The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, February 18, 1892, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    SOMEWHAT STRANGE.
ACCIDENTS AND INCIDENTS
EVERY-DAY LIFE.
OF
——— ’
Queer Episodes and Thrilling Adven.
tures Which Show that Truth Is
Stranger than Fletion.
Ax INTERESTING investigation is that
being made by the Bureau of Ethnology
concerning the great beds of oyster.
shells that mark the sites of ancient In-
dian fishing-villages on the banks of the
Potomac, Susquehanna, and Delaware
Rivers. These beds were found along
tidewater by the first white settlers, to-
gether with the ruins of huts that were
often built on the heaps of shells. The
inference is that the Indians depended
largely upon the bivalves for food. In
some places the beds extend over hun-
dreds of acres, and in the debris imple-
ments of the chase and the home-life of
the savage have been found. Most of |
these, of course, are of flint. Fragments |
of the very vessels in which the oysters
were cooked have also been brought to
light, so that a conjecture that the In.
diuns were familiar with the sieamed,
broiled, and roasted ovster is not far
fetched. No kind of implement for
opening oysters hus been dag up, so the
opinion may be hazarded that the red |
men were unacquainted with the epica- |
rean flavor of oysters on the half shell.
A savant says that the preparation evi- |
dently most in favor was that of steam- |
ing, ‘the bivalves being placed on h t|
stones and covered with moist seaweed, |
It is thought alse that the Indians were
masters of a process of
which they di.posed of in barter to tribes |
in the interior. The Lucullus
would undoubtedly turn up his nose at a
dried oyster. tho
invasion the oy sterfishers of the Potomac
and Susquehanna the
Algonquins, and, as their guest,
John Smith may have learned
seductive style of preparing t
for the table.
Mes. Barnarea Su
is in her 76th year.
ten grown-up
grandchildren and
and she is well to do,
living by herself and
dent.”
den, in whic
permitted to
From her
twenty-fiy e barrels of
rolled into her colla
carried to ti
tatoes, :
four hogs,
packed the
yvielde iy
Auticip 1
her house
horse she keep
the times eves
dried 300 pound
that it is oll
pend on otl
fident that
drying ovsters,
wrder
modern
Before white man's
were poweriul
‘apt.
a4 new
he
1s v
Of I erry, N
Y.,
She has a tamily of
THE,
children and numerous
ereat-grandchildren,
Dut she sists on
an orchard aud
b it
put a spad
l P
he
one
orchard
butchered
cat up and
wi
banked
with the
To pass
boys have been om
what they
last time for
pendent old
not be alarmed
of even thinki
B good 1
say they
ten ve
Asoxa the professors of the Uni
of Basel, in Switzerland,
a higher plac e than Dr
who died a few days ago,
fortune and a will
play an important
the town.
made by the dead man
$ 00.000 the investigation of the na.
ture of the soul. The of the
money is to be used in paying the sala-
ries and expenses of a ce
scholars who are to live in the hous
cupied by the professor, and study and
reflect upon the properties and nature of
the soa!. From time to ti are to,
publish the results of their investiga- |
tions, that the world may be the
of their efforts to follow out the
ions of the ‘The
take the work, sccording to the testa.
ment, must li and
ie
ine rally
one
un the history of
i was of
one
for
interest
rian number ot
Of.
ne
judge
pros Ha
nnder.
will. men who
devote all
be
heir
nl oreign
“Subjective,”
They must be Christians,
either Catholics or
writings must be {re
words or phrases.
jective,” “‘national,” “transcendental”
and similar words are also to find no
place in their prospective works. With
these exceptions Professor Hoppe placed
no restrictions unon the duties and privi-
lezes of the men who are carry out
his strange wishes,
from f
» 5%
ob.
to
Heme are two little anecdotes of
Russian government in Poland: Not
long ago Gen. Apukhtine was appointed
Government Inspector. A student went
to one of his receptions and publicly
strack him. The next day a well-known
physician, Dr. Nathanson, sent twenty
five rubles to a loeal paper to be given
to a reformatory as ‘‘a thank offering
for some good news he had received.”
He was soon afterwards summoned be |
fore the police and asked what was the
ood fortune which had befallen him.
le could not give a satisfactory answer,
and that evening was informed that he
must remove to Vologda, in the north of
Russia, and remain there for three years,
Gen. Apukhtine received a Grand Cordon
as consolation for the insult he had suf.
fered, and an English clown, who was
playing in the circus, thought he might
make a hit out of the circumstance. So, |
in the course of the performance, ho
maltreated a brother clown most grey. |
ously, and then ran out and returned, |
bearing a decoration on a velvet cushion, |
which he presented to him. Immediately |
on leaving the arena be wae arrosted,
but, on proving his naticuality, was os.
corted over the frontier. while the pro
prietor was fined 500 rubles.
Ax eccentric lady named Chamberlain |
died recently near Birmingham, Eng-
land. She had considerable means amd
kept herself surrounded with animals of
all sorts. For this purpose she bought
two cottages, one of which she occupied
horself and the other she guve up to hor
pets. She conceived an attachment for
a donkey belonging to a aeighbor and
which browsed in an adjoining field.
attended to him. The owner of the
the donkey I will make you a present of
it.” She acoepted the donkey, which be.
about. A favorite dog belonging to the
hushand having survived him was, in ac.
cordance with his previous directions,
buried in his grave. When the widow
died there was some disturbance, and
difficulties arose, the result being that
the dog was removed and after her burial
replaced in the grave.
is considerably over a hundred years old
and who is growing young again. He
now almost black again. He is in active
business as a horse-trader, and occasion.
ally he rides over ten leagues a day. He
has been married three times, is now a
widower, and is quite wealthy. ‘The
paper casually remarks in the course of
at one time with a tumor, “but this was
cured by being gored by an ox.”
A sew cause has arieen for a lawsuit
brother's death.
and ordered a handsome
Her mother was so grieved at her son's
death that the plaintiff had to give up
situation to take care of her. Then
tombstone,
made on mistake and that
vas After unsuccessful
tempts at compensation she has
the
lum had
brother
at
alive,
gone
court, claiming heavy damages
and
io
for grief
(Ing
Portland, Me.
very i
Iury.
of
ars in
bet
l
the most persistent beg
is nn collie Ww shy is
Hog
The
mistress,
or
nd of d lie, in
ughnuts, col
company visited a
perc 1% } > ROme
he lo i
means of short, sharp
The cle rk =
dog, but
for every day sino:
SARE,
a sal «
CHOETOUSIY
now wi
:
has appeared to beg
fF the shop door 18 closed
for more
i tif someone opens
in to got his regular fr
f seasons is
EVE ~F 0
Ince upon this earth once is
i
LJ) vears, due to the varvine i
F enrth 8 nxis
\
the
temperatu
entered
i8 10 prevent,
with remains of
or tie yy ow
two
h f Kittanning
er teeth drawn
i remarked
through
ng pr
3
inter it was oi
ok af $4
SL OF naa
ho wn i
When he
The ch :
appearing in t
which in course of
w %
ge wi
he form of
whole body until there was no bi
Both his
Africans.
be sean
1
LH
pare is
bloo
A
by
Gia,
RIOUS marr tom is record
Dr. Post aa
among some of
in Southern In.
he more prim five
his
fant, a tree
nog- Arvan tribes, consists in
wedding a girl toa p
mal, or «
an ani
ven to an inanimate
notion being that any ill luck which n
follow an actual marriage will be avert
by a union of this kind.
abiect, tl
Why Onr Feet Hart Us,
Uight
veins
boois conceation of
thie by the same
process that produces great warts upon
trees where there is an
the sap as the result of
i
nna
induce a
at extremitios
interruption of
ident
ghtly and far
tet to
be concealed and, worse, to be enduced
OMe Boe
bunches quite as uns
more troublesome grow upon the
formed
is often valued for its prettily twisted
grain and is carved into objects of bean
ty, the guaris upon the poorly cared for
or badly shod foot of man produce
nothing but unmitigated misery, Fow
persons take a daily plunge bath. and if
they do it is seldom of suthicient warmth
to soften the rough scarfekin that is apt
to become too thick and erento unhealth.
iness or discomfort.
A quick daily sponging of the body is
customary with the majority, but this
does not afford sufficient care for the
feet which are so tightly imprisoned the
greater portion of the time. It is an ex.
cellent plun to leave the feet as nearly
uncovered while in one's chamber and
while dressing us the warmth of the room
will permit. At least twice a week the
feet should bo literally soaked for ten
minutes in warm water,
tendency to excess of perspiration add a
tablespoonful of household ammonia or
a teaspoonful of carbonate of soda to
each gallon of warm water used in the
footbath. If there in pain in the joints
or swelling and reduess, paint the affect.
ed parts with jodine, if there is a gon.
ernl sense of pain and of aching weari-
ness, to strengthen them rub the feet
with weak arnica, or wipe them with a
But while the tree when thus de
slum. Many children and many adults
as well, nro rendered sleepless at night
by prindul or restless feet, and the
trouble often extends into the daytime,
and such unnatural conditions are the
result of nature's protest against treat.
ing these useful members with ignorant,
or, ut least, negleoiful cruelty. {New
York Herald,
Curiosities About Be =.
———
It is estimated that bees, in order to
62.000 heads of clover of the average
size. This herculean task (for the bees)
would nec. ositaie 5,700,000 trips to and
from the hive,
Wax is a substance secreted by the
bee, und is analogous to the fat of the
higher animals. The wax of a species
of bee common in Patagonia, Terra del
Fuego and other parts of Southern South
American and the adjacent islands, is a
dark blue in color and more
than arsenie.
A hive of HOOO bees will produce aboot
| fifty pounds of honey annually, and will
{ multiply about ten fold in five yoars.
According to latest striisties the
number of hives of in the United
i bees
{
| annual product of honey
| pounds. St. Louis Republic,
Chinese Credulity,
A returned traveler relates some euri-
| ous stories about Thibet, says the China
Mail. An old monk, about seventy vears
| old, is said to be a god who hus come to
| this world for a temporary sojourn, In
his previous existence he was the head
moth of the old temple in which he
now. One day he called together his fol-
lowe re and told them that his soul would
{ leave its abode, to be born
| certain day ina certain family; that they
should assemble at the hi
! birth at the hous
rival with prayers an
of
musical
inmon n
Liane his new
and welcome his ase
1 that
hie woul
them i
bs lifting
show his knowledge
up a certain ligit
; y
otf of 4 number
fant Fhe event!
lowers marched in
ited: the
Vers were read,
HODES
indi infant was brought
strange,
moved us
pra nna
true, the In
pray “Hr
the
the pt i i wanders
table, tou
ments,
al mus
Sees His Own Heart Beat,
3
ight hi
Or and a ron «
ember 1 he »
midn
Nos
he missed
consult
in dia
seen the man s pt
is elt lung
azn went to
making
ie isating
he
work
eT.
i Of h
ortie n
4 not ong
not at
orris holds a small mirror to
sces his throbbing
or
E04
his side and
in
treated every
kept covered by bandages.
heart re
flected His wound is
hole i
the ginss
fow dava and the s
Lntombed Alive.
———
Miners
i A mine horror
{ 180. at the Hamilton
Newenstle, New Soath Wales
in occurred, which baffled the
For davs siguals were heard
swered, but new falls of
ly blocked progress,
enme faint and infrequent, and at last
Finally, after more than a
work, the chamber
been confined was
n sOOTre
It was easy to see that the
men had literally starved to death. Their
flesh had wasted until the bones
almost protruded some cases the
skin had become and shriveled
that it had cracked open. They had
been nnable to get either food or water.
In their agony they had paced up and
down their little prison until a pathway
had been worn into the rock, There was
otily one tool among them-——an iron bar,
With this one mun had tunneled forty
feet toward freedom, and Lad then been
cut off from his companions in misery by
falls of rock behind him. The other men
had pulled and torn at the unyielding
rocks about them with their bare hands
{ until they hal literally worn their fin ters
away.— |New York Press,
occorred in August,
near
A cave
rOSCUSTS.,
and an
rock oconstant-
The signals be.
coal mine
stopped :
t month of ceaseless
men had
There
badies in it
where the
found. were about of
awn
In
an dry
i
i Reynard's Remarkable Leap.
i
| One day recently the Cottesmore
{ hounds drew the Stapleford coverts, and
| a fine old dog fox was soon roused. He
{took a turn round the deer park, but,
| not likein tr the look of the railway, re-
turned to the plantation. The scent,
however, was too good for him to remain
in this covert, and the hounds hustled
him out. In leaving the shelter he met
the wide siream of water that runs
through the park. Being headed from
the bridge he cleared tho stream of ran.
ning water at one bound. Two couple
of hounds attempted to do the sume, but,
jumping short, tell into the lock and had
to be rescued. When measured the next
day, the distance clenrod wus found to
be fifteen feet, which is considered a re.
markable jump for a fox to make, It
forms another instance of the cou
and power that foxes can display, 1
hunted fox no doubt returned to bis com-
fortable quarters in the roverts at Sta.
pleford, and will without doubt be highly
amused to find that his Yeap has ud
CHILIAN BEAUTIES,
Coquettish Daughters of the Pugna-
clous Republie,
While the general thought of to-day
in regard to Chili has a bellicose ten-
dency, it is pleasant to turn to a more
puaceful subject in connection with the
ittle republic. It matters not how
rough the heart of man may be, he is
generally susceptible to beanty, and
thoughts of a more gentle conquest may
reign when we forget the men in the con-
templation of the women of Chili. The
races of the North, who are for the most
wart fair, are prone to acknowledge the
wauty of their dark-eyed Southern sis-
ters. The standard of beauty may not
be so high-—that is, it may lack the reg.
ularity of feature that is so charming,
thio classic simplicity which possesses a
grace of its own-—but the women of the
warmer Intitudes have no certain coquetry
thot is more or less irresistible. Espe.
cinllyso is it in the case of the creole and
Spanish types which are found in Chili.
The women all affcet the black shawl, or
manta, and this is the regulation morn.
ing and church attire, no woman ever
going to mass without this simple wrap.
Nome travelers go so far as to assert that
itis this mauts much
charm to the wearer, and makes her at.
tractive, while without it she might pot
receive a { This may be
true: bu beautiful Car.
men might be, there would be something
which lends so
ROOT
ginnee,
no matter how
lost throughout the entire opera did she
not wear her manta,
Those who have
{hie
in whose
eon armen can ap-
preciate charm of women of
i veins runs the Spanish
0 juetry 3
sly exchange of notes
under the
In Chili, howe
he
blood. There is « in every mo-
tion, suggests
at the churel
the watchful
the
chapero
oven of
r,
reROmi
duennn,
Wore suffer t
saps tha
Pudi »
i
Week!
oer’ s
Jealous of a Pet Lion.
northwest «
hatin
for his stranze
a dis posit
lion were | :
Ihe wring day the
slank into the house but was 8 illen.
kopt its eyes constantly fixed upon
master. Mrs. Lops
so nervous that she prevaile i
to the brute
promised to do the Hirst time
town. A few days later Lopez §
el to town to
When he returned late at night
his house dark and apparently
ed. Groping his was indoors he =
i § : upon str k-
to find
Ivins 1
sYing on
wife. Folie an
wife of ifs
husband sell
curry out his
um bled
ell
ing light
bleeding bh
floor. ‘the 3
upon the woman when her back
turned and broken her neck, afterward
tearing her limbs from her body hw
animal then escaped to the woods and
has not
gave way and be is now a raving mau.a
1 ‘hicago Post
fn upon something. and
horrified
his wife
had
i
n was hiss
b
wis ol i
ion evidently jumped
was
hoaen seen since, Lopes # reason
Chicago's Manufactures.
Chicago has become the third manufac.
turing city in the Union, and she is draw.
ing manufactures away from the East
faste thas most persons in the East im-
agine. To-day it is a great Troy stove.
making establishment that has moved to
Chicago; the woek before it was a
Massachusetts shoe factory that went
there, Many great establishments have
gone there, but more must follow, be.
cause Chicago is not only the centre of
the midland region in respect of the dis.
tribution of made-up wares, but also for
the concentration of raw materials, Chic.
ago must lead in the manufacture of all
goods of which woud, leather, and iron
are the bases. The revolution that took
place in the meat trade when Chicago
took the lead in that industry affected
the whole leather and hide industry
Cattle are dropping 30,000 skins a week
in Chicago, and the trade is confined to
Chicago, *t. Louis, Kansas Clty, Omaha,
and St. Paul, It is idle 10 suppose that
those skins will be sent across the Alle
back ngain.
and factory towns where hides are turned
into leather goods. The West still gots
its finer goods in the East, bat it is mak.
ing the coarser grades, and to such au
extent as to give a touch of New England
color to the towns and villages around
Chicago. Harper's Magazine.
A SA AA AOA SAA.
Santa Cruz, West Indies.
——_
Ro far ae production is concerned, St
Croix, or Santas Cray, as it is more popu.
larly know, is the most isn gartant of the
Danish Islands, It is well populated,
fairly well tilled, and pretty, as it lies
i— ————— RP
low in the sea. It is tropical only as
Florida und Louisiana are tropical-—that
| luxuriance and magnificence of vegetation
| which the popular mind associntes with
southern countries do not appesr in the
| Lesser Antilles. Equatorial heat is
| necessary for their development. Still,
the flora of Banta Cruz is impressive.
The trees are grand, lofty and noble in
all their proportions. The flowers are
wonderfully rich in color, Such yellows
and reds are never brought out by a
temperate climate. Vegetable life
sustained under the most surprising con-
ditions. Immense vines grow from roots
in the cleft of 4 rock that a knife-blade
cannot enter.
more than 2.000 different varieties of
plants growing at nature's call in the lit.
tle island of Banta Cruz. In half an
hour's walk around Frederickstad |
counted over 200 common forms. The
glorious banyan tree, which the natives
call “evergrsen,” for no reason that they
could give orl imagine, since everything
is evergreen here, towers aloft and
spreads around -—the king of the forest.
From great branches hang hage
bunches of fibres —graybeards-—reaching
after the soil to take root there and start
another tree, Hundreds
orchids, ineconceivably
in the k wl
its
of exquisite
rich in © sor,
k wherever it is suffi.
ciently ind to give their roots a
hold. Ferns, green, silvered and golden,
ns tiny as m i i
nestle bar
ented
’ 1 bet
stard seed and as DIg as no
fr : 3 snbanl
irom every embank-
and Lady of the
vines and Od kspur,
filane 3
FHAROS BiG
herever it
house, s pri up
ment. Indian Shot
Night. sweet potato
bachelor's b ition,
four-u'clocks, greet your eve w
happens iol
i
LTE
CRDE jasmin,
i
irn
supreme vy beau
sight of
'
he ‘
Ki
ISILL
Crowned dgainst the =
thing
quite ;
proportions ol
mahogany, for in
Or on
much greater spy
{ f Hi
i the
horse-choestnut
noblest
yi 5p § »
nazar .
intestines
ow, and eaten as 8 suusaDs
: what
Liarness, rop
i
i skin of This
; the hard
in excellent covering fo
are and po
strong and lasting thread
1%
FiIWSs dried
ite hoes
soaked in sen oil and burned for fuel
horus are made
house
into varous kinds
hold imple nents-into pois fo
hunting and war iin mnufactar
i" Under favo
a sw. ft reindeer of
af sleds pmstanees
1% miles
ina day i} mil per dav
f barden it
Phila
{
is easly made,
cnn draw a load of
¥
a Bulletin,
ig English Oaks,
The largest osk now standin
land is the “Cownthorpic,
ures se ventv.eight feet
at the At one time this tree and
its branches covered more than an acre of
o Eag-
whi
in oir
fleas.
imicrence
ground
space. The giganiic old “Parliamentary
Oak’ in Clipsione Park, Loudon, is be.
lieved to be 1.500 vears old The tallest
oak on the British Isles is called the
Duke's Walking-stick. It is higher than
the spire of Westminster Abbey. The
onk of which felled in
IBID, realize | $4300 for the owner; the
bark was sold for £1,000, and the truuk
and branches for 83.3050,
Oo {releomon, WHE
An Ancient Case,
The oldest unsettled law suit in the
United States is, it is suid, on the records
of the Supreme Court, Pennsylvania.
The action began in March, 1814. It
originated in an assignment for the ben.
efit of creditors, the assignee bringing
the suit on a claim held by the assignor
The claim was collected, and xix years
later there remained a balance of
R].327.23.
held in trust, grew to SIX J02.51
State,
old lawsuit has taken on a now lease of
life ~~ [New Orleans Picayune,
Pussy Among Glassware,
{of glasses ono shelf behind abar? Ina
| certain local saloon they had a member
(of the feline tribe that owns the place.
| At closing time every evening Tom
(climbs up on the counter and sats the
Cernckers and cheese which the free
{lonely fiends have left behind, In from
| of a large mirror a number of fine wine
| glasses are arranged in the form of a py-
ramid. The counter, for that matter, L
full of fine glassware, but the way that
| nt willelim aver the ie, on the
top © eo pyramid and down ;
ion ng a piece beats the Skill
wis SL SA AIS
en A AA AIS SESM
PENNSYLVANIA ITEMS
EPITOME OF NEWH GI EANED FROM
VARIOUS PARTE OF THE STATE.
TAR remnins of Adjutant Genersl MeClel-
{ land, after iying in state at Harrisburg, were
| taken to Pattsburg and buried.
| IN the case of Mre. Corn Frey, at Carlisle
| secused of disfiguring her husband with vit
| riol, the jury rendered a verdiet of guilty of
| sggra
ATthe ne sting of the executive commitiee
of the Cheutasgua, held sat
Laneaster, July 12:h was fixed as the date of
opening the summer assembly at Mt. Gretna.
vated assault.
Pennsylvania
Tug jury in the 8. Clair Joeomotive explo.
sion ease, by which five men were killed, ren.
dered p verdict attaching responsibility to the
Beading Railroad Company
Brcavsy Mary H. Lavek
Jarguisky, of Wilkesbarre, he told ber that
A stretcher
igy was placed in front of the
rejected Joseph
her brother had been murdered.
£1
H
CoutRining an «
woman's Louse. rhe was badly frightened.
Jarguisky was arrested for trespass.
THR report of Dr. A. Ib. Dundore to the
Board of Hes Many
the heating, lighting
ake ¥ eriticisms upon
ventilation and general
bygenic defects in the ety school buildings in
Beading. cludes that impaired vision
o Lhe most « mn injury met with asa di.
rect result o in school
life,
Apxien
United States
nilary conditions
S71 an, sifending the
ool at Carlisle, war
(uarier Bessions of the lar
thes from a fellow pupii.
of the school’s
IST of patents granted thi
re, Fran spparsiu
W. Cans
nD t Chios
ger, Sunoery,
nut lock
ilkesbarre lo placer; B
ile, water mechs
ers: J. Fort
joret
canopy frame
Jayes Mansparl and David Bank
Harris
ot
ttarted a fight in a barroom in Last
pol
Dore 8 race of two
cemen and a crowd
a d gave iw
n sgl miles befors
were capiy
’
red.
y attended mw of hemlock
held st Willian
es and restrict «
was agresd
of H. J. Hort, the { a
filed his report of
BEE INee nic
€ Appraise nit.
i liabilities are not
thought the creditors will
than 15 0 cents on the
Ing Alleghe ny, rendered a sealed
ict. He is secused
Clearfield W. H
of the Houtzdale
of embezzlement.
idl, form
Bank, was
guilty of embezziement
STa1iA REESE, aged 1
easter from rich nos
raw pork. This is the
Leese family from the same disesse
MAURICE FELDER
gomery counly, Was driving & pair « { young
{ Lower Merion, Mont
horses slong Gulf load when they took fright
spd ran away. Farrell was thrown out, his foot
eatehing in the spring under the wagon, hold
ing him inst. He was dragged 1wo miles sua
Kilied,
BY the explosion of dynamite in
Slope, at Hazleton, one man was killed and
Yorktown
others were thrown fifly feet and bruised.
HicuwayMES halted John
tut he koocked one of them
senselews and escaped
Tie Coroner at Erie held an inquest on the
body of Charles Iwtri, Jr., who that
city. The of Mrs Piotr
pecuse her of poisoning her husband.
\lderfer, near
Norristown,
Giedd in
mother and sislet
IX St, Mary's Polish Catholic Church at
Reading, the Father Mark
Januskiewicr tosk public exception from the
altar jo a letter written him by a member,
Martin Boroski, and called the latter a chicken
thief, Boroski replied to the priest and the
latier ordered his removal from the church.
A fight took place between nearly 200 mem:
bers, in which Boroski was severely handled.
Thirty Polanders were arrested,
Tux house of Mrs. William I. Shaffer,
who lived in the mountains thirty miles from
Kingston, was destroyed by fire. She and
| four children, dressed innight clothes, walked
one mile through snow an inch deep toward
the house of a neighbor. Withing sight of
the house they sank exhausted, but were res
cued by neighbors,
Jonx KASE, aged seven years, living st
107 Wilkine street, Pittsburg, was abducted
by a1 nnknown man,
EVAN Reso, a Denver, Col, man, claims,
| with other heirs, to be the real owner of the
greater portion of Patterson's Heights, a sub.
urb of Beaver Falls. A big legal battle is
expected, .
Josern Kevren, aged seven years, while
skating on the Lehigh River, near White
Haven, Lroke through the ice and was
droweed,
By falling between a conl ear and a chate
al Ridge Colliery, Mahonoy Plane, Frederick
Smith, aged 19 years, was killed,
Howard Yarsurt, aged 30, while walk.
ing acroms the Dinmend Valley Railroad
Bridge at Barre Station, mised his footing
and fell through the trestling inte ths water
below. He was so stunned that he was
drowned before help reached him,
sss IOI
A girl in Nashville, Tenn., giggled
because
pastor, Rev.
herself to death the other day