A. TELEGRAPH JOKER, He Knew What the Crowd Want ed and Delivered the Goods. ELECTION RETURNS TO SUIT. Swung 8tott and National Chairman Into Llna In Hia Reports and Gava the Boyt of the Mining Camp the Tima of Their Uvea. A funny incident happened on the lilgbt of the tiAtlonal election of 18IM1 u a little' camp tucked away in the mountain) of southwestern Colorado, where the only means of quick com munication with the world were a sin gle uncertain telegraph wire and a sin gle more uncertain telegraph operator Naturally only l lie merest scraps of election news reached the camp, hut before the certain news of McKlnley's election cuiilil have been got the uncer tain operator had fallen a victim to his favorite vice and, further, had fallen beneath the table. The only other person who knew any thing about telegraphy was "Shorty." the local wit and humorist, who volun teered to write out the election returns as they clicked oh" from the telegraph Instrument. Political sentiment was aflame lor Krynu. News of his election was not only sought, but demunded, for the average American miner is as san gulue concerning the uncertainties of politics as he Is concerning the uncer tainties of mining. The volunteer teleg rapher was noted for an obliging dis position. He was the "genial" of the camp. The "boy" hud placed stores of giant powder at various points. They bad cleaned and oiled their sis shoot ers and relilled their cartridge belts. Botitlres were ready to be lighted on the hillsides, and natural enthusiasm had been stimulated at the Metro pole, the Cosmopolitan, the Fashion, the Troeatlero and less pretentiously named oases In the desert of mining camp existence In fact, every pre liminary to the grandest celebration the San Juan country ever bad known. Shorty was not the man to neglect an opportunity like that. The first bulletin he banded to the waiting crowd stated that New Vork and In diana were in doubt and It looked like a close elei tlou, with the chances fa voring Hryan. That whetted the crowd's keen appetite for returns to razor edge. The second bulletin sent their spirits tip with a leap. "Bryan bus carried Kansas, uiid the Demo crats are cl.ilming Iowa." "Whoopee:" from the crowd. Shorty bent bis ear to the clicking Bounder and inscribed "Bulletin No. 8 Illinois joins the Bryan column with fltHKM) ran nr rt I nil In nil rertn n. New York t'ery close." When the deafening chorus bad died down a young member of the party asked the leader, "Hadn't we better begin to set off tbe glantV" Before the leader could answer Shorty reproved him by word and look. "Don't go off half cocked," be aid. "It's always best to wait until you are st "c. Yon can't be too con servative In a case like this." After a long pause, in which tbe crowd displayed much Impatience, the Imperturbable and conservative Shorty , transcribed bulletin No. 4. but before passing It out be said: "Now, boys, don't do anything rash. .Walt for tbe actual returns." Bulletin No. 4 read, "Senator Jones claims Ohio and Pennsylvania for Bry an." - Under ordinary circumstances a doubt might bare been expressed con cerning tbe probability of such states reversing their political records, but tbe crowd was convinced of an Im pending landslide for their favorite and yelled with delight. "Now we are beginning to get the news," remarked Shorty when the cheering ceased, and be began to write bulletin No. 5 as follows: "New York gives Bryan 100.000 plu rality; Indiana. 40.000. Upturns from (Wisconsin and Minnesota Indicate large Democratic gains." The crowd beard only tbe first sen tence. Shouting, cheering, yelling, creaming. It broke for tbe street. "Hold on!" called Shorty. "Here's another." Bulletin No. ti. "Quay concedes Penn- I ylvaula to Hryan." Another fragment broke from the crowd and ran down tbe street shout ing tbe news. Tbe new operator's pen dl was traveling rqpldlj over the pa- gXECUTIUX' NOTICE. Estate of Jamc-i H. 8pry, Late of Reynolds vllle Borough. Deceased. Notice la hereby (riven that letters testa- j meniary on me estate oi james a. ept-y, late of Kernoldsvllle borough, county nf Jeffernoo and state of Pennsylvania, de ceased, have been granted to tbe undrsivoed. All persons Indebted to aaid estate are re quested to make payment, and those having claims or demands against the same will make them known without delay. BL4RCHB H. Bprt, . 8. M. McCrelght, Executrix. Attorney. BUFFALO, ROCHESTER $4.00 NIAGARA FALLS rta THREE-DAY Tuesday, October 19, 1909 Trains Leave FALLS CREEK 2.32 a m.j 1.06 p, m. per, wnue ma menus and fellow citi zens crowded closely upon him and read as be wrote bulletin No. 7, "Mark El n nun htm locked up Republican head quarters aud gone home." The roar of the crowd was drowned by flie roar of exploding giant powder. Buildings shook, windows ruttled, ac companied by the crash of broken glass. The celebration was on, and Shorty Mclntyre was alone. The celebration lusted fur two days. U'he morning after electlou the regular operator hod recovered stitllciently tn transcribe messages announcing Mc Klnley's victory. Those who were sober enough to understand them didn't believe them. After several warnings of what would happen to tt I in If be didn't quit "trying to fool people" the operator desisted and Join ed In the general jubilation. Not until the arrival of tbe Denver papers on tbe second day did that camp awake to a realization of the outcome of the elec tion, and then there was not stilllcient energy left to vent even Indignation upon Shorty, much less to take re venge. On the third day the volunteer operutor was more popular than ever, for all admitted he had given them the time of their lives. New York Post What a Dollar Dog Can Do. A man lu a nearby city bought for bis wife nnd child a year ago a dog, for which he paid a dollar. It was obviously nothing wonderful in the canine way merely u mongrel, with the bulldog strain prcdomlnantf The owner was a tnau In humble circum stances, and the dog In his modest dwelling was the principal asset aside from a few sticks ot furniture. The other night Tom was tied to a leg of the kitchen sink, as usual, and the family weut to bed. They were awak ened by the dog at midnight scratch ing at his master's dour. When his master enme out to see what was the matter the dog. with a remnant of chewed rope hanging from his collar, whined and ran to the bead of tbe stairway. The bouse was on lire, and shortly after wotnuu and child and man and dog made their escape their poor dwelling was a mass of glowing embers. Tbe owner of the 'dog has been urged to part with him for a large cash consideration; hut. though be Is penniless, he will not part with the four footed savior of his family. Neither haa tbe dog at any time had thoughts of leaving them for luxurious kennels.-New York Times. ' Slaves to the Servants. "I nm very tired." said the fashion ably dressed woniuti. "1 have beeu working diemlfully bard all day. Do ing what? Why. seeing to my serv antsworking for them. Didn't you know that the more servants you have the harder you must work? Certainly I have to do nil tbe shopping for my servants. I have to buy their uni forms, the caps and aprons of the molds, the clothing of the housekeeper, and have to see to the marketing, too yes, and very often. In spite of the fact tlint I bnvc a housekeeper. 1 must, or they will form a combine to rob me of everything 1 have. The housekeeper will get a rttkeoff that will enable her to retire in a few years. Then perhaps It Is I who must hunt a place as housekeeper for some one else. Oh. yes, if you want to keep your poslilon as mistress of a household of servants you must keep bustling! You can't af ford to let the grass grow under your feet to any great extent."-Xew York Press. Ha Got a Hundred. Sammy's mother talked to him long and earnestly about the poor murks he bad been getting In bis work at school. She painted In alluring colors tbe ca reer of tbe little boy who studies bis lessons and gains the love and respect of bis teachers. She went even far ther. She promised him (bat if be got good marks she would give blm a whole dime all for his own. Sammy seemed Impressed. That afternoon he returned from school fairly dancing with Joy. "Oh. mother," he shouted. "I got a hundred:" "Sammy!" cried bis delighted moth er. She bugged hlin and kissed blm and. petted him and gaye blm the dime. "And what did you get a hundrnd in?" she finally asked. "In two things." replied Sammy without hesitation. "I got forty in readln and sixty In speUIn'." Every body's Magazine. Musical Note. "now do yiu sell your music?" asked the prospective customer. "It depends on tbe kind you want," replied the smart clerk. "We sell piano music by the pound and organ music by the choir." i -A Blowing Up. ' "Now, Willie," sold the teacher to a small pupil, "can you tell me what dynamite Is used for?" "Yes, ma'am, answered Willie. "It's used to blaspheme things with." Chi cago News. -PITTSBURGH RY. EXCURSION; EARTHQUAKES. O-ert ShorAn Alr-ott Always Followed by After 8hocke, Although seismologists have not yet succeeded In llnding out any menus of definitely predicting the occurrence of an eaiihipinke. they tire very hopeful of dually arriving at this desired goal, and already they can discern danger by the pulsations which are always gently agitating the surface of the earth. A sudden cessation of these heart heats Is a danger signal, extreme silliness Invariably preceding an earth luake, whereas constant tremors are a good sign. A great earthquake Is almost always followed by weaker ones, and when If Is violent nnd destructive the nuiiilier uf minor shocks following It may amount to hundreds or even thousands and continue for several months or years. The occurrence of after shocks Is nulte natural and necessary fur the set tling down Into stable equilibrium of the disturbed tract ut the origin of dis turbance, each of these shocks remov ing an unstable or weak point under neath. Further, as n very great shock would remove a correspondingly great under ground Instnlilllty It is probable that such a shock would not for a long lime be followed by another of a mag nitude comparable to Its own in the same or a neighboring district. When, however, the Initial shock is not very great It may be followed by another like It. but even In this case the position of the origin of the second shock would usually be quite distinct from that of the Ilrst.-Wlde World Magazine. A CAMEL STORY. Foiled In Ita Revenge, the Animal Committed Suicide. Some years ago It chanced that a valuable camel working in an old mill In Africa was severely benten by its driver, who. perceiving that tbe camel bad treasured up the Injury and was only waiting a favorable opportunity for reveuge, kept a strict watch upon tbe animal. Time passed away. Tbe camel, perceiving that It was watched, was quiet aud obedient, and tbe driver began to think that tbe beating was forgotten. One night after a Inpse of several months the man, who slept on a rais ed platform In the mill, while, ns is customary, the camel was stalled lu a corner, happening to remain awake, observed by the bright moonlight that when all was quiet the animal looked cautiously around, rose softly . nnd. stealing over toward a spot where a bundle of clothes aud a buruoose, thrown carelessly on the ground, re sembled a sleeping figure, cost Itself with violence upon them, rolling with all Its weight and tearing them most Viciously with Its teeth. .... Satisfied that Its .revenge was com plete, tbe camel was returning to Its corner when the driver sat up and spoke. At tbe sound of his vol e and perceiving the mistake It had mude tbe animal was so mortified at the fail ure and discovery of Its scheme that it dashed its bead against the wall and died on the spot. Sheffield Telegraph. Lavender. How many of those wbo delight in the odor of fresh sweet lareuder ever tblnk bow the plant came by Its sooth ing uunie? Back be must go in Imag ination to the clean old Komaus aud their cult of the batb. Lavender found bigb fnvor wltb tbem to perfume their baths, and it was they wbo called It lavaudula, tbe root of tbe name being the Latlu lavare to wash. In olden days, too, lavender leaves were an im portant Ingredient in tbe making of precious spikenard ointment. Although we regard lavender as so peculiarly English a plant owing to Its extensive cultivation in tbe borne counties and Its associations wltb our English homes and gardens, it was not. as a matter of fact. Introduced to this country until tbe sixteenth century, when it came from France with the Huguenot set tlers. Tbe itomaus did not apparently bring it to ns when they gave us our fine roads. Westminster Gazette. - - ' p "An Old Sheep." A Bengali clerk wbo bad been trans ferred at bis own request from my office to another government office in Calcutta was anxious to return and wrote to me personally on the subject. Although uot a Christian himself, be wns evidently acquainted with the fa miliar lines of Bonar's bywn: I was a wandering sheep. 1 did not love the fold. This Is bow he applied them to bis own case. "It Is true 1 have wandered from tbe fold that is. the director general's office but 1 trust that your honor will be merciful and receive back an old sheep." "Stray Stories From India." by Sir Arthur Fanfchawe; In Blackwood's Magazine. A Frank Woman. A woman gave another woman ber photograph, and the recipient. Instead of saying. "I will treasure it always." refused to accept It. "It means only one more thing to be dusted," she said "If I have it out on the table it be comes a nuisance, and If I put it out of sight you will be offended. More over, every day that passes it will be come a little more old fashioned and a little more of a caricature. I won't have it" Atchison Globe. Much Rather. "She says she'd rather waltz than eat." ' "Well, she'll find plenty of men wh wonld rather sign a dance program than a dinner check."-Exchange. ' Content uient gives a crown where fortune hath denied It. -Ford THE TAX ON SALT. One ef tho Things That Started the Frenoh Revolution. Before the French revolution the government established warehouses at which tbe Inhabitants were compelled to purchase their stores of salt. These warehouses were numerous in some provinces and few In others; but, whether sufficient or Insufficient for the needs of the population, they were ofteu situated at a considerable dis tance from the towns and villages, whose Inhabitants hud lo trudge miles along bad roads to buy their salt. But this was not all. It was pre scribed by law that the head of every family must lay In his stock of salt not at such times as might suit his own convenience, but on one slated day In the year. Should he fall In this ob servance he wns lined, and he was also fined If he purchased a smaller quan tity than the law prescribed. His hardships did not stop even there. On making his annual purchase he had to stale the different purposes for which he Intended to use the salt during the ensuing year, and lu the event of j4ss being discovered salting bis soup instead of his pork according to his statement or his pork Instead of his soup on the day he had named he was also liable to a fine. His kitchen was never secure from the Intrusion of the Inspecting officer, nnd woe to the housewife wbo was detected In any petty Infraction of this Inw. WONDERFUL ROCK GARDEN. . Englishman Has a Three Aora Repro duction of the Matterhorn. The largest rock gurden In England Is that of Sir Frank Crisp nt Frlor Park, Henley. It is a faithful repro duction of the Mntterhorn on a scare of about three acres. Seven thousand tons of limestone were brought from Yorkshire to mnke It. Tbe snow capped peak is represent ed by quartz. Below it are thousands upon thousands of alpine flowers grow ing lo pockets between tbe rocks aud filling every chink in the trails that ascend tbe mountain. There must be 200 different species in bloom at once. At the base of tbe mountain, says Country Life In America. Is a minia ture Swiss chalet, where one may sit and enjoy the scene, comparing all tbe main features wltb a little bronze mod el of the Mfitlernhorn which Kir Frunk bud made for the entertainment ut bis guests. A brook courses dowu the mountain side, und Just before It reaches the chalet It forms u pretty cascade und then spreuds out at your feet Into a miniature lake decorated wltb pygmy water lilies aud richly margined with pinks, primroses, gen tians and other ulplue (lowers. A Good Laugh Is Good For the Health. Look at the lough lu whatsoever light you will, whether you see it us the deliverer from the bondage to out grown notions; a schoolmaster with the sharp switch of ridicule to teach us manners; un apostle ot democracy, pro claiming that we are all of tbe same clay, made uf It and to return to It but every lump of it holding some sparkle of tbe divine fire, and woe be tide tbe man that tries to make us think that be is of different stuff: Look at tbe laugb. 1 say, In any light you choose, aud you will see that It is not so much tbe downfa'll and confusion of the laughed at that makes us happy, that Joggles our waistbands aud seuds the ba-ba spouting out. that pumps tbe blood aloug tbe sluggish veins, massaging tbe interior works and re placing tbe shopworn stock of air wltb a new consignment, as it is tbe sud den, sharp. Intense realization of our personal well belng.-Eugene Wood In Success Magazine. Harlem In New York. In an early charter of what is now New York occurs tbe name of Lancas ter. That is what Hnrlem used to be called. It comprised the territory mi Manhattan Island north ot a line drawn from tbe foot of East Seventy-fourth street to the foot of Manhattan street. The real Harlem village was a settle ment collected within a radius of a quarter of a mile from One Hundred and Twenty-rourth street and Third avenue. Today the name Harlem Is applied to the whole territory north of One Hundred aud Tenth street,, east and west. After tbe name Lancaster was. eliminated tbe village was called NIeuw Haarlaem.-New York Press. New Kind of Setter. Little Oscar, aged five, bad a dog wbicb was almost always to be found behind tbe stove In the kitchen. Oscar once visited at a bouse, wbere there were two fine dogs. Tbe master of tbe house told blm that they were Irish setters. Tbe little" fellow, who was very fond of bis pet answered quickly. "Mine is a kitchen setter." Delineator. Batter Than Ever. Mary Backstoop Did be tell you life wltb him would be one grand, aweet song? Maudie Sidestreet No. He said it would be one grand, beveled, aweet toned, silver coated, indestructible pho nograph record. Puck. , Getting On, Father And how are you getting on at school, Johnny Johnny Ob, 1 have learned to say "Thank you" and "If you please" in French. Father That's more than you ever learned in Engllsn. Not Quit a Sponge. Percy Skltts Is a sponge a perfect sponge. "Ob, no! When a sponge absorbs anything, by squeezing It you can get It again." Detroit Free Press. ' Self Is tbe first object of charity. Latin Proverb. Cotton Holds Wrinkles Wool Holds Style i, You don't care what your clothes are 1 made of all you want is the result. If somebody could invent a way to make more lasting and more stylish clothes out of part cotton than out of pure wool, you would prefer the cotton. Clothcraft All-Wool Clothes But the facts, as you know, are that part cotton clothes hold wrinkles and keep shabby while clothes of pure wool hold style and ' keep shapely. Clothcraft Clothes are pure wool there's a Signed Guarantee in each suit. And they sell at the Bing-Stoke Co. 1 Rf YNOLDSVILLE JOB WORKED of all kinds promptly done at THE PITTSBURG Now Open and De lighting Thousands from Pennsylvania, Ohio & W.Virginia Don't MIm the GiMtaat ladsttrlal Sbw la a Sm ef Yan Instantaneous hit of the Thrilling Naval Spectacle, showing tha historic battle between the Ironclads MONITOR AND 1YIERRI1YIAC The show that was the talk of the Alaska-Yukon Exposition In tbe Hippodrome The Greatest Russian Symphony Orchestra. Sept I to H Pryor and hit Band, Sept D to IS Dunrosch and his Orchestra. Sept 20 to 23 r same prices as part-cotton clothes. They art the ONLY clothes at these prices that are Guaranteed pure wool. As soon as enough people find out about these clothes, we won't be able to get enough from the factory to supply the demand. Who Gets The Difference ? llf your bank payi you only two per cent on your deposit you are losing one hundred per cent on your income. ajlf your bank pays you only three per cent, you are losing thirty-three and one third per cent Because this bank pays four per cent interest compounded every six months on all savings and time accounts of any size. You can Bank by Mail with I Atlc for Free Booklet J.E. ut aa easily aa in person it explain everything Capital and Surplus, $10,000,000.00 "In Capita and Surplus, there is Strength." TtGLALlRV5TfoMPAY) (SAVINGS BANK) 317 Fourth Ave. 314 to 318 Diamond St PITTSBURGH, PA. lUaLui; taMSJMMsK' EVERY WOMAN1 Who manage! a home la Interested In the , beat cooking appliance that can be made. PRIZER'S STOVES are the result ot th best experience and materials. They contain advantages not found In other. If von want a mod baker and a Derfect roaster without taking any chance buy Prlier's. We claim for them what wa can prove no more. Guaranteed-your money back If not satisfied. HARDWARE CO. STAR OFFICE E X P o s Archaeolog ical Exhibit with its wonderful relict, taken from Blennerhaaeet Island, attracting widespread interest. Irrigation Another new and interesting exhibit Wonder Compelling Electri cal and Mechanical Displays MOVING PICTURES FERRIS WHEEL MERRY-GO-ROUND TRIP ON STEAMER SUNSHINE Fun for Everybody Busle Casters o N Soosa and hit Band, . Sept 27 to Oct 2 Theodora Thomas Orchestra. Oct 4 to United States Marina Band. . Oct H to 23 J