IEE continued to Ey 4 i Fa 5 B48 es NOW. hoped, for the water was bitterly cold ————— and he was rapidly growing ntimb. If you have hard work to do, If you have kind words to say, After a time there was silence. Lis- Do it now. y I To-day the skies are clear and blue, To-morrow clouds may come in view esterday is not for you; Do it now. 1i you he ive a song to sing, Sing it now. Tet the notes of gladness ring. Clear as song of bird in spring. Let every day Sing some music bring; 1t DOW, EN AANA AAA A ~~ Say them now. To-morrow may not come your way, Do a kindness while vou may, Loved ores will not always stay; Say them now, If you have a smile to show, Show it now. Make hearts happy. roses grow, let the friends around you know The love you have before they go. Show it now. R. Skinner, in New York Sun, The... Flash-Light Hunter -0-B-0-0-0— FRANK LILLIE POLLOCK, * Tk d RRA RAE Kk RATA K ok Kk SARA HAAR HARK K A AAA A AA A AN AR AAA A A AAA AA ARLY in September E left Toronto for {he north Ontario woods partly for a camping and fishing cruise. hut chiefly with the hope of obtaining photo- &r-phs of big game, for he was an enthusiastic cai hunter. In uppev Muskoka be picked up a guide, and they went up the Smoke River in two canoes, traveling slowly and making frequent halts, while Ellis fished or still-hunted with his camera. But in that region the game had been hunted too much to be easily stalked, and they portaged over height of land to another Sesion of streams that carried them into the Al- gonquin National Park. In this great forest preserve. where hunting is strictly prohibited. game of all sorts has multiplied exceedingly. and here Ills’ efforts were more sue- cessful. He obtained several good snap shots at deer, bul the mooso | were tuo wary for him. Moose were plentiful enough in thai district, as the great tracks at every pond-side showed. It was their sea- son of love and battle. and the dis- tant bellowing of the challenging bulls could be heard almost nightly. Once Ellis came upon a spot in the forest where the ground was torn and trampled, and sprinkled with blood and wisps of coarse hair. He would almost have given a finger to have photographed that duel. With his guide's assistance, he tried “jacklighting” on the small lakes, with a lantern in the bow of his canoe, a screen behind it, and the camera pre- pared with a flash-light in the stern. He thus secured several excellent flash-light photographs of deer, but no moose. He was one afternoon exploring the windings of a small and unusually tranquil stream when he came out up- on a beaver pond. It was not the first he had seen, for beaver are growing plentiful once more in the park. but he paddled over it with much curios- ity. He was ai once struck by the fact that some one had been meddling with it. The great rough dam, a rick of mud and brvzh, had been orokén, and was not yet completely repaired. In the deepest water stood the lodges, four of them, like stacks of mud-plas- tered brushwood half above the sur- face; and as he paddled alongside one of them, he noticed that a great hole had been torn in it, parily under wa- ter, which bad not been repaired at all. The other lodges showed traces of injury, Lut had been made serviceable again. Probably the inischief was the work of an Indian trapper, who had broken the dam to lower the water and cut the lodges to get at the beaver. although the fur was of little value at that season. : The beavers, or what was left of them, had not deserted, however. and pieces of gnawed sticks scattered about the shore showed that they had been working hard to repair the damage. They labor ~hiefly at nignt, and. it oc- curred to Ellis that Le might ambush himself beside the dam till dark, and obtain a flash-light picture of beavers at work. It was then nearly sunset, and he pushed his canoe deep among the alders that “ringed the water and lay down in the stern. The sun went slow- ly out of sight, but the long northern twilight still lingered. As dusk came on, one or vo beavers came out of hiding, showing their black Leads he- sides the l-dges; but these glimpses were insufficient. It grew cold, and Ellis :hivered in the cramped canoe. ‘There was no moon, and the sky was cloudy. He could no longer make out the beaver-houses or the dam, Lut sig- nificant sounds began to arise —splashes and ripplings, and once a swimming animal brushed {he stern of the canoe. Ellis was thinking of setting off a flash-light, and trusting to luck to catch something in focus, when, like a sudden thunderclap, there burst out the deep roar of a bull moose from the other end of the pond, not’ two hundred yards away. The sound was so terrific that Ellis cowered. The very leaves of the forest seemed to vibrate at its tremendous volume. Almost immediately the challenge was answered by a sonorous bellow in the same direction, but apparently nearly a mile distant, to which {he challenger responded with a roar of rage. Ellis heard the great animal threshing his antlers against the trees and smashing up the underbrush, aud he thrilled at the possibility of a duel actually t: king place in his presence, even if he ould not see it. For some minutes the distant animal was silent, while the nearer moose tear up the saplings, OE A VAAN AAA AA AAA SAA A ee gnashing his teeth with a loud chop- ping noise. Then Ellis heard a sudden startied “Whosh!’ There was a bel- iow cut short ‘and a rattling crash of locking antlers. The distant enemy must have erept up silently. made a circuit to approach his antagonist down wind, and then ch: irged. In spite of straining his eyes, Ellis could see nothing. but the noise was enough. Trees and shrubs crashed apart as the giant animals wrestled and swayed through the woods with steriorous snorts and gasps for breath. The huge prongs crashed together con- tinually. Ellis thought that the fight- ers were equally matched, but sud- denly one of them broke away, ran down to the head «f the pond, and splashed into the water. The other followed, with a terrific and triumphant blast, and the battle was resumed in the shallow water, with sounds like the dying flurry of a whale. Elis could resist it no long- er. The idea of obtaining so unique a photograph was too much for Lim, and he sat up in the canoe and pushed out. The slight current of air toward him, and the noise of the fight covered his movements, The distance was about fifty yards, and the focus of his c mera was fixed for a hundred feet. The canoe tossed violently on the vaves created by the battle, and when he had glided a short distance, there was a tremendous splash, a noise of floundering, and a scream like that of a wounded horse. One of the bulls had gone down. Ellis gave two more strong paddle- strokes, shipped the paddie. and poised his camera. The terrific threshing in the water continued, and he sighted for the spot as accurately as hz could. waited a moment, and then with trem- bling fingers pulled the trigger of the flash-gun. In his excitement he did not hear the report. The gan was heavily loaded with flash-powder for outdoor work, and in the momentary, vivid white glare he saw the dark forest, the dark water, and a giant black animal stand- ing with heal turned suspiciously to- ward him above something that was hidden in a smother of spray. Black darkness followed, and with it came an appalling bellow from the bull, and Ellis heard the sound of ia plunge toward him. The brute had sighted his new enemny in the flash, and the killing fever was upon him. Ellis caught up the paadle, spun the canoe round, and shot away blindly in the inky darkness. He could hear the bull apparently about a dozen Yards Dehind, coming with great bounds through the water. But in a few strokes the canoe collided violently with somcibing solid. Ellis lost his balance, pitched forward. and went helpless overbeard and under water. As his head robbed up, he heard the smash of th: moose putting a forefoot through the cance. He dived, trying to swim under water, and rn against the jagged surface of one of the heay- er-houses, wlLichi was, infact. the ob- stacle upon which ‘he. had been wrecked. The bull charged him with a rush, and a sharp hoof grazed his leg. In the muddy bottom of the pond he blundered into what seemed a sort of trench. 1t Jed to the beaver iodge, and as he brusbed against the br istling sur- face of knots and sticks, he felt an opening near the bottom. It was the hole that had been cut to enlarge the entrance of the raided lodge, and with a choking desire to take refuge any- where, he thrust himself inside. His head burst through a light floor- ing a foot above the water as he raised it. It was piteh dark. Lifting his hand, he felt the rough roof close above him. The water came nearly to his armpits as he squatted, and it was very cold. The air was damp and surcharged with animal odors He could hear the moose splashing about outside. probably puzzled at its victim's disappearance. Occasionally there was a sharp blow upon the roof of the lodge, but it was thick and solid, built of mud and interwoven branches. As his fright passed off a little, Ellis felt about the interior of his refuge with much curiosity. The walls were rough and splintery, and a great number of small sticks were floating about. Above the light flooring that he had broken through appeared to have been the main living-room of the family, for there was a quantity of dry grass arranged as if for a nest. As nearly as he could judge, the place was about four feet in diameter. He felt sure that the moose did not know where 2 was, for the animal was wading about from one lodge to another, snifling loudly at each. Pres- ently he might return to finish his for- mer antagonist, Ellis thought and | tening breathlessly, he could not hear the slightest sound. He waited for fully fifteen minutes 1 ore, however, to make sure, and then ventured. to thrust out his head and shoulders. It was too dark to see anything. but after listening again, he proceeded to crawl through the spening. He was half-out when came rushing through the water. cunning animal had waited silently for his reappearance, and a blow, for- tunately half-deadened by the water, reached his. arm. He squirmed back into his shelter again. quickly enough to escape further injury. A hoof- -stroke that made the whole. lodg tremble came (rashing upon the roof. A rain of blows follawed that seemed as jf they must knock the whole structure to pieces, but the tough walls held nobly. Finally, at a partic arly heavy blo, a sharp hoof burtt ia; Ioniowed by the whole fore leg. Ellis dodged, knocking his had vio- lently against the sharp sticks in -the ‘something Lm walk Directly .over__him, the bull roared frightfully. Ellis could hear the long leg scraping about close to him: then he realized that the buli was no longer trying to reach him. It was merely trying to svithdraw its leg, and was not succeeding. The leg was firmly wedged into the hole, almost to the shoulder. At this reassuring discovery Ellis re- covered from his panic. He might, in fact, have easily killed the animal by piercing the imprisoned leg with his knife, but he respected the truce of the park. The bull was now plunging about in the wildest terror, and seemed likely to break its leg if he failed to extricate it; but Ellis was not dis- posed to assist him to escape. As soon as he was quite convinced that the animal was hard and fast, he sfooped again, carefully avoiding the kicking leg, and once more wrig- gled out of the hole, leaving several strips of clothing on the projecting sticks about the entrance. The air seemed indescribably fresh as he emerged, and after the pitchy dark- ness of the beaver's den it seemed al- most light upon the pond. He could make out the vast black bulk of the bull standing over the lodge, and it ‘bellowed terrifyingly and enveloped it self in spray at the photographer's ap- pearance. But Ellis did not stop to make observations. He was afraid the bull might break loose, and he did not even look for his escape or camera. He waded ashore, and started, drip- ping, toward camp, which was three or four miles distant. The next morning, however, he re turned with his guide and a smaller snap-shot camera which he had at camp. The moose was still there, standing with its fore leg buried in the beaver-house. But its spirit was gone. It stood with drooping head, exhausted and utterly cowed. As the men approached, it eyed them apathet- ically, while Ellis took several photo graphs of it; and it was so clearly harmless that a guide waded in and chopped it free with an ax. During this operation it only sniffed wearily, and when released it splashed slowly toward shore and disappeared among the alders with a dejected air. Its leg was caked with dark blood, where it had ‘worn off about a foot of the hide in its struggles to escape. Of the other moose engaged in the night's duei there was no trace be- yond a maze of {racks and wisps of bloody hair on the torn-up earth. Un- doubtedly it had gladly taken advant- age of the diversion caused by Ellis to beat a retreat. The canoe, with a great hole in the bottom, had drifted down against the dam, and the camera with it—mot very much injured. EI lis’ chief regret was for the plate which it had contained, bearing the photograph of that duel in the dark.— Youth’s Companion. A Foster Family of Ducks, A curious experiment in the hatching of ducklings by a turkey was madd recently on a model farm at Willerhof, in the outskirts of Schlestadt, in Lower Alsace. It succeeded admira- biy, as attempis not dissimilar have succeeded elsewhere, © The hird was placed in a basket in which were twé plaster eggs, and it was kept there by means of a framework. In a couple of days the two artificial eggs were res placed with a dozen duck’s eggs. In due time nine ducklings were hatched The turkey showed much attachment to its brood and protected it devotedly. The first time the ducklings took to the water the turkey . followed them, but soon drew back and patiently awaited their return and its vigilance did not relax even when they had grown up When the fowl could not share their nest any longer, it left them in the evening to rejoin this fellow-turkeys, but when the coop was opened in the morning, it quickly sought its strange family, all {he members of which are in good health.—La Nature, Flying Turtles. In one of the gallery tanks on the salt water side of the Aquarium are three sea {urtles, each aboui a foot in length, the three including two green turtles and a hawkbill. They attract much attention here, where they can be seen close at hand ana their motions in the water studied. It may be that one of them will be seen swimming through the water, head up, with its body suspended at an angle and flapping its two broad forward flippers, one on either side, like the wings of a bird. Then the turtle looks strikingly like some of odd bird flying through the water. A visitor who halted in this tank yesterday the sight of one of these turtles that he raised his arms and swung them with the swimmer’s flapping fiippers, keeping time with the flying {urtle.— New York Sun. The: lapses from sort , front of was so struck by Unagsorted Stock. Go into any barnyard or poultry yard and the chances are that the stock will be found of all grades, shapes, colors and sizes. “Among the lot will be found some excellent layers, but the whole lot will prove unprofitable, owing to too much “rubbish.” . Yet there are hundreds who annually winter over and feed scrubs that show no signs of thrift, and which give the flock’ the appearance -of being mixed to such an extent as to destroy even ‘the prospect of ‘better results in the future. ] 4 This is due to the failure of farmers to - secure uniformity in the flock. There is no excuse for having a little of everything—good and bad—as the use of pure-bred males will overcome all such obstacles. : We do not mean to claim that the farmer should use pure-bred fowls only, for the crosses ave excellent, but if crosses are to be used, let some judgment be used in securing such crosses. Breed for -just what you vant, using certain males and females for that purpose, and not turn out the whole flock together, and then trust to chance for {be character of the offspring. There is too much useless material in nearly all flocks, but it can be bred out.—Prairie Farmer, Counting Cost of Farming. When ihe harvest is over farmers are in a position to know pretty well if the operations of the last year have been profitable. In some sections crops may have been partial failures; in others, some crops may have heen so good that prices rule exceedingly low. If the year has not been prosperous, what has been the trouble? One {thing worthy. of serious thought is whether one is wearing out his farm. ‘This is quite likely to be the case in the older States. If the crops bave been satis- factory, have we, in growing them, furnished {to the soil enough fertility to grow the crop and still return to the soil the plant food which it contained before the seed was sown? If not, we may consider that just so much we have taken from the vitality of the soil. and that, in consequence, the next crop will be correspondingly smaller. While cld-time farmers thoroughly believe in the old rule of making the farm grow. everything needed for the living of the family and stock before planning to sell any part ef the crops, conditions may change this rule slight- ly. One would not be justified in rais- ing hay for one or two animals, when the soil would bring him a much better return if it grew strawberries, for ex- ample. At {his season of rest each of us should carefully look over the past and search for the mistakes quite as earnestly as for the successes.—In- dianapolis News. —e To (live Medicine to a Horse. In giving liquid medicines to a horse, says the Horse World, have the medi- cine in a stout bottle with a sloping shoulder—an ordinary “pop” bottle does very well-and do not add any more water to it than is necessary to prop- erly dilute it, as a very large drench is’ difficult to administer. Next get the horse in a good position. so that he has to take his medicine. If the construe- tion of the stable permits it, back him into a single stall, {hrow a rope over the beam at the hack. make a noose on the end of it, pass it under the nose band of the halter and place it in the horse's mouth below the upper jaw. Now raise the lhorse’s head until the medicine will run back in the mouth. Don’t pull it too high or the horse will have difficulty in swallowing and there is danger of the medicine going the wrong way. You can easily keep the head in this position by holding the rope in one hand while you pour in the drench with the other. I’ulling out the tongue and squeezing and thumping on the throat ave quite useless as indunce- ments to the horse to swallow, and may cause coughing. Should coughing oc- cur, the head should be released at once, even it the medicine is lost, as otherwise it might get into the lungs. This is a much better and more nua- mane way than putting up the head with a twitch, and a drench is usually given without any difficulty. Preparing For the Oats Crop. Tu this section farmers grow princi- pally the spring oats. The winter oats has not met with much favor, on ac- count of its winter killing. Usually the spring is late and the preparation for the oat sowing comes when the breaking for corn is in order. This danger of the work doubling up causes the oat crop to suffer. The land is often broken wet, worked down wet and the seed sown while the land is very cold. The work of preparing a seed bed for oats is hurriedly done. Frequently old corn land is disked, the seed sown broadcast in the loose trash and cornstalks, and the land run over with a straight-toothed harrow, and the work is done. Only rich or fresh land can produce a paying crop under such conditions. The oat is sown in the spring, and two or three weeks after wheat harvest oat harvest is here. It must grow a good straw and mature seed within less than five months’ time, Oftentimes not more than four months seeding time to harvest. Hence, the oat crop works rapidly, draws heavily upon the plant food in the top soil and requires a large supply of moisture. If it fails {o get available plant food at once, or fails in getting sufficient moisture it cannot wait, but must adjust itself to the conditions and produce a stunted straw and a very small grain yield. The oat plant is a rapid grower if given plenty of food and moisture. It demands a well-worked seed bed. free from clods and young growing weeds, . centrates to supplement it. | It needs even more thorough prepara- tion than wheat, because it must come | plete its work in much less time. —W. B. Anderson, in the Indianapolis News. Buying Store Feed. In general it will pay the farmer who has ear corn to have it ground into corn and cob meal and buy some of the cheaper, more nitrogenous con- Cottonseed meal is richest in protein, but is high in price when total digestible matter is considered. Buckwheat middlings and dried dis- tiller’s grains are comparatively rich in protein, and are also among the lowest in price. Where they can be had at the prices given, their use is to be recommended for a part of the ration at least. Since they both tend to produce a soft, oily butter fat it might be advisable to feed a little cottonseed meal to counteract this ten- dency. Wheat bran, often fed for the protein it contains, is rather low in this constituent, and is also among the highest in price when digestibility is considered. 1t and oil meal or linseed meal are valuable, however, for their general effect upon the condition of the animal. Alfalfa meal, just now being widely advertised, proves to be one of the most expensive feeding stuffs on the market, if we assume that its digestibility is the same as that of alfalfa hay. There seems to be no reason for assuming that its digesti- bility would be any greater, and it might possibly be less. Each year a number of new brands of stock food is put on the market. In the majority of instances the base of each of these is a by-product of the manufacture of some more valuable article. These by-products are some- times sold alone and sometimes mixed with some of the staple feeding stuffs. They are often sold under faney names which give no clew to their composi- tion, and are frequently on the market some time before an official examina- tion can be made and the results an- nounced. It is always best to buy thes in small quantities and test them before laying in a supply. This, however, is not always practicable, and the next best thing is to rely upon the testimony or the experience of some responsible party. Xven this may be misleading, as conditions are not always the same and some are not so readily apparent. In case nothing definite can be learned concerning the new feed except through the manufacturer or agent. it is wise to stick to the standard known brand of articles.—'P. I. Mairs, in the American Cultivator. —————— Soil Analysis Deceptive. The first question that suggests it- self to the average mind is that of plant food. Is there plenty of avail- able plant food? It is supposed by many that this question can be readily answered by a chemical analysis; but as yet the chemists do not feel that their analysis gives a satisfactory an- swer to the question. The plant food in a soil may be dl- vided into that portion which becomes dissolved during the growth of the crop, and that which does not. principal problem in soil anal; been to find a solvent which w solve the maferials in the proportion in which they are dissolved by the plants. It is comparatively easy to make a complete analysis of the soil: but such an analysis gives but little information as to the amount of materials that a plant can take from the soil; and while many solvents have been tried with the hope that the amounts of food shown would correspond with the growth of crops on the soil a satisfac- tory solvent has not yet been found. Another reason for this unsatisface tory condition is that the weight of material removed from an acre of soil by one erop is so smal! in comparison with the weight of the soil on an acre to a depth of two or three feet as to lie within the limits of error of analy- sis. Gif two soils one might contain enough soluble for, say a crop of wheat, and the other not enough, and vet the analysis be practically the same. Even the amounts of potash, phos- phoric acid ovr nitrogen which are us- ually added per acre in fertilizers if dizseminated through the first two feet of the soil would scarcely show on analysis, and yet we know that they, show a marked effect on the yield of the crop.—J. D. Tinsley, in the Amer ican Cultivator. Too Busy to Work. The luxury of physical inactivity ap- pears lo be fully appreciated in the’ South, writes Mr. Bradford Torrey in Nature's Invitation; and as an illus- tration, he tells of a walk he took near Miami, Florida, and of a conversation he overheard. I was walking away from the city at a rather brisk pace one moring, when I passed a lonesome shanty. A white man sat upon fle rude piazza, and another man and a bey stood near. “Are you going to work to-day?” asked the boy of the occupant of the piazza. “Ne,” was the answer, pithy. “Why not?” “I ain't got time. I do not expect to hear the philos- ophy of indolence more szccinctly and pointedly stated if I live a thousand years. quick and ” Pe Jewish Banker a Peer. Sir Herbert de Stern, who was re- cently made a peer, is a Jewish bank- er in London, and is a son of Baron Hermann de Stera, whose title was Portuguese. : COLLEGE WILL BUY LAND Beard of New Wilmington Institution Voted to Purchase 200.6 Acres for $30,000. The board of trustees of West- mingter college, New Wilmington, at a meeting held in Pittsburg voted unanimously for the purchase of properties aggregating 200 acres and valued at $30,000, for the enlargement of the institution. Rev. R. M. Rus- sell, D. D., retiring pastor of the Bixth United Presbyterian church, North Highland avenue, and presi- dent-clect of Westminster college, re- ported at the meeting that he had $86,000 in sight and a portion of that could be applied to the purchase of the land whenever K needed. The trustees agreed to purchase the site known as ‘‘furnace hiil,”” south of the town and adjacent to the young women's dormitory. Mrs. Lucile Patterson, alias “Newt Shirk,” was arrested near Lewiston by United States Marshal Lapp for alleged fraudulent use of the mails. The woman's plan, it is asserted, was to secure correspondents through ad- vertisements of matrimonial agencies and by pleas of povemy in connection with recommendatiozs from her sup- posed minister, ‘Joseph Shirk,” and secure money for railroad fare with the proposed intention vf meeting a prospective husbané at some distant point. It is known that she secured at least $2,000. The postal authori- tiles assert that her victims include farmers in California and Kansas and ministers in Alabama and Georgia. Bhe was held under bail for United Btates Court. The school teachers of Pittston township, near Wilkes-Barre, went on strike, the schools were closed and 6500 children were shut out. The teachers say there is an average of about $400 due each of them in back pay, and the directors made no effort to get any money for them. Tiree Years ago the teachers of the same township went on strike and were out for several weeks before they forced the directors to pay the At Bellefonte, Judge Elis I. Irvis handed down his decisions in the li- cense cases. Of 48 applications 32 were granted and four held for further consideration. Two who held licenses last year were refused and three new ones granted. “ach per- son receiving a license was obliged to sign an agreement not to sell whisky In bottles and to keep closed on cer- tain holidays. Dr. E. P. Weddell, Schovl Director and for several years member of the pension examining board, announces that he will be a candidate for As- sembly at the coming Republican pri- maries. He is the second candidate from Scottdale. Berkey H. Boyd hav- ing announced a week ago. Three As- semblymen are to be elected in the new district. Citizens of Paint boro county, petitioned for a recount of votes cast in that district at the February election, alleging that many ugh, Somerset | legal votes were not accounted for. Judge F. J. Kooser after hearing the judge of election decided that the votes not returned were not properly cast. The Pittsburg Window Glass com- pany of Washington, signed the Amal- gamated association scale and ended the strike which has been on there for more than a week. All old men will be retained regardless of their union standing, but new employes must become affiliated with the Amal- gamated association. While playing with a shotgun Wil- liam, four-year-old son of Joseph Leonard, of Indian Head, near Con- nellsville, accidentally discharged the weapon and blew his head vf. The lad was playing with a younger brother in the parlor and its walls were spattered with blood and parts of the boy’s head. Clarence H. Mayer, of Pittsburg, was acquitted by a Fayette county jury at Uniontown, of a charge of embezzlement, preferred by Carpen- ter Bros., of Connellsville, by whom he was employed. Philip Packett, 18 years old, said to be a forger wanted at Buffalo, es- caped from a Lehigh Valley train as it was pulling into Sayre station, near the New York State line. He was in charge of Detective Magee. The Philadelphia “ripper” repealer, passed at the recent extra session of the Legislature is now a law. Gov. S. W. Pennypacker failed to act up- on the bill which becomes a law by default. Magnus Barron, 40 years old, a quarryman, of Edenburg, became blinded by the snow and wandered on the Pennsylvania railroad track, while going home, and was killed by, a train. Louis E. Rubin, a Uniontown mer- chant who went into bankruptcy, has been arrested. It is alleged that about $20,000 in 200ds were secretly removed from the store before'it was closed. Newton Metz, of Williamsburg, dur- ing a snowstorm was killed by a train on the Petersburg branch of the Pennsylvania railroad. He was 30 years old. Viewers John B. Didinger of Zelienorle, Henry M. Wise vf Har- mony, John M. Leighner of Butler and John Irvine of Evans City, appointed in the condemnation proceedings on the Pittsburg & Butler plank road be- tween Butler and the Allegheny county line, - have reported against condemning the road. Rev. H. D. Lindsay of the North Presbyterian Church, Allegheny, an- nounced to his congregation that he had decided to accept the presidency of the Pennsylvania College for Wo- men, to which he was elected by the trustees some time ago. ol de Sm | n ; ~~ A. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers