Eo » 1 f : £ | i ! | ! f «f Bellefonte, Pa., June 20, 1913. What Will Become of Annie po [Continued from page 6, Col. 4] Ef = HE : 8 fal? od th FER’ Pil ¥1 ¢ ] : i ; | 1 HW i erEd fi iff ipigfedf if i Sz % i 1 HE HL g 3 of, the new gas franchise. straightened painfully, and got to his: feet. He held the bundle in his thin fingers, and glanced at his witnesses, with a keen and curious eye. They met his gaze, expectant, eager, draw: | ing dry, hot breaths. Involuntarily, ' they extended their hands. Father Daugherty looked at them, and a lit- tle twinkle of amusement showed in| the eyes that were wontedly so mild “Would you?" he said. The two aldermen hastily raised. their hands, and together, in strange | unison, wiped their brows. The room | had suddenly grown hot for them, and | their brows were wet, though Father Daugherty was cool and composed, as | he ever was. Yet they remembered; | they could not so easily give up; it was theirs by every right. They could have cursed Jimmy just then for his excessive caution. It was McQuirk’s | quick mind that thought first. “Maybe there's writing,” he said. Father Daugherty looked long and thoroughly, running his thin hand deep into pigeon-holes and back into the partitions, until the sleeves of his shabby coat were pushed far up his lean wrist. “Not a scrap,” he said. “Then, maybe—" But McQuirk drew Bretzenger away, and they went into the darkness that lay thick as dust in the back of the long room. Meaa. while, Father D-ugherty searched the safe through and through. He found nothing more. The strong-box had had but one purpose, and it had served it well. Then slowly, painfully, with the clumsy, unaccustomed fingers that had had small chance to count money, be turned the packages over, counting them carefully, wetting his trembling fingers now and then. The man who had drilled the safe stood looking om, with eyes that widened more and more. " “How much is there, Father?” he said, at length. He extended a grimy forefinger hesitatingly, as if to touch the package the priest balanced on his thousand!” the man ex- claimed. And then he added, in awe: “Dollars! Doesn't look like that much, does it?” “No,” Father answered. y £ i : i ih Hh : TEeal il: : sEirif FH ; ; of d : BER caught men in his It put them {ll at ease, observe the gases in human days were spent in deciding, and ou used quite freguently for money. If and it roused resentment in Bretzen- and carry out other very useful tests. FORMS OF CURRENCY siders had to be called in to assist & man owned a beautiful slave and ger, who felt that this calm priest in determining the value of the goods | preferred land, the bargain was could read him too well. We desire to be classified according to be bartered. speedily made. And if the land or “None of it belongs to you, then, I to our exceptional virtues; we are apt MANY DIFFERENT BASES OF Pi In Africa they were a little more object desired were very valuabiq suppose?” observed Father Daugh- to classify our neighbor according to NANCE IN HISTORY. sensible in choosing for money arti he might have to yield several of his his exceptional faults—Heary Bates cles of smaller size. The natives were | women slaves. “Ah, well—of course,” McQuirk Diamond. extremely fond of jewelry unt fancy or Wr yalent times there have heen in decorations of kinds, and so ! course of turies urged, and his tone showed that he Was Believed to Promote Health, and Old Civilization Knew No Such Thing they used delicate shells of various | the subject of mame, £outuries on was trying, in his crude way, to im- Certainly Was a Protection to as Money, and Legal Tender Was To be sure they were a bit rels have arisen and many battles jress the. priest with an: honest.dis. the Head Both in Summer Simply What Could Be unsubstantial, and if a man broke his | have been fought. And really we interestedness. “Of course, Jimmy and Winter. | Agreed Upon. she There was no 1 gi; egd igi is Hate 8% 19538 & 1 ; 18 fi lps Ea. 1 Ii S&z fs HH seivil i883 EES i § if g 2 g g 1 51 1 8 3 : § i g ily Hh al HH od hy ther Daugherty went to the flat to see | Annie, bearing the bundle, the original | bundle, the bundle that had bought the new gas franchise. Something of the dramatic quality in the situation had got into the old priest's heart He knew that Annie would appreciate it all so much better if she could see the fortune, and feel it, and he would let her do so for an instant before he put it away in the safety deposit vaults to await opportunity for its in: vestment. She looked at it long and long, ly: ing there in the lap of her black gown. She could not grasp the amount, though the old priest, leaning forward, with the enthusiasm of a boy shining once more, after so many years, in his hollow eyes, said over and over: “Look at it, my child! Feel it! It's fifty thousand dollars! And it's all yours!” She patted it, tenderly and affec tionately, with a soft and reminiscent caress, so that the priest knew that it was not for anything that package of money might hold for her in a material way, then or afterward, buf rather for what it gave back for a moment to her desolated heart. And the priest was glad of that, and there after silent. He had had doubts. He would feel better when the money had passed out of his hands, and he sometimes questioned whether if would ever do good in any one's hands. But he had a sense of humor, too, a grim sense ‘in this instance, when he thought of certain political ‘and financial circles, even if he did dust his thin hands carefully with his spotless handkerchief when he laid the money down. leave me all this! Oh, Jimmy, my poor Jimmy!” And she rocked forward, like an old i ; 4 of Socrates. Whe does not recognize at first glance the almost comic face with its turn-up nose and utter ab seace of the slightest ciaim to good looks? We cannot help smiling at it and yet when we think of the man, the ugliness of his face becomes pa- thetic. He worshiped beauty, his life was devoted to teaching how life could be made harmonious in every way and such a nose must, in spite of his philo- sophy, have been a constant trial to him. His prayer was: “Grant me to be beautiful in the inner man and all I have of outward things to be at peace with those within. May I count the wise man only rich; and may my store of gold be such as none but the good can bear.” He counted material wealth without wealth of spirit a mockery and to have outward beauty without inward beauty was to be an imposter. All the same, to have one’s inward beauty so denied by one's face must have been very an- noying and our smile at Socrates may well be mixed with a little sympathy. Have Analyzed Gases. By the use of a new German instru- ment, which takes the index of refrac tion of mixed gases, Haber and Lowe are able to find the amount of carbon dioxide and methane contained in mine gases, The method is also use ful in many other cases, such as for gas or anhydride in the gases coming from pyrites roasting, as well as percent: ages of ozone in the air. They are also able to check the purity of hydro ! ‘neck, and it is bound loosely on the | back of the head to serve as a pillow ; at night. Perhaps one of the most pe- it was considered nearly a Bible times to injure the beard. No doubt the Chinaman took pride | his long braid of hair, because his | ers before him took pride in it, t, according to several authorities ho have long studied the customs d history of China and the Chinese, | ere were other reasons for the eue, and apparently quite good rea- | at that gs FE BE € LF be- lieved that it was far more healthful | to wear his head shaven, except at the top of his head, and let it grow in | long mass to be braided. One be- | a | lief was that wearing the hair in this manner increased the circulation of blood in the brain and therefore made the Chinaman healthier and keener. { . nen aeain. during old weather the | Years of Suffering queue could be braided about the head, giving the protection of a thick warm cap. And in extremely hot weather the queue was again braided | about the top of the head, this time to | protect the wearer from sunstroke. The long queue is also used as a sort of neck-cloth, to wrap about the culiar uses attributed to it is in sud- den illness or injury, especially in the old days of warfare when swords were the general weapons. Then it was | used as a turnijuet to bind about the injury and prevent too great a loss of blood. It was for these reasons as well as for any reasons of sentiment or relig- fon that the Chinamen hesitated 80 | long before agreeing to sacrifice their | = queues, but it is evident that the cus- tom of wearing queues was not what might be termed a “foolish habit,” as | it was really made to serve a number | of uses. | | Fable of a Dog That Misunderstood. Once there was a motley little yel- low dog that was picked up in the street by a kind man. The man, feel- | ing sorry for him and being atrald | no one else would be good to such a homely cur, kept him and bought him a handsome collar and treated him so well that the dog soon began to strut and grew very proud and vain. “Surely,” he said to the house cat, “I must be a very fine dog to be so much admired and petted,” and with that he began to bark at the solemn old Persian cat, which ignored him entirely. “She is rather a well trained old thing,” thought the dog. “She knows enough not to talk back to her bet. ters.” Then he ran out in the street and barked at a beautiful horse that was passing the house, but neither the driver nor the horse paid any atten- tion to him. “Ah,” said the dog, “I must be a very fine dog, indeed—they, too, real ize they must not reprove their su- | periors.” Moral: To the conceited all signs are compliments. Romantic Salute. ; ago, before such a coin had ever been . heard of? In the old civilizations of when one race of people another and did not agree at all each other's standards of value. In ancient Sparta, for instance, huge, | gorgeous chariots served as dollars. If | | a man wanted to buy a house and lot | he had to drive a certain number of | chariots to his desired place of abode, | and then give them in exchange for CATARRH AND BLOOD DISEASE-DOC- 58-25-5t “The military salute,” he sald, “is | peculiarly appropriate to you, madam. | Do you happen to know its origin?” “No.” “Well, its origin goes back to the days of chivalry, to the tournaments of the Middle Ages. In those in watched a young student copying Yaded Rokeby Venus; then he watoh- another young student copying a cracked Holbein; then he watched a student copying a dim Ra i f ———— i Hood's : Sars Ps rilla. TORS FAILED TO CURE. Miss Mabel F. Dawkins, 1214 Lafayette St., Fort Wayne, Ind., writes: “For three an | was troubled with catarrh and lood disease. 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First semester iddle of September; second semester the first of Robo, Someones begin mui 28 Scptunber; Toculil Semen the im of each year. For catalogue, bulletins, announcements, etc., address 57-26 WE TTY YY Tew SR AN