18 Business Locals CERTAINTIES Yea, you can put SIOO ig bank in stead of buying automobile insurance, but then you would be your own In surance company, and If you should happen to Injure someone, or your automobile should burn, you would simply have your SIOO, and be obliged, as many have before you. to pay dam ages for several thousand dollars. Bet ter pay us a reasonable premium, and let us take care of your trouW®. Aetna-Esstck. BREEZY THINGS for hot days. When the thermometer registers near the hundred mark Just get In out of the sun and send for us to Install one of our oscillating electric fans. It will send a breeze Into any corner you desire when you fall to find one any other place. Dauphin Elec trical Supplies Co., 434 Market street COMPANY IN MISERY makes it light. But when you're *n need of money it's poor consolation to know that your friend is in the same predicament and has none to loan you. We make a specialty of loaning small sums of at the lowest rates in the city and lower than the law per mits us to charge. Pennsylvania In vestment Co., 132 Walnut street. ENOUGH IS AS GOOD as a feast Whatever your appetite craves for, whether much or little In this hot weather, you will find It here In appetizing array. The best 26 cent noonday luncheon in the city or a sandwich and a glass of butter milk or iced tea. Court Dairy Lunch, In charge of John H. Monger, Court and, Straw berry streets. WE DON'T HAVE T9 . be told as much as we have to be re ! minded. Everyone knows that Bill Jones Is In business, but If he fails to remind them of what he has to sell they will naturally think of his com petitor who tells them his story. Let us show you our multlgraph facsimile letters. Weaver Typewriting company, 26 North Third street JUST T.IKTC CHRISTMAS! Little lead soldiers and wooden ones too; little dolls and big dolls, rag dolls and pretty dolls; doll tea sets in china and aluminum, and a house full of pretty toys and games the year through. Just like Christmas every day at the Marianne Kinder Markt 218 Locust street COME TO THINK OF IT It's all right tor you to be proud of La Franca. If you weren't, we couldn't be. La France shoes can't be "ground out." The makers make as many as they can, right, no more, i For ladles, in high oxfords or pumps, at $3.50 to $5. For sale only at Delch ler's. Thirteenth and Market streets. GEISHA WAISTS And other Japanese articles innumer able, such as long crepe l'.imonos and kimonos for babies, embroidered slip pers, beads, hand embroidered fans, jewel cases, cushions and the many quaint and artistically designed ar ticles from Japan. All so distinctively different from the average that the difference appeals to all who see thcin. Mrs. Ida Cranston, 204 Locost street FRESH, FRAGRANT FLOWERS Corsage bouquets or gorgeous show ers, cut flowers and blooming plants; baskets of beautiful flowers that sim ply captivate can be arranged on short order. The freshness of the flowers and their beauty is seen in the high est degree in the flowers and does credit to our reputation as leaders. Schmidt, Florist. 313 Market street. AS YOU LIKE TT If you are not satisfied with your present laundry work, then send us I your trial order. We believe we have i the facilities and the trained help nec- i essary to get the work out as you like j it. People who let us do their work seldom if ever make a change of their own accord. Try the Troy. Either 1 '.ione brings the wagon. BETTER CUT THE SHOE than pinch the foot, is not modern logic. Send the shoes to us and we'll put on a new sole and expand the vamp so as to permit greater comfort. The shoe will then be as good as new. The Goodyear way is our way. While you wait, If desired. City Shoe Re pairing Co., 317 Strawberry street. LUKE WALKING ON EGGS Those who have corns or callouses on the soles of their feet find it pain ful stepping on hot days. Potts' Corn Paint for hard corns, and Potts' French Corn Leaf for soft corns are the beet corn shelters that give your feet comfort and permit a firm tread. 10 cents at Potts' Drug Store, Third and Herr streets. PROOF OF THE PUDDING is in the eating. The proof of a tire is Its ability to "eat up miles." A rub ber cook can drybake the life out of a tire as easily as a pastry cook can drybake the life out of a pudding. Mil kr tires are steam cured, therefore, more elastic and durable. Phone Ster ling Auto Tire Co., 1451 Zarker St. PROTECTED FROM FIRE! By using asbestos material such as mill board, paper, pipe covering, cor rugated paper and cement. We carry a good line of this material. E. Math er Co., 204 Walnut St., plumbing, mill and automobile supplies. FOLLOW THE WISE FEW rather than the foolish many. The thrifty ones put away a part of their weekly earning? for investment while the many live from hand-to-mouth trusting to chance. A little each week will soon grow to be a considerable sum. We are open market mornings from 6to 8. East End bank, 13th and Howard strrots. THIS GETS THE MEN They will be interested in our spe cial lot of men's oxfords, regular $3 and $3.50 values, our price $1.98. Latest style English toe, Goodyear welt. See them in our window. The store that has shoes that wear, 7 South Market Square, 20th Century Shoe Co. Our chain of stores gives us ex ceptional buying opportunities. SATISFACTION That men: : u great deal In laundry U means the clothes must be c»n and Ironed to please you. It also means that they must not be torn < r eaten tip with strong chemicals. It Includes a prompt delivery service, and a price that will please. Satisfaction is the foundation of our business suc cess. The Arcade Laundry. Both phones. D. E. Glazier, proprietor. A CHEAP BICYCLE • may cost you twice as much as it is worth in upkeep. The Flying Mer kel is the most up-to-date bicycle in the market. Each part entering Into the Construction is made in their own factory where the r..ost careful atten tion is given to every little detail. Keystone Supply Co., 814 North Third street, bicycle repairing and electrical fans. FRIDAY EVENING, Copyright, 1513, by LHtlo. Brown • Company The Story by Chapters. Chapter l*-On a Charge ef Murder. Chapter ll.—Detective Michael Kearney. Chapter Second Degree. Chapter |V«—No. 60,108. Chapter V.—Planning. Chapter Vl.—The Getaway. Chapter Vll.—Helpe From the I Dead. Chapter VlH«—Hunted. Chapter IX.—The Coming if the Woman. Chapter X<—-The Hand of the Law Stretchea Out. Chapter For a Pur poee. Chapter XII. Loaing the Bhadowe. Chapter XIII. —Two Potent Aide. Chapter XIV.—On the Trail of the Quarry. Chapter XV.—The Sacrifioe. Chapter XVI. —Reatitution. CHAPTER I. On a Charge of Murder. »** THAT'S the charge. lleuten- Wf ant?" y T "Murder." Inspector Rinscombe, In charge of the central office of New York's police department, gave the prisoner before him a second and more searching glance. The prisoner straightened his well formed shoulders as he returned the glance. He stood with a pair of thin and soiled hands clasped before him. There was a glint of steel at the wrists, the sleeves of his coat only partly hid ing the mnnncles that shamed him. His clothes were those of a boy from the country, and he wore them awk wardly in the bright, sunny room of the chief of the city's detectives, where everything was spick and span and the uniforms of the office staff as trim and fresh as though just from the depart ment's tailoring contractor. Ranscombe. a man beyond the half century mark, short and at times bru tal in his speech, his heavy jaw and bristling white mustache suggesting latent ferocity, felt a little twiuge at his heart as he told himself that this youth bore none of the marks of the born criminal. "What's your name, boy?" he asked sharply. "James Montgomery," was the an swer, huskily given. "How old are you?" "Twenty-one." "Guilty?" Montgomery shook his head as his Hps trembled and the denial of guilt re fused to leave them. The inspector turned to the detective lieutenant in charge of the prisoner. "What Is it. Kearney." he asked—"a j street quarrel?" "No. sir; bank watchman killed. He's a yegg." "A yegg!" "Yes, sir. The West Side National bank was blown last night. The i "The policeman on the beat got thil lad." watchman waa murdered. Three met did the job. The policeman on the beat beard the explosion and got this lad. The other two made their get away." "YOll got a case here that won't fal down ?" "Yes, air; It's a good case." The inspector hesitated as If debat ing in bis mind whether to put the boy through an examination. Lieuten ant Kearney seldom needed aid from I his chief. He was a detective of ex | perienre and one who could safely bf I trusted to clear up any case. Ranscombe turned to the pile of doc amenta on his deak. "Take him to the identification de partment and go ahead with the case." he instructed the detective. I The fingers of Kearney's right hand ; gathered up the folds of his prisoner's sleeve until his grip became visellke. He wheeled about and started for the corridor, the boy half staggering along | with him. In the main hall of the building they | took a rattling and palsied elevator to | the top floor. Here they entered a small, dingy room where were scales, j a large tripod with a camera topping It and an Iron frame for holding In position the head of the subject to be photographed. Two Identification experts In uniform took the prisoner in hand and photo graphed him, profile and full face. Montgomery was then placed on a small platform and his height measure ment made. One of the experts filled in an identification sheet as the other took the length of the prisoner's arms and legs, the circumference of the trunk at the navel and the hips and the chest measurement. With a steel compass the measurement between the base of the nose and the base of the skull was made. The expert called off the length and breadth of the right ear In a droning voice. All the figures went down in Ink on the Identification blank, a piece of white cardboard six inches wide by four in length. The man at the desk put down his pen and left his chair, advancing to the prisoner. He stopped directly be fore him and fastened his eyes on Montgomery's as if to hypnotize him. The prisoner returned the gaze, his pupils dilating as fear crept Into his heart—a fear that he could not define. ! He had not slept in thirty-six hours, and he had not eaten in twenty-four. He felt as if his body were swaying, but the clear, searching eyes so close to his seemed to hold him to his heels. Suddenly the eyes of the expert were withdrawn, and Montgomery regained control of Ills senses. He saw the man back at his desk and writing. He was putting into the record the color of the prisoner's eyes, a description of their shape and of whatever peculiarities he had discovered in them. In his weak and exhausted condition Montgomery was easily bewildered. He was in a state of mild stupefaction as the man with the measuring instru ments again began work. Soon the expert's voice was droning out more measurements. The length of the nose at the bridge, it* projection at the high- I est point and at the nostrils, the height ' and width and peculiarities of the fore head, the shape of the chin, the nature of the setting and filling of the teeth, their number and condition, the shape of the lobe of the right ear and its bor der, the color of the hair and its con | dition were all placed in the record that would make James Montgomery a marked man and easy police prey for the rest of his life. Kearney unlocked the handcuffs. "Take ofT your clothes." he ordered. The naked lad was placed on the scales and his weight taken. The left foot and the little finger of the left hand "were measured. The two experts then examined every square inch of the prisoner's body and made note of every mark, mole, scar and cutaneous peculiarity. As Montgomery feebly struggled back into his home fashioned under wear and poorly fitting suit of clothes the Bertillou men studied him careful ly and keenly, as if they were two con noisseurs at a county fair passing upon an especially interesting steer. They were seeking material to fill in that part of the record carrying the title line "Peculiarities of Habit and Action." They conferred in whispers and de cided that the prisoner belonged to the "dopey" class. He was of good frame, but appeared listless and weak. They were not medical men. and they could not know that malnutrition was the cause of the lad's feebleness and that misery of soul had sent his manhood reeling over the ropes. The prisoner was led to a desk on which was a long, white form ruled into twelve rectangles. A Bertillon man caught his wrists and pressed his fingers down upon a marble slab cov ered with printer's ink. The prints of all the fingers of each hand were made ,in the record, and then prints of the first joints of the four fingers were made in other rectangles. A pen was handed the prisoner, and be was made to sigu his name to the sheet of paper. As he lifted the pen from the paper the Bertillon man grasped his right fore finger and made a separate record of It just under the name. The police no longer depended on the name or facial characteristics as a mean* of Identifying the prisoner. The name James Montgomery meant little If anything now. But the little whorls, "islands.parabolas and "breaks" showing in the finger prints in that record forever tagged their man. He might grow old and feeble and so change his appearance that even his own brother would know him not but the finger prints would never change, and no other human bora on earth would have the same little circles in the skin which nature so wonderfully and strangely twists in separate de signs for each of the human species. The police record of James Mont gomery went Into the files and his pic tures into the gallery of rogues. Kearney took his man back to the Wheezy elevator and below to the main HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH floor. A short flight of winding stair* took them to the basement and a little' prison known as "the barrel." This cramped and dark place would bold Montgomery until he was arraigned before a magistrate and the slow proc ess of marching through the courts to prison or liberty was begun. Here, be neath the level of the street, be could send no word to lawyer or friend, and he was as far removed from the sav ing benefits of the habeas corpus as if he were existing before the signing of Magna Charta. Pending Ills arraignment in court this citizen of the United States was without one single trace of considera tion by the law which was written for his protection. It was noon the next morning when Montgomery groped about his little black cell and found an iron shelf hinged to one of its walls. He threw himself on a dirty, twisted blanket, his body worn out and his mind a blank. I His stomach called for food, but be dared not ask for any. The lunch | hour tramping of feet above lulled him into oblivion. His tired eyes closed, and he slept A voice, sounding very faintly at first, but gathering volume until his ears ached, awakened him. "I thought you was dead," he heard the turnkey say. "JHere, take this." The prisoner dropped his legs over the Iron pallet's edge and held out his hands. The turnkey had brought him a large tlncup filled with beef stew, and the savor of it made the boy's brain reel with the delights of anticipation. He lifted the cup to his lips and drank from it eagerly. • The turnkey handed him a piece of bread. He clutched it, stuck it into the stew and ate of It with little grunts of animal satisfac tion. Montgomery beard the cell door slam and the key turn in the lock. As the welcome process of digestion started the starved, tired lad forgot bis sor rows and remembered his miseries no more in dreamless and refreshing slumber. Simple as was the food, and only too slight for a famished youth, it started the blood coursing healthily through his vejns once more. This second sleep brought back his strength, and the fog that had come to his brain while he was undergoing the strange hardships of identification began to lift When he wakened again he found that nature, replenished with fuel, bad cast off the dread load of despair that had settled upon him. He knew not whether it was clay or night. He rubbed his face briskly, tak ing a dry bath and equalizing the sur face circulation of his blood. He threw out his arms and legs vigorously, re moving the kinks in his muscles. Through the bars of the cell he saw the yellow smear of light and the turn key sitting beneath it smoking a pipe. He was debating the advisability of asking the day and hour when the door of the "barrel" rattled and his keeper bestirred himself. A man in uniform was admitted. The turnkey placed his pipe in his chair and came to Montgomery's cell. "Get your hat." he ordered as he unlocked the door. Montgomery groped about for his cloth cap. found it and stepped out of ! the cell. "It's time for the lineup," he was in- ! formed. "They want you upstairs." In charge of the uniformed man he made his way up the winding stair way and stepped into the blindlrg sunlight which flooded the assembly room of the detective bureau. The room was large and wainscoted high with racks of pictures—the old rogues' gallery. In the center of the room was a clump of fifteen men and three wo men. They made up the police crop of the night before. Yeggmen. bur glars, pickpockets, confidence men and a black browed Sicilian bomb thrower were Included in the group. The wo men. blowsy. frowsy and insolent, were common thieves. Montgomery was put In this herd and told to wait there. Half a dozen uniformed policemen were doing duty as doormen. After a few ml mites of anxious, nerve wearing delay ;i door opened and on the threshold appeared a man In the garb of a citizen. Montgomery felt the prisoners about him turning in one direction and he turned and looked. He saw the man In the door. There was something uncanny about his appearance, and be looked more closely. The man's face was covered with a black mask. He stepped into the room and another masked man ap peared on the threshold. The prisoners in the center of the room drew closer together. There was a snicker of contempt from several of them and a whispered anathema as the plain clothes men gradually began to crowd the room. Montgomery counted the first and then the second dozen and Htlll they came, silently, and showing hideous black patches where human faces should have been. The detectives peered steadily at the i faces and forms within the circle, j studying their "Peculiarities of Habit I uud Action." The hunters would know | their quarry again when time came I to break open new leads, but the quar i ry In flight would not know the faces | of the men after them, j Montgomery's head was swimming, and his heart going like a trip hammer when he was shoved Into a prison van with the others and taken to the Jeffer i bou Market police court In the lower west side to be arraigned. As dismal as was the interior of the ill lighted courtroom, the first glimpse of the black robed magistrate brought I a feeling of relief to Montgomery. He j was In a court of Justice, an institution • designed for people in the very plight lln which be found himself. The inno- I cent would here find protection, and the guilty would receive punishment The courts were as much for .the peo ple as for the police, he thought. As the line of prisoners edged along In front of the magistrate's desk he began to frame the words he would say in Ills owii behalf. Surely he would be given u chance to declare his innocence. At last It came his turn. He stepped upon the little elevation known as the "bridge' and looked over the edge of the magistrate's desk. The magistrate did not look at the prisoner, but gave all his attention to a document placed before him by a clerk at his right hand. He signed it and gave it to De tective Kearney, who held fast to the sleeve of the accused. The policeman on duty at the bridge pulled back the prisoner, and Kearney started off through the crowd with him. In his right hand the detective held the docu ment committing Montgomery to the Tombs to await an Investigation of the charge against him and an indictment by the grand Jury. Within a half hour from the time he stepped upon the bridge with his pro test of innocence ready on his lips .lames Montgomery was in a cell in murderers' row in the Tombs. CHAPTER 11. Detective Michael Kearney. M A ICHAEL KEARNEY was one IWI °' tke star plain clothes men ["I of New York. He had little imagination, and the psycho logical theories of Munsterberg and Lombroso did not interest him. His life was given to dealing with the raw stuff—the actual criminal and the ac tual crime. He never shaped a theory. The district attorney and his assistants could Indulge in that after he had turned in the evidence. Kearney "went on the cops," as the department slang has It, when he was twenty-three years old. He had done two years' work at the polls in his elec tion precinct, and his father before him had been a politician. He was among the humble but nevertheless ef ficient and necessary toilers In the great political machine which for so many years controlled the government of New York. In the police school Kearney was taught how to heel a crook, how to strangle an assailant, how to suddenly shoot upward the heavy base of his big right hand to the chin of a foe from the underworld and shock his brain with the jolt and other essen tials which he worked out with dogged application and terrific sweat on the wrestling mats In the training room. After this kindergarten training Kearney went to the identification school, where he was taught the urt of keeping a fellow human branded with his guilt until the day of his death, j At a little desk of the same style of ! construction that Is used in the public schools he sat for days, listening keen ly to lectures and watching his instruc ' tor draw 011 the blackboard human profiles and sketches of ears and noses. Here he developed the power of obser vation and also strengthened his mem ory. As Kearney advanced in his profes sion lie became known as a detective who never stopped on a trail until he had caught up with the quarry. After five years he was made a first grade lieutenant at headquarters. He had become a silent, almost sullen, man, looked up to by those under him and feared by those over him, who drew larger salaries, but who had less capac ity as man hunters. If any of the sense of humor had come to him with his Irish blood Kear ney lost it in early youth with other boyish pleasures. But Kearney had one pleasure in life. This pleasure was his home. It was not the home of the average man of thirty years, with a contented wife and growing children, but it was good enough for Kearney, for his old mother kept it spotlessly clean and snug for him. and therein she worshiped her only son. In a comfortable little flat in the lower east side mother and son lived. She was all the world to him, and he was the apple of her eye. The day before the trial of James Montgomery for murder Kearney start ed home after a long conference with a young assistant district attorney who had been given the case for prosecu tion. They had gone over the evi dence together carefully, and both had agreed, with considerable satisfaction, that the jury would surely bring in a verdict of murder in the second degree if it failed to bring in a first degree verdict entailing death in the chair. Counsel had been appointed by a justice in the criminal division of the supreme court, as Montgomery was friendless and penniless. An efTort bad been made to have this lawyer plead ttuilty to manslaughter for the de fendant. The docket was heavy, and time and expense would be saved. For thus helping out the county, Montgom ery would be repaid with a sentence of fifteen or twenty years. But the boy's counsel reported that his client Insist ed on his innocence and refused to plead guilty to any degree of crime. [To be Continued.) Business Locals NO GUESSWORK In the making of Holsum and Butter nut bread. Every loaf is always the same—never burnt, never sour, al ways that palatable and nutritive fla vor which distinguishes Schmidt's Butternut and Holsum from the ordi nary baker's bread. Made scientifi cally in surroundings especially sani tary. For sale at all good grocers. THE TWO-DOLLAR MAN Who is accustomed to paying that price for theater tickets has become a regular patron of the motion picture theaters. This was all that was neces sary to convince the great theatrical managers and playrlghts that the picture show is here to stay. The pro ductions of leading writers and actors may now be seen, first always, at the Victoria. BETTER AN EYE OUT Than always aching. In the days when proverbs were coined this wisdom may have applied, but In this age of mod em science and accurate optical equipment, there is no need to have one hour's discomfort through imper fect eyesight or ill-fitting glasses. Ralph L. Pratt. Eyesight Specialist, 807 North Third street. I'VE TRIED THEM ALL and I find that the Busy Bee Restau rant gives the most and best for the least money. That's the expression of one o- our satisfied patrons who la a I Market street business man. The>.'e are many more like him who always come back and contribute to our suc cess. Busy Bee Restaurant, 9 North Fourth street. JUNE 26, 1914. CITY ADVERTISING CITY ADVERTISING • TREASURY DEPARTMENT OF THE CITY OF HARRISBURG, PA. NOTICE TO BONDHOLDERS Notice Is hereby given to the holder Issued by the City of Harrlsburg, that of the City Treasurer on July 1, 1914, at will cease: . Street Paving Honda No. Amt. Street. C 48 »100 Plum Street. •C 73 100 Sayford Street. C 76 100 Sayford Street. C 81 100 10-foot alley, 80 feet E. of Cowden Street. C 87 100 Sayford Street. C 95 100 Chestnut Street. C 96 100 Chestnut Street. C 104 100 Moltke Alley. C 108 100 Hazel Alley. C 115 100 York Street. C 116 100 York Street. C 122 100 Apple Street. C 136 100 Basin Street. C 137 100 Basin Street. C 143 100 Third Street. C 150 100 Thompson Street. C 151 100 Thompson Street. C 152 100| Thompson Street. C 154 100 Tenth Street. C 155 100 Tenth Street. C 156 100 Tenth Street. C 157 100 Tenth Street. C 168 100 Tenth Street. C 162 100 Oliver Alley. C 191 100 State Street. C 192 100 State Street. C 193 100 State Street. C 194 100 State Street. C 212 100 Crescent Street. C 219 100 Green Street. C 220 100 Green Street. C 221 100 Green Street. C 222 100 Green Street. C 223 100 Green Street. C 224 100 Green Street. C 225 100 Green Street. C 226 100 Green Street. C 227 100 Green Street. C 228 100 Green Street. C 229 100 Green Street. C 230 100 Green Street. C 231 100 Green Street. C 244 100 Sixteenth Street. C 245 100 Sixteenth Street. C 255 100 Reese Street. C 262 100 Elm Street. C 263 100 Elm Street. C 264 100 Elm Street. C 265 100 Elm Street. C 279 100 Eighteenth Street. C 283 100 Seventeenth Street. C 284 100 Seventeenth Street. C 285 100 Seventeenth Street. C 286 100 Seventeenth Street. C 287 100 Seventeenth Street. C 288 100 Seventeenth Street. C 295 100 Briggs Street. C 296 100 Briggs Street. C 297 100 Briggs Street. C 299 100 Sixteenth Street. C 300 100 sixteenth Street. C 301 100 Sixteenth Street. C 302 100 Sixteenth Street. C 303 100 Sixteenth Street. C 304 100 Sixteenth Street. C 305 100 Sixteenth Street. C 306 100 Sixteenth Street. C 307 100 Sixteenth Street. C 308 100 Sixteenth Street. C 309 100 Sixteenth Street. C 312 100 Zarker Street. C 313 100 Zarker Street. C 314 100 Zarker Street. C 346 100 Penn Street. C 350 100 Market Street. C 351 100 Market Street. C 352 100 Market Street. C 353 100 Market Street. C 354 100 Market Street. C 355 100 Market Street. C 365 100 Carnation Street. C 366 100 Carnation Street. C 389 100 Granite Street. C 390 100 Granite Street. C 391 100 Granite Street. C 392 100 Granite Street. C 395 100 North Street. C 396 100 North Street. C 399 100 Disbrow Street. C 411 100 Evergreen Street. C 427 100 Kittatinny Street. C 431 100 Front Street. C 438 100 Fifth Street. C 439 100 Fifth Street. C 440 100 Fifth Street. C 441 100 Fifth Street. C 450 100 Hamilton Street. IIC 487 100 Penn Street. C 501 100 Clinton Street. C 502 100 Clinton Street. C 513 100 Relly Street. C 529 100 . Sixteenth Street. C 533 100 Fourteenth Street. C 545 100 Chestnut Street. C 546 100 Chestnut Street. IIC 551 100 Walter Alley. C 552 100 Walter Alley. I C 569 100 Zarker Street. C 576 100 Burkthorn Street. C 580 100 Apricot Street. C 681 100 Apricot Street. C 587 100 Bailey Street. C 614 100 Forest Street. C 625 100 Apricot Street. C 629 100 Juniper Street. C 630 100 Juniper Street. C 633 100 Shoop Street. C 641 100 Fourteenth Street. C 644 100 Logan Street. C 651 100 Fulton Street. C 651 100 Mayflower Street. C 670 100 Howard Street. C 671 100 Howard Street. C 681 100 Summit Street. C 684 100 Reservoir Street. C 701 100 Herr Street, lie 712 100 Refflna Street. |C 718 100 Reglna Street. C 721 100 10-foot alley, between Verbeke and Cumb. C 723 100 Boyd Street. C 730 100 Boyd Street. C 746 100 Logan Street. C 759 100 Granite Street. C 761 100 Sayford Street. C 781 100 Harris Street. C 809 100 Fir Street. C 810 100 Verbeke Street. C 825 100 Fourteenth Street. C 834 100 Granite Street. C 839 100 Delaware Street. C 851 100 Mifflin Street. C 854 100 Hunter Street. C 867 100 Emerald Street. ||C 886 100 Currant Street. C 893 100 Rhoades Street. C 895 100 Brady Street. C 917 100 Nectarine Street. C 934 100 Forrest Street. C 935 100 Forrest Street. C 945 100 Wood Street. C 955 100 Bambaugh Street. C 963 100 Helen Street. C 964 100 Helen Street. C 969 100 Park Street. C 983 100 Christian Street. C 990 100 Compass Street. C 991 100 Compass Street. C 1007 100 Twelfth Street. C 1008 100 Twelfth Street. C 1014 100 Zarker Street. C 1020 100 Brlggs Street. C 1026 100 Daisy Street. C 1033 100 Ethel Street. C 1044 100 Mary Street. C 1059 100 Whitehall Street. C 1060 100 Whitehall Street C 1067 100 River Street. C 1082 100 Gelger Street. C 1110 100 Myers Alley. C 1118 100 Helena Alley. C 1123 100 Haehnlen Street. C 1132 100 Shrub Street. C 1137 100 Berryhlll Street. C 1150 100 Boas Street. C 1166 100 Linden Street. C 1169 100 Miller Street. C 1171 100 Crabapple Street. C 1174 100 Calamus Street, c 1177 100 Ella Alley. > C 1178 100 Ella Alley. C 1181 100 Forster Street. C 1193 100 Thirteenth Street. C 1203 100 Brenslnger Street. C 1204 100 Brenslnger Street. C 1205 100 Brenslnger Street. C 1206 100 Brenslnger Street. C 1207 100 Susquehanna Street. C 1208 100 Susquehanna Street. C 1209 100 Atlas Street. C 1217 100 Penn Street. CC 55 200 Haehnlen Street. CC 110 200 River Street. CC 115 200 RWer Street. CC 120 200 Cumberland Street. CC 121 200 Cumberland Street. CC 136 200 Rose Street. CC 139 200 Curtis Alley. CC 141 200 Angle Alley. CC 147 200 Sixteenth Street. CC 149 200 Plum Street. CC 160 200 Hay Street. CC 163 200 Fourth Street. CC 164 200 Fourth Street. CC 165 200 Fourth Street. CC 172 200 Pear Street. CC 173 200 Pear Street. CC 180 200 Fulton Street. CC 185 200 Penn Street. CC 206 200 Berryhlll Street. CC 209 200 Hummel Street. CC 210 200 Hummel Street, lice 217 200 Cowden Street. CC 224 200 Wallace Street. CC 227 200 James Street. CC 236 200 Ash Street. CC 239 200 Sarah Street. CC 240 200 Sarah Street. CC 246 200 Fourth Street. CC ' 247 200 Fourth Street. CC 248 200 Fourth Street. CC 249 200 Fourth Street. CC 251 200 Charles Street. CC 252 200 Charles Street. CC 263 200 Charles Street. CC 254 200 Kunkel Alley. CC 255 200 Kunkel Alley. CC 260 200 Primrose Street rs of the following Improvement Bonds, the same will be redeemed at the offlcl which time Interest on all said bonds Street Paving Bonds No. Amt. Street. : If CC 261 200 Primrose Street V CC 264 200 Third Street. CC 265 200 Third Street. CC 266 200 Third Street. CC 267 200 Third Street. CC 268 200 Third Street. V CC 263 200 Third Street. CC 270 Third Street CC 271 200 Third Street. CC 286 200 Tenth Street CC 308 200 State Street CC 309 200 State Street. CC 310 200 State Street. CC 811 200 State Street. CC 313 200 State Street CC 813 200 State Street. CC 314 200 State Street. CC 315 200 State Street. CC 316 200 State Street CC 317 200 State Street CC 318 200 State Street CC 319 200 State Street. CC 320 200 State Street. CC 321 200 State Street. CC 345 200 Green Street. CC 346 200 Green Street. CC 347 200 Green Street. ' CC 348 200 Green Street. CC 349 200 Green Street. CC 350 200 Green Street. i CC 351 200 Green Street. tCC 353 200 Sixteenth Street. 4 *CC 354 200 Sixteenth Street. CC 356 200 Reese Street. CC 357 200 Reese Street tCC 359 200 Elm Street. tCC 360 200 Elm Street. •CC 361 200 Elm Street. CC 362 200 Street. CC 363 200 Elm Street. CC 364 200 Elm Street. tCC 370 200 Seventeenth Street. CC 371 200 Seventeenth Street. CC 372 200 Seventeenth Street. CC 380 200 Sixteenth Street. CC 381 200 Sixteenth Street CC 382 200 Sixteenth Street. CC 386 200 Zarker Street. CC 409 200 Reßlna Street. CC 416 200 Kittatinny Street. CC 424 200 Front Street. CC 430 200 Fifth Street. CC 464 200 Penn Street. CC 497 200 Bnlley Street. CC 509 200 Fifteenth Street. CC 525 200 Walnut Street. CC 568 200 Kelker Street. CC 569 200 Kelker Street. CC 570 200 Kelker Street. CC 571 200 Kelker Street. CC 583 200 Sa.vford Street. CC 584 200 Sayford Street. CC 689 200 Wallace Street. CC 595 200 Harris Street. CC 622 200 Verbeke Street. CC 623 200 Verbeke Street. CC 624 200 Verbeke Street. CC 632 200 Dauphin Street. CC 649 200 Delaware Street. CC 650 200 Delaware Street. CC 653 200 Curtln Street. CC 658 200 Mifflin Street. CC 661 200 Hunter Street. CC 664 200 Camp Street. CC 672 200 Emerald Street. CC 681 200 Peffer Street. < CC 705 200 Wood Street. CC 723 200 North Street. CC 728 200 Brißgs Street. CC 72!) 200 BriKgs Street. CC 733 200 Daisy Street. CC 773 200 Front Street. CC 787 200 Prune Street. CC 788 200 Prune Street. CC 789 200 Prune Street. CC 794 200 Shrub Street. CC 795 200 Shrub Street. CC 800 200 Berryhlll Street. CC 801 200 Berryhl'l Street. CC 802 200 Berryhlll Street. CC 803 200 Berryhill Street. CC 804 200 Berryhill Street. CC 804 200 Summit Street. CC 805 200 Summit Street. CC 807 200 Boas Street. CC 810 200 Park Street. CC 814 20.0 Sixteenth Street. CC 816 200 Balm Street. I§ CC 824 200 Crabapple Street. CC 825 200 Forster Street. CC 832 200 Miller Street. CC 835 200 Susquehanna Street. CC 836 200 Susquehanna Street. CC 837 200 Susquehanna Street. CC 838 200 Atlas Street. CC 846 200 Front Street. D 49 500 Herr Street. D 66 500 Forster Street. D 67 500 Forster Street. D 83 500 West Street. D 89 500 Strawherry Street. D 92 500 Willow Street. D 232 500 Fifth Street. s D 260 500 Market Street. D 276 500 State Street. D 312 500 Derry Street. D 326 500 Front Street. D 335 500 Maclay Street. D 363 500 Fourth Street. D 367 500 Sixteenth Street. D 368 500 Sixteenth Street. I> 380 500 Vernon Street. D 381 500 Vernon Street. D 386 500 Front Street. D 388 500 Union Street. D 41 1 500 Myrtle Street. D 413 500 Susquehanna Street D 416 500 sixteenth Street. D 417 500 Sixteenth Street. D 440 500 Sixth Street. D 441 500 Sixth Street. D 442 500 Sixth Street. D 443 500 Sixth Street. D 458 500 Fifteenth Street. D 466 500 Fourteenth Street D 467 500 Fourteenth Street D 473 500 Fifteenth Street. D 477 500 Retly Street. D 478 500 Belly Street. D 482 500 Marlon Street. D 501 500 Calder Street. D 506 500 Berryhlll Street. D 507 500 Berryhill Street. D 508 500 Berryhlfl Street. D 519 500 Hummel Street. D 549 500 Cameron Street. D 550 500 Cameron Street. D 551 500 Cameron Street. D 552 500 Cameron Street. D 553 500 Cameron Street. D 554 500 Cameron Street. D 555 500 Cameron Street. D 556 500 Cameron Street. D 557 500 Cameron Street. D 558 500 Cameron Street. D 559 500 Cameron Street. D 563 500 State Street. D 564 500 State Street. D 565 500 State Street. D 581 500 Swatara Street. IID 599 500 Fifth Street. D 600 500 Fifth Street. D 601 500 Fifth Street. D 613 500 Peffer Street. D 628 600 Woodbine Street. D 632 600 Seventeenth Street D 643 500 Seneca Street. D 64 4 500 Seneca Street. D 659 500 Second Street. D 665 500 Park Street. D 666 500 Fifteenth Street. D 671 500 linden Street. D 672 500 Miller Street. D 674 500 Forster Street. D 675 500 Green Street. D 676 500 Green Street. D 678 500 Front Street. D 679 500 Fr6nt Street. D 680 500 Front Street. D 681 500 Front Street. Street firnillnar Honda No. Amt. Street. •93 SIOO Twelfth Street •99 100 Calder Street. •100 100 Calder Street. •101 100 Talder Street. 102 100 Calder Street. •105 100 Monroe Street. •106 100 Monroe Street. 123 100 Front Street. 129 100 Atlas Street 130 100 Atlas Street. 131 100 Atlas Street. 132 100 Green Street. ' - 133 100 Green Street. 134 100 Green Street. ™ 136 100 Greenwood Street. 137 100 Greenwood Street 138 100 Greenwood Street. 139 100 Greenwood Street. 140 100 Greenwood Street. 143 100 Green Street. 35 200 Front Street. 86 200 Front Street. S7 200 Front Street 38 200 Front Street. 39 200 Front Street. 40 200 Front Street. 43 200 Greenwood Street 44 200 Greenwood Street. 750 600 Second Street. 751 600 Second Street. 762 500 Second Street. 766 600 Front Street. 767 600 Front Street Sewer Bonds No. Amt. Street. 141 100 Zarker Street 142 100 .Zarker Street || Called January 1. 1914, a t which time Interest ceased. • Called July 1, 1913, at which t!m« 'nterest ceased. t Called January 1, 1913, at which :lme interest ceased. OWEN M. COPEL.IN, City Treasurer. Harrlsburc, Pa., June 19, 1914.