Tbe Fulton County News MoConnslUburf , Pa. ANOMALY OF PROFILES. How often have we tat directly op posite a comely (ace In the street car, lor instance, admiring Its regular, well-formed features, when, with a certain turn of the person's head, the Illusion of beauty suddenly vanished, the new view presented revealing con tours of nose, cbln and mouth disap pointing In the extreme, says the Photo Era. The consoling feature, perhaps, Is the ear, which, projecting abnormally in so many cases, now as sumes an air of repose. Few faces Will produce a profile of classic beauty, nd even some of these fall to yield Haltering full face portraits. This Is ene reason that one sees more front View portraits than profiles In paint ing and photography. Incidentally, it tnay be remarked that many a man -ould look better with his head pre sented In profile, if he wore a mus tache Instead of being smooth-shaven. Not only does It preserve the har monious proportions designed by na ture, but Its removal. In obedience to fashion's decree, sometimes result In Unpleasant disclosures, sui'h as an ab normally long upper lip or an ill haped mouth, besides Imparting un due prominence to tbe nose. A pos sibly bumotous phase of this subject Is the report that patrons of marriage bureaus in large German cities now Insist upon both fullface and profile photographs of their prospective contorts. Judge Foster's characterization of "Joy riding" as "thieving," coupled with his Imposition upon the prisoner before him of a sentence of a year in tbe penitentiary, gives the new law Increasing the severity of the penalty for the offense an excellent start, says the New York Post Such an attitude will not only serve as an emphatlo warning to reckless chauffeurs, but will make It difficult for Judges who Blight be Inclined to undue leniency to yield to their weakness. It is a com monplace that, in rendering law ef fective, an ounce of enforcement Is worth a pound of additional legisla tion. Two British assistant army phy Klclans committed suicide In London and tbe Inquest resulted In tbe at tribution of their self-murder to In sanity caused by overwork. It was a Bad end. yet precautions to avoid such melancholy fate may be exaggerated. Everyone who stops to reflect upon the subject probably will be able to recall the names of more than one among the persons of his Immediate mcquaintance who never will die of overwork. Save the babies. So many people are getting lynched and killed In au tomobile and motor cycle races, not to mention the fatalities in aeroplane and warship disasters, that tbe little ones are sure to be needed. The charge Is that all the microbes not otherwise disposed of, amounting to several billions If not more, attach themselves to the public roller toweL The appearance of the towel, too, trongly corrobrates the charge. "What are you going to do with Vour boy In summer!" asks a corre spondent For the correct answer many a parent will have to Inquire of (ha boy. One hundred gueBts fled from a Cin cinnati hotel Are In their night clothes. hlch must have been embarrassing to those who travel without night clothes. New York Is going to try vacuum treet cleaning. This we submit Is In flnltely better than taking your streets out into the back yard and beating them. Some people seem to wait patiently from one June to another for the pur pose of making a plea for shirtwaists for postmen and sunbonnets for horses. Flve-slxtbB of the burlesque houses In New York city are rated In a Rus, tell Sage foundation report as demor alizing. It is apparent, therefore, that Che investigators attended the shows. A school of muslo has been opened In Bangkok, Siam, and the Bangko kese are said to ba bidding for a sym phony orchestra. They are highly musical. There is a Chicago woman who vants to get rid of a husband whom he won on a bet. Thu moral is: Never bet A new gun for the battleship Texas will hit the enemy 12 miles away, pro vided the enemy will be accommodat ing enough not to dodge. The death of a Chicago man la at tributed to the fact that he wore tight hoes. Yet Chicago women thrive and grow fat on such a form of torture. Lightning was too quick for an Ohio telephone girl. It rendered her la enslble before she could say 'Tine's Imsy." Chewing gum has been tried foi saccharin and acquitted. If tried foi Its offenses under foot It would b lynched. During the hot weather no dog not properly adorned with a muzzle should ralk abroad. HE WIRE TRUST ON THE GRIDIRON rwo Subsidiaries of Steel Cor poration Indicted. CHARGED WITH CONSPIRACY. Thirty-Five Companies, Forming Seven Pooling Aasooiatlons, In dicted on Charges Preferred ey Federal Government. New York. Eighty-four wire manufacturers, representing 35 com panies, were Indicted here by the Federal grand Jury on the ground that they hud offended against the Bherman Anil-Trust Law In having formed nine pooling associations which were allegod to have acted in restraint of trude. The American Bteel and Wire Compuny, ono of the largest subsidiary concerns of the United State Steel Corporation, was teclared to have been represented In loven of tbe pooling associations and Its presldont, William P. Palmer. was indicted seven times. The name of John A. Koebllng's Son Company appearB in eight indictments. On the list atoo are the General Elec- tric Company, the National Conduit and Cable Company, the Standard Underground Cable Company, the American Horse Shoe Company and the Hazard Manufacturing Company. In the list of defendants appear the namrs of Krsklne Hewitt, son of ; celved 2,760, giving its opponents a Abram S. Hewitt and secretary of mu. jori t y of 2,0'JU. Under the the embassy sent to London for j vaHh act it was necessary for the Queen Victoria's Jubilee; Herbert L. ' commission government advocates to Batterlec, son-in-law of J. P. Morgan, uou 2,835, or 30 per cent, of the who gets In because he is president lolai V0e tu8t for members of tiec of the Hablrshaw Wire Company; I ton UBt all, which they failed to do. Charles F. llrooker, vice-president of : Tie campaign for the adoption of the Ansonla Brass and Copper Com pany and Republican national com mitteeman from Connecticut; Carl and Ferdinand Roebllng; Edward S. Perot, who is president of the Nation al Conduit and Cable Company; Frank J. Gould, on the score of his being president of the Old Dominion Iron and Nail Works; LeBaron C Colt, of Rhode Island, and E. E. Jackson, Jr., a lawyer of this city. and pre Departments and every Mr. Jackson was Indicted nine times I omce-holder in the city. To many it on the ground that he was super- 00te(i ludicrous to see the two here tlsor of all nine pools. Ferdinand i tfore bitterly antagonistic organiza Roebllng was named eight times and tiong working together hand-in-hand Joseph W. Marsh, president of the Standard Vnderground Cable Com pany, was Indicted six times. Sales men and minor officers of the vari ous companies were Indicted many times also. The Indictments cover the whole field of the wire industry, Including electrical cables, steel and copper wire, wire nails and horseshoes. The government alleges that the nine as sociations controlled from 70 to 95 per cent, of the business In their respective departments. HURT AT A FUNERAL Women Become Panic Stricken In n Electrical Storm. j i . . mourners were Injured in a panic caused by a severe electrical storm ouring wie lu.ieim ui uru,s, . i m i r o - at West Klttanlng. The mourners " . were filing out of the house to board lf one of the six ward, carriages for the cemetery when the . dty & majorlty fof u storm broke. Many Bad "Let Trenton try it The vivid 7' while other, said the election loud peas of thunder frightened; , d goon an(, tney come of the women and they made opportunity to be- a rush to re-enter the house In a acoualnted J,Itn the subject moment there was a hr-uf'n !lumclentIy to vote intelligently crowd In the front yard. When calm was restored eight of the women were so badly hurt that medical at tention was necessary. SOLDIERS KILLED BY BOMB Explode While Troop Are Listen ing to Band. Mexico City. Seventy-two Mader ist soldiers were killed In the town of Jonacatepec, State of Morelos, on Monday by the explosion of a mine planted by federals before the evacu ation of the place, according to dis patches received here. The dead belonged to General Za pata's band. They had been muster ed out and were on their way home. They had stopped In the plaza to listen to the band, when the explosion took place. The remainder of the Maderlst detachment, 1,000 in num ber, have seized the town and are making an Investigation. Cold Storage Eggs Hatch. Springfield, Mass. A Wrest Spring field man placed a plump hen on a setting of a dozen cold storage eggs. The twenty-first day, eight chicks batched out. There are six varieties of fowl, a circumstance which the proud mother hen affects not to notice. Drowned In a Barrel. Fairmont, W. Va. Mrs. A. F. Radtka, of Barnesvllle, a suburb of this city, aged 63 year., took, her life by drowning herself in a barrel of rainwater at the home of her son-in-law, C. W. Yates, with whom she resided. She left the house but a short time before her UfeleBS body was found. Mrs. Radtka's mind became un balanced from brooding over the In juries sustained by her son, Edward, in a fall of coal In a mine of the Consolidation Coal Company. HI Car Batray Him New York. Because he refused to permit his finger print, to be taken, tbe record of Mike Ferguson, who wanted to enlist, was Investigat ed and be is now held a. a suspect in a train holdup in Kansas last March. Held for Criminal Libel. Jackson, Miss. Three Mississippi editors are under arrest on a charge of criminal libel for having accused "Private" John Allen, ex-congressman, of stealing jjug of whiskey. ;uspicious L felt tLupyriiitu. 1111. 1 COMMISSION PLAN FAILS Snowtd Under in New Jersey by tht. Voters- "Let Trenton Try It Flr.t. Iloboken, N. I. lloboken decided by a large inujorlty of votes Tues- day thut It does not want eomniis- slon government. The total vote polled, wth one dis trict of 200 votes mlssng, waH 7,022 of which commission government re- the Walsh act was a vigorous one. For a week mass-meetings were held every night, and one of them was addressed by Governor Wilson. The commission government advocates also circulated much literature throughout the city. The adoption of the act was op posed by tbe Democratic and Re- DUi,liean organizations, the Police for a common cause. The opponents to the commission form of government did not hold any meetings or circulate any literature, but early in the game they began a still hunt which, as the result Bhows, proved very effective. 600 Short at Brunswick. New Brunswick, N. J. By a vote of 2 to 1 commission government was defeated here at the special election, the total vote being 2,620 against, 1,245 for, the majority against be ing 1,245. Even though the majority had been for It, there were not enough votes cast to bring the vote for It up to the required 30 per cent, under the Walsh act. Last year the reg stry was 6,000, and 1,800 votes 16 7 h,h tnr were necessary to De pouea ior commission government to carry It. ,T. . ,, . oor,v nn Rhnrt thereon. BANKER MUST SERVE TERM Morse Lose Another Fight for Re lease From Jail. Atlanta, Ga. Charles W. Morse, the New York banker, serving a term in the Federal prison here for violating the national banking laws, failed in his effort to obtain his re lease on a writ of habeas corpuB. Without passing upon the validity of that portion of Morse's sentence of 15 years beyond 10 years, District Judge Newman denied the petition for a writ declaring that ten years of the sentence unquestionably was good, aiid as Morse had not served out that time the court had no right now to enter further In the matter. Morse's attorneys filed notice of an sppeal to the United States Cir cuit Court of Appeals of the fifth circuit. Judge Newman said that he had no doubt of the legality of Morse's confinement In the Atlanta prison, although it had been erected for "hard labor" convicts. He said Morse might be able to obtain a transfer to another prison by appli cation to the attorney general, but he believed conditions here were probably as good, at least, as would be found In a prison elsewhere. Gomper Will Not Apologize. Washington. Before leaving here for IndlanapollB to continue his In vestigation into the McNamara kld napplng. case, President Samuel Gompers, ot the Amercan Federation of Labor, Intimated that no apology from John Mitchell, Frank Morrison or himself would be forthcoming In connection with the ruling of Judge Wright, of the District Supreme Cnnrf. directing them to show cause by July 17 why they should not be adjudged In contempt of court. Treaty Agreed Upon. Washington. After a conference between President Taft and Ambas sador Bryce, of Great Britain, an nouncement was made at the White House that the arbitration treaty be tween the United States and Great Britain was practically complete and with the exception of a fow com paratively unimportant detallB the terms of the treaty had been agreed upon. EM CASE NVESTIGAT10N Intimation That Prosecution May Follow. L0RIMER PUT UP TO TAFT. t'dw.rd Hlnes, the Chicago Lumber man, Alleged to Have Collect ed the $100,000 S ush Fund, on thj S and. Washington. Intimation that prosecution of certain w itnesses for j no(rti-ut. and he reached his destlna uerjury would grow out of the Sen- ion at n in A. M. ate Investigation of the election or Senator Lorlmer was forthcoming Thursday during the examination of Edward Hlnes, the Chicago million aire lumber man, whose name Is connected with the alleged $100,000 fund collected to elect Mr. Lorlmer. Mr. Hlnes flatly contradicted many j statements of previous witnesses, ; Congressional Reapportionment and the situation aroused Senator Bill without amendment providing Kenyon, of Iowa. for 433 represents ves notwlth- "Now there ought to be some standing practically all the commit prosecutions for perjury right here,", tee members had expressed them he exclaimed. He did not Indicate 8elveB 88 opponei to the Increased whom he would have indicted, but , Te entation. his remark created a profound lm- ' The Provide, for 41 represen ession tatlves over the present number and Mr.Tl'lnes1 first testimony that at- t 80 as ,t0 P"vefnt a de' tracted deep Interest was bis detail- "efse , the niwnbersh p from any ed account of how he said President Three of the 10 member. Taft. former Senator Aldrich and present, Senators La. ollotte. Du Senator Penrose had him exert his i Pont and McLean, voted in the nega- influence to have Mr. Lorlmer elected , "ve' bu whiIe eT'BB "g Jl8aPro' t Vh fit Pf tne Ingenue the other seven de- Mr" Hlnes "then detailed in Its en- dded to allow the House to have Its tlrety the testimony of Clarence S.ly the matter so peculiarly per .i monor nf th In-1 talnlng to its own affairs. The re- . u.., - ternational Harvester Company, re gnrding the conversation the two t en had at the Union League Club, ! In Chicago, shortly after Mr. Lori mer's election. Mr. Funk had testi fied that Mr. Hlnes asked him on that occasion for a $10,000 contri bution to a $100,000 Lorlmer cam paign fund. Mr. Hines testified that Mr. Funk asked for an introduction to the new senator, and for the privi- lege of contributing to his election expenses. Mr. Hlnes added that mentioned the proposed inirouucnou Mr. Lorlmer objected, because he re- ti. t..A carded Mr. Funk as one of his active , . . ,.. enemies. When the Senator explain- ed to Mr. Hlnes that he had no elec- tlon expenses to defray, Mr. Hines said he decided not to mention Mr. Funk's offer. Subsequently, he said, Mr. Funk expressed disappointment over the outcome of his conversation with Mr. Hlnes, but continued very cordial, even asking Mr. Hlnes to get him a seat In the Senate gallery here last 4tn of March, and to introduce Mrs. Funk to Mrs. Hines on one occasion last spring. Mr. Hlnes also contradicted In toto the testimony given by Wirt II. Cook, of Duluth, Minn. During the day Mr. Mines put Into the record copies of all the telegrams which had been sent to him by Sen ator Lorlmer since the latter's elec- tlon, with the exception of one, which be declared ne never receiveu. no told the committee that all his per sonal checks and those of the com panies with which he was connected were open to Its Inspection. $1,500,000 Pond for Hewa'l. Washington. President Taft ap proved an iBsue of $1,500,000 Ha waiian bonds, the money to bo used in' public improvement In the Islands. The bonds authorized by the organic act will be dated August 1, 1911, and will bear not to exceed 4V& per cent. Moros Kill Four American. Manila. Four Americans have been murdered by Moros In Mind anao, on9 of the largest of the Philippine Islands. Prospectors named Oyler and Vexesboses were murdered near Camp Overton. A plantation owner named McGill was killed by robbers at Pantar. Private Mlchaelis, of the Twenty-first In fantry, was killed at Parang. He was stabbed seven times in sight of his comrades. Aeroplane foe Every Pot Washington. Every army post In the country will be supplied with an aeroplane, which' will be shipped as soon as completed. Men from the new army training school at College Park, Md., will be detailed to operate there. Admiral Togo to Arrlv August 4. Washington. Admiral Togo, the Navy Department announced, will ar rive In New York on the Lusltania August 4. B3Y AVIATOR BREAKS RECORD File to Harvard-Ya e Boat Race With Pm ger and is Wild y Cheered. New London. Harry N. Atwood, the boy aviator, in a Burgess-Wright bipluNie, made a flight of 107 miles, carrying a passenger, In order to wit ness the Harvard-Yale boat races here, covering the distance in 125 minutes without alighting,' averag ing 51.66 miles an hour, and break ing the American record for a single pasBenger-carrylng flight across country. One hundred thousand visitors who had come to New London and were about to leave for the race course forgot all about college root ing and cheered wildly when Atwood circled twice around the Groton .Monument, directly acrosB the Thames River from the New Haven Railroad station, passed over the big drawbridge and flew over the two mile course at a speed which the waiting oarsmen at Red Top and Gales Ferry envied. The Yale and Harvard crews for the moment turn ed loose all their enthusiasm and cheered the daring aviator. Secretary of the Navy Meyer and party aboard the United States dis patch boat Dolphin applauded At wood wildly, and tbe great fleot of yachts on both sides of the race course tied down their whistles and fired salute after salute from their cannon. After passing the Dolphin, Atwood picked out the west bank of the river for a landing place. He voloplaned from a height of 1,000 feet in two magnificent sweeps and landed light ly on the ground in Riverside Park, to the north of the drawbridge. Atwood arose in the air from tho Harvard athletic field at Squantum, at 7.05 A. M., having his mech anician. Eddie Fleet, as a passen ger, lie passed over Brockton, sail ing 1,000 feet, high at a !0-mlle clip, aided by n fresh 20-milo breeze ut his back. The weather conditions were Ideal all the way across tho oialPo 0t Massachusetts and Con- REAPPORTIN0MENT PASSED Bill Adopted by Senate Without Amendmunt Washington. The Senate Coin- "jlttee on Census agreed to report . ... . ,hh(1,, fnr vppV to give Mr. La Follette time to prepare minority report which will be pre- sented by Senator Bailey. FARMER WHIPPcD BY OWL. Victim of Bird' At ack Not Expected to Live. Washington. Philip Cruzan, a wealthy farmer. Is at his borne. 15 neg west of ber6i wJlh pratically. I no hope for his recovery, as the re- 8U,t of hl encounter with a nioDstor i hoot owJ J u.ail, wuiiu naming 1.111 vufs" ' , , , yard, was struck in the face by the ' .... . .,, A - wbteh. apparent ly. n Its . n ri-. ....... ., . . 1 1 n.ntl,ln (LaAnoh 1,1a flight, had unintentionally collided with the man. The bird, infuriated, fastened Us talons in Cruzan's face and began a vicious attack. Again and again th heavy beak penetrated the man's eyes and Cruzan's efforts to beat of! the bird were in vain. Finally, Cru zan fell unconscious, the bird still pecking and clawing at his face, To Withdraw Border Troop. Washington. President Taft has under consideration the withdrawal of the troops now forming tha maneuver division in Texas. A final Cabinet meeting, and the indication! are that the withdrawal will begin I Imnicwllntelv nnrl hn rnmnletprl u-lfTi ( ,n ft nionth improved conditions in Mexico and unusual discomforts suf fered by the soldiers are the reasons assigned Re-lprocity By August 1. WnBhington. Senator Penrose. chairman of the Senate Finance Com mittee, conferred with President Taft on the Canadian Reciprocity and Fre List Bills. Senator Penrose, o:i leaV' lng the White House, declared that there would bo a vote on the Roclproo ity Bill before August 1. $150,000 In Furs Seized. New York. Imported furs to the value of $160,000 were seized here by customs officials who raided the establishment of Charles Weln schecker & Co. The firm Is charged with defrauding the Government of duties by alleged undervaluations. It Is composed of Charles and Jacob Welnscheker and Max Tamarkln, th6 last two have headquarters in Lelp tig, Germany. None of the firm is now in the city, employes said. Burned at Stake. Shawnee, Okla. Robert Swazey, a Canadian, was burned at the stakf by Mexican bandits near Fort Sum ner, N. M., June 15, according to a letter received here from Mrs Emma Bingman, mother-in-law oi the dead man. Swazey was killed because he refused to reveal the hiding place of a large amount of money which had been left In hU care by a Mexican railroad which, employed him, the letter said: Mrs Bingman has advised the Brltlsl Government of the case. EXPRESS N WESTERN STYLE Gang of Dozen Masked Men Rob Train. WOMEN ABOARD TRAIN FAINT. Penge Kept Inside ty Fusi- lad of Bullets--! r ..In Near ly Thrown Down Em bankment Erie, Pa. A fast mail and pas senger train on the Philadelphia and Erie Division of tho Pennsylvania Railroad was held up live miles from this city by a band of a dozen mask ed men. The mail and express cars were rilled, and threo of the crew C. 11. Block, of Erie, mail clerk, and H. D. Rooney, Erie, conductor, and C. F. Bomls, brakeinan were Injured. Block was shot In the right side and was taken to a hospital in a dying condition. Rooney received serious injuries when he was hit with a stone thrown by one of the robbers. Bemls was shot In tho arm. The train was due In tills city at 10.10 P. M. A few minutes before 10 o'clock, when the train was mak ing a long curve, the engineer saw an obstruction ahead. He slopped the train with all possible speed, but not before It crashed Into ties and tele graph poles that had been placed across the track. R vo ver Cracked. When the train lilt the obstruction It was first believed by t he passen gers that there hsid been a collision with another train. The next mo ment, however, the crack of revolv ers acquainted them with the real cause of the train's stop. As the train came to a standstill several of the passengers alighted to ascertain the troublo. Their pres ence drew the fire of the band of masked men, and thero was a stam pede to re-enter the cars. An unknown passenger, who, braver than the rest, caught hold of one of the robbers, was picked up bodily and thrown over a 300-foot embankment. His condition Is seri ous. The man's heid, fice and body were badly cut and his clothing torn from his back. He was taken to a hospital in an unconscious condition. The spot selected by the robbers was ideal for their work. On one Ride of the railroad Is a large ravine and on the other side Is a dense woods. The men had hidden among the trees. It was from this point that all of them mado their appear ance when the train came to a stop. Almost before the train had reach ed the obstruction the masked band had taken up their positions at prac tically every entrance to the cars. When the passengers began pouring from the train thero were a few sharp cries from the men to get back into the cars. When a number of the excited passengers failed to take this advice the bandits opened fire. They shot along the sides of the cars, level with the windows and this effectively put an end to the curiosity of the passengers. Within the cars there was a panic. A number of women fainted, while the screams of others caused much confusion. The train arrived In HiIr city about midnight. The passengers, dazed from fright, could not give a con nected story of what had taken place. Many of the women were hysterical and required attention. A large number of those aboard were from Philadelphia. Buffalo and Intermediate points. The train was made up of four day conches and two Pullmans. It meets the through Philadelphia and Buffalo train at Emporium, Pa. According to opinion here, It is not a train that expert robbers could be expected to attack. It Is believ ed the bandits were foreigners. Panic In 'he Tr n Within a few moments after word of the' holdup was received here every officer in tho city was called Into action. Many of them boarded a special train for the scene, while athers were taken there in auto mobiles and other conveyances. Albert Cnrey, engineer, by making a quick stop of the train probabVy prevented a serious disaster. Rail road men say had the heavy train struck the obstruction with much force It would have thrown the en tire train from tho track and down over the embankment. Discover Pnoumon a Cure. Chicago. That pneumonia has been conquered by Injection of a serum Is the announcement made by Professor Preston Keyes, of tho Uni versity of Chicago, in the Journal of the American Medical Association. Check Men Caught Wheeling, W. Va. Local police have arrested Harry C. Armour, alias 11. C. Treadwell, wanted at Wash ington, D. C, for having passed forged checks on tho New York Pro duce Exchange. He waB picked up on a description telegraphed here by the Washington police, and has sign ed a waiver of requisition to go back for trial. While here he passed two worthless checks on a local business house. Very Wet Town Now Dry. Slstersville, W. Va. This town, the wettest In West Virginia and In the center of the oil region, whore men get awfully thirsty, has mount ed the sprinkler and will be dry for some little time to come. At a meet ing of the town council the dry ele ment refused to grant licenses to the saloons which applied. The grand Jury, which has been in session for days, bas Indicted all the local saloonkeepers. THE NEWS OF PEHMSYLVAJA Sunbury. A representative body of the State Grange met here and Instituted what promises to be tho most Important action ever undertak en by tbe grange. ' They formed an organization, which will be known as the United Stores Association tho object of which Is, by co-operation on the part of the farmers, to place the products of thb farm first-handed to the consumer. The plan Is for the association to receive the farm prod ucts of Its members and distribute thorn to the association stores in the large centers of population. Auto trucks will be tarried and the asso ciation will be operated on the per cont. system. The main object of the association Is to lower the cost of farm products for the benefit of both farmer and consumer by dispensing' with middle men, who, It Is assorted, receive the greatest profit of all concerned, and who, the grango declares, are large ly responsible for the high cost of liv ing. The meeting was presided over by William T. Creasy, or Hloomslmrn, master of tho Stato Grange. Oilier delegates were Leonard Rhone, Cen tre Hall, pa.U maHter; E. B. Dorsett, Mansfield, State lecturer; William Armstrong. Alderson; I. Frank Chal mers, TouKhkenumon; C. It. Hildine, Orangevllle, members of tho Execu tive Committee; A. Nevln Detrlck, ed itor of the "Grange News;" J. T. Ail man, Thompsontown; George T. Pow ell, Ghent, N. Y., president of tliu Agricultural Exports Association, ami Holland Onsfrory, New York, who evolved the idea of co-operation in the farm world. Reading. Attorneys for Mrs. Martha Dennis, brought u civil suit, against George Blank to recover $ln, 000 damages for shooting Mrs. licn nis in the leg on March 16 last, the effect of which was the amputation 5f the limb in a Lancaster hospital. Blank and the husband of the wo man had a quarrel when It Is all- p il Blnnk' fired a shotgun at Dennis which missed him, but the shot pen etrated his wife's knee. Bellefonte. Mrs. Charles B. Mai lory, of Braddock, was electrocuted by touching a live electric light wire while visiting at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jas. C. Smith, at State College. A hard storm put out the lights in the houso and Mrs. Mallory went Into the cellar to in vestigate and accidentally touched (he wire where it was not properly insulated. Reading. While plowing potatoes on his farm at the foot of the lllue Mountain near Bethel, this county, Henry Stoinbach unearthed the grave of an Indian brave. He found live spear Heads, a celt or chisel, 7 'j nclies long, arrow nemi mm " all of which are In a good state of preservation. Lancaster. Rhesa Swclgart, of Reamstown. has confessed that lie set fire to tho Hoover barn, near Hahnstown. Swelgart was examin ed by Dr. J. F. Mentzer, of Ephrata, and Dr. E. R. Miller, of Stevens. They declared that he is of unsound mind, and Justice of the Peace Shlmp '" mttted him to the county insane asy lum. Norristown Angclo Poletto, em ployed by the Norristown Water Com pany, in laboring around tho com pany's reservoir, was killed by Hd''' ning. When a heavy rainstorm came up he took refuge under a tree anJ tho tree was struck by lightning. Reading S. V. Eisenhauer, Meek vllle, this county, has been appointed health ofllcer of Bethel and Tulpe- hocken Townships by Stato Health Commissioner S. G. Dixon, to succeed G. E. SchlasBtnan, resigned. Bethlehem. Perhaps tho youngest person ever admitted to St. Luke' Hospital In South Bethlehem, is the S-day-old daughter of John Schaf for, of Allontown. The Infant Is suf fering from a broken arm and hit York. Rev. Dr. J. F. Meslck, a retired Presbyterian minister, cele brated his ninety-olghth blrtliiW here. Ho was born In Albany, V He fought with Harriet Hcwl Stowe for the freodom of the colorea race. Huzleton. Joseph Marone. 1 years old, with John Spalonc years old. both of Huzleton. vu-re seized with cramps while swimnilM at Stockton and drowned. York. Earl Schaffer, Bonalr, tb' county, In attempting to shoot groundhog on his father's plu. s" himself in the foot. Gettysburg. While doinK ! work near the battlefield, two m came upon the bones of a dead n supposedly a soldier, near which a lot of bullets, two Vermont P j a belt and cartrldgo box. The 8 , was missing, but all the other bo wore found. StroudBburg. Thoodoro lcW. a Lackawanna section man, va ed at tho East Stroudsburg s"1 His head was caught between and crushed. . . . cotn 1' .;iectri The members oi mu - re. Medical Examining Board ' ,U1( appointed as follows: Al. Rauch, Johnstown; W. O. he toona; C. L. JohnstonbatiRn. )(i hem; L. F. Crawford, WLWt, EwlngandR. E. Holmes, I'r and S. J. H. Louther, Sonicr T." i,ln COl"1'" A delegation of Daupm'1 political leaders called ui" . State Highway Commission f ter to urge the early conr the River Road and the ' ; Koad, In this county.