Wouldn't It look better If John Bull could tnke lils defeats on the turf more gracefully? . , Those Immortal who were left out in the cold should cot up a Hall of Fame of their own. ' Every farmer should have an agri cultural library, If only for the Influ ence it would have upon the boys and girls in Increasing their Interest In the farm and the duties upon it. The most touching contribution to the old of Galveston sufferers Is $84, donated by the Inmntes of the Dun ning poor-house nr.d Insane hospital, Illinois. This sum represents the sac rifices of 2r00 unfoilnnntes, who gave up smoking anil oilier smnll luxuries to swell the fund. It Is a great pity that every attempt to propngate the blue joint grass of the Western prairies Is a total failure. Could It be plnced on the list of tnme grasses It would be a most vnluable addition. It will soon disappear entire ly from the prairie section of the West, being unable to hold Its own with the blue grass In the pastures and mead ows. French gallantry, of late years said to be banished from the earth, seems to have found nn abiding place In the French courts. The judge who res cues a distressed American heiress's millions and restores them to the care of her anxious family is surely a beau chevalier, though he does not wear a sword and take great pleasure to die for one. President Jones, of Hohnrt College, thinks that too much money In spent nowadays in furnishing college under graduates with enervating luxuries and not enough In paying fair salaries to college professors. The professors, he says, are sadly underpaid, but for the lads whom they teach and who never pay the cost of the education they are getting, luxurious clubhouses are built and furnished, and a manner of life made possible which Is unsulted to their years, and not conducive to prolltablc training. The latest development of science provides that ships con go to sen with frozen ammunition. A method of util izing liquefied nir on warships has been discovered which will render the. explosion of ,p magasslne, even when the ship Is In action, nlmost Impossi ble. The method Is to so placo tho liquid air that It will freeze the am munition to several hundred decrees below zero. In that condition It could not explode, even If a shell should burst In the magazluc, Wonders will uever cease. Const defense Is the most Important topic dealt with In the annual report of Chief of Engineers Wilson. Ho polntB out that tho war with Spain had the effect of hastening the work on the coast defenses to such an extent that now, ten years after that long neglected work was tep-un In earnest, he Is able to report that fifty per cent, of the work Is complete. Tweuty-flve of tho principal harbors of the United States now have a sufficient number of heavy guns and mortars In place to offer nn effective defense against naval attack. Existing projects con template the mounting of a great num ber of additional guns. . Tho cost to consumers of the anthra cite coal strike calls attention to the benefits resulting In England from the Co-operntlve Wholesale Society, f his society Is a federation of 10-10 retail co-operative societies, representing 1,053,5(14 individual members. By the operation of this society consumers are enabled to supply their wants at n purely economic cost that In, not subject to the penalties of "Jobs," com binesthe common tricks of trade that affect prices under general conditions. During the first thirty yenrs of the society's existence a profit was real ized of tO.731,725, that went back into the pockets of the consumers, Vienna Is excited over great Jewel robberies that have deprived some of her finest dames of their gems. Not long ago the wife of a nobleman noticed while nt a bull that her dia monds did not sparkle with all the brilliancy their cost demanded, and, looking closely nt them, she discovered that they were not diamonds at all. but paste gems of the cheapest kind. She made a great outcry, and all the other women Instinctively looked at their jewels. Tho outcries became general. It scorns that all the women who live In the same quarter of the city discovered that their Jewels had been tnkeu, and had been replaced by cheap Imitatlous. Th work Is sun nosed to have been duV during the Auiuuier mouths. Fools' Gold. BY MRS MOSES P. HANDT. 0pyrtnlits1, 1900. Dully Btory Pub. Co.) It was the last grand hop of the sea son. To-morrow the band would leave, and thereafter, for the two weeks before the final closing of the hotel, the remaining guests would dance In the parlors, to the sound of the piano and one violin. Lucy Alston found herself feeling melancholy, and somewhat sen timental. It had been a happy summer, the happiest of her life. 8he was well aware that much of her Joy was due to the society of Horace Polndexter who waa, to her mind, the most charm ing man she had ever met. Her experi ence of charming men, however, was small. Mrs. Polndexter took one of her nieces away with her every sum mer, and this year the lot had fallon to Lucy. Mr. Sturdlvant came down to the Beach every Saturday, to stay over Sunday, and from the first he had singled her out as the especial object of his attentions. More than one per son had warned her, more or less good naturedly, as people will, that such attentions on his part were rarely se rious. Her aunt, especially, had cau tioned her. "Horace Sturdlvant thinks himself a pauper," Mrs. Polndexter had said. "He haa about $5,000 a year, which to a man of his tastes, spells poverty. And every one knows that he will never marry any woman that Is not an heiress." Five thousand dollars a year seemed Wealth to Lucy. She failed to attach due Importance to her aunt's counsel. Mr. Sturdlvant was assiduous In his courtesies; he waltzed delightfully and had "a tongue which might wile the 7Q a'V-OTiSF "Good-bye, dear, God bless you, good ' bye." laverock from the cloud." All the other women adored him; therefore, how could poor, unsophisticated Lucy fall to feel bis fascinations? With "Youth at the helm, and Pleasure at the prow," how can love be always on the lookout for rocks and shoals? Much practice had made Mr. Stur dlvant past-master In the art of love making. His eyes were volumes of af fection, his voice a caress, his whole manner eloquent of tender and deli cate admiration. Yet he had never spoken one word to her which might not have been proclaimed from the house-tops. To-night Lucy folt vaguely uneasy and bethought her of the wisdom which had been whispered Into her ears. His air was sad and distrait, with an Indefinable chill overlying its accustomed tenderness. They had danced together, the last waltz of tho year, and the well-known music had a wonderfully mournful cadence to her sensitive ear. "Oh, you girls, you frivolous girls," wailed viol, violins, and cornet In unl son. Somehow It all seemed a dream, and Lucy gave a little sigh when the melody ceased, and the dancers stood still. She could have gone on waltz ing forever, her hand on his shoulder, his, clasping her waist, and his eyes looking into hers. "Get a wrap, and come out on the terrace, the tide is in and the moon light on the water is beautiful. I want you to see it," Mr. Sturdlvant com manded rather than asked. She obeyed without question, and was back in a moment, with a fleecy shawl wound about her head and shoulders "How pretty she is." be thought. The damp sea-air, which made other worn en's locks hang lank and limp, caused her's to curl In bewitching rings about her forehead. He gave her hand a ten der pressure as he drew it through his arm, but he did not speak, and for a while they stood on the terrace in si lence, watching the waves as they charged the shore, and retreated, bat' fled always. "How like it is to life,' sighed Mr. Sturdlvant, with his eyes looking out to sea. "Always the same vuln striving tor the unattainable." Lucy bravely choked down the lump in her throat. "I feel to-night liko Cinderella," ehe said. "The ball is over, and in a little while I shall re tire to my nook, and take up my hum drum life again." Mr. Sturdlvant gave a little start He had not expected the idyl to end so soon. "How so?" he asked. "Mrs, Polndexter has taken rooms at the Al hambra for the winter. You will And that gayer than this." "I shall not be with her. Auntie takes her nieces in turn, there are tea of us all counted, and I had my turn this summer." Mr. Sturdlvant experienced an un ploasant shock. He had already taken care to hunt up the will of the lata Aaron Polndexter, and discovered, to bis regret, that bis widow had only a life Interest in his large estate. How ever, that Interest was absolute, and gave Mrs. Polndexter an Income greater than an extravagant woman could easily spend. purely sua -nlcW bt axpeota-a to do L- - -r -. - - ia7i i i in i ii MJf, 1 t 1 WJU II a b something for a favorite niece. He would be content with comparatively little. Now this house of cards fell to earth. "I am very eorry. This, then, la probably our last evening together. I must go back to town early to-morrow morning, on business." Oh, the In finite tenderness and sadness of his tone! It held the cadence which the French call "tears in the voice." Lucy pulled herself together with a mental Jerk. 8hf felt aa though she had taken a plunge Into cold water. This, then, after all that had passed during the last few weeks, waa his farewell. But, no, he could not mean It. 'Not necessarily. South Stamford la not quite out of the world. It can be reached by rail from Boston," ehe ven tured to say. Is that where you live? Child, It Is as far away from my world aa the antipodes. Besides, when a man knows himself too weak to resist temp tation, what can he do but flee?" 'How can a man measure his strength unless he trlea it?" "Ah, you know so little of the world. When a man's lot In life Is so bard that he dares not ask a woman to share It, what can he do but love and run away? Perhaps he ought not to love In the first instance, but human nature Is helpless; a man Is only a man." "Has the woman no right to be con sidered? Sunpose she loves too?" Lucy folt surprised at and a little ashamed of her boldness. But he was making the conversation impersonal. which gave her some excuse to speak He shook his head. "Ah, no; in that case he is bound to protect her against herself. How can a man worthy of a name drag a woman he loves down to poverty, even tholigh she does not wish to be parted from him? Good-by, dear, God bless you, good-by." They were In tho shadow of the pa vilion, practically alone; he gave one quick glance around, then caught her In his arms and, holding her, kissed her passionately, once, twice, thrice. Never before had he so wholly forgot ten himself. He loved the girl as well as he could love anything except his precious self, and her appealing eyes and quivering lips broke down his self control. It was done In an Instant; he released her so quickly that she had not even time to struggle; then ho rushed her back to the hotel piazza, and left her, without a word. Lucy sank into a seat to collect her breath. She was more indignnut than broken hearted. This, then, waa what the man called love. She thought of her father, who, with her mother at his side, had fought his way to Inde pendence, indeed to prominence: he was a local Judge and had represented his district In congress. They found themselves, with all their children, passing rich on five thousand dollars a year. "Thank heaven I am not an heiress to be married for my monoy," she said to herself, at last, fervently. Upstairs Mrs. Polndexter was at her deek, writing to her brother. "I have seen my nloces, in turn,' she said, "and Lucy, of them all, I find most congenial. I wish to keep her as long as you can spare her. Despite the fact that Mr. Polndexter's estate re- verts, at my death, to his relatives, I own some property, in my own right, and my ample income enables me every year to add something thereto. If I live a few years longor, as may reason ably be expected, the child will be fully provided for, the advantages which I can offer her meanwhile, are, I am sure, such as you and her mother will appreciate." Khnntlnar Stars. According to Camlllle Flammarlon, a well-known authority, what are call ed "shooting stars" are small bodies, weighing at most a few pounds, and consisting mainly of Iron and carbon. They traverse space In swarms and also revolve around the sun In long elliptical courses like comets. When these little 'bodies enter the sun's orbit they are deflected toward the earth and great numbers of them are seen in a single night. Their brightness is due to the heat engendered by the energy of their motion. Their speed is enor mous, 4V4 kilometers a second, while the speed of the earth on its orbit is only 6 kilometers a second. Conse quently when a shower of them ap proaches the earth In the dlrectlou op posite to its course, the Initial speed is 72 kilometers a second; when they follow on its course they gain 16fa kilometers a second on it. Their mean rate of approach Is between 30 and 40 kilometers a second. The fric tion engenders a temperature of 3,000 degrees, Celsius, subject to which they burst into flame. Twins Msile In I'onlteotlarlrs. Minnesota's binding twine plant, es tablished in the state penitentiary, is as much a success as the like Institu tion in Kansas. By this means the problem of convict labor has been solved In these two states to the satis faction of about everyone concerned, including the labor unions. Members of the latter are gratified, as well as satisfied, as penltenttary-maoe twine Is a direct slap at a trust. The farm ers, too, are happy, as they get their binding twine at from 3 to 5 centa less a pound than la charged for the prod uct of the trust. The only complaint in each state la that the penitentiary plants are not large enough to supply the demand. New York Post. - 1 World's (Irsatost llualavsa Connors). The postal service establishment of the United States is the greatest busi ness concern in the world. The rev enue of the postoflice of New York la more than 18,000,000 yearly, with a net profit of I5.004.WW. POPU'tR SCIENCE. A Gorman astronomer who recently had tho good luck to photograph a building nt the moment when It was struck by lightning has after careful estimates found that the lightning flash measured Ave millimeters, or one-fifth of nn Inch across. The latest experiments tend to prova that pitcher plants are not carnivor ous, as baa been so long believed, and that any apparent digestive action Is due to external microbes thai may en ter the pitchers. Some of the vast changes which tho face of the earth has undergone are Indicated by the recent discovery In the small lakes scattered among the extinct volcanoes of Anvcrjjne In France of the survival of certain forms of marine animals. Salt plains exist there whose deposits were formed before volcanic forces up heaved the surrounding rocks and created mountain peaks and craters. It has" been asserted Ihnt Insects are particularly attracted by the colors of certain flowers. Felix rintfau, after Investigating the conduct of Insects In their visits to various flowers, con cludes that while they may perceive colors and thus be enabled to distin guish, nt a distance, between flowers and leaves, yet they show no prefer ence among the different colors. Blue, red, yellow, white are Indifferent to them. He thinks that the odor of flowers affects Insects more than their colors do. The French scientific Journal, La Nature, calls attention to n recent re port of the French Consul nt Hawaii which, It thinks, throws light on sumo problems of ethnography. Not long ago a little schooner, dismantled and with Its ruddVr gone as the result of a tempest, was drifted by wluds and ocean currents from Tahiti to Hawaii, after eighty-one days of helpless wan dering. Hawaiian traditions declare that In ancient days people came from Tahiti, drifting with the currents, and settled Hawaii. The adventure of the d:mnntlcd schooner ceems to prove the possibility of such a migration, and It Is suggested that the currents of tho Faelfle. which have not yet been sulllclently studied, may throw much light on' tho distribution of tho native races among tho island groups. Geologfcal observation long Blnco nroved that iletroleum and Its deriva tions are unnblc to rise In the geologi cal scale from ono formation to an other, tho prluclpal deposits being her metically sealed lu the strata that con tain them. It Is assumed, this being so, that the so-called "surface indica tions" of gas and oil are principally duo to the numberless fractures through falls by which the contents of the porous rock can reach the surface; If, therefore, It Is possible for this prisoned gas to escape In any mensur able degree, then, It Is argued, the present figures must Indicate tho re mainder of pressure nfter "millions of yenrs of waste" If escaping now the pressure must bs steadily falling un 'less through a constant replenishment. In all accumulations of oil and gas the structure or arrangement of the strain Involved Is the dominant feature, and this controlling Influence becomes more and more clear as tho gas and oil fields of tho world aro moro ade quately studied. It is thought proba ble, that In the fields where salt water rises from deeply porous rocks under artesian pressure, tho an mo pressure will be exerted on the gas nud oil which with tho salt woter lire tho Joint tenant a of tho rock. Doubtless the rock pressure of the gas wells In certain districts Is duo to tho salt water that follows the gas. A Blighted Ambition. George had been working nil the summer to get a place In the brass band as a cornet player, and Just as his hopes seemed to be on the verge of fulfillment she met him oil his way homo from the postoflice, and, linking her arm lovingly In his, wolked on in silence until they reached the popular walk. There she stopped in tho long shad ows, and said: "George, I wish you wouldn't ploy the cornet In tho new baud." "Why not'" said he, lu surprise. "It Is the place of honor, and I get a great deal of attention by It, dear." "Yes, I know," sho suid couxlngly. "It Is so nice to have you noticed by every one, and all that, darling, but" She paused and hung her curly heud a little lower. "But what?" said he sharply. "Blowing the comet makes makes" her voice sunk to a pouting whisper "makes the lips so stiff uud burd!" She won. Answers. How Mexicans Maks Ire. In one of the highest valleys of Oax acn, Mexico, nt uu elevation of 800t or 0000 feet, there Is a flourishing Ice Industry, which Is bused on the well- known principle of the reduction ol temperature by radiation of tempera ture during the night. The ground It covered with a large number of wood' en troughs, which are tilled with wat er, and durlug the winter nights a film of Ice not mure than one-eighth of nu inch lu thickness is formed. This lc Is removed on the following morulug, shoveled Into holes lu the ground, nnd then covered with earth. It rapidly solidifies and is then cut Into blocks, nnd sent by uiules to the cities below, where It Is readily sold. San Francis co Call. OOOOOOOOOOOCOCOOOCOOOOOP FAUM TOPICS I B30OO0OOOOOOO000OOOOOOO00 O When to TRIpen Cream. It Is desirable that the ripening of cream, either naturally or artificially, sheuld le at a temperature not ex ceMllng sixty-five degrees, and after the ripening has been completed, that Is, when the lactic add has been well developed, it should be reduced still lower lie-fore churning, say, not to be nbove fifty degrees, and some of the best butter has been mnde nt forty seven degrees. Cheoc also ripens best at a low temperature. The experiment atatlons have, said that cheese ripened nt sixty-five degrees was belter than that which was allowed to stand In a higher temperature, nnd that ripened nt flfly-five degrees was much sujj rloi to tli.it nl sixty-live degrees. Foml AnVrttn tho Milk. Numerous scientific experiments show us that linseed meat gives us a butter t lint Is very soft and oily; when liny nud coarse food are given as an exclusive fond the butter Is crumbly, white nnd Insipid; heavy feeding of poor silage gives a butter that Is not much better than lard, while butter from good silage that has been made from corn well advanced toward ma turity has nn excellent flavor nnd ranks among the' best. In speaking upou this matter of the food affecting the product n dairy Jour nal says that not only the character of the milk may be Influenced by the character of food, but every part of the animal system may be more ot less Influenced. The kidneys, liver uud Internal fat, the skin, hair und horns may be, each and all, more or h-ss modified by food. The extent to which nny of these changes may be made varies with the breed and with the in dividual nnd In all cases Is limited wit hln a comparatively short range. The Cultivation or Small l'lota. When one has but little land, such as Is provided by a village lot, there can Jio but little space devoted to a garden, and It officii costs as much or more to cultivate such n plot than the vegetables that can be grown on It would cost In the market, If one had to pay for the labor at n fair price. They cannot be worked with a horse because of the smnll size nnd the ex pense of digging, hoeing and other work by hand Is too great to allow of nny profit from the crop. Of course the clerk or mechanic who has leisure hours and strength to do this work can obtain fresh vegetables of his owu growing much better than he can buy. If be understands raising them, but If he has to pay for the labor, he had usually better contract wit li sonic suc cessful gardener to supply him. Hut for a fanner to use such smnll plots for n garden is folly. Let him so plan as to have It large enough to work with n borne, and then If he can pro duce a surplus, sell It nt market rates and add to his Income. Htorltirc llio liny Hlgglng. One of tlio most unhandy things nliout -the farm equipment to store nway Is the hay rigging. As com monly made wllh stationary stakes. It occupies a large spaeo In every di mension. If bo mnde that the stakes enn be removed and tho end ladders folded down closely. It will require less room for storage. Perhaps tile best place for the rigging Is the baru loft nbove tho driveway. It can be hauled up with two ropes nnd two pul leys. If It can be folded up closely It Is ofteu stored underneath tho first floor of a high basement, barn or shed. Being such u cumbersome and un wieldly affair, In half the country they are stored lu tho open air. With this treatment, unless,, painted every two or three yenrs, they become weakelied by decay In sonio vital spot nnd break down durlug tho rush of hnylng or harvesting. If you do not care to paint them fully, then by all menus thoroughly souk with oil where two pieces meet or overlap each other. This will keep the water from enter ing at these points and decay Is thus prevented. Even kerosene oil is good for tho purpose, as It penetrates deep ly nnd quickly. llnllliiK AVrninn Wheels. Nothing will preserve a wheel with wooden felloes, and keep tho tire tight, as will treutlng them to a hot oil bath once in a season. Get a tinner to make you a pan about four Inches wide nnd six deep in the middle, with a rounded bottom to correspond to the shape of a wheel, showu lu cut. Set it HOW TO BOIL THS WHEELS, In au improvised fireplace and pour lu the oil. When It Is hot put In the wheel and turn slowly, holding In posi tion by means of a stick thrust through tho hub. A frame cun be put up easily, or crotches set, to hold tills stick. In this way two men can do the work quickly and well. J, L. Irwiu, In Ohio Farmer, Card playing lu Foglaud la on almost Corgotun Daatluia KYH STATE NEWS CONDENSED TENSIONS GRANTED. State's Fintnctt RocsipU of th fiscal Year Largest In Its History Urge Pottery lor New Caslle. Last week pensions were grant ed the following persons: Chin. Ashton, New Brighton, $o; John K. Mullen, Mt. Pleasant. ' $to; William Phillips, Port Perry, $6; Will iam Grav, Ca-rrolltown, $12; Darius G. Doyle, Three Springs, $8; Thomas G. Smith, Coles Summit, $12; Noah W. Kuhn. Mcrccrsburg. $12; Thomas Wil son,, Orbisonia, $12; Ve Shancr, Lash, $8; George Stone, Boalsburg. $12; Su san N. Fonst, Mt. Pleasant. $8; Jere miah Kohler, Lemoync, 8. The next Legislature wi'l be a -ked to pas a bi.l mnking the office of district attorney in the small counties a salaried one. At present they are paid fees and a number of them complain that the compensation does not justify them t perform the labor required. The bill will propose a salary of about $1,000 in counties containing a population ol 50, oco or less. The State's financial officers announce that at the close of the fiscal year, No vember ,10, there was $6,64o.;!877 nt the State treasury, of which $4.J22..1.j6.65 was in the general fund and $2,327,652.12 in the sinking fund. During the year there was received at the State treasury $17.494.21 1.7R. the largest rec-ipts in one car in the history of the State. The New Castle Pottery Co. has been r.rganizcd with $100,000 capital to manu facture table and other ware. The main building will be 482x195 feet and the smaller buildings Hoxloo, and 100x55. tcct respectively. Work lias already begun and the plant will be in opera tion in six months. It will employ 20a people. For the proposed soldiers' monument and memorial to cx-Gov. Curtin at Hclkfontc about two-thirds of the re quisite amount of money has been pledged. It is thought the remainder can be secured and the monument erect ed by October 7. 1901, the anniversay of cx-Gov. Cnrtin's death. At the service in Christ Gcrmai Church, of Hazleton, the Rev. Mr. Schnrckter. in a sermon against foot ball, characterized the game as the dev il's snort, and said that the patrons of the game arc simply the devil's ser vants. The capital stock of the Sharon and Youngstown Street Railway has been increased from $200,000 to $000,000. Work on the line between the two places is progressing rapidly and it is. stated that cars will be running by June I, KJOI. The rittsburg, Somerset and West moreland Railroad Company has made a proposition to extend the road from iia terminal . 12 miles to Somerset if the citizens will take $50,000 worth of stock in the enterprise. The fourth death in the Gates shaft of the American Coke Company at Uniontown, occurred when George Liv ingstone while working on the tipple lost his footing and dashed down the shaft over 100 feet to his death. James Gibbons, a justice of the peace,, and a prominent Democrat politician, was found dead in a chair at the St. Clair hotel, I'ittston. Heart disease is supposed to have been the cause of death. He was 52 years of age. The first rail machine at the Sharon steel works in South Sharon was put in operation for a test and a large num ber of rails cut. One hundred machines arc now completed and nearly ready to be started. James Patterson and George Johns ton, colored, terrorized the people of Eastbrook, Lawrence county, and at tempted to kill their employer, Win field S. Moore, and are in jail at Grcena burg. Miss Louisa Shcppard, an actress ! New York, has given up the stage to go into mission work. She will wed Rev. Charles 11. Pridgcon. pastor of the First Presbyterian church of Canois burji. An option on ten ocrcs of ground at Bracbtirn has been secured by a New Jersey tube company and will be given by Park Arnold, with the stipulation that the company give employment to 500 men within a limited time. Huffman M. I.iston is back at Union town, after a soiourti in the Cape Nome gold fields. He reports the discovery of a mastodon's bones. He reports that Mr. Bartlctt, of Pittsburg, ha strv.ck :t rich. At Washington the jury in the Car roll murder case failed to reach an agreement and were discharged afUT Dcmg out about 14 hours. Llevcn stood for acquittal. At Martins Creek. Northampton coun ty, fire destroyed the cement plant of William Krae.se & Sons. Loss. $200, 000: insured. The works will be re built. By an explosion of powder John Pc tos and his three boys were dangerously burned at Smock. Fayette county. Pe tos was filling, his powder can, when the youngest hoy pulled an open lamp off a shelf into the powder. Fifty st'vlcnts of Wayncsburg col lege have formed a cadet corps, adopt ed the West Point uniform and will en deavor to have a West Point man as instructor. The countv commissioners ablect to the bill of Coroner F. H Taylor, of Fayette county, and sav the cost of is iii(tiests should have been borne by corporations and not by the county. Eleven milk dealers arre-ted at New Kensington and find $-o and costs each. for adulterating milk, refuse to pay thru nncs ami defy tnc authorities to tlicm. Charles Lehman, of Columbi: Lebanon hospital with broken riuV, in injured spine, due to a football gan anu may not recover, The Sharon boiler works has recei a request from Leeds, England, prices on the erection of three 1 Iron smokestacks at Buenos Ayre Thomas Taylor, a McDonal lor highway robbery of which . rill was the victim, got tour ; penitentiary. Harry Weiss, a pipe lind Mt. Pleasant, was toting bullet in bis heart Suf
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers