' eee eee = 4 . THE DREAM. reach the dam above, For a moment .« 8 x \ 3 es the kit fought, then lost its footing, PENNS Y | \ fANIA iL noon the valley of f; Duaghestan, > With a 1 nme breast Tay et and stark, and rolled to the feet of Plenty Boy, : A While drop by drop, slowly, the red life-blood rai who pounced upon it with a cry of de- = | From the still smoking w ound that showed Sow and dark. light. * a Alone I lay there on the bare sandy ground, And now the big cat, glaring with Intere ti It fr 5 TR Py aE The fierce sun of noontide a rching the stee o. S in €11S om - 2 or own gress of the moun ting ‘that h je 2 me P round, Lag Soo, hasty in id a spring g ections of Sn Log And it fell on me, too—but I slept the death-sleep. n Fellow e eape owar er : : pod £ ad 1 dreamy of fy countyy; a revels by night,” gud wine be Bieoy Sah thy ion the Keystone State. 2 * halls that were brilliant with cressets aflame; 00 ral a € nmmzzie oO e~ 3 - Bod Of maidens whose hols of oes ane At. beast he 2s, &. his shaft entered : And amid their gay gossip I heard my own name. aval a ants ed oir in STATE WILL LOSE LARGE SUM JOSEPH A. SCRANTON DIES ~ */ ar er red and gaping maw and stuck i cath : Sut one of the maidens sits péi isive apart, ‘ : rrr t AF ess ST © Nor join %, Sie laughter: and Go a ar knows “the cougar’s throat. With a growl of Corporations Freed from Paying State Served Four Terms in Conggress and: Sn What sin ter fancies e ngulf he I ung bessis rage, igmu hanska leaped from her Tas on. Bonds.Held in Banks p in Other Offices : So silent she sits while the- revelry grows, : £ = . . = = v Does & her on the sé of 2 Suid Ln 3 Led Tie Self. at “the daring Harrisburg.—It is estimated that ———— x 3 Win ee bre ost, eS oT a § launched herself 5 pum the State of Pennsylvania will lose Scranton. — Former Congressman. 3 At noon, in the valley of far Daghest: on Be hoy, striking him’ upon’ ‘the“chiest, “and | ° E 3 $500,000 a year revenue as direct re- | Joseph A. Scranton, aged 69, died: = a While the still smoking wound with his life-blood is dark? gether ‘they "rolled “upon” thewrocks. 2 - 7" Gpoose and Peppers sult of the decision of the supreme | October 12. He served as revenue.’ * —Michael, Yourievich Lermontov, transtated by Rosa Newmarch. hinking his" last moment :.was at. : AF dation lad oomibines. cream: court, affirming the Dauphin county | collector, postmaster and County : : : Hand, YeHow Belt fought ie Lh, or a - ei beans, court in the case of the Clairton Steel | Treasurer, and was elected to Con- = - o : J : He somehow got to hi¥ ‘fest, and J ’ *| Company of Pittsburg. gress in 1880 and re-electéd to the; AX (ICA CA CA OA OACACARS REACTANT STAG TTT - ’ & : J 2 S a we QPEL IN NE Bis surprise was equal to" his fright ang sietiuce, To prepare the fillin The company contested the right | Forty-ninth, Fifty-first, Fifty-third and 5 | when he saw the great yellow ibeast takesas small cooked string beans as of the State to collect tax on its | Fifty-fourth Congresses. He had ‘= ; he Son of Bi Mountain . | rolling in agony. At a glance he saw you Zan get, and have them as tender | ponds held in State banks, on the | been proprietary editor of the Secran-", - J g | Y | that his arrow had entered her throat 3S possible; mix them with some | ground that the state had already | ton Republican since 1867. Surviv- ° | and stuck. that a blow from’ her paw creafn cheese. Have green peppers | taxed these bonds under its levy of'| ing him are a son and daughter, Rob-_ By Frankia V Welles Calkirs had snapped the shaft, and the iron } 38 Lbarly the same size as possible, | 4 mills cn the capital, surplus and ert M. and Elizabeth Scranton, the . ig a ‘tcoth- was wedged fast holding her { 2B ji them at the top, and remove the | profits of the state banks. The | latter the wife of Captain D. L. Tate, =. AACA RCAICACALALA : os *T 1 : ourts i i + of the com-| TU. A. ed S jaws wide apart. “In vain she strove ne ce Su them gd Dota Se or qosided In {aver of the o us 3 - : ; ; : Yeridi z ey will stan , an em wi 5 * . “My boy, I am going to leave you as to his elders, was a big, “mysteri- | 10 tear out the offending weapon. A Sng up, . i It is stated that the Pennsylvania NINNER "WITHOUT HANDS now to go on the other side of this ous dog,” a sunka wakan tanka. She rolled to and fro, uttering hoarse ingteans mized with Fronch dressing. Railroad alcne has $15,600,000 of — hill. Look well to Plenty Boy till I Yellow Belt hastened to peer in at chest notes and tearing at her mouth ie ghia Seah Dene put 2 Spoon bonds in state banks and savings -in- | Alderman Irvin's Death Closes Career I get back. Remember. you are a |the crevasse, and as he approached, until her jaws ran red with blood. pers on noe a Se i stitutions, on which the company of Remarkable Man, = Sans Arc and the son of Big Moun- | his ears were startled by a rumbling The animal was crazed with pain, Tires ur pays $61,000 a year taxes. In ad- Aftoons-Born. with nelther hands~ = “5 tain.” growl that set his stiff black hair on | Oblivious of everything else 28 she 2 dition to the loss of revenue in pros nor feet, Alderman B. B. Irwin, who Such, or something like it, was the end. He knew that voice—the threat fought to rid herself of the weapon. ‘c 1 Cal Pack Jr Bald fo be a questoh | groppeq dead, had attained at 33~ dialy admonition of Yellow Belt's of ignu hanska, the long yellow cat of Plenty Boy, sprawling at the foot of : feamead non. ; > ether the Bemson or not vears distinction as a political leader. mother during the berry-picking sea- |the mountains,—knew it for the good | the ledge, fiercely scratched by the| Peel a quart of medinm sized white | tive. If it is, the state may lose $1. | fo was nominated on the Democratic’ son. Among the rough lands of the |reason that theré was, at that mo- | Small beast, which had already fled, | onions, cover with boiling water, add- 00%; ,000 in the Fenifusnoent of tax seh | {joyet as a candidate for City Treas- © Powderhorn. {he red raspberry was Ment, one pa:tly tamed, a prisoner at | Was howling lustily. ing.a teaspoonful of sait for each | Hements since 1885. | urer, Sheriff and County Treasurer. inc erulle Bi Sm Aang e s Arc villag y re the y ter but | quart of water : Se . He was twice elected alderman, hav- wonderfully pienty. The Sans Arc the Sans Arc village. Yellow Belt gave the youngs it | g MERY B ST s I : . ; Sones gathered creat quantities, not| “Ho, god-for-nothing! Bad—bad— | 2 glance to note that he was not seri- Boil rapidly ten minutes with the MONTOOME BAN STAND ing been nominated by both the Re- a only to meet the enormous daily ca- |bad!” yelled the small brother, an- ously hurt; then, fitting his bone- | cover partly off, then drain and COVer| pederal Judae Refuses to Reduce pubiiean ond De moqratle DALLES: * pacity of their families, but to dry for |8rily. toothed arrow, he circled warily about agath with fresh boiling water. Cook Amount cf Bond. risen sth a ® ag future use. With his knees knocking, Yellow |the fighting cat, watching his oppor- untf¥ tender but not broken, drain and Pittsburg. — William Mentgomery, | good En ae ws ay The berry range extended on all Belt strung his bow, fitted an arrow, | tunity for a deadly shot. add “milk to cover (it will take about | former cashier of the Allegheny Na-| ang an expert penman. r sides of their village, so the women and stepped softly into the crevasse. It came at last. At three paces he | half cup for every six onions). Sim-| tional bank. must remain in jail un- ee ] became scattered in all directions. The sight which met his eyes | launched his arrow, burying its tooth | mer until quite done, then thicken with | til his trial unless his friends come MURDER AT CHURCH DOOR i * / = The children were.usually taken with | might well have appalled the heart | behind the old beast’s shoulder. a tablespoonful butter rubbed smooth | forward with $150,000 ball gemanded | i their mothers, because a herd of or > his father, the chief, Big 3 her SO ins with a Foiespoentst id Jed self by ane, ig os FR Bennington Shoots Down Wife, Flees: 2 to eas bees. | Mountain. n . and pepper to taste, cook, stirring a 2 BY ae LE les i i them, left at the deserted teepees, MALLE long pepr Judge Young, in the United States and Kills Himself, were too likely to get into mischief. And older children were put to guard younger children, because they were of no account in picking berries. Yellow Belt's case was very trying to a twelve-year-old boy. He had no sisters to relieve him, and his charge was a mischievous and freakish three- year-old child. However, the older brother was very faithful for a num- ber of days. He kept one eye on Plenty Boy and the other on the look- out for small game. Sometimes a chipmunk or a small The youngest scion of the family, breech-clouted, but otherwise naked, was standing erect and defiant, sturd- ily confronting a big cougar and her young, insisting, as he angrily stamp- ed his feet, that the sunkilas come down and play with him! As he shook his fist at them, he leaned backward—so close he was to the face of rock upon wiich they were perching—and the belt ‘of his clout leggings creased his fat sides in double folds. , Yellow Belt saw all this at a glance, bird came within reach cf his blunt- | end arrows, and the excitement of the | mind for =a And when a bush rabbit was actually hit by one | the lad elaborated a carried home to his affair would occupy his long time. ran by, and of two arrows, story which he playfellows When there was no game to be seen Yellow Belt would divide his time in admiration of two war arrows which his uncle, G Bull, had given him, shoot among the bushes. One of these was somewhat worm-eaten in shaft, and its iron teeth played lcose on its rivet for want of real sinews to bind. The other had a hone tooth, and was not a weapon for the buffalo. Yet these arrows and his confidence in them were to bring him out of the greatest adventure of his life, one which, after ferty years, furnished him with his most thrilling tale of personal encounter. On the day when his mother left him to go behind the big hill, she had spread her blanket for Plenty Boy, who was sound asleep. Yellow Belt did not mean to go to sleep when he lay beside the young one, but he had eaten to repleticn, and despite some fighting, his drowsy eyes clesed. He awoke because the sun had shift- ed so that its hot rays were beating directly upon his face. He rose, dig- ging at his heavy, burning lids, and was reminded of his charge by hear- ing the voice of Plenty Boy, sounding faint and far away, but with a fierce accent which spoke of infantile wrath. At first Yellow Beit believed that his mother had ccme and had carried Plenty Boy away as a rebuke to his own remissness, and that the chiid was angry at leaving him behind. Feeling very crestiallen, he gathered his bow and arrows- and made his way among bushes and rocks at the foot of the ledge, toward the sound of Plenty Boy's scolding. For some hundred steps or more he heard nothing of the small brother; then, nearer than he*had expected, he heard the young vcice in an explo- sive shout, repeated two or three times. Plenty Boy had evidently wan- dered off alone, and was shouting—as he often did at the village—at some crow, buzzard, cor other live object which had attracted his attention. Yellow Belt hurriea atong the face of the ledge, not daring to call, for it was a trick of the mischievous lad to scamper off and hide when any one was thus seeking him. So the elder boy ran softly forward, and turning an angle of the rocks, agan heard the voice of the youngster scolding in sharp tones of infantile bravado: “He-e-e! Ya-dra! Come—come down here, sunkila!”’ So! the young brother was calling, and to a “little deg.” Yellow Belt climbed to the top of a boulder, and looked about among wne rocks and juniper bushes. The voice seemed to be coming out of the 1ace of the ledge, and for a moment the lad stared in bewilderment at the bare rock walls. Then a protrduding bush betrayed a cleft near at hand, and its ledges, of seeming jointure, were, he knew some steps apart. He Diesiened to- ward the half hidden imag- ing that the small ht have cornered a rabbit ii To iller horse, Plenty Boy's mind all arim than horses we » dogs, and the and which he did not trust himself to | the | and by his native instinct fully under- stood what had happened. | The little brother, wandering along | the face of the ledge, had come upon | the tiny spotted kits, got accidentally | between them and the mouth of their | lair, and had followed them .into this notch. The old one, prowling upon the top | of the ledge, had heard her young | ones’ distressed miauings, and had de- iscended a scarp which they were un- able to climb. The snarling old beast, her kits al- | most within reach of Plenty Boy, was vaiting to pounce upon the intruder {S Shonie it become necessary to protect | her young. oon Belt was frightened enough; for the moment his legs shock so that he could hardly stand. He called softly to Plenty Boy, hoping to coax him away. But his words were of no avail. The little lad had his eyes glued upon the spotted kits, and the desire to play with them was the only emotion his infantile mind could hold. He answered the brother's entreaty by a forward movement and angry whoops at the kits. And why was this tiny Sans Arc not afraid of the mother? : Yellow Beit knew too well it was because of the big mountain-cat which Lone Elk kept in a stake tee- pee, fastened with a white man’s iron rope, and at which creature, snarling impatiently, little villagers at home were wont to launch their puerile de- fiances. Yellow Belt's legs were yet weak and his teeth clicked with fear, as he stepped cautiously toward the fierce old cat, now snarling down, her muz- zle within three arms’ length of Plen- ty Boy's face. He knew better than to call again to the sturdy urchin. He sought to attract the angry seast’s attention to: himself. He re- membered his mother’s parting charge, and grew brav®. Holding bow and fixed arrow in one ‘hand, he clenched the other and beat his breast as he advanced. “He! Look at me, igmu hanska!” he shouted. “I am the son of a chief, Big Mountain. I do not fear you!” Then, as the old cat seemed to draw back against the rocks, he took fresh courage. “Ho! ho!” he whooped. “See, I will send an arrow through your body!” The sound of his own voice greatly heartened -him, but so also it embold- ened Plenty Boy, who now tiptoed against the rocks and beat his tiny ficts against their hard surface as he renewed his shouts to the “little dogs” to come down. Vithin :ix paces of the glaring cougar Yellow Belt halted. Should he drop his weapons, teap forward, snatch Plenty Boy and run? This he was about 0 do, when the remem- bered counsel of old hunters re- strained him. “When in close quar- ters you must never run from igmu hanska or from mato-hota, the griz- zly, for then they a.c sure to attack. You must always face them warily, weapons in hand.” Such was the wis- dom of the elder hunters, and the boy hecded. He took another step forward, and now the two lower kits, with barely space to cling against the rock, began to crowd: each other for safer and { higher feoting. One of them shoved | the other nearly off its perch, and txls | | ne made a desperate scramble to a moment all was over, cat lay stricken dead at his feet; and for several minutes thereaiter the rocks rang with his exultant whoops of victory. While he was still shouting, his mother found him and saw what he had done. She caught her youngest, still screaming with pain, into her arms and examined his hurts. Finding nothing to alarm, she turned to the exulting son of Big Mountain and said: “My boy, you have indeed . done well.”—Youth’s Companior, mime QUAINT AND CURIOUS. The ostrich has been known to trav- el as fast as a mile a minute. In the seventeenth century, absence from church was a punishable offense in England. The largest park in Europe is the Prater, in Vienna, measuring eighty square miles. seized in use in a Seven tons of bad eggs Detroit were destined for cookie factory. Manhattan borough city has a population to each acre. of New York of 161 persons Alfred Soderman, of Worcester, Mass., has succeeded in growing pola- toes and tomatoes on the same vine. Cigarette smoking is greatly on the increase, and New York city consumed 2,775,000,000 of them during the last year. An Italian nobleman, who is a wid- ower for the seventh time, has erect- ed a castle with seven towers at Biar- ritz, one in memory of each of his wives. Mrs. Mary McGeehan, 106 years old, has lived on oatmeal all her life, and works about the farm at Brockagh, Donegal, Ire., with her children ‘and grand-children The decline of Canada’s shipping, which has been in progress for thir- ty years, apparently has been arrested, for last year’s shipping register shows the first net gain since 1878. In the county jail at Lincoln, Neb Dr. Earl Truell, a dentist, forcibly took three gold teeth from the mouth of Edward J. Reed, a prisoner, who had given a bogus check to the den- tist. A cheap yet durable pavement has been laid by the city of Mankato, Mich., consisting of a mixture of crushed fine stone, gravel ‘and tar, top-dressed with cement and sand. It cost but 80 cents a linear foot, thirty feet wide. Though the wild American biso has practically become extinct there is a promise that the race may be pre- served by domestication. The New York Bronx Zoological Garden added twelve to its herd during the. last year by births. Many of the Japanese porcelain fac- tories, it is said, are not paying ex- penses, and production has been re- duced by 30 to 40 percent. In Tsu Maki-Mura twenty-eight of the eighty porcelain factories have suspended, owing to the decrease in American and Chinese imports. : Under the law not one of the million and a q2arter immigrants who enter tue port of New Ycin each year, is fully admitted to this country, for each enters only under parcle and the government has the right to return him to the port from which he came at any time within three years after his arrival. cheese. the time until the sauce is creamy and thickened, then pour into a hot dish to serve. A change may be made by turning the onions, sauce and all into a serving dish that can go into the oven, covering with buttered cracker crumbs, then baking until brown. Still anather variation is to cover the top of the cracker crumbs with grated Onions cooked in this way will be found very delicate and not odorous.—New York Tribune. Baltimore Apple Bread. Dissolve at night one-half com- pressed yeast cake in a cup of milk that’ has been heated to the boiling point, then ccoled to lukewarm. Sift together a pound bread flour and three heaping tablespoonfuls sugar. Rub in with it two-thirds cup butter, add the milk and dissolve yeast cake with three well-beaten eggs, and stir and beat with a wooden spoon until the dough is blistered. Cover and set over night in a warm place. The next day roll the dough cut in two cakes, each about half an inch thick. Spread the lower one with tart apple sauce, then butter the other slightly and lay over it and let them rise together about half an hour. Bake in moderate ven until the bread is well done. When taken from the oven spread with more tart, tender apple sauce that has been put through a colander, dredge with sugar and set back in the oven to glaze. Serve hot. By using a whole yeast cake the time of the first rising may be shortened so that the bread may be set and baked the same day.—: Washington Star. Hints to Housekeepers, To butter a cracker and sprinkle in with cayenne pepper will induce sleep after eating. Varnished wood should be rubbed witk a chamois leather wrung out of cold water, then polished with a soft duster. An easy method of mending a lace curtain in a hurry, until time can be spared for darning it, is to cut a piece of net as near a match to the cur- tain mesh as possible, dip in boiled starch, and iron over the torn part until dry. ? Patent leather is always deubtful leather to buy, as no one will guaran- tee how long it will wear. If the shoes are cleaned and oiled frequently with sweet oil or vaseline they will keep in good condition and last very much longer than if they are left alone. To polish a varnished floor rub well with equal quantities of beeswax and turpentine. Another method is to take equal parts of olive oil and spirits of turpentine, wet a sot cloth with these, rub the wood hard, then rub with a dry cloth. This is also geod for black walnut furniture and sewing machines. A folding toilet and dressing table is new and useful, but expensive. The table -is of highly polished mahogany, with stool to match, eontainirg a good sized mirror at the back, and nineteen silver toilet articles. When not in use, the. top may be completely fold- ed up and used as an ordinary table. A very good salad can be made by using a cupful of uncooked. cabbage, green pepper, celery, all to be shred- ded; apples cut in pieces, a few seed- ed white grapes cut in halves and 2 few English walnuts. Mix all togeth- er thoroughly and place in the refrig- erator. Serve with mayonnaise or French dressing. Remember that pond lilies, when procurable make one of the loveliest of summer centre pieces. They should be placed in a large shallow glass bowl, and care should be taken not to crowd in tco many blossoms. The water beneath with the long, curving stems is one of the chief attracti of this decoration, as it gives the flow. ers the advantage of their native s roundings even when ner table. refused to reduce the amount of the federal bond as re- quested by E. Y. Breck, counsel for the accused man. United States District Attorney Dunkle opposed the reduction of the bond, declaring that while the amount demanded was large, the bank had been looted to the extent of $1,250,000 and therefore he did not think the bail too great. District court, Women Elect Officers. Saltsburg.—The Woman's Mizsion- ary society of the Conemaugh presby- tery closed its convention at Shelocta with the election of the following of- ficers: President, Mrs. W. A. Kel- fey, of Johnstown; treasurer, Mrs. A. W. Mahon, of Indiana; saecrelary, Mrs. J. M. Walsh, of Indiana; perance secretary, Mrs. Mary Indiana; thank offering secretary, Mrs. R. M. Hamilton, Blairsville; secretary of yonng women's work, Miss Jane Ralston, Elderton. Two Buildings Destroyed. Sharon. —Fire caused sand dollars’ less of South Starting in the restaurant Maudlin, in Broadway the store cf Herb buildings were desiroyed, contents. The Michler huilding, ad- joining, was damaged. The de- stroyed buildings were owned by M. A. Shiclds of Pittsburg. . The cause of the fire is not known. Sharon. of Carl ord Both with their Fined $17.60 for 5-Cent Sale, Sharon.—C. H. Hawkins, a confec- tionery dealer, was arrested for vio- lating the blue laws last Sunday. it was alleged Hawkins scld a package of tobacco for five cents. He pleaded guilty and paid $17.60 fine hefore a justice. Liner Kills Tamaqua Boy. Tamaqua.—While the boy pupils of the Penn school, near Shenandoah, were playing ball cne of the nunyber, Schenkey by name, 7 years old, bat- tel out a liner that struck Albert Wychonis, 7 years oid, cn the*head. With a groan, the- boy sank. to ‘the ground and socn died. Has New Air-Craft. Altoona.—J. E. Farnsworth, an elec- trician, ha; applied for a patent for a heavier-than-air flying machine, which he says will maintain a speed of a mile a minute. The machine sails in any desired direction. The prevent breaking down in mid-air. Forests Swept by Flame, Connellsville.—Fcrest fires are rag- ing in the mountains east of Connells- ville. The blaze is spreading over the Pinkerton tunnel. One hundred acres of timber land have already heen destroyed and the woods at both ends of Ohio Pyle are blazing. Far- mers in {he burning districts are mov- ing out. Fire Sweeps Timber, Saltshurg.—Forest fires in the vi- cinity of Black Lick valley, near here, have destroyed many acres of timber and fencing. On the farm ef Rose Mahan, in Upper Two Lick township, 100 acres of wocded fields have been swept by flames and much fencing has been destroyed. The flames are supposed to have been started by hunters several days ago. Means Work for Many Men. Beaver Falls.—The big plant of the Armstrong Cork Company, which has been idle in many departments all summer, started up in full running day and night turns. Accepts Bellevue Call. Rev. James M. Ferguson, pastor of the First United Presbyterian church, New Castle, announced that he would accept a call recently extended him by the Belluevue church. He is a son of Rev. Dr. R. G. Ferguson, formerly president of Westminster college. Fire Destroys Plant. Philadelphia.—Fire of unknown origin destroyed the plant of the Greater New York Metallic Bed Com- pany, at Second and Spruce streets, { in the business section of the city, entailing a loss es'imated at $50,000. | tem- | Bruce, | | private several thou- | it spread to | | county. | 3,000 men were in line. inventor says he has it perfected to | i having York.— William Bennington shot and ° killed his wife while she:was on her way to church at Belta Sunday and then committed suicide. Benning- ton followed his wife to church with a horse and buggy and fired a load of shot into her body just as she was about to enter the church. . He then whigped up nis horse and _ drove across tne. State line into Maryland, where he reloaded the = shotgun, placed the barrel against his stomach and pulled the trigger. The a 1 crime is said to have been prompted "HN by jealousy. : 1, Veteran Railroad Man Killed. - Meadville—Samuel R. Hainen, aged 0 65, a foreman in the Erie Trailrcad "2 | blacksmith shop and one of the old- > est employes on the road, was killed when a power ram driving a wedge out of a brcken hammer, slipped and struck him, crushing his chest. He was the father of Miss Anna Hainen, secretary to Miss Helen . Gould and of Joseph Hainen of Greensboro, N. C., superintendent of motive power on the- Southern rail- road. Italians Celebrate. Greensburg.—In commemoration of a the discovery of America by Colum- > bus, a celebration was held here by Italian residents of Westmoreland In a parade in the afternoon Judges Doty and Steel, Mayor Sell, Silas A. Kline i and Justice J. Q. Truxal, were guests: - : 2 of honor. The celebration, which was under the auspices of the Societa i 0. I. di M. S. Christofor Colombo of sr Greensburg, closed with a banquet in the evening. Ak RY XR ® i GER Weaver Can Amend His Papers. Harrisburg.—Judge Kunkle declar- So ed invalid the nomination papers of 2 M. L. Weaver, the candidate for the Rightecus Government party for Sen- ator in the Cambria county district, ’ but gave leave to amend. This con- test was the only one this fall. The : defect in the papers was that the l vouchers did not know personally the signers. This will be corrected. Dropped Match in Powder. Washington.—The accidental drop- ping of a lighted match by a foreign- : er, George Guide, into a keg of pow- : der at Manifold resulted in an explo- sion in which Guide, his landlady and several children in the house were severely hurt. One end of the house 2 was blown out. Guide is in the e City Hospital. 2 . Will Rebuild Long Bridge. Butler.—The Baltimore & Ohio rail- way officials decided to suspend traf- { fic on the big bridge over the Alle- ! gheny river, near Foxburg, owing to its unsafe condition. Passengers are being transferred across the stream by boat.’ The bridge is of wood and was built about 35 years Lago. It . > will be rebuilt. Italians Scrap. Canonsburg.—In a fight among Ital. - . ians employed in building a State road in Peters township Tony Boran- to’s upper lip was bitten off. He was brought to the Canonsburg hospital, where Lis injuries were dressed. Joe * Bonbio left the camp and has evaded i 2 officers huntinz for him. Former Postmaster Dies. Greensburg.—John D. McCaleb, 84 years old, died at his home in M:!. 2 Pleasant, where for years he conduct- ed a general stere, later operating an iron foundry. He was postmaster of Mt. Pleasant from 1876 to 1880 and from 1880 to 1890 was justice of the peace. = Killed by Train. Titusville.—The lifeless body of Henry Lineberger, a steelworker, . aged 25, with both legs cut off at the thighs, was found beside the Penn- sylvania Railroad here. He is sup- posed to have fallen under a night . train, and died from the loss of blood. a = Killed by Football Kick. Canonsburg.—William M. Potts, the football player injured in a game Oc- tober 3, died Sunday morning, after been unconscious almost a “ iw eek. nei of in ¢ aga thal hav real pap othe text Fir: blue er t but the gun thai to in 1 sho the onl bec: _ one. —N life- the the who the nev fore of t the ‘best cles helj bac] of t stra en, mer wat WO that to Mis che Nev the the com har ten one the ed exal if a thin .§che sho ther ties cau witl Alic nev is o do say: ing You aga you lear sch ber stro ave: trer tion abr note incl but heig only othe terd first vine san the: and not
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers