5 As : the boat, A SAILOR’S A something white came up last night, 1t was the mist, [ wist, or rain. It wheeled about, flashed in and out, And beckoned ‘gainst the window pane, It was a bird, no doubt,—no doubt, And will not come again. And something beat with slow repeat, Ana heavy swell, the old sea-wall, And shrill and clear and piercing sweet, I thought I heard the boatswain’s call. The sails were set and yet, and yet, It may have been no boat at all. SUMMONS. But if tonight a sail should leap, From out the dark and driving rain, " You must not hold me back nor weep, For I must sail a trackless main, To find and have, to hold and keep, What 1 have sought so loag in vain. I need no chart of sea nor sand, Nor any blazing beacon star, My prow against wild waves shall stand Until it cuts the blessed bar, And I run up the shining strand Where my lost youth and Mary are. — Flavia Rosser, in The Criterion. "BRED I’ THE BONE. By PATRICK VAUX. It was close on sundown when the TU. S. A. despatch boat Speedy sighted and spoke Admiral Brainerd’s most westerly scout, the Denver, protected cruiser; and the cruiser’s were the last American eyes that she was ever to. see. In the northeast, leagues away from San Domingo, the Ameri- can liberation of which from continual internecine strife had.caused the Eu- ropean Alliance to declare war against the States, Brainerd was feeling for the enemy's powerful fleet, hoping to divert its attention from the U. S. A. Flying squadron swooping down to devstate the western coasts of the mainland of Europe, and also secure the Windward passage against its ap- proach on Domingo and Cuba. That afternoon, acting on information ac- curately supplied by the captain of the R. M. S. Co.'s mailboat, the ad- miral had flung his scouts, one after the other, down into the southeast, and detailed the quick-steaming Speedy for Santiago with despatches, and to speak the westerly scouts, when encountered, with orders to re- join the main body of the fleet. Her acting lieutenant, getting the utmost out of her fine engines and sweaty-browed engineers and firemen, sighed contentedly when he looked at the speed dial. Another four hours at eighteen-a-half gnots should see him in harbor. He also found relief in the thought that Lieutenant Durey would then be in hospital. “Poor fellow,” he muttered, as he wiped the wet off his night binoculars. “Better a shell in one’s innerds, and end up in a scat- ter, than have his complaint!” Below, in the little cramped ward- room, Durey was writhing in a fresh attack of agony. A suffocating sob burst from him; he dug his elbows into his knees. With his face sup- ported between his hands he let him- self swing like an automaton to the vessel's jobbling. So excruciating were the flames of pain within his breast that it was as if a thousand nerves, raw, vibrant, and exposed, were being plucked out by their roots. He gritted his teeth together to hinder himself from shrieking. Sweat beaded his heavily-lined brows and trickled down over the twitching ashen-gray cheeks. ¢ Gasping thickly, he threw himself back, shut his eyes, and stiffened his muscles., Then suddenly his anguish fled away. For a minute or two he sat there, panting with exhaustion, his body limp and shaken; but a lurch and weather roll made him secure himself in a safer position beside the table. He wondered with fear, when the next attack would recur; then the jumpy, tumbling movements of the hurrying boat diverted bis thoughts, carefully nursed through the -Caicos Passage by her tired officer, hurled herself up tae dark, scething slopes flashing dimly with kindling phosphorus, heaved her- self across the widening troughs and sifiashed down a growing sheaf of sea, she jarred and groaned and quivered in every inch of her rigid hull. But Durey was oblivious to the many- voiced turmoil. Within his brain jost- ling thoughts were making a noisier hubbub. He sat there looking dully at the shielded glow-lamp, his squar- ish head sunk between the even shoul- ders, and his thin, long-fingered hands gripping the “fiddle.” Lieutenant Durey was of slender build, unfited for much hardship or physical stress. Nothing but his high- spirited nature had enabled him to withstand the pungent seasoning of the gun room. However, his seafaring ancestry had bestowed on him a tem- perament fearless of the elements; to him at sea it came as mere routine to cope with and’ bear the weight of the greatest elemental danger. From the female side of his family stock was the taint developed in him—his ineradi- cable abhorrence of physical suffering. ‘At school his cowardice of a caning had earned the contempt of other and hardy lads. However, as years had passed and his physique improved, he had partly lost this squeamish nicety of feeling, and thrcugh his profession had become hardened to the thought of possibly experiencing it some day. Nevertheless, this blemish was not wholly eradicated, and, making him look constantly ahead to a state of war, it had covertly inspired his with- drawal from the service. However, when the rumor of war spread in the land, Durey had offered his services again. He was comfort- ably married by this time, with a charming wife and babes; and until the very last moment had enter- tained a vague innerly hope that his wife or his parents would offer some strenucus opposition to his re-serving, some opposition to which he counid honorably how the head. To their God- gpeed he had to join his ship. As now he sat, clutching the “fid- Ts cto Esath TATA ITER SAAS sturdy seamen, brought aboard out of a shattered cruiser, had revived all his inveterate abhorrence of suffering. His moral courage, too, had suffered defeat from the sudden attack of his malady—the growth of an internal tumor developed by his exposure to wet and cold when on mine-field duty in Hampton Roads. Surgeons had dif- fered in diagnosis, so the Admiral, knowing his capabilities for handling men, had despatched him for urgent treatment. As now he sat, gripping the “fiddle” to keep his balance, the sudden pip- ing of boatswains’ whistles, the indis- tinct scampering of naked feet over- head, the deepening throb and thud of quickened machinery took his atten- tion. With a curse at his infirmities of mind and body he switched off the light, staggered to the ladder, and slowly clambered on deck. As he drew his legs out of the companion, the boat made a steep dip; hastily banging-to the hatch, Durey grabbed a life-line and stared about him. The night was heavy with the men- ace of storm. Though a myriad stars gleamed ahead, the horizon to wind- ward was obscured with cluods. The strong head-wind blew wet and sharp with spray that stung the lieutenant’s throat and nostrils like fine salt. With a start of surprise he saw the men were standing by at quarters, and amidships torpedo gear was being rap- idly adjulted abeam. Gulping down an exclamation—was it of fear or amazement ?—he staggered forward to the bridge. As he climbed its ladder a swirling bunch of sea meeting the port bow splashed over the forecastle and bridge weather-cloths. Contact with the chilly gouts of spray restored Dur- ey’s self-control. The drenched sub. was clearing his eyes, when he ob- served him. “Hello, sir,” cried he, in a voice charged with excitement, “would y’ not be better below. She's throwin’ a lot of water aft. Bridge's like a mill-sluice—"’ " “No good drivin’ her, I reckon. She’s losin’ more than she’s makin’ over 18 knots,” Durey grunted. “Why are the . “It’s cut an’ run. Look there!” in- terrupted the sub., handing his binocu- lars, and shooting an arm west-by- south. “Four big boats. Overhauling us, I guess, too. We'll fight, though, if it comes to that. Sorry didn’t report, sir. I was waiting till there's more certainty about them. : Durey steadied himself and took a long look at the distant strangers head- ing down on their port quarter. “They're none of ours. What are ‘hey deing there? I just reckon the leading boat ’s a smart thing, an’ ’ll take some lickin’,” he snapped out, quick as his heart was beating. The acting lieutenant nodded empha- tically. “That’s my way of thinkin’,” he screeched against the flurry of wind. “The look I got before that streak of cloud came up, gave them away. Guess the Alliance have rua out a flyin’ squadron also. Keen look- outs they must have. They've sighted us. They shifted nine points to the west’ard, and put on speed. Looks as if they know something about us,” “They’ve taken the pass as we cleared the Caicos. Running for San- tiago and the transports,” cried Dur- ey, and snatched the binoculars out of the lieutenant’s hands. As he stared at the enemy, envy, vehement and despicable, swept into him, for well he knew the Speedy’s commander was cool and collected, while it was himself who was growing flurried and painfully apprehensive. Was he a coward physically as well as morally, he asked himself, and in- stantly was eating his heart in bitter- nesg at his inborn pusillanimity. He was moving to the binnacle when a sharp cry broke from the acting lieu- tenant. “By the Powers, they've opened fire!” and the smothered report al- most overwielmed his voice. There was a volcanic eruption of red-hot splinters and sparks amidship as the night-spent projectile flopped against the base of the mainmast, crashed dle” tight, he admitted, mentally, a certain secrot gladness at his being | sent into eick-bay ashore. While aboard the fiagship the spectacle of tattered, gory, living things, once through the deck, and wrecked every- thing in the after-part of the vessel. Durey recovered himself from the port hridge-rails against which he had been hurled with the sudden toppling of the thrashed hull. The acting lieu- tenant lay in a bloody heap beside the wheel, and from aft came shrill cries and hoarse yaps of tortured bodies. For the moment he winced, and felt a hopeless feeling possess him, but the next he was bending over his in- sensible junior. A second projectile ricochetted over the seas wide to star- board, sending up great showers of snowy brine visible in the night; a third plunged short by 10 feet off the port quarter. The enemy could play good game at long bowls. Bear a hand, here, some of you le men,” Durey ordered. “Aft, rt the wreck,” as, with the groaning lump of humanity In is arms, lie tried to stanch the flow of blood from the mangled arm and ribs. Jagged segments and splinters of steel male ugly wounds. Warm, sticky blood smeared his hands and wrists; it made him feel very gick. Disgust swept through him at his own weakness, and with tender but shaky hande -he bound up the ghastly lacerations. Only a little more, and the acting lieutenant would have been eviscerated. As Durey turned from assisting the seamen to lift him down the ladder, the tight feeling in his throat became more choking when he realized that the enemy were now visible to the naked eye. The flasking from the foremost vessel's bow chaser struck his senses like a blow, though not an- other shot hit his vessel. Between 5700 and 6000 yards distant he was from the leading cruiser. Four points off the bow Great Anagua began to loom low and indistinct in the dark- ness for the squally wind chopping about had cleared the starry heavens of cloud and the thin drizzle of rain. Onward rushed the Speedy, throw- ing herself up the great swells and slapping down into the hollows as. if lashed on by the great guns thunder- ing out behind her. Had the enemy surmised her errand? Lieutenant Durey had returned to the bridge from attending the wound- ed. Though pain gnawed at him he gave no heed to it. Sense of the re- sponsibilities now lying on his shoul- ders had revived his self-respect and induced an obliviousness to suffering hitherto foreign to him. He was streaming with salt water, and his eves and nostrils were stung with brine and the salty northeast wind that roared and eddied about, smell- ing of the deep, gray Atlantic surges and storm-filled weather. Its sharp tang permeated his brain. It reviv- ified the dominant instinct of his stock. Durey was transfigured by its mag- ical influence. His face settled in stub- born lines; a grim joy lightened it; his weak, sensuous lips became hard as iron bars. He had the omnipotent look of the man who goes forth to death knowing it is the best fight of all. Crash went a heavy projectile through the cap cof the port smoke- stack, and smoke and flame poured in a lurid cloud to windward. As Durey threw a defiant look at the cruiser again spouting fire, the second artificer reported water rising fast in the after stokehold. The projectile which had wrecked the after-part of the boat must have started some plates. Durey now had no hesitation. He bent over the bridge rail. “On deck, there. The gunner to the bridge. . .” Calmly and incisively he is- sued his orders. Then “Up helm” electrified the gun crews, yet their hoarse cheering brought no change to their officer’s iron-clad expression; his voice but rang the harder and more despotic as he gave the sighting ranges to torpedo and gun. For his line had claimed him heart and soul. Who can tell how many fierce- hearted forebears’ blood sang joyous- ly in his pulsing body at he thrust his weak vessel against the enemy, now opening a terrific cannonading? And what thoughts thronged his cluttering senses as the four great, thundering cruisers loomed large upon his bows. Who of his forebears claimed him then? . . It was not till the war was over that the Speedy’s fate was known.— The Critericn. A Horse's Sense of Smell. A horse will leave musty hay un- touched in his bin, however hungry. He will not drink water objection- able to his questioning sniff, or from a bucket which some odor makes offen: sive, however thirsty. His intelligent nostril will widen, quiver and query over the daintiest bit offered by the fairest of hands, with coaxings that would make a mortal shut his eyes and swallow a mouthful at a gulp. A mare is never satisfied by either sight or whinny that her colt is really her own until she has a certified nasal proof of the fact. A blind horse, now living, will not allow the approach of any stranger without showing signs of anger not safely to be disregarded. The distinction is evidently made by his sense of smell, and at a consider- able distance. Blind horses, as a rule, will gallop wildly about a pasture with- out striking the surrounding fence. The sense of smell informs them of its proximity. Others will, when loos- ened from the stable, go direct to the gate or bars opened to their accus- tomed feeding grounds, and when de- siring to return, after hours of care- less wandering, will distinguish one outlet, and patiently awaits its open- ing.—St. James Gazette. The Higher Allegiance to Hymen, A St. Louis man disregarded a sum- mions to serve on a jury because his marriage to a St. Louis woman had been set for the same hour. He thought he knew which court order to obey.— Richmond Times. Thought She Had It A little girl in an uptown kindergar- ten was learning to read and spell, but it was very hard for her to remember what her teacher told her about pro- nouncing a double letter when she came to one. She would say “a—a” or “e—e” or “t—t’ instead of ‘double a” or “double e,” etc. Her teacher had one day drilled her considerably on this matter in spelling. Shortly af- terward the little girl was called on to read. The paragraph began, “Up, up, Mabel,” and the little girl read it triumphantly, “Double up, Mabel!”— New York Herald. Ninety-two thousands pounds has been provided by the British Admiral- ty this year for the payment of good | conduct money to patty officers and | bluejackets. A SCHOOL FOR BARBERS. WHERE "TCNSORIAL ARTISTS” ARE TAUGHT SECRETS OF THE CRAFT. How They Obtain Material for Practice Strange Characters Who Take Advan- tage of the Opportunity of Having Their Hair Cut and Shave for Nothing. One of the most curious of the many strange institutions of New York City is a school established not long ago on the East Side, where young men and boys are taught to become skilled barbers. In this school long rows of barber's apprentices are at work all day throughout the course, scraping diligently at sundry stolid counten- ances provided for ‘clinic material.” When not working in this capacity, the majority of the faces so used might be met on the Bowery or in kindred regions, surmounting the slouching frames typical of America’s leisure class. Some are placid coun- tenances, bearing evidence of a Mi- cawber-like trust in potential good luck; others are sullen or troubled, with the hunted look that comes to the face of a man out of a job; but each and every one is the better for a free shave and haircut, even when awkwardly done by unaccustomed hands. In order that material for practice may be plentiful and at “hand the school is situated far down town, where trafiic of every sort is thickest and where the great city’s voice takes on its deepest and most insistent tone. With the first drowsy growls of that multiple voice at dawn, the men be- gin to gather and form in line at the entrance to the building. Many of them have stood for hours in the mid- night bread line on Broadway that they might break their fast at least once in the 24 hours, and now come to be freshened up as much as possi- ble before starting forth again en the weary quest for work; others, equally alive to the advantages of being shav- en and shorn and made as presentable as may be, come by way of living up to their life principle of getting some- thing for nothing, and getting it be- fore any one else. At 9 o'clock the school is opened and work begins. Men come and go all day, and the aspirants to barber craft work like beavers, getting more practice in one day than they would get in a month under the old method of apprenticeship. All sorts and con- ditions of men come under their hands tramps, vagabonds, crooks, workmen out of a job, gentleman adventurers down on their luck, fat men, shriv- elled men, smooth men, gnarled men, men with skins like rubber, and men surfaced like nutmeg graters, downy youth and stubbly eld—here is expe- rience varied enough to qualify any one. Only three kinds of men are barred—the unclean, the intoxicated and the men who have once stolen, begged or given any manner of trouble in the school. One offence is sufficient here. The master barber, quiet and alert, has an unerring eye and a strong arm, and woe to the man who sneaks in for a shave after having been forbidden the place. This gray November raorning, when the master barber told of the teaching and learning ef his craft, saw about 200 men sitting on benches in the darkest corner of the workroom, await- ing their turn. The big room was din- gy but clean, well lighted from one side, and sparsely furnished with two long workstands running from wall to wall and flanked by double rows of well worn barber chairs. These were all filled, and the ranks of busy bar- berlings were hard at work. Most of them were boys, ranging in age from 16 to 20 years, but here and there an older man stood by one of the chairs, léarning his trade at a time when most men are well established in life. One cheery old fellow, with hair as white as snow, worked patiently among the students, though at best it could be but a few years before hand and eye would fail, and dexterity with the razor would be a thing of the past. All the students worked steadily and conscientiously, aided now and again by a hint from the master bar- ber as he strolled up and down the lines. Some of the beginners attacked the task before them with nervous, painstaking care, each grasping the razor hatchetwise in tense hands and dragging it like a gravel crusher across the unresisting jaw of his es- pecial segment of clinic material. Others, presumably the born barbers or the more advanced students, worked freely and confidently, wrist and el- bow loose and the razor held. light. Constantly from the waiting benches mer went and came, and contrary to ai) traditions of barbarian loquacity, the work was carried on in almost unbroken silence. “We have students here from all parts of the United States, Canada, the West Indies and even England,” said the master barber. “There are first- class barbers among all nationalities, of course, but the men who take most readily to the work are usually Ital- fans or Germans. Italians are as lim- ber and loose muscled as cats, and Germans don’t get nervous and afraid of the razor. That is the difficulty with women. There is a big demand for women barbers, and we have num- bers of them come here to learn the trade. They make good barbers in time, for women are quick and light- handed, but most of them are scared to death of the razor and live in terror of cutting somebody's throat. It's a profitable business for ‘them, though, for they usually learn all branches, from shaving to hairdressing and manicuring, and they command big wages and get liberal tips. Barbers like to employ them. They are steady and work well and the crankiest cus- tomer isn’t going to complain of his shave or haircut if it is done by a pret- ty girl. No, it isn’t an unpleasant trade for a woman unless she makes it so for herself. “How do we.start a beginner? Just by giving a man a set of instruments and somebody to practise on, and set- ting him to work. He can’t learn to be a barber by looking on and being told about it, any more than he could learn to ride a bicycle by watching somebody else. When a beginner is ready for work I make him put in the first day learning how to hone and strop his razor. Then I assign him to a chair and let him look on while I shave a man. The next man he lath- ers in and I give the first shave, let- ting the student finish him. In shav- ing you always go twice over a man’s face, once with the grain and then against it. The third man the student takes alone, while I look on and cor- rect him when he goes wrong. + After that he needs only occasional super- vision, unless he gets hold of an es- pecially tough subject. “After four days of steady shaving we let the student try his hand at hair cutting. That's harder than the shaving, but all I can do is to give him a pair of scissors and show him haw to hold them, and let him go ahead, while I stand by and tell him where he is wrong. He has to get the knack of it himself, and the whole secret of good barbering lies in that knack. It is easy to get if a man has a light hand, a loose wrist and steady nerves to start with, but anybody can get it with time and practice. It all lies in practice, and the value of a place like this is that the student is practising every moment of the work- ing hours. We shave and cut the hair of over a thousand men every day, and we average about 50 students to do the work, so they haven't much time to stand around and talk about how it ought to be done or to watch somebody else. “Before any training schools for bar- bers were established—and they only date from the World's fair—a man could not learn the trade anywhere but in a small shop. The big shops won’t bother with green hands. When a man wanted to be a barber he had to go to some little shop and start in as porter. He might put in six or eight months sweeping and dusting and running errands before he was al- lowed to touch a razor. Then he was put at honing and stropping the ra- zors, cleaning combs and brushes, and finally at lathering in, combing hair after it was cut, and putting on the bay rum. For real work he had to wait his chance until some extra good natured man came in who didn’t mind being shaved by a raw hand, anf such men are not so plenty as they miight be. Hair cutting was out of the ques- tion unless there was a big rush on or a boy came in. Boys don’t mind how their hair looks, but most men are fussier about a haircut than any- thing else. Of course a bright young fellow with his wits about him could get the knack in time, but it was slow work because he couldn’t get real prac- tice enough to keep his hand in. “Here, after seven weeks of steady practice in shaving and hair cutting, the student is ready to go into the finishing' room. There he is taught hair dressing, how to singe and sham- poo, how to use tonics and dyes, and finally how to trim the mustache and beard. That takes another week, and then the man is ready for his diploma and is fit for any shop in the city. Oh, yes; there are positions enough for them. We have more applications for trained workmen than we can fill. “The older men here? Most of them are learning the trade, not to work at it themselves, but to open shops and employ men to do the work. They have to know how it ought to be done, for it is bad policy for the owner of a shop to discover a bad workman only through the complaints of his custom- ers. Yes, this is the only barber school in existence. We have branches in all the principal cities of the United States, but they are all under one management. So far the enterprise has been very successful.”—New York Post. A Champion Snake Hunter. It is not well known that certain parts of France are infested with pois- onous serpents, against which warfare is waged by state-paid serpent hunters. They are killed in thousands, and the price per head is 2 1-2d. There was some time ago a famous serpent Killer in the forests of Southampton, John Milly, who in forty-two years of hunt- ing killed more than 29,000 vipers. A Frenchman named Courtol, who hunted in the Loire district, can be compared to Milly, as he was credited with hav- ing killed 30,000 venemous reptiles. His only weapons were one or two massive sticks. As soon as he saw the serpent he advanced and hit it violently, either killing or stunning it; with the seconé stick he pinned it to earth and cut off the head with a huge pair of scis- sors. But along with these simple weapons Courtol possessed a thorough knowledge of the habits of serpents. He knew when and where to find them. In two days near Puy-a-Clermont he killed 230 of them, and not only did he kill the poisonous creatures but he would capture them living when de- sired.—London Tatler. A Pertinent Question. An inquisitive visitor to the Hamp- ton institute for Indians not long ago asked one of the students, a pretty Sioux: “Are you civilized?” The Sioux raised her head slowly from her work—she was fashioning a bread- board at the moment—and replied: “No; are you?’—Argonaut. Vaccination is mow being literally tried on the dog, as a preventive of dis- temper. The experiments are being con- ducted on a pack of hounds in Wales, STONE SINE NCHS CONDENSED PENSIONS GRANTED. New Coke Railrcad—Sentenced for Six Years—Raising Perry's Flag- ship—Liguor Licenses. 4 ERE | Pensions were granted to the fol- lowing applicants during the past week: Joseph DPropeck, Waterford, $6; James Capstick, Conemaugh, $8; John Cessna, Gastown, $8; John® Eichenauer, Allegheny, $8; John A. George, Vandergrift, 38; Moses K. Etheridge, Edinboro, $8; Thomas C. Rigden, Shannondale, $10; Simon Rider, Mechanicsburg. $10; : james Weaver, Sayres, $8; Jacob Kramer, Soliders’ Home, Erie, $12; William Younz, Washington, $12; Michael Shottsbarger, fort Royal, $12; Geo. Hayden, Greensburg, 312; Philpine Weiss, Pittsburg, $8; Matilda Firth, Alfaratas, $8; Frederick O. Dupont. Rockford, $8; Casper J.. Gelnett,:- I'ubois, $10; William A. Cavett, East Smithfield, $17; Graffius Weston, Port Matilda, $17. The Erie chamber of commerce has again taken the matter of securing funds from Congress for raising the Perry flagship, the Niagara, which lies sunken in the Missery bay, Pres- que Isle harbor. A petition asking for an appropriation of $10,000 will be “sent to Congress. The Pennsyl- vania Sailors’ Heme commission will be asked to furnish a place on the grounds of the Soldiers’ Home here for the predervaticn of the ancient hulk. If Congress fails to appropriate the money the State Legislature will be asked to provide it. Work has been started on the con- struction of the Connellsville Central railroad, which will run from Buffing- ton station, Fayette county, to the plant of the Union Steel Company at Donora. The road will be 21 miles long. It will be used to haul coke from the coking plant of the Republic Coke Company, a subsidiary interest of the Union Steel Company, which will develop about 3,000 acres of coking coal. About 800 ovens will be operated. The Altoona Academy of Medicine and Surgery elected the following of- ficers: President, William H. How- ell; first vice president, H. R. Smith; second vice president; W. S. Ross; corresponding secretary, J. E. Smith; recording secretary, J. W. Rowe; treasurer, 8. L. McCarthy: trustee, Jchr Fay. The physicians discussed the prevalence of smallpox and the riethods that should be used to stamp it out. The case cf Arthur Wadsworth, the eighteenth regiment soldier, who on October 8 shot and Killed William Durham, a striker in Schuylkill coun- ty during the anthracite coal strike, came hefore the State Supreme Court at Philadelphia, for argument. The court took the papers and reserved decision. William Newton was sentenced by Judge Bregy at Philadelphia to pay a fine of $500 and undergo an imprison- ment of six years and nine months at hard labor in the Eastern peniten- tiary. He had pleaded guilty to mal- practice which resulted in the death of Miss Bessie Hoffman, of Birds- Horo. Of the 77 applicants for certifi- cates to practice medicine in this state examined by the state medical examining board last December in Philadelphia, 64 passed the examina- tion and will be given certificates, and 13 failed or were found deficient. Thomas Roach and Winnifred Kil- len, in jail at Greensburg, charged with being accesscries to the fact in the murder of Louis Ernett, at Jean- nette, have had warrants served on them charging murder. At Kenwood station, on the Pitts- burg, Ft. Wayne and Chicago rail- road, an eastbound cattle train side- swiped a freight, throwing 10 cars over an embankment and killing sev- eral of the cattle. Judge Cyrus Gordon, at Clearfieid, handed down the list of liquor li- cense applications. for 1903, and granted eight new licenses. None of the old applicants were refused. The hcdy of James Parker, 83 years old, was found in an old shanty near Scott Haven. He was last seen alive on December 26. He is supposed to have died on December 27. James Wands, aged 14, son of Chief of Police Wands, of Tyrcne, fell to the floor of the stage in the opera heuse, a distance of 20 feet, and died frora his injuries. The body of Clarence Wilson, who was drowned in the Conemaugh river at Blairsville, was recovered almost near the place where he .broke through the ice. John Soboskc, a Hungarian, fell into a pickling vat at the wire mill of the Pittsburg Steel Company's Monessen plant and was probably fatally burned. . Rev. Waldo Cherry, pastor of the Parnassus Presbyterian church, has been called to the pastorate of the Second Presbyterian church at.New- ark, O. O. R. Cutler, teacher of Harvey's school in Greene county, was slashed with a knife by Arnold McClelland, a pupil whom he attempted to chas- tise. New (astle business men have ors ganized a chamber of commerce. The 2-year-old child of John Fergu- son, of near Altoona, was burned to death while playing with. matches. Russell Sheriff, 12 years old, the son of John Sheriff, of Latrobe, was fatally injured by a street car. Mr. Carnegie has offered $1,500,000 for the extension of the free library system of Philadelphia. P. MeManus, superintendent of the American Steel Casting Company, at Sharon, has resigned. S. K. Demars, a carpenter, fell from a scaffold at South Sharon and was instantly killed. y db IR Re RO a Pn a [Y rR A a A