SEIS Bellefonte, Pa., March 13, 1908. E— Harrigan. By LULU JOHNSON. Copyrighted. 1508, by Jesser Morgan. 0000000000 000006000000000 There was no uproar in the street, only the long, single file of depositors waiting patiently in the faint hope that the bank might open its doors and let them present at the window the checks which they nervously fingered. The scene being enacted under the great glass dome within the bank pre- sented a curious contrast to the almost hopeless inactivity outside. In the di- rectors’ room the bank examiner and the president sat at the long table scanning piles of collateral. At the bookkeepers’ desks the clerks were helping the staff of accountants to examine the huge ledgers, and in the wire cages the assistant cashier and his staff were counting over the stacks of bills and the great bags of coin, The cashier, Douglas, was not among those present. Tim Harrigan looked up from his desk as the assistant cashier, Mr. War- ing, passed. “I wish you'd count these,” he said. “I've gone over it three times, and it seems to be $200 short.” Waring stepped into the cage and ran over the bills with practiced touch. A second time he counted them and then looked up. “That is just what we are trying to find out,” he said to Harrigan. “For months Douglas has been slipping one or two bills out of a package. It was easier than falsifying the entries, and as most of the money was cash reserve the trick may have been going on for a year. It was when one of the pack- ages was paid out by mistake in Doug- las’ absence that the first suspicion was aroused. I asked him about it when he came back from lunch. He gave an explanation, but when he did not come down yesterday morning suspicion was confirmed, and somehow the news got out, and so the run started.” “And a precious lot of work it is making,” said Harrigan crossly as he thought of the hard labor of the night before and of the broken engagement to take Nell to the theater. Waring laughed knowingly. “Don’t mind about the girl,” he ad- vised. “There's every prospect of get- ting through tomorrow, and you can take her to the show then. Keep an eye peeled for short packages and lay them to one side.” The assistant cashier passed on, and Tim Harrigan bent to his work again. Outside a hand organ grinder had drawn up at the curb to cheer the waiting line with popular songs. Tim gritted his teeth as the familiar strains of “No Wedding Bells For Me" came through the ventilators. For a mo- ment he was half envious of the flee- Ing cashier. Douglas had taken plenty of money. Twenty thousand from the previous day's receipts were known to be gone. What else was missing could be told only when the auditing was accom- plished. Twenty thousand! Just one of those crisp bills would enable him to get married and set up the little home for which he longed. He and Nell were saving, but their bank ac- count grew with such pitiful slowness The hand organ changed its tune, and Bascom, in the next cage, laughed “There's your song, Tim,” he said and softly began to hum the words of the chorus: H-a double r-i-g-a-n spells Harrigan, I'm proud of all the Irish blood that's in me. Divil a word a man can say agin ye, H-a double r-i-g-a-n ye see, It's a name that a shame never has been connected with, Harrigan—that's me. Soon the organ was pushed on to more remunerative stands, but the strains kept whirling through Tim's head. It was a catchy air just then popular in the vaudeville houses where he and Nell sought their amusement, and she delighted in singing it to him. It brought to his mind a picture of the parlor in the little flat where he spent mest of his evenings. It was Colleges & Schools. clean and neat and had the aspect of a home, but the tiny flat was small, and the children overran the place. He wanted his own home alone with Nell, Just one of the erisp bills which Doug- las had taken would have set them up and have left a tidy balance besides. Tim gritted his teeth at the thought. He counted the packages of bills me- chanically, now and then throwing out one in which the count was short. He had completed the count of the hun- dred dollar bills and was working on the thousands now. Here, too, he found discrepancies. It was as easy to slip a couple of these notes from a package of fifty as to ab- stract them from the packages of a lesser denomination. Douglas’ plan had been absurdly simple In a way. Tim wondered that others had not thought of it. He might have done it himself with little fear of detection. He might do it now with absolute im- punity. The thought staggered him for an in- gtant, and he leaned uncertainly against the side of the cage. On the polished counter before him were a score of packages from which bills were missing. What was to prevent his slipping a couple of bills from a perfect package and toss it on the short count pile? It would be blamed on Douglas. No one would ever suspect. One bill would enable him to marry Nell and fit up a home such as they had dared to dream of. It required only a single deft motion. He could slp the bills off the pile and into his pocket. The fiction of a legacy would explain his sudden affluence, and no one would ever dream of his transgres- sion, He was leaning against the wire par- tition that separated him from Bas- com's compartment, and the clerk look- ed up. “Tired out, Tim?’ he asked kindly. “It's a tough job. I'll be glad when it's done. I'm as sick of money as a girl in a candy store Is of chocolates.” Tim nodded, and Bascom went on counting the rolls of gold coin, whis- tling softly as he worked. Tim started as the tune caught his attention. It was “Harrigan,” and Bascom was whistling the chorus: H-a double r-i-g-a-n, you see, It's a name that a shame never has been connected with, Harrigan—that's me. Tim slipped off the high stool and went over to the water cooler. The fced water reduced his fever, and he went back to the dull drudgery of the count, his momentary madness gone. He was proud of his name. He never could face Nell burdened with secret knowledge of guilt; he never could offer her a home that was bought with stolen money. The song had saved him. It was late in the afternoon when he tabulated the results of his count and took them to the president. The gray haired old man gave a sigh of relief as he saw the total. “It is not as bad as I had feared,” he sald slowly, passing the memorandum to the examiner. “Douglas hit us pret- ty hard. but he did not deal a death- blow.” “The bank wlll keep open?’ cried Tim, a smile spreading over his face. With the bank closed, marriage with Nell seemed further away than ever. “The bank will keep open,” verified the president. “And that reminds me! Mr. Waring is to be promoted to the position of cashier, and he has recom- mended you for his place as assistant. It will mean a raise of $300 a year. You are married?” Tim shook his head. “Only engaged.” he said simply. “But with the raise I can afford to get mar- ried.” “Come to me if you want to borrow money to set up housekeeping with,” sald the president kindly. “We want our men to have hopes. them down.” As hour later a notice was posted on the bank doors that the institution would resume payment in the morning, and the line of watchers began to drift away. The last were still lingering about as Tim Harrigan came jauntily CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of CHAS. H. FLETCHEL. Y YOU WISH TO BECOME. A Chemist, A Teacher, An Engineer, A Lawyer, An Electrician, A Physician, A Scientific Farmer, A Journalist, in short, if you wish to secure a training that will fit you well for any honorable pursuit in life, THE PENNSYLVANIA STATE COLLEGE OFFERS EXCEPTIONAL ADVANTAGES. TUITION IS FREE IN ALL COURSES. TAKING EFFECT IN SEPT. 1900, the General Courses have been extensively modified, so as to fur- nish a much more varied range of electives, after the Freshman herdiofore; includ- ish, Latin and Gree Languages Litera. French, German, Ce hor Damion and itical k These courses are Pedagogies, y the wits of those who seek either the most thorough training for the Profession ot Foachia Education, nes ng, or a general College The courses in Chomistey, Civil, Electrical, Mechanical and Mining Engineering are among the very best in the United Graduates have no difficulty In securing and holding positions. YOUNG WOMEN are admitted to all courses on the same terms as Young Men. WINTER SESSION opens January 9th, 1908. For specimen examination papers or for catalogue giving full information respecting courses of study, expenses, ete., and showing positions held by graduates, address THE REGISTRAR, State College, Centre County. Pa. It steadles er A057 EE ——— ot down the steps and hurried up the street with springy stride to bear joy- ful news to Nell. And as he strode along the street the smile that played about his lips gave place to a pucker, and he whistled— It's a name that a shame never has been connected with, Harrigan—that's me. WONDERFUL READERS. Macaulay's Almost Superhuman Gi%t For Absorbing Literature. Here is an interesting list of the vol- umes read by Lord Macaulay in a pe- riod of thirteen months, during which time he was also busied with his offi- clal duties as one of the members of the supreme council of India. “I have read Aschylus twice,” he writes a friend; “Sophocles twice, Euripides once, Pindar twice, Callimachus, Ap- pollonius Rhodius, Quintus Calaber, Theocritus twice, Herodotus, Thucydi- des, almost ail Xenophon's works, al- most all Plato, Aristotle's ‘Politics’ and a good deal of his ‘Organon,’ besides dipping elsewhere in him; the whole of ‘Plutarch’s Lives,’ about half of Lu- clan, two or thiee books of Athenaeus, Plautus twice, Terence twice, Lucre- tius twice, Catullus, Tibullus, Proper- tius, Lucan, Statius, Silius, Italicus, Livy, Vellelus Paterculus, Sallust, Cae- sar and lastly Cicero. [ have indeed a little Cicero left, but I shall finish him in a few days. I am now deep in Aris- tophanes and Lucian.” Manifestly Macaulay had an almost superhuman gift for reading. Trevel- yan said of him: “Macaulay’s extraor- dinary faculty of assimilating printed matter at first sight remained the same through life. To the end he read books faster than other people skimmed them and skimmed them as fast as any one else would turn the leaves. And this speed was not in his case ob- tained at the expense of accuracy.” Balzac's ability to take in at a glance half a dozen or more lines of a page is a well known incident of literature, and the Frenchman got all the mean- ings and the shades of meaning from the page. Balzac was not a systematic reader and boasted that he never read a book through. But he, too, had the power of “assimilating printed mat- ter.” M. Brunetiere says that Balzac’s Hood'»? Sarsaparilla. capacity for absorbing knowledge as | well as learning is not to be judged at all by the standards of ordinary men. The same principle incidentally is the sufficient answer to those who doubt that Shakespeare wrote Shakespeare because there is proof that he was never a student Doubtless these who have been men- tioned were exceptional readers. or. rather, devourers of books. But their | example is interesting not because it is exceptional, but for the reason that industry in reading is really not ex- ceptional. The bibliographers attach- ing to meritorious works of history et- test stupendous research—stupendous Attorneys-at-Law. C. MEYER Aucriey.atlay Rooms 20 & e 21, Crider's Exechasge, Bellefonte, Pa. 9-44 B. SPANGLER — Attorney-at-Law. Prae- . tices in all the Courts. Consultation in glish snd German. Office in Crider's Ex- change, Bellefonte, Pa. 0.22 8. TAYLOR—Attorney and Counsellor at . Law, Office, Garman House Block, flefonte, Pa. All kinds of legal business at- tended to promptly. 40-49 = KLINE WOODRING * ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Bellefonte, Pa. 51-1-1y Practices in all the courts. to the man who is content to merely “do” the magazines. The learned per- son who occasionally advises that a reading of Shakespeare and the Bible “is enough” has doubtless himself read wisely. Even a cursory survey of the subject convinces that reading and its amount depend upon one’s temperament and habit and has nothing whatever to do with time.— Kansas City Star. m=oded Snakes. The hoods of snakes were unques- tionably intended by nature to act as weapons of intimidation, for when sud- denly ope.ied. as they are during the excitement of a contest, these give their owners an apparent and formida- ble enlargement. But the hoods which have been so useful at some period in snake history have now become so en- larged as to tend toward the extinction of their owners, just as the overde velopment in the tusks of prehistoric animals led straight to their destruc- tion. During a fight the hooded snake in the act of striking his foe suffers from the outstretched and weighty hood—he overbalances himself and top- ples forward. His assailant, the mon- goose and some birds specially, seizes him when prostrate and, ripping up the back of the neck, speedily dis- patches him. The Secret of Gontent. If men today actually possessed the acres on which they toil, they would be in no hurry to leave them; they C. HEINLE — Attorney-at-Law, Belle- . fonte, Pa. Office in Crider's Exchange, second floor. All professional business will re- ceive prompt attention. 30-16 J H. WETZEL—Attorney and Counsellor at . Law. Office No. 11, Crider's Exchange, second floor. All kinds of legal business attend- ed to promptly. Consultation in English or Ger- man, 30-4 ETTIG, BOWER & ZERBY-—Attorneys-at- Law, Eagle Block, Bellefonte, Pa. Sue- cessors to Orvis, Bower & Orvis. Practice in all the courts. Consultation in Eaglish or German, 50 . tice in all the courts. Consultation in Office south of court professional business wil receive J M. KEICHLINE — Attorney-at-Law. Praec- oglish and German. house. All Meat Markets. GE THE BEST MEATS. i You save nothing by buying, thin or gristly meats. I use only Eo, ’ . LARGEST, FATTEST, CATTLE, and su my customers with the fresh- est, c t blood and muscle mak- ing Steaks and Roasts. My prices are no higher than poorer meats are else where I always have ~eDRESSED POULTRY, Game in season, and any kinds of geod meats you want, Tay My Sucre. P. LL. BEEZER. High Street, Bellefonte Travelers Guide. ENTRAL RAILROAD OF PENNA. prompt attention. 49-5-1y* | Condensed Time Table effective June 17, 1908 { Physicians. READ OOW iions | Rue gr. No 1/No 5 No 3 |No 6 No 4 Nos. 8. GLENN, M. D., Physician and Sur : : - . geon, State College, Centre county, Pa. | A m. p.m. p. m. p.m... m Office at his residence. 35-41 | F705 655 2 105 05 9 40 715 706 2 57) 4 52! 9 27 moh Safin Dentists. 72 | 2 47 43 438 918 733/07 28) 2 61, 39| 4 34/19 09 Erm——————————— 57 728 2 8 36 4 a 9 08 RJ. E. WARD, D.D.S.. office next door to | J 3217 33 3 01] BEA Y. M. C. A. room, High street, Bellefonte, | 5 46' 7 38] 3 05/...... 29 4 21/18 50 a. Gas administered for painless extracting | 5 45/17 40 3 08| 2; 4 18/18 56 teeth. Superior Crown and Bridge work. Prices | 75. 7 44 312 22 4 14, 8 58 reasonable. 52-32, 7 56/17 49| 3 10 18 4 0918 48 0a) 7 01] 3 BB cromaicna 8 10] 4 01] 8 40 { seesreeast a. R. H. W. TATE, Surgeon Dentist, office in | § 10 8 02] 3 30 ..MILL HALL... 8 05 3 56| 8 35 the Bush Areade, Bellefonte, Pa. All modern electric appliances used. Has had years (N. Y. Central & Hudson River R. R.) of experience. All work of superior quality and | prices reasonable, #581y | 11 40, 8 53|........Jersey Shore........| 8 09 752 12 15 9 30 Arr TwawporT | Lve| 338 17% . 12 29 11 30|Lve “4 fArr.| 230 650 | (Phila. & Reading Ry.) | ATENTS, TRADE MARK COPY- 73 6 ”, asssesssnnsn PHILA wccecsinnnns| $8 36 11 30 rights, &c. Anyone sending a sketch and 1010, 9 00}euein. { | 9 00 would be effectively chained to the | jecripiion may quickly ascertain our opinion soil by the sense of independence and | proprietorship. as is the case among the rural population of France, who do pot rent but own the land.-—W. J. Dawson. sm wo PURE BLOOD Mrs, C. K. Tyler, Burlington, Vt,, says - strength to do all my work." mail. C.1 H Co., Lowell, Mass, Is certain if you take Hood's Sarsaparilla. This great medicine cures those eraptions, pimples and boils that appear at all seasons ; cures sorofula sores, salt rhenm or eczema ; adapts itself equally well to, and also cures, dyspepsia and all stomach troubles ; cures rhenmatism and catarrh ; cures nervous troubles, debility and shat tired feelidg. “The cares ot a large farm, so much to do and so little health to do it with, caused almost a complete break down; blood poor and thin; no strength, little sleep. Hood's Sarsaparilla gave appetite, natural sleep, perfect health, SARSATABS—For those who prefer medicine in tablet form, Hood's Sarsaparilla is now put a in chocolated tablets called Sarsatabs, as well as in the usual liguid form. Sarsatabs haye identically the same curative properties as the liquid form, besides accuracy of dose, conven- ience, economy,~—no loss by evaporation, breakage, or leakage. Druggists or promptly by 529 free whether an invention is avbably patentable, Communications strictly confidential. ‘Handbook on patents sent free. Oldest agency for securing tents. 60 years experience. ttens taken hrongh Munn & Co. receive Special Notice, with- out charge in the SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN. fllustrated Weekly. Largest etreula lation ot any scientific journal. Terms $3 a year; four months §1. Sold by all newsdealers, MUNN & CO, 361 Broadway, New York. Brauch Office, 625 F St, Washington, D. C. 5245-1y. band at 1 Hair Dresser. R THE LADIES.—Miss Jennie Mor- gan in her new room on Spring St., lately used as offices by Dr. Locke, is now ready to tmeet any and all patients wishing treatments by electricity, treatments of the scalp, facial mas. sage or neck and shoulder massage. She has also for sale a large collection of real and imita- tion shell pins, combs and ornaments and will be able to supply you with all kinds of toilet articles including creams, powders, toilet waters, ex. racts and all of Hudnut's preparations. 50-16 Fauble’s Great Clothing House YO (Via Phila.) {Week Days WALLACE H. GEPHART, General Superintendent. BELLEFONTE CENTRAL RAIL- ROAL. p. m.la. m.lAm. Lve. la. m./p. m. Schedule to take effect Monday, Jan. 6, 1908. WESTWARD EASTWARD read down | read up to. / No.3 > | onarems. [No.2 No.4 'g P.M. | AW Lv Ar.| AM. | POM PM. 2 00] 19 156 30 ...Bellefonte...| 8 50| 12 50/6 (0 2 v7] 10 20/6 35 ..... Coleville...... 8 40| 12 40,5 60 2 12| 10 236 38/...... Mortis....... 837) 12 37 5 47 217 10 27/6 43 ptevens, piv Ve » 12 35/5 48 | ..Lime Centre..| : 3 10 ole 4) Runter's Park,| & 31 12 31.6 40 2 26| 10 34/6 50....,. Fillmore... 8 28| 12 28/5 86 232 10 40.6 85 ...... Briarly....... | 824 12 245 30 2 35! 10 45.7 00.......Waddles.....| 8 20 12 205 25 | 250 10877 12). Krumrine... 8 07 12 07/5 07 | 9 I ay § ———— ro "T 15750 | | 781 ..Blormeaor...| T40| | 17 85 Pine wrove M'ls| 7 85 3 20 3 40! { l F. H. THOMAS, Supt. SE ST RE ENE EI TENE) «...LET US SHOW YOU..... SPRING AND SUMMER CLOTHING. IS THE TOPIC OF INTEREST NOW. —— Qe QO Every day we are receiving additions to our new stock. As we place the garments on our tables we cannot help feeling proud of the assortment of realy HIGH : CLASS : CLOTHING at your disposal. We do not think we have ever shown such beautiful fabrics tailored in- to such smart models as you will see here this season. We are anxious to hear your verdict. M. FAUBLE AND SON. Shoes for Men and Boys at a Big Saving. od IC JZ IV 5¥ 4 VF 30 05 38 Fe 9 4 EI EEEEEEEEEEES FTEEIEEEEEEEERE EEE DEEEIEE SE CA EEE SSAA, EIDE EI = 4 8