Bellefonte, Pa., February 14, 1980. “AIN'T IT FINE TODAY!” Sure, this world is full of trouble— I ain't said it ain't. Lord! I've had enough, an’ double Reason for complaint. Rain an’ storm have come to fret me, Skies were often gray; Thorns an’ brambles have beset me On the road, but say, “Ain't it fine today!’ What's the use: of always weepin’, Makin’ trouble last? What's the use of always keepin’ Thinkin’ of the past? Each must have his tribulation Water with his wine. Life it ain't no celebration. Trouble? I've had mine— But today is fine. It's today that I am livin’. Not a month ago, Havin’, losin’, takin’, givin’ As time wills it so. Yesterday a cloud of sorrow Fell across the way; It may rain again tomorrow, It may rain—but, say, ‘Ain't it fine today!” —Douglas Malloch. THE SAD END OF OF MR. Wm. There were times when almost hated his profession, when he felt himself filled with an intense loathing of the sickening details of various crimes which he was called upon to investigate. The room in the Euston Road Temperance Hotel to which he had been summoned hastily, its barren disorder, the piti- ful unclean meagerness of the whole setting, perhaps rendered more ter- rible still by the sight of the lifeless body crumpled up across the iron bedstead, at first glance filled him with nothing but disgust. Police Constable Collier, summon- ed from his beat to take charge of the room until one of his superiors should arrive, loked at the matter, however, differently. It was a gala morning for him, whose taste for sensation usually had to be ap- peased by the arrest of a pickpocket, or the stopping of a drunken brawl. “Copped it fair, he did, sir,” he remarked as he pointed to the small blue hole in the man’s forehead. “Was he dead when they fetched you?” Benskin asked. “Dead as mutton, sir.” The detective stood a little away from the bed and studied the room. A single cane chair with a broken leg was lying on its back; a worn strip of linoleum was rolled up and disarranged. The bedclothes were in disorder, a broken glass which smelled of spirits lay upon the floor. There was a handful of loose money on the mantelpiece and, curiously STARR Benskin enough, a gold watch and chain, ap- | parently of considerable value. Benskin, conquering an aversion from which he had never wholly suc- ceeded in freeing himself, came a little closer to the bed and examin- | ed the dead man. The latter was ap- parently of middle age, clean shav- en, wearing the shirt and trousers of a laboring man, but presenting many indications of a superior sta- tion in life. On the floor by the side of the bed wasa modern look- ing revolver from which one car- tridge had been dicharged. “What about the doctor?” detective inquired. “The waiter’s gone round to the hospital for Doctor Jacobs, sir. His surgery’s in the next street. The woman as keeps the house, she’s downstairs waiting for you.” “Bring her up,” was the prompt command. ; Police Constable Collier departed upon his errand. In due course there were heavy footsteps upon the stairs, and he ushered in a lady whom he announced as the pro- prietress of the hotel. Except that she was rather inclined to be fat instead of thin, she conformed very faithfully to type. She was untidy, nervous and almost incoherent. “Do you know the name of this poor. fellow?” Benskin asked, point- ing towards the bed. “Mr. Brown, he called himself, sir. Don’t know whether that’s his right name or not.” “How long has he been here?” “Three nights—leastways he slept here three nights. He hasn't been in much during the daytime.” “Do you know anything about him ?” “Nothing except he’s paid a week’s rent in advance for the room.” “Was he staying here alone? he any visitors?” “None that I know of,” the wo- man replied. ‘I ain't always about, of course, but there was no one with him permanent.” the staying Had “Was this all his luggage?” Ben- skin asked, ponting to a shabby kit-bag, from which the initials seemed to have been scratched away, and a cheap green canvas portman- teau. “All that I know of” she re- marked. ‘“He had a trunk when he come, but he took that away the next day.” “Did he say what his occupation was?” “Something out of work. He wasn't fond of talking about himself, but he did let that slip. Kind of clerk, or something of that sort.” Benskin thoughtfully. in the night?” he inquired. thing.” “Do you know what time he came in?” “Not an idea. I never spies up- on my lodgers as long as they be- haves themselves. Besides, I sleep in the attic.” “Anyone nearer to have heard him?” “Not last night’ the woman de- cided, after a moment's reflection. “There's no one in the two lower rooms.” There was a knock at the door, and Doctor Jacobs entered. He was a pale, weary-looking man, with hook- looked at the body “Did you hear a shot “Not a than you likely ed nose, thinning gray hair and a tired stoop of the shoulders. He de- posited his little black bag on the edge of the bed, greeted the proprie- Benskin. “Inspector. Benskin of Scotland Yard,” the latter announced. “Iwas fetched here by telephone call from the Constable on point duty here. You can see the cause.” He indicated the figure upon the bed. The doctor put on a pair of horn-rimmed spectacles and made a brief but singularly cold-blooded examination. “Bullet shot through the head,” he remarked, “Close quarters, I should say. Case of suicide, I suppose. Wait a moment.” : He unfastened the man’s waist- coat. A little expression of sur- prise escaped him. “What is it?” drawing nearer. The doctor pointed downwards. “The clothes of a poor man outside,” he observed—*“but pale blue silk un- derclothes. Seems quaint!” The detective leaned a little far- ther over the bed. The doctor was right. The man’s undershirt was of thick spun silk. He felt round the back of the neck. Inside was the name of a famous Bond Street hosier. “Someone in hiding, I imagine,” the doctor propounded indifferently. “That’s your job, not mine, anyway. Cause of death, that bullet wound, without a doubt.” : “How long should you say he had been dead?” The doctor occupied himself with the body for a few minutes. “About six hours,” he decided. He took up the revolver, shook out the car- tridges and held the weapon to his own forehead. “Very simple,” he observed. “I'll just do what's nec- essary, and then I suppose it will be the mortuary.” He bent over the bed once more, and Benskin continued his search of the room. The gold watch had the maker's name in it, were the torn fragments of several Benskin asked, the breast pocket of his coat. The markings had been removed from the few other articles of clothing. There was nothing in the shape of identification was possible. The doc- tor stood up and wrote a few lines in his memorandum book. “Any fresh discoveries?” Benskin inquired. “Nothing to discover,” was the wary reply. “I'll give you the cer- tificate when necessary. I suppose my fee—" er assured him. The doctor took his leave, follow- ed a few minutes later by his fellow investigator. Soon after the appearance of the evening papers a middle-aged man, accompanied by a young lady in a state of considerable agitation, pre- sented himself at Scotland Yard and the two were ushered into Benskin’s' room. The young lady, who was good-looking in a somewhat ordinary way, addressed him at once. “Miss Hammond, my name she explained. “I'm typist and pri- vate secretary to Mr, William Starr. He’s been missing for several days. We thought he’d gone abroad but we saw in the paper—" She broke down for a moment. Her companion interposed a word. “I'm Mr. Starr’s servant, sir,” he announced. “It's quite right what the young lady says. Mr. Starr went off last Thursday-—we though he was going to Boulogne for the week-end; but there’ve been a lot of people trying to see him since, and we ain't heard anything of him. “Of course it doesn’t seem pos- sible,” the young lady went on, “put when I read in the evening pa- per about a man having been found in the Euston Road, and the de- scription and everything, it gave me ‘quite a shock. I showed the paper to Furnell here, and he thought we ought to go there and make sure.” “Couldn’t have rested quietly un- less we had, sir,” the man con- cluded. “When we got there a policeman told us the body had been moved to the mortuary, and that ywe couldn't get in to see it without an order.” Benskin took dwon his hat. “I'm sorry,” he said to the young lady. “You won't find it a very pleasant place to visit, but I will take you down there. First, however, in order to prepare you a little, do you recognize this?” He produced the gold watch. The man turned it over in his hand with an exclamation of dismay. “It’s the master’s, sir,” he con- fided. “Was that found with the— | with the body of the mian who shot himself ?” “It was, and there is another thing—with whom did your master deal—say for his underclothes ?” “Beale and Inman in Bond Street, sir.” “Did he ever wear light blue silk ones?” . “Nearly all the time!” the young lady cried. “Then I am afraid you must prepare yourselves for the worst,” Benskin warned them. It was an unpleasant errand, but brief enough. The girl gave one glance at the dead man’s face and burst into sobs. Her companion looked away with a shiver. “That’s the master, nounced—“that’s him doubt. As good a one as ever I shall find again in this world, and what he wanted to do it for when there's heaps of his friends he's helped himself who'd have given him a hand if he only hadn't been too proud to ask for it; I was kind of suspicious,” he went on, “when he gave me my wages six months in advance in case he didn't get back.” Benskin escorted them to the police car which was waiting and handed them in. “I shall be staying here a few minutes,” the said. (“There are still one or two formal- ities. Will you give me your names and addresses, please?” | “The girl took out a card and sir,” he an- without a tress and looked inquiringly towards . and there ' letters which he carefully placedin cards or papers by which immediate “That will be all right,” the oth- is,” i name on the wrote the servant's back. “Was Mr. Starr in business?” Benskin asked her. 5 : The girl nodded. “He was a fi- nancial agent amd. cen agent .ad. company promo- ter,” she . explained. “He's floated some wonderful companies in his time. Just now he wasn't doing quite so well, and he seemed very queer and irritable. What Furnell says is quite true, though. There's plenty would have helped him if he'd been a little more confidential.” “You knew that-he was hard up, I suppose, then?” The girl hesitated. “I couldn’t help knowing it,” she admitted. “Everyone seemed to be tumbling over themselves to get money out of him. Will there be an inquest?” Benskin nodded. “Naturally. You will have to give evidence, I am afraid, but as it is such a simple case it will be only a matter of a few minutes. You will get your subpoenas in due course.” “And the funeral?” the girl fal- tered her eyes again filling with tears. “The day afterwards, I By the by, what was Mr. address?” | “Number 7-A, Clarges the man replied. “You are staying there?” “Yes sir. I've had no order to imagine, Starr's Street,” leave. I suppose someone will come ‘along who'll look after affairs as soon as the news gets about.” i “7-A, Clarges Street,” Benskin , repeated. “Please be there in an hour’s time, if you don’t mind. There are one or two little formar- ities to be attended to, and I might have to go through some of his papers.’ “IT will be lady promised. tell you anything know.” She spoke almost eagerly. Ben- skin took off his hat and waved the car onwards. His eyes were on the girl’s face until the last moment. The Sub-Commissioner never had been more surprised than when Ben- skin presented himself in his room early on the morning fixed for the inquest and asked that an applica- tion for a formal adjournment should be made. “What on earth are you going to say, Benskin?” he demanded. “What reason could there possibly be for an adjournment? It seems to me that never in 8 clearer case.” “I thought so at first,” the other admitted. “Sometimes I think so Inow, and yet there are one or two very peculiar points about it.” | “The long and the short of the | matter is, I suppose,” the Sub-Com- missioner remarked, “that you think the man was murdered instead of having committed suicide?” | His subordinate avoided a definite { response. “I really am completely in the dark at present, sir,” he ac- : knowledged. ‘You know how one has to trust to instinct sometimes.” “Your instinct has been worth following more than once,” the Sub-Commissioner admitted. “Let's hear a little more.” “Well, I didn’t like the doctor,” ‘Benskin confessed. ‘He seemed to take everything much too much for granted. Then there was another thing. When he took off the under- shirt. I saw distinctly on the man’s arms the marks of hypodermic in- jections. The doctor too must have seen them. He made no remark, failed to call my attention to them or to examine them himself. He just took up the revolver and show- there too,” the young “I shall be able to you want to ed me how he thought the thing was done.” “What about the motive?” the Sub-Commissioner asked. “There’s a very serious motive for suicide; none whatever that I can see for murder. The man had lost all his money. His bankers had called in his overdraft, and his creditors were clamoring around him. The little cash he had in his pocket and the .gold watch were untouched. Of course he may have had complica- tions in his life we know nothing my life have I seen. “111 stand you the best dinner I've ever ordered in my life.” " So, at the end of that dreary for- mal function which took place on the day arranged, a thunderbolt flashed into the court. The doctor's evidence~ followed by Miss Ham- mond’s, seemed so conclusively to point to suicide that people took scant interest in the case. The general public deserted almost in a body before the coroner addressed himself to the jury. Then, quite un- expectedly, Benskin got up in his place and on behalf of the police made formal application for an ad- journment. The coroner looked at him in amazement. “An adjournment?” he exclaimed. “But for what reason?” “The police have had very little time to make inquiries,” Benskin pointed out. “They admit that the evidence as to suicide is, on the face of it, conclusive. On the other hand, they feel that in view of the fact that a large portion of the deceased's assets apparently have disappeared, they should like an op- portunity of making a few inquiries before the matter is absolutely clos- ed A man who deals in large sums of money without keeping proper books in which their disposal could be traced, is, as you must admit, one -of the most possible victims for a cleverly constructed crime.” The witnesses, Furnell, the doctor and Miss Hammond, were all seated in the well of the court, together with a lawyer who was understood to be representing them. The latter rose. “It has occurred very seldom in my lifetime, Mr. Coroner,” he said, “that I have found myself in the position of protesting against such an applicaton as has just been made, especially when it has been made under the auspices of Scotland Yard, but I cannot for the life of me see the use or the advantage to any- body of the proposed adjournment. A clearer case of suicide, I venture to say, never was laid before you, sir. Why should my witnesses be inconvenienced, the poor fellow’s funeral postponed, for no reason whatsoever ?” The coroner cleared his throat. “Mr. Ellis, I feel a considerable amount of sympathy with what you have just said,” he admitted. “At the same time it never has been my custom to diregard an application made by a responsible person on be- half of the police. The inquest adjourned until a week from to- day. The few stragglers in the court rose to their feet and made towards the exit. The girl remained in her ‘seat for a moment, her eyes upon Benskin. to him. “I can’t imagine why you wish to waste our time in this manner sir,” he protested sharply. ‘The affair is so simple. From the The doctor shambled up mo- ment I saw the body, I realized ex- ' actly what had happened, and the evidence has confirmed my convic- tion. Adjourn the inquest, indeed! I never have heard of anythng so foolish! ~ You police can't have enough to keep you busy.” “I. am very sorry if it inconven- iences any of you,” Benskin replied politely. “You see, there are just one or two more inquiries which should be made before a serious matter like this is jury’s verdict once given you must remember.’ is final, The doctor hurried off, with a little grunt of disgust. Somewhat to Benskin’'s surprise, when he reached the pavement he found the girl standing by his side. She was lookng a little pale, but she was quite collected. “Shall I see you again before the adjourned inquest, Mr. Benskin?” she asked. “There are letters every morning which of course you see if you like.” “I'll look round if I may,” Ben- skin promised. “I'm sorry to bother “you all this way.” about yet. Have you stumbled across one of them, by any chance?” “I cant say that I have,” Ben- skin admitted, “There is no doubt that he was on very friendly terms with the secretary, to whom ap- parently he had left anything that might be saved from the wreck of his estates. Beyond that, I gather that he led the ordinary life of a middle-aged man about town.” “How would his financial position pan out exactly?” “Badly, without a doubt. I called upon the young lady secre- tary again yesterday to see wheth- er I could pick up any further in- “You ought to know whether it is necessary,” was the quiet rejoinder. “If it is, then of course we have nothing to complain about.” “It will be only for a week, after all,” Benskin reminded her. “I am afraid I'm rather unpopular with all of you, especially the doctor, but one gets ideas, you know.” She looked at him keenly. “I won- | ‘der what yours is.” “Probably a mare's nest.’ Before the week was up, Ben- skin received a call from Miss Ham- mond. She was wearing a little more rouge than when he had first seen her and she had apparently used her lipstick freely. She enter- ' ed the office boldly, as one who has a | formation, and I must admit I was. ‘ astounded.” i “In what way?” He seems to have dealt largely in stocks and shares and property,” Benskin explained, “without keeping ' any account of his transactions ex- cept what the entries in his bank- book disclose. Then, this last year especially, he has been drawing considerable sums of money from his bank just on the day before any of the great race meetings.” “But still,” the Sub-Commissioner urged, “why do you want the in- quest adjourned?” . “Because there is something be- hind the whole affair I can’t figure out I should like a little more time to inquire into his private life. We are taking it for granted now that he committed suicide because he was undoubtedly in desperate straits, and there appears to be not the slighest motive for anyone to have shot him. That may be because we know so little of his private life. A man liv- ing as he did naturally must have had enemies. I only want a few days.” “We shall ,be confoundedly un- popular,” his chief grumbled, “but of course if you really want it we'll apply.” “I must have it,” Benskin con- fessed. “I hate making myself a nuisance, but I think the coroner will forgive me some day—at least T hope so.” | “If he ever does,” the Sub-Com- missioner remarked incredulously, grievance. Her manner was, if any- | thing, a little overconfident. Never- theless, there was disquietude in her eyes.. “I want to know, Mr. Benskin,” she said, “why I am being followed.” “Followed?” he repeated. “By whom ?” “That is what I came to ask you,” she rejoined. “All that I know is thet twice during the last three days I have started out to pay a visit to a friend, and discover- ed that a person whom I have seen loitering upon the other side of Clarges Street has dogged my foot- steps.” “That seems very quaint,” Ben- skin observed. “If the person an- noys you in any way, I should ap- peal to the nearest policeman.” “Are you sure that it is not the police who are responsible?” she de- manded. Benskin looked at her with those very innocent blue eyes of his wide open. “My dear young lady,” he exclaimed, “why on earth should the police take any interest in you?” “I don’t know, I'm sure,” she ad- mitted. ‘Wherever I go, this man follows me. Twice I've given up go- ing to visit my friend’ “Why change your plans because you were followed?” Benskin asked swiftly. : The girl was momentarily at a loss. “No particular reason why I should, but I don't like people pry- ing into my concerns.” “Miss Hammond,” he assured her, a little more gravely, “I don’t think is . whole | concluded. The . can | believe, house physician to St. Luke's, that anyone wants to pry into your concerns. At the same time, you must: remember that your late em- ployer, Mr. Starr, died under very peculiar circumstances. He. was re- puted to be a wealthy maf: He has left behind him nothing but debts. He is known to have been possessed of considerable property, stocks and shares. There is no evidence at all, not even in his bank-accounts, of how he has disposed of these, You are the only person who might have thrown light upon the situation, and you say you can’t.” “But how can I?” she protested. “Mr. Starr kept no books—his was a one man business—he didn't need to. If he had kept books, as he said, he would have been liable to tax.” “Just so,” Benskin agreed. “Well, I am afraid I can’t help you, Miss Hammond. You must remember that Mr. Starr had some very heavy creditors. Any one of them might be interested in your movenients.” The girl took leave, and Benskin, ais soon as she had gone, glanced through the report of her move- ments on the previous day. The adjourned inquest opened contained marks of the on the shoulder. Two policemen ap- peared from- the- back of ‘the court. It took half a dozen men to make a lane through which Miss ~Daphne Hammond, Doctor. Jacobs and ~ Wil- liam * Furnell were: conducted ‘to the police van which awaited them. The Sub-Commissioner kept his word. He entertained Benskin that night to the best dinner his club could provide, “Benskin,” he said, “the Chief de- sires me to present to you his com- pliments. You have done the force a remarkably good service. All the evening papers have laudatory ar- ticles concerning us, but we will see that you get the credit to which you are entitled. I don’t want ail the details. I've picked up a few ‘already, but just give me an idea how you tumbled to the thing. Here's your very good health! “Well, it began like this,” Benskin explained, setting down his glass and helping himself to caviar. “I thought it extraordinary that Doctor Jacobs made no remark about the numerous scars on the man's from the hypodermic injections, and , then, too, I noticed that the body injection without any indications of the sen- sometimes made at a hospital toin- sation in which it was to result. sure that death actually has taken Phe jury once more viewed the place. Then all sorts of little suspi- body. Miss Hammond and Furnell cious things cropped up. the servant, again gave their dence followed, almost word for word the same as on the previous occasion. The coroner, however, instead of addressing the jury at once, referred to some papers by his side, and one or two observant people in the court noticed a distinct change in his man- ner. He nodded to the sergeant, who threw open the door of the witness-box, “Police Surgeon Harding.” “The police surgeon stepped into the box. Doctor Jacobs, who was seated just below, started slightly and leaned forward in his place. The coroner addressed the new witness. “You did not at first examine the body of the deceased?” he asked. “I did not, sir,” the surgeon ac- knowledged. “In the face of the testimony of Doctor Jacobs, who was called in and who is a fully quali- fied man, it was not thought neces- sary. I had two inquests that day on the other side of London.” “You have since, however, at the request of the police examined the ‘body ?” “I have sir.” “Tell us what conclusions you ar- , rived at.” evi- “First of all, the cunning way the man was supposed to have crept in- to hiding, and yet in the matter of his underclothes and gold watch left evidences as to his identity. Then there was the disappearance of all his ready money, leaving nothing but debts behind. I couldn’t make head or tail of his bank-book, so I had a long talk with the bank manager who was very sympathetic, chiefly because he dislikes Starr. { We arrived in due course at a pretty clear idea of the man’s finan- cial position. He’d been a rich man once, without a doubt, but he lost fifty thousand pounds in rubber two {years ago, and that started him on this game. Whenever he got a chance he paid in money which he received from various quarters to a bank- account abroad, and as he couldn't build up fast enough that way, he kept on drawing large amounts through his own bank, and pretend- ing he’d lost them at race meet- ings. “All this time, of course, he paid nobody, and he entered into every , speculation where he could get a few months’ credit and draw in a certain amount of cash. In this fashion he drained away the whole + The surgeon hesitated. “I will ad- "of his assets, and built up a reserve ‘mit the possibility of error, sir,” he 'of something like seventy thousand said, “but I came to the conclusion pounds in hard cash, all deposited that the deceased had been dead for |abroad. several days longer than the period. “As soon as I had arrived at stated, and that death was due to, those facts, I put aside all idea of morphine poisoning. The deceased suicide ,was clearly an addict.” court. “What about the revolver shot in the forehead?” the coroner contin- ued. “TI came to the conclusion, sir,” the witness replied, “that the shot had been fired into the head of the deceased some time after death.” Silence was impossible. There was a babel of whispering. voices through- out the court, Doctor Jacobs, it was noticed was livid. Miss Hammond was rubbing her face with her handkerchief. The trembling fingers ‘of her other hand held a stick of lip-salve. “That is a most extraordinary statement of yours, doctor,” the coroner pointed out. “It is the result of my very care- ful examination of the body,” the police surgeon said. i The coroner waved him away, and his place was taken by a well-dres- sed, portly looking gentleman. The coroner turned towards him. “Your name is Doctor Marriott, I the ' Euston.” “That is my name and position.” {At this point Doctor Jacobs was seen to rise stealthily to his feet. A burly-looking man in plain clothes who was standing immediately be- (hind touched him on the shoulder, however, and he resumed his place. ! “You have seen the body of the deceased ?”’ | “Yes, sir.” “Are you able to identify it?” “Certainly. It is the body of Sid- ney John Mason, who died in one (of my wards last Thursday week ‘from morphine poisoning.” | The murmur of voices rose until and worked upon a theory of my own, which turned out to be There was a ripple of sensationin the correct one. I looked up Doctor | Jacobs’ past, and I didn’t think ‘much of it. I paid a visit to the "hospital and discovered that a pa- i tient, attended by Doctor Jacobs, had died there three days before of morphine poisoning, and had been buried at a certain cemetery near. * i “A few more inquiries, and I dis- covered that Doctor Jacobs was pay- ing off some ‘pressing debts *' and was ordering whisky by the case in- stead of by the bottle, that two men from the undertaker’s establishment with whom the hospital had a con- tract had been drunk for two days, and that Miss Hammond was divid- ing her time between buying a trousseau and trying to get down to Tilbury. “Starr had thought the scheme out carefully enough. He had got hold of a crook doctor, spent money freely, squared the landlady at the , Temperance Hotel and up to a cer- ‘tain point the thing worked out ac- | cording to plan.” “And what about Starr?” “Well, we shall know in a few minutes,” Benskin replied, looking down the crowded room. | An offical looking messenger, pre- ceded by one of the club officials, was making his way towards them. Benskin, with a word of apology to his chief, tore open the envelop of the note which the messenger hand- ‘ed to him. | “Starr was arrested this afternoon at Tilbury,” he announced. “He and ‘Miss Hammond were off on the , Commissioner. the coroner was forced to tap sharp-' ly upon the table before him. As soon as silence was restored he turned back to the witness with a question. “Can you account in any way for the body of one of your patients, who ,died in your hospital and who ‘should have been buried under its , auspices, being found in a temper- ance hotel in the Euston Road, sur- i rounded by evidences of another per- | sonality ?” “If my answer to your question involves no contempt of the court,” the witness replied, “I should reply at once that the fact can be ac- counted for only by the existence of a cleverly exploited and carried out conspiracy. Mason's body left the hospital for burial at two on the | day arranged for. A coffin was de- ' posited in the grave prepared, before three o'clock.” | “You know that the grave has been dug up, and the coffin found to contain nothing but bricks?” the coroner asked. “Such is my information.” Three times the coroner was forced to appeal for silence. At last he rose to his feet. “Gentlemen of the jury,” he said, , “your unnecessary presence here, as you have now gathered, has been "due to a conspiracy with which an- ' other court will have to deal. | are discharged immediately from the present case, and relieved from all future services for two years. Any ‘further proceedings in connection ‘with the deceased,” the coroner pro- ceeded dryly, with a significant glance in front of him, “wll take in another court.” | The burly-lookng man leaned for- ward and touched Doctor Jacobsup- You ~ Ortana tonight for the South Sea Isalands.” “Poor rascal!” sighed the Sub- —Hearst’s Interna- tional Cosmopolitan. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. Bellefonte Trust company, Adm. to Bond M. Hartsock, tract in Pat- ton Twp.; $600. Eleanor R. Gettig to Harry C. Rothrock, et ux, tract in Port Ma- tilda; $1. Luther Strouse, et ux, to N. 8. Jones, et ux, tract in Ferguson Twp.; $709.60. D. P. Woodring, et ux, to Willis D. Woodring, tract in Port Matilda; $500. Jacob Krumrine to Daniel A, Krumrine et ux, tract in State Col- lege; $1. Susan Kerin, et al, to Thomas W, Kerin, et ux, tract in Snow Sh Twp.; $1. Hattie Miller to Witmer Steel Co., tract in Miles Twp., et al; $300. George E. Stover et ux, to A. S, Stover, tract in Haines Twp.; $1. Olga K. Messmer, et bar to Harold H. Shirk, et ux, tract in State College; $8,400. H. W.Rote et al, to John Rachau, tract in Gregg Twp.; $565. John Rachau, et ux, to Roy R. Zettle tract in Gregg Twp.; $650. Lizzie Homan to J. L. Miller, tract in Penn Twp.; $100. George Cartright, et ux, to John J. Cartright, et ux, tract in Snow Shoe Twp.; $1. Senior (accidentally stepping on Sophomore’s foot) —Pardon me, didn’t mean to walk on your foot.” Sophomore—*“Oh, that’s all right; I walk on them myself.” - . —“The Mountain Echo,” Altoona.