CINDERS. Story of a Dog That Earned Mis Welcome. By Eleanor. M. Porter. Half way through the park the boy with the dog stopped and looked about him. A chill wind had, sprung p. and the wide, elm-bordered path wao almost deserted. "Jlmlny!" muttered the boy. "This dog-etealln' ain't what It's cracked up ter be. I've a good mind now ter leave the little beast where he It! " It had been growing on the boy for an hour this terror. All the elation of that first moment of successful theft had fled, leaving behind a lively fear of pursuit and punishment. The incriminating collar with its name and address had long ago been thrown away, to be sure; but there yet remained the dog "Cinders," ac cording to the collar. " 'Taln't wuth the risk," muttered the boy at last; and with another swift glance about him he tied the ena ot the dog s leader to a con venient settee, and ran down a side path toward the avenue. For one amazed instant the dog stayed motionless, then he strained at the cord with all his small might, giving a series of frantic barks and whines. Two men and a woman, coming up the path, glanced at the dog, swerved, and passed by on the farther Bide. A small boy shied a Btone, then ran; but a backward glance assuring him that the cord still held, he turned and shied a larger one. The wind from the east grew sharper, and brought a cold, fine rain. The dog, exhausted, frightened and hopelessly miserable, crept under the bench for shelter. He was there when the tall, blue-coated man came down the path ten minutes later, and so he escaped the cold gray eyes of Offi cer O'Callahan. The rain Increased with the dark. By midnight, hunger, cold and terror had driven the dog almost wild. Lit tle by little his jorks and pulls loos ened the cord about his throat, until one last frenzied effort disentangled the knot and set him free. He paused, then rushed down the path, leaving behind him the cord still fastened to the settee. At the edge of the park the dog stopped. The endless blocks, tho lights, the shadows all were un familiar and confusing. Cinders, born and bred In the Western town that was his master's home, had never been In New York until that morning when he had come with that same muster on a visit East, only to be stolen nt the very railroad station by the boy who had so quickly aban doned him. No wonder Cinders eyed his surroundings in dismay! Up ona Btreet, down another, across a third trotted the" weary llttlo feet, hour after hour, until at dawn the dog reached once more the park, and de jectedly dragged his way to the bench which had so recently held him a prisoner. It was then that there began for Cinders a new existence. An exist ence of anxious days and apprehen slvo nights; of little food and less Bhelter; of small boys with stones, and big boys with sticks. His long, silky hair grew soiled and matted, his body loan, and his eyes wide and terror-filled. Once a blue-coated, hel meted man with short club chased him for some distance, but In the be wildering maze of paths he eluded his pursuer and crouched under a low-hanging bush until the man, puffing and swearing, had passed him by. It was a trying experience, but a necessary one; after that Cinders' hid when a blue coat came In sight. Both tho park and the adjacent sheets Cinders claimed as home, but after his experience with the blue coated man he grew more wary; and when In tho park spent mo3t of his time hiding under shrubs or behi:.' trees until night brought darkness and safety. As for food sometimes a bread crust designed for a squirrel was snatched up by his own hungry little Jaws, and once it was the squirrel It self that made his dinner. Occasion ally a child with a cooky, or a man with a sandwich, strolled along una ware of the hungry eyes that peered out from beneath tangled hair and watched for a stray crumb thrown aside. It was toward the end of the week that Cinders, skulking under the trees in the twilight, came face to face with a shabby, hollow-eyed man on one of the park settees. "Hullo!" greeted the man. The dog barked away. "Well, by Jove! you look a rittle more hard up than I do. Come here, sir." The dog did not stir. "Prrtty tough old place, this world eh?" Bald the man, with a weary smile. Still the dog did not stir. "Hungry?" Two mournful eyes gazed unswerv ingly into tho man's fara. The duct of the dog's heels stirred faintly with the slight the very slf'ght motion o! a tall feebly wagged. "Humph!" grunted the man. thrusting his hands into his pockets and pulling out a dime and four cop per cents. He glanced from the coins to the dog, and from the dog back to the coins. "Humph!" he grunted again, rising to his feet. "Reckon you need 'em the most, old fellow." And he shambled down the path that led to the avenue. When he came back some minutes later he threw a hurried look about him, then drew a sandwich from the paper bag in his hand. "Come, sir, come good fellow!" bo called softly. A bird chirped overhead. "Come, sir, come! Where are you, Weary Willie?" called the man again, peering into the sbadowi. The silence was unbroken. Until It was quite dark the man tat on the bench and watted; then be rote and walked away. On the next night twilight found the hollow-eyed, shabby man on the tame benen. The dog, too, found bin there. "Humph!" growled the man. throwing that same quick look about him, and dragging from his pocket a paper bag. "Seems to me you were a good while coming! " He extracted a sandwich, broke off a generous piece, and tossed It to the dog. Snap went the famished jaws, and the dog came at once to "attention." "Ah, ha!" crowed the man. "So you were hungry!" He threw a second piece, then another, and an other. "There!" ho exclaimed, when the sandwich was finished. "How do you feel, Weary Willie?" The dog whined, and took a tenta tive step forward. "What's your name 'Jack?' " There was a Blow wagging of the dog's tall. " 'Fldo? " The tall wagged harder. " 'Rover?' " There was a quick, short bark. "Come here, sir," ordered the man; but at the outstretched hand the dog turned and ran; the memory of those friendless day! and nights wa3 rot to be bo lightly cast aside. It came to be a regular thing after that for the shabby man to bring a nightly sandwich to the bench in the park, and for the dog to come and eat it. There was always an ex change of courtesies In the shape of jovial greetings and sharp barks, and gradually the dog lost his fear. Three times ho tried to follow his new friend home, but the sharp "Go back, feet to a halt, and sent the dog slink sir, go back!" brought the little eager ing bacl. to the shadows, there to stand with wistful eyes gazing after the shabby figure disappearing down the street. "After all, where's the use of It, Weary Willie?" asked the man one night when, the sandwich gone, the two sat together on the bench. "Where'B the use of It? There's no fne to care what becomes of us, you and me. Let's chuck It!" The dog thumped his tall against the Beat. "Humph! Think It's a joke, do you? Well, maybe 'tis, maybe 'tis." There was something queer about tho man that night. His voice shook, and was not quite clear; his step, too, was far from steady, and he dropped on the seat with a curious relaxation of all his muscles. The next night it was worse, and the next, worse still. There was a flat bottle which he brought again and again from his pocket and put to his lips after a cau tious look about him. He stayed longer and longer each night, and sometimes he seemed to sleep, so low was his head bowed on his breast. At such times the dog spent long minutes in motionless watching of the silent figure, giving occasionally a low whine a whiue which met with no response. There had been almost a week ot this when one night the man slipped from the seat and lay half on the ground. Cinders leaped to the man's side and licked his face, his hands, and again his face. He whined, then barked, then stood quiveringly alert for the slightest movement. At that Instant down the path came several boys eating bananas. There was a chorus of jeers, then a fusillade of banana skins. Cinders, fierce and bristling, faced the crowd and barked. He growled and showed his small white teeth, as from all sides came mon and boys on the run. More banana skins, and even small stones, struck the man, the dog, and the ground near-by. Still the dog stood firm, thrusting his tiny, flercs little self between the Inert figure and the crowd. Suddenly the man opened his eyes. One glance at the mob, the dog. and the flying stones and banana skins cleared his brain. With a snarl of rage he caught the quivering little dog In his arms and staggered to his feet. There was a cry 61 "The cop'B a-comln'!" and the man found him self all at once alone with the dog, while up the path came a blue-coated, uurrylng figure. Clasping the dog yet more i.rmly in his arms, the man turned and walked rapidly In the opposite direction. "Come, come, what's the meaning of all this?" called the policeman, be tween short, panting breaths, as he reached the shabby man's side. "Nothing." returned the man, la conically But the crowd what were they doing?" "Stoning the dog and me." "Stoning you! Been drlnkln'?" "Do I act drunk?" retorted the man, sharply. The policeman gave him a 'lour, shrewd glance. "Mighty near it." he growled. Then he tried a new tack. "Whose dog is it?" he demanded. "Mine." There was a ring of de fiance in the man's voice. "Where's Its collar? Got a 11 conso?" probed the policeman. "It will have by this time to-morrow. " "Looks tj me mighty Ilka the little beast I've been chasln' in these 'ore parts fur the last month. I've had more'n a dozen complaints ot a stray dog; but I couldn't catch the little varmint." "You'll not have any complaints of this dog," eald the man, quietly, as he turned tff at one of the side paths. It waa then that existence for Cin ders changed Vet again. It became now a thing of kind words, scanty but gladly given food, and a bod In one corner of a spaniely furnished room up many flights ot stain. Thero were the same walks in the park, only now he both went and came with the man. There waa the same bottle, and there was the same cautious tipping of it to the man's lips but perhaps lest frequently now. At all events, there never again came a time when the man waa not fairly erect and In bit right mind at be sat on the bench. As the summer passed the man's clothes became more shabby, and bit cheeks more hollow. At first he bad gone away from the room each morn ing and returned at night clinking . a few loose coins in hlti pockets; but now days and days passed when be did not leafre the room until night, apparently preferring to lie for hours on the bed In the corner with his face to the wall. "Where's the use?" he would say more and more frequently, as Cinders would leap upon the bed and coax him, dog fashion, to go out for a walk. "Where's the use, Weery Willie? If there was some one to care, I'd quit It," he went on one day. "Perhaps I'd never even have begun. She cared once, Weary Willie; she said she did; but it didn't last It didn't last. She got tired and skipped skipped." There was a long pause, then the voice began again. "You don't blame her, do you, Weary Willie? Maybe you'll skip some day eh? She said 'twas incompatibil ity, old fellow; In-com-patl-blHt-. Long one, isn't it? But not half so long as the misery It holds. S'pos it will be that way with us, old boy Incompatibility?" The dog whined and leaped to the floor. "Ha!" cried the man, whimsically. "So you do want to leave me, sir? By Jove, old fellow, I should think yon would," he added, suddenly, get ting to his feet. "Come, let's go for a walk!" Days passed. Both man and dog grew thinner; and the nights when 1 the man came home clinking colni ' in his pocket grew fewer and fewer. I Even the walks at twilight were not taken so frequently now, and the man I had fallen into the way of passing long silent evenlngB, gazing blankly Into space. Sometimes there was in his hands a gleaming thing of pol ished metal, which he handled linger ingly, almost lovingly. "Come, let's chuck It, Weary Willie, you and 1," he would say, And when the dog barked and whined, he would smile and lay th thing aside with the laughing re- proof: "Why, old fellow, it doesn't , hurt! It's all over before you ever know it's begun! " There came a day when Clnderi ' had no breakfast, no dinner, no sup- j per. All day long the man had been tramping the room like some wild I thing. He, too, had not eaten, but h 1 had twice picked up the gleaming ' thing of polished steel, only to lay it down again. At dusk his jaws set in sudden j stern lines. With one stride h j reached the table, clutched the re volver, and raised It to his head. Al- j most instantly there came a frantic bark and a sharp report. The woman j coming up the stairs thought the two had occurred at the same Instant; but j the man in the bare room on the top floor knew that the bark had : come just in time to startle him so 1 that the ball had found a harmless ' resting place in the wall across the j room. "Good God! can't you let a fellow be! " he stormed at the dog, as the re- ! volver fell from his relaxed hands. The next Instant he strode to the door in answer to a frightened knock. "Oh-h!" breathed the woman out side in glad relief, as she saw that the man was at least alive. "Tom! how could ypu? Are you hurt?" she cried, stepping swiftly Inside, and closing the door. The man fell back in amazement. "Sally! you?" "Yea, dear, yes. I've come back, Tom. I've been miserable, wretched without you. 'Twas my fault, dear the whole of It. I've come back. Won't you take me?" A shamed red came Into the man's face. "But, Sally, I " his eyes swept the bare room, and a despairing ges ture told how little he had to offer. "Yes, yes, I know," murmured the woman, coming close to his side. "You got discouraged, and things 1 went wrong. But we'll change all j that now. We'll begin again. Why, Tom, I'm here. Don't you see? We'll j start together. Tom, don't you j want me?" "Want youI-vSally!" And hie hungry arms closed about her. Long minutes afterwards the man, ! the woman, and the dog sat down to gether. "After all, Weary Willie," said the ' man, softly, as he patted the dog's ' hend, "I reckon it's Just as well you I did bark when you did. a little bit ! ago. There's some one now to care." San Francisco Argonaut. "THIRD DEonEE" A MYTH. Veteran THU a Dramatic Story About a Knpnoscd Instance of It. It was my privilege, several years ago, to witness the Infliction of that much-dreaded "third degree," so much written about, and believed by many people to be conferred with torture, etc., on persons arrested for crime. The officer who took upon himself the right to inflict It was the former Inspector of Police, Mr, Byrnes. The case In question was the mur der of a drug clerk on upper Third avenue. The evldonce on which the arrest was made was clrcumstancial, but of the highest and most convinc ing character. The officer, now re tired, who made the arrest, reported with the prisoner at the Detective Bureau, 300 Mulberry Street, and after stating the facts to the inspec tor, was asked: "Have you got a confession from the prisoner?" "No," he replied; "I had not the heart to ask for It. I consider the evidence sufficient." "Bring in the prisoner," said Byrnes. He was brought in a youth about sixteen years old. Mr. Byrnes looked at him for a second, then he said: "Sonny, how old are you?" "Sixteen," he replied. "Where do you reside, and whom do live with?" He answered, "With my sister. " stating the location. "Where do your parents reside?" "They are both dead," he answered. A minute elapsed, and then the Chief looked steadily at the officer and at the pris oner, and calling the doorman, told him to take the prisoner out. He requested the officer to remain. After the door closed and the boy was out of hearing, Mr. Byrnes, turn ing sharply, asked the officer, "Why didn't you get a confession?" "Be cause I have a child of the same age, and all through this Investigation I have kept my child in thought, as If he was In this unfortunate's place. Do you. who have no boy, ask for the confession?" Mr. Byrnes sat for fully two min utes in deep thought, turning to the officer, In a husky voice replied, "You are right." The next day's papers reprinted the fact that under the terrible third degree positive evidence was ob tained from the prisoner of his guilt. In due time an indictment for mur der was found by the Grand Jury, and a trial followed. The pres ent District Attorney, then an assist ant, prosecuted; the prisoner in his own defense took the stand and told of his arrest and of the torture In flicted on him by the Chief and de tectives the horrors of the "third degree." A jury went out and brought a verdict of not guilty the Judge (Glldersleeve) looked In amazement at the jury, then at the prisoner, and said: "If you did not kill the de ceased, who did? You are dis charged. " Every reference to the third de gree since brings this memory to my mind and causes me to ask myself, "Was the 'third degree' ever given anybody, at any time or place, out side of a fraternity? And why will people continue to believe such cruelty as is frequently reported to have taken place In connection with arrests, when in fact there has been none?" The belief in the practice not only influenced that jury', but misleads as well the Grand Jury, out Public, and crea'es prejudice against our police. The New York Times. What Happened. The Rtmit man on thii rvlit. form declined to agree with the con ductor. The conductor thought he hadn't paid his fare. The stout man was of the contrary opinion. They exchanged harsh words over the matter. "I gave you a nickel when I not aboard." Bald the etont man. 'I haven't taken in a nickel on this trip," said the conductor. The Btout man grew very red. Hit hair seemed to bristle. "That's just enough of this," he growled. "I don't want to have any trouble with you. I had trouble with a conductor once. I'd hate to tell you what happened." The conductor drew back a little and made no further attempt to col lect the Btout man's fare. But when the stout man was about to alight from the car at the Penn sylvania crossing the conductor's cu riosity waa too much for him. "Say," be asked, "what happened when you had that trouble with the other conductor?" The stout man looked back. "I was in the hospital six weeks," he mildly answered. Cleveland Plain Dealer. An "Inch" of Rain. Few people have an adequate Idea of the amount of water that descends from the clouds during a rainstorm. We read In the weather bulletins that two or three Inches of rain some times fall in a day, and that in out last rainy spell nearly Ave Inches fell in forty-eight hours: but these fl really convey very little information i to our minds and give us no idea at all of the prodigality of nature. An acre contains 6,272,040 square Inches of surface, and an inch of rain means, therfore, the same numbe: of cubic inches of water. A gallon contains 277.27 cubic Inches of water, and an inch of rainfall means 22,622 gallons to the acre, and, as a gallon of water weighs ten pounds, the rain fall on an acre Is 226,220 pounds. Counting 2000 pounds to the ton, an inch of rain means over 113 tons pet acre. An acre is about half a St Louis block, bo that a rainfall of an inch means a downpour of about 22G tons of water on every city block. Multiply this by five, the number ol Inches of rainfall during the wet Bpell In the last week In May, and no one can wonder that the gutters were In sufficient to carry off the water. The occasional overflow of a sewer In the .ower part of town is regarded as a very remarkable thing, but the won der really Is that then Is not an over flow every time It rains. St. Louli Globe-Democrat. The Industrious Hen. A billion two hundred and fifty million dozen eggs were produced in this country last year. That means that the hen, the greatest trust butt er of the age, took fifteen billion whacka at the octoput In 1906. So, when you wax eloquent about the Bplendldnest and permanency of American Institutions, don't forget one of the mightiest ot them all the Industrious hen. Brittol Courier. Many tales are told by travelers ot the wonderful skill ot the Algeri ans In handling rifles. The native Algerians would rank with our expert rifle shooters. A New Problem. It i3 reported that more than 1000 Hindoos have crossed the Canadiar border Into the State of Washington recently, and have become competl- j tors in the labor market of the State. Men of their race, who present a strange and curious typa to most Americans, may be seen at work now on the railroads of California. They are made conspicuous even at a dis tance by their turbans. A gang here and there makes an impression on the traveler without being noticeable because ot its size. But there Is a population of 294,361, 000 In India, an area ot 1,766,642 Bquare miles, as against a population that Is probably considerably leu than 400000,000 on an area of 1, 532,420 square miles In China, and a population of 47,000,000 on an area of 147,655 square miles In Japan. Chicago Record-Herald. Ill-Health. There is a groat deal of ill-health which deserves not sympathy or pity but criticism and condemnation, and a worship ot good health, including workt at well as faith, might with advantage be made a feature ot the national religion. Hospital. According to the moBt reliable re ports, there are 262,000 Sunday schools in the world, with a total en rollment ot 26,000.000 nupllt. 1 r " CHILD WONDER BACK. ;irl Cclclii-nled For Her Mind Hand ing Tricks. Lam-aster (Special) .Elsie Miller, or "Elsa the Child Wonder," as she Is known on the vaudeville stage was returned to her home In this city by tho police authorities, and her re turn was accompanied by one of tho most daring escapes of a prisoner ever recorded in local criminal an nals. For several seasons the girl, a child In years, had been taken over the country and featured in a "mind reading" act in all the principal vaudeville houses. Her manager was H. R. Parker, and the pair were un usually successful. Recently the girl's parents decided to recall her, but Parker, It is alleged, enticed her away from her home. Warrants were Issued for his ar rest and he was Anally taken Into custody at Hanover. He waB brought here and taken to police headquar ters. Prior to his Intended removal to the county jail Parker nsked per mission to send a telegram. While talking to a messenger boy in a pri vate room and surrounded by offi cers Parker plunged from a window and made his escape. DREAM SAVED TRAIN. Engineer Saw Landslide In A Villon And Ran Slow. Harrlsburg (Special). ConAdente In a dream probably averted a big wreck on the Northern Central Rail road. Previous to reporting for duty at the roundhouse Tuesday night. En gineer James Burd. who hauls the Buffalo flyer leaving Harrlsburg at 11.10 P. M., dreamed that his train had run Into a landslide at a point between Dauphin and Halifax. He told his dream to several roundhouse attaches, but they laughed at him. Engineer Burd, to ease his mind, determined to run very slowly be tween Dauphin and Halifax. So speeding his train to the limit till Dauphin was passed, Burd then slow ed up. And It was well he did, for at a point some distance north of Dauphin, Identical with the place he had seen in his dream, the en gine ploughed Into n lardsllde. Go ing slowly, the engineer was able to bring his train to a stop with little or no damage. BLEW OF F HIS HEAD. Engineer Commits Suicide Tying Dy namite Around His Neck. Shamokin (Special) .The head less body of Stephen Raker, a promi nent church member and secret so ciety worker, was found on a moun tain by Sergeant Hennlnger and sev eral companions. Raker had com mitted suicide by blowing bis head off with dynamite. At Arst It was thought he bad been murdered! but the authorities soon determined Rak er had killed himself In a fit of tem porary Insanity. From all appearance Raker seat ej himself on a rock and without even removing his bat, placed the dynamite In a bag around his neck. Holding both ends, he applied a match to the fuse and the explosion blew away his bead and a portion of the neck and chest. Only small par ticles of the head were found. Rak er wns employed as an engineer at Bear Valley shaft. STATE NEWS IN BRIEF. TABLET FOR HKADIVG PION l'.KIt. Site Of Conrad WHscr's Old Store To Be Marked. Reading (Special). At a monthly meeting of the Berks County Histori cal Society It was reported that ar rangements had been mnde to dedi cate a tablet In memory of Conrad Welser. the pioneer, on October 30. The tablet will be placed on the Stitcher building at Fifth and Penn Streets, which occupies the site of Welser's store. The memorial will be three by four feet and will briefly narrate the his tory of the man and the place. When Reading was laid out In 1748 this famous pioneer and Indian Interpre ter engaged In the mercantile busi ness at the spot where the memorial is to be erected. Years ago a move ment was started to erect a monu ment over his grave at Womelsdorf. but the project has been dropped for the present. A few months ago his old Womelsdorf home, near the grave was burned. Conrad Welser was born Novem ber 2, 1696, and was the principal Judge of Berks County from 1752 to 1760. He was born In Germany and came to this country when 18 years of age. He learned to speak the In dian language, and often acted as Interpreter between the Indians and the provincial government. The following nominations were made by the historical society: Pres ident, Louis Richards; vice presl- uents, s. h Ancona. B. F. Owen, Kicnara L,. Jones and Daniel Miller; recording secretary. William Fegely; corresponding secretary, George M. Jones; treasurer, William M. Zech man. An invitation from the borough authorities of Phoenixville to attend the unveiling of the monument mark ing tne farthest point reached by General Howe in bis march up the Schuylkill in 1777, to be held on Sep tember 21, waa accepted. TOOK POISON FROM SORROW. Girl's Mind Unsettled By Frequent Deaths In The Family. Chester (Special). Pretty May me Feeney, agi 1 17 years, drank six drams ot laudanum at her home at 357 Howell Street, but the arrival of members of the family and a physl. clan frustrated her plans. The girl was taken to the Chester Hospital where, after several hours of heroic work by the physicians, her life was saved. Friends claim that the attempt was made on account of the great sorrow she has experienced by deaths In her family and that when notified that her brother could live but a short while longer, she became mentally deranged. The girl claims that sho did not intend taking her life, but that she took the drug in mistake for medicine. LOAN BT..iL defeated. Trinity Methodist Episcopal Church, Chester, has asked that Rev. Dr. John W. Sayers. the pastor, be returned for another year. Should the bishop return the minister It will make his seventh year at the church The contract for the new Trust and Savings Company Building, at Bristol, has been awarded to Er nest Lawrence, for $11,386. The milkmen of Royerstord have decided to raise the price of milk from 5 cents to 7 cents per quart. At the Schuylkill Haven Storage Yards, George Rene, aged 52 years, stepped In the way of a passenger train, was struck and Instantly kill ed. The unfortunate man is surviv ed by his wife and a large family. Playing about a bonfire, the clothes of 4-year-old James Colson, of Ma hanoy City, became Ignited. His 10-year-old brother fought nobly to save the boy's life, but before tho fire was extinguished the little fel low was bsrned so badly that death followed soon after. U. G. Prey, Deputy Internol Rev enue Collector of the Ninth District for Cumberland County, has sent his resignation to Secretary Yerkes on account of his having received an ap pointment in tho State Health De partment. Jamet M. Guest, a well-known resi dent of Lionvllle, Chester County, died at the -jge of 83 years. At his ripe old age he helped to do all the harvesting on his eon's farm this year. For the past sixty years be has been a member of the Dunkard Church. W. H. Sechrlst, of Stewartstown, the oldest resident of that borough, died in his 89th year. He had been retired for a number of years. When Mrs. John Mehl. of New Cumberland, awoke she found her 6-fnonths-old baby dead in her arms. The child was apparently In good health nt midnight. The new post office building at West Chester was thrown open for business and a large crowd of young people waited to be the first ones to purchase stamps and keep them as souvenirs-. 1 Falling from a pear tree, Levi Rlt ter, of Mountainvllle, fractured his spine and is now in a critical con dition at the Allentown Hospital. Mrs. Catharine Martin, 80 years old, died in the Reading Homeopath ic Hospital as a result of talllug out of a second-story window at her home. Asleep on the tracks of the Penn sylvania Railroad, a short distance cbove South Danville, John Rogers, to Ironworker of that place, wis truck by the locomotive and ground to death. Rogers had been drinking and had fallen asleep on ths tracks York Votes Against Burrowing $750, 001) For Improvements. York (Special). At the special election here to decide whether or riot York could borrow $750,000 for municipal improvements the loan proposition was snowed under by a big majority. This action of the voters came as a thunderbolt to the members of the Municipal League and others who have been working arduously for the past several months to induce the voters to cast their ballots In favor of the loans. The proposition voted upon was for the completion of the sewage system, street paving and for park purposes. TWO-CENT RATE INVALID. lYnilKvlvnnin Court l)u-1iii-a f ,n Unconstitutional. Mi Hud el rib in (Siieclal). In a 3(Li AAA a . . . . , n ,wicn VTOinou HI1U Auuruiiwi, of Common Pleat Court No. 4, ren dercd their long-awaited decision ojw vii iuo i- u u is in u i -r..-iiL ruio inw, mw- gm clarlng the act "unjust, unreason unconstitutional Insofar as It appltr to the Pennsylvania Railroad. While the decree was hailed an great victory by the Pennsylvanll i Railroad, which had made the Cora A ty of Philadelphia defendant in tult to enjoin the collection of provided for the violation of tbo Dunsmore act, the opinion of the whlrh s to lip token to thn Hunrnm.' Court will not untie the legal knot for all the State's railroads. It is specifically stated by the court that the opinion is rendered entire ly upon the contentions set up by tho Pennsylvania Railroad, leaving open the question as to whether the law may not apply legally to other railroads unless these corporatlont can prove the same facta shown by the Pennsylvania Railroad. The Judges' Findings. Briefly the finding of the Judge Is this: "It agrees that the Legislature pon 3esses the power to fix the rates to be charged by tho railroads, bat It excepts part ot the Pennsylvania Line that part between Pittsburg and Harrlsburg built under charter rights which permit It to charge whatever fare its officers consider .-easonablp. "It is set down by the Court, how ever, that the Legislature under ruling of the Federal Supreme Court has no right to regulate rates bo that a company will not be able to earn the legal rate of interest--whlch la this State is six per cent. "By their own calculation tht Judges decide tbat the Pennsylvania would not be able to earn this all per cent, under the two-cent law. Therefore, it is that the act In its application to this railroad is de clared 'unjust, unreasonable and con fiscatory.' " Effect On Other Roads Uncertain. Whether this will apply also to the pending cases of the Philadelphia & Reading, the Lehigh Valley, the Northern Central, and the Philadel phia, Baltimore & Washington, can not be known until the figures of the roads are subjected judicially to the same test as used In the case of the Pennslyvanla. AH of these roads claim that they would not be enabled to earn the legal rate of interest. But tho interpretation of the law la such that each corporation must stand upon Is own bottom In court. Prcpurlng Appeal To Supreme Court. Preparations to appeal the case to the Supreme Court of the State waa begun Immediately by City Solici tor J. Howard Gendell, who has been defending the case in company with Attorney General Todd. He will first have to file exceptions which will be argued bofore the entire Court, Judges Willson, Audenrled and Carr. This is but a formality necessary to make the decree final. President McCrea and General So licitor Gowen, of the Pennsylvania, announced that they wore anxious to go through with these prelimi naries hurriedly In order that Mr. Gendell might get an early bearing and decision upon his appeal to the Supremo Court. TO RETURN BRIBE MONEY. Poisoned By Rut's Bite. Bellefonte (Special). Miss Mary Rapp, a seamstress of this place, Is threatened with a bad case of blood poisoning as the result of the bite of a rat. She encountered the rod ent In a closet and attacked it with a broom. Before she realized what It was up to the rat ran up the broomstick and bit her on the hand and made its eacanp Ml nunii had the wound dressed and thought , collateral little of it until a day or two ago, when sores broke out on her arm and face and the attending physl clans say they are symptoms of blood poisoning and that they are undoubt edly due to the rat's bite. Pittsburg Criminal Suits Will, How ever, Be Pushed In Courts. Pittsburg (Special) . Negotiations are in progress for a settlement of the financial differences between President C. S. Cameron, of the Pitts burg & Tube City Railroad Company, and Broker C. H. Richardson, who furnished the $70,000 in the attempt to bribe Councilmen, Attornoy Charles A. O'Brien, of counsel for Cameron, said. This is said to mean that Cam eron will pay Richardson the money be borrowed from him and that Cam eron will get back stocks put up as Hid Gold In Mountain. Mauch Chunk (Special). Some where on Flag Staff Mountain there Is $940 in gold In a coin bag. This amount of money disappeared from the Madouse home when Mrs. Ma douse, suddenly bereft of reason, left her home and family Sunday evening and roamed the mountain until the Monday night following. The woman has had but few ra tional moments since. During one of these she told her husband she remembered taking the family sav ings and hiding them under a rock In a mountain crevasse but just where she does not know. Dynamite In Dinner Pall. Carbondale (Special). Two pounds of dynamite caps carried In a dinner pall by Peter Obleck, a miner employed In the Northwest Colliery of the Temple Iron Com pany, at Simpson, exploded while Obleck wsb homeward-bound from his work. The pall blew up with terrific force. Pieces pf the tin stuck like pins in a cushion In che miner's face, while his hands and body wero torn in a hundred places. Read Paper (rousing Track. Chester (Special). James Far ren, aged 40 years, was struck and instantly killed at the Madison Street crossing ot Baltimore & Ohio Rail road by a northbound express train. He. vyas carried three squares on a cow-catcher before the train stopped. Hit neck was broken. ynren was employed in the rail road round house in West Philadel phia and was on his way to the eta tl3n to catch a train. Farren vu reading a newspaper when the fatal ity occurred. The settlement of the civil suit will not affect the criminal cases against Cameron and Richardson. Swallowed Thermometer. New Cumberland (Special). Dan iel Erney, a Lewisburg trucker, died from the result of swallowing part ot a clinical thermometer which ht broke while holding between hit teeth to ascertain his temperature. Mr. Erney has been sick for somt time and symptoms of typhoid fever had developed. He is the father ol nine children. Brukenuui Falls From Train. Wilkes-Barre (Special). Earl Barton, of Sayre, a Lehigh Valley brakeman, was killed at Coxton bf falling off the top of a freight train while it was running. He was miss ed and the train was run backward for a couple ot miles before bis bod) was found. Doctor Causes Wife's Arrest. Qua ken own (Special). DomostM troubles In the family of Dr. Nelson Weinberger, finally resulted in tht doctor having his wife arrested on the charge ot threatening to kill him. Tbe doctor alleges that on dif ferent occasions Mrs. Weinberger threatened to shoot him and thai she forbid htm visiting his parents, continually threatening him with revolver, and thus intimidating him. Mrs. Weinberger wat admitted to bail. Lawyer Got Good Slinking. Reading (Special). Mias Mary Rogers, a buxom maiden of 19 years and a witness In an assault and bat tery case In Criminal Court, gave a striking Illustration of the way she said bt r friend, Hiss Jennie Geta was assaulted by William Ptlgert and bis wite. Asked by Ue latter't lawyer, D. E. Schroeder, to describe the alleged assault, she took hold of the attor noy by the neck and shook him un til he tell luto his chair. The in cident caused a general laugh In tho courtroom.