The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, September 10, 1908, Image 6

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VICTORY IN DEFEAT.
The soul that strives for higher destiny,
A strength of will from bafiled effort
When once defeated in a noble cause.
S \ :
—Eugene C. Dolson, in Rural Magazine.
Ser Y
$ “fhe Printer’s
; A | Mistake.
{na
A DADADDADNDDRNMN
“It’s no use, Edna, the Lord never
meant me to be very happy in this
world. I'll have to take what I cdn
get and be thankful.”
The two girls were directly oppo-
site types. Eleanor was tall, grace-
ful, high strung, nervous, full of life
end energy. Her most attractive fea-
tures were her eyes, dark and deep-
set, with a longing, unsatisfied ex-
pression. Edna was a type much less
interesting, cold, phlegmatic and
clear sighted; a much smaller wom-
an, too, with colorless gray eyes.
On the bed lay lingerie of the most
alluring kind, the sort of things that
only woman can appreciate. Pile
upon pile of lacy stuffs were scattered
about the room. Surrounded by
these pretty things that women love
gat Eleanor Godfrey, who to-morrow
would be the bride of Tom Grant.
“There’s one thing I can never re-
gret,” she said. ‘I told Tom every-
thing before he took me. It was
brutally frank, I admit, to tell your
future husband that the best love of
your life had been given to another.”
“Poor boy,” murmured Edna.
“Poor boy, indeed. Don’t I have
to live with him? Don’t I have to
see him waste his life? And it is
nothing that I have to eke out an ex-
istence crushing down my sighs, fore-
ing back my tears?” =
Walking across the room to where
Edna sat she put her hands on a pair
of very unsympathetic shoulders.
“How can you judge? You do not
know the case. Now listen. Every
breath I breathe, every prayer I ut-
ter, every breath of my aching heart
is for Jack Winston. I've loved him
ever since I was a little girl, but you
see 1 could not very well marry him
because he never asked me. Then,
too, Jack is so poor, and all my life
I've been longing for things that Tom
Grant's money will buy for me. I
don’t deceive him. I said I couldn’t
love him; but he, still knowing this,
wants to marry me, and I accepted.
Now judge me if you will.”
Edna straightened up a bit and the
lines about her mouth seemed to
grow deeper in an instant.
“One question, please, before I
render the verdict. You take upon
your soul the wrecking of this man’s
existence. You will suck the honey
from the flower of his life and leave
him nothing but the stem. This is
easier for you than being an ‘old
maid.” Then, too, suposing that Tom
was in love with some other girl?”
“1 plead guilty to the charge,
judge, and accept the sentence of the
court. Your logic is getting stale:
so let's go to bed that I may get my
beauty sleep and make a handsome
bride. Think of it, dear girl, to-mor-
row at this hour my visiting cards
will read,. ‘Mrs. Thomas Kemp
Grant.’ ”
The next morning was colorless,
the air heavy; in fact, just the sort of
day to make a bride look out of the
window and wonder if she really were
superstitious.
It was about 9 o'clock and Tom
was whistling one minute and singinz
the next. He walked into the bed-
roem where his friend and best man
lay peacefully sleéping.
“Get up, you lazy vagabond. We
can’t keep the bride waiting, yom
know. That’s her privilege.”
The best man rubbed his eyes,
growled a bit, and finally crawled out.
Tom was practically ready. After
working about an hour on it, he had
managed to arrange his puff tie to his
entire satisfaction. He had butioned
and unbuttoned his waistcoat until
his thumbs were blistered. He had
pulled it down in front and buckled
it at the back until the seams threat-
ened to give way.
By 11 the men were ready and on
their way to the house. As they
neared it Tom became more and more
nervous. There sceme to be a
weight on his heart that he could not
lift. At that moment the best man
was hanging out the cab window,
cursing the cab driver for the snail-
like pace they were pursuing.
“J say, cabby, this is a wedding that
we are going to, not a funeral. I'll
give you an extra half dollar if you'll
harry.”
“An extra half, is it? You talk
like a politician. Well, sir, you might
corrupt me, but the horse can’t be
bribed and weddin’'s or funerals, his
gait is all the same. Rest easy while
you can, sir—the lady will drive you
fast enough, once she gets the reins.”
The best man was about to rail at
the Irish as a nation, when Tom said:
“If anything should happen—"”
“Jumping Juniper, Tom, brace up.
You look as if you had eurvature of
the spine. Pall yourself together,
will you? Any girl who had such a
looking object as you on her calling
list would be ostracized by good so-
ciety, and one who would marry you
would be declared mentally incom-
petent.”
“AH rieht: 1} pull up,
beastly idea that something
wrong. Jack, old man, I «
I'm in Jove with Edna Ca
with Eleanor. I've }
realize it.”
“You old poacher, then why did you
ask Eleanor to marry you, when you
knew that I have loved her all my
life, and have been trying to forget
—
but I've a
is going
n't do it.
s and not
begun to
her for months?
1 went over and sat with Edna, trying
to make myself think I was forgetting
Eleanor.”
“And every night,” said Tom, “I
went to see Eleanor because you were
over at Edna's, and I had no right to
trespass on your preserves. A nice
mess we've made of it. What are we
going to do?”
“Do? Why, that’s easy enough,”
assured Jack. “I am going to be the
groom, and you can just slide back
into my boots as best man. We'll
blame the whole thing on the printer.
Trust me, old man. I said I'd see
you through this ordeal, and I'm go-
ing to keep my word.”
As the cab finally reached the
house the men stepped out and were
ushered into the room where the min-
ister was waiting for them.
No word of explanation was uttered
and the men took their places by the
minister who was to pronounce them
man and wife. The wedding march
was played, and as Eleanor, in her
gorgeous robes, came forth to meet
the man of her choice, Jack Winston
stepped forth and offered “her his
arm. .
Eleanor was speechless, but too
happy to resent, and before the gap-
ing crowd the minister tied the knot
that made them one “till death dco
them part.”
Then Jack began his explanations:
“Simplest thing in the world,” be
said. “You see, Tom ordered the in-
vitations, and, of course, the printer
took it for granted that it was his
wedding—merely a typographical
error, nothing more.”
Eleanor’s mother stepped in at this
moment, and with a haughty manner
inquired:
“Then, may I ask why Tom gave
the bachelor dinner — why Tom
bought the ring?”
“Yes, mother,” said Jack, with a
very proprietory manner, ‘you see I
was broke at the time, and Tom, as
you all know, is just loaded with
money, so I gave him carte blanche
to go ahead as if it was his own wed-
ding, and I'd pay him back in good
time. You see I only came into my
inheritance yesterday, and that would
have been too late to order invita-
tions, give dinners, ete. Anyway,
how could you ever think that Tom
was going to marry Eleanor? Why,
he’s engaged to marry Edna, and if
you don’t believe me, ask them for
yourself. I tell you it was a typo-
graphical error, nothing more.”
The color that suffused Edna’s face
and the smile that glorified Jack's
verified the statement, and the guests
were in a flutter of pleasureable ex-
citement, while, in the corner, Jack
was shaking Tom by the hand and
saying:
“Didn't I tell you I'd see you
through it, old man?”—J. H. Wads-
worth, in the Brooklyn Times.
The Nervy Young Man.
By CHARLES C. MULLEN.
“Sir,” said the nervy young man,
coming into the rich merchant’s
office and taking a seat near the head
of the firm, “I would like to ask you
for your daughter's hand!”
“Why, 1 don’t even know
sir!”
“Oh, don’t let that bother at all,
sir. We'll soon get acquainted.”
‘So you, a perfect stranger, ask
for my daughter's hand, eh?” said
the rich merchant, gazing in amaze-
ment at his caller. ‘“Which daugh-
ter do you mean? I have three.”
“I mean the one with the golden
hair,” imparted the young man, un-
abashed.
“] am still in doubt, young man.
Two of my daughters have golden
hair. Do you mean Ellen or Maria?”
“Can’t say which, sir. I had only
a moment's view of your daughter,
and have never met her to know her
rame. But the moment's sight of
her was enough to tell me that I
love her, sir!”
“And you come here to get my de-
cision without consulting or even
seeking an acquaintance © with my
daughter?”
“Yes. You see, sir, the time is
short. Yesterday I cane across your
daughter and a ycung man in the
park. Just as I had made up my
mind that I loved her, I heard the
young gentleman tell her that he was
coming here to-day to ask you for
her hand in marriage; so I hurried
right along to get in my bid ahead
of him.”
“Young man,’ gasped the fond par-
ent, ‘it’s a foregone conclusion that
you will accomplish what you start
out to do. And you've certainly got
the nerve! So go ahead and obtain
an introduction to the daughter of
your choice and do the rest. You've
got my consent!”’—From Judge.
you,
A Smile From a Stranger.
Most of us owe debts of gratitude
to strangers whose kindly smile has
sont sunshine into our aching hearts,
and has given us courage when we
were disheartened.
It is a thing to go through life with
a smiling face. It costs little, but
who can ever estimate its value?
Think how “the pleasure of life
would be increased if we met smiling
faces everywhere—faces which 1adi-
ate hope, sunshine and cheer! What
a joy it would be to travel in a gal-
lery of living pictures, radiating
hope and courage!
Who can estimate what beautiful,
smiling faces mean to the wretched
and the downecast—those whose life
burdens are crushing them?
Many of us carry precious memo-
ries of smiling faces which we
glimpsed but once, but whose sweet,
uplifting expression will remain with
a
a
| us forever.—Success Magazine,
1
Night after night |
wer The
Farm Colony Bill
@ Why It May Be Considered as a Measure
of Self:Defence. é
By Edmond Kelly.
WELVE years ago a farm colony bill was drawn by a com
mittee appointed by all the charitable societies in New York;
but it did not secure at Albany a moment's serious atten-
tion. We are told by our legislators that poverty is not a
crime. When we answered that cur bill did not make of it
more of a crime than the penal code, but only proposed to
substitute for the expensive and degenerating system of the
misnamed workhouse, inexpensive and regenerating work
on a state farm, and that the plan had operated effectually
in Holland and Belgium for over a hundred vears, we were told that the plan
might do in Holland, but it would not do here. So also in the archives of
the French senate may still be read the report made ‘by Thiers, when ap:
pointed by Louis Philippe on a ccmmittee to investigate the first railroad ever
built, which concludes as follows: “Railroads may serve a purpose in Eng-
land, but they are not suited to France.”
A similar bill, improved by borrowing from late experience in Switzer-
land, has been drawn once mere by a similar committee, to which was -added
our Commissioner of Charities, Mr. Hebberd. This bill is likely to receive
a better reception at Albany than the previous one because it will be intro-
duced and supported by the great railroads of New York state; for the rail
roads have discovered that the tramp is an intolerable nuisance. Col. Pang:
born, of the Baltimore and Ohio, has lately estimated that the damage occa-
sioned by tramps to railrecads in the United States amounts in a single year
to $25,000,000. For the tramp in America does not tramp; he rides on rail-
roads; he sets fire to freight cars and freight stations; he obstructs the lines,
wrecks trains, and is a fruitful cause of action for damages. The measure,
therefore, which was thrown out by the Assembly when proposed from mo-
tives of humanity, will be passed as a measure of self-defense. And self-
defense thus constitutes an element of the power always at work on the side
of progress that neither ignorance nor interest will be able to resist. Just
as cholera forced from the British Parliament in 1830 hygienic measures
which up to that time the landlords had been able successfully ¥o resist. so
every evil carries within itself the agent of its own destruction, and the very
men who now resist progress will one day awaken to the fact that they them-
selves, even in their moments of bitterest resistance, have all along been the
unconscious instruments of this very power which some of them today affect
to despise.— From the Century - .
RI pon Ne YC
Model
Heathen Marriages
Ey Maud Churton Braby.
Lorene ALY
HE more one studies the problem of marriage the more plain
does it beccme that many of the heathen ideas on the sub-
ject are infinitely superior to ours. One of the dreams of
Socialist reformers, for instance, is the endowment of moth-
erhocd. They regard it as. a Utopian vision of the far fu-
tureinot likely to be fulfilled for years to come.” Among the
Mohammedans this dream is a reality. The maintenance of
children devolves so exclusively on the father that the
mother is entitled to ¢laim wages for nursing them! The
importance of her services ‘to the state in rearing healthy citizens is thus
recognized in the most practical manner. - -
We hear a good deal of agitation nowadays about making the conditions
of divorce equal to both sexes. Among the Shawanese this is already done.
An unfaithful husband can be turned adrift by his wife, who retains all his
property. They go one better-and make drunkenness alsc an offense for
which divorce can be obtained. :
The savage tribes whem: ve strive to convert have apparently a much
clearer idea of the real basis of marriage, the end for which it was ordained,
than we, who seem to marry for almost every other reason than the desire
for children. With savages the offspring is the main purpose of wedlock.
Married couples in some tribes do not live together at all until shortly before
or sometimes actually after the birth of the first child, and in some cases the
marriage is not binding until a child is born. Among others a childless wife
can at any time quit her husband, but may not marry again. Westermark is
authority, but I cannot recall the names of ihe tribes from memory. These
poor heathens recognize, it will be seen, that children are the chief tie—the
only real hond—that unites a man and woman permanently—in short, that
“marriage is rooted in famijly rather than family in marriage.”
URAL LALERRRRILIRARLA2 ER 2a
Rye NY VE
The Corporate“We’ ©
:
By the Rev. Dr. Robert Mackenz e, of the
Rutgers Riverside Presbyterian Church, New York.
ORPORATIONS, they say, have no conscience, and this is
true, for there is no longer the personal “I” but the cor-
porate “we.” The church has no conscience, the college
class has no conscience. Conscience cannot be distributed
any more than a suit of clothes can be distributed among a
hundred men. It is like the seamless robe of Christ. You
can cast lots for it, but you cannot distribute it. Conscience
is personal. Hence there is nothing more lawless, inhu-
man, brutal than a company of men who have sunk the “I
in the corporate “we.” This is the central issue, as it is the central!
Manifold drifts. of opinion are setting toward all that is
Nyse
danger of this day.
corporate, collected, communal, to the threatened submergence of the per-
sonal self. Si
But whether vou are one of four hundred or of two, let not the artificial
corporate body blind you to the natural responsibility of self. The wrong
will be shared by all. The responsibility will be shared by each. ‘It is the
very task of legal science £0 iC make a combination of many as to evade the
responsibility of each.
We have, therefore, to wrench away the self out of the entanglement cf
the many. As men in a mob are suffocating we elbow our way to the edge
that we may breathe. ‘“Self-love, my liege, is not so vile a sin as self-neg
lect.” ;
PURARELRL LARA RRANARIARAE2ADR
Judges Must Not Be
Swayed by the Mob
By judge J. Otis Humphrey, |
of Iilinois.
Cp rmusivl tml a
S900 9290699 HERE are many citizens whose action is such that they at
: € least ailow us to believe that they expect the judicial de
® ® partment of the government to be run in accordance with
: € public sentiment. When the day comes—let us trust that
) @® it may never come—that the judicial branch of government
) Ca lBad ® is swerved from its official duty by the clamor of the popu-
PO OeewyV . . é
2 lace, the cnd of the government is not far distant. No gov-
Sa eaabe ernment can long survive whose judiciary yields to the pop-
409096069
ular frenzy that follows for a moment the mere clamor of
ithe unreasoning, uneducated, in that particular case, opinion of the public or
even of the press. Law is not the arbitrary creation of a majority's will or
of any will, but it ought to be, as we trust it may ever be, the well-
rounded, well-considered justice of the state, enlightened by the reasonings
of the court which enforce it. You would have little respect, I think, for a
court who curbeds its views to meet the popular clamor.
FIRED ON OFFICER
With Bullets Falling About ‘Them
Police Consider It No Dis-
grace to Run.
Butler.—Charged with felonious
shooting, Harry Young and Mrs.
Katherine Kimmel of Butler town-
ship, were jailed.
Special Officers Harvey McKee and
Stephen H. McBride went to the
Young house to serve a warrant. Oc-
cupants of the house opened fire on
the officers, who fled. The man and
woman held the house for the night.
Several attempt were made to reach
the house, which shtands on 2a knoll
on the Mercer road,- but each sally
of the officers was met by bullets.
Next day Special Officer George
Rogers and Constable Aaron Fisvitz
arrested the pair without resistance.
RAPS TWO.CENT FARE LAW
Court Rules Against County in Favor
of Raiiway.
Wilkes-Barre.—Judge Fuller in the
county court here issued an order re-
straining the county commissioners
from bringing , suits against the
Wilkes-Barre and Hazleton Electric
railway for violations of the rate law
since the passage of the two-cent
fare law by the last legislature. The
company has been charging two
cents a mile, but claims it was losing
money.
After examining the earnings of
the road Judge Fuller is satisfied the
contention of the company is correct
and that the low rate has greatly re-
duced the profits, giving no adequate
return for the capital invested.
VETERANS MEET
Observe Forty-Sixth Anniversary of
Their Leaving Pittsburg for
the War,
Rochester —Survivors of Company
H, One Hundred and Thirty-ninth
Pennsylvania volunteers, were enter-
tained at the St. James hotel by the
proprietor, J. M. Hays, a member of
the command, which 46 years ago
started in cattle cars from Liberty
street, Pittsburg, for the front, with
Colonel H. F. Collier of Pittsburg in
command. The guests were from
Carnegie, Webster, Pittsburg and
Beaver county. “Fin” McDonald of
Webster, a drummer boy during the
war, sang old-time patriotic airs.
OPEN GRAVE FOR PAPER.
Heirs Seek Certificate to Prove Right
to $20,000,000 Estate.
Shamokin.—Heirs of the late John
Rupp, who died in Numedia in 1838,
opened his grave in an attempt to
procure the birth certificate of the de-
ceased, who, it is alleged, was the
direct descendant of a relative in Ger-
many who died leaving $20,000,000,
which {he government holds for dis-
tribution when the legal heirs come
forward and prove their claims. It
is said that the heirs found the pa-
pers.
QUAKER CITY’S BIG LOAN
lssue Bonds for $10,000,000, Redesma-
able im Thirty Years.
Philadelphia.—Bids were=opened at
the mayor's office for a new municip-
al loan of $10,000,000, the bonds to
bear interest at the rate of 4 per cent
and to be redeemable in 30 years.
The loan was heavily oversubscrib-
ed, there being three bids by differ-
ent syndicates for the entire issue
and other bids for from $500 to $6,
000,000. The premium offered rang-
ed as high as $3.59.
Independence Party Ticket.
Harrisburg. — Tne Independence
party” took out its first papers to
make a nomination in Pennsylvania.
The papers were taken out by James
Wheeler of Philadelphia. No state-
ment was made of the offices for
which it was proposed to nominate.
There is also an Independence pariy
in Pittsburg, which presented the
name some time ago.
Capitol Cases Next Month.
Harrisburg.—Deputy Attorney Gen-
eral Cunningham returned to this city
after a six weeks’ trip to Europe, and
as soon as the routine business of
the office is disposed of will take up
the capitol cases. It is expected to
have the argument on the motion for
a new trial for Sanderson, -and the
convicted officials on October 6.
cy in the Westminster College facul-
ty has been filled by the election of
Prof. Owen W. Mills of Clark Uni-
versity, Worcester, Mass., to the chair
of biology. He succeds Dr. A. D.
Howard who resigned.
Drinking Cup for Each Pupil.
Homestead’s school board adopted
a resolution to provide each pupil
with an individual drinking cup, so as
to prevent epidemics of contagious
diseases.
City to Spend $500,000.
Johnstown.— With a view of reliev-
ing a water famine, which several
hundred families in the higher parts
of the city - have experienced for
weeks, the Johnstown Water Compa-
ny decided to increase its indebted-
ness $500,000 in order to improve the
system. A petition signed by 100
property owners of the Seventeenth
ward section was sent to Attorney
General Todd at Harrisburg, asking
that the State compel the water com-
pany to adopt immediate measures
for relief. .
PENNSYLVANIA
Interesting Items from All Sections of
the Keystone State.
New Wilmington.—The' last vacan- |
MURDER MYSTERY
Investigation of Death .of One Man
Leads to the Discovery
of Another.
Washington.—Coroner W. H. Sipe
had scarcely begun his investigation
into the death of am unknown man, =
whose body was found two miles
from Scenery Hill, when the mystery
was deepened by the discovery of
another body lying 15 feet from the
first in dense underbfush
A Monongahela & Washington rail-
road section gang found the first
body in a thicket close to the tracks.
It was practically decomposed. Near-
by was a revolver with a handker-
chief wrapped around the butt.
Men .seaching about the thicket for
clues to the man’s identity were hor-
rified when they stumbled upon an-
other partly decomposed bedy. An-
other revolver was on the ground and
a search revealed three hats, indi-
cating that three men were involved
in the strange tragedy.
TOWN HAS $25,000 BLAZE
Boys Smoking Corn Silk in Barn
Start Fire That Threatened
to Wipe Out Place.
Reynoldsville.—Boys smoking corn
silk in a barn started a blaze that de-
stroyed half the pioneer section of
the town, causing a loss of over $25,~
000 and for a time threatening build-
ing in East Main street.
Starting in M. C. Coleman’s bam
the fire quickly consumed three other
barns, leaped across to Coleman's
drug store and headed for the center
of the town. Reynoldsville firemen
being unable. to check the fiames Du-
bois’ fire department was summoned.
When it arrived the drug store was
in ashes. A vacant store adjoining
owned by James Spry; Mrs. Lucas’
residence and one occupied by for-
eigners—all on the same side of the
street—were doomed.
AN OLD OFFENDER
Eighty-Yeor-Old Woman Charged
With lllegal Liquor Selling.
Philadelphia.—Rose Brennan, aged
‘80, tottered before Magistrate Beaton
to face the charge of keeping a speak-
easy at 1628 Philip street. Police-
man Lenahan testified that he had
gone to Mrs. Brennan’s grocery store
and had purchased in all 16 drinks
of whisky, which he absorbed and paid
the price demanded by the aged pro-
prietress of the store.
He says Mrs. Brennan had been ar-
rested several times for selling liquor
without a license, but that he had
without a license, but that she had
never been convicted. The woman
was held in $1,000 bail for trial. 1
LAMP EXPLOSION FATAL
Woman Sustains Terrible Burns
When Light ‘Lets Go.
Erie—The bursting of a kerosene
lamp carried by Mrs.: Anthony J.
Schmidt, at the ‘family’s summer _
home, west of this town, at midnight,
cost Mrs. Schmidt her life.
_. She was hurried to Hamot hos-
pital, where it was found she had
been burned from head to foot and
that the sight of both eyes had been
destroyed. She died.
Loss More Than $40,000.
Harrisburg.—Twenty buildings, 12
of them dwellings, were entirely de-
stroyed in the borough of Shiremans-
town, seven miles from this city. The
town is without a fire department,
and has no water supply, except from
wells and cisterns, and the loss
would have been far greater had not
chemical engines from this city and
Mechanicsburg stayed the flames.
The loss will run over $40,000, of
which fully $9,000 will fall on St.
John’s Lutheran congregation, whose
handsome brick church was destroy-
ed. 3
Still Purchasing Coa! Lands.
Washington.—Following the pur-
chase early last week of over 6,000
acres of coal in Morgan and Washing-
ton townships for $1,500,000, another
big coal sale was consumated in
ireene county. J. V. Thompson was
again the purchaser, getting 200 acres
for $400 an acre, almost a record
price for coal in this undeveloped
field. Thompson has opticns on
other large tracts.
$10,000 Fire at Spangler.
Johnstown.-—Over $10.000
damage
| was done when fire
destroyed four
buildings at Spangler, north of Ebens-
burg. The losses are: Joseph
Ginter, store and dwelling, $5,000;
Stupey & Williams, store and dwell-
ing, $3.500; George Swartzic, double
house, $2,200. A hucke! brigade was
inadequate to save the buildings.
Scranton.—It a strike riot at Dun-
more Mrs. Adam Kavalko and Mrs.
Anna Cordlach, wives of” miners,
were shot by stray bullets, the source
of which has not ye: been clearly as-
certained.
Clergyman Is Candidate.
Harrisburg.—Rev. Dr. W. L. Wiest,
manager of the publishing house nf
the Evangelical Church in this city,
and one of the best known ministers
of that denomination, was nominated
as the Prohibition candidate for sena-
tor from the Dauphin county distric:.
He will oppose Senator John E. Fox.
Altoona.—Finding a box of liver
pills little Fred Kleffman, aged 2, ate
them, death resulting shortly after-
ward. >
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