A New Story ol the Assassination ol Lincoln. By W. H. TAYLOR, an Cye-Wltneaa of the Tragedy. Tho program which 1 own of a per formance at Ford's Fifth Street Thea tre, In Washington, D. C, was ob tained, by me under peculiar circum stances. I was a young man, about twenty years of age, and living In Washington at that time. Having been away on a trip, to Chicago and points In the West, I was returning home on the forenoon of ATJJI1 H 1866, when, on reaching tho Relay House, nine miles from Baltimore, I noticed in the morning paper an an nouncement that President Lincoln, I f ' iuiui Jlf" "S- ' ' is ' The Uist Pbotogrnpli of Abraham Lincoln, J liken on the Sunday ueiure m At aiminutioii. It Shows the Great Change in His Face Worked by the Anxieties of tlio Civil War. tlves for many years, knew one of this band very well, and he used to tell Christie some of the wise utterances of Wilkes Booth, one of which was: "The fame of the youth who fired the Epheslan dome will outlive that ol tho pious fools who reared it." At tho time of Booth's capture he wai found to have kept, In his flight, a diary, in which his egotism was great ly in evidence. It was rather a dis jointed affair, full of wild and ardent expressions. He had seen newspaper comments, and was surprised and deeply grieved at not finding himself glorified In the affair. The following, lust as written by him, gives a good idea of the matter: "A colonel was at his side. I shouted 'Sic semper' before I fired. In Jumping broke my General Grant and other notables were to attend Ford's Theatre that night. This caused me to resolve upon going to the theatre, as I had never seen General Grant, whose fame had for some time been so well established. Quite early In tbe even ing I started out at the solicitation of a young friend of mine, John Danser, of Trenton, N. J., to witness a street parade In honor of the passage of the eight-hour law, etc. We could bear the bands playing, and directly came to a point where we could dis cern floats, torchlights, etc., coming down Louisiana avenue. After watch ing the procession we proceeded to the theatre. We selected seats In the dress circle, which was as yet al most vacant, and secured places where no more than two or three dozen others were able to see as well at ourselves the arrangements of the President's box, which was situated Immediately across from our position and on the same level.. About the mlddlo of the first act the President and party arrived and were received with loud and hearty applause. "The band played "Hall to the Chief!" which stopped the per lorraance for a few minutes while they were proceeding to their seats. On reaching the box the President took a large arm-chair in front and to the left as they entered; Mrs. Lin coln took a chair in front and to the right, and Miss Harris one near Mrs. Lincoln, but not quite as far forward, Major Rathbone was seated farther back than the ladles on an old-fash' loned sofa that ran along the wall on the extreme right. . About the middle of tbe third act a shot was heard and Immediately thereupon rang out John Wilkes Booth's cry, "Sic semper tyrannts;" not after be reached the stage, as has been stated In some accounts; neither did be Jump from the box full height, with arms outspreac and upstretched, as we often see him in Illustrations. On the contrary, he placed both hands upon tbe rail of the box and swung himself over In that manner, thereby. lessening tbe fall by tbe distance of bis own height. One of his spurs caught In the American colors with - which the box was draped, and he probably landed his whole weight on ne foot. On striking the stage he pitched forward on all fours, and I then saw the blade of a long stiletto or dagger glisten In tbe footlights, as bis hand lay on the floor. He quickly rose to his feet and took one or two uncertain steps, then, turning to face tbe audience, drew himself up In theatrlcaj attitude, and, swinging his arm In a half circle, made a grand flourish with the dagger, and was off tbe stage In a flash. Next came the piercing snd horrifying shrieks of Mrs. Lincoln, and then arose a fearful commotion. Directly efforts were made by some parties to get Into the box from the outside, but the door was barred from tbe Inside. I nex noticed a military officer standing on the shoulders of another man and endeavoring to climb up to the box from the stage. Meantime, the Presi dent had remained sitting In his chair with his head bent forward, but I distinctly saw him rise once to his feet and In a dazed sort of way at tempt to take a step or two. He was not upright, but half erect. Just then Major Rathbone came to his assist ance, and, supported by tho latter, he sank back Into his chair. About this time I noticed Miss Laura Keene, who had reached the box from the private way back of the stage, and who was said to have brought a glass of water which might refresh the President. The bar against the door having been removed from the Inside, several people went Into the box from the dress circle, and little more could be distinguished thereafter. Strangely enough, an assassination plot seemed to have been understood at once, for word was passed around that the place would be blown up. There was a general rush to vacate the theatre, and from our position we were necessarily about the last ones that could possibly leave the place. On nearlng the doorway we saw men approaching from the pas sageway back of the box with the form of the President, carried on an Improvised Btretcher as It now seems to me a window shutter, or something of that nature and we stopped to let them pass. They were hastening from the building as well as they could, aa,d tho President's head was thrown back and hanging somewhat down. He was quite un conscious, seemed perfectly limp, and was bleeding slightly from tho wound In his head. Just as they passed by glanced on the floor, and, seeing the crimson blotch on a piece of paper, picked It up. That the marks there on are the life-blood of ADranam Lincoln Is as certain as that he was shot on the date and In the place mentioned. As the place remained brilliantly lighted and there seemed to be no Immediate danger, we went back to the President's, box, where almost the first thing that attracted the no where Lincoln Was Shot. i.ii,inl,"ifiiiii iiiiWiir"" i " ; , ' ' . . . j 1 FOR THE. TMik State of Pennsylvania Plant Shade Trees. The farmer who cuts down all the shade trees In his pasture to prevent bis cows wasting time lying In the shade Is lowering the milk mark In his pall, and Inviting the attacks of gadflys and sunstroke. It there Is no shade, plant it. Farmers' Home Journal. Ford's Ihcatre, Washington, tn Winch Lincoln Was Occupying a Box When 6hot bv John Wilkes Booth, April 14, 1863. 'I , 1 A- V f t JOHN WII.KKS BOOTH. THE MUR DERJill Of LIXCOLN. Frvm Wood-Cut Publihl in Hurler WerLly for April ISM. leg. Passed all his pickets," and bo on. Toward the last ' he wrote: "After being hunted like a dog through swamps, etc., etc., I am here In despair, and why? For doing what Brutus was honored for what made Tell a hero." Further on he says: "I am abandoned with the curse of Cain upon me, when, If the world knew my heart, that one blow would have made me great." The personnel of this organization under Wilkes Booth as a guiding spirit was what might have been ex pected. Payne and Atzerodt were Just ordinary thugs without a vestige of character. Herold was a young, foppish sort of fellow, none too well established as compos mentis. Sam Arnold and Miles O'Laughlln were Confederate common soldiers and ready enough to take orders from Booth, but when it came to facing the Issue they were found wanting. Altogether they were a wretched lot until we consider John II. Surratt and his mother, who were of a decent fam ily and ought to have known better than to be found In such associations. Or. Mudd was an accessory after Feeding the Colts. Some farmers seem to think that the colts can live out tn all Kinds of weather and thrive on any kind of food they can get. This Is a great mistake, however. Colls, like any other young animals must be kept growing by careful feeding and care if the best horses are made of them. Oats with a little bran mixed in thom make an excellent feed. Feed once a day and lightly at first. In a little while tbey cau be fed twice a day and will eat a quart of feed dally. A Reader, In the Indiana Farmer. LINCOLN'S PINAL RESTING PLACE. t- 1t . t . Ail Kdurator, I think a good scale Is the best ed ucator on the farm for the boys. By constantly weighing cattle and horses, as well as hay, etc., a boy gets his Judgment developed so that it be comes wonderfully accurate. I know a lad eighteen years old who, I really believe, could guess a hundred Indi vidual cattle without missing the weight on a single one more than fifty pounds, while on most of them he would not be over ten pounds from tho mark. Such knowledge is of very great value to n man If ho fol lows any branch of the live stock business. Correspondent of Michi gan Farmer. (they knew that the Government actu ally begged them to tell their difficul ties as to the raising of their crops the results that would accrue to the Nation In a few years would stu pendous. In my section of tbe country many beautiful farm lands are deserted, and I have heard men say "I would not give $3 an acre for that land." And why not? The answer Is: Ths land Is worn out: it will not produce as it used to. Well, where has SI Perkins gone? Oh, he's gone over ta Canada; they've got better farm land over there. Hence there Is n large exodus to Canada every year from this country by farmers. Right here Is where he must be stopped and told that his land is all right and what ho must do to make it produce. What he needs is a special ist to tell what the remedy is and how to Apply it. Most farmers are not fa. miliar with rotation of crops or Irri gation or treating the soil that has developed toxins as a result of de cayed organic material. He know? that the soil does not produce as many potatoes as it used to and that the crop is growing less every year, and he therefore surmises that his land is worn out, and hence his de sertion. J. P. S., In the New York Times. Child Labor Law. Shenandoah. I. W. Cooper, super intendent of thn public schools of this town, scored tho new Child La bor Law, declaring that besides the excessive extra work It entails on tho school district, It Imposes unusual hardships on poor widows, crippled parents and orphan children. He said it became his painful duty to senJ through a parontless boy of 15, strong and healthy, to the alms house, as his boarding mistress would not permit him to stay with her until he could learn to read and write. ' The Pig the Farmer's Friend. No animal on the farm is better adapted to turning good feed quickly Into marketable meat than the hog, and none can better repay, from a market standpoint, a discriminating system of feeding. This is particu larly true as to first costs, for the hog la by nature planned to utilize the least expensive feeds and will manu facture into toothsome pork much that might otherwise bo reckoned of little value, if not waste. In any phase of farm economy the hog is a feature, and his proper feeding has In Innumerable instances been the factor that kept a farm's profit on the right Bide of the ledger. From Coburn's "Swine in America." Remedy For Cold. The owner of most flocks of fowls has been troubled more or less with colds, In spite of the best care. The following remedy is a simple one, and one that you have at hand at all times. It is quite an old one, but Is given for the benefit of those who have not tried it. Take a tablespoon ful of ginger and cayenne pepper, make Into pills about the size of a small marble, using enough flour to stiffen. When the cold Is first no ticed give ono of these pills three times a day. If not sufficient, repeat. It Is always well, even In what, might seem a mild case, to separate the af flicted bird from the balance of tho Hook. Southern Poultry Magazine. The Monument Erected Over the Tomb of the Great Emancipator in Oak Ridge Cemetery, Springfield, Illinois, and tbe Scene o: Elaborate Centenary Exercises. tice of my companion and myself was the pistol which Booth had used, lying on the floor only about three or four feet back of the chair . In which Mr. Lincoln sat. I recall the weapon as a single-barreled, .percus sion-cap affair of the Derringer type, shorter and more compact than the dueling pistols ao much In favor among gentlemen of the old school In those days. As we started to leave tbe theatre we met, at the head of the stairway, a ' policeman, who in quired if we were present at tbe time of the shooting, etc., and said we bad better give our names and addresses, as it might be necessary to call us as witnesses. I drew the pistol out of my pocket and gave It to the police man to take charge of against the chance of Its being called for as evi dence. The blood-stained program has never been out of the hands of my Immediate family. Soon after the oc currence I gave It to my mother, Mrs. Mary A. Taylor, of Trenton Falls, N. Y., In whose custody It remained until her death tn 1889. It was then kept bjr my siBter, Mrs. Merrltt Peckhura, Jr.. of Albany, N. Y., until It recently came into my possession again. It always Beoined to me extremely doubtful that Wilkes Booth could have been the accredited representa tive of the governing body of the Southern Coufederacy, notwithstand ing that Jefferson Davis, In a speech at Charleston, S. C , when he received a dispatch from John C. Brecken- ridge, announcing Lincoln's murder, remarked to his audience: "If it were to be done, it were better that It were done well." Tbe brutal frankness of such a statement made In public was almost sutficlunt evi dence that be was not directly know ing to the Infamous plot. the fact and not before It, If he had any guilty knowledge of the con spiracy. Where his sympathies rea.ly were, however, was readily con jectured, for he harbored Booth and afforded him every surgical and friendly assistance In bis power. Spangler was a scene shifter at the theatre, and no one bad the remotest Idea that he was oonnected with the assassination understanding. One thing that made Booth's act seem perfidious and dastardly beyond ex pression was the fact that about three weeks before that time he wbb at the White House and specially Introduced. The President greeted him very cor dially, and, taking blm by the hand, said: "Mr. Booth, I am proud to meet you as a son of the elder Booth." The night that threw its sable man tle over this national tragedy was one long to be remembered. In Wash ington no one thought of sleep. Tbe streets were thronged with people. Of course the Vice-President at once came Into very prominent notice and not altogether pleasantly so. It Is undeniable that the most ugly rumors sprang Into existence, and bis rather Inconsistent conduct at the time, and subsequently, gave consid erable countenance to some of them. Wilkes Booth was said to have been closeted with Antfrew Johnson at the quarters of the latter In the Kirk The Farm Meal Barrel. It Is no better business thun it used to be to sell the hogs, receive market price, less the freight and a shipper's profit, to be killed at some packing centre and shipped back to be sold to the producer with all the expenses, freight and dealer's profits added. Many of the families In Michigan buy all their pork when they might Just as well buy very little and cure the pork themselves and have an abund ance of pork that is better than the packing house product. Good grades pf breakfast bacon, hams, shoulders and all parts of tbe pig are selling at enormous prices at present, and there Is no reason why the farmer should pay these advanced prices. No mat ter how high the price of corn and the price of hogs, It's cheaper to fat ten and kill a few pig3 for home con sumption. The price of meat will very likely be higher next spring than It Is now, so those who cure the meat at present will not be in need then. With the present cost of an outfit for butchering on the farm, the elim ination of the greatest excuse for the work Is accomplished. A short time ago I was In Oklahoma, where there Is a law which makes every farmer have his animals Inspected before they are slaughtered and pay a fee of twenty-five cents for each animal, but that did not binder the farmers from Joining together and slaughtering hogs for home consumption. Where the families were close enough to gether they would take turns in kill lng a pig, half or portions of the ani mal going to each family. The weather lu many Instances was the cause of this, as the winter Is likely wood Hotel tor over two hours a day or two previous to the assassination, , to be open and the meat would not ana tnis iaci, aunouga not necessarily In Itself of criminal significance, rankled In the minds of many people. Against this was the supposition, pretty well supported by evidence, that Johnson was Included In tbe as sassluatlon scheme, Atzerodt being told oft to effect bis death. Perhaps tbe most tangible thing to bis detri ment, as shown by the hotel clerk, keep long, but here there Is not much need for such division. E. B. Reld, la tne Michigan Farmer. Although the conspiracy was of wai tbe fact of Booths having sent considerable magnitude. It was not up to blm on one oi me nays reierreo more than sufficient to satisfy Wilkes to a written communication, the na Booth's morbid craving for notoriety. ' ture of which Johnson never cared to He had slsnallr failed as an actor i make known. Leslie Weekly. and was known to be a man of moody disposition, suffering from tbe panes of disappointed ambition, -and for aome reason embittered against authority of any kind, He bad a lit tle following of kindred spirits, who revolved around him as a central figure, and to whom be posed as a i 1. I .J AnAnltt vM I - ,kaf. I Ul, UIUII9 Mli MID VWUaiUU Ul tUVlt pothouse assemblages. A friend of mine named Christie, who was door keeper of the House of Representa- Fanners I to ot Know, T read an artlclo by W. J. Spill- man. Chief of tho Bureau of Plant Industry, United Siates Department of Agriculture, who states that the chittf cauee of slower response to the modern science of agriculture Is tins to tho Isolation cf tho faroipr. This is lu a measure true, but there are many farmers who are not Isolated and who are Ignorant of these sub Jects because the matter baa never been brought to their attention. I believe thst If tbe farmer knew that tbe department solicited correspond ence from him on subjects of this kind it would be a great help. Most farmers are Indifferent and would not now address a letter to the depart ment asking for Information, for the reason that they have the Impression no reply would be forthcoming. If Stal)le Conveniences. So much of the farmer's profit from his cattle depends on their com- fort in winter that ho can hardly give too much t-hought to securing for them the very best accommodations that he can afford. Fortunately, the requisite degree of comfort to keep them In good condition may be ob tained at a very small expense, as has been more than once pointed out in these columns. There are some points in winter stable management that are also worthy of careful atten tlon. with regard to which a few use ful hints are given in the Times: "Cleanliness in the stable Is an aid to warmth, because it lessens the de mand for a large supply of fresh air to remove the more abundant odor from gathered Btable manure or sat urated floors. Tho arrangements for feeding the stock are of much Im portance, because they regulate the amount of labor expended In stable work. The store of bulky food is con veniently kept on a level with the sta ble floor, as the work of raising it to ten or twenty feet Is avoided. A con venient way of storing hay or fodder Is to have an annex to the stable. reached by a door from the feeding floor and a low wheeled truck to carry In the fodder. Grain, meal, bran and similar feed stuffs we would have kept above tho feeding floor in bins made like a hopper with spouts attached, and made larger at the bot tom than at the top, so that tho feed falls down when the slide door below Is opened. These spouts we have over the feed box In which the fodder Is cut and mixed. A cistern to save the rainwater should bo below the feed floor and a pump from It should be fixed close to the feed box and near the wall. This is a great con venience, as in bad weather tho cows need not go out. and the feeder is equally protected if, as should be. a passage is made through all .the buildings under cover from any part of them to the outside door nearest to the house. 'A large fodder cutter is indispen sable for economy of fodder and time, and a bushel basket and a large grain scoop for measuring the cut feed are equally serviceable. The feed troughs should have a sloping shelf in front of each one, and an opening through which the feed may be put Into the trough or manger. The feed troughs should be capacious, to avoid spilling and wasting the feed, and should be completely separ ated from each other, to avoid steal ing the feed by one cow from another. 'The convenience of the owner, or of the workman, which Is the same thing for time of a hired man Is money should bestudled ail through the arrangements. While there are some Just objections to a manure cel lar under the stables, yet this may be so managed as to avoid everything that may be undesirable, and afford many desirable facilities. With a cellar for manure, and a gutter pro vided with trap doors In the stable, tbe stable may be cleaned out very quickly and without soiling the clothes or boots. A large hoe should be used for scraping the contents of the gutter into the cellar, and a coarse broom should be used to finish tho cleaning. If a few bushels of clean, dry Bawdust are then spread over the stalls and the gutter the sta ble will be quite free from odor, and may bo called perfoctly clean for a cow stable. A wide walking platform behind the gutter Is a great conve nience in many respects, for ample room Is a great saving of labor. To kacp the cows cleaned at least onco a day U also a great convenience, for it saves a world of trouble with the milk, saves labor In washing clothes badly soiled, in removing filthy stains In the house, and saves a man's self respect, for how can a man respect himself who deliberately sits down to milk a cow plastered over with filth, which soils tbe bands and gives a foul cdor to tbe whole person? All the above is applicable to the horse stable." Weekly Witness. l.lO-I'Vmt Fall. Pottivllle. Falling from the top of the Sllverton Colliery breaker, S Snyder, of Mlnersville. sustained probably fatal Injuries. Stepping on a loose board, he dropped 150 feet and landed on a pile of roeks. He sustained many fractures and Intern, al injuries. Ieliltfli I'nlvei'Mtty. South Bethlehem. In memory of Kckley B. Coxe, who was an active alumnus and valued trustee of Iyehlgh I'niversity from its early days, the Board of Trustees announced that they had decided to name tho new $:i0,00O mining laboratory now be ing erected on the campus, tho Eck ley 1). Coxe Laboratory. lilu.n In Pittsburg Hotel. Pittsburg.-The Hotel IlirniinR ham, South Side, was discovered ablaze. Twentv-six guests were forced to flee down the lire escapes In their night dresses. Clayton Williams, pro rrletor of the hotel, and his wife were seriously burned In their efforts to ouell tho flames. The loss was slight. Sane Fourth For Berwick. Berwick. Burgess Hetler, of Ber wick niarto announcement, in ordr that locnl dealers could not after wards complain that they had not been properly warned, that Berwick would have a safe and sano cele bration of tho Fourth of .Inly this year and that any dealer selling' lire works of any ldnj would bo prompt ly fined. Pi Inters ISott. Pottsvlllp. The Pchuylkill County Comlssloners are in a quandary be cause of the fact that every Schuyl kill County printing office has re fused to print the ballots for th Spring election. Thero are 158 dis tricts in the county and an entirely different ballot must be provided for each district. As a heavy bond Is required for tho performance ot the work in the legal time allowance, none ot the local publishing houses would undertako the risk. It Is fear ed that part of the county will have to go without an election unless tho commissioners are able to make ar rangements with outside printing houses. Begin KOO-Foot Bridge. Pottsville. As a part of the $1,000,000 railroad yards of tho Philadelphia & Reading Railway Company, stretching between Mill Creek and St. Clair, work was start ed on the foundation for a new lat tice bridge to be erected at Dormers, a point midway between tho two towns. It will be 300 feet long, and will be the largcn structure of tbo kind In Schuylkill County. Anoth er bridse will bo built at Paterson to avoid a grade crossing. Clone Port ( ill bun Schools. Port Carbon. At a meeting of tho School Board it was decided to closo the schools for an Indefinite period because of an epidemic of measles in the town, more than If)') caaes lin ing reported. Crushed In The, Mai blue. Shenandoah. Aniandus Knecht, a prominent member of many secret societies, was caught in the machin ery of the Locust Mountain Powder Company plant and instantly killed. He resided at Iirandonville. Suvo I.'ntoiiilied Man, Girardvi'.ie. Robert Caton had a miraculous escape from death at De- Turke Colliery. He- wa3 robbing pil lars when caught by a heavy rush of coal. He was entombed for five hours and was given up as dead, but a rescuing party finally took blm out alive and practically unhurt. Cuillslp Y. M. '. A. Carlisle. Carlisle's Young Men's Christian Association, with a mem bership of 239, has inaugurated a novel campaign to secure 500 mem bers. Marshaled by William Ogllby and Dr. Harvey Mentzer, the asso ciation has been divided Into rival forces, known as tho "Reds" and the "Blues." Baseball Player A Benedict. Shenandoah. Thomas P. Carroll, one of the best semi-professional baseball players of this section, was married to Miss Minnie Fallon, by Rev. Joseph M. O'Hara, of the An nunciation Church. They were attend ed by Miss Anna Carroll, as maid of honor, and J. J. Carroll, as best man. Drinks Poison For Medicine. York. Mistaking a bottle of pol son for cough medicine, Mrs. William Essie, of Whlghtsville, drank the con tents and she now lies at her home in a critical condition. Charles K. McCloskey Dies. Manetta. Charles K. McCloskey, ono of Lancaster County's most prominent men. died, aged 4G years, after a brief nines. He was a grad uate of several colleges, an Odd Fel low of note, a Mason and member of tbe Patriach MiHtant. Did Xot Hecognlze Her Son. York. Having left his hcrr.e here thirty-five years ago at the age of IS, P. Oliver Stambaugh returned for the first time. So great a change had been wrought In the years of absence that neither the son nor the mother when they met recognized each oth er. He has been in the West dur ing his absence from York. Homes Of Oftlclnls Burn. Lewisburg. The homes of Burg ess George M. Wolfe and ex-Register and Recorder William E. Housel were damaged by fire. Iliindnned Undue. PhoenixviUe. Convinced that fire nnlice badce No. 1 ;S of tbo Phoenix Hose, Hook and Ladder Company, is attended with a train or HI hick Herbert Llewelyn, a member of the company recently el cted as a fire policeman, has refused to serve if he i;i compelled to wear the hoodooed badge. Llewelyn contends that all his predecessors have met with mis fortune of ono character or another. The company will get lilni another badge. Arrested On Swindling Cliaiue. york. Alter wandering about this country and Canada for over a year, dodging detectives, who were on his trail, George Harber, a former resi dent ot this city, was arrested here. Harber is charged with raise pre tense, having, it Is said, secured $250 from Mrs. Anna Brenneman. a widow, promising to use the money to oper- i ate a barber shop for her It Is said he failed to keep is promise. Trim To Murder lli Family. York. Lewis Falkenstlne. an aed farmer, near Paradise, this county, became violently iDsane and threat ened to murder the members of his family and set fire to the house. With the assistance of neighbors Falken stlne was strapped to a chair to pre vent him from carrying out his threats He had been committed to the almshouse and will later be tak en to the Harrlsburg asylum. Present Hall To College, Bethlehem James V. Beck, o' New York City, formally presented to the Moravian College the new Students' Hall, his gift to the college in memory of his father. The pre sentation was purposely arranged to occur on Thursday, which was the seventieth birthday of Dr. Augustus Schultze, president of the institution. Killed Sitting On Kail. Chester. James Dawson a signal man on the Pennsylvania Railroad, was struck by a passenger train, No. 51. near Highland Avenue Station. Dawson, who boarded ot 70:' Monroe Street. Wilmington, Del., nr.d who is survived by a widow, was seated on the rail repairing a osvitch signal when struck. Mad Hull Loses I i-ht. Williamsport. A mad bull on tho farm of Elmer Kdler. in Woodward Township, charged upon Edler while he and several assistants were try in; to capture the animal. The bull, in its blind assault, ran into a waon. locked its horns in the spokes of a wheel and was held a prisoner whilo shots were fired to end it.- life. Fall 8 Floors In I'levutor. Pittsburg. Six workingnien were Injured, one fatally, when an eleva tor in an unfinished building in Al legheny fell eight stori"s landing a wrecked mass of timbers und bent Iron, in the basement. liascball Star Marries. CatAsauo.ua. lu the Brldct? Street Prfsbyterian Church Miss May me S. Welsley and R. P. Schneider, were married by Bev. H. W. Ewlng. Mr. Schneider wa lat yer.r captain of the Lafayette Collene bnseball team and after leaving college created a sensation by bu twirling for th Reading Tri-Stare League playing under the' name of Dan'c The wed ding trip will be to California where the bridegroom has signed with tht Oakland baseFall team of the Pacific League. A Dsegerons Doctrine. That Chicago husband who Is ea tending that be Is entitled to di vorce because his wife . plays poker should pause to consider that be Is setting up a dangerous doctrine. "It Is a poor rale that does not work both ways." Chicago later-Ocean. All Golden. . Every opportunity that Is missed la supposed to be golden. Stole Two Miles Of Wlr. Pboenlxvllle The biggest wire theft that has been committed In this section has been uncovered by loos! detectives of the telephone company, and three arrests, two men nnd one woman, have been made. Tho wire nearly two miles ol it was found at tho home of Mrs. Thomas Elvln who with her son. Robert, and Mahlon Beard, was arrested. Monument For Hon Franklin. Bethlehem. Members ot historical societies of tbo Lehigh Valley bavt started a movement to erect a me morial to Benjamin Franklin, near a fort which h built ft Welsspor, 154 years ago. Pui'tor's Salary flO.ODO. rittsburg.--BeraiiRe he refused a chair In the fr.culty of Princeton Theological Seminary and a few weeks later relused tbe presidency of a KentucUv college. Iliv. William L. McEwen, of tho Third Presbyterian Church of ttls city, known as the Thaw churoti, has had $3,foo a year added to his salarv Dr. McEwen will now receive 110,000, muKlng him tho highest raid minister In west orn Pennsylvania. Mrs. Mary Copo ley Thaw has been prominent In the support ot thn church. Dr. C. F.. Albright Dies. Williamsport. Dr. C. E. Albright, one of Muncy's oldest citlnens, d:ed, aged nearly 78 years. He was well known throughout ibis section, both as a physician and an Inventor ol note. The Muncy purse was one ol his most profitable Inventions Chis ter and William Albright, ol Uei toanlown, ore,survlviog sons. fntnuinniia IVslor ItcMl'rns. Caissauqua. To accept a rail to Plalnfield. Mass.. Hev. H, F. Davlet. pastor of the Bethel. Congrectlou ChurcD, Dos rnMBiici. Family Claim Old Fortune. New Castle. Members of the Drake family In Western Pennsyl vania have organized and on Feb ruary 18 will meet in Nlles, Ohio, where plans will be formulated by prominent attorneys to secure a for tune sal. I to have been left by Sir Francis Drake and no-.v la litigation In the British Chancery Courts The fortune is estimated at $200,000,000. Women ( limb Aloft. Pittsburg Fourteen members ot tho crew of '.bo sand boat Diamond, twelve men and two women, had narrow escapes from death when the craft sank in the Ohio Plver Whsn near Lanes lienu, tne unaiood plunged her bow Into the water', an t before the sleein: ?rew could be aroused bad .'rk flvr teet below the surface. By climbing out on the tcperstriirtare the rc'.'ii and women managed to keep afloat until fcelu arrived. Dr. Rose RlnsolJ is the only woman contract surreon In the Unit, ed States Army. When on duty sbe wears a divided skirt and a uniform coat. She Is esieclaUy Interested In the hospital prob'em ot nn army In the field, and has mad sttidv of to work of the Japanese hospital corps In tbe the war with Pvs'. Canada baa 100,0)0 Indlsnt among brr population of 6.000.000. Tbe government hr Isolated them, as wards of tb nation. In reserves, which are scatterel all over tho Do . minion. -