The on County News i HcGoooellsbars, Pa. ri i i COCKNEY AS A DIALECT. I The efforts of the London county Council to drive out the Cockney speech from the schools of the English metropolis hardly needed the opposi tion given In a book recently Issued In defense of the dialect Thla book, which 1m, curiously enough, the work of a man named Mackenzie MacBrlde, contends that Cockney Is no modern dialect, but that It possesses an ancient and hon orable lineage running back nearly 0.000 years. When one born within sound of How Boils says "thet" for "that," "benk" for "bank," and "by Jyfte" for "bailiff," he Is using no mod era corruption of the English lan cuage, but the pronunciation of those words which has obtained not only In London, but In Kent and Surrey for hundreds of years. Moreover, In an--dent times, the words were spelled as Ihe Cockney now sounds them. So, oo, are "abaht" and "ahtslde" Justi fied for "about" and "outside," accord fag to Mr. MacBrlde. He says that Siany Londoners have been laughed out of these ancient pronunciations, and he advises them not to change their pooch, because of outside prejudices gainst It, says the Chicago Tribune. Certainly Cockney would seem to bo a dialect or It would not have survived for so many centuries In the midst of peech which calls Itself more cul tured. It Is a curious fact that In the Bahama Islands, which were set tled more than 200 years ago by Lon doners, the Cockney dialect Is as trong as In Cheapslde. These are the days for sausage. There Is no use for a person to stick ip his nose at sausage, for sausage la good when It Is made right It is ' the respoiibo of the food world to the polar breeze that blows through the morning. It Is as sweet as a plate of strawberries on a mild June day. .Hut It must be made right Good sau 1 eage is an art product It Is made p of Judgment, taste and skill. It Is ft combination of ingredients that cor relate with one another as the fra grance and the blush of the rose. The butcher doesn't understand this. Gen erally he throws In some scraps and odds and ends, and especially the odds, tfabs of some salt, pepper and sage, grinds it out, and the confiding cus tomer buys it because it is sausage, ays the Ohio Btate Journal. He does't like it very well, but he eats It, nd everything goes. The oth er day we saw a customer In a meat shop direct the making of his own sausage. He selected the meat, slmon ipure cuts off the best parts, had it ground and took it home to season it there. That man knows how to take 'are of himself. He knows art from bull's foot He appreciates the true sentiment of sausage. "Remove not the ancient landmark," la a Scriptural injunction to whose value the United States Is only begin ning to subscribe In earnest, says the Omaha Dee. Spasmodic efforts at reservation have been made here and there, the most notable being in ,the case of the Yellowstone, but the in sensate greed of the utilitarian world tas wrought heavy damage in many epots of benuty and wonder ere the people awoke to u realization of the wantoness. The Palisades of the Hud eon have oeen saved after years of desultory fighting, during which com mercialism was steadily at work scar TlE' the noble features of the Hudson. Similar destruction of the famous Del aware Water Gap has been averted with the utmost difficulty. Only prl Tate enthusiasm and ability to pay saved and perpetuated the Garden of the Gods, which a wealthy patron has Jut; presented as a Christmas gift to Colorado Springs. The announcement that the two ends of a waterway by which it will be possible for vessels to avoid passing outride of Cape Hatteras have been Joined, so that completion of the route is a matter of but a short time, is of peclal Interest Cape Hatteras is one of the most dangerous points along the American coast, particularly at certain seasons, and anything which can lessen Its terrors for mariners or passengers will be a most welcome change. Incidentally the canal in question will form one of the links In the Atlantic deeper-waterways sys tem, which Is destined to play a most Important part in the development of the country's commerce and as an adjunct to the national defense. We are glad to have that newspa per clipping giving the information that "flies will not alight on picture frames If you keep them well rubbed -with oil," but it would be Just like us to lose It before next summer. Abdul Hamcd, former sultan of Tur key, is reported to bo happy and grow ing fat. Certain middle-aged ladles will wonder how anybody who is growing f:'. can possibly be happy. A Worcester (Mass.) man, 52 years ld, has been sentenced to the house of correction for ten months because he kissed a widow who Is 70 years of age. The old theory that women, after pass Ing a certain age, become thankful for euch attentions must be all wrong. ' The new counterfeit 1100 bill Is Just now giving the treasury agents and the ultra rich considerable trouble. This, however, is one of the worries that the ultimate consumer escapes. FLIES OVER ML WILSON Arch Hoxsey Soars Abovfe High est Teak in Range. UPPER ALTITID: FAR BELOW ZERO. nobler Of World's Altitude Record Crosses Ruugc Thut Kims Cali fornia Valley In the Air One Hour and Twcnty-Klglit Minutes Army Officer Hays One Thousand Aeropluncs Could Curry 10,000 Troops Across the Alps In a Sin gle Day. Los Angeles, Cal. (Special). Arch Hoxsey, of Pasadena, bolder of the world's aeroplane altitude record 11,474 feet Thursday flew over Mount Wilson, the highest peak of the mountain range that rims the valley in which Los Angeles, Pasa dena and the towns of the orange belt lie. Under ideal weather conditions, ho soared 10,005 feet into the sky, and cleared the crest of Mount Wilson with 4,200 feet to spare. Lieut. Vernon Boiler and several other army officers, who are here to see the flights, asserted Hoxsey's per formance pointed a new way of transporting armies across mountain ranges. Lieutenant Holler, who came here from Fort Whipple, Ariz., said that a thousand biplanes could transport an army of 10,000 men across moun tains as high as the Alps in a day. Runs Into Nleet Storm. Hoxsey used a Wright biplane, equipped for passenger Bervice, and he made the Journey from the field to a point beyond the mountains in 1 hour and 28 minutes. The distance is estimated at 34 miles. On an air line the distance from the field to the mountain Is less than that, but Hoxsey circled over the field until he had reached his maximum height, before he pointed the nose of his machine toward the range. He was out of sight before he made the attempt at topping the peak. News of his success was flashed to tho aviation field by telephone from the Carnegie Solar Observatory, on Mount Wilson, directly above which the aviator soared. "It was fearfully cold," said Hox sey, "and when I got to a point Just above the summit, I found that the haze, which obscured the mountains from the aviation field, was a heavy pall of vapor with fine ice particles that stung my face. I am certain that If I had had a recording ther mometer with me It would have- shown the temperature of the upper altitude to be far below zero. How ever, hurdling mountains Is.- much easier than climbing 11,000 feet over a valley of the sea. The earth does not seem so far away," growth of the soi'Tn. Has Doubled Output of Entire United States in 1800. CharWtte. N. C. (Special). In an address' at the annual banquet of the Greater Charlotte Club Richard H Edmonds, editor of the Manufactur ers Record, In discussing matters bearing upon the South and IU prog ress, said: "Despite all the disadvantages un der which we have labored, despite much of tho unwise agitation of all kinds of the last 10 or 12 years, agi tations which have created false im pressions about the South, this sec tion has achieved wonders of which It may well boast. Sometimes we have talked about being too poor to develop our educational facilities, and yet the South Is now spending for common-school education largely over 150,000,000 a year, against $23,000,000 as the total amount thus expended by the United States In I860, when the population of the country exceeded by 3,000,000 the population of the South at present. "In its cotton mills this section has twice as many spindles as tho United States had In 1800. It Is making three and a half times as much pig Iron as tho United States then made. Last year It produced almost as much grain as the whole country raised In 1860, and Its total farm products ex ceeded by $900,000,000 the value of the agricultural output of the United States at that time. Wo have two and one-half times as much railroad mileage and six times as much money In bank deposits as the whole coun try had In 1860." Yes, Tho I.lon Yawned. San Francisco (Special). While visiting the winter quarters of a wild animal show here, John Kellcrt, of Knights Landing, Cal., was told that he could make a lion yawn by tick ling his chin. John tried, with the result that he Is now In a hospital nursing a hand from which two fin gers are missing. A Model Hospital. Chicago (Special). The new Emergency Hospital building erected by tho Iroquois Memorial Associa tion at 87 Market street In memory of tho 600 persons who lost their lives in the Iroquois Theatre fire De cember 30, 1901, was presented to the city of Chicago Friday, which was the seventh anniversary of tho dis aster. Tho building Is said to be the finest and most complete small hos pital in existence. It is of fireproof construction, four stories and base ment and contains 20 rooms. Pullman Porters Ask Raise. Chicago (Special). About 200 Pullman car porters met In Chicago Tuesday for the purpose, it Is said, of forming a union. The meeting was secret and very Uttlo of the pro ceedings becamo public. The union when It Is fully organized will be along the lines of labor unions gen erally, and will also havo a death benefit. The porterB have already sent a request to tho Pullman com pany for an increase in wages. A SELF-SUSTAINING BASIS But P. 0. Department Expendi tures Exceed Receipts. Washington, D. C. (Special). That Postmaster-General Hitchcock Is determined to put the Fostofflce Department on a self-sustaining ba sis is evidenced in the annual re port of Third Assistant Postmaster General James G. Uritt, Just made public, Though the expenditures of the department for the past year still are in excess of the receipts, there is a marked decrease in the expenditures for tho past year when compared with those of a year ago. The total postal receipts for the fiscal year 1910 aggregated $224, 128,657.62. This Is an Increase of $20,566,274.55, or 10.10 per cent., when compared with those for the preceding year. The expenditures for the paBt year amounted to $229,977,224.50, an ex cess of expenditures over receipts of $5,848,566.88. To this deficit should be added the sum of $32,915.07 loBt by burglary, fire, bad debts, etc., making a total deficit of $5,881.- 481.95, a decrease of $11,598, 288.52 when compared with the defi cit of the flsral year 1909. The Third Assistant Postmaster General discusses In detail the dif ferent branches of the postal service which come under the Jurisdiction of his office. The financial system, tho supervision of the manufacture and Issuance of postage stanipB, postal cards, etc., the money-order system and registry system and the classi fication of domestic mail matter aro all taken up fully In the report. GIVES EMPLOYES $100,000. T. G. Plant, Shoe Manufacturer, To Retire From Riisincss. Boston, Mass. (Special). Thomas G. Plant, tho Jamaica plain shoe manufacturer, It about to retire from the firm bearing his name, and, In pursuance of a policy he inaugurat ed in the nature of a merit system, he gave to his employes a vast sura of shining gold fresh from the mint, ex ceeding $100,000. This gift will be followed l"ter in the year by a sec ond distribution of $50,000 to the employes. Although the news of the distribution came through tho em ployes, it was confirmed at the office of the company. In letters he sent with the gifts of. gold to the several hundred employes Plant said: "I hjlievo length of service, to a groat extent, expresses the Individual' loyalty to his em ployer. I express my sincere appre ciation of your loyal services." TRAIN HIT BUGGY; WIFE DEAD. Husband Thrown On Pilot, Rides Six Miles Still Holding Reins. Lcmoyne, Pa. (Special). Thrown on the pilot of the engine of the southbound fast Hocking Valley pas senger train, which struck and de molished the buggy and Instantly killed his wife, who was riding with him, John Bartelsheln, a wealthy farmer, was carried to Pembervllle, six miles distant, where he alighted, dazed from the shock and exposure to the cold, but otherwise uninjured. When he alighted from tho engine he still held part of the broken lines In one hand, together with the lap robe. KILLED RY NITROGLYCERIN'. Charge Containing 25 Quarts Put in Hot Water. Washington, Pa. (Special). Wil liam C. Maloney was about to shoot an oil well in Cross Creek township when ho complained that the nitro glycerin was too thick. He placed the explosive In a bar rel of hot water and was completing preparations for the shot when the charge exploded. Maloney was blown to pieces, and tho derrick at the well wrecked. His horses, although knocked down, were not hurt. The charge contained 25 quarts of fluid. Maloney had been a "shooter" for 10 years. I.Ives Saved From Shipwrecks. Washington, D. C. (Special). Ac cording to the annual report of the general superintendent of the life saving service, just mado public, 6,601 lives were saved and 1,463 disasters to shipping at sea were aid ed during tho course of tho year. Fifty-three lives wero lost. More than $10,051,160 was saved to the companies owning vessels. The entire cost of the service was $2, 249,395. Gem For Mrs. Tnft. Washington, D. C. (Special). Among the earliest presents received at the White House for Mrs. Taft was one which camo as a testimonial from her associates, the women of the Cabinet. The gift was a beau tiful ring, set with rubles and dia monds. Baby Smothers To Death. Trenton, N. J. (Special). Christ mas festivities at the homo of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Smith, Morrlsville, were spoiled by the discovery that a 4-nionths-old daughter had been smothered In tho night by tho bed clothing. The children were put to bed early nnd the father and mother ppent. until far Into tho night trim ming the Christmas tree. When the children awoke In the morning the mother could not move her daugh ter. She had been Binothered in tho night. To Catch Dynamiters. Los Angeles, Cal. (Special). Though It was odlclnlly announced Mf onday that the damage sustained by tho plant of the Llewellyn Iron Works as the result of Sunday's dynamiting wil' not exceed $5,000, the members of the Merchants and Manufacturers' Association held R special meeting to devise plans for ; investigating' the explosion. The ! po1' have made no arrests and an j n need that they have no suspects under survelllanco. BOILER EXPLODES SIXTEEN KILLED At Least Two Other Men Expect ed to Die. BODIES OF VICTIMS BLOWN TO PIECES Men Hod Gathered In the Roller Building Of Hie Mori-wood Lake Ico Company, At Morewood Lake, Preparatory To Harvest lug Crop Senator W. Murray Ciunu Heads Relief Fund. PIttsfleld, Mass. (Special). The lives of 16 workmen were obliterated Thursday, by the explosion of a boiler at the plant of tho More-wood Lake Ice Company, at Morewood Lake, two miles south of this city. Twelve men wero killed instantly, one died Bhortly after the accident and threo others died In the hospital. In addition 12 men were injured, and it was stated at the House of Mercy, tho hospital to which they were re moved, that It was feared that two of tho patients would die. State Officer A. H. McNeill was as-( signed by the Massachusetts District Police officials to mako a thorough investigation of the cause of the ex plosion. At a special meeting of the City Council resolutions were adopted calling for lmmediato action to sup ply tho wants of the fatherless and Injured. L'pon the suggestion of Mayor William 11. Maclnnis, a sub scription paper was started and In a short time nearly $3,000 had been subscribed. United Ftates Senator Winthrop Murray Crane, whose home Is In Dalton, near here, headed tho list with $500. Gathered thl3 forenoon In and about the little boiler building, which was some distance from the Ice houses, wero about 125 men, mostly Poles and Italians, awaiting the chance to earn a few dollars by cut ting ice. With a crash, heard for miles around, tho boiler burst. Bodies of men and fragments of Iron and timber were hurled through the air. Those of the workmen who were not killed outright were either seri ously injured or dazed by tho shock. Sl'GAR TRl'ST OFFERS $700,000. Wants To Compromise After Dis covery Of Drawback Frauds. Washington, D. C. (Special). Recent disclosures in the "draw back" frauds against the government have put the Treasury Department in a position practically to dictate the terms of compromise with the sugar refining companies. The American Sugar Refining Company's recent of fer of $700,000 may not be accept ed, In view of tho fact that the gov ernment Is said to have evidence to compel tho return of not less than $1,000,000. It has JtiBt become known that at a recent conference with Attorney General Wlckcrsham, attbrneys for the sugar company offered $500,000 in settlement and declared that "was the last cent." Tho offer was de clined and the $700,000 one came soon after. WED CO YEARS; NEVER FUSSED. Aged Hubby Says Only Wuy Is to Marry Young. Cleveland, Ohio (Special) . Mar riage is a success, say Mr. and Mrs. Max Dublnsky, respectively 80 and 77 years old, who celebratod their sixtieth wedding anniversary Tues day. The Dublnskys were married In Riga, Russia, when ho was a lad of 20 and she a lass of 17. Dublnsky says tho only way Is to marry young. Both say that they never quar reled. They are hale and hearty and hope to live to celebrate their seven tieth wedding anniversary. ft TONS OF RAD EGGS SEIZED. Hoard of Health Will Ro Asked to Destroy Them. New York (Sneelnl). Nine tons of "liquid eggs" were seized Tuesday by federal officers in tho cold storage plant of the Merchants Herrigerator Company, Jersey City. The warrant of Beizure, which was Issued bv the United States Commis sioner, described the eggs as "filthy, decomposed and putrid animal mat ter." The Jersey City Board of Health w ill be asked to destroy them. Murderer Stabs Keeper. Trenton, N. J. (Special). -William D. Turner, deputy keeper at the Btate prison, was fatally stabbed by Domin ic Menango, a convicted murderer, of Passaic county, it Is believed Menan go bore Turner a grudge and waited his opportunity. The convict called Turner to him and stabbed him twice. Menango was overpowered and plac ed in a dungeon. Overcoat As Life Net. Chicago (Special). A llfo net. Improvised from a man's overcoat, at a tenement fire here, saved tho life of a baby. Mrs. A. Dekanavlsky, the mother of tho child, Jumped to the sidewalk from an upper story and was severely Injured. Two neighbors, who also Jumped, were hurt. Mrs. Deknnavlsky was about to Jump with her baby when Fred. Hoffman, man ager of a nearby apron factory, Jerk ed off his overcoat, spread It out In tho hands of by-standers, and shouted to tho mother to drop tho baby. tins Wrecks Home. Pittsburg, Pa. (Special). An ex plosion of gas, followed by fire, Mon day, caused the death of two persons, Injured another, nnd wrecked the lit tlo home of Mrs. Laura Rryan, a widow, at Coropolis. Six other mem bers of tho family had narrow escapes. A rubber hose, It- Is sup posed, became detached from a pipe, allowing the gas to escape until Ignited by fire burning In an adjoin ing room. SEVEN KILLED; SCORE HURT Over a Ton of Powder Explodes at El Paso, Texas. El Taso, Tex. (Special). Attempt ing to blast away a slag pile at the El Paso smelter, workmen accident ally exploded 2,400 pounds of blast ing powder and came near wrecking the plant of the American Smelting and Refining Company, second largest In the world, damaged It considerab ly, caused a loss of probably seven lives and tho Injury to over a score. Property was damaged severely in the Immediate vicinity of the explo sion, and windows were broken threo miles away. Many small houses of Mexicans In the vicinity of the smel ter were badly damaged, and in these most of the Injured wero lo cated. About 20 men wero tunneling be neath the slag pile when the explo sion occurred, and tho tunnels saved thoso who escaped with their lives, as the slag merely poured down around them and they survived until dug out. At dark Ouillermo Domlnguez and Florentlno Naitarro had been taken out dead and as nothing could be heard from five men unaccounted for and believed to be In the tunnel No. 3, nearest the explosion, they are all supposed to be dead. Those in other tunnels had talked from their pris ons to their rescuers. All are Mex icans. Marcentl Ilcrmanos, a Mexican wo man living In a small house near the smeller, was sick In bed when the ex plosion occurred, and its force wrecked her houBe, and the wreck age fell on her. She was taken to the smelter hospital, where she died later. Porflrlo Vorak, Maturn Mar quez, Louis Marques! and Domingo Minjares and their families suffered. Most of all the children were more or less hurt In these small homes and Mrs. Maturo Marnuez, who was sweeping her house at the time, wag thrown to the floor nnd hurt. The operations of the smelter were not Interfered with, although all win dows were broken and holes were torn In the roof by the falling slag. ACCIDENTALLY' KILLS HIS SON. Shotgun Discharged When Knocked Against Hollow Tree. Greensboro, N. C. (Special). Fred Ward, a lad of 15, was Instantly killed when a shotgun in the hands of his father, Richard Ward, wai accidentally discharged. The father mid son were squirrel hunting In Orange county, and while the father was knocking against the butt of a hollow tree with the gun stork the weapon was discharged, the entire load going through the heart of the boy. 3 CHILDREN' PERISH IN FIRE. Mother Away, They Are Trapped By Locked Doors. Glasgow, Ky. (Special). On re turning home from an errand Sun day Mrs. Robert Boles, of Wisdom, Ky., found her home In ashes and In one comer of the ruins the charred bodies of her three young children. When Mrs. Boles left home she covered tho fire and locked the doors. The children had apparently tried to escape, but were trapped. Ice Rrenks; Judge Drowned. Springfield. 111. (Special). Prerl tated into Shoal creek when the Ice broke under the weight of his horse and buggy. Judge Milton M. Crelghton, of the Montgomery Coun ty Circuit Court, of Litchfield, drown ed Thursday. Another Jurist riding with him escaped. Judge Crelghton was a brother of Circuit Judge James A. Crelghton, of this city, and Circuit Judgo John Crelghton, of Fairfield, 111. Earthquake In Greece. Athens, Greeco (Special). Im menso dnmngo to property, with probable loss of life, has been occa sioned in the province of Ells by con tinuous earthquako shocks. The movements of the earth have been unusually severe, hundreds of houses and stores having been thrown to tho ground. There Is great panic In the province, and much suffering. Troops will bo dispatch ed to the aid of the people. . Poisoned At Communion. St. Petersburg (Special). By ac cident a' priest In the Lutheran Church In the Petorhof district filled the communion cup with a chemical compound Instead of wlno. As a re sult, three of tho communicants died Thursday and more than a score are In a serious condition. Two Killed In Pistol Fight. Cypress, Fla. (Special). "Jim" Whltt, of Altha, Fla., shot and fatally wounded Stephen Johnson, a neigh bor, In a quarrel over a trivial mat ter Sunday. Whltt was In turn shot and Instantly killed by tho mother of Johnson. 10-Ycnr-Old Roy Hangs Self. Cleveland (Special). Ralph Shan non, 10 years old, died at his home here In convulsions from an attempt to hang himself because his mother would not allow him to go to a motion-picture show. When his mother told him ho must stay at home he went to a woodshed In the rear of the house and tried to hang himself with a skate strap. His mother rescued him, but the boy went from one convulsion into an other. Two Killed by Powder Flash. Butler, Pa. (Special). An explo sion of 150 pounds of blasting pow der at a quarry near hero'kllled Tony Rossi and Peter Guannl, two of the blasters, and fatally Injured Andrew Russlna, an assistant. The latter was blown 25 feet. Both feet were torn off his body and his head and body wero lacerated. The explosion Is thought to have been caused by a drill striking a cap In an unexploded charge. TO CONTROL ALL RAILRAOD RATES An International Commission is Assured. IHE NEGOTIATIONS COME 10 END. Chairman Knupp, Of the Interstate Commission, ami Hon. J, P. Mubie, Of Canada, Present Report To the State Department Question To Ro Settled By Treaty Some Of the Things tho Commissioners Recommended. Washington, D. C. (Special). An international railway commission, with supervisory authority over the railroads operating between the Unit ed States and Canada, practically It assured. After many months ot negotiations between the govern ments of the United States and the Dominion of Canada, a conclusion was reached Friday which means that, In the course probably ot a few months, regulatory authority will be extended over railway Operation be tween the two countries. For several days chairman Martin A. Knapp, of tho Interstate Com merce Commission, and the Hon. J P. Mable, chief commissioner of tho railway commission of Canada, have been In conference, as the represen tatives of their respective govern ments, on tho subject of the creation of an International railway commission Tho commissioners reached an agree ment last Wednesday. Since that time they have been working out tli details of the report. . Chairman Knapp and Judge Mabic called at the Department of State and presented their Joint report. As It is a diplomatic matter, the commis sioners were directed by the Stato De partment not to make public at pres ent the result of their negotiations. The text of tho report, therefore, Is hot available. Commission Recommended. It Is known, however, that the commissioners have agreed as to the advisability of the creation of an ln ternatlonal railway commission, which shall have supervisory author ity over the railway lines doing an International business between the two countries. This authority is to extend to the regulation of Interna tional rates, both freight and pas senger, and by the exercise of the powers conferred upon it, the Inter national commission may prescribe through routes and Joint rates and through bills of lading between points In one country to points In the other. The commission will have the authority over all International trans portation and may be appealed to by shippers or carriers in either country for relief from what they may deem oppressive methods or regulations, or excessive or unreasonable rates. The principal subject under con sideration by the designated repre sentatives of tho two governments was the method by which the com mission should be created. It finally was decided to recommend that the arangement between the two coun tries should bo concluded by treaty, rather than by Joint legislation. In tho nature of things, It will be neces sary to have whatever treaty may bo negotiated submitted to tho Senate of the United States. No serious dif ficulty In that regard Is anticipated. RORIN TAKES POISON'. Ranker Collapses Just Before He Is To Re Arraigned In Court. New York (Special). With head prert, shoulders squnred and eyes lev eled at the battery of cameras trained an him, Joseph G- Robiu, the Indicted banker, stepped from his sister's homo Friday morning to face arraign ment, calm In the knowledge that he had Bwallowed a doso of hyosclne, tho subtle nnd deadly alkaloid with which Dr. Crlppen killed his wife, Belle Elmore. Robin collapsed before he could be taken into court, with tho exclama tion: "I'm a dead man; I've taken poison '.ablets." . Tho case was postponed amid the Rieatest excitement, a stomach pump was hurriedly brought Into play, and the sick man was carried first to tho I rlson hospital adjacent nd later to Bellevue, where he lies tonight In tho prison ward. No charge of attempted sutcldo Is entered against him, and it Is thought ho will recover, although the action of hyoBclno Is slow and much will depend on his vitality. Futher Of 31 Dies. Grafton, Mass. (Special). Frank King, father of 31 children, died here Thursday at the age of 104 years and 24 days. Ho was born in Quebec, and until two days ago, when he suf fered a shock, had never been sick a day. Less Gold From Alaska. Washington, D. C. (Special). A marked falling off In the production of gold In Alaska, due to the failure of the placer mines In tho Fairbanks and Seward peninsula districts, Is re ported In the preliminary statement of the Geological Survey upon Alaska mining conditions for 1910. The production of gold during the year lias been approximately $16,360,000, compared with $20,371,000 In 1909. The decline Is blamed upon the work ing out of the beach placers about Nome, and other placer mines. Messina Fire Costs $1,000,000. Messina (Special). Five among the wooden buildings along the har bor was got under control Friday af ter a loss of approximately $1,000, 000. The postoffico, telegraph office and railroad station wero among tho buildings destroyed. Automatic machines have been in vented which will thoroughly clean 1,000 fish an hour. It Is easier to be divorced than married in Switzerland. LIVE NEWS OF THE STATE Uniontown. Washington If eight died Wednesday from a gunshot wound, said to have been inflicted by Daisy Meade, whom he follow to her home at Republic. Tho was at the home of William Taylor when Height entered, and, it Jj stated, renewed his suit, so often re. Jocted. The girl became angry and Helgjit attempted to walk home uin her. When In front of her brother'! house, she says, he pulled a knir from his pocket and attacked her She did not hesitate, but shot him! Unlontowr.. Miss Lucy Jimrs, t University woman, and one of th leaders of Uniontown society, hj, been appointed a deputy sheriff By her father at her own request, anj will be expected to do her part B looking after the outlaws of I'ayette county, although her particular duty will bo work In Uniontown. nouncement of Miss Jones' new pi. tlon camo when the force of dppmi,, presented her with a revolver, ii;w and a pair of handcuffs. She suc ceeds a deputy who will study law. Pottsvllle. Philadelphia & rtiad Ing locomotive No. 1575 was tumid over into a ditch at Palo Alto after being sldeswiped by a coal trait. Engineer Dewald, who was In the fab with other trainmen, escaped as bj a miracle, tho locomotive lianglnj suspended for several minutes, finally falling with a crash. The big engine weighing 117 tons, snapped a hue. ber of chains put on It to pull It back on the tracks before It finally righted. Mauch Chunk. George Co.-.simer, while looking for a night's lodHing! selected one of the ashpits below th New Jersey Central roundhouse. H!i peaceful slumbers were awakened during the night by the dropping ot a boxful of redhot ashes from a lo comotive. The man was so severely burned that he was taken to the Pal. merton Hospital, where he died dur ing tho night. Norrlstown. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Smith, of Phoenlxvlllo, brought suit here to recover $25,000 from W. Gordon Dyer for Injuries received last September, when they were run down by Dyer in his automobile, jt Jeffersonvllle. Dyer was convicted it tho October term of court of amrra vated assault and battery and Is sen ing nine months In the county prison. York While Emerson Ellison and Andrew Miller were practising at tar get shooting with rifles they had re ceived as Christmas gifts, the f.irmer was shot In the back of the hend and was probably fatally injured. It li said that Ellison, who is 14 yean old, stepped In front of Miller just as he raised the rifle and shot at the target. Reading. Mrs. Susan Burtnn, 52 years, died In the homeopathic Hos pital fromburns sustained on De cember 15. Mrs. Burton was sitting; alone In her homo dressing two dolls which she intended to-give as Christ mas presents. While thus ciiMged sho fell Into a doze, and, it is tun posed, overturned the lamp, setting fire to her clothing. Seranton. Miss Sadie M. Pert, aged 61, daughter of the late He'. Luther Peck, at ono time pastor of Adams Avenue Methodist Epi.-copa! Church, was found on the floor of the kitchen at her home on Clkuut street with her throat cut from ear to ear. Sho had taken her own life with an ordinary kitchen knife. Kennett Square. Mrs. Dlanna W. Sheward, probably the oldest person In Chester county, died at her homo In Unionville In the one hundred and second year of her age. She wi born the samo day as Abraham Lin coln, and lived In this section all her life. She was quite active until few weeks ago. Windsor Castle. Henry Fclmlti, of Windsor Furnace, who lived In small shanty with a wife and Hire children, died In the hut after being ill for six weeks, without medical at tention. Charles Young, a half breed Indian, was also found dead in a M at the Six Mllo House. Altoona. Going to the stable, Ed ward Donley, aged 64, an engineer, living at Bellwood, near here, pu' a bullet In his brain. Tho family toll Coroner Blackburn that Donley had threatened to commit suicide, and that within tho past few days they had kept a closo watch on him. Reading. Charles Borcky, W(i 31 years, was so badly Injured si' hours after he attended the funeral of his grandfather, Joseph Borcky, that his death resulted in a I'lioenli vllle hospital. Borcky fell under his train at Perkiomen Junction and left leg was severed. Seranton. Benjamin II. Throop. having just attained his majority. M' fallen heir to a fortune of $5,"M' 000. By the will of his grand. ather. tho late Dr. B. II. Throop, he not to get the money until he was 21. Altoona. Frederick Durr, af3 30. a brakenian on the Pennaylvaiil Railroad, was thrown from a car W tho snapping of his brake stick a"d cut In two. Tainaqua. Andrew Carnegie flf' nlfied his willingness to donate J''1' toward the payment of a pipe oral for St. John's Reformed Church. Beaver. Just after laughing telling his companions that ha n"" and had enough skating for one (W starting for home, Avery P' 14 years old, of Rochester, bre through the ico on the Beaver Rl at Brldgewatcr aud was drowned. Shamokin. After haviug bcciif' tombed In tho Cameron colliery n'10' for seventeen hours by a fall of Willis Faust was saved by a rcf""1 party penetrating the immense b' rler. Faust was not seriously ' Jtircd.