WOULD | FATE BE KIND? RONDEAT REDOUBLT Would Fate be kind, and give our childnvod back, All the long years which we have left behind, And bid us walk Which we have again the self-same track ollowed, ignorant and blind— . Should we be glad the same old path to find, With every sorrow, every loss and lack, And every burden for the heart and mind— Would Fate be kind and give our childhood back Would Grief’ wild storms, Disaster’s Thunder-crack, Be recompensed by all Life’s joys combined ? Would we toil on beneath Care’s heavy pack, All the long years which we have left behind? Fair fruits were bitter, underneath the rind; In bluest skies the tempest gathered black: Would we rejoice, should Fate her skein rewind, And bid us walk again the self-came track? Why change the dates in Time's grim almanac? Safe with the past let them remain enshrined; Nor crave the path in Life’ Which we have followed, s cramped zodiac ignorant and blind. We should not be more happy or resigned, Nor suffer less from scourge, and knout, and rack, Briers and thorns with nettles intertwined. If she should send us on the self-same track. Would Fate be kind? —Elizabeth Akers, in Putnam’s. For five vears I had been confined to my armchair by paralysis. Occa- sionally I would be carried down to an open carriage and taken for an hour or two through the city, or the neighboring country. My legs—well, there is no necessity to speak of them; one of my arms was still able to move, and, thanks to it, I could still eat alone. But my eyes were good and my hearing was acute. One day, when the time was ex- tremely dull, I fancied that I would Yegain complete calmness if I could -hear an opera. My friends remon- strated, but I insisted. I cannot tell how happy I was—I was going to be filled with music, good musie. By an unexpected chance they played “Le Prophete,” one of the works that I had always preferred. At last the hour came. My niece of sixteen was to accompany me. Two strong men carried me to my chair. Fortunately we did not live very far from the theatre. My nephew had thoughtlessly se- cured seats in the first circle. No matter, my two bearers installed me there, me and my armchair. I was directly in the centre, just opposite the stage, and I saw admirably all the theatre, from the pit and the orches- tra chairs to the boxes of the fourth circle, that legendary place where you are not incommoded by the chande- lier—you see over it. I remained alone with my niece, who was as much enchanted as I was. They played the first act. I do not remember ever to have enjoyed in my life happiness so complete, so heavenly. The second, third and fourth acts were rendered in a man- ner that I thought perfect. During the intermission I noticed between two violoncellos an odd little creature, in whom I felt unaccounta- bly interested. He was a poor, mis- erable fellow, shockingly deformed, but his features were quite regular. When he played all his body moved and appeared to wrap itself around the violoncello in a fantastic and lov- ing manner; forming a singular con- trast, his face assumed a serious and almost austere expression, and the light of enthusiasm illumined his eyes. I mused in silence until the mo- ment when Jean of Leyden thinks that he should reveal his accomplices that they must die with him. Then a white smoke rose on the scene through the cracks in the floor. It excited no attention, and was only thicker than the smoke usually em- ployed, but suddenly there was an explosion and a flash that dimmed the lights in the auditorium; then all the dancers rushed toward the wings; the tenor lifted his white robe and liter- ally took flight, and all the other singers and choristersdisappeared one after another. “What does this mean?” demand- ed some of the audience, already alarmed. Here a young woman appeared on the stage, running. The most fright- ful terror was expressed in her face. The poor girl, distracted, sprang into the orchestra, screaming in a choking voice: “Fire!” ; The ° audience started with one sound. Oh, I remember all as if it were still passing before my eyes. The musicians stopped suddenly, but not all together, for some random notes broke forth, here and there, on the air. Frantic with fear, they rushed toward the door of the orches- tra, but quickly returned. The re- "treat was cut off. They must escape by the auditorium. The auditorium! thing was frightful, horrible, incon- ceivable! It was a battlefield. At first I did not appreciate the danger, -and then I trembled and shook with an unnatural fear. Alone with Jeanne—alone with that child who could do nothjng for me and who re- mained calm. I realized that I must remain where I was, without being able to stir, at the mercy of the fire, which. would slowly advance to lick mé, to burn me alive, to consume me. Nevertheless, I did not lose my pres- ence of mind. “Quick!” I said to little Jeanne, “fly, my chiid, and hasten some ¢ne who will take there is time.” A young man who had noticed my | niece hurried toward her. ““Comnie, little one,” said he to the child. Vithout ceremony he pulled ber aiong by the hand. Ah, there every- me away, if ” to find | ‘But my uncle, my uncle!” the girl. ‘Oh; let him come,” swered two or three voices from the crowd who were crushing themselves without mercy at the narrow door. They left me there. During this time the struggle was desperate in the orchestra chairs, stalls and pit. There were only four doors, each three feet wide, for this torrent that wanted to 'ff%h out in two seconds. The terrified people used all their efforts to reach these doors. Each wished to pass those who were in advance. They pushed, cried, shrieked and fought with fury. Two strong men braced themselves back to back near an opening that they intended to pass before any one else, and during that time no one, neither they nor the others, could es- cape. Behind them were sobs and imprecations, and the crowd pushed with blind fury. I saw some Young men =who had already felt the heat of the flames jump on the seats and then on the shoulders of those nearest the door. Thus they crawled along on their fel- low sufferers. Meanwhile the scenery was burn- ing. The flames were rapidly ap- proaching the auditorium. The heat had become more intense. I was perspiring freely, but it was more from fear than from heat. Already the spectacle was sublime—sublime and grand. In spite of the anguish which chilled my heart, I found some- thing violently gay in those enormous tongues of fire, frisking before me and caressing the front of the stage. At the doors the contest was be- coming more violent, more compact, more frantic. Oh, woe to the weak! Woe to the kind! Woe to all those who had not yet consented to become ferocious beasts. I saw a great demon, his eyes dis- tended with fear, stretch out his hand. He seized by the shoulders a young woman in front of him, and dragged her backward, so as to gain her place, at least. The contracted fingers of that giant hand were driv- en into her flesh, and bruised and scratched it. But she resisted mad- ly, fighting with- all her strength and cried trying in her turn:to plunge her nails into the face of the cruel man. That dastard I knew by sight. He was regarded in society as a polished gen- tleman. Suddenly a fireman appeared. Why had he come? I called out. He looked at me, seeming to ask what I was doing there, and disappeared. I supposed he was coming to my res- cue. Not at all. Little by little, however, the the- atre emptied. Some who had waited until the last still had the courage to draw into the corridor the van- quished on whom the crowd had trampled. Among them many women were mortally wounded. The fire had reached the orchestra. The stands were overturned; violins, hautboys, flutes, clarinets lay on the floor. Scarcely any one had the pres- ence of mind to take away his instru- ment. On some of the stands, still erect, there were scores and sheets of music already scorching. The smoke, quite thick from the first, was drawn toward the roof by some phe- nomenon of ventilation. The sheets of music curled slowly; the heat was becoming intolerable, and a violin string broke from the heat of the fire. That sound of the dying instrumenc was heartrending in its sadness. Soon all the harp strings snapped, one after another. This admirable, exquisite instrument seemed tq sing i's death song in that agony. . A melody flew away into the flame with its soul. After the harp, the strings of the bass-viol broke, with a sharp sound, like the reports of a revolver. At this moment a head rose in the door of the parquet to the left. It seemed to be a child's head. Soon the body entered. Suddenly it took two steps forward, and I screamed. It was not a child. It was the little, deformed musician. Deliberately he walked toward the orchestra. A vol- ume cf fire stopped him. He recciled but appeared not to renounce some mad project. Seizing a favorable moment, he darted forward. His arms covering his face to protect it, i he approached his place among the “musicians. He had returned to sesk his friend, his conmipanion—his vio- loncello. 1 saw him take the instru- ment in both hands and try to lift sharply an-. 1 over the railing which’ “separates the orchestra from the parquet. What folly! I trembled violently with anx- iety. Involuntarily, and in a ter- rible voice, I roared: ‘Go away! Go away!” Then, all at once, he seemed to succeed. The violoncello, finally ex- tricated from the chairs which en- cumbered it, moved toward him, when, nearly at the same instant, all the violins and violoncellos, the light wood of which had become overheat- cd, burst into a blaze simultaneously. The little fellow relaxed his grasp, tottered and fell forward headlong into the orchestra, and upon his burn- ing instrument. For some seconds I gasped and stretched out my arm —my one arm—to the place where I had seen that strange and sombre figure rise. 1 saw him, still moving in the midst of the flames, extend his blackened arms, and then sink into the glowing coals. Probably he did not hear me. The fire spread all around him. He stood on a chair, and then placing one foot on the separating railing, he dragged his violoncello. I almost forgot my own situation in the excitement. Poor little crea- ture, so brave, and who must have been good and intelligent, and to whom I had never spoken! I see him still there, before my eyes, stand- ing on that chair, and making those great efforts. The flames became more violent. It was like a furnace. The cornices and other projecting parts of the front of the stage kindled rapidly now. I could scarcely disfinguish anything more. The smoke blinded and choked me. My time had come. I was going to die. The enemy advanced slowly and steadily. Had I lost all hope of being saved? No, I must admit I had not. Yes, I hoped still. My hopes were carefully built on the death of the poor ‘cellist. Since he had been able to return for his instrument, others would be able to enter in seareh of me and carry me out. Then, like an immense wave, an- other velume of smoke enveloped and stified me. Although the fire had not yet reached the woodwork of my box, the heat was so violent that I began to feel my blood boiling. The sensation of burning became terribly appreciable. 1 knew I would not be able to retain consciousness much more than two minutes longer. The sweat ran from my forehead and temples down my cheeks and beard. A brand detached from I don’t know .where described a curve through the auditorium and fell into the box next me. My resignation could not withstand that. Decidedly I did not want to die. Save me! Save me! Ijhad no other wish, no other desire. * But my fury, my heartrending cries, my frantic gestures, were all in vain. No one came. My beard was scorching and commencing to burn. I felt an itching sensation in my face, on my neck and at the roots of my hair. Now I made a great effort and moved in my chair. “There is still time,” thought I. I determined to rise and walk. It was only for a moment. After in- clining my body forward, I made a sudden movement. My eyes flashed. I believed I was going to walk. It was only for a moment. No, no; my legs were not willing. They re- mained reluctantly paralyzed. My excitement again became violent. I tried once more. No, no, no. Now I felt only that I was dying. It was no longer possible to endure one degree of heat more. Before my eyes a blinding light; around me, everywhere, above me, below me, the fire. I remained passive; perhaps I fell. I know nothing more. I was abandoned. Eight hours afterwards I found myself in bed again. My little niece in running for help had fallen and was severely wounded in the head. She had been carried away fainting, and it was only after recovering her senses that she was able to speak. Two men were dispatched to my res- cue, and drew me from the furnace just as I became unconscious.— Translated for the Argonaut, from the French of Camille Debans. RICHES IN CORNSTALKS. Enough Power Now Wasted to- Run All the Nation’s Machinery. Prof. Wiley, of the Department of Agriculture says that inasmuch as every 100 pounds of cornstalks will yield six and a half pounds of abso- lute alcohol it is obvious that the ignorant agriculturist has been allow- ing an enormous amount of wealth to go to waste. Say that one acre will yield from ten to twelve tons of grain stalks, or about 20,000 pounds, and you have a quantity of raw material which will produce 1300 pounds of absolute al- cohol, or 216 gallons. Alcohol at the present time is worth forty cents a gallon. Ground in a wet condition and dried, cornstalks may be kept in- definitely, and are ready at any time for conversion into alcohol. Prof. Wiley says that the alcohol derivable from the cormstalks that now go to waste in this country would not only drive all the machinery of our facto- ries, but would furnish the requisite power for all our railroads and steam- boats, run all of our automobiles, heat and illuminate all of our houses and light the streets of every city in the Union.—From Leslie's Weekly. Dodging the Spotlight. Courtesy is becoming so rare that the man who gives up his seat in a street car feels as if he were playing to the grand stand.— Cleveland Leader. THE MISEE { walked uptown for thirty days And saved five cents cach day The sum was just a dollar hiv a half. I'll save in many ways.” I thought: “Each little swing pays; My common sense began to make me laugh, I never went to any play Nor to a good cafe; I saved a undred dollars and some cents. I said: “By every means I'll save, To saving be a slave;” My money madness soon became jitense. Cigars and drinks I cast aside, At cigarettes I shied, And every day I grew to be more mean. L Shought: I even will not lend Leip a starving friend; T Ne on soap and gave “up being clean. At sordid tricks I thus got wiser Until T was a miser. My savings grew- and grew and grew and grew, said: “TI wed a pretty girl;” I did: she was a pearl. Tre money flew and flew 2nd flew and New York Sun. ‘Edgar is a splendid talker, isn’t fhe?” “One of the finest I ever es- caped from.”’—Life. > Mr. Jawback—‘‘The biggest idiots always seem to marry the prettiest women.’’ Mrs. Jawback—‘ ‘Now, you're trying to flatter me.””—Cleve- land Leader. “What makes that goat shiver so, Mike?’’ ‘‘He ate a lot av sleigh bells th’ other day, an’ ivry toime he moves they jingle, an’ he thinks it’s win- ter.”’—Denver Post. Candidate for Crew—‘Could you tell me where the rhetoric class is be- ing held?’ Candidate for Football— “I don’t know,: I'm a student here myself.””—Town Topics. If money talks, As some folks tell, To most of us It says: “Farewell!” —Lippincott’s. Admiral—‘“And what made you wish to become a sailor, my boy?’ Navy Candidate (in perfect good faith) —‘‘Because he’s got a wife in every port, sir.”—Punch. Little Edna—‘“What is ‘leisure,’ mamma?’ Mamma—‘It's the spare time a woman has in which she can do some other kind of work, my dear.””—Chicago Daily News. He (sententiously)—“1I always speak my mind.” She (tartly)—"I suppose that is why you have the reputation of being a man of so few words.”’—Baltimore Amreican. “What have you in the shape of cucumbers this morning?’ asked the customer of the new grocery clerk. # Nothing but bananas, ma’am,’” was the reply.—Christian Register. Mother—‘‘Whatever are you doing to poor dolly, child?” Child—“I'm just .going to put her to bed, mom- mer. I've taken off her hair, but I can’t get her teeth out. Souris. “The suitable garment for chauffeurs,’ Said Stickler, “is settled at last. The fabric is quite uneéssential, So long as the colors are fast!’ » —Lippincott’s. Nell—‘‘Yes, she said her husband married her for her beauty. What do you think of that?’ Belle—‘‘Well, I think her husband must feel like a widower now.’’—Catholic Standard and Times. : The judge was at dinner in the new. household when the young wife asked: “Did ¥8% every try any of my biscuits, judge?” ‘'‘No,” said the judge, “I never did, but I dare say they deserve it.” Mistress—‘‘Bridget, have you ce- mented the handle on to the water- jug which you dropped yesterday?” Bridget—‘‘I started to, mum, but most unfortunately I dropped the ce- ment bottle.””—Punch. » S$ THE DAY OF S$ THE FARMER. @ ° 00000000006006000000000000 The farmer who is an amateur is a really increasing factor in to-day’s life. In fact, farming is rapidly be- coming one of the professions. We have our agricultural schools, just as we have our law schools. It is getting to be a business as well. Farmers have their trusts, like other manufacturers. It is a far cry from the New Eng- land farmer, trying to-arrange an ex- ploded granite quarry into a stone wall that he may have room in which ® ® Qo o e o ® to plant his crop, and that master of capital, science and black earth ten feet deep who plows with a traction engine and reaps with a ten-horse team. And between these ‘two types of farmers the drift is steadily toward the latter. The comic paper does not laugh at the “granger’’ as frequently as it used to laugh. It wants his sub- scription. The capitalist does not foreclose mortgages on the prairie farm now. He borrows money from its owner. And, what is vastly more import- ant, the entire country looks with a respect bordering upon apprehension en this new type of American who has deeided views on railroads, trusts, and, in fact, on every subject, from the ‘‘green bug’ to the lecturer at his Chautauqua. This rise of the farmer into national significance is welcome in view of the inundation of great cities by immigrants who have significance only en masse. The farm is the nursery of indi- vidualism. If you are a cliff-dweller in the city send your boy there this summer, and let him see what it means to create wealth with the help of nature rather than with the ticker. You will help make him a better American.—Editorial in The World To-Day. now $1,173,000 on a capital stock of PENNSYLVANIA STATE NEWS HIS BANK DISAPPEARED ——— > Franklin = Institute of Philadelphia | Now Assured of Building. Old Gum Boot. As a memorial to her father, who! John Vanca, a Donora for vears was interested in scientific | who used a rubber boot torn savings: research, Mrs. Anna Weightman . Walker has contributed $50,000 to the | bank, has had a lesson in finance. fund for a proposed new building for | Vanca boarded with T.ucius Spirie, the Franklin Institute of Philadel- | and secretly deposited his savings in phia. { the rubber boot, which he found hang- Mrs. Walker inherited $60,000,000. ing in an attic room. Vanca's sav- As the result of Mrs. Walker's gift | Ings amounted to $150. the society will be enabled to secure | Recently Spirie decided to visit his the $125.000 known the Franklin Dative land. and in his trunk packed: fund. which was founded by Benja- his rubber boots. When Vanca desir- min Franklin and which is controlled ed to make another deposit he found by the board of city trusts of Phila<] the bank had disappeared. ’ delphia. The latter board over a | The Hungarian > year ago voled to turn the fund over about the house. shouting that he: to the institute on condition that Dad been robbed. until Mrs. Spirie $200,000 be raised by outside contri- explained the situation. Vanca hopes Drtions. to recover the money. In the mean- time a surprice awaits Spiric when he pulls on the hoots in. his native: land. Hungarian Deposited Money In Am MRS. WALKER GIVES $50,000 | Hungarian, as rushed frantically BLACK HAND DENIES to Impeach Confession Made by a Member. The defense of Antonio and Carlo De Grosge and Antonio and Gaetonio Scimis, alleged members of the Black Hand Society, who are charged with having written threatening letters to John Albertoletti, a weaithy Jeannette Italian, was begun in Greensburg. The defendants entered a general 10 denial tosthe confession made by he siding. of the West Penn Rail- Semme De Grosse, who was arrested. road, loaded with sup from the as he was taking a package from the | coonerage company. origin = of spot designated in the letters to Al- the fire unknown. bertoletti. He turned state's evidence | The residents of West Apollo fought and. on the witness stand toid the de- the fire alone for some time until the tails of the alleged plot. He claimed department of Apollo was summon- that with a revolver piaced to his ed. By the time it arrived it was head by Gaetonio Scimis he had been | impossible to save either of the build- compelled to take oath he would chevy The ereatest loss is on the ma- instructions and not tell of the exist- | ¢hinery of ceoperage plant. the ence of the society. loss cn the 22.000. "TAXPAYERS TAKE Greene County to Co-Operate in Con- struction of Bridge at Millsboro. More than 200 Greene county payers filed a petition for the ap- | poirtment of a board of viewers to | meet a similar board from. Fayette county and take action on the ques- tion of building a bridge across the Monongahela river at Millsboro. Northampten Bank was The court appointed Engineer J. clected ident of the clearing C. Webster, D. L. Donley and N. H. | © Biddle. The Fayette county hoard It has already been appointed. and the : two boards will meet on the site of the proposed structure. AFTER PROMOTOR Attempts FIRE CAUSES $20,000 LOSS Apolic- Ceoperage Plant Burns in the Early Morning. $20.0 damage, oc- Apollo. “destroying the entire plant cf Anollo Cooperage ompany, the min residence ad- ng and six hox cars standing on Fire canseing 00 enrred in West Renji lies The is the house heing only ORGANIZE CLEARING HOUSE Meet and Prepare to Certificates. Easton banks ACTION Bankers Issue tax- organized a house oeciation. The ) n. National the Easton Trust: Company and the Northampton Trrst Company the organizing in- stitutions. . E. JF... Richards of the The ing 'aAnk, Nati National once if aring issue clea denominations $15 and $20. ordinarily pay in- asked not to 90 days. in $5. 310, rtificates $4, house of 1 TYSHintions which st cn deposits so for a yeriod tere were .do of JUSTICE METED OUT Prisoner Is Sentenced in One Day on Second-Degree Verdict. ‘ted and sentenced in & experience of Jos. murdering Jos. station, West Man Who Worked Alleged Fake SWIFT Mining Scheme Held Up. Attorneys D. M. Hertzog and H. L Robinson of Uniontown have gone to Falton Cal., to hear testimony be- fore a notary in the case of Dr. S. S. Stahl, of Connellsville, Pa., who is charged in 21 counts with receiving cash and subscriptions for gold min- ing stock, which it is claimed proved to be practically worthless. Many prominent Fayette = county people are among the plaintiffs. Tried. convix single day, was the Pettite, charged with Fenoglietto .¢f Penn moreland county. _Pattite was a suitor of Fenogliets 's daughter, but the: father object- n quarreled last Sep- rzed Pettite shot 10g] . ¥ jury. returned a ver- HUNTER SHOOTS: HIMSELF dict of second degree murder. © Judge ty imposed a sentence of seven rs and five hs in the Western ry. {WO ne > avid it is el mont jitentis Lies Mortzally ‘Wounded Before Cries Are Heard. : Jacob Phillini. 35 Blacklick township. is dead, as the result of an Patrolman Ober Fi re on Sen-in:Law Shoouny hunti 1 3 as He Flourishes Knife. Phillipi was hunting alone, when er ; his gun fell from a log and both bar- nome rels ‘were discharged. The charges So entered an arm and a leg. He suffer- scal ed for hours, when his faint. cides | were heard by John Phillipi, a broth- er. He died frem the loss of blood A widow survives. vears old, SHOOTS RELATIVE Somerset. county accidental special park, near gon-in-1r.w, abdomen. after the shooting victim ‘to the - Potts- He then went to the 1d admiited the shoot- (George Geist, Ringing Rocks fatally shot Davis, twice in Immediately (Geist took his town hospital. police station ar ing. It is said that his the Want Oleo Law Changed. Secretary of Agriculture Critchfield : and Dairy and Food Commissioner from his home, Foust have prepared a joint letter | Kill her. Later which is being sent to every Pomona home. flourisning a and subordinate grange in Pennsyl- | Was shot. vania, urging that dairymen shall cir- culate petitions to send to United States Senators and members of Con- gress asking that tne oleomargarin¢ law be so changed as to protect the | dairy interests of the country. Davis drove his wife and threatened to entered the Gelst butcher knife and he THREE KILLED IN WRECK Collision of Freight Trains Fatal One Crew. siding, near Empor- train was standing at when another train engine crashing caboose. Three train- caboose were killed. The dead Thomas Welsh, Cas- per Frve and Mr. Cleary. One man was flung upon the headlight of the the others were buried under which took fire. to Howard's freight water tank. info it, the the At inm. the ran through nien in the Bank Has Proud Record. The First National Bank of Union- town, of which J. V. Thompson is president, .declared its . semi-annual dividend of 11 per cent® and added $46,000 to the surplus fund, which are is eneine: $100,000. The bank earned $57,000 i the debi since the dividend of last May. Its resources are now over — $4,000,000. | — This bank stands first on the roll of Make Lighting Contract. honor among the National banks of A contract was awarded by” the the United States. {board of public and build- | ings to the Kellar pike Company of | Philadelphia at its bid of $13 ;197,-t0 Lydia Risben was acquitted at| connect the capitol lighting plant Greensburg of the murder of James with the wires supplying current to Blakeny at Cokeville, on October 16. | the capitol park, new being lighted by The girl made a plea of scif Zefense, | a private concern. The Ix yard figures While she was at the home of Mrs. | that a saving of $1,000 a month will Maude Kauffman, Blakeny called and | he effected. demanded admittance. When he was FRR told to go away he battered down the Pronounce Jail Unsanitary. door. It was brought out in the tes- After inspecting the Kittanning jail timony that the girl did not sheot un- | "yw Holmes, prison inspector of Hi Blakeny seized ler throat | the department of charities, pro- nounced it unfit for the worst crimin- al ever arrested. He demands changes to make it sanitary. is, Acquits Girl on Self-Defense Plea. Announcement is made that the Philadelphia Mining Exchange has passed out of existence after living a year. The exchange at one time had a membership of 57 and during its lite trading amounted to a little over two million shares. In recent months business dwindled to almost nothing. Seven freight crews on the Chau- tauqua & Allegheny Valley division of the Pennsylvania railroad have been laid off in pursuance of orders from Philadelphia. THE OFFICIAL RETURNS New Record in Revenue. Estimates made by Auditor Gen- eral Young indicate that the state revenues for the current fiscal year, Is 147,228. which ends November 30, will vierg : ; to. $26,500,000. The revenues last| ~The state department completed vear aggregated $25,818,000. | the compilation of the official returns 3 2 = a | of the recent election, for state treas- { rer in Pennsylvania. The vote fol- lows: Sheatz (Republican), 459.965; Har- | man (Democrat), 312,737; Stevenson | (Prohibition), 29,850; Clark (Social ist), 14,346; scattering, 5; total, 816,- 883. Sheatz's plurality, 147, 228; | Sheatz's Plurality in Recent Election After deliberating less than an hour, the jury at Greensburg, return- | ed a verdict of guilty in the case of Antonio and Carlo De Grosse and An- tonio and Gaetanio Scimia, who were charged with writing threatening let- ters to John Albertoletti, a wealthy Jeannette Italian. | Sheatz’s majority, 103,047.