The Fulton County News MoConnellsburg, Pa. -----' MODERN SCHOOL OF MARINERS. The old Baying that there Is no loss without noma guln In borne out by the change which bin been wrought n the country's shipping. There has been much lament over the decadence of the famous Yankee seamanship, but after the passing of the clipper and whaling fleets at last has como to the high seas a new breed ftf Amer toans who are the equals If not the superiors of the old. The mechan ical genius of the nation has sent many young men to the steamships Of the navy and the merchant marine, says the Cleveland Leader. Ninety per cent, of the sailor-mechanics of the United States navy are American born. Twenty years ago, the propor tion of Americans on merchant ves sels was otily about 30 per cent.. In 1910 the proportion wok 49 per cent., the natives heavily predominating ever the nuturallzod. The showing for this year will be even better, as the movement of American to the sea has been steadily Increasing for several years. In many ways the ma riners of the new school are better than the old shellbacks that heaved at the cup's! an bar and lay out on the end of the yardarni. The demands of s!eam and electrical machinery re quire a different kind of skill and more Intelligence. The constnut ad vance of mechanics and electrical science makes It necessary for them to keep mentally fresh and alert. They know more and are more pro gressive than the old-time snllor and In their habits they are cleaner. A strong movement Is to be started In England to limit the reading of trashy novels, w hich . are perverting the emotions ami lowering the thought of the youth. Some of the most In fluential men In England have Joined the movement. As a general thing, parents do not realize the harm the Indiscriminate reading of novels is doing their children. The constant reading of novels, even of good ones, weakens the mind. It has about the same effect on the mind that loung ing in a hammock or floating down stream hns on the muscles. The mind, to appreciate truth, has to deal with truth, and encounter and overcome ob stacles that are In its way. Lacking this exercise It grows weak and flab by. The parent might as well, from the very start, give up his child, so far as worth and noble destiny in this world Is concerned, who is a constant reader of novels. A variation of the Enoch Arden story comes from a New York town, where a man who had deserted his wife had the uncomfortable experi ence of having her unexpectedly walk In on him and have him arrested. If this variation could only replnce the crlginal practice, it would be much better for the community In general and have the effect of reducing the number of these wanderers from their own firesides, who have formed a dis tinct class of public nuisances. A Michigan lawyer has found a new way to break a will. One of his cli ents spoke his will Into the trumpet of a phonograph and bad the record put away. His lawyer, by dropping the record, smashed it into a thousand pieces. It seems to be impossible to make a will that some lawyer can't break, somehow. Blind psychic Impulse leads beau tiful women to the selection of ugly men, according to a Canadian obser ver, who adds that It not Infrequently leads to a fat bank account. Blind! no; psychic? relatively; Impulse? hardly. David Starr Jordan would abolish college baseball because of the "scientific muckeriBm" in Joshing the players. In professional baseball the muckerlsm is for mors scientific but less classical. The Krupps have a monoroly In a projectile which will hit a balloon. It Is likely that two or three men will have a monopoly In being In the bal loon. The Wisconsin boyB who save them elves labor by having a p'lonograph call the cows out of the pisture are perfectly willing to rely upon humun lungs for the dinner announcement. People who have nothing else of im portance to do nre arguing the ques tion, "Hoes the robin sing or does he merely chirp?" It Is almost as exciting as playing chess. "All the epidemic and local diseases thrive upon the family cat," asserts an authority. This may explain why the animal Is endowed wlih nine lives. A rope manufacturer has Just been made a director in a cigar company Almost anybody could say something about the fitness of things here. A tunnel nine miles long through the Alps has Just been completed. It had to hurry up to get finished before the airship made It a back numbtr. Thieves in Brooklyn stole a ton of coal from a citizen's cellar.whlch. shows that the simple life canffOt be . entirely extinct. Washington has a club of girl avia tors. Women refuse to stay down In these days of change and reform. SECRETARYOFWAR DICKINSON 0U1 He Resigns as the Secretary of War. H.LSTIMSON HIS SUCCESSOR In Hie Letter to the President Mr. Dickinson 3ys He Is Compel led to Retire, Owing to Pressing Business. Washington, D. C Secretary of War Dickinson has resigned and Mr. Henry L.' Stlmsou, Colonel Roose velt's candidate for the governorship of New York last fall, has been ap pointed to succeed him. President Taft seemed to enjoy thoroughly the surprise with which Ike announcement of Mr. Dickinson's retirement was greeted. To antici pate the gossip that would ascribe other reasons for Mr. Dickinson's withdrawal from the Cabinet at a time when the Secretary of War ap pears to he the most important mem ber of the President's advisers. It was frankly stated at the White House that Mr.' Dickinson felt he as compelled to resign because of I personal reasons and stress was laid on the statement that Mr. Dickinson would not return to the practice of . his profession, but would devote him-1 elf entirely to his business Interests In Tennessee Mr. Dickinson and family are very ' heavily Interested In a coal mine In I Tennesseo, which has for some time past proved a losing venture and has, , nmn nedg The regUlali0I1g here Indeed, been placed In the hands of a ! ,ofore goverlllng the appointment of receiver. It Is Inferred from what I ,.. ,...-,, . Iha Armv haVe was said that Mr. Dickinson feels himself compelled to assume per- I onal management at once of his i properties and that he feels he can-, not afford to remain longer In Wash lngton. Although one of the lead ers In his profession of the law, and for many years In the enjoyment of a large salary as chief counsel of the Illinois Central Railroad, Mr. Dickin son Is not a wealthy man, and It was reported not long ago that he had sold a splendid stock farm In which he had taken the deepest pride. Iff' Vtf.r7 mm JACOB M. DICKINSON Secretary of War. It Is not usually regarded In Wash, lngton as either fitting or necessary to state so frankly the reasons for a public official's retirement to private life. If the usual course has been t departed from to so unusual a de gree In Mr. Dickinson's case, it is probably because of the rumors that have been current here for some time of friction In the cabinet between Secretaries Dickinson and Knox. It' has been gossiped that Mr. Knox strongly resented the fact that the ; great military movement of several weeks ago, when 20,000 troops were ruBhed within rifle shot of Mexico, was entirely planned and executed without his knowledge. Indeed, within the past fortnight It was found necessary to issue an official denial at the White House of the persistent ! report that Secretary Knox would shortly resign, because he felt that he was not being given the considera tion due his office In the affairs of this country In the Mexican matter. The announcement of Mr. Dickin son's resignation might easily have , been construed as the result of an , uHlmatunTfrom the Secretary of I State that the further presence of i Mr. Dickinson and of himself In the Cabinet would prove uncongenial. The extreme candor of the official ex planation of Mr. Dickinson's resigna tion puts an effective and final stop to all such malicious gossip. Kossuth's Niece Sees Ta t Washington. D. C. Madame Am hrosvltz, of Vienna, niece of the Hun - garlan patriot Louis Kossuth, was received at the White House by President Taft. Pensions for P esidenta' Widows. Washington, D. C Pensions of $6,000 a year each for Frances F. Cleveland, widow of President Cleve land, and Mary Lord Harrison, widow of President Harrison, are provided for in a bill Introduced In the Sen ate by Senator Root, of New York. To Insure French Aviators. Paris. An Insurance office to make a specialty of aviation, was opened next door to the only aero plane ticket office in the city. Spanish Steamer Sunk Dover, England. The British steamer Westmoreland collided with the Spanish steamer Debayo, from Huelva for Rotterdam, off Goodwin Bands. The impact was so terrific that the Spaniard sank two minutes later. Her captain, chief officer and three sailors were drowned. Ch'nese to Cbssrve Sunday. Peking. An Imperial edict de--reelag that Chinese shall observe Sunday as a day of rest, has been romulsated. In COURTING THE ' (Copyright, ltll.) THREE THOUSAND DOLLARS TIONAL ANTHEM. NEW8 ITEM. OPENING TO MILITARY GLORY Civilians May Now Win Army Com missions New General Order Issued. . . Washington. D. C. Bright young , ambitious to wear the unlform an(J Ule g10ui,.r girap 0f thg government will be given an op- uortunitv to win , heir commissions, ni1 ,, ... t llag lut ,gued gellural ordPr glvng Jn UJ. , th ,nformatlon that every young nio,iined hv President Taft so M t0 conform t0 pregcDt condtlons. A offlMri mugt enter the KryltM ag gecond lleut,nauti. Keoond ,lcu. tenancies are filled by appointment ' by the President, first, by cadets who ' have graduated from the West Point I .Military Academy; second, by en listed men in the ranks who have , passed competitive examinations, and third, by civilians between the ages of 21 and 27 years. The War Department designates a I large number of young men from all J over the country who are subjected, after a rigid physical test, to a se vere oompetltlve mental examination. No young man who Is married Is designated for these examinations, nor will any cadet at West Point or midshipman at the Naval Academy be permitted to enter these examina tions until after the classes of which they have been members while at : West Point or at Annapolis have ' graduated. ) Preference Is given among the I civilian candidates to honor gradu ates from those schools and colleges at w hlch Army professors are detail jed as professors of military science, 1 and at which the students have i shown a degree of proficiency which has entitled the schools to be designated as "distinguished insti tutions." Next In order of choice are members of the organized militia who have served not less than three years creditably. The general orders of the War De partment give full Information as to i the subjects on which the mental ex aminations will be based. No candi date falling to obtain a general aver age of 76 points will be appointed as second lieutenant. Candidates whose general average in a competitive mental examination Is 85 or more will be graded separately and select ed to fill existing vacancies In the order of their merit, and the remain ing vacancies, if any, will be dis tributed among the candidates whose average Is less than 85 but not be low 75. AGUA PRIETA CHANGES HANCS Federals Abandon It and Rebels Take Posssss on. Douglas, Ariz. With Agua Prleta, the town about which a desperate battle raged two weeks ago, thrown back on their hands by Its abandon ment by the federals, the members of the rebel Junta in this city are at a loss what to do with It. The town is deserted. Tho town of Naco also fell Into retn-l hands, its volunteer garrison withdrawing. With the port of Naco closed all provisions and other supplies for Cananea and intervening points on the Naco Railroad must pass through Nogales. Got Wife Bv Prayer. Spartanburg, S. C. Madly In love with a woman whom he had known only two days, the Rev. Allen Fort ' a Baptist preacher of Chattanooga, I says he prayed for advice and was told by the Lord to propose. He did an and was accented. c Playhouse Burned Wilmington, Del. Fire wrecked the Lyric Theatre and damaged ad joining properties, entailing a loss of about $75,000. The theater was a vaudeville and moving picture house and" did a big business. Mrs. Wll- 1 Ham Benner, wife of the lessee of the theater, and Gertrude Ward, house keeper for the Benners, were carried down ladders by firemen from the third Btory windows. John and Dan iel Mullln, actors, were assisted down the same ladders to the street. Chloago Wants G. O. P. In 1912. Chicago. First steps in a move ment to bring the Republican Nat ional Convention to Chicago In 1912 were taken by the board of directors of the Republican County Central Committee at Its annual meeting. Resolutions were passed requesting the Republican National Committee to pick Chicago as the next conven tion city and urging the national committeeman from Illinois, Frank O. Lowden, to use his Influence to that end. PATRIOTIC MUSE AWARDED FOR THE BEST NA- ESTABLISHED FACT Dr. Gomez Minister of Foreign Relations. THE CITY IN GOOD ORDER. Provisional Government Becomes a Fact With the Captured City of Jaurez as the Capital. Juarez, Mexico. Mexico's provi sional Government, composed of In surrectionists, became an established fact with the naming of a cabinet by Francisco I. Madero, Jr., provisional president, and with the establish ment of a capital in the captured city of Juarez, where General Navarro and his Federal troops are held prisoners. The Cabinet follows: Minister of Foreign Relations Dr. Vasquez Gomez. Finance Gustavo A. Madero. War Venulstano Carrauza. Interior F. Gonzales Garza. Justice JoBe M. Pino Suarez. Private Secretary to President Madero Juan Sanchez Azcona. Secretary of War Carranza will have charge of railways and tele graphs. His first act was to grant permission for the repair of the Mexican Northwestern railroad. Men immediately began repairing the roadbed south of Juarez. Gonzales Garza will have charge of the mail service, and Secretary of the Treasury Madero will direct the affairs of the Custom House. That the insurrecto army is more than simply an armed mob Is shown In the absence of general looting and Intoxication and the quickness with which the shattered city was cleared of Its dead and wounded. The embargo against visitors was re moved and sightseers In thousands poured across the bridges from EI Paso. Only occasional cases of looting were reported, and these not by the Insurrectos themselves, tut by In satiable curio hunters, one of whom triumphantly displayed In Kl Paso two silver candlesticks taken from the big church In which the Fed erals made a desperate stand. While Madero refuses to divulge his plans for the Immediate future, Provisional Governor Abram Gon zales, of Chihuahua, unoftlcially says that the next step Is to take Chihu ahua, annihilate Rabngo nnil his command and then march to Torreon land on to Mexico City. This Is to be the slogan of the army of libera tion, so-called, and the first move will be made by Orozco, who will go out to meet Rabago should the Fed eral General approach near Juarez. To Abolish the "Mister " Washington, D. V. Military pro cedure in calling the roll In the House of Representatives will lie adopted, and the prefix "Mister" no longer will be used In the designa tion of members, If a resolution In troduced by Representative Martin, of Colorado, Is passed by the House. L'ghtnlng Kills Eight Persons. Berlin. During thunder storms that occurred throughout Germany Thursday lightning killed eight per- I k"b 811(1 n,'nr Hamburg rekindled a ! natural gas well which had been ! recently capped with the greatest difficulty. Ends I ife In Cll. Philadelphia. Jenn Rochelle, 30 years old, committed suicide in a cell of a police station here by hanging himself to the bars, using a necktie as a noose. A man who had been arrested for Intoxication was in the same cell, but slept soundly while Rocrelle killed himself. Rochelle and his wife were arrested while quarreling on the street and the wife was In a cell nenr her husband when he ended his life. The couple came hero from New York two months ago. Lost His Lite to Sav- Pets. Edinburgh. A performing lion, maddened by burns and in fear of death, was directly responsible for the loss of at least eight lives In a fire that destroyed the Empire Music Hall. The animal's master, "The Great Lafayette," two of his assist ants, Alice Dale and Joe Coates, and James Balnes and John Whelan, musicians, are among the victims. They lost their lives trying to con trol the terrified animal which had blocked ihe main exit from the dress ing room. MADERO CABINET SUFFOCATE IN MINE AFIRE Four Reicue Parties Fight Way Into Shaft Njked Light the Cause. Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Five lives were lost by suffocation in the Bos ton mine of the Delaware and Hud son Company, at Lnrksvlile,t near here. A strike began at the colliery on Tuesday, and consequently only a small number of men were at work. Had the full force been engaged the loss of life would have been ap palling. Fire broke out In a section of the mine where rock miners were em ployed, but it Is said to have been gotten under control without diffi culty. Eleven men were at work in that section. After midnight the odor of smoke was detected and another alarm was sounded. All the em ployes In the inside workings made their way from a side vein to the main gangway, but the smoke had become so dense that, nearly all were overcome. COMBINES BOOM COTTON $33,000,000 Merger, With 1,000, 000 Spinalis, Poposed--Mor-gan and Cuke nteretted. New' York. With the return of Frank L. I'nderwood to New York after a long trip through the South, where, It is understood, he has been arranging details of the merger of cotton yarn mills with a total of 1,000,000 spindles, It Is expected that definite announcement regarding this, the lateBt of four big cotton mill corporations, will become known. Besides several local concerns, headed by the Morgans, it 1b reported that J. B. Duke Is also Interested In tho proposed consolidation. It Is understood that the plan proposed by the promoters is a merger of 1,000, 000 spindles on which bonds will be Issued to the amount of $10,000,000, half for the purchase of tho proper ties and the other half, for working capital. There will also be Issued $12,500,000 in common and $12, 500,000 In preferred stock, amount ing to $35 a spindle. The mills en tering the merger are to get 20 per cent, cash for their properties, 4 0 por cent, in preferred and 40 ier cent. In common stock In the cor poration. The promoters will retain 10 per cent, of each stock for their services. The mills entering the merger are to have their properties assessed by Lockwood, Green & Co., of Boston, and J. K. Sirrine, of Greenville, S. C. SHIPS IN MIDNIGHT CRASH Ward Liner Merlda Sunk, but 319 Persons Rescued. Norfolk, Vn. A near-tragedy ot the sea, filled with many thrilling narratives of human rescue and escape, occurred off this coast, when the Ward Line steamer Merlda, bound from Havana, Cuba, for New York, with 819 souls on hoard, sank In 36 fathoms of water 55 miles northeast of Cape Charles, after she had been rammed by the fruit steamer Admiral Farragut, bound from Philadelphia for Port Antonio. Every person aboard the Merlda was rescued, and but one was seri ously Injured the wife of A. Peon, a land proprietor of Progresse, Mex ico, who, with his entire family, was bound for Paris, to await the end of Mexican troubles. Mrs. Peon, oc cupying a room Immediately next to where the Farragut struck the Merlda, was Injured, probably In ternally. Says G-r' Sto'e Him. Chicago. Joe Blakeslee. very blond and very small, wants a divorce and wants It badly. He declares his wife, the daughter of Fire Captain Shaughnessy, literally kidnapped him, took him to St. Joe, Mich., and there married him. The bride, a year older than her 18-year-old hus band, laughingly denied that she had done the kidnapping. The court took the case under advisement. Pouiht Ten of Prunos Cheyenne, Wyo Relatives of Joseph H. Klngham, former assistant postmaster, sentenced to eight years for embezzlement of $23,300 of gov ernment funds, will ask a rehearing of the case. Among the grounds upon which this rehearing is sought Is evidence that Klngham once j bought a ton of prunes for his family and at another time purchased 40 pairs of trousers for himself. Preparing to Greet American Fleo'i St. Petersburg. The naval au thorities at Reval are making exten sive preparations -for tho visit of the second division of the I'nited States Atlantic fleet. The battleships will be In thnt port from June 11 to June 18. Ohio Voters Disfranchised. Portsmouth, Ohio.. Fourteen resi dents of the Second ward of thla city, who were charged with selling their votes, were disfranchised for five years by Judge A. Z. Blair. Workhouse sentences of six months and fines of $25 and costs which had been imposed were suspended pend ing good behavior. All are labor ers and It Is charged they Bold their votes for prices ranging from $1 to $3 each. Stlmson Is Gratified Huntington, L. I. "I am very much gratified by the mark of con fidence In me which President Taft has displayed," said Henry L. Stlm son, the nowly-appo'.nted Secretary of War. Mr. Stlmson would not com ment further on his appointment. He said he expected to assume his new duties as Boon as he could ad Just his private affairs. How soon that would be he did not Indicate. It Is said that apples are an anti dote for liquor and tobacco. OUTBREAK IN HDERiRi ARMY Orozco, One of His Own Gener als, Orders His Arrest. DARES MEN TO SHOOT HIM. Insurrecto Leaders Declare Outbreak the Result of a Plot to Break Up the Revolutionary Organization. A Day's Events In Mexico. Oencral Madero, the provi sional President, turned what was evidently Intended as a coup of malcontents to disrupt the Insurrecto organization Into a triumph for himself. Fearing that an attempt might be made on the life of General Navarro, the Federal comman der who surrendered at Juarez, Madero spirited hliu away to the Rio Grande and enabled him to reach United States territory. The Mexican capital Is virtual ly in a stage of slego and ma chine guns have been mounted to protect the palace. Juarez, Mexico. The supreme test, the clash between the military and political authorities, was experienced by the Provisional Government ol Mexico and Provisional President Francisco I. Madero, Jr., Is compleU master of the situation. After a day of thrilling incidents during which the lives of Madero and his chiefs were In danger, Gen eral Orozco, In a moment of passion ordering the arrest of the little rebel leader and demanding the resigna tion of the Provisional Cabinet, thi capital of the Provisional Govern ment Is quiet. General Navarro, the defeated Fed eral commander, whose life wai threatened by angry mobs of Insur rectos, was spirited away by Madero In person to the American side of th Rio Grande and is safely ensconBed Id the homo of friends in El Paso. Madero Issues) Epl nation. Senior Madero gave out the loilow lng explanation of tho day's events: "Orozco, excited by the victory, probably from the adulation and bad advice of persons Interested in caus ing disunion among us, committed 8 fault which fortunately had no conse quences. "He complained that the troops die not have sufficient provisions, and wanted to lay the fault upon the per sons designated by me to provlslot the army, but the truth is that In the storehouses we have more thar enough provisions, so that the fault ii with the provider of his corps, who has not attended to his duty. "Ho told me also that he did nol like the persons whom I had designated as Cabinet officers, but 1 told him that it was not he whe should tell mo whom I should ap point. Clasped Hands and Made-up. "There being present a consider able number of soldiers at the plac where we met, it appeared to me op portune to address them and explain to them what was transpiring. Thej all showed that they were well dis posed to concord, and In order to ter minate the small and disagreeable Incident before them Orozco and I clasped hands and forgot everything, as I took Into account that although It was true that he had Just com mitted a fault, on the other hand, he had given good service to the cause." YEARS EXPORTS $2,012,749,508 Two-Bllllon-Doliar Mark Passed for the First Time Washington, D. C. Exports from the 1'nlted States for the first time In any 12-nionth period passed the two-blllion-dollar mark, being $2,012. 749,503 for the year ended with April, according to figures prepared by the Department of Commerce and Labor. Exports In April, $158,004,276. were larger than for any previous April, while the Imports were nearly $14,000,000 less than those of April 1910. Of the total Importation during the month, amounting to $120,128,122, there entered free of duty $58,000,000 worth. The excess of exports over Imports for April was $37,800,000 and for the 10 months ended with April $378,800,000. 20 Belgian Soldiers Drowned Antwerp. Belgium. A news dis patch reports the capsizing of two barges laden with Belgian soldiers, during a storm, on the Lualaba river, one of the head streams of the Congo river, near Lokandu, Belgian Congo. Thirty lives were lost. Mr. Dodge Guilty Guild Hall, Vt. Guilty of man slaughter was the verdict returned in the caso of MrB. Florence M. Dodge, of Lunenburg, who has been ou trial for the last two weeks for the mur der of William Heath, of Dalton, N. H. For Big Rrlief Fund Toklo. Prince Katsura, Premier and Minister of Finance, is leading a movement to obtain a fund of $10,' 000,000 to be used for the relief of the sick and poor of Japan. D'etz Guilty. Hayward, Wis. John F. Dleti will spend the remainder of his nat ural life at hard labor in the State penitentiary at Waupin by the ver diet of the Jury for the murder in the first degree of Deputy Oscar Harp In the battle of Cameron Dam on October 8 last. Indications point to a heavy mor tality from plague In India this year Cases and deaths have Increased each week this year. ALL OVER THE STATE TOLD IN SHORT ORDER Allentown. Because he manajiail to grasp the top of an 80-foot high Jtrlck wall, Frank Gallagher, a string tural Iron worker on the KltterHvHie Asylum, escaped certain death. liq was riding a heavy iron rafter tha was being elevated for position on the roor, when it bigan to Blip, liej low him was a clear space of 80 feot; bounded by the concrete basement floor. His refuge lay In Jumping for! the wall ten feet away. No circus athlete ever did any more tlirillliiq stunt than Gallagher as he Jumped; high In air for the wall. He juuij managed to grab the edge with ihq tips of his fingers, where he hung on with Iron grit until a big crane was swung around to save him. Holltdavsburr. The Blair counts court appointed Herman J. McCaulcij and J. F. Meek to act as receivers the Keystone State Savings and I. nan Association, of Altoona. The ap-i polntment was made In proceeding Instituted by stockholders who alJ lege that the- association had lc eti wrecked by mismanagement of Wi officers. Reading. Although she denied wearing a hobble skirt last Dccem-j ber when she was thrown and Injur. ed In boarding a trolley car, the jury In the damage suit of Mrs. Kuru K. Manger, of New York, against tlm Reading Transit Company was un convinced that her tight fittlm; divsq was not responsible for the accident, and returned a verdict In favor oj th company. Allentown. incensed because wife had left him on account of li s thlftlessness and brutality, .lolm Grentman shot her and himself at their homo, between ZIonBvllle ani Trelchlersvllle, when she returned tq visit her children. Harrlsburg. Figures collected i, the State Railroad Com mission show that In. March 102 eople were killed and 660 Injured on the railroads ol the State, a singular coincidence lie lng that the number of railroad fa. tallties In March of last year was the same. Pottsvllle. Mrs. Benjamin (iranc er, aged 32 years, who killed nor seven-year-old son, whose hands sli tied while she cut his Jugular vein. was taken to the State Asylum at Hanisbure. She was a maniac when she perpetrated the deed, and piivsN clans say she is hopeessly Inpnne. Reading. In beoucathing a $2nn.. 000 estate the will of Willlnm M, Stauffcr, a financier and prominent Methodist, filed here, gives a building to the local W. C. T. V. It Is to be occupied by that organic tion "to educate public sentiment to the standard of total abstinence and to promote Interest In reform work.' Harrlsburg. Mayor Meals issued a proclamation for a safe and mm Fourth of July, prohibiting firecrack ers and other pyrotechnics and urg. Inir that the Park Commission liava a fireworks display for the residents of the city. The proclamation is the first of the kind ever Issued here Coopersburg. Miss Marlon On. "8 fhla olaee. who Is 11 years old, H nrobablv the youngest high sclmol rraduate in the State. At the gradii-. atlon exercises of the Center Valley! High School she was graduated with high honors. Her father is a puliH school teacher, as were her maternal and paternal grandfathers. Altoona. The first death from In fantile paralysis to occur In this vl. rlnltv. carried off Madeline, six- months-old daughter of Sami Simp. The child had been 111 several weeks; Harrlsburg. John Whlsler, Jr. sired six. died from eating pill foi'"4 In a box in his home. The pills f' talned strychnine and were prescrib ed as a tonic for an older member of the family. Harrlsburg. Emlllo Rubs, r mem ber of the famous family of IlitrrU burg hotelkeepers, was almost kllM K foiling thrmiirh a skvllgllt at h" hotel. He fell through the skylit;" from a distance of fifteen feet ana struck upon his head. r-n,ilng. The body of William H Rlbble, a well-known bookkeeper, was found In the Schuylkill -'onal-He left a note addressed to his wife, stating: "You can find my K"dl down at the canal." He had recent ly been in Ill-health. Harrlsburg. Governor Timer wt June 22 as the date for the execution of Charles Hickman, convicted of murder In Beaver County, Hickman twice escaped from prison, but recaptured recently. Gettysburg. Official announ ment was made here thnt an annul Chautauqua will be established " Gettysburg. The first will be he'" August 18-27. York. The York County M101 Society had Andrew C. 'euhart' wealthy citlm, who is reputed i be a pow-wow doctor, arrested. " A. A. Long was-the prosecutor. hart says the prosecution is the suit of spite work. Pittsburg. The Pittsburg & Erie Railroad Company e,,,l'l!',ted plea of nolo contendere In the 1 m 8tates District Court to charts violating the Interstate comnwrce and Judge Orr imposed a n"uini fine of $1,000. Tamaoua. As a result of coll' iWJ between cars In number font" of the Ihigh Coal & NJR , Company, Wash Prebola and 1 Pollnkl, miners of Lansford. Instantly killed, and Simon Frc'u- laborer, has his legs broken. York. Major David D. s""'' was one of the first defenders wer to Abraham Lincoln's fa troops in 1861, died suddenly home here. One-third of Britain's tcl,Sr,pl1 operators are women.