\ organist could find on such short no. tice, . So Jim did not know what to make tt J | of it when he saw the boy evidently : I NY ih a preparing to sing alone, Jim knew Ta ' | each boy's capabilities In a musical — 4 a way by this time as well as the organ- ist himself did, and he knew that this boy could not sing the musie ly. The organist began to play; boy looked frightened. It was for him to beg he hesitated choked. The turned around. The next instant a wonderful strength and ed the church, After played steadily on from whence or volce proce ded. but it was Ti ugh the glowing and proper- the time and partly of sweetness fill voice the organist did the a single start He whom not heavenly end. end, withot fear with a God to or ) thrilling » and devotion, Jim poured id died 4 } i nad ¥ Easter Reading. trl ¢ t neither in Oi Taal 1 hn deliberating, stood Jim. cold wing tore round the and to from snatch his head the wind. had had an luck this af. and seld 11 his papers and oot oon, now several in his pockets, coins which meant for a night's coins him a good hot lodging. He turned and crossing street after had wandered into a section -of city where he very rarely most prosperous section, judging from the fine broad avenue, Jim was cold this time, and thought that he would retrace his when his attention was attract- ed by the sound of music. It came from a church close by, which stood invitingly open. ed nice and warm inside; no one in sight, and Jim softly stepped in and sat down at the back of church, which was in semi-darkness The only lights were away down at the other end, where were gath- ered a group of boys about Jim's age, and a man seated at an the man began to play and the boys to sing. Now one would hardly have guessed on seeing Jim that he a musician himself, but he great reputation who were sure that not one of the famous singers of the day had a voice supper and long, sauntered a ll he ¢ street, by steps % the Jim's, Jim was Interested at once when he heard music in the church. Oh, the beautiful music! He had never heard anything like it in his life. It made him almost unhappy at one mo- ment, and he would rise to go, only it Reld him so that he could not. But the boys! His rose as he heard and watched them. The man was evidently trying careless and would not others were stupid and learn. Finally the boys becagne so restless that the man rose, and clos ing the organ, told them all to come the next afternoon; and immediately there was a wild scramble for the door, That night Jim would neither pay nor whistle for his friends, to thelr great surprise; but the grand, uplift. ing strains which he had heard that afternoon still lingered 1u his ears, The next afternoon, as #oon as his papers were sold, Jim started again listen, hing by the | could have sung ! ot! 4% of patience Jim was comple with one boy beautiful part { Lo sing alone, evid limax of | the whole plece, ane | like a sky | it was | thing! What he apparently les forgotten the 1 lark, so pure an A task Was i 1 and mutter { at the | i i of it. § They | Baster celebration, | from the conversation, | up his mind that he on that day himself | 80 many of the rehearsals by | time that he felt at home In the church: but it seemed a very dif. { ferent to him in the light | the bright spring morning, when Jim walked up to the door on Easter Day Eh sn Great Ocean Greyhound. of immensity Maurefania getting as were Jim learned | “a and he would be He had attended | this thi HOT CROS! Chinese Are Waking Up. Hardly a province of ( has es {| caped the and if a ried out hina mania for railways, én nt recent sat i the lined projected are oOo quite i the 1 rojected are car some remotest paris lace of f the empire will » rendered easy 16 many carriages, the throngs of An 1¢ hardly dared go in, but he Cunarder the of may dressed people so abashed him idea the — | A VOICE OF WONDERFUL STRENGTH AND SWEETNESS FILLED | THE CHURCH gathered from the length of her cable This is about 19500 feet long and weighs, with its shackles, 130 tons, finally found an opportunity to go in | unobserved, and slipped quietly into | his accustomed geat. The church | | quickly filled, even the corner | where Jim sat, to After a while there was a sound of | distant singing, and soon the boys came walking in procession, and sing. ing the music that Jim had heard them | learning, In their choir garments they looked | little like the rough, careless boys of the day before, He did not know that the boy with the beautiful voice, who was to have sung the solo part, had suddenly been taken ill, and that the organist, In despair, had been obliged to substitute in his place one of the nize him, my son. His conceit his other boys, who was not capable of been quite insufferable since he posed filling it, but was the best that the | for those capdy rabbits.”—Puck. w — Young Mrs, Bunny-—-"Don't recog So — A ATI STATE OF PENNSYLVANIL Latest News Gleaned From Various Parts. Emma, the 2-year-old daaugnter of Benjamin Schelrer, of Allentown, was fatally injured in a fall from a window of the second story of her home. The little girl crept onto the window sill, lost her balance and fell. John Dalley, of Walnutport, was struck and Instantly killed by a fast freight train near his home. Charles F. Raap, who was chosen Chief Burgess of Orwigsburg at the last election, early tired of the office, submitting his ignation. Thomas J. Reed was named the Court his successor. The stocking of ted trout stream ted there he Run, Pottsville, 1 Ire by as Schuylkill's de- with fry has ing been placed miles west of trout from several l 5,000 young Harri fisheries A fund raised by Of lamsport with memorial tablet in nor of the tha the peo- which to the city John P, who WAS late 3 0 tng the patroln week ago while attemg a notorious imina has rder in the for beating He fractured her f hd fle Purcell, er of the eri. gi locomo- the * Board of Tax Revision and J 41 peals of Easton has in three davs creased the assessed Firat ond Wards Gon Nearly all the va Yani VAIUALIONn nearly § increases and Sex ! have been made in business The train i roperijes northbound Reading lelphia, rq { irom 11iad passengers, loaded with collided with heavily an outbuilding which had fallen from a terrace along the rafilroad near Shamokin landed in the middle of the track The en- gine tore the bullding in half and kept on the rails along with the cars and Lawrence H as the orator for the annual Memorial day exercises to be held in Allentown May 30 At a rectora of plang for a accepted of Di Bank meeting of the Board the Mirst National new The building is cost in the neighborhood of $35.000 and will be the largest bank biflding the town. It will contain to the quarters occupied by the bank eleven offices. a two lodge rooms the Independent lows, The the granite second and third of terra cotta After frankly telling that she loved another man, Mrs Samuel Kellenberger, of Lancaster, is said to have eloped with Garfield Moore, who leaves behind him a wife and five children. Both parties are under 30 years of age. Mrs. Kellen- berger is an unusually attractive au- burn-<haired girl. Moore was a trol- ‘ey conductor and the affair is the result of a street car romance. The couple became accquainted while Moore was on a suburban resort line which Mrs. Kellenberger frequented Charles De Huff, » Royersford igar manufacturer, who has made tperiments with the soil on various farms in that locality, has induced . number of farmers to form a com- any and engage in the raising of ‘obacco. The soll is sald to be equal ‘o Lancaster County and over fifty crea will be planted this year as an xprriment. Caught in some machinery at the ‘rizer-Painter Stove Works, Wilmot, amuel Sheetz bad his right arm o badly mangled that it had to be imputated above the elhow. to be Order atructure is to by Fel occupied of Odd of stories, first x -— ————————————— ATTORNEYS, D. » vorruxy Jno. F. Gray & Son (Bucctssors 0. ., GRANT HOOVER Control Sixteen of the Largest Fire and Life Insurance Companies in the World. , , .. THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST , , . No Mutuals No Assessments Before insuring your life see the contract of THE HOME which in ease of death between the tenth and twentieth years re- turns all premiums paid in ed. dition to the face of the policy. ATTORNEY AT-LAW BELLEFONTE, FA Office North of Court House. Pm —— ee ww. HARRISON WALEKYXR ATTORNEY AT LAW BELLEFONTE, PA — No. I W. High Street. All professional business promptly sttended w Iwo. J. Bows Fa | CET, BOWER & ZERBY ATTORNEYS AT LAW EsoLx Brook BELLEFONTE, PA, Buocessors 10 Orvis, Bower 4 Orvis Consultation in English and German. to Loan on Firet Mortgage Office in Crider's Stone Building BELLEFONTE, PA. Telephone Connection TTT rrr YY Irreeeereeeiiid Money S—— — a —————— CLEMENT DALE ATTORNEY AT-LAW EELLEFONTR, PA. Office N. W, corner Diamond, two doors from | First Natiopal Bank. jy 09 VV VDVVUVUVUNd | ¢ | woos | ARGEST [NSURANCE § LA EENCY IN GENTRE COUNTY H. E.FENLON Agent Bellefonte, Penn’a. ex oo ———————————— The and Best Accident Ins. Companies Bonds of Every Descrip- tion. Plate Glass In- surance at low rates. ATTORNEY AT LAW BELLEFONTE PA. All kinds of legal business sliended to prompily Epecial sitention given to collections, Office, 8d Soor Crider's Exchange ire HB fraveLER i ATTORKEY-AT-LAW BELLEFONTE. PA, | Practices In all the courts. Consuilation in | English and German. Office, Crider's Exchange | Bu Building trol | Old For Hote f ERR a EDWARD ROYER, Proprietor Largest Location | One mile South of Centre Hall. Accommodations fSrst-class. Good bay. wishing te enjoy an evening given stiention. Meals for such opoesiond pared on short notice Alwam for the transient trade. RATES: §1.00 PER DAY. The National Hotel MILILHEIM, PA IL A. BHAWYVER, Prop. First cham socommodations for the traveler @0od table board and sleeping apartments The eholosst Isquors at the bar, Stable age fommodations for horses is the best 50 by bed. Bus to and from all trains on he Lewisburg and Tyrone Rail st Coburg — Cr Ne— —— - LIVERY .2 Special Effort made to Accommodate Com. mercial 1 ravelers.... | D. A. BOOZER ' Centre Hall, Pa. Penn'a R. R 9% 9% 99990909909 VeD WWW VD DDD VDD VSN eH NNN NNN ® B50 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE Trave Manks Desians CoPYRIGHTS — t ng Patents take through Mun: spend we, without charge, int - ifi A Scientific American, A handsomely fllostrated weekly, Largest oir. F scientific jlcurnal, Terms. $8 a tha, $1 850d yall newsdealers, "26 Broaden, New York ¥ Bt. Washir*wn, THE OTHER SE oF THE WORLD | Penn's Valley Banking Company in- ul woot out hat ven MUN & C Branch Offos CENTRE HALL, PA W. B. MINGLE, Cashi¢’ Recelves Deposits . . Discounts Notes . . . portland | mples par five times its entire Hamburg, ¢ Far East MARBLE wo GRANITE. 0% fontigs. 5 an elec- modern : to Japan in an | ». and Russian calico a German wrap- | ilding in Japan employs 10, | 'n at Nagasaki, Kobe | at Osaka. All the Japanese | t are full orders R060 at A of Japanese savings bank deposits on | July 21, 1906, were $16,500,000 more than on December 31, 1905, a great gain for only seven months i H. GQ. STRCHIIEIER, Many Chinese are becoming natur- CBNTRE MALL, . . . . . alized Japanese. The Japanese Con- | suls in China are legally empowered | to confer Japanese citizenship ! Manufacturer of using re-enforced | and Dealer In new buildings with . marked Success : HIGH GRADE ... it is also being used : MONUMENTAL WORK ir culvert pipes and other purposes In ail kinds of Marble am i (Granite, Dom" fail to got my prioss Manila is freely concrete for its New South Wales offers $30 a head toward the passage money of ap- proved agriculturistsa and domestic | servants that colony, and $20 a head for other desirable immigrants. Column after column of the news- papers in the Far East is filled with news about railways building, built and projected in China. The same is true as to Japan and the Federated Malay States. to Preach That Earth is Square, Members of the First Church of | God (or Christ) are causging a revo lution in religious mutters in the Goose Creek neighborhood, south of this city. They preach that the earth is square, quoting from the Bible that the peopie are to be gathered from the four corners of the earth, | and that they are to carry the gospel to al! who inhabit the four corners of the earth. They speak in strange tongues and an interpreter is required for those who talk in the meetings, They re- quire converts to believe that Christ was not born in a manger, but under an apple tree, and they banish sick. | ness by laying on of hands and other | ceremonies. Fifty-nine converts are | reported, some of whom are men well known in this city. —- Martinsville Correspondence Indianapolis News. Safe, Quick, Reliable Regulator Bupert her remedies nt high oes. Cure rao, Tt need gpa 200,000 Women. Price, 33 Cents, drag. gists or hy mail, Testizseonials & bookie! frees. Pr. LaFrance, Philadelphia, Pa. s————" w Ar A LEE'S... NEW LIFE TEA CONSTIPATION, INDIGESTION, SICK HEADACHE, SE tohs D. Langham, Holley, N Y. ~ TOMMY'S THEORY. “Yes, Tommy, it was in Salem that they burned the witches." “Gee, but that must have been a cold winter." Cleveland Plaindealer,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers