grant drove the nails of the fourth shoe with his customary quick- ness. The judge commanded him to hurry. Instead of doing so he laid the shoe down and said that, as he was a prisoner, working only to oblige folks, he'd be hanged if he'd do anoth- er tap of work for a man so low down as to swear at him. The judge plead- ed aud apologized in vain. It was only when the young couple returned and rendered Judge Weaver speechless with rage by the announcement of their marriage that John Grant would consent to put on the other shoe. The very next day came an Apri thaw. The traveling was so bad that the prisoner's only visitor was Jaller Gibson, who brought him his meals. In the night when the blacksmith re- tired the rain was pouring outside in a monotonous drizzle. The Pottersville jail was situated on the bank of a small but deep river, and the waters of this stream were yellowed and swollen by the freshet. In the early hours of the morning there was a slide and a fall and a splash. Over into the river went a section of banking, the Pottersville jall and the prisoner therein. The structure did not float far, but ground- ed on the shelving shore opposite the blacksmith shop where John Grant had practiced his trade prior to his latest departure from the narrow path of sobriety. As John Grant forced 4 COUPLE DASHED BY AT HIGH SPEED IN A FAMILIAR SLEIGH. open the conveniently arranged door it cccurred to him that at midnight the sixtieth day of his imprisonment had been completed. His face wore a sat- {efied smile, His equanimity was undisturbed the next morning when Judge Weaver drove over, furiously accusing him of stealing the jail and demanding that he return it to the place he had taken it from. The easy grin on the features of the blacksmith grew to broader di- mensions, “I whipped you at ’lection, judge” he drawled slowly, “an’ you sent me to that place.” indicating the floating jail, “when you had your turn. Then I wouldn't put the shoe on your horse 80's you cculd stop your daughter's marryin’ young Wenham. Now you say 1 stole the jail. Judge, it's this way. I've got a chance to sue the town of Pottersville f'r false imprison- ment. I ought to have been let out o’ jail at 12 o'clock last night. More'n that, the jail’'s mine!” The judge's face grew blank and purple with amazement. “Yes, sii-ee! The jail's mine. I didn’t go to sea f'r nothin’ when I was young. Pottersville jail .is flotsam— F-L-O-T-8-A-M—an’ if the town wants it back It'll get it by payin’ good money. An’, judge, if you should want Kelleck shod in a hurry don’t f'rget I'm doin’ business at the same ol stand!” Dishwasher An Heir to $80,000. Indianapolis, Ind., Oct. 7.—Thomas Yeakle, who has been employed as a dishwasher in hotels in Indianapolis, sees a fortune of something like $30,- 000 in sight and has left for Chicago to try to obtain it. Edward A. War- fiald, of Chicago, administrator of the estaje of George T. Cline, who died in Chicago some months ago, leaving an estate of $2,000,000, found Yeakle in Indianapolis after a long search and sent for him. Yeakle is a nephew of the late millionaire.