deo IN DE SWEET, SWEET COUNTRY. In de sweet, sweet country What de Kingdom chillun stay, one time see de angels A-makin’ holiday; An’ one, he love de angels, An’ went home wid ’im ter play. His mammy call an’ call ’im, Wen de playtime-day wuz done, An’ de hills wuz lookin’ lonesome— Sayin’ good by ter de sun: “Come home—de dark is fallin’: Come home, my Ii’l’ one!” “Come home!” de shadders answer; “Come home!” de lost hil £ »Come home!” de Winter want you Ter smile an’ make de May; It’s only fer de li'l’ one De Springtime come ter stay! But de Night is long wid trouble, An’ de long, long watch she keep; She dunno dat de angels Love de 1i’’ one a heap; But dey let ‘im come ter see her An’ he kiss her in her sleep. —~Uncle Remus’s, The Home Magazine. 0000000000000 9090000000000 = 5 $ She Just Wanted to Be Sure. ’ By JAMES HARRIGAN.' Se mr co 190690000000000600006060000 Tasker, most patient of men, gritted his teeth hard to hold back the retort that hovered on his tongue. Never had Millicent Kent been so taltalizing, and to-day it seemed doubly hard to bear. On the morrow he must go back to the city to spend the hot weather season at his desk. Jim Tasker had snatched two brief weeks with Miss Kent and most of their waking hours had been spent in her motor boat. » It had been an unhappy two weeks. Millicent had never seemed so to de- light in teasing, and Jim’s restraint was worn to the breaking point. Half a dozen times that morning he had been on the verge of a sharp answer, and ‘Millicent, lolling indolent in the stern of the little craft, smiled wick- edly to herself and was moved to fresh endeavors. This time she had almost drawn blood. The nose of the boat swung round and headed for the channel that presently would bring them in sight of the hotel landing. “Jim.” Millicent’s voice was low and clear. “You are off your course. Quagh is over to the left.” “I know it,” was the quiet response. “I am trying to get back to the hotel.” “But we were to have lunch on Quagh,” she reminded. “We don't want to get back to the hotel yet.” “I do,” was the short response. “I want to get back there as quickly as this boat will take me.” “When I went to such pains to put up da nice lunch,” expostulated the girl, “and on your last day, too.” “I can’t help that,” retorted Tasker. “I have tried my best to keep my temper in check, but you will not have it so. You seem determined to force me to an outbreak.” Miss Kent's face assumed an ex- pression of hurt surprise and her voice was reproachful. “Please turn, Jim,” she said; plead- dngly. For an instant Tasker’s grip on the steering wheel faltered, but only for an instant. The boat yawed slightly, then held steady again. “I said ‘please,’ Jim,” reminded Millicent. ; Tasker made no response, For a few moments nothing was said, then with a sound like a tired sob the motor ceased its staccato ex- plosions and soon the headway was lost. The boat floated quiescent on the still surface of the lake. Still silent, Tasker sought to locate the trouble. The spark was all right, there was plenty of gasoline in the tank under the seats, the feed pipe was not clogged up, and yet there was no delivery of the’ fuel. For full fifteen minutes he worked over the motor, then ‘he turned to the smiling girl. “There is something the matter with the machinery,” he announced quietly. “I shall have to paddle in somehow.” t “But you have no paddle,” remind- ed Millicent. “It’s a mile to the other end. You can never make it.” For answer Tasker caught up a cross seat and, using this as a paddle, he began to move the boat slowly through the water. It was hard work and more than once Millicent urged him to stop, but his only reply was a determined shake of the head. They had gone half the distance, and already they could see an occa- sional boat slip past the opening of the channel, but too far away to hail. Millicent moved forward and sat closer to Tasker. : “Jim,” she said softly, “if I say I'm sorry, will you stop being foolish and go on to the island?” “Sorry for what you did on pur- pose?” he asked, bitterly. “During the last two weeks you have done nothing but try to irritate me.” “I know it,” confessed Millicent, sweetly, “and I am sorry only for your sake. It was for your own good that I did it.” “To improve my temper?” ' manded, sarcastically. “To see if you had one,” she cor- rected. “You see,” she went on, “I’ve kuown you five or six vears, Jim, and in all that time I never saw you in a temper. I never could quite make out whether it was because you were without spirit or because you had such perfect control of yourself, and —1I just had to find out,” she added, contritely. “And you have made excelient use of your time,” said Ta bitterly. 04600000600 & 4 3& ® <4 <4 4 < <4 <4 <4 < < 4 < < he de- with sparkling eyes. “Nc woman wants to marry a man with no spirit,” she added, in explanation, “and I was beginning to be afraid that that was your case. “But you will forgive me tell you that my answer is ‘Yes?’ '’ she demanded. when 1 Tasker’s face beamed. “Is it really ‘Yes’ after all these negatives?” he demanded. M cent nodded. “] wanted to be sure,” she ex- plained, as Tasker took her in his arms. “What a shame we can’t h lunch on the island!” he cried regretfully a few minutes later. “But we can,” explained Millicent. “I wanted to see if the stoppage of the engine would not be the final straw. I turned off the feed cock and then sat over it. You were too angry with me to ask me to move.” She bent over and worked at a shining bit of brass. “Now, throw over the engine, and we'll start on oar betrothal party,” she cried, gayly. “There's a bottle of pop in the hamper, and we’ll drink to the tame temper.—New York Even- ing Journal. ~ WISE WORD. The only way to get all the happi- ness in life is to give for the happi- ness of all. The devil is worried by the people who work for.the good, not by those who worry over him. Happiness never comes to any who can enjoy it alone. The lofty soul is often best mani- fested in the lowly service. Reviewing old troubles is a sure way of recruiting new ones. It is easy to affect to despise the things we can not understand. The grace of forgiveness is not ac- quired by practicing it on yourself. The best way to make sure of be- ing happy is to make some one else glad. The best way to worship the heav- enly child is to give some other child some heaven. He who waits to do good in some notable way will never have any good to note. The most eloquent prayers for the needy are the ones we carry to them in baskets. To follow only the light of your own desires is to find yourself in the darkness of self-disgust. You may have a right to nurse sor- row for yourself, but you have no right to let its shadow fall on others. —From “Sentence Sermons,” in the Chicago Tribune. ———— A Dubious Tribute. The young theological student who had been supplying the Rushby pul- pit for two Sundays looked wistfully at Mrs. Kingman, his hostess for the time being. “Did you like the sermon this morning, if I may ask?” he in- quired. “You done real well with the ma- terial you selected,” said Mrs. King- man, with much cordiality. “As I said to Zenas on the way home, I've heard a dozen or more sermons preached on that text, and this young man’s the first one that ever made me realize how difficult ‘twas to ex- plain.”—Youth’s Companion. ———————————— ———————— A Holdup. De Roads—‘ Mister, I found the dorg your wife is advertisin’ a reward uv $5 fer.” Mr. Jaw—‘‘You did, eh?” De Roads—‘“Yes, and if you don’t gimme $10 I'll take it back to i | | Reflections of Uncle Ezra | By ROY K. MOULTON. I have seen a lot of French horns | on automobiles, but, by gravy! I have seen a blame sight more greenhorns | {on i ‘em. A feller ad. in the ways down who puts a matrimonial paper is running a long as much of a freak as the feller was | , twenty years ago who didn’t. | | her. See?’—Philadelphia Inquirer, Some men are born poor and oth- ers acquire automobiles, A feller who thinks he has got to | tell you the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth about your- self is more of a nuisance than a downright durn liar. Our milliner is using a shredded- wheat biscuit for a rat, and the con- stable is at work on the case, tryiug to find out if she is violating the pure food law. About the most aggravatin’ thing in this world is to see a seven-dollar dog eat up‘'a twenty-dollar bill. Pansy Tibbits, of our town, is tak- ing music lessons at some conserva- tory. Hank Pike says a conservatory is a place where they keep fish, but Uncle Hod Peters says Hank is a liar, and that a place where they keep fish is an antiquarian. Bud Hicks says he wants to marry a woman with money. Well, by jing! it is pretty difficult to marry a woman , Without money. Abner Hanks made a mistake the other day and filled the tank of his forty-candle-power runabout with gin instead of gasoline, and the blame ‘thing wouldn’t stay in the rud, but knocked the front porch off from Hilliker’s general store and smashed four rod of fence in front of the meetin’-house. Rev. Stubbs has got the shingles. Now would be a good time to put a new rocf on the church. The last time Elmer Spink, of our village, was in New York he made love to a chorus girl, but her grand- son came out of the stage entrance just in time to give Elmer a good thumpin’, Grandma Spink has got a new set of false teeth. Let the improvements go on, and we will have a pretty fine- lookin’ town. Virtue is its own reward, especially if a feller is rupnin’ a seven-column newspaper in a one-column town. I hate to see a lady chaw tobacco or smoke a pipe, but, by cracky! I'd rather see ’em doing that than kiss- ing poodle dogs. There are a whole lot of people sufferin’ from inflammatory religion. —From Judge. Twe Little Dogs. Although there was no sort of toy which could be bought and for which Harold had expressed a desire that was not in his possession, he still had his unsatisfied longings. “I know what I wish I was, mother,” he said one day, when his- own big brother had gone away and the little boy across the street was ill. “Yes, dear,” said his mother. ‘Perhaps you can be it, Harold. Mother will help you, Is it to play soldier?” : ‘No, indeed,” said Harold, scorn- fully. “I just wish I was two little dogs, so I could play together.” The Very Latest. “She is wearing her hair in some entirely -new style. I can’t make it out.” “That's the aeroplane tousle.”— Kansas City Journal. Boston seems to appreciate the needs of a woman’s stomach better than other cities. There a woman may eat better for less money than in any other big city in the country, and she doesn’t have to go to a for- eign restaurant to do it. 5 ‘While the same woman may sus- tain life decently in New York or Chicago if she doesn’t require con- tinued variety, Boston gives more than that. It is a mistaken idea to assume that Boston breakfasts, lunches and dines on the bean. There are several dozen interesting places in the business district espec- ially intended to attract a woman, and she may have a wide choice, al- though the dishes each day are not numerous. Seldom are two days duplicated in a month’s menu. The monotony of New York's inexpensive restaurants is avoided, and as each of these lit- tle Boston restaurants seems to strive continprally to make an individuality of its own in the list of dishes, un- less a woman really pines for same- ness in her diet she isn’t ‘compelled to submit to it. So thoroughly is the attractiveness of some of these places understood that in a number of them are dis- played signs, “These tables especially reserved for men,” and this too not in the shopping or stenographer dis- | trict, but unclassified all day patron-| age. So many women decline to eat meat in these days or cut their allow- ance down that these places pay at- tention to the preparation of vegeta- bles an/1 made dishes, especially those including fish. While such women have to eat health food com- positions in New York or rarely get anything but white bread, wheat or a corn muffin more than half wheat | “I’ve been tempted to threw you over- board a hundred time “I wish you had,” flour, the Boston places pay special | attention rye, whole wheat, to variety in breads, and | estimable wife was good enough to graham, oatmeal! give me to-night’s invitation,’ ” } BOSTON WOMEN WELL FED. Variety in Little Restaurants at the Hub Not Matched in New York City. and Indian corn muffins, gems, Sally Lunn and such things are not only ordinary orders but are made so at- tractive one really wants to repeat them. Most of these lunch and tea rooms are inspired by American women who have had some scientific training and are blessed with enough business sense to make money out of it. The places are necessarily tucked away up one or two flights, but the Boston pa- tron of such a place seems to be as- sured that the more one labors in reaching it the more desirable it is likely to be. The Boston woman who doesn’t propose to spend much money on her food has become so well trained that she can’t be fooled very long. When she comes to New York she is soon disenchanted, for even if dishes called by the same names are to be found in New York they are five or ten cents higher a portion. Boston is developing in such eating an in- expensive, nutritious and attractive cuisine that is: really American and not quite like anything else in the land.—New York Sun. Pushing Too Hard. “You are pushing me too hard,” said Wu Ting Fang to a reporter in San Francisco who was interviewing him, as the story goes in Everybody’s. “You are taking advantage of me. You are like the Pekin poor relation: “One day he met the head of his family in the street. ‘“‘Come in and dine with us to- night,” the mandarin said graciously. “ ‘Thank you,” said the poor rela- tion. ‘But wouldn’t to-morrow night do just as well?’ “ ‘Yes, certainly, But where are you dining to-night?’ asked the man. darin curiosly. the road to meet trouble. ! It is getting so nowadays that a | feller who chaws tobacco is almost ! { GERANIUM CAKE. | - Cream one-half cupful of butter with one cupful of granulated sugar, | add two-thirds cupful of milk and two cupfuls of flour in which has been | sifted two even teaspoonfuls of bak- ing powder and a pinch of salt; fold in the stiffly beaten whites of three eggs, line a square tin with white paper, butter it, and place on the bottom a layer of rose geranium leaves; pour the mixture all over the leaves and bake. The result will be a delightful flavor, like the odor of rose petals. The leaves pull off read- ily. Boil one-third cupful of water and one cupful of sugar till it hairs, add three tablespoonfuls of sweet cream, bedt till cool and pour over cake,—Boston Post. : BRAN BREAD. One cake of yeast, two cups of bran, two tablespoons of salt, two ta- blespoons of molasses, half cup of su- gar, one cup of cornmeal, four me- dium sized potatoes. In the evening dissolve yeast for an hour in half cup water. Mash fine four medium sized boiled potatoes. Pour over them one pint of water in which they were boiled, then add flour enough to make a moderately stiff batter. In the morning take three pints warm water, add to this the above sponge, salt, su- gar, molasses, bran and cornmeal (which must be cooked before using), then stir in as much flour as you can beat with a spoon, use more flour and knead until stiff. Let rise, then make in loaves. Let rise again and bake for forty-five minutes to one hour in moderate oven.—New York World. INDIVIDUAL CHARLOTTE RUSSE. Half a cup butter, one cup sugar, | four eggs, one and one-eighth cups pastry flour, one teaspoon baking powder, one teaspoon of vamilla. | Cream butter and sugar together, add i vanilla and eggs well beaten. Sift | flour and baking powder together | three times and add. Bake in tin cups or half-pound baking powder | tins will do; makes seven. Grease well and put rounds of greased paper | in the bottom of tins. Takes twenty | to thirty minutes in moderate oven. | When done, cool and cut out and re- | move the centres. To do this, take a | thin, small, sharp knife and three= | fourths of an inch in from the side," press knife down to within three- fourths of an inch of bottom, and then cut right round the cake. Now insert knife in ithe outside three- fourths of an inch from the bottom and push blade in to within three- fourths of an inch of opposite side, and without increasing hole where knife went in move the tip of the blade back and forth till the middle of the cake slips out. Fill the shells with first chocolate and then plain filling. . Chocolate Filling — One-quarter ounce gelatine and one cup milk, soaked till soft and then scalded in double boiler. Melt one-half square of chocolate, add one-fourth cup sugar, one-half teaspoon vanilla and the yolk of one egg. Pour over this the scalded milk in which the gela- tine is dissolved. Set the dish in ice water; stir often, and when the mix- ture is slightly thickened, add beaten white of one egg and one-fourth cup cream. Blend thoroughly and half fill cakes at once.—Boston Post. THE] LN) UFOUSEKEEPE SR oo —— a - SE i ca pos. Apple sauce may be served with pork or duck. Cracked ice may be used artisti- cally instead of merely as a chiller. Clear boiling water will remove tea stains if poured through the stain. Any sort of leaf tucked around a platter will make it look inviting. Cornquat marmalade, although hard to get, is delicious with cold meats. If possible a cream soup should not be served at the same meal with a cream dessert. Turn your plush driving robe so that the nap runs down. It then catches on your clothing and will not be continually slipping from you on a cold day. Dry the tender leaves and small ends of the stalks of celery and keep for flavoring purposes; parsley should be first dipped in boiling wat- er—to make it a bright green—then dried in the oven. . Relief from choking may be had by swallowing a raw egg immediate- ly. This will generally carry a fish- bone or other obstruction down which cannot be removed from the throat by the utmost exertion. To remove rust from steel rub the rusted part with sweet oil and allow it to stand for forty-eight hours. Then rub with a piece of soft leather ‘and sprinkle with finely powdered unslacked lime until the rust disap- pears. An ingenious woman suggests that a soft brush, such as is used in var- nishing, is good for brushing bread, rolls and pastry with melted butter. “ ‘At your house. You see, your! It a string is put through the handle and the brush is hung in the regular place, so much the better. ‘| goods. PENNSYLVANIA Interesting Items from All Sections of the Keystone State. COUNTY EMPLOYES HELD Matron of County Home Accused of Embezzlement and Steward of Assault. Franklin.—Mrs, Lillian Sutton, who was recently removed as matron of the county farm, had a hearing on a charge of embezzling property of the county. A former employe of the county home testified that County Commis- sioner Baumgardner was supplied with two pounds . of butter every week for two years from the county farm, and provided with large quan- tities of vegetables. The commis- sioner, it was said, got many articles for a wedding anniversary dinner at the county farm, a The witness alleged” Mrs. Sutton had dresses made from county. dress ges, but she was for trial at court. Homer Sutton, the deposed stew- ard, was held for court on a charge of attacking an anmate of the home. held HUSTON TRIAL LATER Capitol Architect Secures meént in His Case. Postpone- Harrisburg.—The trial of Joseph M. Huston, architect of the State: Capitol, upon the charge of conspiracy to de- fraud the State, was postponed with- out a date being fixed when called in the Dauphin county court because of a plea that the defense would be pre- judiced by a severance recently grant- ed to John H. Sanderson, the contrac- tor; William P. Snyder, ex-Editor General, and James M. Shumaker, for- mer superintendent of grounds. Successful Candidates for Mine Jobs. Washington.—The result of the ex- amination for mine foremen and fire bosses, held at Monongahela last week, have just been announced. Of the 35 men who took the examination for mine foremen, A. M. Harper, Bellevernon; John Carroll, Mononga- hela; Lewis Anderson, VanVoorhis, and Dennis Kerwin, Elizabeth, were successful. Sixty-one took the exam- ination for fire boss and 16 passed successfully. These 16 will be given an additional oral test next Monday at ther Naomi mine. : Will Be Tried in Sharon First. Sharon.—District Attorney J. Mede Lininger of Mercer county, said there is positively no chance of James H. Boyle and his wife, now in the county jail, being taken to Cleveland until they have first answered to a charge of kidnapping “Billy’’ Whitla before the court of this county. District At- torney Lininger has received a letter from County Prosecutor Cline of Cuy- ahoga county, O., asking that the au- thorities of that county be allowed to have the Boyles to answer a charge of blackmail. : Miners’ Home Burned. Wilkes-Barre.—Eight houses were completely destroyed and 12 families were rendered homeless at Bresslau, a mining town adjoining this city. .One of a number of men who had been occupying a room in a boarding house threw a lighted cigaret qn a bed which caught fire. With heavy wind blowing and no fire department near at hand, nothing could be saved. The loss will reach $15,000. Mrs.’ Patterson Dead at 102. Philadelphia.—Mrs. Esther Hoge Patterson, who was 102 years old, died here. She was a member of the most exclusive society circles here. Until about twg months ago ‘she retained all her faculties, but recently , has been confined to her bed. Her fath- er was a Presbyterian clergyman, who came to this country from Tyrone, Ireland, in 1798, and married Eliza- beth Clay Holmes of Carlisle, Pa. Will Manufacture Perfumes. Articles of incorporation were filed in Dover, Del., for the Nonpareil Man- ufacturing Company of Pittsburg, Pa., to manufacture, sell and deal in per- fumes, chemicals, etc. Incorporators are L. Duncan, F. S. Alsfelder, S. W. | Cooney, all of Pittsburg, and Charles W. Bush of Wilmington, Del, Capi- tal stock $50,000. ~ Negroes Rob Contractor. ‘Washington.—While driving from Houston to McDonald late at night George Lewis, a contractor, was held up and robbed by two negroes. Lewis put up a fight, but when revolvers were ‘leveled at him he gave up a small amount of money, his knife and a watch. : Scarlet Fever Is Epidmic. Johnstown.—Owing to an outbreak of scarlet’ fever, all public places in South Fork, near here, have been or- dered closed. The order affects Schools * churches, dance halls and theaters, Oil City, Pa.—Mrs. Anna Hardinger, aged 50 years, committed suicide at the home of a daughter, at Torpedo, Crawford county, by hanging herself. No cause for the act is known. Somnambulist Falls to Death. Butler.—George J. Smith, aged 60, while walking in his sleep at the Good Will Hose Company’s room, where he was employed as one of the night men, fell through the pole hole and sustained injuries from which he died an hour later. Newspaper Changes Hands. Meadville.—The Tribune Publishing Company purchased the plant and bus- | iness of the Star Publishing Company, t including the “Crawford Journal,” E. A Hempstea whic Pos Mrs. Sutton denied the char- KILLED BY FALLING WALL Wind Blows Down Wall of Burned Opera House. Greensburg.—Weakened by a heavy, wind, the north wall of the Jeanette Opera House, gutted by fire several months ago, collapsed at night, de- molishing the home of Dr. Allen A. Custard, adjoining. One girl was killed and another was probably fatal- ly injured. : a The Dead—Mildred Felton, 16 years old, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Felton, of High Park. The injured— Grace. Swift, 16 years old; cousin. of Dr. Custard, bruised about face and | body and probably internally injured. The collapse of the. wall came with- out a moment’s warning. girls, students in the Jeannette High lor.. Miss Felton; at the sound of the crashing wall," tried to escape through the front door, only six feet away from from where she stood, but was caught by heavy timbers and her skull was cdushed. : : ’ DRIVES CHILDREN AWAY Seek Asylum in County Home and Are Takeh Care Of. Washington.—“Please mister, won’t you let us live here?’ asked the old- est of five children who appeared at the Washington County Children’s home. The children, ranging in age from 14 to five years, said they. were Rosi- na, Joseph, Mila, Anetta and Jimmie Cereta. They were taken in and told Mrs. J. L. Rockey, the matron, that stepfather had mistreated their mother. J An investigation revealed that they lived in Washington and had been sent away by their mother, who fear- ed they would be killed. She told them to go to the children’s home. them and ANOTHER COAL LAND DEAL Josiah V. Thompson Buys Coal Tract for $1,087,000. Washington. — Another mammoth coal deal has just been closed in Greene county by Josiah V. Thomp- son of Uniontown, who has bought 6,010 acres of fuel in one solid tract a few miles north of Waynesburg. The tract, known as Adams block, was owned by J. B. Adams and 125 others. | The price paid by Mr. Thompson | averaged about 180 an acre, the entire | amount being $1,087,000. The block |1s continguous to other holdings of | Thompson and his associates, LEGISLATIVE APPROPRIATIONS Chairman Woodward's Estimate for Lower House at Harrisburg. Harrisburg.—The following state- ment of the appropriations of the leg- | islature this sessfon fe] | Chairman James F. Woodward of the house committee on appropriations. General appropriation bill, $27,697,- 552.98. For roads, $8,000,000.00. Indigent insane, for maintenance, $3,000,000.00. Indigent insane, for buildings and improvements, $2,037,401.97. Prisons and reformatories, $1,288,- 405.68. State institutions under construc- tion, $1,771,000. Colleges and universities, $1,702,- Armories, $400,000. y Primary elections, $1,000,000. National guard, $1,785,000. Capitol park extension, $2,030,000. Homes, hospitals eous, $8,000,000. Grand total, $59,701,860.63. Right to Punish Upheld. a teacher in the Plaingrove township schools, was acquitted on a charge of assault and battery entered by John | Sankey before Justice of the Peace [T. B. Rodgers. Sankey alleged his |son, John Sankey, Jr., had been pun- lished so severely his face was cut. { The teacher said the boy resisted and [1s face was cut in the resulting scuf- ie, . Child Bleeds to Death. | Altoona.—While playing near his | home in Tyrone, Gerald, the one-year- jold son of Edward Lower fell and cut {his mouth on a tin. toy. He bled pro- | fusely, no clot formed and. death re- | sulted from loss of blood. 3 {children in the family died from sim- {ilar causes. The child is the seventh jin the family connection who has died | from loss of blood caused by a minor [ injury. : | Divorce Court Makeg Record. | Washington.—AIl divorce records in Washington county were broken when Judge J. PF. Taylor handed down decrees separating 30 mismated couples. All the cases were submit- | ted to the court last week upon testi- mony taken before commissioners. Monaca.—The Rev. Samuel A. Bow- er, pastor of the First Presbyterian church here, tendered his resignation to take effect April 30. 111 health caused him to take the step. Coal Lands Are Sold. Johnstown.—J. Ear] Ogle of this city a trustee in * bankruptcy proceedings, has sold the properties of the Seward Brock Company and the Seward Coal Company, located at Seward, to Blair Kennerly of Philadelphia, for $75,000 Mr. Kennerly will resume operations {at the mine next Monday, giving em- | ployment to about 200 men. | New Castle.—The Rev. T. W. Pear- ac} |son, pastor of the: Presbyterian | church of L.eechburg, has tified his mgregation that will accep all to North Warren. . The two school,” were at. fhe. piano in the par- - their father was dead and that their - was made by ° and miscellan- .New Castle.—Miss Bessie Holiday, , Two other * ) ¢ a, ® (1 le A Ah Cab al 2h ob bad Cdeted ah Sh CP eth ah th a An a A ak PINTER tab mb AR UNG A dsp Alaa ta Sheet BE ol a a a a a Rami a dtl a. gall? ai «ol
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers