a P. GRAY MEEK. GOD REST YOU MERRY GENTLEMEN. God rest you merry gentlemen, Let nothing you dismay, Remember Christ our Saviour Was born on Christmas day, To save us all from Satan's pow'r When we were gone astray. In Bethlehem, in Jewry, This blessed Babe was born And laid within a manger, Upon this blessed morn: The which His Mother Mary, Did nothing take in scorn. From God our Heavenly Father, A blessed Angel came: Shepherds Brought tidings of the same: How that in Bethlehem was born The Son of God by Name. “Fear not then,” said the Angel, This day is born a Saviour Of a pure Virgin bright, To free all those who trust in Him From Satan's power and might.” The shepherds at those tidings Rejoiced much in mind, And left their flocks a-feeding In tempest, storm and wind, And went to Bethlehem straightway, The Son of God to find. And when they came to Bethlehem Where our dear Saviour lay, They found Him in a manger, Where oxen feed on hay; His Mother Mary kneeling down Unto the Lord did pray. Now to the Lord sing praises. All you within this place, And with true love and brotherhood Each other now embrace; This holy tide of Christmas All other doth deface. COMING BACK TO CHRISTMAS. In the twilight chim smoke went up, coal-stoves showed th home windows, thick, slow snow f ifferent- ly. All differently. Front gates slam- med with a meaning as if they knew what had just passad their curly iron At horse-blocks sleigh-bells ceased jingling with significant abruptness, as if with some real reason for the sleigh's stopping. In back dooryards stately clothes-reels turned themselves as in the knowledge that their fla pieces had been washed out, ru out, wrung out —however the household phrased it—for an occasion more than mortal. Country dooryards, country streets, the very faces of the bird-houses peering over lattices, lay in the soft hold of Christmas eve, as if the spirit of Christmas were a spirit in- deed, to which even homely things are sweetly sensible. A little child, a boy of seven, sat on a gate-post of the house that was usually home, but for the time seemed no home at all. For some last offices of Christmas his mother had that afternoon gone to the city—that obscure place to which the child had never yet penetrated and which he associated with long trousers and gold watches and automobiles and other prerogatives of the time when he he should be grown up . . . so early are children infected with the love of things! . . . His mother had said that she would be back on the local at six o'clock; that he might play on the pond until that hour; that the key would be under the mat if he wanted it, or he might wait for | her, for those few minutes, in the front yard. The little boy leaving the pond shortly after the whistle blew, had run all the way home, taken one look at the dark house through whose sitting-room window the coal-stove glowed like an angry eye, and had climbed up on the gate-post to wait. A strange man, coming toward him up the road from the drawbridge, brought back to the child what he had heard his mother say to a neighbor that morning: “1s Grant Willet's to be let out to-day?” And the woman had answered: “I s'pose he is. Let loose on folks, and him without any place to belong. I s'pose he'll put right for this town, anyway.” The child thrilled deliciously as he saw the man coming. If he were Grant Wil- let! Grant Willet why, seven years before the child was born—and the child had been born for seven years—had been ar- rested in the city in a strike, had attack- ed the policeman, and, for resisting an officer, had been sentenced to fourteen years in a reform school. “And him,” the village had observed, sorrowfully, “having grown up night in ou face and eyes. it seem possi- e? ” The stranger was coming on looking, so to say, the village in the face, examin- ing each of the houses with a kind of friendly interest. He was youngish, huge, with thick hair and brows, and the eyes of a man who has lived forever. Oh, the child thought, if it should be Grant Willet . . » and he should whip out a bow and arrow and a bowie-knife and brandish the Next best to a bowie-knife was this— to have the stranger stopping to speak to him. He y forgave dress the t, have privileges. . ello!” the child “I bet you don't know what tomorrow is, Jovansd ie stranger. “What?” the man asked. a all answer the child suiled -a made his face adorable. After it he turn- ed away his head. “Say it,” the man encouraged him. J 36 Hib of thechilds tongtle workad at his red mouth’s corner, he lifted one and shook his head. "Go on,” coaxed the man. “What's its name?’, "My mamma's gone to the city to buy things for it,” volunteered the child then, all at once. “She's gone there. She's Soe there, She's coming home on the “Oh,” said the man, "on the six. Well, the six isin,” he added. “I was on it— to the draw.” “Maybe she'll come,” said the boy, pa- tiently. adi you better go in the house?” | ed. CR freel the way of ad- TT An cutlaw, it | then STATE RIGHTS AND FEDERAL UNION, =O VOL. 57. don’t know what day gt yo He hesitated, looking at child. erry Christmas!” en abruptly, and moved away swiftly. But still the imp of perversity seemed | in the child, an perhaps, of | his shyness at t of who this strang- | er might be; so he merely met the man’s waiting look, and smiled, and watched | him go down the street and was torn with remorse that he had not talked with him while he might. : The seit of “Town caught say. t stranger as he turned awa Hh child in Ee dusk. It all looked so absurdly as it had looked twenty years | before. : Eg stuck u 's wi just visible through the frost | panes. There was the Messer drug-store, with red and green globes ng and, | outside, a cigar-stand with a wreath of holly on his feathers. There was the Everly home bakery with pink | mosquito-netting in the window and cocoanut-cakes with pink-sugar jenterisig. | He be to read what the se = "M hristmas,” t tters a en . Brisings. The cakes, now, look | as if tl meantit. . . . . He kept on looking at the words. | Somehow the scattered holiday signs of | the day seemed all to be concentrated in | the pink-sugar lettering. He almost felt as if the greeting were to him, but the | feeling was lost in the im eti- | tion on cake after cake. He found him- self looking inside the bakery with un- | defined wistfulness. It was like a great, | Rotnely panty, with its bread and dough- i nuts and cookies, a pantry with a wel-' come for everybody. It seemed as if the | place must say “Merry Christmas” spon- taneously to any one who opened the The man suddenly opened the bakery door, whose swinging released a sharp | bell that summoned Mrs. Everly from the back room. She came hurrying, as if she had left a hundred things unfrosted. | But neither the shop nor Mrs. Everly! said Merry Christmas. The man looked at her intently and seémed to be waiting | for something. “Good evening,” she said briskly. | “What's wanted?” “What's wanted?” the man repeated, | and looked about the store and then stood ' and looked down at her hands. When she repeated her inquiry he realized that he had been trying to see the finger whose tip was gone and which once had held him spellbound as she measured and cut and tied. “Excuse me,” he stammered. “I want- ed to know—I want to ask you—the ho- tel. Is it on this street?” “Just a block on,” said Mrs. Everly, with her professional patience. “At the corner, on this side. You can't miss it.” Already she was edging toward the back room, but he lingered. “You've got great doings in the town tomorrow, I s'pose,” he said. “That's what's hurrying me now,” she replied pointedly, and nodded, and might have turned her back. But it occurred to the man that he had acted unwarran- tably in intruding on her time, and then making no purchase. He had had no oc- casion to use money for a long time, and there was in his pocket a bit, drawn that day, that had long been accumulating to his credit. “Let me have one of the little cakes in the window,” he said. i She went to do his bidding, lifting up the little cake as casually as if it bore no | special import, and she was more con- cerned about the frosting than the mes- sage. She took her pay, returned the change, said her thanks and did not meet his eye—all as if the night were any night and the cake were any cake. He took it and went out. And, as he passed the window, “Well," he observed, “you said it if she He deliberately tried Messer's drug- store next. There the ceiling was hung thickly with cat r which swayed in | the draught from . Young Mes- | per bows about huge bottles of perfume. | “Evenin’,” said he, flicking a loop of | the last bow. i “Evening,” said the man, and stood for a moment patiently watching the adjust- | ment. “Nice evening?” He putit doubt- | fully, when the bow was i for a huge, smiling mouth below the face- like stopper. | “Why, ” said young Messer, frank- ly. “tos, 2 g 7 = Eg i ® § Hb oe g il oF ed around the store. tio a ol he Slerk prac; . soap? | Manicure set—-we got 2 fine He 0’ roars. | cute goods i plush Hoes. Is it forman, | woman, or child?" he inquired. i : “It’s for a child," said tbe man sudden- y. “I might of known," the clerk ore “I'm a family man myself. How's | this?” he wondered, bringing up a felt lamb from glass-case The man examined the lamb critically and shook his head. He examined critic- ‘and no idlin",” he said and went off to BELLEFONTE, PA. DECEMBER 20, 1912. | i “Well,” said the man, “I'm sorry you ally a dozen objects which the clerk of- | blamed if I will. It's bad enough to have him in a flood of feeling as the little fered, and he discarded them all. He | to bleat that all day long to-morrow with- ueezed bears and elephants, and decid- | out nning previous. Anything more against the quality of their tones. I can do for you?” Was it a boy or a girl, the clerk wanted The man looked at him steadily. to know. It was, it appeared then, a boy. | “Anything more you can do for me!” How old a boy? About seven or eight, he repeated. “What more can any man the man thought. And when at length | do for another that’s been living a dog's he had selected a box of paints, he ab- | life and has got a hankering to hear a ruptly indicated one of the huge bottles decent word? What more can you do for of He would take one of those. perfume. me—what more can anybody do for any- And at this the clerk surprisingly wink- | i body than to mean Merry as at ed again,as one who should convey his them? Say Merry Christmas, damn you!” understanding that a Christmas of gifts said the man, and suddenly took ja- for children was all very well, but he min Thatcher by the throat. knew there were others to be considered The grocer’s look of pure surprise was —women, now. . . ue. partly grasped the sign “We wink, but he felt its unmistakable fellow- it,” Benjamin articulated, his fingers on ship, and he winked, too. the other man's hand. When the parcels were brought to him, “Not like that!” said the man, and he took them from the clerk and looked shook him slightly. “Say it, and say it at him half expectantly. | as if you meant it or I'll choke the life “Nice Christmas weather,” the man ob- ' out of you!” served. “You leggo my wind-pipe then,” uttered “Rosy,” said young Messer, holding the Benjamin, not without dignity. door for him. “Rosy.” Butit just hap-' The man complied, drew back, waited. pened that it did not occur to the youth ' Benjamin, frowning, felt of his neck. to wish the man a merry Christmas.; “Merry Christmas,” he said, sullenly. That was a wish to be made exclusively, “Not that way!'’ repeated the man. to young ladies, the lad’s impression may | “Say it as if you meant it right—from you have run. | to me.” “No Christmas nonsene about A4im,”said | Benjamin faced him angry, the man to himself outside. “No, sir.. “Who are you that I should be wishing Nothing but Christmas trade.” | you merry Christmases?” he inquired, He had not meant to go into Hoard's irritably. "How do I know—" meat-market. But the door stood open The man cut him short. to let out a farmer with some crates, and “I'm made some like a human being, because his eye fell on old Joe Hoard ain't I?” he observed, grimly. “I say to chopping meat at the block the man you as one human being sys to ” went in. And when he stepped on the | ‘Merry Christmas,’ I say. Now what do saw-dust covered floor and breathed the you say back?” “ Jou're that fierce about cold, suet-smelling air of the place he He went a step nearer to Benjamin. Ben- went over to Joe Hoard and stood close jamin was little, and he looked up at the beside him. { man standing over him, athis brown face “Give me five cents’ worth of sage,” he , under the mass of straight, graying hair, said. j and at his brown bare throat; when With no more than a unctory | he looked in this stranger's eyes he saw glance old Hoard complied. His clumsy | there no threat, only something strong, ngers tied the tiny package and took the ' that men like him obeyed. coin. Then, as man lingered, he! “ ey hristmas. Merry Christmas. raised his head. | Mer-ry Christmas,” said Benjamin. “Is “Anything else?” he asked. | three times about enough?” “Why, I don’t know,” returned the | “I won't press you for more,” said the man, quizzically. “What else is there | stranger pleasantly, and leaned against usually—on’ a night of this stamp!” | an apple- rrel and regarded the ruffled The butcher grunted. “Double work | little man. answer the teleprone. { Then the stranger's eye fell on some The man went on through the snow thingat the grocer’s elbow. It was a with the paints and the perfume and the counter on which were displayed certain package of in his hands. He put | articlesintended as Christmas gifts, but the sage to his nose and the pungent | now lyingin that all forlorn state of the odor brought with it thronging remem. | unbought on Christmas eve, astate which | brances. He had no idea of buying sage, causes even red rubber balls and toy only he had been so many times to steam-engines to develop a look of hav- Hoard's for five cents’ worth of sage for ing faces, and they sad. There were a dressing . he could smell the | lot of these gifts, and they were all for Christmas turkey-dressing now. Old children. All for young children, say, Hoard not to know him! Not to remem- | under ten. Many of them were for boys. ber the time that he had sent him home At these articles the stranger looked, and carrying a rope of bologna sausage So | what he had begun by sheer chance in long that he had held both hands above | the other two stores it occurred to him his childish head so that the sausage ends | 10 finish by design; and in his face the should escape the earth. He could hear | feeling, the wish, and then the intention old Hoard’s laughter yet. And now the | came to expression. wouldn't.” ti 2 5 2 old man had no remembrance—the vil- : lage had no remembrance. And it had no Christmas greeting, it seemed, for a stranger. He stood on the curb, looking at the few hurrying figures in the little street. The essential cruelty of Christ- mas gripped him like a new wrong. Everybody for himself and for those who were dear to him and for children and for the poor. He was not a child or a beggar, and he was dear to nobody now. So, it appeared, Christmas, too, had cast him out. Across the street was a store whose glass was unfrosted, whose gas-lights were many, whose look was that of silent welcome. He crossed to it. This was , Benjamin Thatcher’s grocery and general goods store. In the window were a pyr- , amid of oranges, a pile of mixed candy, and a little barrel so as to pour forth nuts. He remembered how every Christ- mas in the old days these had taken the had always hung a row of hams at the back of his window and how they all swung when the door was slammed—be- Sond the hams and the bunch of bananas puting more wood in thestove and using is burnt coat-flap for a holder. “My word,” man thought, “he hasn't got a holder yet.” He the door and went in. Ben- jamin tcher came forward, rubbing soot from his hand. The store was cheery and warm, a half-barrel holly stood the and man 7 Ee e- ee ; TEE fi : 8 ir gt i : : HE 78 f 2 : | 5 g £5 5 g : i £8 f Fa 85% 11 | g 5 2 5 Z £ g = 5 i 24s | g £ 5 28 if i i | i | “I'll have some of the toys,” he said. | “Half a dozen of 'em. For a boy about seven or eight. Oh, any of 'em. The engine, and the band, and one of the baseballs—and a couple of the games.” Benjamin bustled. Whether this stranger really wanted these things or was pur- chasing then fom) sumption, this mattered nothing. It was, in any case, the amende , and the dealer in him did his patron’s bidding with defer- ence. The man watched him quizzically and when his parcel was ready. “Still giving coffee-berries to the chil- dren, Benjamin?” he asked, surprisingly, “to Show your good-will? Or does an oc- casional int escape you now in your a age?” For the first time Benjamin Thatcher a lo Saami. ? a 0 you you are, anyway?” the grocer i uncertainly. Then the stranger laughed, heartily, not unmusically, not without bitterness. And when he laughed his face became mellow, with a kind of merry understand- | ing, without a touch of impudence. “That's what I don’t know any more,” he said. “I thought I was a human, but you folks in this town have been fiving me to understand different. erry Christmas!” “Well!” said Benjamin.” Merry Christ- mas! And if you feel like that ut it— a happy New Year, too! But—" “Oh, you needn't go that far, Benjamin Thatcher!” said the man, and shut the door, and left all the hams swinging. The stranger retraced his steps alo: the little street. And now not only the look of Down-Town and all the little near : £ r ell Eise EpfnieEfiedsd he himself, so little to have saved him. little more controlled li £ ~3RegE gil. 52 : S»z2f za NO. 50. street spoke to him without his knowing what it said, but only recognizing its im- memorial voices. . . But in it all he went clinging to one thought of warmth. For he was saying | to himself: “I don’t believe his mother came in on { the local. She'd have had time to get down there from the station if I'd had time to walk from the draw. And if the key is under the mat. . . It was almost dark now, and he hur- on, trying to peer ahead to see if the gate-post BIE little sentinel. He had at being a figure in puzzling. “She 't come yet. Ain't it a long vary. the “A very long time,” man said. “How much longer will b You wait?” The child stared. “Why, I got to wait till she comes,” he said in t. “She's my mother.” “I see,” said the man. “Well, now, look here. She hasn't come on the six. The don’t get in till eight, does it?—it didn’t use to. Well, now, didn't you say the key is under the mat?” The child nodded with that emptying of the face of expression which leaves wonder lying there naked. “Well,” said the man, “I've bought a few things here that I don’t know as I really want. What do you say to our go- ing in your house and seeing what's in these packages?” The Soy gave that sound that is,among all possible sounds, one of the most de- lightful—a child's little squeak of antici- tion. He slipped from the post, lost is balance, gathered hmself up, and ran up the path. “Come on!” he called. “I know how to open the door!” Inside, the coal-stove glowed red and warm, and the little Fleing foom looked used and lived in daily. e man tum- bled the things in a deep chair,found and struck a light, and, the child throwing off his own coat, he did so, too. The man’s clothes were cheap and new, but he was scrupulously clean, and with his hat off, the thick hair did not conceal the splen- did head, the fine, full forehead. As he turned, the child was balancing at the table and holding up one foot. “It's buckle sticks,” he explained. got a crook in.” “It's big a little man would not wish to be taken on a knee, himself knelt and drew off the overshoe. Then he looked up at the boy standing before him, his hair go- ing out at the back where his cap had made it rough. “Shake,” said the man. The child obediently put out his hand, but he did not look at the man; his eyes went past the man's face to the deep chair filled with packages. “Now then,” the man assented, and arose and drew a chair where he could watch best, “begin. And if you want "em they're all for you. Christmas has start- ed now—remember that!” It is true that a child's eagerness for possession does not always affect us as ing the menace that it is, as being the fatherhood of the man’s unwarranted love for things. And this is because what fires the child is not so much the love for things, as such, as the love of magic. A tied-up parcel bears the connotation of the unknown. Itholds all mystery. It is an adventure, It is to the child at once the essence and the outermost border of romance. He enters upon it as upon some little star. So the child enterned now. The paints, the cake, the ball, the bottle of perfume, the games, $ach was to him experience ecstatic. Until it was unwrapped the man had f the bottle of perfume and with * t's a Christmas present for you to give mother,” he placed it on your the table, and the child had hungover the bottle, enchanted. With every gift he flashed up to the the child-look of mingled joy and d ief inreality,a look that goes to the head and flowsin the veins of the one who has occasioned it. The moment fs mod = the world, a precious intimacy. e watcher knows that the toys will be broken, that essen- tially it is not the objects that the child ves—only sofeety of Surprise " three 2d 8 i: H : E | 3 i 2 | i : BZ ® g i gE 2 : : 5 : ® 2 g : i [ h ? : ff j gs £2 HH i 7 3 | ; H 3 3 iy 2 + 2 : : : : g i RF 2 ; : g 3 : g : & 5 ; : i g : z z 2 § 3 g i | gz : g 598 i £ i 7 5§ 2: | | | i i Lo i ! 3g 3 : i 28 | H | ! £ SE SER fa The man, as if he understood that so! —It takes 1,600 pounds of bread each day at the Huntingdon reformatory and each Saturday 128 dozen ginger cakes are baked. | —The postoffice at Pine Flats, Clearfield coun- | ty, has been discontinued and patrons are being served on a rural delivery route from Garman's Mills. —Johnstown's Hallow’en celebration committee has just had its accounts audited. The expense of the big time was $2,175.16 and the committee ! has a balance of $799.67 on hand. | —Newberry chicken thieves seem to be plying the trade “just for the fun of the thing.” Many of the chickens are not taken away, but simply cut down the back and left lying dead. —Cresson borough: is to pay 17% cents per 1,000 gallons for water, instead of 10cents, as formerly. The council has accepted the 75 per cent. raise | and consumers will likely pay the bills. ~The Lewistown shirt factory wants opera- tives; the knitting factory and silk mill are run- ning full time and the holiday vacation of these workers will be cut to the two feast days. —Bertha Shultz, aged eleven years, cut her throat a few days ago at her home in Benton. She fell down stairs with a piece of earthenware in her hand. It broke and cut a three-inch gash, which is likely to prove fatal. —Burgess H. C. W. Patterson, of Saltsburg, re- cently had returned to him a pocket book which he lost on Hallowe'en. It had been dropped into the outside postoffice box during the night. Al the valuable papers it contained were intact, but of the $80 in cash, $30 were missing. —Lycoming county commissioners have revok- ed a franchise granted the Williamsport Passen- ger Railway company for a right of way across the Third street bridge. The franchise had been available for five years, but the bridge hadn't ma- terialized and the commissioners were not pleas- ed at the delay. ~The mines of the Pennsylvania Coal and Coke company at Bens Creek, on the main line of the Pennsylvania Railroad, have been closed tem- porarily, owing to the shortage of cars. About 700 miners are thrown out of employment. The mines had been working on half time previously, for the same reason. --W. T. Huntington, of Lycoming county, set out 1,000 peach trees last spring in the regular way and 100 by the use of dynamite. Thelatter, in comparison, have grown nearly twice as fast as the others. Mr. Huntington intends to plant 500 moretrees in the spring. He says he will use dy- namite to dig the holes. ~—At the State capitol in Harrisburg on Monday two Patton concerns filed notice of increase of debt, as follows: Patton Clay company, $150,000 to $200,000, and George S. Good Fire Brick com- pany, $100,000. The Clearfield Sewer Pipe com. pany, Clearfield, also filed notice of increase of debt to the extent of $100,000, ~—Ethel Sergeant, a 16-year-old Northumberland girl stepped out on the back porch at her home, an unknown man jumped out from behind a fruit tree, fired at her and disappeared. Her wound is not serious, but she is suffering from the shock. The man is thought to be one who has been frightening people by looking in their windows. ~Coroner Potter, of Mifflin county, issued a statement absolving the railroad company from any blame for the accident which caused the death of Isaac Dreese. Mr. Dreese was crossing the tracks at a point some distance from the pub- lic crossing and therefore was a trespasser. The practice of crossing at this place has been com- mon. ~The length of a cat's tail was the cause of a fire alarm at Williamsport a few evenings ago. Mrs. Lewis Henry was dressing when her pet cat came purring around. Tabby jumped on the dresser, and was about to jump off when her taij struck the lamp, throwing it to the floor. It exploded, but neighbors came to the rescue and little damage resulted. —Mrs. Theressa Roessner, widow of the man for whose murder John Keeler was found guilty in last week's Clearfield county court, died re- cently at her home in Clearfield. She had, only a short time before the murder, come home from a Philadelphia hospital, enfeebled by a serious op- erationand the shock of her husband's tragic death is supposed to have hastened her own. —The new Cresson State sanatorium for tuber- culosis will be opened December 26th, according to notice sent outby Dr. Samuel G. Dixon, com- missioner of health. This sanatorium is the highest inhabited »oint in the State and yet easi- ly accessible to the main line of travel east and west. The new institution will accommodate 360 patients; one half of this number will be advanc- ed cases. —Charles Johnson, a farmer living at Seven Kitchens, was driving to Sunbury a few days ago, when he heard the trot of an animal behind his wagon. He turned out to let the team pass, but nobody passed. Then he looked around and saw a large black bear contentedly eating potatoes from a sack it had torn open. Mr, Johnson hadn't | any gun, so he let the bear continue its luncheon undisturbed. After atime it dropped back and disappeared in the woods. —The thirty-third annual session of the Penn” sylvania State Educational association, which will be held at Harrisburg during Christmas week, will bring to that city some of the most noted educators of the country. The meetings which will beheld during December 26, 27 and 28, will consist of the general sessions and the de- | partmental meetings of city and borough superin- tendents, county superintendents, High school, college and normal school, graded school, ungrad- ed school and child table. —]J. S. Stewart, of the National hotel, Mifflin, town, went to his refrigerator in the gray dawn and found a man helping himself. He hit the in truder a blow that made him easy handling for the policeman who took him to jail. As he answered the description of the man who had held up and robbed Miss Minerva Snook, at Lew- istown Junction. Miss Snook was sent for, bit was met at Mifflin with a message that the man had disappeared. The sheriff “didn't know" whether or not any of his prisoners had escaped. —Accompanied by his wife and twenty-four children, Alexander Friss, a farmer, residing five miles from the Wind Gap road, drove to Pitts- burgh Saturday, a distance of twenty-five miles in two wagons, to do his Christmas shopping. It was the first visit of the children to that city, When they left for home it was easily seen that “dad” Friss was a good spender. Friss is 60 years of age while his wife is 64. Mrs. Friss has given birth to five pairs of twins, two sets of trip- lets and eleven other children. Three have died in the last three years. “Dad” Friss believes in the simple-life theory, and that is the reason he refused to allow his children to pay a visit to the wicked city until this time. —A peculiarly sad accidental death occurred at New Derry a few nights ago. Emanuel Wilson, of Leechburg, went to visit his blind brother, W. M. Wilson, at New Derry. The two were in La- trobe and went home late in the evening, on the way meeting and talking in a friendly way with George and Lee Miller and Charles Peterson, close neighbors. There was no oil in the lamp when they reached the blind brother's home and he started to get some of his neighbors. His vis- iting brother started after him and they stood in the road, discussing the possibility of getting oil elsewhere, the mission not having been success- ful. Suddenly there was the report of a gun and the visitor fell dead inthe road. Neighbors were aroused and the three above named were arrest- ed. Peterson, who is charged with the shooting, claims it was accidental. 505 RIS SSA