The Fulton County News I McConnellsbiirg, Pa. PHILOSOPHY AND PLASTERS. For ttio most part mankind has learned to accept the varied happen ings of life In a philosophical spirit. Hut there always will be people who, forgetting the inspired adage which recites that sufllclcnt unto the day Is the evil thereof, continually look ahead for trouble. The other day a big snake In the Bronx zoo was found to be suffering from bronchitis. The ordinary remedies were given and In addition the reptile's throat was wrap ped with adhesive piaster for a dis tance of six feet the unusual space being covered, perhaps because It Is difficult to tell where a snake's throat ends and the rest of him begins. And now an uneasy correspondent writes !r his dally paper and asks how the lactor and the attendants propose to remove the plaster. It Is possible, that f ls Inquiring person has had trouble Ith plnsters and knows how unpleas ant It Is suddenly to separate the stickers from the human skin. But, why worry about the snake? Why look for trouble even before the plas ter begins to draw? When the prop er time comes and the usefulness of the big mufTlcr Is ended, it Is possible the cobra will slough the plasters as he might his skin. A writer contends that for the defi nition of "home" as "the place where a man can do as he pleases." There might be much advanced In favor of the proposition that It Is the place where woman can do as she pleases at least she generally does. Well, why not? Who makes the home? Every Ideal home owes Its greatest charms to woman's part In Its making. Man Is aware of that, and the American man generally accepts woman's exclu sive dominion In the' home of her un questioned right, his privilege being to finance the enterprise and to enjoy the comfort which the presiding ge nius provides for him. It Is reported that a New Haven man recently had his eye put out by a lady's bat pin, w hich protruded from the side of the "lid" sufficiently to con occt with any one occupying the same street car seat with the owner of the deadly ornament Whatever may be said In favor of "milady's" hat orna ment, a great deal of damaging testi mony can be brought against It, and It Is reasonably certain that If It was an adaptation of "mere" man It would long ago have been forced Into the "has-been" class. But woman, with her supreme power, and ber hat pin, make a combination difficult to do feat. Foot and mouth disease, which broke out three months ago In the province of Haute-Savoie. has spread rapidly and Is now threatening central and southern France. Pigs, sheep and cat tle are affected. The best policy with reference to this scourga is to keep It out of a country by the most strin gent Inspection system for Imports of live stock. The example of France demonstrates that the disease Is bard to fight when It once gets In. And now the pure food experts are after some of the soda fountain drinks. charging, among other things, that they are habit forming. Corrobora tlon might be had from the swain of the summer girl, who views with alarm the rapidity with which one Ice cream soda follows another. A good deal of sympathy has gone out to Hetty Green's son because In an Incautious momept be announced that he Intended to marry within a year and bad not picked out the girl. But he now says he will not marry a New York woman. And he la care fal'.y remaining In New York. The latest fish story comes from Pine Brook, N. J., where, it Is claimed, an angler cast for fish and pulled up a chest of silverware. The fact that the story does not come from Win ated, Conn., leads us to place some tilth In It A recent order prohibits profanity on the part of those engaged In the construction of the Panama canal. The privilege Is no doubt reserved for crit ics of the work. A stranger wins $100 by betting that "choir" and "quire" mean the same thing. Will dictionaries new have to be seized as gambling paraphernalia? The Newport society girl who eloped with a chauffeur Is away behind the times. The proper stunt now Is to fly away with an aviator. It hM been discovered tbfU an octu dus can be scared to death. This Is true only in the animal world, not In the Industrial. When cholera germs tackle caviar they meet a foe they cannot cope with. We take great pleasure In an nouncing for the benefit of the suffer ing poor that the price of terrapin has dropped. We are told that the pea crop will be a small one this year. Our citizens are advised to use more care and not let so many roll off the knife. . China wants $33,000,000 Indemnity from Mexico or fight. Either alterna tive Is equally difficult to obtain. 01 FLOODED DIM GIVES II Black River Falls Is Swept by Floods. CAUSED BY HEAVY RAINS Number Of Buslneos Houses and Dwellings Destroyed A Three Story Hotel the First Structure To Co. Lacrosse, Wis. The situation at Black River Falls, a town or 2.000 in habitants, which was swept by a flood. When the waters of the Black ltiver. swollen by recent ruins, washed through the .embankment of the La crosse Water Power Company daniB at Hatflold, is worse by far than was even feared when the Hood swept upeli the town. Half of the business section has been destroyed, together with a part of the residence district, and it Is laid by the townspeople who have taken refuge on high hind unable to make an effort for the protection ol their atores and homes, that the town I 111 be wiped out. Whether or not lives have been lost Is not yei cer tain. Thus far two persons have not been accounted for. The Destruction Total. The buildings have been not merely flooded, but destroyed. The water, flowing in tremendous volume", under mined one building aftor another, and as each collapsed the debris for the most part was carried away. The Tromont Hotel, a throe-story struc ture, was the first to go. No precau tions could be taken to stop the wrecking of the town, the residents finding it a dlfllcult problem to save themselves, their families and more valuable possessions. None of the stocks In the store was saved and little of the heavier furni ture In the houses, the people, al though they knew of the overflowing of the Hatfield dam, showing little fear of Its effects ui.til the waters burst on them. The disaster was caused by the sudden rise of the Black River bohind the two dams from the LarrosRe Water Power Company following rains which lasted almost a week. The dam withstood the' pressure, but In each case the river washed around the side, taking out a big section of the river bank and coming down on the country below It almost as great vol ume as though the dams had been swept away. Farmers Taken Unaware. Besides the damage at Black River Falls, a great tract of surrounding country was overrun. Effort was made to warn farmers, but the tele-1 phone wires were the first to go down. , L,i ., f mnnv settlers, who i.. ,.r fln,l ....til It nothing of the flood until It ' their localities, is the cause of , pprehension. j struck some a PHILADELPHIA'S SCANDAL. Warrants for Arreats Of Several Lead ing City Officials. Philadelphia. Warrants for the ar rest of Director of Public Safety Henry Clay. City Architect Carl B. Zllenziger, John B. Wiggins, a contrac tor and builder, r.nd Treasurer Wall, of the letter's firm, were Issued Friday on the affidavit of Logan M. Bullitt, chairman of the Taxpayers' Commit tee. The charges are conspiracy to de fraud the city, and are an outcome of the investigation conducted ny tne Catlln senatorial romnilsslon. The men will not bo taken Into custody, but will accept service through their attorneys and appear for a hearing. .... .. Demonstration For Reyes. San Antonio, Texas Arrangements were made here by the friends of Gen. Bernardo Reyes, of Mexico, for a demonstration uncn his arrival here from New Orleans. It Is expected that of Francisco I. Madero will . ... take part In the demonst ration. Search Is being made for a residence to serve as home and headquarters for I Reyes. Colombians Insult Peru. Bogoto, Colombia. On leaving the Cathedral, where they had attended a meeting presided over by the Arch bishop of Bogota, a mob stoned the Peruvian Legation and tore down the coat of arms. This Is the second at tack on the legation and the situation Is considered grave. The previous at tack took place In July and was due to Ill-feeling over the alleged eneroaen ent of Peru upon territory claimed by Colombia. Two More Dams Burst. Chippewa Falls. Wis. Two dams went out in this city Friday and one at Bloomer. The country is flooded. The Chippewa River has risen eight feet, and Is overflowing Its banks. Water is running In the streets as a result of an 18-hour downpour of ra'n. . ....... Two bridges near Stanley ana one ni Owen went out In the flood. This Is the heaviest deluge experienced along the Chippewa River since June, 1904. 10,000 Chinese Killed. Peking. American Methodist mis sionaries at Cheng-tu, the recently be sieged capital of Sze-chuen Province, telegraphed here that they estimate that 10,000 pfcrsens were killed during the fighting between the Insurgents and the government troops. Of the detd 2,000 were soldiers, and the oth ers rebels. Ten thousand rebels are In posses sion of several cities southwest of Cheng-tu. THE RAILROAD CROSSING GUARD I s'-- v- "V--- V it'm.vitahl. 1911.1 FLAY FOR ITALIAN BUMS Bombarded Tr poll and Dt moished For.s No ShJts Hit tha Shipj. Rome. Adm'.rul Faravelll 1ms Bent a. message to the government, stating that the bombardment of the main batteries ut Tripoli commenced at 3 o'clock Wednesday ai't-rnoon and coutinuud until sunset. Admiral Aubrey reports that in bombarding Tripoli he spared all the consulates, hospitals, churches, mon asteries and convents, aiming only at the fortifications. Discrimination was made with relative ease, as the range of the Turkish cannon was so short lhat the ships were enabled to ap proach the city closely and so take accurate aim. The bombardment was protracted because of this extreme care to avoid useless bloodshed and to respect the homes of non-combatants und the mosques. Moreover, the firing was at long Intervals, as Admiral Aubrey and Vice Admiral Faravelli expected at any moment to see the white flag run ,:p Indicating a desire to surrender. Scarcely any of the population ro maliiB in Tripoli, the city having been abandoned immediately when the bombardment began. In cautioning the fleet commanders to limit their action to silencing the batteries and compelling the Turkish garrison to surrender or evacuate, the .Ministry of Marine told the officers to remember that the provinces were about to pass under Italian control, and the more damage done the greater would be the expense of repair later. A message from Admiral Thaon dl Revel says that the action appeared more like a shooting competition than a bombardment. Ollicers and' sailors placed wagers on the results. In one instance an order was given t dis- mam ie a pium ...... .m... v... ...... ner was heard to any: 1 bet I can knock down the left turret at the first 'shot." When the smoke had cleared snot. v, nen u,e i u. ( away the turret had disappeared. lie , man shot again, Now rWit tur-, ret." In a flash the second mark was in ruins. RARE HONORS PAID SCHLEY. Naval and Military Forces and Hosts Of Friends At Funeral. Washington. Naval honors seldom accorded an American characterized the funeral here of Rear Admiral Win field Scott Schley. The body rested In the family home, preparatory to the private service at 1.30 o'clock. The i public services were at St. John's j Episcopal Church. Cadets from the Naval Academy at Annapolis, sailors from the naval sta-1 . i ni.ilnJI..Un tions at wasningiun ami ..u.....-.yu., . light artillery and army bands from Fort Myer and Washington Barracks, , and comrades and friends of the dead I Admiral composed tho procession that escorted tin uouy oi Aumirui oc.i.i-j from St. John's Church to Its resting place In Arlington National Cemetery. Imposing floral gifts filled St. John's Church. These Included a wreath from tho survivors of the Greely Arctic re- by Admiral , !"' "". i M'mey i v i tr-,.r tho r-nhnn I.poution and 1,1 other sources. ROOSEVELT TO HUNT WHALES. Ex-President Will Try Harpooning For Eig Sea Game. lxng Beach, Cal. After hunting bear in Colorado, elephants In Africa and various other game In his own country, Col. Theodore Roosevelt, it is intimated, may come to Long Beach to hunt whales. Captain Loop, whoso powerboat is fitted uo for the pursuit, is authority for the announcement that Colonol Rooseevlt Intends to come here to har poon the sea mammals. PEOPLE'S MONEY PILING UP. Savings Increase $20,200,000 In Lesa Than Three Months. Washington. Despite the advent of the postal savings banks, the Bavlngs deposits In the national hanks are tn rri,agng. From June 7 to September I j these deposits grew from $634,100.- . . nun linn ., hmpnuua tf tll . i uuu to uui,ouu,i t- :00,000. Of the 7,301 national DanKS In existence a month ago 3,014 had savings departments. A Valuable Silver Dollar. Chicago. Somewhere In Chicago a silver dollar, valued by numismatists nt $650, is waiting to be recognized. It waB Btolen recently from the collec tion of Charles E. Rogers by workmen who, Rogers thinks, had no Idea of Its real value. The dollar is of the lusue of 1804. "I had some decorating done," said Rogers, "and there were a lot of men running In and out. The coin was tn a small chest In the dining room. I'm afraid some workman grabbed it, went out and bought a drink with it." COL ROOSEVELT AVOWS CANALGRAB Gave the People Benefit of Doubt. DEFENSE OF HIS ACTION Scores Critics Who Say He Acted Be yond Constitutional Powers "Timid President Can Find Excuses." New York. Theodore Roosevelt has an article on "How the United States Acquired the Right to Dig the Panama Cunnl," in the last issue of the Out look. Mr. Roosevelt discusses state ments which have been mado from time to time that he acted in an un constitutional manner and usurped authority in connection with the Pan ama project, and he upholds the regularity of the proceedings through out. Mr. Roosevelt oays that his mes sages to Congress set forth in full and In detail every essential fact connect ed with the various phases of the ac quisition of tne Panama Canal. He adds: "Not one important fact was omit ted, and no fact of any importance bearing upon the actions or negotia tions of the representatives of tho United States not there set forth has been, or ever will be, discovered, simply because there Is nono to dis cover." Referring to the opposition to the project then and since, Mr. Roosevelt says: "Of course there was at the time, ami has been since, much repetition Btll,ement8 that 1 acted in tutlona,. lJlanneri lhat i wa8 Mt mmp 8tatoments that wer of statements that 1 acted in an 'tin- usurped These ere made again and again In reference to al most all 1 did as President that was most beneficial and most Important to the people of this country. Acted Within Powers. "The simple fict was that when the Interest of the American people im peratively demanded that a certain act should be done, and I had tho pow er to do It, I did it, unless It was specifically prohibited by law. "In my judgment, history had taught the lesson that the President has very great powers if he chooses to exer cise those powers; but mat, it no is a iim or Beifish man, afraid of re sponsibility and afraid of risks, lie can, of course, manufacture Ingenious excuses for failure to exorcise them." Opposed By Speculators. Concerning the purchase of tho canal rights from the French Com pany, Sir. Roosevelt says: "Every step taken by the Govern ment In connection with Its negotia tions with the French Company and the payment to its official representa tives In accordance with the agree ment entered into was taken with the utmost care, and every detail has been made public. Doubtless In Paris, ana perhaps to a lesser extent in New York, there were speculators who bought and sold In the stock market with a view to the varying conditions apparent from time to time in tho course of the negotiations, and with a view to the probable outcome of the negotiations." Aeroplanes for Tripoli. Naples. Nine military aviators, with eight monoplanes and two bl plans, will be sent to Tripoli. The aviators will bo commanded by Cap tain Piazza, who won the air race ! from Boulogne to Venice. New Order Increases Army. Washington. The War Department announced an order re-arranging the strength of the Army. Cavalry regi ments assigned to duty In the Panama Canat zone, Hawaiian Islands, and the Philippines, will get 70 men to the troop, and the Infantry regiments serv ing in the same territory will have 72 men to the company. This order will Increase the total strength of the army to 77,532 men. To Kill Ground Squirrels. Stockton, Cal. One thousand farm ers, representing a district of 80,000 acres, have Imposed a tax of five cents par acre on themselves as part of a fund to exterminate the ground squir rel In the southern part of San Joaquin county, which are said to be Infected with bubonic plague. The campaign will be carried on under the direction of county and United States medical commissioners, OR, WILEY IN FULL CONTROL Solicitor McCabe Leave the Pure Food Bca OChtm st Dunlap i A so Out. WuBhlngton In a sudden succes sion of orders an Initial move in the expected reorganization of the Depart ment of Agriculture, Solicitor George P. McCabe Tuesday was retired from the Pure Food and Drug Board, Asso ciate Chemist F. K Dunlap, closely Identified with McCabe, was allowed leave of absenco until the President's return, and Chemist Harvey W. Wiley left appuremtly In supremo command of the board. Dr. It. K. Doolittle, of Now York, was temporarily appointed to the board to succeed Mr. McCabe. Those changes were announced by Secretary Wilson following u confer ence with Dr. Wiley, who has been on a long vacation. They were deemed Inevitable In view of the official and personal antagonism aired before a congressional committee the past summer and Dr. Wiley's exoneration by President Taft after Attorney Gen eral Wickersham, with views aligned with those of Secretary Wilson and Solicitor McCabe, had recommended Dr. Wiley's removal from office as head of tho chemistry bureau because of a technlcul Irregularity In ap pointive methods, to responsibility for which he denied. The Board At Odds. Tho Pure Food and Drug Board is the agency which passes upon many Important cases arising under the en forcement of the pure food law. Dr. Wiley, on the one band, and Solicitor McCube and Dr. Dunlap on the other, woro tho members of the board. Dr. Wiley declared that he was usually outvoted and made a number of sen sational statements In the Investiga tion of tho controversy. Smarting under the frequent overruling of his views wherein ho held food products deleterious to health, ho told a con gressional committee that he regard ed his associate, Dr. Dunlap, as his superior officer. Secretary Wilson's brief announce ment of the change stated thnt Solici tor McCabe voluntarily resigned and that his resignation had been ac cepted. Dr. Dunlap was nctlng chairman of the board when Dr. Wiley was absent from Washington. Whether Dr. Dun lap will return to his duties on tho board was not stated. HIb tempor nry withdrawal was attributed official ly to the fact that he Is to take the customary four-week vacation, but Socretary Wilson stated that Dr. Dun lap would not return until after Presi dent Taft has returned to Washing ton. In place of Solicitor McCabe to servo with Dr. Wiley on the board Secretary Wilson appointed Dr. Doo little, long a member of the Bureau of Chemistry force and now head of that bureau substation In New York. Dr. Wiley and Dr. Doolittle will con stitute the majority of the board for the Immediate future, the latter's ap pointment being necessary to give the board's action legal effect. NAVY TO SHOW STRENGTH. Mobilization Of Fleets In the Atlantic and Pacific. Washington. It is believed here t hut great naval maneuvers and mobili zation to be held In the Atlantic and Pacific next month are the result of the strained situation In' Europe and the unrest apparent throughout the world. The uncertainty of the situation In Europe with the vague possibility of developments that might Involve any of the nationp through some unexpect ed event is fully realized by the gov ernment at Washington. While all Europe is torn with war and rumors of war, Uncle Sam has decided tc make a quiet display of the fact that he has not been Idle. Whother there is any more definite reason for the mobilizations at New York and Eos Angeles of the Atlantic and Pacific fleets could not be learn ed, but the Impression Is strong that the plan was adopted merely for Its moral effect on the International situa tion. Secretary Meyer Is still uncertain as to the exact plan of mobilization. It will take place early In November, and nith the President reviewing tho shins at New York the occasion Is ex pected to be made so notable that It will be a matter of news tnrongnoui the world. WILL WAIT TO BE ASKED. United States Government Will Not Offer Mediation. Washington. State Department off! cials after careful reading of the six articleB of The Hague Convention bearing upon mediation have failed to find any mandatory provision requlr lne a neutral nation to offer to medi ate, although It is admitted that the first article, under a strained construe tlon, might have conveyed an opposite Impression. The council of the Intor parliamentary Union at Its session In Paris appears to have fallen Into that error, in the opinion of the olllclals here. MISSI.iG MAN TURNS UP. Walks Into Pa-ents Home After Being Gone 30 Years. Bollofontalne, O. After being miss ing for 30 years and given up as dead Rufus Meisler walked Into his par ents' home at West Mansfield Tues day. Ho has become wealthy as ranch owner In California. He gave no reason- for his sudden disappear ance. He left home 30 years ago to go squirrel-hunting and then dlsap pearcd. Taft To Rest a Week. Washington. As soon as President Taft returns from his Western trip he will eo to Hot Springs, for week's rest The President then will go to Cincinnati and perhaps to Iouls ville. Kills Wife Seeking Dlyoree. WooBtor, O. James Sprang, 45 vears o!d, shot and killed his wife, Grace, 40 years old, at their home 1 Loudonville. The shooting came whr Sprang heard that his wife had r piled for a divorce. ITALY S 1 I Tricked Turks in Her Clever Naval Operations. WILL HOLD ALL OF TRIPOLI Troops Will First Be Landed and Pos session Made Complete Before Italy Will Consider Any Intervention. Rome Official circles, while realiz ing the anxiety of foreign countrUs to see the Turco-Uuliaii conflict ended und the possibility of iiomplicatlons avoided, wisli to warn public opinion ubroad that while the Italian fleet has taken possession of Tripoli und Cyro naisa, tho occupation cannot be con sidered an accomplished fact In the sense that It renders possible that In tervention by the powers which Italy in due time will welcome, but which at the present moment would be Inop portune. Before anything of the kind occurs the Italinn troops must land and In reality occupy not only the coast, but also the interior of the province In order to make sure that any remain ing resistance of Turkey shall be overcome. It is charged that Turkey Is not obeying the International rules of war fare. Italy has released all tho Turk ish steamers which were seized In Italian harbors until war was declar ed or arriving soon afterward, the commanders not having leurned of the beginning of hostilities, turkey, on the contrary, has hoisted the Ottoman flag over the Italian steamers Ernesto, llardl and Melorla, which were seiz ed along the coast, and remanning them with Turkish sailors, Is using them for Its own purposes. It Is about to do the samo with smaller Italian craft captured In the Aegean Sea. Italy will protest on tho ground that this action Is In violation of the con- ontlon signed at the close of the Crimean War. The Italians have occupied Derna and the coast of Bombah Guir. inns Is revealed the plan of the Italian cam paign In Northern Africa. The object as to Insure above all else tne occu pation of Cyrenlca, which Is the rich est part of the invaded country. Ac cordingly a great naval display was made before Tripoli to deceive the Turks while Rear Admiral Aubrey, commander-in-chief of the fleet; feign ing a pursuit of the Turkish fleet, landed a force from the battleship tttorla Emmanuclo II. at Tobruk, oc cupying Bombah Gulf and the town of Derna. 500 miles east of Tripoli. STEPHENSON WAS "TOUCHED.' Politics Mixed With Picnics Admitted At Senatorial Probe. Milwaukee.---"Touches," a hammer" and "picnics" were brought up as part of the campaign expenses of United States Senator Isaac Stephenson In the Investigation "before the Senatori al committee here. The details were given by Rodney Sackett, one of the Stephenson campaign managers, after Senator W. B. I ley burn, the chairman, said the total expenditure of $107,793 would have to be explained to over come the presumption that it had been wrongfully used. Some of the general items given to Sackett to explain were: General ex penses for organizing State, $46,052; Milwaukee county, $11,600; office ex penses, $4,074; telephones, $256; post- ago, lll.ouu; sunury uins, o,ou, nomination papers, $40; one man to attend colored picnic, $50; campaign buttons. $702; trip through Ghetto (three men), $35; one man to another picnic, $10; "touches" by two old sol diers, $2; numerous and various 'touches," $17, and a hammer, $3. The newspaper advertising in the campnign, Sackett said, amounted to $12,696. In one Instance Senator Stephenson gave $1,500 for a list of farmers' names, paying for them at the rate of one cent a name and an extra one-half cent for each subsequent use of the same names. SCHENK SUED FOR WIFE'S MEALS. Cafe Proprietors Want $14; !.40 For Food Sent To Jail. Wheeling, W. Va. John O. Schenk has been sued for $142.40 by Stoops & Nichols, cafe proprietors, for meals served his wife, Laura Farnsworth Schonck, while she was a prisoner In Jail awaiting trial on a charge of at tempting to murder her husband by arsenic poisoning. Mrs. Schenck had all her meals served from the leading cafe of the city, refusing to partake of the regular jail food. DR. COOK OFF FOR EUROPE. Expects To Prove He Got Near the North Pole. New York. Dr. Frederick A. Cook the Brooklyn traveler, who still Insists that he ot least came as near to the North Pole as Admiral Peary did. took Mrs. Cook and two children with him to Europe aboard the Lapland. "I am coine to Europe." he said, "to present scientific data to various In stltutlons to prove that I reached as near the North Pole as any man evor did." MADERO WILL ABIDE BY VOTE. Says He Never Countenanced Attacka On De La Barra. City of Mexico. Discussing the an nouncement that President de la Barra would refuse to accept the Vlce Proairionev. General Madero, the President-elect, said: "If Dr. VaBquex Gomez received a majority of the votes in the Electoral College there will be no disturbances We will abide by the ballot. POLI ALL OVER THE STATE TOLD IN SHORT ORDER Reading. John Schaeffer, aged 53 years, a farmer of Rornvlllo, this coun ty. commHied suicide by hanging him self with a rope In his barn. No rea son can be assigned for his act. Carlisle Three prisoners serving time In tho Cumberland County Jail for stealing chickens, escaped from their guards while working on West street, where a gang of prisoners are cutting down a hill. Pittsburgh Following the receipt of a Blnck Hand letter demanding that he deposit $1,500 in a convenient plnco, a charge of nitro glycerine was exploded at the hourding house of Peter Caruso hero. The fifteen occu pants of the house were thrown from their bods by the explosion, but were net seriously injured. West Chester. While Morris Sel lers, proprietor of Turks Head Inn.this horotifch, and his wife were driving in their large touring car near town, tho machine took fire from gasoline escap ing from engine and was entirely con sumed, save one wheel. No ono was Injured. Chamhershurg William Reei:, con victed of the murder of Sara C. Math na at the Pennsylvania Forest Acad emy, at Mount Alto, on May 9, was sentenced to be hanged. Judge Gil Inn, before sentencing Reed, denied a motion for a new trial aud for an ar rest of Judgment. Allentown. Thought to be dying from a fifteen thousand volt shock, George Coates, an Allentown oler trician, nppcared on the street, all bandaged, but smoking his pipe. He was teaching his gang to string wires when ho was caught, and his smoking body was removed from a high pole by men who climbed ladders. Cniiisle.-By walking a distance of twenty two miles three Carlisle young men won a dinner. Miss Bertha KHz miller, of Shlppensburg, a teacher ere. told Fredorlck Brown, illis Wierman and William Moorehead thnt if they would hlko to her home she would give them a meal. Tho yomiK men accepted the dare and received the reward. Pittsburgh. Captain John F. Klein, former Councilman and riverman, who pulled the props from under tho sky nd cave testimony which sent a nom of Pittsburgh city officials, bank olli cers and others to the penitentiary and county Jail In connection with ex- ensive grafting In 1910, was released from the Western Penitentiary nere, having been pardoned by the Gov ernor. rottsvllle. At the plant of the East ern Steel Company, John loon aim James Moulor had a desperate quarrel. They were separated by fellow worK- men, but a short time later Jiouier ap proached Coon, having horrowcu a long dagger, and drove It to me imm. between his victim's shoulders, the blade deeply penetrating his back and piercing several vital organs. It was necessary to pry out the knife with the aid of a lover. Coon is in a dying con dition and Mouler is a fugitive. Shenandoah. For some time the Philadelphia & Reading Coal and Iron Company have been boring with dia mond drills for tho mammoth mid seven foot veins at West Shenandoah Colliery mines. Thursday the officials were much elated by the citsroxerj ... both veins. The mammoth vein is twenty-five feet thick and the seven foot full size. This means new Hi'' for this colliery, gratifying news . .. 1500 employees, acids gienuj business of this town, and Increases the value of real estate. Allentown. George F. Prevelege. hotelkoener at Emails, and his son, George, went on the mountain to train a hunting dog. A bird being Unshed, the son raised his gun ami me ger being set lightly, fired premature ly and shot his fathers rig... off, besides lacerating tno h'K below the knee. When the youth re covered from his horror he hound tiu- leg as tightly as possible wnn -pie. Three hestnut-hunters carri.o the wounded man home, nearly to miles. The log wos omputnted at t" hospital hero. From excess. " of blood Trevelege may not sum"- rottsvllle.-Objectlng to the road way trolley force encronciu.m - nearer to her hotel property at i Carbon, the plans for changes in tracks taking them slightly out of the old route of the road. Mrn An gelo Long, held up a squad of thi rt me" with a leveled gun for "' "" of until Interference came on the P Troop C of the State Cons ' The trackmen were permitted ? above, and below her proP'J- ' every time they attempt step a prescribed "dead line held them up with her weapon thn onlng to blow off the head of the h . . i !... imiinils- man wno lgno.e.. . ,he tor the State police arrived, changes in the track were made. York.-Mr. and Mrs. Abrahmn of near Nashville were scrlo'isl jured when an automob lie In they were riding was s r. k songer train on the Ues .tern land Railroad. Tho a. .to ...o rl. wrecked and the occupants wore ed forty feet. York.-Oscar Beard. 25 , ; was arrested and sent to Jan n tor having confessed to llnR from his grandmother. Reard, ot Newberry t"h',w00de Beard kept her money in chest ("hurlf' Allentown. -tthen M". , Erich and her husband heard In the room adjoining. n"n Km cupled by her mother Mr Hunsberger, they Invwtlgai'a mother fell Into ner ... d ,r- and expired before a rive. -ZT,..., Vnrk M Harrlsburg rue l . ... UAllron" press on the Pennsyiva" - 7, ran Into a freight wreck t - ,, miles west of here, but as ,. was running slowiy no one Jured.