. . -.U... .,... , . ,, . "FOR LOVE OF CHLORIS" By BEULAH MARIE DIX. Legally they were both Elizabeth Wetherell, but to the large circle of their relative! they were Lizzie Wetherell and Lizzie! daughter, while to the girli of Ambrazon Col lege they were Betty Wetherell of 'O and Betty's mother. Lizzie Wetherell had pretty brown fnalr, Just touched with gray, and brown eyea that crinkled when she laughed. A tidy little body she had, usually clad in a brown tailored suit, and plump capable hands. She could keep a house with marvelous nicety. Sho could plan and make the dainti est of gowns. She could tell the fun niest stories. For occupation she took three girl students to board in her cozy, old fashioned house in Brownlow street. And with all her heart she admired and adored her daughter Betty. Betty Wetherell had pretty brown hair, Just touched with red, and brown eyes that were grave and ear nest. A supplo young body she had, clnd In pretty gowns of her mother's planning, and slim, restless hands. She could write themes that won commendation even from her English Instructors. She could plan novels and plays that in time she meant to write. For occupation she was a student at Ambrazon College. And being a well bred girl, she was tol erant of her mother, and rarely showed how frivolous Bhe thought her nilud and how trifling her pur suits. The graduate student, who dug at Gothic roots in the third story cham ber of the house In Brownlow street, held that Betty's worst fault was youth. In time, no doubt, that would amend Itself. But meanwhile It was not always a pleasure to watch Betty with her mother. In her little girlhood Betty had thought that there was no one In the world so clever as her mother. She had liked to hear about the days when her mother had been young and, like her, had written stories and planned great works for the future and had even begun to have things printed in the papers, till on her marriage, she had laid aside all thought of a career. But as Betty grew older and more critical, and found that her mother preferred Scott to Stevenson and Milton to Browning, and clung to Macaulay as a trustworthy histor ian, she began to feel that her moth er, however worthy as a housekeeper was sadly deficient as a scholar, and. no doubt, as a writer. So more and more Betty told her aspirations and read her stories to her- own little coterie of college friends, and less and less to her moth er. And Lizzie Wetherell went on keeping her house spick and span, but she did not tell so many droll stories. And sometimes, when she had spoken, she glanced at clever Betty as if she almost expected to be snubbed for her frivolity. At such times the graduate student longed to take Betty by the shoulders and bump that pretty, foolish little head of hers against the nearest wall. Of course, feeling her mother's lack of true appreciation of her work and alms, Betty did not confide is her when she decided, at the begin nlng of her Junior year, to compete for the 500 prize that Eversham's Magazine was offering for the best short story submitted before Decern ber 1. Instead, she consulted her friends and classmates, and with their aid picked out the manuscript that she meant to submit. It was a theme that her Instructor had declared quite perfect In its literary form, and sho felt It no extravngance to pay to have It neatly typewritten. How pretty her own words looked seen for the flrBttimeln clear, printed letters! When Betty carried the manuscript home, in the frosty No vember twilight, she had only one re gret, namely, that there was no one left among her friends who had not heard the story. She would so much have liked to read It aloud from the typewritten manuscript. So thinking, Betty entered tho house, and there, in the living room she saw her mother sitting. The lamp was lighted, and In the open grate the ore was kindled. At her mother's elbow, on her desk, were the pad on which the day's menus were written and a couple of cook books. On her mother's lap were a darning basket ana uetty s silk stockings. And on the table was a silver dish of crystal lized ginger, a sweet of which Betty was fond. After the cold outdoors the living room looked warm and cozy, and Bet ty wanted a hearer for her story. So contrary to custom, sho went Into the living room Instead of passing on to her own chamber, which was also her study. She sat down in the deep cnair by tho hearth, and for au in tant she had half a mind to tell hor mother all about the Eversham's Prize offer. But then, as she looked at her pretty manuscript, she felt bo sure of its success that she thought it oetter to wait and astonish her moth r when she had actually won the prize. So for the present she told hor only that she had there a typewritten copy of one of her newest stories. "Perhaps you would like to hear "." Betty ended, graciously. "It is tailed, For Love of Chlorls.' Whai n you smiling at, mother?" "I didn't mean to, dear," said Liz Wetherell, meekly. "It Just JUtted across my mlud. Such a state- ' old name! I haven't heard it in 'earn. Then it was a queer old worn Nancy Towle, down on the Maine jpast, who had a heifer she called -niorls. Poor old Nancy." in a voice that was Injured merely "'think that her heroine should have ""'iity with heifer, Betty began b "jading. Boon she had lost the sense "' Injury in the Joy of hearing ur sentences. t was mi eighteenth century tale '"u tine bad written, in the fashion tua b0ur. The heroine wore red ww- The hero prefaced every sen tence with "Egad!" or T faith!" All the characters were great gentle folk. The plot was an ingenious com pound of love and villainy, and plt- eotisly. direfully tragic In Its out come. Betty's voice fairly quavered over the concluding lines. Lizzie Wetherell's face, as she list ened, was lovely in its tenderness. Oh, how foolish sho had been to feel hurt at Betty's slights, any more than she had resented It when Betty, a tiny baby, had tugged at her moth er s hair! How young she was, this tall Betty! Love and life! What did she know of either, this child with her red-heeled puppets and her tags of borrowed phrases? Betty looked up. She saw the ten der mist in her mother's eyes, but she saw, too, behind the mist, ft little twinkle. Suddenly she felt young and angry. You don't like It!" she flashed. 'I wish you would say what you don't like." "T know so little of eighteenth cen tury manners," apologized Lizzie Wetherell. "Hut are you quite sure woman would behave like your Chloris?" Betty rose majestically. "I knew you wouldn't undertsnnd," she said, and swept out of the room. That night at dinner Betty was not rude, but deadly civil to her mother. It was'ono of the timeB when tho graduate student particu larly ached to lay hands on ber. So unbearably supercilious was Betty, that at last, like the trodden worm, Lizzie Wetherell turned. She remembered that In the dnys long past she, too, had been a girl writer, with ambitions like Betty's. She remembered that all her life she had remained famous In her own cir cle as a teller of good stories. She remembered that she still could write letters that were a delight to her friends. "Why, even to-day I believe that I poor, stupid I! could write a story as good as For Love of Chloris! concluded Lizzie Wetherell. So much did she think of this last slight that Betty had put upon her that when she took up the pad that evening to make out the next day's menus, she wrote, almost before she realized what she did, the title that was running in her head "For Love of Chloris." As she looked at the words she began to fuse the frag ments of the story that had come to her since she had heard the name the true story of Nancy Towle and her heifer Chloris. Bit by bit she shaped it in her mind, and then, with a little smile that was half ashamed, but very resolute, she bent above tho pad and set to writing. By the time Bhe had finished tho clock was striking 10, and a few mo ments later the graduate student came down stairs. She always came at that hour, pausing in her long eve ning's work, and made a little supper of fruit and crackers by the bright Are, and listened to the tales that Lizzie Wetherell no longer ventured to tell at the table. Indeed Lizzie Wetherell and the graduate student were good friends, and knowing that, Lizzie Wetherell took courage. Will you let me read you some thing?" she aBked. And then she read aloud her "For Love of Chloris." It was only the story of a crotchety old woman and the dumb creature that she loved, but there were tears in it, and laughter, and wholesome sea air, and at the last a gleam of watery sunshine. When the reading was done the graduate student sat for a moment silent. "That's good," she said at last. "It's true and human. What do you mean to do with It?" Lizzie Wetherell was as pleased as a girl. Of late she had not been praised for anything but housekeep ing. "Do with It?" she repeated. "Why, maybe I'll send it to Cousin Hattle. She'll remember old Nancy, and she likes my scribbling." "More than your cousin would like that story," said tho graduate stu dent. "Why don't you try for the prize thnt Eversham's is offering?" Lizzie Wetherell had not heard of the prize, for Eversham's was one of the new magazines that she, a Btanch conservative, never dreamed of buy ing. But now she heard all about it, and she consented to the graduate student's entering "For Love of Chlo ris" In the competition, although, she protested honestly, she was sure nothing would come of it. So the graduate student carried the manuscript to her room, and on her way she passed Betty's door. "Little prig!" mused the graduate student. "With a mother so plucky and sweet hearted and clever oh, so much more clever than ever the child will be! And she dares to patronize her! I wish Mrs. Wetherell might wlu that prize It would be a lesson to tbe girl, and she ought to loarn it before it's too late!" The graduate student choked. Over her own mother's grave the snows of the third winter now were drifting. In her own room the graduate stu dent struck off a fair copy of the manuscript upon ber typewriter. And the next morning on her way to col lege, she posted a long envolope at the box at the corner of Brownlow street, Just as Betty, In the corridor at Ambrazon, was trusting her pre cious story to the mall. About the middle of the morning Betty had a doubt that worried her. "Did I stamp that envelope that I enclosed for tho return of the manu script? It I didn't, they'll never send It back. I've lost It unless Ever sham's takes It. And It's quite possi ble that they won't." Then Betty settled down to anx ious waiting, and under the same roof, each unknown to the other, the graduate student, loo, was waiting. But Llxsle Wethersll, who should have been much concerned for the fate of ber "For Lore of Chloris," was so troubled at Betty's unoT plalned preoccupation that sho al most forgot about her story. Soon Lizzie Wetherell had a fresh loss to grieve her, for tho graduate student was called home. AlmoBt at a day's notice she left college and her own work to take charge of a stricken house and two newly orphaned uleces, and Lizzie Wetherell, who had come to depend on her companionship, es pecially at the hour of the little sup per, missed her cruelly. But Betty scarcely heeded the go ing of the graduate student. She felt that sho was no favorite of hers. Be sides, she was now giving all her In terest to the outcome of Eversham's competition. Every time that she hoard the postman's ring she would herself go flying to the door. On such an errand she had run one gray December afternoon, and she was longer about It than usual. Then her voice rang Jubilant through the house, and she ran Into the living room, just as she bad used to run to her mother. "Tho prize!" she cried. "I've won Eversham's prize! 'For Love of Chloris," by Elizabeth Wetherell, la to come out in the March number. I didn't tell you at the time. I wanted to surprise you. But I sent a story to Eversham's the one I read you and they've taken it. And they're sending me the check. Five hundred dollars! Think of It, mother!" When sho thought of It Lizzie Wetherell thought it the most nat ural and beautiful thing that could have happened. If sho remembered her own poor little story that the graduate student had so praised, it was only to be glad that she had never told Betty that she, too, had entered the contest. And she re joiced whole-heartedly In Betty's triumph, not only for Betty's sake but for her own. For It seemed to her that In this eager girl, who wanted her sympathy and her praise, she had at last her own daughter- friend again. But all too quickly Betty was once more her recent self. She must tell her mates about her success, she said with tho implication that in them alono could sho find true apprecia tion. And as she turned away, she added, with a laugh that was more ill natured than she guessed: "You see, mother, Eversham'i thought my Lady Chloris was truer to life than you did." Of tho weeks that followed too much need not be said. If Betty had been offensive In her patronage of her mother when she was merely an ear nest student, she was fairly Intolera ble now that she was a successful au thor and a wage earner. Five nun dred dollars at one stroke! It was more than her mother could clear by months of labor. So she patronized her stupid mother, till the graduate student, had she been there, would surely have lost the last of her pa tience and shaken her. The marked copy of Eversham's came one February afternoon, along with some letters for Mrs. Wetherell Betty, who had just come in from col lege, tore the wrappings from the magazine. "For Love of Chloris, by Elizabeth Wetherell," she read the title. She read the name of the fa mous artist who had done the illus tratlonu. Then she turned to look at the story In its glorious dress. In after life Betty could laugh, re memberlng the dismay with which she saw, instead of tbe full page pic ture of her dainty Lady Chloris, a gnarled old woman, leading a spotted heifer. But at tho moment she did not laugh. "Mother," she said, in a dry voice "look here! It's my title. It's my name. And I've received the check But It's not my story. I can't under stand!" Then she saw that her mother's face was startled and that she was holding out to her a newly opened letter, written In the graduate stu dent's hand. Betty read tho opening sentences: "Am 1 not a true prophet, dear Mrs. Wetherell? I've only Just had time, so busy these sad weeks have been, to glance at the magazines again. And I see, In the current num Mr of Eversham s, that your story 'For Love of Chloris.' has won the prize, as it deserved to do. Congrat ulations and Betty dropped the letter. She grew aware that her mother was speaking. "I wrote the story." Lizzie Wether ell was Baying. "And the graduate student persuaded me to send it to Eversham's." "She did It on purpose!" Betty's voice rang harsh. "She always die liked me. She " "Betty," her mother interposed you must bo fair! Wo did not know that you were entering the contest I know! I know!" cried Betty She s not to blame to meddle like that! You're not to blame to take my title and not to tell me! I'm to blamo for it all, perhaps, because I didn't stamp that envelope because they threw my story Into the waste basket In t. ml of sending It back because I didn t know it was reject ed! I'm to blamo that I thought I'd won the prize that I've told every body that I've made a fool of my self" She stopped, terrified at the sigh of her mother's stricken face. She could nut Bpeak sanely yet, but at least she could be silent. Shesnatched up her coat and ran out of the house, All that afternoon Betty Wetherell walked. Clear to the reservoir she tramped, and out beyond the railway tracks and the brickyards and the great waste fields. Through frozen mud and snow she tramped till the sun bad sunk redly, and by that time ahe had tramped the demon down Something of the youth of which the graduate student had complained Bet ty lost In that hour of her bitter hu initiation. But in its place she gained her first real knowledge of herself So In the early evening Betty came home, white and chilled and weary but mistress of herself as she bud never been in her short life. She went straight to her mother's fireside "Dear," she said, frankly and hum bly, "I'm sorry. Please forgive me for what I said and for other things." "It was my fault," said Betty's mother, with her arms about uvr, "1 ought to have told you that I was trying for tho prize." "Served me right!" choked Befty. "I ought to have told you. I was the one who began having secrets." "AndJ have no right to take the title of your precious story." Lizzie Wetherell went on, contritely. "It was yours. It wasn't fair of me." "Fair?" cried Betty. "O mother, don't! It wasn't, fair of me to seize that Elizabeth Wetherell letter, as If there was only one of that name In this house, as If there was only one with brains enough to write a story! And I took your money, and I took your fame, and all the time" But she did not say It. In the hope that perhaps she had not mistrusted, she spared her mother the pain of 1 hearing how In her heart she had thought slightly of her. ; 'I'll put that money to your ac- mat In the bank to-morrow," said' Betty. "And I'll tell the girls, and Pa write to the aunts and uncles and let them know that It was you, and not I, who was so clever." 'Betty, need you?" urged Lizzie Wetherell. Then, wisely, she was silent. For she saw that Betty must In her own way work out her atonement. So Lizzie Wetherell made no com ment, although her heart was aching for her girl, when Betty came down stairs that night, at the hour when the graduate student used to come, with a handrul of letters. "All writ ten, mother dear," said Betty. "I've told all the relatives just whom they should be proud of. And the student graduate " Lizzie Wetherell gave a Btart. "Yes," said Betty, "I've written to her. And, mother, won't you read me your 'For Love of Chloris?' " She gave a sudden shamed laugh that made her eyes crinkle like her mother's. "I've been a pig, haven't I?" she said. "And- a prig, which Is worse. But after this we'll be chums again, won't we, mother? And about the letter to the graduate student, yon needn't worry. I wrote to thank hor." Youth's Companion. '.NEWS OF PENNSYLVANIA MiM its DEMAND NEW WAGE SCALE. WORDS OF WISDOM. Who finds fault, finds trouble, too. -American Cultivator. What wo think about the things that are greatest will determine how we do the things that aro least. Scottish Reformer. Another of the advantages of being good Is the pleasure derived from being shocked. Puck. None know what it Is to live till they redeem life from monotony by, sacrifice. Scottish Reformer. When a man has not good reason for doing a thing he has a very good reason for letting It alone. Scott, The average young man worries too much about getting his salary, and not enough about earning It. Atchison Olobe. To make an end of selfishness is happiness. This Is the greatest hap piness to subdue the selfish thoughts of "I." Buddha. A man can't very well lose all hla money and retain all his confidence In mankind. New York Times. Some people are not satisfied to kill two birds with one stone, but they want the stone back. New York Times. Religion is not a department of hu man life. Religion Is a spirit per vading all departments of human life. Mary Emily Case. A religion of clean clothes needs to be preached to the world as well as a religion of clean hearts. Indi ana Farmer. When a thing you wish for cannot be had. ever wish for that which may. Terrence. Tho wise man profits by the exper ience of others and at the same time mixes it with a little originality. Chicago News. Whiskers and Language. "How long does It take you to shave?" asked the man with the brushwood whiskers. "About ten minutes, usually," an swered his fellow traveler, who was trying to land a few scrapes between the lurches of the Pullman car. 'And how often do you shave?" "Every day of my life." "Have you ever thought that If you devoted this time to study you could learn a foreign language In two years?" "No; I never did. That's rather interesting. How long have you been wearing a beard?" "It's sixteen years since a razor has touched my face." "That makes eight. Well, you beat me. I am professor of modern languages In a college, and so I have had to learn French, German, Span ish and Italian. I suppose you be gan with those, too. What four did you take up after that Portuguese, Greek, Russian, Swedish?" "Ah! that is to tell the truth, I never had a head for languages. They wouldn't do me any good If I had." New York Tribune. An Abrupt Introduction. "Long Introductions when a man has a speech to make are a bore," says former Senator John C. Spoouer. "I have had all kinds, but the most satisfactory one, in my career was that of a German Mayor of a small town in my State, Wisconsin. "I was to make a political address, and the opera bouse was crowded. When It came time to begin the Mayor got up. 'Mine friends,' he said, 'I haf asked been to Introduce Senator Spooner, who is to make a speech, yes. Veil, I haf dlt so, und ho vlll now do so.' " Literary Digest. Recognition Of The I'nlon To Be Insisted Upon. Scranton (Special.) An entire now agreement will be the demand of the anthracite mine workers to the operators to replace the present working agreement, which expires April 1. 1909. This was tho decision of the trl dlstrict convention of the First, Seventh and Ninth Districts, United Mine Workers, embracing the Iacknwanna, Wyoming. Lehigh and Schuylkill regions, here. It Is expected that the operators will vigorously oppose the demands and that long conferences will be the rule before an agreement Is signed. Demands Of The Miners. The demands of the miners are as follows: "First-Thai an agreement shall bo negotiated between the represen tatives of the miners and tho oper ators of the anthracite region and all disputes arising under the contract hU be adjusted as provided for In the said agreement. "Second W" demand the com plete recognition of the United Mine Workers of America as a party to negotiate a wiiro contract and thai the United Mine Workers of Ameri ca shell be reeoghlzed In our right to provide any method we may adopt for the collection of revenues for the organization. "Third That we demand au eight-hour day with no reduction of wages. "Fourth That all roal shall be mined and paid for by the ton of 2,001 pounds. "Fifth Thar we demand a defi nite and more uniform scale of wages and prices for all classes of labor M nil collieries In the anthracite re gion and that all employees paid less lhan $1.50 or less per day shall ro felve a 10 per cent, advance and all employees paid more than $1.50 and less than 1 por day shall receive a " per cent, ndvance. "Sixth That tho system whereby n contract miner has more than one Job. or employs two laborers, be abolished. "Seventh That the employers he required to Issue uniform pay state ments, designating the name of the company, the name of the employee, the colliery where employed, the amount of wages and the class of work performed. "Eighth That the contract shall be made for a period of one year." Arranging The Conference. After the convention bad adjourn ed President Lewis said that the con vention had appointed the national president and the three district presidents to get Into communica tion with the representatives of tbe operators for the purpose of agree ing upon a time when a Joint con ference of the representatives of tbe miners and operators would be herd If the operators agree to this, Mr lowts said, that probably the miners would be represented by the natlon.il president, the three district presi dents and a delegate from each local In the anthracite coal field. He could not, he said, forecast when the Joint conference would be held, for that depended upon the operators agreeing to hold it. While President Lewis will not or der a strike unless all other means fail, those who know him best eav he will call one If the ex-t remit v de mands. The mine workers declare positively that thev win not accent the old agreement and they will sign one for no longer than a year. points DBPECm IN Till. VA I N ATION LAW. Thousands Of Children Are Kept From The Schools, Harrlsburg ( Special ) . Conflicts between the provisions of the com pulsory education and vaccination laws of Pennsylvania are held blame able for keeping thousands of chil dren out of the public schools of the State by Superintendent of Pub lic Instruction Nathan 0. Schaeffer In tho annual report which he submit- 'ORTH ILPUWIPH r -fcMM I mi- grs Humming birds are disappearing from Trinidad. In 1866 there were eighteen species; now thore aro only five. More than half of France's tobacco Imports come from the United States. John Alcorn, of Princeton, Ind., lued William Riley for alienating his wife's affections, and got one cent damages. Most of tho tobacco used In so called Russian cigarettes the far famed brandB of Turkey and Cairo, too is grown less than one hundred miles from Louisville, JCy.. or within ' ted to Governor Stuart. He declares a 1,ke rdlus of Raleigh, N. C. bluntly that the hopes of those who endeavored to make vaccination gen- A tunnel more than a mllo In oral have not come to pass. length, said to" be the longest In ex- Still more startling is the super- Istence for use by municipal electric Intendent'B statement that ministers J surface car lines, has Just been and Sunday school officers permit no- opened by the Genoa Street Railway vaccinated children to como to Sun- Company; It shortens the time to Rl- day school and are as much law I varolo by fifteen minutes, breakers as the school officials who j when the vdrIn t0, aUend ' I Herbert E. Ouy, of Brockton, Mass., ,,nrnfthey Ca" DOt pioduce B cer- I is tho owner of what Is claimed to DEATH FROM FOOTBALL. Concussion Of The Brain Results Fatally To Plnyer. Norrlstown (Special!. A den'li and one serious Injury have result ed from the football contest at Oak Viow on Saturday, October 3, be tween the Junior Athletic Club, of Norrlstown, and tho Wlnton A. C. of Philadelphia. J. Wiggo. full-back for the Wln ton, died from concussion of the brain, sustained in the struggle In that game, which was fiercely con tested, while McOulre. the right end of tho Wlnton, is suffering from a fracture of the collar-bone. Wlgge'B injuries were not deem ed serious. He was unconscious for a Ume, but was able later to accom pany Ms team-matee home. Reach ing there a change developed. McGuire's Injuries were not deem ed more than a severe sprain at the time he was forced out of the game. In his remarks on the subject of ! tho smnllost Shetland pony In the varctnntlon nr. Schaeffer says: "The State Commissioner of Health, Dr. Samuel O. Dixon, ascer tained that In 9851 schools which his subordinates Inspected there were I 50.817 unvaccinated children In at- tendance. The total number in 1 schools In the State Is 33,171. These I figures show that the progress of I those who framed the law excluding j unvaccinated children from schools j There is a marriage each eight and who hoped thereby to make vac- mlnutes in Now York City, elnatlon universal, has not been real- "'"'Moreover. legislation which. The United States Government has through no fault of their own. makes 1 Property In the city of New York children lawbreakers for the sake of I valued on the basis of the tax assess- gettlng an education, Is very far from ment at itu,ouu,uou I State. Tho little fellow stand just twenty-one Inche--, In height and is only twenty-three inches long. Blasting marble is Impracticable, those who quarry It having to spilt off blocks In the same method in vogue when the Parthenon was built, more than 2300 years ago. -satisfactory. The law now favors those who wish to evade the penalty for neglecting to send their children to school. By simply refusing to furnish n certificate of successful vac cination the parent can hnve the child excluded from school, and the power of the attendance officer over said child Is at an end. "The dissemination of anti-vaccination literature Is dally Increasing the difficulties by which the schools are confronted. Fully 60 per cent, of all tho letters sent to the educa tional commission bear upon vacci nation." The statistical portion of the re port shows that there are 2,580 school districts in the State, 33,171 schools, 7,488 male teachers, 26, 523 female teachers, 1,231,200 pu pils, an Increase of 5,812. The aver ago number of pupilB in .daily at tendance last year was 95L670. A New Yorker of broad traveling experience says that he finds It an economy not to register from the metropolis when he visits tho sum mer resorts. He uses a little up State town for this purpose. John Wax, a farmer living near Newport, Perry County, Pa. missed a metal frog, painted green, weigh ing four pounds, used to hold a door open, and a few days later killed a black snake seven feet long, near the house, inside of which he found the frog, and two half grown rabbits. STATE FAIR PROTECT IS GAINING GROUND. The only book that Is with any certainty known to have been han dled by Shakespeare is a copy of Flo rio's translation of Montaigne's es says. It contains the poet's auto graph and was bought by the British Museum for 120 guineas. A second copy of the same translation in the museum has Ben Johson's name on thA flv-lenf. Its rncnas Wilt ITcscnt Hill To Legislature. I A combination of a lump of soap Harrlsburg (Special). "A bill for i ot the 8lze of a nlckory nut- Plnt ,.,,. . , . , .'of boiling water and four tablespoon- tho establishment of a State fair will ; , ,, , fh .,,,.. IU1D Jt I I I 1 1 ' 111111 ID I Ml' 1. .1.1 111 VI OVS- lutlon UBed to transfer newspaper cuts to another piece of paper or to cloth. Dropped Dead Paying Taxes. Heading (Special). While paying her taxes ait City Hall, Mrs. Hen rietta Adams fell dead. She was 85 years old. ITEMS IN BRIEF. Clark Colby, of Newport, N. H., has conceived tbe Idea of a "woman scarecrow." It holds a broom aloft, and Mr. Colby finds that hawks are much more afraid of it than the are ot the usual scarecrow. David St roh m, one of the best known residents of Cumberland County, died at Carlisle, after a gen eral breakdown, aged 83 years. He was well-known In banking circles. Henry EherU. a Nazareth contrac tor, despondent and 111, went Into his back yard, removed his shoe and with his too pulled the trigger of hie shot gun and blew off the top or his head. Miss Mary N. Baird. of Reedsvllle, has been elected superintendent of the Lewistown Hospital, to succeed Miss Anna Lentz, resigned. Kenneth Neal. aged 18 years, was drowned in the Susquehanna River near McCall's Ferry. He was fishing and his boat upset and the young man was carried through the rapids Balggio Fusco, 22 years old, em ployed on a Pennsylvania Railroad construction train at Tyrone, was given six pay checks to have cashed at the Blair County '-lank, and has failed to return. The loss of the workmen will exceed $200. Joseph Reeser. u prominent Re publican politician, who had held Sev ern) public offices In Lancaster, died suddenly, aged 64 years. Mrs. Thomas Folan, aged 70, was burned to death when her clothei caught from the fire she was klndllnr in the kitchen stove of her Berantou horn be presented in the next Legislature, with the support of many of the agricultural societies, and I think It will go through, because there Is a great and growing sentiment for such a fair," W. C. Norton, president of the State Live Stock Breeders' As slclatlon, and a former member of tho House of Representatives from Wayne County, declares. Mr. Nor ton came here from Altoona, where he attended a meeting In tbe Interest of the annual session of the allied agricultural societies to be held here this winter, and said that his visit here was to "boost the State fair." "I have found people all over the State In favor of It, heartily In favor i of It," said Mr. Norton. "Few people I have any Idea of the enormous i wealth represented by our live stock industry. Why, It Includes every i men who has horses and cows, to say j untiling of chickens. Even the bees ire in it. Now, If we have a State ; fair, the cream of such exhibits, tho 1 prize winners from county fairs, would be brought together and we COuld show the world what .Pennsyl vania really has." Mr. Norton Bays that he considers I ! larrlsuurg the place to hold the fair, j is it Is not only a railroad center, but the Capital, where the State A cheap yet durable pavement ha? been laid by the city of Manketo, Mich., constating of a mixture of crushed fine stone, gravel and tar, top-dressed with cement and sand. It cost but eighty cunts a linear foot, thirty feet wide. GERMANY AND ITS CITIZENS. Government to Improve Their Condi tlon in Many Reasonable Ways. Germany is not pauperizing the population nor paupering the work men as dependents upon the bountlei of paternal government. It is striving by well devised social reforms to im prove the quality of workaday citizen ship instead of degrading it. Ever; measure has been thoroughly thought out before It has been tentatively In troduced, and tho co-operation ol trade unions and even of Socialistt has been secured in the practical ad ministration of the insurance fundi and other institutions. Results and tendencies have been calculated Witt louse and other Stflte buildings are , painstaking care; thrift is not di rected. In this opinion he Is Blip- j cournged by injustice to industrloui ported by Deputy Secretary of Agri iilturc Martin, one of the Btanch advocate! of a fair for the whole State. YOUTH INSTANTLY KILLED. and prudent workers; paupers and i parasites are not singled out for pub lic charity and rewarded for improvi dence; and the haves are not systam I atically raided and plundered for tbe ! benefit of the have-nots. Social re- Hunter Met Death In Presence Of ! orm 18 "KluM? ,D Germany M . , , I Is thoughtless and reckless in Eug- l ather And Brothers. land.-Cobleutz Correspondence Now Pine Grove (Special). William York Tribune. Heinbach, a Civil War veteran, took I . five of his eight grown-up sons Into Itmer's Swamp, in Pine Grove Township, hunting. Phaon, the 20-year-old son, stood rn a stump watching a chase with the muzzle of his gun pointing to his chin, when It was suddenly dis charged, the contents going through roufeg Helnbach's head, killing him Instantly. A 17-ycar-old son of Adam Krause. of Rock Washington Town Hp, watched his dm's charing, with the muzzle of his gun resting on Tights on the Stave. Must a music hall star exhibit her self on the stage in tights when she abominates such a display? Thli question has been raised by Mile. De Valcourt, a Parlslenne, who, after a brief uppearance on Buch conditions, declared that she had had enough oi the business. First of all she ex plained thnt this was too great a trla' to her modesty, and then she added that the wearing of tights every even ing made her positively 111. The Paris his shoe, when it was suddenly dis- i Tribunal of Commerce having pro. charged, shattering h s foot. j pounced against her and ordered hei APPEAL TO Til E PRESIDENT. ! PawB, f 0O"Ot' 8h" b oun' ' j the affair before the Court of Appeal, Deposstpri Of Closed Bank Going To foildl' hoping that the war which wai Washington i ueln8 waged against indecent exhibi- Waynesburg (Speciali. - The de- w"" nr ?lX j 1 tC, posltors of the closed Farmers & : I" case, but the Court of Appeal Drovers' National Bank are to be - haB also decided against Mile. De Vel granted an audience by President I court. It holds that an artist who hat Poosevelt, according to an announce- i undertaken to appear in revues und nent made by Norman W. Sayres. ballets such as are performed In es iresident of the Greene County Tax- ' tabllshments like the Ambassadeuri layers' League, who has been active or tbe Alcazar cannot fairly regard n pusuing me suns againBi j. u r the wearing of tights as placing he iMnehart, 'ormer racked bank. cashier of the Rabbits Plentiful In Schuylkill. Pottsvllle (Special). Not in many years have rabbits been so plentiful in Schuylkill County as this year. The opening of the season was pro tective of good results Hunters ound objection on tke part of farm- about crossing their lands t :use the corn husking season It n P-"- j it has been frequently noted by The starfish, netted, commits sut- aeronauts that the barking ol a dan de. It disolves itself into many Is always the last sound that the ioces, which escape through the bear from earth, and it bas been, die meshes ot tbe net Then a kind ol covered that this can be Ji ard uudej resurrection takes place, qauh piece favorable elrec r uascss ai en elsrt- trowlng Into u oerl'ect starfish tjOB 0f Iour 11 in au unforeseen position. As for the injury to health, the court consider! that Mile. De Valcourt ought to hav thought of this when she contracted the engagement, the more eo as the medical oertlflcute sets forth that shi was already in a delicate state severs) years ago. So the Judgment of the Tribunal of Commerce Is malntalued, London Telegraph.