FAIR INES. © saw ve not fair Ines? She’s gone into the West, To dazzle when the sun is down, And rob the world of rest; fhe took our daylight with her, The smiles that we love best, With morning blushes on her cheek, And pearls upon her breast. O turn again, fair Inis, Before the fall of night, For fear the moon should shine alone, And stars unrivaled bright; ‘And blessed will the lover be That walks beneath their light, ‘And breathes the love against thy cheek I dare not even write! Would I had been, fair Ines, That gallant cavalier, Who rode so gayly by thy side, And whispered thee so near! Were there no bonny dames at home, Or no true lovers here, That he should cross the seas to win The dearest ¢f the dear? I saw thee, lovely Ines, Descend along the shoa, With bands of noble gentlemen, And banners waved before; And gentle youth and maidens gay, And snowy plumes they wore; It would 'e been a beauteous dream-— If it had been no more! Alas, alas, fair Ines, She went away with song, With music waiting on her steps, And shoutings of the throng; But some were sad and felt no mirth, But only music's wrogg, In sounds that sang farewell, farewell, To her you've loved so long. Farewell, farewell, fair Ines, That vessel never bore So fair a lady on its deck, Nor danced so light before; Alas for pleasure on the sea, And sorrow on the shore! The smile that blessed one lover's heart Has broken many more! —Thomas Hood (1798-1845). LETTER- & S103 HE big, square, weather- ¥ worn house looked in its © T © silence and isolation like q R the relic of a long dead bh 4 past. Not the abandoned relic, however, for the hand of a pains- taking florist and gardener was in evi- dence in the little yard on which the house fronted. : In spite of the flowers, however, there was such an atmosphere of sa- cred quiet about the house that except for the presence of a tabby cat on the step, it would have seemed to be unin- habited. But any urchin along the street could have told you who lived there; it was “Miss Phoebe,” while the question, “How long has she lived there?” would variably have brought the answer, “Slje’s always lived there.” Just across tite road from Miss Phoe- be’s residence stood a plain, grim, old two-story building, whose front. door- step abutted on.the pavement. As of the other house across the way, any one in the meighborhood could have’ told you who the occupant was, and of him, too, would have said that he had always lived there. re ‘Certainly every morning for more than twenty-five years Mr. Lorton had been seen to issue from his front door: punctually at 7 o'clock, in. order to ride to the station in the old, ‘bus which passed at that hour.” And from her- window Mics Phoebe had watched his departure each morning. and not- ed his return at evening, by the faint glow of a light through the chinks of the ever-closed blinds. Thus had passed twenty-five years, when one morning there occurred an unprecedented break in the - chain forged by long habit; the old ‘bus passed down on its 7 o'clock trip, and Mr. Lorton failed to make his appear- ance. Naturally, Miss Phoebe was moved from her wonted placidity, as one planet in a system is disturbed by the least erratic movement of another in its orbit. All through the long hours of the morning she watched the door cf the house across the street for the appear- ance of its owner, but at last she was forced to conclude that some import- ant engagement must have called him forth before the fixed hour of his ris- ing. Late in the afternoon she went about the garden attending the flowers with her usual care. There was a small square hole in the side of one of the gateposts, where a pair of the prettiest pf the blué-coated songsters had nest- ed every year, feeling secure from mo- lestation under Miss Phoebe’s kind- ly protection, From time to time Miss Phoebe glanced at the closed house over the way. It was’silent and still. It was not yet time for the return of Mr. Loring, if he had gone away that morning. : ; While Miss Phoebe was leaning against the little gate, her spirit drift- Ing with the gentle current of happy memories, she was suddenly startled from her dreamland voyage~ by a strange noise in the post at her side. Quickly she glanced around, just in time to see a rat leap from the little square hole in the post, dragging with it to the ground the debris of a blue- bird’s nest of the season past. The agile rodent scampered away among the ground. cinging vines, and Miss Phoebe stooped down to pick up the pest. It seemed the first time that the fittle square hole had ever been emp- ty; and as she rose she stopped to peer into the long-inhabited -shelter of the nesting birds, now: cleared of its litcle specimen of bird architecture. As she glanced into the cavity, ber eye. caught sight of some white object far back in its depths. After trying in vain “fo “make out what it was, .she picked up a little stick, and thrusting it ‘into the bole, encountered—what? Jt seemed only a piece of waste paper, yet at the sight of it Miss Pheebe straightened up and leaned forward with one elbow placed on top of the old fence post, while her breath came and went in little cuick gasps. With an effort she roused herself; and this time dragged the liftle paper from the hole. Perhaps the bluebirds had ‘carried it in, and, finding it un- available for their use. had pushed it to the rear out of ibeir way. At any rate, it had evidently lain there for many years, as the curves of the wa- ter marks were brown with age. Half eagerly, half fearfully, she unfolded the little sheet, and, although the twi- jight was deepening, and Miss Phoe- be’s ‘eyes were Bot as strong as they once were, she read on till the last! f ¥ HA & THE GARDEN 5 J. OX. C. S. REID. faded letter was deciphered. Then, without a sound, she sank down and buried her face in her hands. It was almost dark when Miss Phoe- be finally dragged herself from the damp grass and entered the house. Once inside the stately old drawing- room, she drew the folded paper from her bosom, and again read it over, while tears coursed slowly down her cheeks. She approached an old brown cabi- net which stood~ in: a corner of the room, and, taking therefrom a little rosewood casket, laid the scrap of pa- per within it. Then she turned out the light and crept to the window, where she sat looking out across the way. Evidently she was still uneasy about her neigh- bor, for there was no light from his window, nor did one appear while The following morning she again took her place by" the window. Bui the ’bus passed and Mr. Lorton had not appeared.” Fai] . - During ‘tlre day Miss Phoebe called ! Dinah to.-het room. - ».. “Er A ““Dinaly?} -she ;said; “I believe. some- thing has happened. to Mr. Lerton, ov he; is ill over there in, that house all alone.” ; : “I spec’ you said it "bout right, Miss | Phoebe, ’cause I ain’ seen nor yistiddy, neither.”’ “Oh, Dinah, it would be awful if he should die there all alone,” and Miss Phoebe turned away her head. The afternoon wore away. At length the shadows began to grow long and the anxiety of Miss Phoebe’s charit- able heart overcame her patience. “Dinah,” she said, as she passed through the hall, “I am going to Mr. Lorton’s. I feel that it is my duty, for I am sure he must be ill; and think, Dinah, if he should die there with no one’’'—surely the sweet voice trem- bled—*with no one to hear his last words.” Qut in the yard she sought among the late flowers until she found a .sin- gle white rose ready to scatter its pet- als. This sh» plucked; then, passing +hrough the gateway, crossed the street. The gorton house was an old-fash- ioned one, with a street dcor at the end of an open entrance. Through this4 doorway Miss Phoebe entered and ad- vanced along the passage, made dark and gloomy by the dense, untrimmed growth of shrubbery in the little side yard. Approaching the door of what was probably Mr. Lorton’s sleeping room, she tapped gently upon the panel. After a moment a weak voice from within said, “Come in.” Mise Phoebe hesitated = moment, while she felt the blood rush to her temples; then she firmly turned the | knob and entered. At the scund of her step the figure | turnel, revealing the dazed, feever- brightened eyes of Mr. Lorton; then a hand wandered toward a table that stood at the head of the bed, and on which rested a pitcher of water, a goblet—and, yes, Miss Phoebe drew a long breath as she saw that the hand was reaching for a little box in which lay the long-seered petals of a once red rose: With a swift impulse Miss Phoebe placed the white rose over the with- ered petals of the red one. Then lay- ing her cool hand on the hot fingers of the sick man, she said gently: : “You are ill. ‘Why didn’t you send for some one—foér—for me?” : The eyes of the sick man met hers with a half-dazed expression. Then he tufned to tite wall. “I know- you,” he muttered. = ‘You seem real, .but ‘you're not—you with your :white rose——""_. ._ “Listen, she said. “I'm going .do- send for a doctor now—at once—and then I will come back and fake care of you~! ¥ sn Again the fevered eyes turned to hers, and again they sought the wall “No usé,” murmured the hoarse voice, “no use to live: ne future—ro one ‘who cares—only red roses—red roses 2 But his visitor, her soft gray eyes misted with tears, was already hurry- ing across the road; and, although it was dark, Dinah was dispatched at once for a doctor, while Miss Phoebe, hastily gathering from her stores such remedies as she thought might relieve the sick man, hastened back to his bedside. For more than a fortnight Mr. Lor- | out | Miss Phoebe.watched, although it was | £ late when she retired. : | rose Yim to-day.) oS ed daily by the physician, and hourly by a gray-haired little woman, who always wore in the folds of her dark gown a single white rose, Three weeks from the night that his neighbor made her first call he had dmproved so rapidly that Miss Phoebe ceased from her visits, though each day she sent Dinah with little delica- cies and cordial inquiries. Finally, one golden autumn evening, Mr. Lor- ing took his first walk down the road; an occasion long remembered by the neighbors, who remarked with delight the old kindly smile and his wonted pleasant though short bow of greet- ing. Miss Phoebe had no thought of his return until she looked up and saw him pausing before the gate. As his eyes met hers she flushed ever so slightly, stammered some little phrase of pleas- ure for his recovery and then turned toward the house. “Phoebe,” said Mr. “Well, John?” He put out his hand, in whith she allowed lrer own to rest for a moment. “Phoebe, it’s twenty-five years since —since we used to stand and talk here together at sunset; but—is the little postoffice still open in the old gate- post?’ “It is open now; but, oh, John!” ex- claimed Miss Phoebe, burying her face in her hands, “I did not get your last letter until the day before I found you Ea “Phoebe! Phoebe!” cried Mr. Lorton, gently drawing her hands away from her face. The tears stood in her eyes, and John thought them a gentle show- or that freshened the springtime beau- ty of her life. “Have you got the letter now? me see it?’ He drew open the gate and went in- side, while Miss Phoebe took the lit- tle serap cf paper from her bosom and zave it to him. The letter was undated and read: - “My Dear Phoebe—You tell me you are going away in the morning to be sone a whole month, a length of time to mie will seem a whole year. I feel that I cannot let you go away with-? Lorton, Let that SHRUBS ABOUT THE HOUSE. Some Simple Ways For Beautifying the Home Grounds. vines will transform the appearance of an old schoolhouse yard has been many times made clear to readers of The Companion., An expert of the Agricul- tural Department has recently been making an investigation of what may be done in simple ways for beautifying home grounds, whether they include only the back yard of the city resi- Jence or embrace the spreading acres of the old farm. Trees and shrubbery, the Govern- ment expert suggests, should hide un- sightly buildings without interrupting the line of vision where the outlook is pleasing. Their use as screens and windbreaks may be combined with pleasing effects. Walks should generally be straight. Any ornamentation that sends the trav- eler a longer way round defeats one of its own objects. Greensward is everywhere an ele- ment of beauty as a common back- ground for almost everything that grows. The perfect lawn is a posses- sion hardly less rare than beautiful paintings; it usually represents a tri- umph over difficulties in addition to giving restfulness and delight. : Shrubs ought to be grouped so that those of upright habit and robust growth will occupy the rear, and form a general background for all the lower- growing sorts. The eye may thus be carried from the: turf to the highest foliage without resting on bare stalks anywhere. In this nature herself is one of the safest guides; her compan- jonships usually include plants which love the light and those which can bear the shade, growing side by side. The hand of the gardener should always be concealed. Evergreens seem to many Reople sombre. Nevertheless, in the winter of Northern latitudes they offer a striking contrast of the dead. i 4 They are also useful as a means. of emphasizing slight elevations. The living with the some token. I have tried to ex- press, not only in words, but in a thou-; sand other ways, my consuming love Now, O Phoebe, blest angel for you. hefore v o Ti - rife? before you go. Will you be my wife? fire's id ie 1 Yo ey and effort. of my dreams! send me a simple-token, place of ‘enlisting a little of na- value of vines in decorative planting Ss well understood. © a £ Such ornamentation “of the home ‘grounds costs something in time. mon-’ But the effect on a s aid can never be measured in ATay ano? av 3 > : sx } c May T hope? If I may, then send me | goiars. There is a restfulness in the Lope. then send pie the blood-red rose, | that I may see in i y own poor’ sila that I ma) seein it my 0 vn poor bleed fess adds to t ing heart. Your ever devoted fu >; “JOHN. Mr. Lorton’s hand i ter droppeil -t6 his Knee. . 1.: “And, Phoebe, you that evening.” “Oh, John, how could 1 know? It was by chance that I sent it as a tok- en of remembrance. Then for. some reason we ‘went away that night in- stead of the next day, so that I never thought to look in the letter box. When I came back a month later the blue- birds had settled there, and it was only by accident that I ever received your letter, twenty-five years after it was written!” ' Then, in a few broken phrases, she told of how the long concealed bit of paper had been discovered, and of hos, on the afternoon she found him ill, she had covered the withered petals of the red rose on his table with a fresh white one. But before she could finish Mr. Lor- ton was close at her side, his hand out- stretched. “Phoebe,” he said hoarsely, “if—if it was for mere cominon charity you brought me that rose, then give me— give me pow the answer I've missed all these years.” Without a word Miss Phoebe reached out a trembling hand to a nearby rose- yush. Plucking the flower slowly, carefully, she held it out—still without a word. Quite as silently the man closed his fingers about that symbollie blossom and about the hand that gave it. ‘And straightway in the face of both there dawned the look of those for whom the world had suddenly turned back through twenty-five years, and for whom the bluebirds sang with all the ecstasy of long past springs.—- New York News. sent me a red ee Tobacco Heart. It is estimated that about twenty per. cent. of the young men who recently applied to enter the Naval Academy have failed in the physical test, and the, failure was largeiy due to the use o tobacco, resulting in the irregular beat- ing of the heart. Nowadays physi- cians speak of the “tobacco heart,” a of the weed. When the smoker de- velops into a “cigarette fiend” ‘the ser: vices of a physician are necéssary, but before this point is reached the Leart- may be permanently injured. The trouble is often of gradual growtl, and it is only when the young man is subjected to a physical examination that the extent of the disorder becomes known. .An observant. Englishman, recently in, no country in. the world had seen smoking carried to sucli excegs in America.—Baltimore Hérald. Ao A Religious Enthusiast. ; . } Brother Karl of tke Benedictine Order, who was recently buried at Prague, was of noble blood and had a remaikable career. Schoenberg, ke was handscme, dash- ing, and of rare promise. But at thife ty-five a change came over his spirit, and one day he rode straight to the abbey from the parade ground, and in full uniform, asked the prior for admission. The head of the order at first refused, but the prince broke his sword, threw away his epaulets and decorations and begged for a monk's habit. ing lay in the grip of the fever, attend- | studied theology, and was o He afterward went to Rome, ned. which held the let-¢ La pure avhite rose; if I must no longer beauty of the plant life to those who ana that doubt- enjoy its atmosphere, which they he vigor with v "Companion. : pe Disastrous Alpine Year. ; "The deathroll in the Alps is increas ug this year with terrible rapidity, and promises to exceed that of any other year of which reliable records have been ‘kept. - There have been already, this year no fewer than 160 deaths, either from avalanches or climbing ac’ cidents, in the Swiss and French Alps. Among the most recent victims is M. Dubois, who, in making an ascent of great difficulty and danger without a guide, accompanied only by a friend, slipped and fell, and succumbed to shocking injuries before he could be cartied down to the hospital. Mr. Rooke's death at Zermatt appears alsc to have been due to an attempted as cent of a difficult passage without a guide. At Saentis a German musical director fell and was instantly kilied a few days ago on the Bodmer Alps Two soldiers belonging to an Alpine regiment were swept away and killed a week ago near Epierre; the accident on the Dolderhorn, due like so many kothers to the absence of a guide, re sulted in the death of one of the three climbers and such injuries to another that he will probably never be able tc walk again; another guideless ascent on the Wetterhorn ended in the fall and instant death of one of a party of Swiss tourists; while on Mont Pilatus an Englishman; exploring in thin sum mer shoes, slipped and fell, landing al most unhurt on the very brink of a trouble caused by the excessive usé | on a visit to the United States, said § As Prince Edward : 200-foot sicer drop. Miss Nicholas, a Scottish lady, a few days ago fell intc a deep, crevasse on the Mer de Glace at Chamonix, though her fall was for- tunately arrested, and she escaped with a few minor injuries.—London Pall Mall Gazette. A Briel Interruption. i T.ooking' every inch jurist, Judge Clay N. Merriton, of Ala. ‘hpama, was at Seelbach’s Hotel last night surcharged with a fund of clever arpecdotes concerning himself. Judge Merriton was asked by a re porter how he had acquired the facility with which ‘he turned from one case to another. In explanation he stated that he had learned this from what he saw at a baptism of colored people avhen a boy. t# The weather was very cold,” said Judge Merriton, “so that to immerse the candidates they were obliged to eut away the ice. It happened that when one of the female eonverts was dipped pack into the water the cold made her squirm about, and in a moment she LBaq slipped from the preacher's hands nd was down the stream under the ice. ; s “The preacher, however, was not dis- goncerted. Looking up .with perfect almness at the crowd on the bank, he said: ‘Brethren, parted—hand me down another.” "= Louisville Herald. © cm The Fish and the Voice. Fine voices, it is said, are seldom found in a country where fish or meat diet prevails. Those Italians who eat the most fish (those of Naples and Genoa) have few fine singers among them. The sweet voices are found in the Irish women of the country, and not of the towns. Norway is not a country of singers, because they eat too much fish: but Sweden is'a coun- try of grain and song, The carnivorous pirds croak; grain-eating birds sing. How wonderfully a few shrubs and | dan take up duty’s rotnrds «Youth's the eminent this sister hath de SPECIALISTS IN THIEVING. How Burglars Will Ignore Some Articles of Value in Preference to Others. It is a remarkable thing, said a de- tective to the writer recently. but I can assure you that many of the rob- beries which are taking place every day prove beyond 2 doubt that there are certain thieves who confine them- selves to annexing one class of goods only. In some instances this is fo pro- nounced, and the specialty stolen so extraordinary, that I thoroughly be- lieve the thief must have ~ mental nut loose somewhere. To give you a case in point. A few months ago the establishment of a well-known firm of oboticians was broken into. The place contained a magnificent stock of valuable lenses, microscopical instrumen -, gold chains, zold-rimmed “pebbles,” etc, worth several thousand dollars. But did the robber take any of these things, though they were lying round ready to his hand? Neo! Fe simply secured about a hunared glass eyes and de- camped. The same thing happened about two months later, when another shop of the same description was broken into. When the fact of the burglary became known to the proprietor we received notice at headquarters and I went dow: to lock into the matter. We went over the stock and, after careful inspection, found that appar- ently nothinz had been removed. I congraiulated the proprietor on his good fortune, and was about to take my leave when he called to an as- sistant and asked where the case of artificial eyes was. It had vanished, or, rather, the contents had, and, put- ting two and two together, I came to the not unnatural conclusion that one ‘burglar had been “operating” in both places. We never discovered the thief, but doubtless it was someone who had a mania for collecting glass eyes, and was even willing to risk his liberty in doing so. It is scarcely credible what a num- ber of communion cups are stolen from different churches every year, both here and abroad. Though these cups are valuable; of course, I do not think that they are always stolen for their worth alone.: I know of one Presby- terian church where every communi- cant is provided with a separate cup, and swhere, curing a sirgle year, 216 of these miniature chalices have been stolen. The very valuable large jewel studded chalice and paten, however, appear to bave no fascination for the thief or thieves, though they might be'as easily carried away as the small cups. All attempts to trace tif miscreants have failed, and now special watch is being kept in this church, but appar- ently no further robberiecz are contem- plated, for the probable reason that there a.2 very few cups left. The “alders,” too, have decided to go back to the more usual custom of having one cup for all communicants. Mean- while, numerous other cases of stolen cups continue to be notified, and when we do capture the burgiars and ask them to explain why they commit such sacrilegious acts, thev usually refuse to answer. . —— Japanese Man Power. The present war in the East is prob- ably the only instance of a great cam- paign between civilized nations in which one of the combatants has re- lied almost entirely on man power, instead of horse power, for transport, the whole of the supplies of each Jap- anese division of infantry being carried by as many ‘“coolies” or porters, as there are fighting men. The Japanese porters are mainly men whose phy- sique is not judged to be good enough to entitle them to fight in the line of battle, though according to modern Eu- ropean notions theirs would be consid- ered rather the more arduous task of the two. But the Japanese have shown up till now that their choice of means has generally been correct, and it is not likely that they have made a mis take in this case. They know their own people, and for centuries human transport has been the occupation of a large class of their unskilled labor. The litter or rick- . shaw, has been adopted, in imitation of their method, even in Simla, the governing city of India. By a simple mechanical eontrivance they have also greatly facilitated the work of Dear- ing burdens. A bamboo is carried on a kind of pad over the shoulder, and the load, carefully balanced, is suspended to each end. The carrier thus avoids one of the greatest sources of fatigue—mamely, the effort of pick- ing up the burden when it has been laid down to rest—for by merely rais- ing the bamboo and putting his whole body under it he lifts it with the least possible effort.—London Spectator. Teeth Made of Paper. One of the novel inventions which hail from Germany is artificial teeth made from paper. Many of the den- tists are using them and find them to be entirely satisfactory. They have several advantages over the ordinary ‘pnes ‘made of porcelain “or mineral composition, as they are cheap, do not break: or chip, are not sensitive to heat or cold, nor has the moisture of the mouth any effect vpon them. Bishop Olmstead. Bishop Charles 7%. Olmstead, who succeeds ine late Bishop Huntingtosn, is sixty-two years old, was educated at Trinity College, and the Berkeley Divinity School. and was ordaised to the priesthood in 1868 by Bishop Ho- ratio Potter. British Ships Built. English shipbuilders in May put into the water twenty-five vessels, of about 53,191 tons gross, as compered with twenty-seven vessels, of 54,715 tons gross, in April, and twenty-five vessels, ’ ' of 55,906 tons gross, in May last year. -niata river bank. KEYSTONE STATE CULLING MISTAKEN FOR GROUND HOG. Foreigner Kills Countryman in Butler County—Fired at Moving Ob- ject in the Bushes. Newton Tannehill killed Frank Isa- bella in mistake .for a ground hog. . Both men are coal miners, living near Hillard, Butler county, and both were hunting after ground hogs on the Rumbaugh farm. Tannehill -saw something move in a clump of bushes and could see one eye. He leveled his Winchester rifle and fired. The bullet struck Isabella in the left side, near the heart, and passed through his lung. Tannehill carried the wounded man to the nearest house and secured a doctor but he died within half an hour. Tannehill gave himself up to the authorities. Disputing as to which one should act as escort for Mrs. Samuel Epler on her way to her home, Jacob Epler and Frank Yanney, tarmers, wno live near Dushore, quarreled and Yanney shot both Epler and the woman. Ep- ler was so badly wounded that he died. Mrs. Epler was shot in the right thigh. Yanney alleges that he acted in self-defense. He is locked in the jail at Laporie. The tric had just returned from an excursion to Harveys Lake, near Wilkesbarre, and the shooting occurred at the railroad station at Dushore. The Pennsylvania Canal Boatmen’s Association held its twelfth annual reunion at Freeport. The bcatmen were welcomed by R. B. McKee, who was responded to by Dr. J. C. Kenne- dy, of Pittsburg. The officers elect- ed are: President, Dr. J. C. Ken- nedy, Pittsburg; Vice President, Rob- ert Bingham, Aspinwall; Secretary- Treasurer, M. E. Brown, Blairsville. The next meeting will be held at Blairsville. A fire, which is alleged to have been started by a spark from a traction engine, destroyed the barn of Robert Johnson, in North Strabane township, Washington county, entailing a lossof several thousand dollars. The flames broke out just before a large thresh- ing had been completed, the grain hav- ing been placed in the barn. ‘Several horses were burned. Little insur- ance was carried. ; Mystery continues to surround the disappearance of ‘John A. Lawver, the Altoona publisher who. left for New Bloomfield Friday, and whose cloth- ing was afterward found on the Ju- Every foot of the ground which he traversed has been searched thoroughly witnout results. The hunt will be continued. l The State of Pennsylvania, throlgh its district Health Officer, the county of Westmoreland, the Board of Health of Hempfield township, officials of the United States Coal Company and four physicians are battling with the small- pox scourge at Edna No. 2, a mining town three miles southeast of Irwin. There are 18 cases. 2 The Buffalo, Rochester and Pitts- burg ‘Railroad announced that a new boiler shop, 300x140 feet, will be built at once. When this addition is com- pleted the DuBois shops will have a capacity of turning out an engine every 36 hours. The road has or- dered 10 new locomotives. Mrs. Thomas R. Roberts, 60 years old, is suffering from injuries and nervous shock at her home in Scuth Sharon, following a frightful exper- ience with a negro. William Mahan, her assailant, was landed ‘in jail, after a lynching had been narrowly averted. When John Pomeroy, an undertaker at Anita, opened the front door of his house he was shocked upon discover- ing the dead body of an Italian lying on the porch. The clothing was soaked with blood, and an examina- tion showed that the man had been killed by a bullet. Has ‘Henri Bentzel, of Dover town- ship, a young school teacher and jus- tice of the peace, been murdered? Bentzel was a teacher at 'Stough’s schoo] near Dover. His father is:rich and it is known that he himself had $5,000. He often carried large sums of money and valuable jewelry. ° The Shenango Valley steel plant at New Castle resumed after a Week's idleness. The new 500-ten biast fur- nace just completed by the Carnegie Company was also placed in opera- tion. © The other. new 500-ton fur- nace will be ready early in Cctoper. The plant of the American Sheet and Tinplate Company at Leechburg, which was closed for four weeks, re- sumed. All other industries, imelud- ing the Pittsburg Steel Shovel Com- pany and the West Leechburg Steel Company, are in full operation. Additional rural free delivery serv- ice. will be established Qetober 1 at Wampum, Lawrence county, wit | one carrier. Length of route, 24 miles; population, 650. kx i Samuel Cohn, of Butler, fell from the top of a Bessemer and Lake Erie Railroad train, and received injuries that may prove fatal.n : W. T. Emenhiser, 2a lumberman, was killed by a train at. Howard, Cen- ter county. He leaves a wife and four children. vo The store of G. N. Fry, at Oil City, was entered by burglars, who eseaped detection and secured goods worth about $300. TH © a George Harris, formerly of Pitts burg, escaped from the county jail at Uniontown. A reward of $100 has been offered for his capture, Frank ‘Costa, aged 17, shot and fa- i tally wounded his father, John Costa, at the latter's home in Carbondale The boy has not ‘lived at home for some time but paid a visit there and became involved in a quarrel Which ended by the ‘young man draWing a revolver and shooting his father mn the breast. Robbers entered the Jewish synago gue of Kenhera Israel at Harrisburg, and took everything in sight in the way of valuables except a Hebrew Bible ang a copy of the ten command- ments. » ce Ne 3 Telt peared on -th trimm Ano lookin like b brim Crown One a roll circled velvet pon, Sim door v Worry op the ities v exhau We gt proper oursel we do we dc winks’ are so can an to sou be rer The better, other I ever sales ¢ tomob; “You those. - Lovely ‘come i take hizze get a wiih t ‘attired “ Wo ‘es mod in for pensiv SEE know | ery nh: fancy sometl Guin the sm Whit ble fo frock | Bert! with b ings, a Ribb frocks those « in whi silk or or blue For. 4 charmi ‘with a loped | tached The of the for sm. shirt w Moha fs a sr girls’ d How Sion #4 spoken tenden gard a enthusi lunatie, of the 1 who ha be eny more i POSsess cided ir nified 1 or is s mentior aently “Tha tor tha lowed | tastes,” nature, should surious will wo for our old and tal rest Amuse | {ndiana How In th Perkins more l¢ ment. aeighbo inite pi than th aal soul It mi finite a: aing w thought a week certain spreadin One 1 ject for >wn bu whether nany n eally ne LQ Spenc