Rend mii County News ' Mr. Wh'IcCcnnellsburg, Pa. i 'When the pets suffer. A large gray cat leaped to death from a 13 story window of a New "York hotel, and a telegram gives the bxplanatlon that the animal committed suicide In this way because Its mis tress bad sailed for Europe, leaving It Iiehlnd, says the rittsburg Chronicle Telegraph. Whether the cat commit ted suicide or nut Is Immaterial, but the Incident does serve a purpose In calling attention to a pathetic Bide of the vacation season. In thousands of tomes all over the country there are tiouschold pets, such as dogs and cats nd birds, and as many of these homes are closed during ihe summer, or at least for several weeks, the pets are In most Instances left to snHl for themselves. For the sake of the song fiero are neighbors who will tuke tharge of the canaries during the ab sence of their owners, but fur the dugs tod (he cats there are, as a rule, only Jiarsh words nnd buffeting from the neighbors, and sticks nnd stones from the urchins of the community, and the poor creatures, homeless, friendless, and abused, nre indeed ob jects of pity. It would he much more humane for the owners of these pets to put them to death before going way on their vacation trips, Instead of leaving them to their fate, but the practice of deserting them goes on ear after year. A bulletin recently Issued by the census department shows that the X'nlted States leads the world In man ufacturing silk, with the possible ex ception of China, from which no fig ures are obtainable. We took first ylace from France In 1905, and have maintained our lead. We not only are the greatest manufacturers of silk goods, but the greatest consumers. Al though we manufactured In 1909 silk worth $196,425,000, we exported less than one per cent, of the goods we made. Our silk industry In 1869 mounted to $12,210,000. It was more than $41,000,000 ten years later. It had more than doubled again in 1689, when It was $87,298,000. It was $107,256. COO In 1909 and more than $133,000,000 five years later. The Instruction of school children n the danger of railroad trespassing Is a good thing to take up. Much of the danger Is Incurred through child ish thoughtlessness and failure of re quisite attention of parents and ln ttmctors to the matter. The fact that cars and trains have the right of way on railway tracks cannot be too strong Ij impressed on the youthful mind. In fact, it might with advantage be brought to some adult attention. At the same time, much danger, particu larly to the young and to the aged and .feeble, might be lessened by more at tention on the part of car and train crews to the laws governing the rate of speed In cities, particularly the ordinances applying to the street crossings. Burgeon n. M. Brown. U. S. N., has discovered a method of treating at mospheric air so that It shall sustain Jlfe for us as much as a week In an enclosure of moderate size even though no fresh air Is Introduced. If the scheme really works, we shall hear of public men and faBhlonablo women seeking the rest cure by a week's vacation in a submarine Im mersed say a hundred miles off shore. Somebody who claims to have con ducted a scientific Investigation an nounces that music will quench a jnans1 thirst for strong liquor. If this is the case tba bands that have leen maintained by some of the iashlonable cafes are likely to be compelled to look elsewhere for en gagements. Another comet has been sighted. If Jt creates all the commotion as cribed In this sphere to Halley's corn et, its discoverer ought to be Jailed on the charge of disorderly conduct, so that other seekers after these mis chief breeding celestial vagrants may be discouraged from breaking the pub He's peace of mind. Now a scientist announces that the lalo is a real thing, and that a faint glow can actually come from the brain, the result of radium stored there. This explanation, however, will destroy the value of halos, us some brains radiate nothing but faint glows. Confectioners say the bonbon has passed and that young women's appe tites must be figured upon In candy making. Time was when an oyster tew, at least, was a certain and addi tional obligation. As you step up to the marble topped counter In the drug store and call for your favorite fizz, ask the young man If he mixes saccharin with his soda .water, and watch his face as he ans wers. When the weather man climbs to the 100 mark on the thermometer It does not mean that he has achieved a lofty place in the hearts of his countrymen tAnd yet the misguided Individual Is carrying on like a steeple jack. President Emeritus Eliot of Har vard says no American city of 100,000 Inhabitants or over Is anywhere near as clean as it might be. Many small- er towns in this country might be gleaner than they are- TO STAY PANIC SOLUO TRUST Tennessee Coal and Iron Com pany Deal. STORY CF A PLOT IS DENIED. Brother of M.k Hanoi Tell the House Investigating Commu tes Thai the I rannctivn Saved the Day- New York. No ulterior motives lurked behind the taking over of the Tennessee Coul uud Iron Company by the I'nited Stales Steel Corporation during the financial panic of lituT, In the opinion of L. C. llutina, of Cleveland, one of the syud.caio own ers of trie Tennessee concern belore the merger, who spent the day on the witness-stand before the Steel Truat Investigating Committee of t lie House of Representatives. Tnal surreptitious motives had been sug gested. Air. llautia, who is a bro ther of the late senator Mark liaiina, admitted, but he never had credited the reports. He believed the trans action wus necessary to avert the failure of the New ork banking and brokerage firm of Moore & Schley, who held too much Tennessee Coal and Iron stock as collateral for loans, and to avert wild spreading of threat ening business disaster. In answer to a series of questions by Representative Beall, of Texas, Mr. Hanna said he thought the Con gressman believed a plot had been framed whereby the Tennessee Coal and Iron Company would be gobbled up by the steel interests, but he had li o knowledge of such a plot, and did not credit such an Idea. Before the threatened failure of Moore & Schley," asked Representa tive Beall, "had not the United States Treasury poured $50,000,000 Into New York to stop the panic? "I think so," Mr. Hanna replied. "Also before that time," Mr. Beall continued, "had not Mr. J. Plerpont Morgan and his associates advanced $60,000,000 to relieve the financial situation?" 'I heard it so stated," said Mr. Hanna. "After all that the panic was not averted," Mr. Beall resumed, and can you tell me why the taking up of only $6,000,000 In loans on the! Tennessee Coal and Iron collateral of Moore & Schley affected that restora- j some light on the tragedy, were bibo tion of confidence in the business ' taken to police headquarters, world which the United States Treas- It was declared at headquarters ury and the Morgan millions had that Paul Geldel confessed to Dep been unable to do?" I utv Commissioner Dougherty and "The only explanation," Mr. Hanna ' District Attorney Whitman that he replied, after some hesitation, "Is j chloroformed and robbed Jackson, that the panic up to that time had ! Mr. Jackson was murdered In the not reached that character of bus!-1 midst of the hotel nnd club district, ness houses which were Involved in ! where the night life Is almost as ac- this transaction. I think from your line of questions that you believe the sale of the Tennessee Coal and Iron Company was a plot. I never thought so. I still wish I could nave neia on to my stock, but It seemed absolutely necessary to sell It to avert serious trouble." BUTTED TO DEATH BY RAM Mrs. Antlontto Zoil Found Dead in Har Cowshed. Muskegon, Mich. That Mrs. Antoinette Zoll, of Conklln, who was found dead In a cowshed in the rear of her farm home wns not murdered, but came to her death by being butted by a ram, Is the conclusion practically arrived at by ofllcers In vestigating the case. The sheep was found In the fields Its hornB bloody and a large patch of blood on the back of Its neck. The theory is that the ram attacked Mrs. Zoll as she ran around the house In teror and finally knocked her down. When It left her, It is thought she managed to drag herself Into the shed, where she died. r i ... r ... r.i..i. Fright Cure. Cripple. Harrisonburg, Va. A cripple from birth, Joseph Summers Friday threw away his crutches and, crazed with fright after accidentally shooting a' small girl, ran In his bare feet Into . the country. He (led so rapidly that! he has not yet been overtaken. The child, Ruth Enswller, five years old, may die. The shooting occurred while Summers was cleaning a re volver, which was discharged. Fell Dead at Card Table. ParlB. Naoum Pacha. Turkish ambassador to France, fell dead at the Union Diplomats' Club. Naoum had taken a place at a card table and was In the act of taking up a hand when he fell backward. Death wns due to congestion of the brain, caused by the Intense heat. Historic Sh p Snved. Washington. The oil sailing na val vessel Portsmouth, now used as a quarantine ship at Norfolk, Va., will not be dismantled or disturbed In any way until Congress passes upon the proposition to fit her out In condition to sail around to San Francisco to be preserved there as a relic. The Portsmouth raised the American flag at Buena Yerba, now Ban Francisco, In the war with Mex ico. It Is estimated the repairs will oot $25,090. Female Guards Pu' M" Out. New York. When 5,000 fancy leather goods workers, mostly girls, went on strike the employers hired a group of husky women guards to offset the strikers' pickets. Four of these guardB put a man picket out of business. Nutmeg Br degrooirn Stinpw Middletown, Conn. Because bride grooms are growing more stingy as to clergymen's fees, Rev. J. A. Court right asks that the ministers be given 26 onts of the marriage license fee. STOP! i . ' Hi PRESIDENT TAFT SLAIN IN HOTEL REBUKES DEHWERS Wm. H. Jackson Dead on Bed room Floor. BELLBOY IS UNDER ARREST. Jackson, Aroused by Attempt to Chloroform H m, Makes Brave Fight for UfeFlrst Stun, ned by Blow. New York. Paul Geldel, a 17 year old boy of Hartford, Conn., who was employed as a bellboy at the Hotel Iroquois, was arrested In connection with the murder of William Henry I Jackson, an aged and well-to-do . Wall street broker, who was found strangled to death in his room at the hotel. Geidel was taken to police head quarters, where, according to Deputy Police Commissioner Dougherty, he will be charged with the murder. Four other persons, three men and a oniau. no u . ueneveu ,., ; tive as the day. , , In some manner which the police do not attempt to explain the man j effected an entrance to Mr. Jack- : son s room on tne lenin uoor oi me , Hotel Iroquois, at 49 West Forty- fourth street. While he was rlf.mg the apartment the broker evidently awoke and attacked him. The strug gle must, have been a short one, for the evidence Is that the thief was a powerful man and Mr. Jackson was not only feeble, but had been In bad r.ealth for some time. Three terrific blows over the head, which left ugl; gaBhes, evidently fioo.-ed the old man. Not content with this, the murderer then stuffed c. washcloth half way down Mr. Jack son's thoat and with his bare hands throttled the littlo remaining life out of him. The price of this crime was about $30 in money, a watch that was an heirloom In Jackson's family and a ! few small trinkets, such as scarfplns, cuff buttons and shirt studs, I While Mr. Jackson was not a rich j man, he was generally reputed to bo ; wealthy. Connected with the Wall street firm of Van Schnlck & Co., a member of the New York Yacht and ft her exclusive cltibs.and much given ,0 extreme liberality In his tips to the : . ......... .i.. employes of the hotel, he gained the reputation of being a man of means. MORE MONEY FOR THE MAINE Whole Vessel May Havi to be Re moved Piecemeal. Washington. Congress Is to be asked by the War Department to ap propriate more money for the re moval of the Maine. Though the exact amount to be asked for is not known, It is under- ! 8,0011 thnt 11 wl" be nlore than 200' 000. Thus far, more than $400,000 lias been expended on the task. It was said that least three months more will be required for the work. Practically the whole vessel will have to be removed piecemeal. Stlmson In Po-to Rlcs. San Juan, Porto Rico. Henry I,. Stlmson, the American Secretary of War, who, with Brigadier General Clarence ft. Edward, chief of the Bureau of Insular Affairs, and others, arrived here Friday, spent a portion of the day Interviewing business and professional men of Porto Rico. The Secretary was accorded ovations in all tho towns along the automobile route from Ponce to San Juan. Citi zenship was the keynote of all the welcoming speeches. Wellman Give It Up Cheyenne, Wyo. Information that Walter Wellman has given up the project of making a Bocond at tempt to cross tho Atlantic in a dlriglblo balloon, transferring the management to Melvin Vnnlman, chief engineer of the last expedition, was obtained here through a per sonal letter from Mr. Vanlnian to J. Lovett Rockwell. Mr. Vanlman wrote thnt he has a dirigible well on the way to completion nt Atlantic City, and believes the expedition will be successful. Controller Bay Message to the Point. MUCH HARM DONE ALASKA. Says Thara I No Danger of the Controller Railway and Navi gation Company Monopo lizing thi Field. Scorn for Scandalmonger. The acrimony of spirit and the Intense malice that have been engendered In respect of the administration of the gov ernment in Alaska and in the consideration of measures pro posed for her relief and the wanton recklessness and eager ness with which attempts have been made to besmirch the char acters of high officials having to do with the Alaskan govern ment, and even of persons not In public life, present a condi tion that calls for condemnation and requires that the public be warned of the demoralization that has been produced by the hysterical suspicions of good people and the unscrupulous and corrupt nils-representations of the wicked. The helpless state to which the credulity of some and the malevolent scandal mongerlng of others have brought the people of Alaska In their struggle for its de velopment ought to give the public pause. (From the President's Con troller Bay Message.) Washington. In terms of bitter denunciation for those who "in the Intensity of their desire to besmirch all who invest" In Alaska, "operate upon the minds of weak human In terests" and "prompt fabrications of false testimony," President Taft gave the Senate his version of the circumstances leading up to the entry of harbor rights on Controller Bay, Alaska, by Richard S. Ryan, and repudiated with fierce Invective the famous "Dick to Dick" letter. The message was almost Roose velt inn In Its use of the "short and ugly" word. That President Taft Is strongly In favor of extending Alaskan develop ment without delay Is shown by the Mowing pnragraph: "The thing which Alaska needs is development, and where rights and franchises can be properly granted to encourage Investment and construc tion of railroads without conferring exclusive privileges, I believe It to be In accordance with good policy to grant them." The message accompanied the documents concerning Controller Bay, called for by a resolution adopted in the Senate on June 27 last. Cook County' Vast Wealth. Chicago. Cook county's real es tate Is worth more than the personal property of Its residents, according to figures given out by the Board of Assessors. Tho real property In the county Is valued at $720,000,000, while the personal property Is esti mated to be worth $652,710,448, or a total of $1,372,710,448. Find Watch In A'llqator. Forsyth, Ga. A gold watch bear ing the monogram "J. T." waB found In the stomach of a giant alligator killed near here. Residents believe this explains the disappearance of Janet Thornton, 12 years ago. Cltv't Auto Bill Bl". New York. The 100 automobiles of the city cost $220,505.78 and were repaired last year at an expense of $176,570.91. Joy riding cost the city a pretty penny. Postofflco Appointment. Washington. Mack T. Roberts wns appointed postmaster at Eggle ton, Putnam county, W. Va. E. J. Norflect was appointed rural carrier and Josh Brltt substitute on tho route at Holland, Va. U. e. to Have t Ir Fiest New York. Gen. James Allen, chief of the United States Signal Corps, declares that within a year this country will have a fleet of 20 aerial warships, manned by 40 officers. THE WIRE TRUST MEN FINED Thirty-Seven Manufacturer Piead Guilty- Joined to Re strain Trade. , New York. Thirty-seven of Ihe 84 wire manufacturers and their em ployes, who were Indicted by the Krand Jury hero on June 29 on the marge of combining In nine pools to the restraint of trade in the wire business, entered pleas of nolo con tendere before Judge Archbald, in the criminal branch of the United States Circuit Court here, and each was fined $1,000 on the initial count ar.d $100 on every udd'.Uonal count in the Indictment against him. ' ie total amount of the fines imposed Is $42,700, and of this sum $21,000 waa paid to Commissioner Shields before he closed his ollice for the night. In the case of most of the 37 ap pearing before Judge ArcUba'd the nolo contendere was entered to sup plant the original plea of not guilty already made; for a few the nolo contendere was tho Initial plea. Dis trict Attorney Wise has heard from the lawyer representing several other Indicted wire men thnt they, too, will come Into court and enter the plea of nolo contendere. Those who pleaded and were sen-teuer-d to bo lined, some of them on ns high us six and eight convictions, represented the following, alleged, by the government to have participated in the nln pooling associations: Lead Uncased Rubier Cable Association, Fine Magnet V:e Association, Rubber-covered Wire tisorlutlon, Wire Rope Association. Weather-proof and Magnet Wire Association,. Under ground Power Cable Association, Telephone Cable Association, Horse shoe Manufacturers' Association and Bnre Copper Wire Association. Though several who paid up today were listed under scattering Indict ments ns representatives of the Bare Copper Wire Association, Wllllnm Palmer, the president of the Ameri can Steel and Wire Company, whose name headed the list under the Bare Copper Wire Association, and who was Indicted seven times, was not one of those to appear. MERELY ADMC NISHMENT Wilson Doe Not Ask for Condign Punishment for Wiley. Washington. It Is known here that Secretary of Agriculture Wilson, in a report to President Taft, has recommended that Dr. Harvey W. Wiley, the pure food expert, be ad- monlshed, but not dismissed. Sec I retary Wilson, It is understood, de clares leniency must be shown Dr. ,Wllcy because of his valued services to the government in the past and his usefulness for the future. For this reason he apparently does not believe that "contllgn punishment" should bo meted out In the case. Under the recommendation the President will bo able to retain Dr. Wiley In his position, as It has been believed nil the time he would do, without seeming to Ignore the advice of his attorney general. Thus an embarrassing situation will be avoided. IN AIR OVER FOUR HOURS 'Johnstone Brsaks All Amer cin En durance Raco'd Hempstead, L. I. St. Croix John stone, In a monoplane, broke all American endurance records for both biplane and monoplane on the Hemp stead Plains. Mr. Johnstone remained continu ously in the air for four hours one minute and a fraction. In this time his machine flew more than 195 miles. His official time was 4.01.53 4-5. He had planned to fly for seven hours, but a leak In one of the three gasoline tanks caused much of the fluid to be lost, and this compelled the aviator to descend af ter he had made 39 laps of the five mile course. Tidal Wave Kills Forty. Tokio. Forty persons are known to bo dead In the Province of Tokio, part of which was overwhelmed by a tidal wave following in the wake of a devastating typhoon which had raged for 24 hours. Part of the em bankment In the Fttkagawa district was washed away. The Suzakl quar ter was Inundated and scores of houses demolished. The damage Is estimated nt $1,000,000. Live With a Broken Neck. Minneapolis. Sixteen - year - old Martin Gray is at a hospital in Minneapolis with a broken neck and the father, Fred L. Gray, president of the Fred L. Gray Company, is plowing through seas on a fast liner toward the bedside of his Injured son. The boy Btruck a dredge heap head first while diving at .Lake Calhoun. His case Is proving a puzzle to sur geons, i More Germs Than Ice-cream. Boston. Announcement that 55, 000,000 bacteria had been found in a half spoonful of Ice-cream by the Boston health authorities caused the declaration by Prof. James O. Jordan, of the ioard of Health, thnt he would ask the Legislature to pass an emerg ency measure providing that the frozen delicacy must hereafter be sold and served only In original packages. The sample was purchas ed In the North End tenement dis trict. Insane Asylum Burnt. Hutchinson, Kas. The State Asylum for the Insane at WInfleld was destroyed by fire during the night, and the. 1,000 inmates are housed at Bluffs, two miles south of WInfleld, until the state can make provisions for them. They will prob ably be kept In tents until other buildings can be secured. No one was Injured In the lire, which Is sup posed to have resulted from delect ) wiring. THE CANADIANS 1 REG PROCITY Now the Issue Before the Peo ple of That Country. . CAMPAIGN WILL BE BITTER. Premier Laurler Carrie Out Hi Threat, Dissolve tie Parlia ment and Appea to the Country. Ottawa, Ont. The eleventh Par liament of Canada passed out of ex istence Saturday, and upon the polit ical complexion of a new one to bo elected September 21 will depend tho fate of the reciprocity aeement be tween the United States and Canada. Premier Laurler decided to usk for an Immediate dissolution at a meet ing of -his cabinet Saturday after noon, and at once notified Earl Grey, tho governor general. A short tlmo later a special issu of the Offlelal Gazette was printed, containing the formni announcement and giving legal effect to the edict. As the House does not sit on Sat urdays there were only a few mem bers at the Parliament buildings when the action was announced. In both Liberal and opposition rooms the news was received with cheers and the members hurried away to telegraph their political workers that the campaign was on. Came a Surprl-. The announcement of dissolution came somewhat as a surprise, as few persons expected It before next weok at the earliest. The absoluto refusal of the Conservative minority In the House to close the debate on the gov ernment's reciprocity resolution and permit a vote upon It, which would mean Its adoption, and the im probability of a chnnge In their at titude, resulted In the government's decision that It was' useless to keep Parliament sitting another day. This is the first time a session of the Dominion Parliament has been closed without the appearance of the governor general In military state at the Senate chamber to give formal prorogation. As the Senate was not due to reassemble until August 9, and as prorogation could not take place without both houses being present, dissolution was resorted to. The Sole lue It Is generally agreed thnt the two months' campaign before tho coun try will be vigorous and even bitter. Reciprocity probably will be the sole Issue, although the Conservatives in Quebec mny seek to Inject the naval Issue Into the contest. The antl annexntion cry already has been raised by the Conservatives In all parts of the country. Sir Wilfrid Laurler and his minis ters will take the stump and conduct plntform campaigns In all provinces. The prime minister will confine his attention to the central provinces and Quebec, while Mr. Fielding, minister of finance, who helped to draft the reciprocity agreement, will devote his attention to the maritime provinces. . TRAINS CRSH IN STORM Eight Lives Crushed Cut at Grlnd itone Station. Grindstone, Me. Eight were kill ed and 14 Injured when an excursion train and a regular passenger train on the Bangor and Aroostook Rail road met head-on at this station. Five passengers of the excursion train were killed. The engineer of the excursion train and two firemen were also among the killed. The collision Is believed to have been due to a misunderstanding In orders and was made possible by one of the most violent midsummer storms that has swept this part ot the country In years. The passenger train was bound from Van Buren to Bangor. The excursion train was returning from Kidder's Point, nenr Searsport, on Penobscot Bay, to Presquo Isle and was running a minute late. Grindstone has just 43 Inhabitants and, of course, no physicians or medical facilities, but the villagers did everything In their power for the Injured until help camo from other towns. Uncle Sam Saves m Million. Washington. That the War De partment because of administrative methods just Installed, will be nble to save a million -dollars in the cost of keeping up the "military estnl lishment" was stated by Quartermas ter General J. B. Aleshlre to the House Committee on Expenditures In the War Department. Wise Move In Chicago. Chicago. It is reported that the publishers of all the big Chicago dallies have entered into an agree ment to drop all premium giving, popularity contests, etc., and sub stitute therefore "legitimate business methods." It Is also reported that Chicago Sunday papers will be raised to sell at six cents, nnd publishers of morning papers are In agreoment to raise prices to two cents, begin ning September 1. Bones From the Maine. Havana. The bones recovered from the wreck of the Maine, which represent 16 bodies, were transfer red without ceremony to Cabanas fortress and deposited In the case mate, over which has been placed a guard of honor. The remains of two additional bodies were recover ed on tho berth deck, near the quarters of the warrant officers. These remains, like the others, pre sent no possibility of Identification. THE NEWS OF PEHMSYLVAXIA Nesquehonlng. The Lehigh Coal & Navigation Company, which owns all the land throughout the Panther Creek Valley, through which runs one of the richest anthracite coal veins In the entire world has an nounced that it will construct one of the largest coal breakers in the world a short distance from this place, one that .will cost several mil lions of dollars and having an an nual output of a million tons of coal. The plan of the company Is to drive a tunnel from the top of Nesquehon lng Mountain down to a level of sev eral hundred feet below the surface of the main valley, where another shaft will be erected at the breaker and the two shafts will be connected by a tunnel through which conl will be conveyed from great distances. The breaker will be erected midway between this place and Lansford, where for a distance of five miles and a width of several miles no coal has yet been mined, but where It exists In exhaustless quantities. All plans and arrangements have been completed by the company, which ex pects to have this mammoth colliery In operation in two years. McKeesport. City officials to be deprived of office the first Monday In December, by reason of an amend ment to tho law governing cities of the third-class, will try again for the places they now hold, with the exception of Mayor H. S. Arthur, who Is not permitted that privilege. An nouncement that the amendment had been signed by Tenor came as a thunderbolt to the politicians of Alle gheny county, after it had been dis covered by W. S. McClatchey, chief clerk of the County Commissioners. It had been passed by the Legisla ture the latter part of April and ilgned by the Governor, June 21, without attracting general attention. Pottsvllle. The tax collectors of this county in convention decided to demand an increase In commission for collecting the school taxes under the new school code. Instead of two per cent, commission they demand five per cent., because of the extra labor entailed by the new law which compels them to notify every lax payer of the taxes duo within thirty days after the duplicate Is opened. Many of the collectors stated If their demands are not granted they will go on strike and refuse to accept re election. Tyrone. Eight employees of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company were injured In a head-on collision between two locomotives here. En gine "No. 620 with Engineer J. G. Hull and Conductor H. R. Harshncr ger moving west with one car at tached and a local engine and cabin with Engineer S. W. Keith and Con ductor II. H. Miller going east, col lided near the depot. Hazleton. Mayor Charles Brin-h and the other city officials of Hazle ton expressed no fear that, they come under the provisions of the "ripper" features of tho new third-class city law. The Mayor, City Treasurer and City Comptroller hero were elected In 1910, and their terms will expire In 1913, the year of the next mu nicipal election after that of 1011. South Bethlehem. More than two hundred members of the Clauss fam ily attended the ninth annual reunion at Waldhelm Park. The Clauds, who came from the Bethlehem?. Philadelphia, Llmcport, Saegersvilio, East Greenville, Raubsville and vari ous Lehigh county towns, arc de scendants of Nathan and Daniel Clauss. Lebanon. Grant, seven-year-old son of Grant Wagner, of Palmyra, was perhaps fatally Injured, am! Mrs, John Lettich, of near Palmyra, seri ously hurt, when the team occupied by them was struck by a Lebanon Valley Street Railway car at. Horn gardner'B Lane, two miles east of Palmyra. Lancaster. Mrs. Samuel Warner, a member of a prominent family, committed suicide by hanging her self In the attic of her homo at White House. Her body wns found by net husband. Mrs. Warner has been in 111 health for some time. Hazleton. While picking lnieket berries in the woods. Bernard Wlsske, a ten-year-old West Ha" ton bov, was struck by a bolt of WM nlng during a short thunderstorm and instantly killed. Andrew No alkl, a boy with him, was knock! n down by the same bolt, but cpeapei Injury. klllei' Marietta. A mad dog was larieuu. n - , i..i nnr 01 on tho DUliy inrm, j" town, after It had bitten several K'P-. and gave several men a chase. Temple. While Edwin M. lb"''' an employee at the Muhlen -Brewing plant, at Hydo Park, n here, was working on the t Hit 1 he was stricken with purnlys n fell a distance of twenty foot f'' window to the roof of the house, sustaining a compound ture of the skull, resulting in d' -"n- Carlisle. - Contention anions tjj directors of the Shlppensburg ini & Manufacturing Company rn application to be made for , The hearing Is to be held i nn A y 6 The capital Btock Is 2-'.ul1 Lower Heldelberg.-Tl.o U9; vllle grist mill, owned by 't';,a,,(ltt.1, baker and tennntcd by w ' T,)( Sterne, wns destroyed by loss is partly covered by m r' Tho origin of the fire is a niJ81 Reading. County Treasurer (J. instituted thirty Indivldua against merchants in the c -county who have failed to I mercantile tax for the ensiilnR j Reading. Ignatius Shade, a War veteran nnd retired ineu ' fl his city, died oZ a conipl diseases In his seventy-s.'coud