ye e says red of - later. women rd and to lay middle many or any. by for )T your rou do, life as sments, ife and a from of see- ze your z made clerks, es, just w have ey took 1s, still ving in tanding ‘amilies trusted making SO easy of im- ttle, in he best Lwsuits, by not arts to~ ers’ in- ys and sorts of t them- ng. No higher 1ethods. 1ey are justice. between ne their led pity re most lightest , finan- al mar- political beyond ancient ve done: ly been, 1e great f power n. She Empire: ntracted uszd to her to Several urn for or their: > people more to ce these z to pay ny poor ncement d worse woman- whp are ring an- These onorable re a re- the sea. all true worthy fathers =n we have out rea- are in- srsonally yrganiza- ly stand is ques- hrug his is con- n to the lent will the men, it under- without As for in place service, men and ‘ : An Ancient Custom. The right of the ladies to propose during leap year and to claim a hus- band or a silk gown forfeit is tradi- tionally ascribed to St. Bridget.—Ar- gonant. - 3 The Height of Queens. Nearly all the sovereigns of Europe are shorter than their consorts. Our own king, for example, is not quite so tall as Queen Alexandra, the kaiser is decidedly shorter than the German empress, Queen Amelia of Portugal was a little taller than the late Don Carlos, the King of Spain is quite half a head shorter than Queen Victoria Rugenie, the czar appears quite small beside the czarina, and so also does the King of Italy, who scarcely reaches to the shoulder of his beautiful queen. The King of Norway and the Prince of Montenegro are the only two rulers who are very much taller than their wives.—London Women. Eat Plenty. Women seem to be eating less and less, says a London physician, and this applies not only to working girls, but to women of society. He bemoans the milk and bun habit, as being one of the worst evils in London, and at the risk of shocking the highly proper tee- totaler suggests that a kird of “can- dy drink,” which appeals to women with a sweet tooth, is about the worst thing that any one can swallow, for it troubles the digestive organs, though it steals no wits away. He also makes the statement that it is better to over- eat than undereat. Evidently the doc- tor has no regard for waist lines and the edicts of fashion, which demand that women keep thin figures. Honeymoon in Arabia. For seven days after the wedding the Arab bride and bridegroom are supposed not to leave their room. The bride may see none of her own family and only the women folk of her hus- band’s, who wait on her. She remains in all her wedding fin- ary and paint, and does absolutely nothing. The bridegroom generally slips out at night after three days and sees a few friends privately, but he per- sistently hides from his wife’s family, and should he by accident meet his father-in-law before the seven days are over he turns his back and draws his burnous, or haik, over his face. This is their view of a honeymoon, and they grow as weary of it as any Furopean couple do of their enforced continental tour.—From the Wide World Magazine. : Women in Magazine Art. ‘After many years of public patience magazine illustrators as a class tacitly have acknowledged the necessity of t¥&ading a story to draw good pictures for it. Time was when the average “artist” contented himself with a glance at a few lines extracted from the story which he was expected to ex- press in an illustration. He illustrated 1 hat passage without a thought of the context and with none too much re- gard for the passage itself. As a re- sult one would read, “She crossed the room majestically and stood looking down at him,” and in the picture would see the heroine placidly regard- ing the hero from the recesses of an easy chair. As for women being blonde in the story and brunnette in the il- lustration, that was the rule rather than the exception. The advent of women into the world of magazine flustration possibly has had something to do with the reform. No woman ar- tist would draw a heroine with her hat on when the text called for an op- era scarf. She would not have a character sitting when he or she should stand. Nor would she make the hero- ine look 36 years old in Chapter 1 and 18 in chapter II. Anyway, whether the credit be due to womankind or merely to progress in the general con- scientiousnss of illustrators, the result is gratifying.—New York Press. Ethel is a ‘‘Horsey” Woman. The coming debutante of the White House is in every sense a true daugh- ter of her father, says the Dellneator. It is not often that the White House Jao the good fortune to harbor two arming debutantes of a single presi- dency. Alice Roosevelt is “wooed and married and a’, but here comes her sister Ethel to make her first formal bow next year. Ethel Rodsevelt is ex- tremely popular with her friends, of her own age as well as with older peo- ple. The former like her for her good temper and high spirits, the latter, for her womanly ways and her ex- treme devotion to her mother. Mrs. Roosevelt and her daughter are thor- ough “chums.” Of course she loves horses—her fa- pers daughter could not help it. ‘Theodore, at home from Harvard for akin his vacation, remarked in a supérior. manner after listening to a long ac- Qubt of the virtues of Montauk, her own horse, “I haté a horsey woman, thel!” “Well,” retorted the girl un, abashed, “I'd rather be talking about an olmost human horse than abdut a lot of college fellows!” * She Is an “all-around girl.” In the last year or two she has shot up amaz- ingly, and the shy, awkward little girl who went to the White House will leave it & stately young womah with a frank charm of manfief that is sure to carry her to brilliaht social sufcess.—_ ~ Bewalils Scarcity of Talkers. ' “Good talkers are scarcc these days,” said recently a matron in an address to a woman’s club. “I'm not holding forth for the dame of Colonial times, who could pass whole days in chitchat and never make herself or anybody else the wiser. But I do draw a com- parison between the matron of today and the sensible" woman of a genera- tion or two ago who could interest al- most any one without becoming slangy on one hand or pedantic on the other. Whether the woman of the sixties and seventies had more or less to think about than her daughter of this age I won’t undertake to say. Certainly, she talked better. True, she didn’t make platform speeches. Victoria Woodhull -and Tennie Clafin were re- garded as freaks when they began ad- dressing crowds, and such daring thinkers as Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton often received: scant courtesy at the hands of the very men who went miles to listen to them. But of good talkers in the home circle and the sewing society there was an abundance. I dare say it must have been because they bent their minds on more serious subjects than does the average woman of today. For thought, you know may be regard- ed as an essential of good talking, and the blind devotion to fads characteris- tic of the twelfth century cannot take the place of good, hard thinking.— New York Press. Pathetic Olid Age. The death of Mrs. Letitia Tyler Semple ought to be a reminder of a condition that may one day become the cause of national discredit and perhaps is one already. Mrs. Sem- ple was the niece of President Tyler. She was mistress of the White House when she was twenty-one years of age. She died at the age of eighty-six. She was totally blind, very lonely, and pitifully poor. She was in an institu- tion that was not exactly a charity, al- though it is maintained by an endow- ment fund. The Louise Home, where Mrs. Semple died, is for Southern wo- men of good birth and family who can pay a modest price for the shelter af- forded. them, and Mrs. Semple lived there for some few years, having pre- viously conducted a school for young girls at Baltimore. Mrs. Semple was a gracious and lovely mistress of the White IiQuse. She was married at nineteen, when Mr, Semple was in the United States navy. Upon the outbreak of the war, he re- signed at once and entered the Con- federate navy. When the war was over he found his health broken, his money and property gone, and nothing but trouble and distress ahead for himself and his: wife. Fortunately they had no children, so Mrs. Semple went to Baltimore, leaving her hus- band in Virginia. He died some years later and his wife continued with her school in Baltimcre until she was no longer able to attend to it. Then she came to Washington and entered the Louise Home, where she died. Mrs. Semple was the only remaining member of her immediate family, al- though she has many nieces and neph- ews living in the south and in Cali- fornia. The last visit she made to the White House was during the adminis- tration of President Pierce, with whom she was on terms of intimate friendship. She has been invited to the White House many times since, but she has put the invitations all aside. Memories were too bitter for that. That a lady who was once mistress of the White House should be allowed to die in poverty and in neglect seéms hardly consonant with the eternal fitness of things, and hardly in keep- ing with the national dignity.—Argo- nant. Fashion Notes. Pockets appear in the newest knit- ted silk underwear. Plenty of black silk jackets, trimmed with braid ornaments and braid em- broideries, will be seen. The embroidered vest and lace jabot are a costly feature of the coats which form a part of the Louis costumes as worn in Paris. Solid colors, changeable, stripes, plaids and checks are all in favor, with the plaids slightly in the lead because of their novelty. Scarfs of tulle or chiffon edged with heavy fringe, 'tasels or beading whose weights keeps them in place are very smart for ball or dinar frocks. The gored skirt is certainly going to be the favorite, but it will be arranged in so many different ways that one’s gowns will have no suggestion of same- ness. i Oriental silks, or at least silks with Oriental designs “whose predominant color is the same as the skirts with which they are to be worn, are used for new blouses. Petticoats are mostly sheath-fitting. This effect is produced either by a shaped yoke at the waist or else by darts. The tailored silk petticoats is the first favorite. The difficulties of tailoring light weight goods have been so far over- come that now chiffon panamas, voiles, the lightest of worsteds ,taffetas and tussahs are shown in tailored suits. If a woman has pretty shoulders, she will want one of the transparent V-shaped yokes cut in one with one collar which is such a pretty fashion. It should be fitted without a wrinkle and cut very high. THE PULPIT. A BRILLIANT SUNDAY SERMON BY THE REV. ROBERT COLLYER. Subject: Toward the Sunset. Brooklyn, N. Y.— The venerable but still vigorous Dr. Robert Colyer preached in the First Unitarian Church Sunday morning to a large congregation. His subject was “Looking Toward Sunset,” and for his text he took the two passages of Scripture: I. Timothy 4:8: “The promise of the life that now is and of that which is to come,” and II. Cor- inthians 15:53: ‘This mortal must put on immortality.” Dr. Collyer said: I think it is no wonder, as the years come and go, and we fare on toward the sunsel of the life that now is, the heart‘in us should feel a touch of dismay now and then when we try to imagine ourselves out of the body, but the same man or wom- an, away from the world we live in, yet still in a home which will be. homelike and welcome, and .of a day when the seasons will be no more what they have been or the sun and stars, the streets on which we walk or the homes in which we dwell. A time when we can clasp hands no more with friends; sit no more at the table and join in the cheery talk, go to our work in the morning and when the day’s stint is done go home, take some book we love best to read and then go to sleep through the silent, shadowy hours to wake again in the morning and find that God has made all things new. And I think this touch of dismay may well be of all things natural and therefore right, because we are in this body and find that in the measure of our life is our loyalty to the things we can touch and see. To the feeble aged this loy- alty to the world he lives in is no more than an.instinet to hold on, but in those who. are still hale and strong it is a loyalty for which they can give good reason. They love the fra- grance of the opening spring that fills them with the old delight, and the summer with her fruits and flowers, and the golden treasures of the au- tumn, and the white glory of the win- ter. All this is so dear and human ‘that it cofnes a little hard to think of a time when all this can be no more what it is here and now. And so it ought to be. If the option were giv- en to many of us while the tides of life run deep and full to exchange this life for the splendors of the ce- lestial city, to give up the fight for the necessaries of life, for the white robes, the harps and crowns, most of us would hesitate to say, we love this best, after all, and do not want to give it up, no matter what may be waiting in the blessed life to come. The gravitation of our being binds us to our planet, and we cannot cry, “Oh, that I had wings like a dove; then would I flee away and be at rest.” Nor do I think that God's gift of life should be thought of as if it were in quarantine and this world a place to have done with, the sooner the better. Some such conclusion, I know, may come ffom brooding over the ills of life, or to those who have drained their life of all its pleasant- ness. The men who have talked in this strain are men who were either out of sorts cr else they did not prac- tice what they preached. The men who have done the most and best were of an abounding human life, and while they were on the way to join the saints they could go hunting with St. Augustine or play or sing with Luther. So of the men who have no special claim to a place among the saints. They loved their own land like good Sir Walter Scott, the waters and to go afishing like Isaac Walton and Paley, who once told a friend that he could not think of writing another word in his once famous book on the evidences until fly-fishing was over. . No one thing in this universe can be of deeper moment to a whole and sound man than his own proper per- sonal life. You may talk to him for- ever about being lost in the infinite, he will still cling to himself as the true factor and say, with a very no- ble man I knew who has gone out of the bed to God’s house: ‘I prefer hell to annihilation.”” The angels are well enough, but he would not be an an- gel. Angels have had no mothers to croon over them, by what we can make out, or fathers to romp with them. They never fell in love when the time came, wondering over their rare fortune, or made homes where the children clung about their knees, or fought strong battles for the truth and the right, or wept over graves. Angels, then, must be poor where such a man is rich, or rich in some way he cannot as yet understand. He has solved the problem so far of his own personal identity and would not have it resolved into the grandest presence that ever trod the earth. These years, with their clustering memories, are his own years. They stand out clear and reveal to the man his own life. A poor thing, he may say, but mine own; full of mistakes, but mine own. I want to keep track; of myself. Send me where you will, but let me be sure that I am still the man who is now living this hu- man life, as those are who have lived human lives with me. ‘The kind, the true, the brave, the sweet who walk with us no more,” they will be there in the life to come, not un- clothed but clothed upon and then I shall rest in hope for: - It is the dear belief That on some solemn shore, Beyond the reach of grief, We find our own once more; Beyond the sphere of time, And sense and fate’s control, Serene in changeless prime, Dwells the immortal soul. This faith I fain would keep, This hope would not forego: Eternal be the sleep, If not to waken so. There must be another life to round this out and clothe it with perfec- tion. The tree loses nine blossoms -for one globe of fruit; the wild things let their young go forth and. forget; the flocks are kith and kin, but one is taken and another left and to-mor- row it is all the same. They do not regret their mistakes or sorrow for their sins as I must, but old friends sa taken and I am left, those dear to me as my life or dearer, and I cannot prevent this longing after them because they are part of my- self and I am only as shards and shreds of the whole fair circle. My soul demands, if, being mine here, they are not mine hereafter. And in looking into my own life I can see where I have missed my way and wanf to try again. I am only a learn- er. I want still to learn and turn my lesson to some noble use. So what can this incompleteness mean which haunts but the intimation of com- pleteness? This claim as it seems to me is founded in fair reason, and we hold the right to see the account come out fair and trueon this ground, if on no other. May I not say once more that the vears as they come and go should bring the heart to understand that this we call death should not be thought of—and especially by those who like myself have had a long lease of life—as a bane but a blessing, and not to. die while so surely would :this world be the loser by our staying; hat those who love us most dearly would pray that we might be set free from the burden of the over many years. For it would make no mat- ter to the creatures of the lower cre- ation we have glanced at, if their life could run on forever in the old kindly grooves, because they must measure their life by their instincts, and the present moment is the perfect sphere. They want -no better, as they fear no worse, and take no thought for the morrow. The squirrel has his nuts and the bee his honey,and so through all the spheres of their life. But here lies the distinction be- tween our life and theirs: Where they have instincts we have memories, where they have habits we have out- looks and inlooks, anticipations and reflections, and our manhood on the line to which we have risen holds in its heart our cross and our “crown. The glamor of youth is mine no more; yet, I may remember with ten- der regret and I may in some dim fashion be aware why the eternal love should give me the blessed boon of death, when I have drank my fill at the fountain of life down here and it is time to cross the bar. And then I must take this truth home to my heart: that by the time I have had enough of life the world I live in now may have had enough of me. So I must not only get out of the world, but out of the way, so that the new man may have room for the work he must do. To most of us the time comes when we begin to trace the truth of the new time by the lines of longitude and forget the lines of lati- tude; we do not believe in the new man from the Lord, but want the old man and manhood that will be true to our line of measurement. Again, when we grow old the knowledge of the evil in the world begins to lie like lead on us, while the knowledge of the good can hardly hold its own. One man in ten may takesme in and I lose more grace by that one man than I gain by the nine who did not; I think ‘more of the bitter.than the sweet, brood over the cruelty and for- get the mercy. While I must say, with the great apostle, “It doth not yet appear what we shall be,” I would hold on well to the faith that I shall be myself when I pass from the shadows of the seen and temporal into the light of thse unseen and eternal. I shall pass out of one room in the “many mansions” into another, and what treasure in the heaven was mine here will be mine there, while that which is to come will not seem so much another life as the ripeness and perfecting of this life that now is. We may say we know nothing about the mystery of the life beyond, but this is not true if we believe in Him who “brought life and immortality to light.” We know enough to keep the heart from trouble, and this is what we need to know, for it was the heart’s love which brought us here, that nursed us forth, bore with us, believed in us and hoped for us, and never failed—and that death cannot slay. And so I love to believe in—what shall I call the solidarity of life here and hereafter, and that I am to be myself whatever befalls—the myself I long to be—released from ‘‘the body of this death,” and to bear with me all that is best worth God’s sav- ing in my life down here; and not a flower has bloomed, or a well sprung up for my blessing, or a bird sung, or a dear friend clasped hands with mine, or tears fallen, or laughter rip- pled out of a pure joy, to be forgot- ten. I would be myself, and myself this soul, which has stored up essence of all that shall be of an immortal worth since I lay a babe in the cradle so far away in time and space. What care 1 Though falls the sky And the shriveling earth to a cinder : turn: No fires of doom Can ever consume What never was made, nor meant to burn. - areas m————— The Man of Prayer. No words can describe the bless- fngness of a soul which lives in com- munion with God; asking and receiv- ing, seeking and finding, knocking and having the door opened, wrote Thomas Adam, over a century ago. For what is happiness but this? Or how can we describe it better than by saying that a man wishes for the very thing he sought and is sure to have it? And such is the man of prayer, the Christian. « He chooses the fountain of all happiness for his, portion, and can not be disappointed of his desire. He is happy in the very act of prayer, knowing it to be the right frame of his mind, the proof of his renewed state and his capacity for receiving blessing from God. Bia een ier tn Preparing Prayer. All personal work must be perme- ated with love. A perfunctory invi- tation or a word spoken without sym- pathy and love will not prove effec- tive. The spirit in which we approach an unsaved person may render use- less all our labors. Preparation by prayer is necessary before we under- take personal work. If you are in communion with God, it is much eas- jer to get into touch and communion with your fellow men. In Thine Inner Chamber. Having entered into thine inner chamber, shut thy door against the care and fret of life, against earthly loves and passions, against thoughts, against bad self, but more closely against good self. Turn thine ear and hearken to the living God, who dwells in His yielded temple.—Edgar K. Sellew. PENNSYLVANIA STATE NEWS MINISTER GOES TO JAIL. Charged With Sending f>bscene Pic- tures Through Mail. Scranton.—Judge Archbald in the United States court here, sentenced the Rev. H. E. Zimmerman of Oma- ha, Neb., formerly a Lutheran minis- ter in Dickinson, this state, to six months’ imprisonment and to pay a fine of $100 for sending obscene pic- tures through the mails. The charges against Zimmerman created a sensa- tion. When he was arraigned Zimmer- man pleaded guilty and some of the members of his former congregation testified to his good character. The #@lefendant sought to excuse his con- 8uct on the ground that he needed the pictures In connection with a magazine article which was in the course of preparation. CERTIFICATES SENT OUT Over 3,000 Nomination Petitions Acted on at Harrisburg. Harrisburg.—Certificates of all nomination petitions filed at the cap- itol were sent out to the county com- missioners of the counties in the state. There were over 3,000 names certified. Eight names have been withdrawn, those withdrawing today being J. J. Dropeskey, of Mt. Carmel (Republi- can), named for the legislature in Northumberland county; John R. Fortig (Republican), Lebanon, named for the legislature; M. T. Garvin, (Democrat), first legislative district, Lancaster. HELD UP AND SHOT Miner Will Die as Result of En- counter With Foreigners. Greensbhurg—James Daruley, a min- er, 52 years old, was fatally shot when he and three companions were held up at night by three foreigners near Hempfield Slope, one mile east of Greensburg. Darnley, his* son George, his son-inlaw, John Proctor, and James Neilson were returning to their homes at Hempfield Slope at midnight when three men jumped out from behind an embankment. One of the trio fired a revolver into the air and then fired twice at Proctor, but missed. The older Darnley rush- ed at the thug with his revolver and two bullets were sent in his direc- tion, one entering his groin. One of the foreigners, Mike Stro- back, was captured and is now in the county jail. The older Darnley was carried to his. The physicians say there is no chance of recovery. BLOWN TO PIECES Nothing Left But Hole in the Ground and Shreds of Human Bodies. Greensburg—Three persons, com- posing all the male members of the family, were literally blown to pieces by dynamite at Acme, five miles east of Mt. Pleasant. The dead are: David H. Brown, aged 50; Roy Drown, aged 17; Clark Brown, aged 5. David Brown was postmaster at Acme and conducted a general store at the village. Accompanied by his two sons, Roy and Clark, he went to a large field back of his store late in the afternoon to dynamite stumps. They took with them 25 pounds of the explosive. No one saw the ac- cident, but it is supposed that when they set off the first charge they left the rest of the dynamite too near with the result that it was exploded. A deafening report was heard, and when an investigation was made a big hole was found in the ground, while shreds of human bodies lay scattered about. The trunk of the father’s body was recovered, but only small pieces of the other bodies have been found. Postmaster Brown's wife and two daughters are left. Three Killed by Train. Harrisburg.—The bodies of three foreigners were found beside the Pennsylvania railroad tracks, near Newport, Perry county. The men had evidently been walking the track and were struck by a fast express, as all were badly mangled. The sup- position is that they were killed in the night. When the bodies were taken to Newport they were identified as Italians living in that town. To Codify Mine Laws. Harrisburg.—The state commission for the preparation of a code of mine laws will meet in Pittsburg where a list of the suggestions made by oper- ators and miners and from observa- tion by commissioners will be sub- mitted. The report will be drafted this fall. The commission is head- ed by Chief Roderick. Odd Fellows Lose Equipment. Franklin.—The building occupied by the general store of Borland & Felt and the Rockland postoffice was struck by lightning late last night and burned. The loss is $15,000 with $10,000 insurance. All the mail mat- ter was burned. The Odd Fellows lodge equipment was destroyed. Reading ©uspends Crews. Reading.—The Reading railway in- definitely suspended 15 crews, be- cause of a lack of business and in order to give employes longest in the service opportunity to make more time. This order applies to all di- visions and it is estimated that 200 men are affected. Three Charged With Murder. Butler—The Pittsburg Synod of the Lutheran Church will be asked to settle the differences between the Emanuel] Lutheran congregation of Prospect and Rev. Amos Bartholo- mew, who has filed suit to collect $692.46 back salary. Greensburg—Excitement reigns at Delmont over the discovery of gas in the first sand on the W. F. Adair farm, leased by the Pittsburg Plate Glass Company. SECOND TRIAL POSTPONED. Next Capitol Case will Be Tried In Month of May. Harrisburg.—The second Capitol tria] will begin May 11, instead of March 23. Judge Kunkel today granted the postponement, on request of counsel for Architect Joseph M. Huston, with the assent of counsel for the . Com- monwealth and the attorneys for the other defendants. The delay is due to the unexpect- ed failure of the efforts in behalf of a severance for Architect Huston, who is a defendant named in the in- dictment, along with Congressman H. Burd Cassel, ex-Auditor General William P. Snyder, ex-State Treasur- er William L. Mathues, ex-Superin- tendent James M. Shumaker and Traveling Auditor Frank Irvine. Attorney General Todd and hig as- sociates refused to assent to a sever- ance unless Huston would give the Commonwealth some information that would be of value in the prose- cution of the case against the others. GOES TO AID DOG, DIES Hollidaysburg Woman Drops Lamp and Is Burned With House. Mrs. Martha Carfwright, a widow of Hollidaysburg, arose from her bed at night to go downstairs to care for a pet dog. She dropped a lighted lamp and was burned to death. The house was destroyed. Her son, William Cartwright, jumped from an upstairs window and was se- riously injured. Arrest Saloonkeepers. Pottsville. — Twenty-four saloon- keepers and wholesale liquor dealers in Shenandoah and Union township were arrested by agents of the Penn. sylvania Anti-Saloon league, charged with violating the liquor laws. The saloonkeepers are charged with sell- ing on Sunday, and the wholesalers with selling at retail. All will be brought here for hearings. Health Officers Close Church. Johnstown.—Because the Polish Catholic congregation of Conemaugh ignored a request to suspend serv- ices officers entered the church and compelled all to leave. A week ago the Health Board ordered all places of public assemblage closed on ac- count of a threatened epidemic of diphtheria. Officer WV. T. Kissell, it is alleged, was struck by one of the congregation. Will Borrow $9,000,000. Philadelphia—Following a confer- ence of city officials Mayor Reyburn announced that imediate steps would be taken to borrow $9,000,000 under loan bills authorized by ccuncil a year ago to put under way municipal improvements which will give work to the city’s uneniployed. It. is thought the money can be raised in about 15 days. Blast Killed Him. Allentown—Charles Lichtenwalner of Macungie township, was struck by a rock from a blast fired by men at work on his farm and instantly kill- ed. Mr. Lichtenwalner, who was 55 years old, and a member of a prominent family in Lehigh county, had just alighted from a train to in- Deu his place when the blast was red. Not Within Purview of Act. Harrisburg—In an opinion given to State Superintendent of Public In- struction Schaeffer, Deputy Attorney General Fleitz decides that county, city and borough school superinten- dents do not come within the purview of the corrupt practices act of 1906. Sharon Man Honored. Sharon.—Henry M. Cohen of Sha- ron, has been appointed district deputy grand president of the B’nal B’rith lodges for Northwestern Penn- sylvania. The district embraces Meadville, Corry, Oil City, Erie, Ti- tusville, Sharon and Bradford. Butler—The Butler Fair and Driv- ing Park Company has decided that beginning with the 1908 exihibit next September all displays will be lim- ited to residents of Butler county, be- cause professionals from other coun- ties have been taking nearly all the live stock premiums. Electric Shock Is Fatal. Altoona.—Richard Marks, agec 16, was electrocuted at the home of his aunt, Mrs. James A. Davis. He was repairing an incandescent socket and his aunt turned on the current. Marks received the charge of 120 volts and was killed instantly. Negro Acquitted. Indiana.—John Lindsay, a Pittsburg negro, was acquitted of killing his roommate, Mose Hudson, 15 months ago. The men were employed in the mines at Sagamore. Lindsay disap- peared the day Hudson was killed, but returned last fall and was arrest- ed. - Washington.—Ninety-five cents and a raincoat was all the loot secured by burglars who visited the new Waynes- burg & Washington station here. New Castle.—Attorney J: W. Humphrey of Ellwood has been ap- pointed receiver of the estate of Os- car T. Adams, an Ellwood business man who has been missing two weeks. Friends of Adams fear he has com- mitted suicide. Ends life in Cell. Warren—James Nixson, a prisoner in the city lockup, committed suicide | by hanging. Nixson was charged | with stealing a coat. He fastened |one end of his belt about his neck | and the other end to the top of his cell. 4 | Washington—Washington | through the medium of the |ton and Jefferson College | Society, Washing- Cotillon { Club, has placed the ban on the barn | dance because it is “rought and rude {and not a society dance.”