The Fulton County News McConnellsbirg, Pa. i . . - PLANT TREES. If In 75 years tlx present supply of timber in this country w ill be exhaust ed, at the present rate (if i onsumpilon, the. admonition to plant trees becomes lo(iient with meaning. There la prat value In Irees, sajs tlie Kansas City Times. The bit? lumber fortunes bare been made In the main, not In buying ami selling lumber, nor even In manufacturing lumber for sale, but la buying vast tracts of timber land Jil holding them for the Inevitable tdrances in timber prict h Incident to d rapidly decreasing supply. Now, jt would not profit any imin or cor pc ration to buy large areas of land that could be prolltably used fur agri culture, fruit growing or grazing, and let them In trees; but It would bo profitable for all who own timber lands that could not be prolltably used for oilier purposes to maintain them as permanent forests, using only the matured trees and cutting them and clearing the slash In such u way us to give the best possible pro tection to the Immature timber. Al so, It would be profitable to every owner of land to plant trees on any part of It that cannot be utilized for ether purposes. If this great nation could inspire Its landholders with this one purpose for a given time, to the end that all land that should lie planted with trees would be so plant ed, the problem of the future lumber supply would be solved. The treasure chamber beneath the pulace of Necessldades, Lisbon, Por tugal, has been opened and examined by tlie minister of public works at the request of King Manuel, who feared for the safety of the crown Jewels and certain personal property of the royal family. The Jewels and valuables were found In the underground cham ber Intact. An Inventory showed them to be worth upward of $3,000,000. Among the Jewels was the diadem of ex Queen Amelia and a necklace given ber by her father, the Compte de Paris, valued ut $200,00(1. There wan found also a table service of solid Ger man silver, weighing over a ton, also a crown and scepter of gold studded with precious stones; also sevi ral bricks of gold, the largest weighing 45 pounds. The minister of llnance announces that all valuables which are the private property of Manuel and his mothtr will be returned to them. Those belonging to the state, such as the crown and scepter will be placed In the national museum. Some peculiar rights are being set tled In New York. A man recovered nearly $l,nOO damages from a police man for clubbing him because the man In question kicked In his own door. As the man's wife had request ed the policeman's Interference, she having locked the kicked In door, this decision for damages looks like a desperate stand on the part of mere man to avoid being kicked out of do rcestic supremacy. A man In New Jersey was lately ar rested for assaulting a neighbor. But It developed later that the assailant bad been run over by his own auto mobile, driven by the neighbor. As II would have been clearly superhuman self control w hich would have checked an attack under the circumstances, the assault was condoned by a law recognizing tho limitations of human Dature. A Hloomlngtnn, Pa., man celebrated bis eighty-third birthday by sawing wood continuously from 7 a. m. to 7 p. m. The moral Is to saw wood early in life, and when you are 83 perhaps you won't havo to do so. Clubwomen In New Jersey are to establish schools for the tralulng of maids. When they get the flrls per fect In the arts of housekeeping and cooking they will doubtless discover that it is wives they have beeu train ing. That Imdon hotel where r.o lipping Is permitted bas proved such a success that another like It. the largest in London, Is to be erected at once. And they say the service Is perfectly all right, too. We are told that the convocation of Canterbury proposes to abridge tha ten commandments. Evidently the commandments have been broken so often that they need repairing. "Are vegetarians as strong as meat caters?" queries a contemporary. Well, the elephaift, the ox, and the horse are vegetarians. A Beruni cure for Insnnlty is report ed to be successful. What will the frenzied flr.nnie bankers do for a de fense now? In view of the recent activity of the hen we suggest that it be allowed to replace the eagle as our national bird A New Jersey man suggests an affi davit wl'h eggs. Hut who will guar antee that the eggs will not be switched? i Ice floes as large as islands are ap pearing in the North Atlantic, but Uncle Sam will not annex any of them. Our faith in mankind remains un shaken. We have not seen anybody wearing a corset coat. HOUSE VOTES 10 SE The Reaportoinment Passed. Bill is ENLARGED TO 433 MEMBERS. Rearrangement of tho Congressional District Left to the Legislatures of States One Member for Each 211,877 Inhabitants. Washington, U. C A bill provid ing for the enlargement of the na tional House of Representatives from 891 to 433 members and the appor tionment of these members to the dif ferent States on the basis of the pop ulation shown by tho recent federal census passed the House after vain efforts of members of both political partleB to amend it in important particulars. The proposed slzo of the House is Identical w ith that provided for In the Crumpacker bill, passed by the House at the last session of Congress, but not acted upon by the Senate. The Houston bill, Just passed, leaves to the Legislatures of tho different States the power to rearrange the Congressional districts In their re spective State, on the new population basis of one member for each 211.S77 Of inhabitants. The two important amendments proposed, and defeated after lengthy debate, were to put the redisricting power In the hands of the Governors Of States, when the U'glslatures had failed to act, and to limit the House In the future to a membership of 43') or 433, leaving future reapportion ments to the Secretary of the Depart ment of Commerce and Labor. The increase of the size of the House was agreed to by members of both parties, but many Republicans attacked It on tho ground that it Would make tho House more un hieldy. Insurgent Republicans were particularly vigorous In opposing the Increase, declaring that IT It were not for the demands of those States that would otherwise lose members there would be a general sentiment In favor of keeping the membership at the present size of 391. NCREA SEE WORLD OWES U. S. $441,000,000 j M(,xf0 cllv Tlle Nw York cor- "" " respondent of Kl Diarlo telegraphs Ony Once Did Balance of Trade g linVfiT at Ramon Corral should Exceed This Amount j n()t h(lve l)ePn credited with paying Washington, D. C. The world j that "the Mexican revolution was owes the tinted States $44 1,000,000 being formulated by Americans with for food, clothing and raw materials I the Idea of forcing Intervention." sold abroad. Only once has the bal-1 The New york correspondent cx ance of trade been higher In favor plains that the Interview should have of this country, according to Gov ernment figures. That was In 19oS, when It was more than $55,000,000. Close, observers of finance and trade predict a record-breaking fis cal year If the favorable condition continues until June. While opinion Is divided over the significance of the fact that the bal ance for March was less than half the size of that of previous months, some point out that March a year ago produced a balance entirely in the other direction, with an excess of Imports of more than $19,000, 000. CHILD WELFARE CONCRESS. Men and Women of International Prominence Attend. Washington, D. C. The pres ence of many men and women inter nationally prominent In the child study movement at the Second In ternational Congress on Child Wel fare lent added dignity to the con vention. President Taft followed a Roose velt precedent In making an enthu siastic address of welcome to the hundreds of mothers in attendance at Hi' opening. The congress was under the joint. auspices of the National Congress of j Mothers and the Parent-Teachers' Divorces "Aff nity" Earl. Association. The relations and duties York. Justice Nevvbcrgcr, in of home school, church and state to SupPenlP Court, signed the final the welfare of the child were the nt , th n,arrlnso of principal topics of discussion. KuttlK.r un,, Ken,nand rinncy j Karle, the artist, whose matrimonial $65, 730,000 Fcr Railways. I experiences added the word "alllnity" Merlin. The Government has laid! to Kngllsh slang. Miss Kuttner was before tho Diet a bill appropriating Rat io's second wife, the artist mnrry 263,000,000 marks I $65,750,000 1' Ing her after his first wife had ob for the building of secondary rail-j tained a divorce In France, ways, double tracking some of the ! " existing roads, continuing the elee- triflcation of the linos between Mag deburg, Halle and Leipslc, beginning the electrification of the lines In the Btleslan mountains and providing new rolling stock. So dlera Have the Measles. Pouglas, Ariz. Measles of a dang erous type have broken out among the United States troops at Nogales. Two Men Perish In Fire. Middletown, N. Y. Two men are believed to have perished In a fire that burned the factory of the New York Piano Key Company. The finan cial loss Is estimated at approx imately $130,000. Coffin Built 'or Her. Hinckley, III. A specially built coffin had to be prepared for Mrs. Henry Anshach, the heaviest woman In Illinois. She tipped the scale at 4 05 pounds. Slandered From Pulpit. New Haven, Conn. The Rev. John II. Carroll, of the Church of the Holy Trinity, must pay $4,000 to William Hassett, former member of the Wal llngford board of education, for hav ing slandered him In a sermon. 311,084 Settle In Canada. Ottawa. During the year ended March 31, no lesa than 311,084 iranil--rants entered Canada and of these vrr one-third were from the United V.ates. WHEN CIRCUS POSTERS BEGIN TO APPEAR (fi.pyrlttlit, liiil.) DISPLEASING TO UNCLE SAM heporied Statement by Vice Presi dent of Mexico Demand It Be Repudiated. Washington, I). C The reported declaration of Ramon Corral, vice president of MeIco, that Americans were fomenting trouble In his coun try !u order to force Intervention, has encountered the dlsf.or of the Toll ed States government. The State Department has called the matter to the attention of Mexico In order to establish officially whether the Inter view with the Vice-President, In which the statements excepted to are said to have been made, was authentic, as published In Mexico City. The question will be taken up by Ambassador Wilson at Mexico City, to whom the department telegraphed a copy of an official statement which It had issued unequivocally disprov- I ing tne anegeu imeraiice. The statement expressed the confi dent belief that the Mexican Foreign Office will promptly "repudiate and r.revent the promulgation of any such statements, calculated so serl j ously to disturb the mutual ron- (idence and friendly good understand ing between the two peonies." been credited to Inigo Noriega, a rich Spaniard, who has Interests In Mex ico and who arrived at Santander, Spain, on the same ship with the vice president of the republic of Mexico. San B'as Taken. Nogales, Mexico. A well-authenticated report has been received here that the rebels have captured the Important railroad city of San Itlas, on the Southern Pacific-Mexico line, In the State of Sinalna. San Bias Is about HO miles below Fuerte, the former capital of Sinaloa. re ported yesterday to have been taken by the rebels. The whole region ap pears to be overrun by Insurrcctos. To Be Highest Skycraoer. New York. Plans were filed here by the Mroad way-Park Tlare Com pany for the construction nt Broad- way and Pnrk place of the highest building in the world, from the curb to the apex of the tower it will stand 7f.0 feet. There will be ,10 stories in the main building and an additional 25 In the tower, 55 In nil. The highest building In the world Is the Metropolitan tower, 700 feet 3 Inches, and tne next Is the Singer tower, 612 feet. I Morales a"d Jlminei In Jail. I San Juan, P. R. Gen. Carlos F. Morales, the former President, and ; Maurlclo Jiminez, the former Vice I President of Santo Domingo, were nrralcned here charged with planning Is filibustering expedition against Santo Domingo and held for the grand Jury. In default of $2,500 bail bonds they were sent to jail. Think Men Better Students. J-fi.VMfi, ".'is. That men are bet ter stndents than women In the opin ion of the faculty of the University of Wisconsin, was shown when 13 meiT and only seven women were named for membership in an honor ary scholastic socieiy. On y S'x C n s fcr a Kiss. New York. For being kissed against her will as she said, Mrs. Agnes Springer recovered six cents damages from Harry Nunwlller. Ironworker Gsea Insana. New York. His mind unbalanced from gazing down while forking on high buildings, Charles ; 'allvan, a structural Iron worker, committed suicide. 100-year-old Mi l Burned, Zelienople, Pa. Fire destroyed the Zelienople flouring mill, owned by C. B. Harper, causing a loss of .125,000. The mill was constructed almost 100 years ago, and was still using the old water wheel. j afe msmm PRESIDENT TAFT President Puts Leading Ques tions in a Clear Light. HE FLAYS ANNEXATION TALK. Unl ed States Has All It Can At tend to With the Terri tory it Is Now Governing. New York ada must be Reciprocity with Can adopted now or never and must stand or fall by its own terms. Amid tremendous applause and the waving of handkerchiefs so declared President Taft in an dress at the Waldorf-Astoria at ad-1 the ' fourth annual Joint banquet of the Associated Press and the American Publishers' Association. His address was the first of a series in which he plans to evoke public sentiment in support of his policies, and he ap pealed to the company of editors and nouonoiuii' rutu-la gathered from the i. i, o,,,i n... i ,ith of the land ' I11B,111 UI1M I "1 I" "" - to Imnress In the public mind that reciprocity should stand alone and , "ought not to be affected in any re- ' gard by other amendments to the ; tariff law." His recommendations! were warmly cheered. 1 All talk of annexation he charac- j terized as "bosh" and said that the I nited States has all it can attend to with the territory It is now gov erning. He praised the Houwo of Rep resentatives for Its passage of the agreement; declared that it would not injure the former nor any special class, answered in detail tho objec tions that have been raised to reci procity and begged for at least "a kind of test" to dispel the ghosts "ex hibited to frighten the agricultural classes." "1 have said that this was a criti cal time In the solution of the ques tion of reciprocity," concluded tho ( President. "It is critical because un-1 less it. is now decided favorably to 1 reciprocity it is exceedingly probable that no such opportunity will ever again come to the I'nlted States. The' forces which are at work in Kngland and in Cannda will derive an impetus from the rejection of this , trcaty aml jf wp , would have reciproc ity with all the advantages that I havo described and that I earnestly I and sincerely believe will follow its adoption, we must take It now or give ' t up forever." Cutch Take Palmas Is and. Manila, P. I.- Delayed advices re ceived here via Jolo report that the Dutch have taken possession of Pal mas Island, 60 miles southeast of Mindinao, lowered the T'nited States colors and substituted the flag of Holland. James C eelman Appointed. New York. Mayor Gaynor has ap pointed James Creelman, the jour nalist, to the municipal Civil Service Commission to succeed John C. Mc Gulre, the president of the board, who was named by the Mayor to one of the vacancies on the Mrooklyn magistrate's bench. "Frat" Men the Flunkers. Ithaca, N. Y'. President Schur man, of Cornell, has warned frn ternity men to Improve in their I studies, declaring that the 29 per cent, of the men students in t lie fra - ternities furnished 45 per cent, of the flunks. Wants to Sea Battleships. Boston.-- The most compelling de sire expressed by Stearns Kendall Abbott, released after 30 years In prison, was to pee a modern battle ship. He displayed no Interest In ueroplanf-s. Stois Panic. With Revolver, Tarrytown, X. Y. Policeman Welsh stopped a panic In a moving picture show when a film caught "lire by drawin'g his revolver and threat ening to arrest anyone who moved toward the exits. Herod's Palace Found. Vienna.--Prof. Krnsy Sellin, a not ed Kgyptologist, says he has foend an ancient palace of Herod the Great on the plain of the River Jordan, near the road from Jerusalem to Jericho. Eat Weeds for Dandelions. 'KIttanning, Pa. Alexander Sar:il, aged 3, 1b dead and eight other chil dren are In a serlouB condition from eating poisonous weeds, which they thought were dandelions. 10 PUBLISHERS W3ULD ABOLISH THE SENATE Victor Eergar, Siclnllet, lt roduces Re oiution In the House. Washington, I). C. Victor Merger, of Milwaukee, the Socialist member of Congress, in a resolution Intro duced in the House, not only pro poses to aboil: h tho Senate, but alms to strike from the hand of the Presl dent the veto power and 'nke from the courts authority to invalidate legislation enacted by the House of Representatives. All this is proposed sis an amendment to the Constitu tion, which, If petitioned for by 5 per cent, of the voters in each State, shall be submitted to a general refer endum. "The Senate has run its course," said Mr. Merger after his threaten ing document hud been dropped Into the hopper on the speaker's desk. "It must some day, as with the British House of Lords, yield to the popular demand for Its reformation or aboli tion." The resolution was not referred to the Judiciary Committee until after several hours' delay, caused by rais ing the question as to whether a clause In the preamble attucking the I Senate might not be a violation of I the House rules. This clause re I ferred to the Senate as "a menace to jthe liberties of the people" and as ia "body, many of tho members of j which are the representatives neith er of a State nor of Its ixopl", but solely of certain predatory combina tions." House rule 22 authorizes the I Speaker to throw out bills and reso lutions of an Insulting character. It I was determined, however, that the ' resolution was not a violation. I The rule prohibiting members of i ono legislative body against crltlcls j Ing or attacking the other body Is ap ! pllcable only In debate on the floor. BIBLE OF OUR FOREFATHERS Mr. Taft's Tribute to King James Version Celebration In New York- New York. Letters from King George of Kngland and President Taft were read at Carnegie Hall at a notable gathering In celebration ol the three hundredth anniversary ol the publication of the King James version of the Kngllsh Bible. The King congratulated the people of thl country on "their share In this, out common heritage," and President Taft wrote that the "Bible's splrll has Influenced American Ideals in lif and laws and government." The Right Rev. David II. Greer, bishop of the Kplscopal diocese ol New York, presided at the ceremony which was held under the auspicei of the American Hible Society, Jamei Mryce, the British ambassador, read the Kitig's letter aud delivered an address. The King said: 'I rejoice that America and Kng land should join in rommemoratluij the publication, 300 years sgo, ol that version of the Holy Scrlpturei which has so long held Its own among Kngllsh-speaklng peoples. "Its circulation in our homes but done more, perhaps, than anything else on earth to promote among old and young the moral and religloui welfare on either side of the At lantic. "The version which bears King James' name Is so clearly interwoven in the history of British and Ameri can life that It Is right we should thank God for It together. "I congratulate the President and people of the I'nlted States upon their share In this o. r common heritage." Tho White House, March 7, 1911. To the Tercentenary Celebration ol the King James Version of th Kngllsh Bible: I desire to express mv deep Inter est In the recognition which is being , taken In this country of so notable an event as the Three Hundredth Anniversary of the King James Ver sion of the Kngllsh Hible. The publication of the version of ' tho Holy Scriptures In the year 1611 ; associates it with tho early rolonlej of the Kngllsh people upon this Con tinent. It became, at once tho Hible of our American forefathers. Iti classic Kngllsh has given shape to i American literature. Its spirit hai i Influenced American ideas In life and !law8 and government. I trust that this celebration may j continue and deepen the Influence ol i the Mlblo upon the people of this re j public. 1 WILLIAM H. TAFT. ! Klhert A. Prlnrkerhoff, vlre-presl- ;dent of the American Bible Society, I opened the meeting and Introduced Bishop Croer, who said In part: The publication of the Bible, the i three hundredth anniversary of which we are assembled here to cole- i brate, was not oitly a groat literary Invent; It was also a great moral and j religious event. Dr. Hyd Out on $50,000 Bond, i Kansas City, Mo. Dr. B. C. Hyde, under a life sentence of Imprison- ; ment for the murder of Col. Thomat ill. Swopc, was released from the county Jail on a writ of habeas cor pus granted by the seven judges of , the Circuit Coert here. pa " irect Vote Measure Albany, N. Y. By a vote of 10R to 30 the Assembly adopted the reso lution of Senator Roosevelt, ndvocat ing the election of I'nlted States Sen ators by direct vote of the people. I Curiosity Brings Trouble. Allentown, Pa. Overcome wl curiosity, Mrs. Rose Srhultz used hatpin on a fulminating dynamite cartridge thnt her little boy found The rap exploded. She will never do 1 It again. Ravages of fie Paaue. London. The official figures o the ravages of the bubonic plague in the central provinces of India, show the appalling total of 55,884 deaths from the disease In March. SCHOOL TEACHERS KILLED IN WRECK Excursion to Washington Ends Tragically. FIRE CONSUMES ENTIRETRAIN Teachers' Special From Utlca, N. Y. Bound for National Capi tal, is Ditched Near Easton, Pa Tragedy of the Rail. A special tarrying 169 school teachers from Now York cities on sight-seeing excursion to Washington jumps the track and Is set on tire. The train was set on fire at one end by the engine and on the other by an oil tank car, which it sldeswiped. Many of tho passengers, though Injured, pluckily assist ed In rescuing their less fortunate passengers from the burning cars Kaston, Pa. Fight persons lost their lives, several are missing and believed Jo be dead and half a hun dred others were injured at Mar- tln'B Creek, N. J., in a wreck of an excursion train carrying 170 school teachers and friends from Utlca and Syracuse, N. Y., and vicinity to Washington for a week's outing. The train was one furnished tho teachers by the Delaware, Lacka wanna and Western Railroad, and the accident occurred while It was traveling at a high rate of speed over a stretch of track controlled by the Pennsylvania Railroad. The loco motive Jumped the track, the cars toppled over and were set on fire by exploding oil, the wrecked coaches tiavlng sldeswiped an oil tank along the track when they left the rails. The entire train was quickly en veloped in flames and completely consumed by the fire. The eight missing poisons, seven of whom were women and lived In Utlca, are be lieved to have been burned to death In flie wreckage. The finding of charred bones led the railroad wreck ing crews to the conclusion thnt they are dead. The most seriously injured were removed to the F.aston Hospital, where two of them. Miss Eleanor R. Rutherford, a Utlca teacher, and Charles M. Parsons, of Stroudsburg, Pa., a Pennsylvania Railroad conduc tor, died at night. The cause of the wreck has not yet been detormlned. The place where the accident occurred had been un dergoing repairs and unfinished work may have been responsible for the train leaving tho track. MAD TRO'3 VIEW OF IT. Says Diaz and Corral Started Inter vent on Scare t Kl Paso, Tex. General Madero, rpeaklng of the alleged interview with Vice-President Corral concern ing the United States, had this to say: "I am not sure that Corral made the statement credited to him, but I do know that when the revolution was In the formative stage It was part of the Diaz-Corral strategy to give the Impression that the United States would Intervene In behalf of the Mexican government. This was to make us appenr unpatriotic. "However, the revolution got un der way anil Is winning, yet there has been 110 intervention. The govern ment, therefore, is now trying to mnke It appear that the revolt does not owe Its spread to the unpopular ity of the administration, but to foreign elements which they allege havo come to the aid of the upris ing." TURIN EXHIBITION OPENS. U. S. Wo I Represented In Industrial Show. . Turin, Italy. The International Kxblbitlon of Industries and Labor, tbo biggest affair of the kind ever attempted In Italy, was opened Sat urday. The Turin exhibition occupies 12, 000,000 square feet, extending on olther side of the river Po, the two parts being joined by four bridges, two built especially for this occasion. The American pavillion comprises the largest exhibit ever made abroad by that government. In all there were 15,000 exhibitors, representing the European countries, North and South America, Japan, Persia, Slam, Turkey, Tunis and the British col onies. Merrlam Spent $133,254.80. Chicago. Charles E. Merrlam, Chicago University professor, spent $133,254.80 In his recent effortB to become Mayor of Chicago, according to a final statement of campaign re ceipts and expenditures, made pub lic. Tho total receipts were $136, 191. C5. Cuba Shaken ByQjakn. Santiago, Cuba. An earthquake was felt here. No damage was done, Dut there was great alarm for a time. John D. Gives $180 000. Boston. Charles W. Perkins, of this city, treasurer of the American Baptist Missionary Union, has re ceived a check for $180,000 from John P. Hoekefellcr as the oil mag nate's annual gift Honor Conferred on Taft. Washington, P.- C. President Taft was elected honorary president of the Amerlran Society of Interna tional Law at the closing session of the convention at the Wlllard Saturday. ALL OVER THE STATE TOLD IN SHORT ORDER III J Mauch Cunk. - -Work 011 the grad ing of the extension of the line of th Lehigji and New Knglund Railroad from Danielsville to Tamaqua, via tho Lizard Creek Valley, is progress ing rapidly. In responso to tbreatH made by West l'euii Township, Schuylkill County, farmers that un less tho company came forward with the cash for the land over which the new road Is to pass, the courts would be usked to grant Injunctions, Hie company's claim agent took a trip through the valley this week to re new old options or pay the cash. This move Is thought, to Indicate that the U'lilgh Coal and Navigation Com pauy has no hope of fixing up lib differences with the Central Railroad of New Jersey and that the new road must now be built. Reading. Flsli Warden Charles Nessley made a midnight raid at (Herniate, In the southern end of Berks County, and took Into custody James Hurner, Charb.s Harmr, Frank Qulgley and Ernest Weaver on the charge of Illegal fishing. It is alleged that the party visited trout streams In the vicinity of the Yellow House, and with a large net tock nearly all fie trout in the dam and In the stiva ..s. Allentown.- Lewis F. Grammes, u leading manufacturer of this section, died suddenly of heart trouble in his sixty-seventh year. He had many patents for knitting machines and other mechanical contrivances, but his principal Invention was the mail ing machine. Mr, Grammes and Ids sons did the largest foreign business from Allentown. Chester. Amor Talley, treasurer of Lower Chichester Township, was severely Injured by the explosion (f an electric light globe on a Murnm Hook trolley car. Pieces of the ghs struck him in the eye, necessitating the aid of an oculist. In spite of the pnln be proceeded on his way to .V -dla and reported for duty as a Civ. I Court J '.ror. York.- Because he did not like Lis new home, having changed his resi dence the first of April, Emanuel II. Herkert, seventy years old,, commit ted suicide by shooting himself in the head. Two boys wltncs-id tbo tragedy, having followed Mr. Ileekert from his house to the bam, believing he Intended 10 kill rats. The boys crept near : where Mr. Heckert was sitting ui d saw him placo a revolver to li la 1 1 and lire. I.ewistown. Mrs. Charles Reilly. 40 years old, died of burns received when she attempted to stamp out ti e flames of a rubbish fire that had ecu -municated with straw in the stall yard and threatened the buildini:. Rev. Mr. Rhoads Jumped the rein" and was badly burned on the hands and arms In an attempt to save the woman, whose clothing was a n.ai-s of flames. llairishurg. Warrants were is sued here for the arrest of Ar'ur Gleason, an Englishman, amis. ii 'I having embezzled money beloniiK to thref women living in Dorset, Fin land. The information whs made , Mrs. K. liarley, who met the n.iin in Liverpool, and who, with her s. ters, accompanied him to this onui try with money to invest. T!i' chnrge that he secured the money I left for New York, leaving tl-em stranded in this city. Pethlehein Injuries which will result fatally occurred to Harold ;u:d Charles Pursel, aged 2 and :i old, sons of Levitt Pursel, of llel lnnd, N. J. The babies, in tin' 'I sence of their mother, got hnW matches. Playing -with tliein 11. :n' a couch, the latter became Ignited. In trying to put out the blaze the lie'" ing of the children caught lire a nil both were burned from head t" i'"1' Scran ton.--Nine-year-old Tommy McLane, known to his companies "Wild West," was hungry for pie. saw a baker's wagou with eighty !'A0 juicy, tempting pies on the ttreet corner, got Into the wagon and din' off; The most he could eat m pies. The others ho dumped the street; drove tho wagon to Hi'e headquarters and told tho police lie found it In "Me Fadder's barn." 11,1 was held for Juvenile Court. Pottsvllle. District Atlunh'.v Lyons has appealed to the Super:"' Court the cases of William On' and William Jones, convicted of lot box stuffing, but granted u n' trial by Judge Urumni. The case before Suix-rlor Court before ami 8 a result Grow and Jones were re manded to inll and it Is claimed tint the lower court cannot, now grant a new trial. Judge Hrumm declares that the mn wero not properly fended and that circumstance liave developed which show that an l"Ji:'' tlve has been done to them. Stroudsburg. Hurd's Sanita"1""' at North Wales Gap, was destroy" by fire together with a cottage. In"11 dry, two ice houses and a large larn, belonglns to the Minlsink Farm Com pany. The 1038 is estimated at f111' " 000. Hurd's Sanitarium was w 9 the oldest summer resort ll,iU','li the Water Gap, and for years been well patronized by ''''"'j phlans. For a month the rct"'t M been opened and a number vvi ,('r' . Istered at the place. There as 1 ' tie dilliculty for the guests to o' them lost in safety, but most of clothing and valuables. Lewisburg. The nucknoll I'"v' sity students who hazed ('l;,r'''' WnycholT In a cemetery here vo ' tartly confessed their offense Ix'ti' the father of young Wayclioff John Howard Harris, preside' it Buckf?ll, and expressed tl",ir Ingness to submit to whatever r alty' might be decided upon- Scranton. John Early, a min checkwelghman, lst his life, nn men, both foreigners, were lJl in a fire which destroyed tne ' 1 -Grove breaker of the PennO'l'' Coal Company, in Punmore.