—— — - - oe PURE MEAT IMPROVES HEALTH. teresting subject closing day's s the Pennsyl- vania Live Stock Association was the Pennsylvania meat inspection law, in law were ex- Pearson, asion of which the results of the plained by Dr. Leonard State Veterinarian. *The State meat passed by the Legislature only ten inspectors,” said Dr. gon. ‘Much good has been accon- plished, but it is impossible for ten | men to cover Pennsylvania and make frequent visits or properly inspect the hundreds of local slaughter! houses. Some of these plants ure | maintained in a most disreputable | wav, Federal, State and city ipnspee- | tion has resulted in wonderful im- provement, but more Sfate and city | inspectors will be necessary to insure inspection that will safegnard the public at all times against the dis- eases transmitted by impure meats.” Dr. Pearson pointed to the usual-| ly healthy dition of the Jews as evider of w can be accomplish- | ed by properly safeguarding the meat supply. After reviewing the efforts of the Jews to secure pure food since the time of Moses, he said that statis- | tics show that in the crowded Gretto! of New York and other districts of | dense population the Jews are afllict-| ed less than any other class of peo- | ple. He said that tuberculosis] among the Jews 18 only one-third or one fourth what it is among their neighbors. inspection law provides | Pear- | cot (Ce CHICKEN THIEF SHOT. Shenandoah (Special).—Exhaust- Isaac Bevan, riddied with bullets from two revolvers which his pursuer. Anthony Sinkiewi emp- | tied into his body as he lay help-| less in a snowd¥ift. All twelve shots took effect, one passing through the heart, sausing almost instant death. Sinkiewicz had for time annoy od by chicken thieves and ed up urglar alarm He awakened by this alarm, and he 8 boarder at his home arme selves and gave « to by means 1weks in the newly-| fallen snow The chase led for more than a mile, hen Bevan dropped over from exhaustion Seven chick- ens were foun n a bag carried unarme wicz gave up to the ties and liberate now county Warz« 12 for cause and F of his boar year-old gashed from ¢d alter a long chase, of this borough, } was been | some i fix- was which he | d. Sinkie-] auch son ROBBED BY FRIEND. Pittsh lott, the R¢ and a man of iTE El- {8 { Special} .—QGeorge formerly purchasing agent public Iron & Steel Company, ninence in corpora- i camrt by Brady on a} ade by W. C.} nett Street tion circles, eld for Magistrate rank J. charge of larceny, m Brown, of 7522 Ben At the hearing Brown testified that Mr. and Mrs. Elliott visited his home, and while ti Elliott stole three diamond rings valued at $500, the property of his wife. These | rings Elliott pawned, it is said. In the meanti: Brown never suspect-| ed his frier Elliott, but had his own servants put unler surveillance. | No trace of the missing jewelry was | secured until the pawnsheets chroni- | cled ring with the initials “W. C. B." The pawnbroker furnished a description of the man who made the pledge and it fitted Elliott, who was arrested. ere Leg Broken; Goes To Church. Waynesburg (Special). - Rather! than break a record of continuous’ attendance at church services, Rev, | | a 2 NO THANKS FOR $2000. Scranton (Special). -A grateful and unknown man rushed up to David Jenkins, sexton of the Taber- nacle Church of West Scranton, and claimed a wallet which the sexton had found on the sidewalk. “I'm glad to get that,” ejaculated the owner, “and | am fortunate in There is $2000 in Then he hurried saying ‘Thank that pocket-bhook.” away without even wallet with Jenkins had examined the and found that it was stuffed bonds and currency. RINDLED FIRE WITH 80600, Rep- Ha- and, Hazleton Leon kaviteh, a zelton, { Special). hotel keeper at West belfeved in banks he collected the mon- never several days ago $600, he secreted ey in the parlor stove. When his wife returned church with several friends she dled a fire and the $600 went smoke, When fell eral from kin- up in the fire he it wag sev- revived, Repkaviteh unconscious hours before he SAW and was over TOOK POISON FOR MEDIUINE, Mrs. months, Is Scranton (Special). Barney Mitchell, a bride of a few lying in a serious condition the drinking creoline by mis- a remedy for throat trouble, had forgotten that the bottle had been removed from its custom- ary place and taking up the creoline poured the flery fluid down her throat. Her face was [rightfully burned and the internal injuries are if such a nature that her recovery as of She Insane From Jilting. Seranton (Special), — months ago on day, fo a few of ing to starve herself police headquarters Wandering aimlessly about was found in the investigation has proved her lance to ap- altar unbalanced her the eve er wedding dea bitter cold that and the failure of pear at the Cut For Refusing To Shave. Norristown { Special) Because refused to shave who the Influence of lig proprietor of St reot, a man 107, shed with RZOT ACTross BY. the € h 168 then and been from His i shop tured ws of condition blood to iI8 Serious. Woman Attacked In Her Home. Johnstown the { Special) told by man attacked on the back porch of her choking her until she fainted her upon a couch in the kit chen, and ransacked the dining-room, securing $30 in cash story the Stolle home, Ie *ishey In Sig Mahanoy City hit Of Home. During this region dur McDonald, of way in the { Special) a raging blizzard in ing the night, Patrick lost his of own home at day from cold and expos in sight his STATE ITEMS. The Hamburg Silk Company ed States Government to furnish various departments of the navy and Just as a Mahanoy Plane teamster was driving over the public road on the mountain above Gilberton, the earth collapsed. He was obliged to whip up his team to escape being F. A. Bright, pastor of the First! Christian Church, was hauled to ‘he! chureh in an automobile despite the | fact that he was suffering from a broken leg sustained earlier (n the evening. Mr. Bright was on his way to church when he slipped on the icy street and fell. ! Mr. Bright has been in the minis- try twenty years and has never miss- ed a service. He was taken home and after the broken bone was set | insisted on being taken to the church. His physician reluctantly yielded. Sophomores Go To Jalil. Selinsgrove (Special). Three meme hers of the Sophomore class of Sus- quehanna University were arrested here by Pennsylvania Rallroad Detec- tive Britton for causing a disturbance at the Pennsylvania Station, when the freshmen ‘were taking a train to attend their banquet. The scrappy Sophomores were taken to the county jail at Middle burg. President Charles T. Alken hurried to the county seat and secur- od the students’ release, furnishing ball for their appearance at next term of court. VEIN OF IRON ORE FOUND, pa ang Pittston (Special) ~=Drillers bor- ing for coal on the mountains west of here accidentally struck a ten inch vein of iron ore. The find has © greated great excitement among the farmers, and farms that were for pale have been withdrawn from the market, The drillers belleve there is suf- ficient iron ore to make the valley an iron producer as it is an ings of Gilberton colliery. Mrs. Kathrina Beckman, 98 years iold, of Shamokin, was burned to Her dress was ignited by a stove while she was alone house, John Ressler was found almost frozen to death near Snydertown with the thermometer below zero. his horse running away and lay seve ber of ribs fractured. Mathias Yergy, aged 61, a Penn- sylvania Railroad foreman at Al- toona, dropped dead at his work while talking aboui the snowstorm. Neighbors prevented a fire in an Altoona coal house from spreading to the dwelling where Henry Fickes lay critically ill by shoveling snow on the flames, until the firemen ar- rived. Members of Conyngham Post, GQ. A. R., of Wilkesbarre, celebrated the fortieth anniversary of the forma- tion of the post. State Commander William T. Powell, Assistant Adju- tant General Charles A. Snyder and Senfor Department Commander Ma- jor O. A. Parsons were the guests of honor, When Conductor Lewis A. Morn ingstar, of Huntingdon, stepped from his train after being thirty hours on duty he was attacked by a slight stroke of paralysis and fell across the track. Eight or ten mines 1n the Pitts burg district are closed and more than 1000 miners are idle because the coal operators insist upon usin a new kind of powder recomme by the State mine. inspectors, Dbe- cause it is less dangerous. The 1 new Anthracite producer. MANNERLESS WOMEN. Having taken American women kindly but firmly to task, in Harper's Bazar, for their careless and inele- gant speech, Henry James has now removed his gloves, and is much more severely reproaching them, In the same periodical for thelr bad manners. He says, in the May Ba- Zar: “When it befel me accordingly, af ter long years-——for {t was but a short time since~—to move over the Amer- ican scene more freely than ever be- fore, to travel further across it and to get a nearer view of those peopl ing it, without my bappening once, so far as 1 now recall, to gather the young encountered in the hazard of knowle {Hty Hp of any woman, or old. travel. offered how- ue nev had ion any Fire f any ci any preface, evar perfunctory, to any such mand, I seemed to make out i 1 § inet meant, an h ¢tént of deviat or demanded, as er yet volee the old close ves had begun to fore for a the of con- reap at gion? see in fine, number informed vision what {t particularly was to be definite slderate an WAS not Hie iy ing the "nit { the gradual and last complete failure of that vi “Pursue grimag: long enough, by rail and road, and dental grims persons whom, you have more intimatel i acquaintances you Iy m make accl ellow pli those been, those formal 1 people troduced Adve more ensue; inquiries of you, invite ade}, naturally assist ance, approach or appeal to mo mentarily, on thi p t or the oth- ar ground Small | jents and accel dents in short occur { which main or that thes you, th ae social then, t thia this HALE ON WOMAN'S WORK DOCTOR Woman's iward Everet: n his monthly talk in the Home Companion, Dr E Hale says: “Will you pleas the bottom rock of iz the habit or determination that place, village, town, neighbor whatever you call it, shall home sule. If I and Mr want to have a road which shail go back to iron swamp, we build we bulld the bridge, such help as we can get from Tucker or from Mr. Champli we do not write to a sub prefect, who writes to a prefect, who writes to an assistant commandant, who writes to another commandant, who writes to an intendent, who writes to a sec retary of engineers, who sends word to us from the seat of government whether we may bulld the bridge and how we may build it stand expresses the foundation prin ciple, the subsoil, bed rock of American life “Now, a very queer thing has de veloped in the evolution of this prin- ciple. It has proved that where the men of the country, have been too busy, or have thought to remember American success ov. ery hood have child bridge rhododen road and or the with Mra better than the men do, “Take this business which 1 have referred to, of a neighborhood library, that library, if they are well conduct: the neighborhood their children want, their husbands need. fortunate for the neighborhood and horses and can drive themselves to the meetings of trustees and select the books and tell Miss Dorcas how many she may buy.” THE MOTHER'S DECALOGUE, The following eommandments typ! fying the domestic ideals of the Ger- mans, will be of interest to American women: 4. Be gentle and placid, 6. Be firm without severily. 6 Do not stint with your mother love. Tenderness is not effeminacy. 7. Discipline as life disciplines. It does not scold, it does not plead, it does not fly into a passion, It sim ply teaches that every deed has its adequate effect. 8. Do not laugh at the little sor rows of children, » danger cheer illness and cherish and your power. And do not vitality by giving way and sorrowing. What must done well 9. In nurse, as in en your anguish be done possible, 10. Do not forget: the of having a child includes the duty of smoothing his way in the world —of endowing him with health, glad ness, courage, victory.—Home Her ald, town, in old Is a woman she has men and chi She is a protect much weak. ta Cap an as be as happiness Greenwich cobbler mending dren in the cobblar of the old old-fa when there years of wo village hool valley, For 25 been shoes old she uses only tools of 50 year ago, made to last a couple stead of as many leather that have will have street a the undertaking fath The girl fatl busines Passe certain None young 16 Ir about ly presses tion by telling parent, who correspondent POKE BON NE TS TO There is more ths a Paris that the i net of huge Feappear, with not will be quirement COME. rumor bon about Uu Baka POKES looked upor favor Whether o the headgear NO Pt YOR nobleman, as } z } yy & lens fs born to him the company's certain su amount, girl has he is entitled to a to a suite of income and home hers until The generations Thanks to it maids unknown mark nobllity.~—~New annual hed the fixed the read apa are she either 3 Or society Gs It has always prospered poverty-stricken old among the Den York Tribune are MAKER the BUTTER Grimston, EXPERT Lady Helen eldest Verulam, has just se the Essex County through the three ter maker from council, She went churning, mak perintendence of a large dairy at Gor hambury, TRAVEL IN MEXICO. The quearest mode of travel I saw seated complacently in a chair bore upon the back of a man Some Mexican women are afraid even of the mule cars, while they look upon the rapidly spinning trolley with such trembling of knees, they em ploy the human carrier at a few cents for each trip—~Travel Magazine. —————— FASHION NOTES. The silk straw hats are excellent! for between Season Wear. A scarf of pale mauve is embroid yer. The wide and narrow pompadour ribbons continue to be popular, buf are rivaled by those In Persian de signs, with their rich, glowing yet harmonious blending of colors, A goodly portion of the French model skirts show the return of the ruffle In all {ts variations as a skirt arnamentation. The soft, thick suede that looks very much like panne is very popu lar for belts with tailored blouses of white linen, The button pins are used where the halr is worn on top of the head Those soft sleeves wrinkled all the way from the shoulder to the hand are best made of some very sheer material, The sallow woman should be taught to eschew tan, Many a trig sweater being worn by the girls was purchased iu the poy: or men's department. : q Hb PULPIT. ——— A SCHOLARLY SUNDAY SERMON BY DR. N. M'GEE WATERS. Subject: Joy in Work. Brooklyn, N. Y.- sermong on “The the Rev. In his series of Choice of a Pro- Dr. N. McGee nue Congregat ional Church, Sunday preached on “How a Young Man May Find Joy in His Work. ' He The story of labor is a checkered one, It is only in our highest civiliza- tion that work is coming to its own. In his savage state man is the lazy Indeed, it {8 not natural any animal to work, save as fit This is the view of find embodied in the old Genesis story, where labor 8 set down as a punishment for Adam's sin, where he is told, as he {8 driven from the Garden, “Thou shalt eat.thy bread by the sweat of thy brow.” This is not only a very uninspired part of the Bib le: but this sentiment certifies that ft is a very old part How labor was despised most signal ustration of Christ You remember the muititudes who heard Him He cast a spell. All the people sald that no man spake as He spake. The loftiest spirits pressed about Him an asked Him if He were the Me Yet they scarcely could believe Joy. And what was the basis of the! doubt? Their skepticism was all in that question of theirs, ‘Is not this the carpenter's son?” How could a& workman be the real Saviour? They marveled at His wisdom They con- fessed that He spoke with authority. They followed Him as sheep follow & shepherd But He was a carpen- ter, and so the high and mighty set Him down for a fraud. It was be- cause thelr eves were holden that they mistook the dignity of toil a disgrace. work we received from the its life over how still true. But increasingly the world is coming to honor the toiler. whether he works in a profession or a trade, and is correspondingly com- ing to de 8pige the idler, whether he be rich or poor. How United States has done with democracy bring this about, with its great men, almost all them coming from the eabin plow, we may never know. much its to and country since Jews in which table to earn Little do we time to find out, contributes to the land of the ancient it was counted respec- one’s living think, or have taken how much our work our happiness us w if we would I suppose most of to eat I suppose ally asked, we first requirement labor was that it and feed us, and the first requirem The second ment a8 man whether he it shall m work m lens it how or the boy wer EaY we made should clothe house ent and gr makes knows it ake a man i the lo atest other we w ho is young man who is a hardship and some There is one man, however, mor fortunate than that Ing man that is the young fell yw who in a silken nest and g¢ lege in an automobile There is nothing wrong about a silken and is nothing bad automobile, except its trail cannot raise an eagle in eiderdown and it requires far more of a man to amount to anvthing in eollege who goes through it In an automobile instead of walking We that we must ! » struggle The reason why rich men's sons rarely amount to anything, is because they never develop their muscles. There is no teacher lke work it bring him bread, but no less It must bring him culture. “The Man With the Hoe"-——he needs not 80 much pity Moses was a herdsman; David was a shepherd; Benjamin Franklin knew no college ~-he was a printer's devil; Robert leisure imes r I and is born you yest thro there about an But you soft raiment; magnitude. nly through work, and there are some things col- leges cannot teach Literature and history and the liberal lagt the ornaments of life; even read- are all named the “conveniences of life.” But dustry, these are fundamentals thrift, courage, hove, love. the threads which. woven together, make the eternal life of man. ¥ you have forgotten these, have gained the whole world, have lost your own soul,” in- honesty you work and calling open to men. When you stand before a task, look for a teacher, If it offer thee not wisdom. desp'se its wage. If thy ealling vield thee not culture for mind and | heart, it is but a cofMin for thy better nature. Demand of your life work that it shall make a man out of you. Work is a great Influence giver. And here we come upon another blunder. you do that gives you influence so much. That is what the world thinks, It is the way you do it. Quality counts for more than kind. It is trua, of course, that there are gome vocations that in themeelves damn the worker. All labor that makes merchandise out of men's vices is of that sort. It is true also that certain kinds of work give more consideration than others, The minister, because he is a min fster, occuples a larger place In the community than the day laborer. That is, he does if he ministers. His great calling will not serve in itself Many a laborer in many a village has ST a i at n parson has n. For, after all, the thing that counts in influence is mot mon.y or posses. Rus wall HY Aus: Foy ar -_— —-— i." which he is at community. There Is a little town out in Min- negota called Rochester, A few years ago when I was there it only had a few hundred people In it. It was a nice little, commonplace, prairie town. It is not the capital of the it Is not the seat of the uni- the penitentiary ig not even there; nor have they a church with relic working miracles It is not the home of a United Btates Senator, nor any politician. And yet it is the Mecca of a pilgrim host. From every Btate in the Union, from across the sea, from every capitdl and country of civilization men are journeying to Rochester, Minnesota. And those who are going are the scholars, the authorities, the masters in surgery What takes them this: An old doctor by the name of Mayo has been practising in that little town for a generation. His two sons, now in early maturity, practise with their father The fact is that they have been doing such marvelous things with the knife, and such fine work as surgeons, that the great mas- ters from Paris, Berlin and Vienna, ag well ag this country, are singing their praise, and go out to that little town to sit at the feet of these men, and pay homage to the guperiority of last judged in the State: versity; there? Simply work it is always so If you re- all it is by the things have done well—whether you raised a field of corn, sewed § old garment, made a or written a poem. the great happiness all know what a game You set up so many two balls, and you or a spare,” or else you don't The game 8 to knock over as many pins as possible. Men become very skillful in it and gain a great deal of pleasure by doing it. That is the philosophy of all play. erection of artificial difficul- or barriers and learning to over. come them with ease and skill, That makes the exhilaration of tennis, and baseball, and bowling and golf I am told, and I do not know any- about it myself, that therein mania for making money. A great game Now, in work is just exactly the same The difficulties to be over- are not artificial, to be sure, very real ut they are there, work ig the game of bridgin over with skill and ease an are kin ple, Work is bringer. Yon of nine pins is pins, and you rol make a “strike” ties thing iles the That is thing. come but and them final analyeis, for a healthy man there {8 no game in the world 80 exciting and so exhilarating as his work. 1 suppose you Ilong- suffering folk who zit in the pews and are more or less at times tempt ed to somnolence, have never real- was anything exciting hing business And gay to you that 1 keener joy than when take a theme and analyze it, and mark out the umina- In its yet 1 want to of no and ready I through illustrate it, d be made in its il} then sit down to writ Your fingers will not fiy fast enoug! If it turns t well there is exhilaration and ] Making points to and #1 on, 1G Now the that there is so because Fork is a man gener ally thea drudgery. We want 3 work as ex- pressing a man's message Stephen- Steg thought SON's poem down in Watts’ canvas: St Wren's Why, se bull der ig thou ights nith make ? anvil express his vy shall not the farmer pub- lish his secret? Almost ANY man can learn the technical part of any work from a niry to Bo but no man hath mastered a trade till it be- comes a language through which he can express himself to all men 0, the drudgery of life lies in the fact that we bend above our work Ilike driven cattle with never a ressing himsell We have to BONE engine dressed up in Tennyson s got we a “IX reen® ta v atts : pe in ne blacksn that we make our vocation proclaim the world the truth that Cod hath put into our hearts! ———— a The Narrow Way. Matt. 7:13, 14 Narrowness is Christ's idez of the way of life, a straitened way, the way For a moment nanse and vise? Jt is 11 o'clock, the orthodox regulator at the watchmaker's points with exactness to that hour. “Very narrow,” exclaim all the cheap timepieces of the neigh- and they persistently point but is only inex- actness, which ls another word for untruth. So ortho marks with exactness each rock doxy in the harbor channel of nals out. A liberal pilot might be careless of those signals, but the pas- senger would prefer that the pliot { should be overcautious rather than E. Partridge, Pomo~ na, Tenn, — A Prayer. Grant, we beseech Thee, O Lord, the Giver and Guide of all reason, that we may always be mindful of the nature, of the dignity, and of the Grant us Thy favorable assistanc: in the forming and directing our judg ment, and enlighten us with Thy truth, that we may discern those things which are really good, and, having discovered them, may love and cleave steadfastly to the same. And, finally, disperse, we pray Thee, those mists which darken the eyes of our mind, so that we may have a per fect understanding, and know both God and man, and what to each is due. — Simplicius (transiated by George Stanhope, Dean of Canter. bury, 1704). ane hit Yourself to God. be remedied and care for things come that cannot be prevented may easily hurt, but can never 1 will, therefore, commit myselt to 4 both and enjoy the present.