THE LAND OF It is well to wander sometimes in the Land of Make-believe, Through its ever-smiling gardens, where the heart may cease to grieve, Where the beds are gay with roses and the paths are paved with gold, And our hopes, like soaring songsters, their mercurial wings unfold. Let us all be little children for a while and make our way Through the sweet and sunny meadow land of Make-bLelieve today. MAKzZ-BELIZVE, There’s a queen within an arbor, where she rules in high renown, With a lily for a sceptre and a rose wreath for a crown, And her laws are love and laughter, for they know not sorrow there— : Never hate or pain or money enters in her Kingdom fair, So we sing the songs the children sing and play the games they play As we wander in the golden Land of Make- believe today. 2 Bx 28 38 2B 2B 2B 2P% 20 5 28x 2B 2B 2B + 30 20x 2x 2B 2B Bc Bo Bc 3B Bx 4 The Yellow Domino. : By KATHAR INE TYNAN. gg gE Ig + Mg I TY I + Sg Sg ag Sg Ng Sagar ag Whene the scheme was mooted to me, my first thought was that, unsezn myself, I should see Eleanor, so I was | eager for it. The others thought on the madcap prank it was, and that their empty | paunches should soon be fiiled with | King’s meat and drink. And for this | | last I do not blame them, seeing that the gentlemen of the Irish regiment more often than not went supperiess to bed, since glory was more plentiful in the French King's service than louis d’or; and arrears of pay seemed likely but to grow greater. Terrence d'Esterre held a hat for the money, and we each cast in what | we could, he who had been lucky of | late at the gaming table more, he who kad lost less... We kept no count of the sums, but, in the end, we had enough to pay for one ticket of ad- mission to the great Mask, and for a yellow domino. The thing that gave us our oppor- tunity was that that night the gen- tlemen of the Irish regiment were on guard at the palace. Tlie Mask was given for a charity by the Queen’s wishes; hence it was called the Queen's Mask, and all of fashion, of beauty, and of wealth in the capital would pay for its admittance, and so swell the coffers ot St. Vincent de Paul. While my comrades laughed and joked about me, I thought upon the last time I had seen Eleanora, waen she and I had litten down from our horses in the Vale of Arlo, and, while the beasts cropped the sward near us, I had taken her into my arms and her golden head had lain upon my heart. I remember how the blackbird sang, and the smell of the whitethorn all in bloom close by that it seemed to in- toxicate me with ecstasy. At that time there was nothing strange in Sir Maurice Desmond lift- ing his eyes to Lord Lahinch’s daught- er. Why, we had been brought up in neighboring houses, and our families had always been friends and allies. If the money dwindled at Bunclody while Lahinch fattened, that was but the fault of the troublous times, for I gave with both hands, as my father gave before me, to the cause of King James and his son. Whereas Lord Lahinch waited to see who should be the winner before he fiung up his cap for the Dutchman or the Stuart. 1 have marveled often upon how Elea- nora came to be his daughter. When we brought our tale to Lord Lahinch, the first shadow of trouble fell upon our love. “What, Sir Maurice,” he said, “take a wife when Sarsfield has need of soldiers! I am an old wan, not a fighter, and I can protect my girl ‘When the blood and fire of war burns the country up, only an old man like myself, who am out of the fight and have a stout castle to boot, can pro- tect women. When King James is on the throne again, it will be time to talk of marriage.” The old fox proved better than his word, for though he conveyed his daughter and his money bags privily from the country before the war broke out and deposited them at the French court, where he had a Kkins- woman high in favor with the Queen, yet he returned and held Lahinch castle for King James against King ‘William, and had his head blown off by a cannon ball, for which I forgave him many things, believing that he was an honest man at last. As for me, when it was over I was the poorest man between the four seas of Ireland, for my house was in ashes, my land seized and sequestrated, and I had lost Eleanora. Rumor had it that she was a great heiress and be- trothed to the son of the Duc de Pic- ardy. But she could not be further from me though she were wedded, and so I said of her to myself, yet could not keep from being light-head- ed with joy when we came home from the Low Countries to Paris, and all because I might by chance happen to see the Lady Eleanora. We gentlemen of the Palace Guard were chosen for our height and size. 1, Maurice Desmond, am six-foot-four, and lean as a hound. Hardships had hold on me as well as love. But I was not the greatest of the troop. There was Andrew MacManus two in- ches greater, and Laurence Maguire an inch. That night the Yellow Dom- ino was higher than any gentleman at the Mask, and it was not likely he should pass unnoticed. lat its height. | a minuet. lot should have been cast last. Nor { could I ask any to change with me, seeing that all were so hungry, and | had not known what it was to have as full a meal as this was like to be for many a year, if, indeed, they had it ever; for it is not every day that a Ilain gentleman is cooked for by M. Paul, the King’s chef de cuisine. The first cock had crowed before the ticket was thrust in my hand and the Yellow: Domino over my head and shoulders. But the ball was still The court was dancing As I pushed my way through the masks, some one plucked at my domino. I looked down, to sec a sharp-faced man wearing a cook's cap and white apron. “Come with me,” he said, “I have something worthy of so distinguished a gourment. You have donc me honor tonight, Monsieur.” I knew not if it were a jest or not, but I allowed him to draw me into the supper room. The place was no such ruin as I had expected. Many servants carried away empty dishes and replaced them by full. “Fall to, most excellent gentleman; fall to!” said the little r~an, rubbing his hands and gazing at me with his head to one side, and his sharp black eyes gloating upon me. “How long does the court stay?” I asked. “Why, it will dance in the dawn,” he responded; “perhaps two hours hence the coaches will be called for.” I fell to then, realizing that I was a hungry man, and faith, I cleaned the platters with a vengeance, but as fast as I ate, other delicacies were laid before me as though by magic. And 1 drank great draughts which seemed to take the coia from my heart that had lain there so long— inde2d, since Eleanora had left it empty. I had the last goblet to my lips, when I felt a hand on my shoulder, and, turning around, I became aware that the room was filled with ladies and gentlemen, all very splendidly clad end sparkling with jewels. There was not a mask to be seen, unless, indeed, it was the little cook, who had fallen into the background, and stood there rubbing his hands in an attitude of great humility. “Who are you, Master 1eilow Domi- no,” asked he whose hand was on my shoulder, “that wear the mask when the signal has been given to nnmask, and who do such great jus- tice to our good things?” I knew the face well between iis falling masses of curls, even if I had not recognized “Le Grand Monarque” by the stars and orders with which he glittered magnificently. I gave the soldier's salute. I did not dare uncover, for there,” by the Queen, stood Eleanora, all in white andi gold tissue, more beautiful, if more sad, than I remembered her. The King gave me another slap on the shoulder. “Why, you are the most prodigious fellow,” he said, “a grosser feeder even than M. Porthos. Tell us again, good Paul, what he has eaten.” The little cook whem I row per- ceived to be no other than the King’s cock, then came forward and testified that since 10 o'clock I had not been above five minutes absent from the tables. He produced his tablets, and I will cay that even for 30 gentlemen of the Irish regiment the consumption of food and drink was indeed prodigious. As le went on the King roared with laughter. The Queen and her ladies hid their merriment behind their fans, all except Eleanor, who watched me with a strange intentness, as though she had somehow fathomed my dis- guise. The supper room was now full to the door, every one tiptoeing and stretching to catch a sight of the Yellow Domino. “Come sir, said the King, “we must see your face. Off with {~e domino! You are one of the wonders of the world. You shall stay with us, and we will see how many cooks it will take to satisfy your hunger.” “Sire,” I said, “before I uncover, may I explain to your Most Excellent Ma- jesty how it came that I ate as for 30?” “Oh, ho!” said the King, lcoking, as I thought a little disappointed. “So you have not eaten all the food your- self?” “Sire,” 1 said, “no man could do it It was a matter of honor with us that we should eat and drink as fast as might be, seeing that there were 80 hungry gentlemen to be fed before | morning broke. We cast lots for tae order of precedence, and, as it chanc- ed, I came to be the last of all, where- fore Luke Monroe clapped me on the shoulder and congratulated me that I was not likely to have an indigestion from too speedy feeding, if I ran the risk of getting no supper at all. I would have bartered many sup- pers to caich but one sight of Elea- nora, where fore it chafed me that my | and live.” “Why, I thought not,” hs replied. “If you did it, Master Yellow Domino, vou would put in the shade all the gentry who swallow swords and feed on red-hot pokers. Now, speak. Nona shall hurt you or your fellows. What ie your name and who are your com- rades?”’ “If you please, Sire,” I replied, “I am Maurice Desmond, a captain in your Majesty’s Irish Regiment of Horse, and the Yellow Domino is not cnly myself, but #9 other gentlemen of the regiment.” “Oh, ho!” he said; guard tonight?” “We were not invited to sup with your Majesty,” I said, “so we bougat a ticket for the mask and a yellow domino. It has served us all.” “And you are satisfied?” he asked, politely. “You approve of my cook?” “We never wish to sup better, Sire,” I answered. “Are there any more of you to sup?” he asked, his lips twitching.” “I am the last of the 30, Sire,” I said. “Why, heaven be praised for that,” he responded, “or else we should have a famine in our kitchen! I envy the gentlemen of the Irish Regiment their appetites.” With that he roared with laughter, as though he thought it the funniest jest in the world; and all the others joined him, so that the supper room rang with merriment. But I stood with my eyes on the ground, not dar- ing to look at Eleanora’s face. Suddenly the King became serious and looked about him. “Is there any one here who knows Captain Maurice Desmond?” he began. There was a little movement in the crowd, but before any one else could speak, my Eleanora stepped forward. “Sire,” she said, “Sir Maurice Des- mond is a most brave and honorable gentleman, who iost his all fighting for King James in Ireland.” Her voice trembled, and, lifting my eyes to hers, I could see that she looked frightened as a fa-wn, yet brave as a martyr. “We were dear friends once,” she went on, shaking like a reed, “but the fortunes of war separated us. I have never ceased to look for my friend through all these five years past, yet never thought to seek him in your Majesty’s Irish Regiment.’ “The uniform of the Irish Regiment has seen honorable service,” he said, smiling at the shabby and discolored coat, and taking a gleaming star from his breast and pinning it wpon mine. “It carries its wounds like yourself, my friend, and like M. de Turenne. No matter; the Irish Regiment shall not be forgotten. I am giad—only for the misfortune of my English cousin— tc have such soldiers on my side. Now the dance is forming. Will you not lead cut the lady whose memory has been so faithful?” The next day I was called to the King’s presence, and about the same time there was left at my lodgings a very fine taffeta suit, laced and slashed, a gift from the King, so that when I went to Court Eleanora had no need to be ashamed cof me. “As though I could be,” she says, leading upon my shoulder to see what I have written. We have built again the Castle of Bunclody, and, Peace having descend- ed upon the country, we dwell there, in great peace and great felicity, and have a boy who is a fight*:g man, al- though but three years old, and car- ries his father’s sword, and, for re- ward of goodness, is permitted to han- dle the King’s star.—New York News. “you were my BUYING A BOX OF MATCHES. Quite a Formidable Undertaking With Natives of Samoa. The natives of Samoa do not hurry the trader unnecessarily... Time is no object to them, says a writer in Lip- pincott’s Magazine. The two or three youngsters, who come and sit on the veranda are willing to wait the trad- er’s own convenience before they open trafiic with him. Then their language seems to the inexperienced strangely uncommercial. . “0, Apa, it is thus, and we two will want?” the trader asks in the native speech, ‘that you sit on my portico beginning at sunrise and ending at all day?” ‘0. Apa, it is thus, and we two will declare the truth to thy highness.” “Use not the high-sounding words of the talk of chiefs; call me not ex- cellency nor yet highness, for by that I know you two are come to beg. That thing do you two tell what you want, and quickly.” “0, Apa, smooth out the wrinkles from thy heart, but listen. In the in- significant hut of thy family of us two there is tobacco, and we have plucked the dry leaves of the banana. But there is no fire. That thing have we two come to ask of thy excellency. Af- ford to us two the fire-scratcher, just one box, for great is the poverty of the family of us two.” “0, pig-faced, it is the lie, and you two come to beg, it is true. It is right that you two buy fire-scratchers; I do not give away the articles of wealth, lest I, too, become poor while you two have all things.” “Thou knowest, O, Apa, the great poverty of all this Samoa, and that we too are poor people and of no account We have not wherewith to buy. But because great is the love of us two to thy excellency we two give to thee the loving gift of the fruit of the hen, one.” “Not so is it true, dirt and pigs. If you two love me you give me fruit of the hen, two. Give them now to me and my black-boy thing shall look through them at the sun, and he shall spin them on this ficor, and he shall float them in water lest they be bad.” “0, Apa, thou art wise to drive a hard bargain, and Samoans are fool- ish. Here, then, are these two fruits of the hen; now give to us two the box of fire-scratchers.” Electricity in Agriculture. An effort is being made in Sweden to use electricity in agriculture. A seed field is covered by a network cof wire and a strong electric current is turned on during nights and chilly days, but cut off during sunny and warm weather. The system was invented by Professor Lemstrom, of Heisingfors, Finland. Aree Bed 4 ILD Sw CH RENS ih A Scjourn in the South, One pleasant autumn morning Mr. Swallow said: “My dear, The nights are growing chilly; We will soon have frost, 1 fear. Don’t you think the southern sunshine And the breath of orange flowers Would be most beneficial For the children’s health and ours?” Then little Mrs. Swallow Wisely nodded her wee head. “My husband dear is always right; We'll go,” she promptly said. ‘Just help me get the breakfast, A worm for each small mouth, And we'll start before it’s sundown For a sojourn in the south.” ~ —San Franciseo Chronicle. Tabby’s Baby. “Come, Tabby,” called Roy, “here pussy, pussy, puss!” And Tabby trotted out of the closet; she thought that meant dinner. “Bring out your new Kitty to show Jamie,” said the little boy, stroking her soft ccat. ‘Tabby purred and rubbed against Roy's knee. Then she trotted into the clcset again and car- ried out a littl bundle of fur and laid it at Roy’s feet. Jamie smiled and stretched out his hands for it. “Isn’t it pitty?” he said. “ ’Ittle malty kitty wiv a white neck-~ tie!” Roy carefully placed the kitten in Jamie’s arms. “You bet it’s a beau- ty. Ain’t got its eyes open yet. You see,” he added, wisely, “it only came yesterday, that’s why it's so little.” Tabby was sitting on a chair watch ing the proceedings anxiously. Now she laid one paw on Jamie's arm, but the little fellow didn’t seem to nctice it. He lifted the kilten and pressed it against his check. How soft and warm it was! “There was three kittens,” Roy went on, “only Bridget drowned the other two, ‘cause she don’t like cats. I just saved this one, and I think it's the prettiest of all. Tabby’s awfully jeal- ous of everybody that touches it, ain’t you, pussy?” Tabby answered with a loud “mia- ow!” She humped up her back and waved her tail angrily and stuck out her claws and said as plainly as she could, “Give me my baby or I'll scratch you.” “Better put it down,” said Roy, so Jamie placed the kittie caref-lly on the floor with one last loving pat. | "Tabby jumped dewn and almost pounc- ing on her baby, trotted off with it to the closet. “Wish vat kittie was mine,” sighed Jamie. He did so love pussies. “Well, I tell you, we'll go halves on it,” said Roy. ‘‘And when it gets really big and Tabby can spare it, maybe I'll give you my part, ’cause two cats is an awful lot, ’specially when Bridget don’t like ‘em ’round.” And Jamie was happy.—Brcoklyn Eagle. The Muskrat Talks. A boy who often used a path alcng the banks of a river caught sight one afternoon of a muskrat on the bank of the stream. He was looking around for a club or a stcne to throw at the animal, when the muskrat said: “It would be no use for you to throw at me, as 1 would be under water as soon as you raised your arm. You would better come here and have. a talk. A boy of your age should know all about the animals to be found around his home. I suppcse you have seen a muskrat Lefore?” “Lots of times,.” repiied the boy. “And why do they call us musk- rats?y > “I don’t know.” “Your teacher in schocl probably could have told you. It is because we carry a little bag of musk with us. Whenever you smell the perfume you may remember that it comes from us. One drop of musk will scent your clothes for a year. It is not much used in America, but in Europe, especially in the olden times, it was a favorite perfume. Kings used to use so much away, and very often it was sprinkled cf it, that you could smell them rods over the motar and plastered upon the walls of churches. Did you ever ask anybody how | lived? “You must live like the woodchuck,” replied the boy. “Not at all, young man. The wood- chuck has a burrow in a bark, and al- ways seeks dry ground, while I have a house in a swamp or marsh, znd spend much of my time in the water. When I do not build a house I make my home in a hole in the bank. Let me tell you that I can swim almcst as fast as a fish, though I can’t stay under water morc than eight or ten minutes at a time. Had I been afraid of you I should have made a dive and swam clear across the river before coming up to breathe.” “I should think you would get water in your ears.” “Do ycu know why I den’t? It is be- cause naturg has provided me with lit- tle valves in my ears to shut the water out. If you dive vou get water in your ears, and .there is a roaring in your head, but nothing of that sort happens to me. I can hear under water almost as well as when I am on the land. If you open your eyes under water they ache, but mine do not; nc ratter how muddy the stream is, my eyes never get sore. I am like a fish about that.” “What do you eat?” asked the boy. “Grasses, roots and barks mostly. but sometimes I nibble at apples and vegetables. I can always find plenty to | eat, winter or summer, and I never Lave to go far from the water. I sea you are locking for a hole in the bank but you won’t find one. I dig into the bank below the surface of the river so that no one may know where I live. 1 can dig like a woodchuck and my Burrow is sometimes ten feet long. The chamber at the end of it is above water so that I have a dry bed when I want | to sleep. Sometimes the river rises and drives me out; but in sach cases I make my bed in the ccarse grasses along the edges. Didn’t you ever see a muskrat’s hous: in a swamp?” “No, I never did.” “Well, we build a house almost like the beaver, except that we use grasses instead of sticks and limbs. We plaster the roof with mud, and we have two and three roon:s inside, and we always enter and leave them from below. I have been in a house when tte hunters came out on the ice and broke their way through the top and I was swim- ming away at the first alarm. The only way to catch us is to set steel traps for us at the mouth of our bur- rows. We are rot as cute as the mink or beaver, though some of us die of old age and never get a foot into a trap.” “I nave seen caps and capes and mnuffs and gloves made of muskrat fur,” said the boy. “Of course you have,” said the musk- rat, “and let me tell you that the furriers dye our skins and sell them for what they are not. Some of the capes called American seal are nothing but American muskrat. However, there is a big demand for our fur {for what it is, and men hunt us so closely that in a few years more there will be none left.” “When a muskrat is zaught in a trap what does he do?” “He makes a great struggle, of course, and does his best to pull his foot out. Sometimes he gnaws his leg off, the same as a beaver, but if the trap is under water he generally drowns before anything can be done. I once caugit the end of my tail in a trap and lost two inches of it in get- tray and lost two inches of it in get- ting away, but it grew out again after a while. Had :»y leg been caught I should not have had the pleasure of this talk with you. I''m going now, and you can remember what I've told you and relate it to the other pupils in your school.”—-San Francisco Chron- icle. A ‘““Migcht-Have- Been’ Quarral, Jennie Andrews and Alice Smithers have lived next door to each other ever since they can remember, and both of them are ‘‘“‘nalf-past eieven,” as they say. And never yet have they had a real quarrel, although last week—but just listen carefully. And never, never be so careless or so positive yourselves. Jennie is learning to embroider, and Alice dues basket-work with rafiia and canes and such things. One day last week they sat out on the shady place between the two houses together, and they had a lovely time making presents for the vchoola:ate who is tc have a birthday party very soon. Then thds very little girl came over to seer them, and the girls, sedIng her coming, tuck- ed their work away under the edges of the two porches. They were hunt- ing four leaved clovers, as innocent and unconscious looking as you please, when she sat dewn on the grass very near. Then they had another lovely time, and neither thought of the worl: again until late the next evening. Jennie, when she remembered, ran over to see Alice about it, and met Alice con:ing over to talk to her. Each had looked in every place the could think of, but neither could find what she sought. “You must have taken my work in with yours,” they said, simultaneously, stopping half way. “I just know I haven't seen yours; so you must have had mine!” was the next simultaneous statement. “I think you're just too mean for anything. There, now!” This was what the respective moth- ers heard after a few moments. Then the two women advanced from the op- posite front porches, and stood lcok- ing down at the two girls. And each held in her hand a little package of worl. “I found this under the edge of the porch last evening, and laid it up here on the porch table. Is it yours, Jen- nie?” This from Mrs. Andrews. “I farcy this belongs to you, Alice,” came the gentle voice of Mrs. Smith- ers. “Fido (the pet dog owned in com- mon by the two girls) brought it over to me this morning when I was look- ing after the flowers. I don’t know where the raffia is. This was all he brought to me.” Down to the edge of tne porch stoop- ed Alice, very red of cheek and down- cast of eye, and drew out ike forgot- ten bunch of material. : Down to the edge of the other perch stooped Jennie, also very red and shamefaced, and drew out the little case of embroidery, silks she, tco, had forgotten. Then, very quietly, the two girls looked at each other, smiled apologeti- cally, and slipped away from the smil- ing gaze of their mothers. And the “might-have-been” qu..rel didn’t come to pass, fortunately, afier all.— Chicago Record-tierald. King Dagobert’s Throne. Much has b-en written about the an- tiquit of the throne on which King ®d- ward of England was crowned, but, as French journalists are now taking pains to point out, it is not nearly as old as the throne of King Dagobert, which is still religiously preserved at the National library in Paris. Ac- cording to the best authorities, this! throne dates back to the seventh cen- tury, and consequently it is many years older than the throne of Edward the Confessor. Morcover, thers is a pop- nlar traditicn that it was fashioned by a saint who possessed much skill in carving and engraving. However this may be, the French are very proud of the ancient relic. A wink is a punctuation mark in the language of the eye. KEYSTONE STATE NEWS GUNDENSED PENSIONS GRANTED. Hunter Shot—Killed While Playing a Joke—Big Haul by Robbers. Gas Explosion. The claims of the following appli- canty were favorably recommended and their names placed on the pen- sion list during the past week: Val- entine Renner, Erie, $8; Samuel Koon, Titusville, $6; Wesley P. Nor- ris, Pittsburg, $6; Henry Minley, Edinboro, $12; Philip Lape, Johns- town, $14; Robert H. Young, West Sunbury, $12; Theodore Orris, Har- risburg, $8; Joseph Burger, ' Jones Mills, $17; Martin Butler, Upper Mid- dletown, $10; William P. Starrett, North Warren, $$; John T. McCurry, Allegheny, $12; Trowbridge L. Smith, New Albany, $12; Charles A. Feather, Middletown, $10; John Brose, Sharps- burg, $8; David McCann, Gillett, $10; Henry P. Horn, Indiana, $10; Louis Labault, Derry City, $8; Thomas Pye, Washington, $12; Solomon S. Mays, Karns City, $72; Leonard Jones, Har- rishurg, $17. There was received at the attor- ney general's department at Harris- burg a petition from Frank H. Thomp- son, of Philadelphia, asking that the attorney general grant the use of the name of the Commonwealth in a suit against the Reading Railroad Com- . pany to show why its charter should not be revoked for alleged violation of the state constitution, which pro- hibits a coal-carrying company from engaging in mining. A gang of robbers have been work- ing in Altoona and vicinity and al- most nightly some residence or store is entered. The store of the Eighth Ward Merchandise Company was en- tered and goods to the value of $80 carried away. The house of John Wilson, superintendent at the new classification sard at Elizabeth fur- nace, was also entered. The robbers secured $378, a gold watch and two revolvers. At the session of the Daughters of the American Revolution in Belle- fonte, Mrs. Charles Fairbanks, presi- dent general of the organization, said she was in favor of state organiza- tion; that the object of the order was not to foster aristocracy, but to teach the rising generation true Amer- icanisim. > The Philadelphia Gas Company has purchased two gas wells from George, Themas and Andrew Heilman, of Manor township, near Kittanning, and another well from R. A. McCul- lough, John Rebold and “Ben” Reese, of this place. Th price paid for the three wells was $22,000. James Smith, employed at the Alice mines, near Mt. Pleasant, was in- stantly killed by a falling vein of coal. A year ago a son of the victim who served with Company E, Tenth regi- ment, during the Spanish war, was killed by a freight train. The home of Frank Hintz, a non- union man, was dynamited at Shameo- kin. The explosive was placed on the back door sill and the door was splintered and the windows shattered by the concussion. Hintz was not at home when the explosion occurred. Philip Bender was assaulted at Meadville by highwaymen. After fleecing their victim of $16 in money and a gold watch worth $85, the high- waymen threw him into the canal. He was taken out of the water in a drown- ing condition. The coroner's jury at Punxsu- tawney inquiring into the mysterious death of 16-year-old Agnes Tompkins, took a recess until October 14, when the chemical examination of the dead girl’s stomach will be submitted. William Cunningham, a coke draw- er employed at the Colebrook works near Connellsville, was shot and in- stantly killed while playing a joke upon Mrs. Rose Keffer, the woman with whom he boarded. President John Mitchell when in- formed that Governor Stone had call- ed: out the entire National Guard said: “If they call out all the troops in the United States it won't make the men go to work.” The Pennsylvania delegate to the G. A. R. encampment at Washing- ton, D. C., held a caucus and unani- mously indorsed Adjutant General Thomas J. Stewart for commander- in-chief. Rev. George H. Seville, of Pitts- burg, believes that immersion is the scriptural form of baptism. He left the United Presbyterian church and was received into the Baptist faith. An explosion of natural gas in the cellar of the store of James Stitzel, Ann street, Homestead, resulted in the injury of five people and prop- erty damage amqunting to $13,600. Rev. George P. Donechoo, pastor of the First . Presbyterian church, at Sharon, tendered lis resignation and later at a meeting of the board of trustees withdrew the resignation. The thirty-third annual meeting of the Pittsburg Synod of the Reformed ‘Church of the United States met in annual session in the Grace Reformed church at Jeannette. At Bellefonte Frank Beckwith, con- victed of murder in the second de- gree for the murder of his wife, was sentenced.to nine years in the West- ern penitentiary. The Blairsville College for Women, which had to close on account of an outbreak of diphtheria, has resumed. C. B. Rich, of Duncannon, a Penn- sylvania railroad brakeman. was Kkill- ed, and five men were injured in a rear-end collision of freight trains near Mifflin. Eastern Lape, a well known farmer of Casselman, near Connellsville, is the first hunter to meet death by ac- cidental shooting this season. The Fourteenth and Eighteenth regiments, National Guard, and Bat- tery B, left Pittsburg for the mining regions Tuesday. Work has been started on the new blast furnace to be erected by the Sharon Steel Company.