LITTLE WILLIE IN CANNING TIME When ma gets busy cannin’ things about this time o' year And Jeaves me with the baby fer to watch : the little dear, : First thing you know it falls some way and . gets an awful bump An’ ma comes tearin’ up the stairs, ~bout SIX at a jump. . She sends me down tn watch the stuff thats boilin’ in the pot. And oh, the smell that comes from here is good, I tell vou what! But pretty soon, somehow, it gets to bub- blin’ from the top And ma comes falling’ over things to make it stop. chairs and She gets the cans all set in rows, and when it’s boiled enough It splashes on her hands and burns while she pours in the stuff, And just because I'm lookin’ on there's something slips somehow And down the can goes on the floor, and gee! but there's a row. : When ma gets busy cannin’ things I wish that could go Far, far awav from home—about a thou- sand miles or so— ‘And then come back along about the time the table's set And ma’s got out a stuff to be et. —Chicago Record-Ierald. can or two of good ay, ¥ a 4E CAME TO HIS OWN. Herbert Vinton caressingly over passed his hand his rather grayish, though still luxurious, locks, and studied the picture before him. It was the photograph of a girl, or rather cf one who had been a girl the day before. Around him were many of wealth. In spite of his bachelor- hood he had all the cares and com- forts of a splendid and well ordered house. He was not a clubman: he had little taste for society; he had traveled all he cared to; he had grown weary of plays, and at fifty, still as vigorous as he had been at | thirty, he preferred to spend his leis- ure moments in his library. “Yes,” -he said to himself, still looking at the picture, “if her mother could Dc as she was twenty-five years ago they might pass for twins.” He drew a long sigh. Twenty-five vears ago her mother had said no to him and married a man who was fifty-five, *I was poor (Len,” Vinton mused, “and he was rich. Now I'm rich and he-—well, I forgive him. He's dead. And they are poor, and she is still ready to give—not her soul this time, but her daughter, ‘for money.’ ” The letter that lay on the desk was from her. It was the first she had written to hin: since their part- ing. She had at least been loyal to the maa she had chosen. ‘Why, he asked himself, had she sent him the picture of her daughter, if not for the purpose that had first suggested itself to him? Why had she not sent her own? Her letter, coming so =oon after the beginning of her widowhood and the loss of her fortune, meant but one thing. When he entered his library the next morning his eves at once sought the picture of the fair-faced girl. “I'll go,” he said to himself, after taking up the portrait again and gaz- ing at it” for a leng time. “Why shouldn't 1? There will be no unfair- ness about it—mnot, at least, on my part. ‘hey—both of .hem—owe it to me. I've waited twenty-five years. \Why shouldn't I be ] evidences rewarded now? It will only be a case of turn about. He took her in the glory and fresh- ness of her youth, whcn she right- fully belonged to me. But here’”— he looked earnestly at the picture again—*"she has returned just as she vras whe: they robbed me of her. 1 will have her. She is my cwn. Fate “has give her back to me.” : He found them in plain little quar- ters, and Eleanor—they had given her her mother's name—placed her hands in his and looked up with a look that awoke a thousand memories in him. It wes the look that he had s0 often, waking and dreaining, seen before. Her fingers seemed to give the old, glad, thrilling touch. Her voice was the voice that had been calling him through all the lonely years. He had found his love again —fair, undefiled, just as she was when h= had lost ner. The other looked upo. chem and was silent. ‘Youth was no -longer hers. Gladness was not in her eyes. Her smile was not the eager smile of hope. Much of her heaut; she re- tained, but it was not the beauty that inspires love. It was such becuty as might be chiseled out of marble. In the days tha: came and went Vinton's joy was boundless. There had been dark vears, in which he had been sure that he would never taste the sweets of love again. He laughed at himself for having harbored such doleful thoughts. And always he kept assuring his conscience that he was preparing to claim only what was his. “She is mine; she has been re- turned to me by them that did me wrong,” he declared. “I have won her by waiting. 1 will have my own.” Eleanor did not dread Lis coming. Often she sat at the window looking eagerly for him. She had learned from her mother why he had been liv- ing in loneliness. She had heard from her mother of the wrong that he had suffered. She had learnel that it was their duty to make reparation. Once, in 2a moment of depression, she had asked: “If he were still poor, would you think 1 ought to give myself to him to right the old wrong?” Her mother had turned from her and failed to answer. » returned to me. They returned to something akin to luxury. The doubts concerning the manner in which they were to ge along had been cleared away. In the mother's eyes thore was a look that was new and strange. Not a look of Jj0¥% not a look of content. Perhaps the look of the lioness that has eaten her wheip to satisfy her. own hunger. Perhaps. Bu: Eleanor discovered in good time that she was not to be sacrificed. Affection for Vinton had found its way into her breast. She did not weep for shame of the thing she was to do. She forget that through her a debt was to be paid, and that through her they were to be insured against poverty. She forgot all save that Vinton was estimable and kind, and that it made her glad to know that he was happy. ¥ One day when she was away buy- ing things fo the - wedding, her mother and Vinton sat alone to- gether. “You are going to be very happy —after all,” she said. “Yes,” he answered—*“after all. My glad old dream is to come true— after all. = You are good to let it happen so; bu. I shall have only what is mine-—after all, you know. The years I have lost can never be given hack; they are gone forever. Still, I gladly give them for the joy that is Only those who have robbed as I have been robbed and who have won their treasures back can know the gladness that comes with the returning of what is my own. Only they who have been loved and lost can know how deep and how dark is the valley which love has come to call me out of. Forgive me for saying these things to you. I know you cannot understand them. It is my present joy that makes me look back witl. pity for the hopeless thing I was down there in the dark- ness where it was so lonely and so cold. I have waited so long, I have denied s» long, that I am intoxicated by the sweet aroma even before the cup touches my lips. You have been | not—"’ With a pitiful cry she put h= rands to her face, and for a moment, while she sobbed, he stood looking at her. - Then h. lifted her up, saying: “God hélp me! I had forgotten that all IT have been denied you also have been denied, and that if I return to claim my love where it was taken from me you must go-on through the darkness alone.” Eleanor drew back from the half+ opened door rr. went away softly, leaving her’ mother in his arms.—S. E. Kiser, in Chicago Record-Herald. ELECTRIC SLEEP IN SURGERY. Professor Leduc Says He Has Discove ered a Perfect Anaesthesia. Stephane Leduc, the eminent pro- fessor of the School of Medicine ar Nantes, France, has discovered a method of causing electric slzep, which, it is declared, will replace chloroform and other anaesthetics in all surgical operations. The discov= ery proceeded from study of the ef- fects of intermittent currents and from the knowledge that the skull and brain offer but little resistance to the current. For a humar being a current of thirty-five volts is applied intermit- tently in its full strength for minute fractions of a second. Two electrodes arn applied to the skull in a special manner, th: pointe of application be- ing first carefully shaved. Professor Leduc made scores of experim :nts on dogs and on himself. All wer: successful. The application of the current on the head is not dangerous, and no ill effects follow, even when the experiment lasts for hours. The adv.itages of the electric sleep are said to be numerous. Anaesthesia by chloroform, morphine or ether is disagreeable, always dangerous, and has often proved fatal, while the awakening painful. During the electric sleep the patient is perfectly quiet and .the awakening occurs soon as the electrodes are withdrawn. The sensations after the operation are quite agreeable. . The mind ap- pears to work more clearly and more rapid, and there is a sense of in- creased phisical vigor. This last circumstance led Pro- fessor Leduc to use his brain elec- tricsation for cases of nervous exhaus- tion, and even ordinary fatigue and moral depression, with wonderful re- sults. Incidentally the scientist asserts that the application in a certain man- ner of hic special current will electro- cute a subjecet in an absolutely pain- less menner, gentle sleep being fol- lowed by gradual but certain death. — New York Times. is 3 When the Sea Smokes. Explorers tell of the peculiarity of the Arctic regions. When it is very cold a steam as if from a boiling ket- tle arises from the water. At forty degrees below zero snow and human bodies emit this vapor. It appears that the colder the temperature the more numerous are the deceptive signs of heat. When the tempera- ture is lower than forty degrees the trees burst open with a loud report, and there is a cloud of vapor as if the thing had been done with powder. When it is still colder the earth cracks open with loud noises, rocks break and streams of smoking wa- ter pour from the cracks in the earth. Fire on the end of a cigar will go out, but the cigar will emit smoke from the whole surface as if it were burning under the wrapper.—Phila delphia Grit. Forester Pinchot advises pecpie Lc use the :vcods but save the soods, PENNSYLVANIA STATE NEWS TEN PERSONS Trolley Car Jumps Track on Hill at Wilkes-Barre. Ten persons injured Wyoming Valley Traction © Company car that’ jumped the track at the top of a steep hill, entering into Wilkes- Barre. The accident was caused by the accumulation of a heavy frost and leaves on the rails. At point where the accident occurred was a curve which the car had round- ed safely, ded along for a short distance and finally turned completely over on a sidewalk. The injured, who are all from this city, are: Attorney William Walsh. Berkley, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Griffith Jones, Marie Kearney, Dennis, Daniel Gallagher and Major. The two former are badly cut bruised about tae head and The others are slightly injured. INJURED teed were on a Davey, Irene Mrs. MUST ACT WITHOUT PAY Ruling as to Lawyers pointed for Convicts. Judge Gecrge S. Criswell of Frank- lin, Pa., rendered an opinion in which he declared unconstitutional the law passed hy the Legislature of providing for the pavment of counsel for murderers appointed by the state. The decision was given in the case of James Strail, who is in jail, await- ing tridl for the murder of his wife in Oil City. ‘Judge Criswell points out that the one important provision in the law is that the defendant's at- torneys shall Le paid by the county, vet there is nothing bearing on this point in the: title. That, the eourt says, is a fatal defect, since the con- stitution of the state provides that the subject of a hill must be clearly expressed in the title. Court's LOAD UPSETS; MAN KILLED Relief Comes Too Late Teamster Pinioned Under Wagon. Caught under a heavy load of pipe, which had fallen upon him, William y, a teamster of Waynesburg, for minutes directed the men. who were attempting to rescue him, but died before he could be extricatod. King was bauling pipe for the Alep- po cil fiellis the wagecn over turned on a-~s¢eep hill. > to Save a when Pian to Lease Crnal. A meeting of New York and Fhila- delphia capitalists has just been held at Reading for the purpose of crgan- izing a company to leasc th Schuyi- kill canal between that place and Hamburz. : It is proposed to erect a series of cight large dams and to use the water on the Schuylkill river to create power for a trolley railroad ts run from Reading to. Philadelphia. The Schuylkill canal is still operated frem Philadelphia tec Hamburg, and last year nearly 100,000 tons of cecal were transported upon. it. If widen- ed and deepened and continued as formerly into an anthracite coal re- gion it would become an important artery of commerce. Greene Ccunty Teachers Meet. The torty-first annual Greene Cotn- ty Teachers’ Institute was heid in the Overa-=House_ at Waynesburg: with Superintendent John lL. Stewart presiding. The corps of instructors and lecturers includes Prof. G. I? Lamb, Alliance, O.; Superintendent James M. Coughlin, Wilkes-Barre; Dr. E. P. Green, West Chester; Dr. Russell Conwell and Lee F. Lybarg- er. Philadelphia; Hon. Champ Clark, Missouri. New York, is music director; Miss Christine Miller, Pittsburg, vocalis’, and Miss Camille Firestone, violinist. Dies of Rabies. Samuel Burnett, 7 vears cold, of Maltby, and John Zecemertis of Du- pont, are dead from rabies, and Isaac Burnett, 12 vears old, a brother of Samuel and George Reca. 10 vears old, were sent to the Pasteur Institute fe ba treated for hydropho- bia. The children were bitten seven months ago by a dog, but no toms of rabies developed until a few days ago. When symptoms of rabies developed Zeemertis refused to go to the Pasteur Institute and died in intense agony. To Operate New Roads. Charters were issued by the State Department to the following COor- poraticns: Consolidated Window Glass Co., Bradford, capital. $1,000,- 000: National Automobile Co., lL.an- caster. capital, $5,000. Charters wera issued also to the Butler and Chi- cora street railway to operate a line between’ the two places, € and the Butler, Saxonburg and Tarentum, to build a line from Butler to "Taren- tum. The Kittanning Presbytery of the Presbyterian Church met and solved the pastaral relations of Rev. P. DD. Daubenspeck ana First Pres- byierian® Church of Apollo. Rev. Mr. Daubenspeck has accepted a call to Huntingdon. adis- a, SESS Treasurer Calls in $50,000. State Treasurer , Berry called in $50,000 from 50 banks and trust com- panies holding state deposits, this money tc be used in paying the cur- rent expenses of the state. Will Go to Detroit. Rev. H. Hobart Barber, for vears rector of . Christ Greensburg, has resigned to the rectorship of the Church of Messiah, Detroit, Mich. He will Church, en- ter upon his new work the first Sun- day in Advent. Church Is Dedicated. Tenth Street Methodist Church of Erie was dedicated with services in charge of Rev. Dr. A. B. Riker, president of Mt. Union Col- lege. Dr. Jchn C. A. Borland is the pastor. the | when it jumped and skid- ! William | and | body. | Ap-- 1997) Prof. Grant Celfax Tuliar, | symp- | | river seven | accept | the | FIND LARGE STORE OF LOOT Yeuth Is Arrested and Makes State ment Implicating Others. After police, led by the confession of Joseph Smith, 15 years. old. had discovered a cave which Smith and four other boys are alleged to have hidden large quantities of plun- der stolen from houses and stores in Parnassus, the five bovs were held for juvenile court by Justice of the Peace J... P. Humes. Many robberies have been commit- ted in this vicinity. Smith was ar- rested as a suspicious person, and he | named Victor Johnston, John Johns- ton, Walter Skyrzcek and Jacob Ka- volski as his accomplices. : The cave, which is outside town, | was filled with loot and in it were found several revolvers. The boys are now in the Greensburg jail. in WANT MERGER ANNULLED Philadelphia & Erie Stockholders Sue Pennsylvania. equity from Erie A bill in Fennsylvania Philadelphia & 10 restrain the operating the railroad as part of its svstem under the merger ef- Jected by a vote of the majority of —steekholders-ef both corporations last spring, was filed in the common pleas. court at Philadelphia by An- {drew j. Reilly and Walter S.. Hum- phreys, trading as Frank T. Bell & Co., and Gustav S. Soulas. The plaintiffs. who are Philadelphia & Erie stockholders. hold that the agreement entered into by the de- fendant companies is unconstitutional and confiscatory, and deprives them of their property without due process of law and without compensation. They argue that the law of March £2, 1401, under which the merger was ef- fected, was unconstitutional. MAIL CARRIER WRECKED ute Runs Away and Over Embankment. ourson, a rural mail car- the Washington postoffice, delivers mail in a large touring and Miss Jessie Anderson = of Washington, wi was accompanying him. had a very narrow escape from death. when the car became unman- backward over a Tumbles rier from who car. ageable and ran Ligh embankment. Beth occunants machine as it a board fence Outside of a was injurd. leaped from the was crashing through a0 feet below the road. few scratches neither Prominent Merchant Thomas C. Jenkins, financier, churchman and the = wholesale erocery Thomas C. Jenkins, largest estab- lishment of kind in the country, died at the family residence in Union avenue. Allegheny. after a long ill- ness. From a modest little establish- ment in Wood street, : where the great interests of Mr. Jenkins. had their inception just after the close of the Civil War, developed the largest wholesale grocery and fiour house in the United States. Dies. merchant, founder of house of its Worse Than an Elephant. A cinnamon bear and a grizzly bear are in custodv at the city prison at Altoona, and the authorities are wrestling with the question of taking care of the pair. The animals were cantured, from two Frenchmen, who, it is claimed, were torturing them to make them play tricks. The French- men refused to pay a fine and were sent to jail. Reports of Poor Potato Crop. Reports indicate partial failure of the potato crop in Western Pennsyl- vania Charles Anderson of Butler county, usually raises 2.000 bushels. He savs this year he wil] not have over 500 bushels. Similar conditions exist along the whole Allegheny val- lev, the cause being potato rot, which proved so disastrous in Lehigh and Berks counties. Orders for potatoes at and 65 cents a bushel have been canceled by farmers. hh Replacing Destroved Street. The steady washing of the Alle- gheny river against the banks at Brackenridge long ago washed away a street along the shore. It is now propesed to recover this lost ground and to raise: the low land along the above the danger mark. The Steel Co. has laid a track from its nlant along the river front and is dumping cinders over the bank to replace the street. Sherango Plant to Resume. The Shenanzo tin plate plant resume operations November 1, cording to unofficial announcement. It has been idle since July 1, under- coing renairs. The resumption will affect 2.600 employes Thieves entered the of : W. E. Tvson at Tyrone and stole six dia- mond rings valued $1,800. They did not take a geld watch and a valuable brooch which were with the rings. Allegheny house at lids will be invited within the next two weeks by the engineering department of the Pennsylvania Rail- road Co. for a new passenger station at Swissvale. In the erection of a modern station, the elimination of the grade crossing and other changes at that place. the railroad will spend about $175,000. Sharon Plant Reduces Force. Owing to a scarcity of orders the | Sharon Foundry Co. has reduced its force. of men at jts Wheatland plant ahout half. Manufacturers in this vi- cinity state business has fallen off 40 per cent and the prospects are ! poor. The slump is assigned to the fact that the railroads are not buy- | ing new material. Episcopal | Reports from growers in the Erie | section of the grape belt say that this | season is the banner one of years, i with prices high. Scarcity of help | is the one drawback. The shipments | will exceed those of all former years. RON SEED TWAS GOLDEN IN ot Nef} ) 50 Tas FOR HALLOWE'EN. By JoAnson Morton. LAST SPRING A TINY, SMOOTII GRAY I PLANTED IN THE GROUND. FIRST CAME A SHOOT, AND. THEN, WITH SPEED, A VINE AND YELLOW FLOWERS INDELD WITH GREAT. GREEN LEAVES AROUND. AND WHEN THOSE BLOSSOMS DROOPED AND DIED A QUEER FRUIT, GREEN AND SMALL" IT GREW AND GREW THE VINE BESIDE TILL WET BY SHOWERS, ’ BY SUNSHINE DRILCD. THE FALL. A SPLENDID PUMPKIN, SO THEY SAY. OF TRULY ‘WONDROUS SIZE, 'AND GRANDMA SAYS, ‘PUT IT AWAY, AND JUST BEFORE THANKSGIVING DAY PLL MAKE IT INTO PIES!” BUT HALLOWE'EN COMES FIRST, YOU SEL THE PUMPKIN’S REALLY MINE AND WHEN I PICK IT JOYOUSLY, AND SHOW IT TO THEM, IT WILL BE A JACK =-0’-LANTERN FINE! 1 ’ ‘THE AIRSHIP AGE IS HERE “heavier than the air.” man Army being tested. otherwise favorable weather, they great facility. steersmen are aware that their progression. ward. remain in the air, is varied. French limited to slightly over three hours, venting further progress. sartments, each entirely only one compartment. The Parseval balloon, which balloon. direction. motor. machine. wings; air after it has ascended. the vertical fixed sails. forty-five miles an hour. Berlin..—The science of aerial navigation, at least in Germany reached a point where many of the most prominent investigators are ask- ing themselves in which direction they shall pursue their experiments. The problem of steering is satisfactorily solved, but there remains the im- portant question of the conquest of the contrary currents of the air, and this raises the issue between the advocates of “lighter than the air” All have given evidence of the fact that. may Not one of them, however, has on any occasion ventured into the air when a strong wind was blowing, for the good reason that their weak The greatest speed attained by any of them, and this applies also to French balloons, has not exceeded miles an hour, and at that rate in such a wind they Even the Zeppelin, which is credited with a thirty-four miles an hour, would do little more than he As to form, the cigar shape maintains its favor. construction, on which, it is argued, depends the capacity of the balloon to In Zeppelin's balloon the envelope is entirely of aluminium, covered with silk and rubber; lower portion of the main body of the envelope is of metal, covered with silk and rubber, the ends and the upper portion being of ordinary balloon material; while Parseval's balloon is entirely composed of flexible material, similar to that used in spherical balloons. The voyages of the Parseval and military ballecons., as well as of the airships, all of which are either semi-rigid Contest at St. Louis Proves That Man Has Conquered the Upper Element. , has and Balloons inflated with gas are generally regarded here as having nearly, if not quite, attained the final stage of their possibilities, which, although marvelous in comparison with the position of only five vears ago, still leaves much to be achieved before the air can be said to be mastered. All three systems, the rigid, the semi-rigid and the flexible, repre- sented respectively by the steerable balloons of Count aeronauts and Major von Zeppelin, the Ger- been and are still in light winds and and maneuvred with Parseval, have be steered motive power would not admit of in round figures twenty-eight would be driven back- ced of thirty-three or 1d its own. but the material of in the military airship the or flexible, have been owing to -the ferward end of the en- velope gradually collapsing through the escape of gas, thus presenting a concave surface to the direction in which the balloon is steered and pre- On the other hand, the Zeppelin, even after the escape of a consider- able quantity of gas, retains its shape and is able to proceed. ; Count Zeppelin asserts that he can attain a velocity of about thirty- four miles an hour with the motor working at full pressure. trials are awaited with the greatest interest, for with such a speed, accord- ing to meteorological averages, which show that on ninety days out of every 100 the wind does not exceed thirty miles an hour, he would be able to as- cend and navigate against it successfully, although on some occasions he: would be able to make only very slow progress. ever, the balloon would be able to pass over an enemy’s camp without run- ning much danger, as, owing to its construction in twelve or fourteen com- separate from compartments be pierced by shot and collapse, not change its shape and the voyage would be continued. The other dirigibles do not possess this advantage. loon is built on the lines of the Patrie, the envelope being composed of The balloon at present in use, which contains 1800 cubic meters of gas, is intended only as a model for larger airships in case the authorities decide to adopt the system. has shown such navigation in calm weather, has the same disadvantages as the military It is constructed somewhat differently, in the envelope contain- Ing the gas being fixed two balloonets, one in front, the other in the rear, which, when one or the other is pumped full of air by the motor, change the equilibrium and permit the balloon to ascend or descend in oblique The envelope contains 2800 cubic meters of gas. The only serious German experimenter until now with a flving ma- chine ‘‘heavier than the air’ is Karl Jatho, of Hanover. a remarkable aeroplane, composed of six sails (a horizontal steering horizontal mainsail, two vertical fixed sails and two vertical steering a wind propeller and a basket or platform, carrying a twelve horse The equilibrium of the aeroplane is maintained by the horizontal steering sail, which controls the raising or lowering of the forepart of the The two vertical steering sails serve to i gpreading or furling one or the other, while the two vertical fixed sails, or as they are called, keep the aeroplane, so to speak, resting on the Five wheels affixed beneath front one movable in any direction, are put in motion against the wind by means of the motor at the same time as the wind propeller, and the aero- plane runs along the ground until it obtains sufficient way for the pole of the horizontal steering wheel to be raised against the wind. ‘ then fills and the aeroplane rises into the air, where it is: kept floating by Should the motor cease working from accident or other cause the mainsail is large and strong enough to act as a parachute. Herr Jatho asserts that his aeroplane is capable of attaining a speed of His further At a high altitude, how- the others, even should several the metal envelope would The military bal- wonderful powers of He has constructed sail, a sails), power direct the course by the platform, the The mainsail Ex. THE “NULLI SECUNDUS,” THE FIRST BRITISH MILITARY DIRIGI- BLE BALLOON, LATELY SUCCESSFULLY TRIED AT FARN- BOROUGH-—IT IS 110 FEET LONG AND HAS A 50- HORSE-POWER S8-CYLINDER MOTOR. List of Racing Balloons in the Order of Flight. St. Louis. — These were balloons entered in theraces in order of flight: Balloon and Country. ilot. Pommern, Germany. .Oscar Erbsloch United States, America..H. B. Hersey L’Isle de France, French. . A. Lablanc Duesseldorf, Germany ..Von Abercron Lotus I., England. ...Griffith Brewer America, America. ......J. C. McCoy Anjou, France........Rene Gasnier Abercron, Germany. ....Paul Meckel St. Louis, America. ....A. R. Hawley Chandler Qualified as Contestant For Lahm Cup. Captain Charles De F. Chandler, who reached St. Louis after a twenty- one-hour balloon trip in the army bal- loon with J. C. McCoy, settled all doubts as to whether he has qualified as a contestant for the Lahm Cup by saying that he mailed to the Aero Club of America official notification of his entry two hours before he left St. Louis. He beat the record by sev- enty-two miles. The best previous distance covered was 403 miles.