Demonic, ald Bellefonte, Pa., March 19, 1920. —————————————— THINGS WE CAN'T AFFORD. We can’t afford to win the gain That means another’s loss; We can’t afford to miss the crown By stumbling at the cross. We can’t afford the heedless jests That robs us of a friend; We can’t afford the laugh that finds In bitter tears an end. We can’t afford the feast today That brings tomorrow’s fast; We can’t afford the farce that comes To tragedy at last. We can’t afford to play with fire, Or tempt a serpent’s bite, We can’t afford to think that sin Brings any true delight. We can’t afford with serious heed To treat the cynic’s sneer; We can’t afford to wise men’s word To turn a careless ear. We can’t afford for hate to give Like hatred in return; We can’t afford to feed such flame And make it fiercer burn. We can’t afford to lose the soul For this world’s fleeting breath; We can’t afford to barter life In mad exchange for death. But blind te good are we apart Frem Thee, all_seeing Lord; Oh, grant us light that we may know The things we can't afford! —Ex. —_—— pr VOTERS AND VOTING. By Margaret H. Barnett. The American ideal has always been a country in which the people chose their own rulers, where there was no hereditary governing class, which ruled by right of birth. Contrasting their own country with European monarchies, Americans are wont to say with pride, that here the people are the sovereigns. Has this Ameri- can ideal been translated into reali- ty? How do the American “sov- ereigns” exercise their sovereignty? The right of suffrage is one of the most important means of exercising the sovereignty of the people, and in a country like the United States it is of supreme importance. It needs no argument to prove this. Yet there are many who hold the duty and priv- ilege of voting very lightly, who treat it with singular indifference. Intel- ligent men sometimes confess that they have not gone to the polls for | years. And their absence from the polls gives to corrupt politicians an | opportunity which they are not slow to seize. There is a second class of persons ‘found among the “sovereigns,” those who vote thoughtlessly and careless- ly. A young man, when he reaches his majority, usually casts his first vote with the party of which his fath- er is a member. It is taken as a mat- ter of course that he should so vote, and occasions surprise, if he does not. Then, if he is a good Republican, or a good Democrat, as the case may be, he continues to vote, year in and year out, for the candidate of his party, giving no thought to the questions at issue, or to the character of the candi- dates, at any particular election. The leaders of political parties would be much more careful than they are at present, in regard to their policies and their candidates, if they knew that defeat awaited unworthy candi- dates and dishonest and dishonorable policies. The fact that a certain num- ber of electors can be depended upon to vote with their party under all cir- cumstances, is one cause of corrup- tion in politics. It is true that polit- ical revolutions come at intervals, but the intervals are too long. There is a worse class than those already mentioned. It is composed of those who make merchandise of the ballot, buying votes and selling votes. Those who sell their votes are bad enough, but those who buy votes are many times worse. It is the vote buyer who is the real meance to a free government. A certain laboring man, who could neither read nor write, told with pride, the day after an election day, what a good day he had had the day before. He worked at his regu- lar place of employment for three quarters of a day, for which he was paid as usual; then he went home and was taken in state to the polls to vote, and was “paid for his day.” Who was the most to blame, the man who was paid, or the men who paid him? It was suggested recently, in connection with the revision of the Constitution of Pennsylvania, * that illiteracy be made a bar to voting. But it is not the illiterates who are the real source of danger to the government. Those literates who are onsidered leaders in public affairs, who voters, are a much more dangerous class than the illiterates, who wield no political influence. There is a power in politics known It extends in as The Organization. its ramifications, from the smallest political units, where small politicians control a few votes, up through the cities and counties to the States and the nation. A man for example, who can control a county organization, isa useful man to the State organization, and for political services rendered, he will be rewarded by an office, the im- portance of which is proportioned to the value of his services. ization is a very potent force in poli- tics, especially the organization of a party which is in power. lic officials are to be elected, it saith to one man, “Run,” and he runneth, and to another, “Go away back and sit down,” and he goeth, as a general thing; for a candidate is usually fore- doomed to defeat whom the Organiza- tion opposes. Several weeks before a primary election, a politician was asked his opinion as to which of several candi- dates would be nominated. He re- plied: “If the election were to be held today, it would be So-and-so,” nam- ing a candidate whom the Organiza- tion opposed. But he added signifi- cantly, “But we’ll change all that.” And they did; and the voters, the “sovereigns,” had a candidate select- ed by the Organization, not by them- selves. corrupt other The Organ- | When pub- | | Lincoln in his Gettysburg address, ! spoke of a “Government of the peo- | ple, by the people, and for the peo- | ple.” One wonders sometimes, wheth- er these classic phrases accurately de- scribe the government of the United States today; or whether it is not be- | coming a Government of The Organ- | ization, by The Organization, and for ! The Organization. The Organization a vicious circle is formed which is hard to break. istence of corruption in politics, he need only read the daily papers. A United States Senator is on trial for election frauds, and with him a num- ber of other men. A number of elec- tion frauds were investigated in Penn- sylvania in recent months, and in some cases convictions resulted. How many election frauds there were that were not investigated, deponent saith not. The oath of office in the Constitu- tion, and the various laws intended to prevent corruption in politics, which books from time to time, also bear ev- practices. The latest of these laws in Pennsylvania is the “Corrupt Prac- tice Act,” passed in 1906. As one Judge said, it ‘was an “effort to stay the rising tide of political corrup- tion.” It has a very fearsome sound to the casual reader, but a careful reader will see that it was framed by those who had no idea of making the way of the transgressor too hard, when that transgressor was a prac- er to say of the authors of the Act, that “A fellow feeling made them | wondrous kind.” The Act requires the filing of an expense account by all candidates, | presumably to give publicity to the | expenses incurred by candidates. But | these accounts are to be filed, some of | | them in Harrisburg, some of them in {the county seat of the candidate’s . county. : | In the seclusion of State or county ! offices, { them, | publicity might have been obtained by ! publication in newspapers, as is done {in the case of other accounts of pub- lic interest. ing of candidates’ accounts, but it pro- vides that they may be audited, if a expenses are found to have been in- curred, the costs of the audit must be paid by those who asked for it. The Act thus makes it easy to let expense | accounts lie unquestioned, and hard to | have them investigated. | One of the “lawful expenses” of a candidate, allowed by the of information to the public.” formation to the public” sometimes takes strange forms, when “dissemi- nated” by a candidate, forms which Webster would find it difficult to rec- oncile with his definition of informa- tion. Being a candidate seems to have a peculiar effect on a man’s mentality. A man aspires to make laws for his State’ or his nation, or to execute the law, or to interpret it, when the prop- erty, the reputation, perhaps even the lives of some of his fellow citizens de- pend on his decisions. Yet such a man does not know what is done with the large campaign fund which is raised and expended in his behalf. His sol- emn oath of office says he does not. A defeated candidate was bitterly scored by his political friends, because he re- fused to put a considerable sum of money into a certain part of his dis- trict, several thousand dollars,—in or- der that his friends might “organize the county,” in his behalf. When it was suggested that the candidate prob- ably had conscientious scruples against such a use of money in poli- tics, the reply was, “He need not have spent any money himself, he could have given it to So-and-so, and he would not have known what was done with it.” An organ of one of the prominent political parties, in a recent issue, criticises the other party, on account of the immense fund which it is said to be raising for the coming Presiden- tial campaign. And it asks why it is “necessary to raise such a tremendous slush fund for the purpose of appeal- ing to the electors.” Comment on this quotation is unnecessary. The jury will determine, from the evidence, whether or not the American | voter has measured up to the Ameri- can ideal. Whatever undesirable political con- ditions exist today, the modern Adam ' cannot point an accusing finger at Eve, and say that she has been the In the greater ! cause of the trouble. part of the United States, Eve has. not yet reached her majority. But her “coming of age” seems now to be imminent. ratified the Suffrage Amendment to the national Constitution, and in all probability the ballot will be placed in the hands of all the women of the United States, in the near future. Woman suffrage was opposed long and bitterly in this country. It has been ridiculed, and cartooned, and joked about, sometimes in a good-na- | tured way, sometimes in a different | spirit. But now the time for opposi- tion has practically passed, and the time for joking has entirely gone by. The entrance of a large number of persons, probably twenty millions, in- to the electorate of such a country as | this is not a matter to be treated lightly. It is a serious matter both for the country, and and for the women themselves. The right of suf- frage carries with it a serious respon- sibility, a responsibility which has re- ceived too little recognition and atten- | tion. This responsibility is condition- | ed on the right to vote,»and once this | right is given, it cannot be evaded or | escaped. Every elector exercises the right of suffrage, for they also vote | Who never cast a ballot. Candidates | are sometimes elected by those who | do not go to the polls. This is a well- | known political paradox. When wom- "en become electors, they will share this responsibility, whether they wish to or not. There is, in this country, a large ‘body of thoughtful, intelligent, | Christian women. How will they dis- ‘charge their political duty? Will makes possible corruption in politics, and corruption in politics makes pos- | sible a good, strong organization. So | If any one requires proof of the ex- "and earnestly, is about to be confer- | They will exercise | heard an unpleasant word between a have been placed upon the statute idence to the existence of such corrupt tical politician. It is not for the writ- the eye of Omniscience sees but very few human eyes. Real The Act does not require the audit- | request for an audit is made by five electors. If, upon the audit, no illegal . d “Corrupt ! Practice Act” is, “For dissemination ' “In- | Thirty-four States have | | they merely follow the well-worn | beaten paths of the men who have | heretofore exercised exclusively the right of suffrage? Will they vote so ruptly, that they will but increase the carelessly, and thoughtlessly, and cor- number of undesirable electors in the! country? Or will they vote so care- fully, and intelligently, and conscien- tiously, that they will become, in pol- righteousness ? A time of testing is before the wom- en of the United States. A right which has been long withheld, and for which many women have striven long red upon them. this right in such a lime-light as nev- er beat upon their brothers. Will the Future write upon the walls of our National Temple, as its verdict upon 'the American woman.—“Tekel; thou ‘art weighed in the balance, and art found wanting?” It is for the wom- en to decide. The women of the United States will become a part of the governing power of the country at a time when there will be many serious problems before this land, and before the world at large. May it not be said of the American women, as it was said, cen- | turies ago, to a woman, at a time of national peril, “Who knoweth wheth- er thou art come to the kingdom for such a time as this?” —_———— REFORMED CHURCH LAYMEN WILL GATHER IN TWO CON- GRESSES., Two great congresses of the lay- men of the Reformed church are to be held in April in order to give to them as well as to the clergy the knowledge of what is going on in the church, and its moves to build itself more strongly. This action was de- termined on recently at a meeting of | the Executive committee of the Lay- men’s Missionray mevement of the church, held in Philadelphia, at the re- quest of the Forward Movement. The Laymen’s Missionary movement has | been delegated to take charge of the conferences. The first great gathering will be held in Reading, on April 6-7, and the second in Dayton, Ohio, on April 8-9. It is expected that thousands of lay- men will take this opportunity to get | together, and to learn what the For- ward movement surveys are doing, and what is being accomplished in other branches of the work. Although the program of the con- ferences has not yet been worked out in full, they will be modeled in general on the World Survey Conference of the Interchurch World Movement at ' Atlantic City, and the more recent National Laymen’s conference of that | movement held in Pittsburgh. Many ' of the Forward Movement leaders are on the Interchurch executive commit- tee, and the two movements are work- ing hand in hand in closest co-opera- tion. ) Part of the program will consist of addresses by leaders of the Forward Movement and men outstanding in the denomination who have helped to make the survey of the church, and have given their ability to the plans for the raising of the huge budget of the denomination. Their talks will be illustrated by lantern slides picturing powerfully and poignantly the phases and difficulties of the task and the re- sults when successfully accomplished. The object of the conference defin- ed succinctly will be to bring before the laymen of the church the reports of the Forward Movement survey and to line up the men of the church sol- idly behind the financial crusade which will take place in the closing days of April. Hitherto the opportu- nity to learn firsthand of the survey has been given to the clergy. The privilege is now extended to the lay- men. The conferences will be in line with the other great meetings of the Lay- men’s Missionary Movement of the Reformed church held at Harrisburg in 1909, at Canton, Ohio, in 1911, and at Allentown in 1915. Reading and ‘Dayton have been selected because they are located in the most centraliz- ed parts of the denomination. At the meeting at which this ac- tion took place the following members of the committee were present: Wil- liam W. Anspach, chairman; Dr. George L. Omwake, secretary, who is also head of the Department of Ed- ucation and Publicity of the Forward Movement; William H. Dechant, treasurer; Dr. William E. Lampe, . general secretary, and secretary of the Department of Life and Posses- sions in the movement; F. E. Am- merman, L. P. Teel, and Dr. J. H. Ap- i ple, Prof. E. M. Hartman, and Harry E. Paisley, who are respectively ex- _ ecutive secretary, head of the Field Department and Financial Campaign | director, and treasurer of the Forward Movement. —_——————— 41 Acres Unclaimed Land Taken by State. The Department of Forestry of Pennsylvania has taken over forty- one acres of land in Porter township, Pike county, for which George F. Sandt, of Easton, had filed an appli- cation for a warrant with the Depart- ment of Internal Affairs. This is one of the largest tracts of unclaimed | land known in the eastern counties in a long time and when the application was filed by Sandt a month ago, at- tention of Forestry authorities was attracted to it. There being no record of ownership Secretary of Internal | Affairs Woodward declared the land vacant and the Department of For- estry exercised its power under the law and took over the property for addition to State Forest Reserves. The claimant made no objection and said he was willing to have the land become a part of the forest system. —_————————————— Horse Sense. A hospital nurse was testing an or- derly in his knowledge of practical first-aid treatment. “Suppose,” she said, “a man suddenly collapsed. What would you do?” “I’d give him brandy,” was the prompt reply. “Suppose there were none?” “Then I'd promise him some.” _———— ——They are all good enough, but the “Watchman” is always the best. itics, a power that makes for civic: 1 WHERE ESKIMO IS SUPERIOR \ ——t—— Home Life Declared by Stefansson to Be Practically Ideal—Hospitable in the Extreme. Vithjalmur Stefansson, in writing of his 13 months’ stay among the Es- kimos, tells of their great kindness to a guest who could not pay for his keep, says Harper's, a stranger whose purpose among them they did not know, thus: . “In an Eskimo home I have never man and his wife, never seen a child punished nor an old person treated in- considerately. The household affairs are carried on in an orderly way and the good behavior of the children is remarked by practically every traveler, “In many things we are the superi- ors of the Eskimo and in a few we are his jnferiors. The moral value of some of his superiority is small. He can make better garments against cold than our tailors and farriers; he can thrive in barren wastes where a New Englander would starve. “But of some of his superiority the moral value is great. He has devel- oped individual quality further than we, he is less selfish, more heipful to his fellows, kinder to his wife, gentler to his child, more reticent about the faults of his neighbor than any but the rarest and best of our race. “When I tried to express thanks for their kindness in my fragmentary Es- kimo, they were more surprised than pleased. “Do, then, in the white man’s land, some starve and shiver while others eat much and are warmly clad? “To that question I said ‘Ne,’ al- though I knew I was lying. I was afraid the competitive system could not: be explained to them satisfactor- ily; neither was I, being the poor- est -among them, very anxious to try justifying it.” OLDEST OF FRENCH JOURNALS Qazette de France Was First Pub- lished 238 Years Ago, and Is Still in Existence. The first number of the Gazette de France, the oldest newspaper in France, was published 283 years ago, May 30, 1631, under the editorial di- rection of Doctor Renaudot. This most powerful of the early journalists of France was born in 1584 and, after graduating in medicine, established himself in Paris about 1612. Richelieu and Pierre d’Hoziner, the genealogist, are said to have inspired Renaudot in establishing the Gazette, which was published weekly and consisted of two small sheets, the first bearing the title of Gazette and the second Nouvelles Ordinaires de Divers Endroits. Doc- tor Renaudot established the prece- dent, long followed in European jour- nalism and by no means extinct, of présenting foreign news first and rele- gating domestic and local news to the last page. Soon after the establish- ment of the Gazette Doctor Renaudot was granted an exclusive monopoly of printing and selling newspapers in France. When the founder died in 1653 the Gazette passed to his sons. The title of Gazette de France was first used in the middle of the eight- eenth century. under that title ever since, with the exception of a brief period during the | revolution of 1848, when the name was temporarily changed to Le People Francais. Improved Rivet Cutter. A pneumatic rivet cutter for use in structural steel work and in repair | shops consists of a long barrel, with compressed air connection at one end and a chisel at the other, the stem of the chisel being held by a coiled spring, which draws it back after each stroke. A plunger travels freely in the barrel or tube, and a small bypass pipe connects the ends of this tube. Two men are employed, the one at the rear operating the valve and the one at the front keeping the chisel against the rivet head. The force of the blow can be regulated by the valve. Air pressure of 30 to 90 pounds may be used, the higher pressure being the more effective, A punch can be in- serted in plage of the chisel for back- ing out the rivets, In the larger size the stroke is 40 inches, and the weight of the machine complete is only 65 pounds. A smaller size will cut rivets up $0 three-elghths of an inch in diam- eter. When Bitte;, py a Mad Dog. When bitten by an animal that is suspected as mad, the best thing to do, acgording to Drs. J, C. Regan apd A. Silkman of New York, who describe a recent case in Archives of Diagnosis, is to squeeze the wound to encourage bleeding, wash it with a solution of mercuric chloride (1 in 1,000), cauter- ize it with fuming nitric acid, apd ap- ply a wet dressing of the mercuric chloride solution, The wound should never be sewn up; if a deep punctured wound, it should be cut open with a scalpel. The sooner this treatment is applied the more likely it iS to be successful. Afterward the routine Pasteur treat- ment should be taken. In the Future. Recently several airplanes were moving over the Circle, and the usual crowd had stopped to watch them. An old woman in the crowd began count- ing. “One, two, three, four, five,” she counted. “Five of those things.” Then she turned to the man nearest her, “Did you ever see the like?” she asked. “Five of those things. Why, pretty soon the atmosphere will he just lousy with them.”—Indianapolis News. It has been published | U. S. Plans to Bring Back 50,000 Bodies. Washington.—The bodies of about 50,000 of the American dead in France will be returned to the United States while between 20,000 and 25,- 000 will remain permanently interred overseas, Newton D. Baker, Secretary of War, informed James W. Wads- worth Jr., chairman of the Senate military committee. The Secretary estimated the cost of returning the dead and concentrating the bodies remaining in cemeteries overseas at $30,000,000. Congestion of the French transportation systems and shortage of materials used in the manufacture of coffins is handicap- ping the work, Mr. Baker said. While 111 bodies of American dead have been returned from Archangel, Mr. Baker said the same number still remained in Northern Russia and that it was improbable that anything could be done toward their removal for a year. Evacuation of bodies in Eng- land is progressing, he added, while irasea ready for return to this coun- ry. _——————————— Political Announcements. DELEGATE TO NATIONAL DEMOCRAT- IC CONVENTION. We are authorized to announce the name | of Col. J. L. Spangler, of Bellefonte, as a : candidate for district delegate to the ' Democratic National convention to be held jat San Francisco on June 28, 1920, subject | to the decision of the Democratic voters of | the 21st Congressional District as express- Je gt the primaries to be held May 18th, 1 J. Frank Snyder, Clearfield, Pa., an- | nounces that he will be a candidate, at the Spring Primary Election, for Delegate | from the 21st Congressional District of | Pennsylvania to the Democratic National convention, and states that, if elected, he | will support that candidate for President i who shall have received the highest num- | ber of votes cast in said District by the | voters of the Democratic party for said of- | fice, and will use all onorable means ‘within his power to aid in Securifg the Jomination of such candidate for Presi- ent. 1 ' DELEGATE TO NATIONAL REPUBLI- CAN CONVENTION. { We are authorized to announce that Mellville Gillett, of Smethport, McKean i county, Pa., is a candidate for Delegate to the Republican National Convention, to be . held in Chicage, in June, 1920, subject to | the decision of the Republican voters of | the 21st Congressional District as express- Ly the primaries to be held May 18th, , v. ASSEMBLY. ‘We are authorized to announce the name ,of Frank E. Naginey, of Bellefonte, as a ' candidate for nomination for Assemblyman | for Centre county, subject to: the decision | of the Democratic voters of the county as | expressed at the primaries to be held on i May 18th, 1920. FOR ASSEMBLY. We are authorized to announce the name "of I. L. Harvey, of Bellefonte, as a can- | didate for the Legislature, subject to the | decision of the Republican voters as ex- | prossed at the primaries on May 18th, 1 | i | | NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. \ARMERS TAKE NOTICE.--I will in- sure dwellings at $1.00 a hundred, and barns at $1.60 a hundred, on the cash plan for three years, and dwell- ings 50 cents a hundred, and barns at 80 cents a hundred on the assessment plan for 5 years as against fire and lightning. 64-28-1y J. M. KEICHLINE, Agent. E mentary upon the estate of Har- riet T. Kurtz, late of Bellefonte borough, deceased, having been granted to the undersigned, all persons knowing themselves indebted to said estate are re- quested to make prompt payment, and those having claims against the same must preseat them, duly authenticated, for set- tlement. NELSON E. ROBB, XECUTOR’S NOTICE.—Letters testa- Executor, Harry Keller, Bellefonte, ’a. ‘ Attorney. 65-8-6t JDITOR’S NOTICE.—In Re-Estate of Christian Sharer, late of Taylor township, deceased. In the Orph- an’s Court, Centre county. A in Italy all bodies have been concen-’ Vallimont and Felix Vallimont her hus- band, of Coudley, Pa. You are hereby notified and required to be and appear at the Court of Common Pleas to be held at Bellefonte, in the County of Centre, and State of Pennsylva- nia, on the third Monday of May, 1920, next, being the 17th day of May, to ans- wer the plaintiff in the above-stated case of a plea wherefore, whereas the plaintiff and the defendants, in said action, to- gether and undivided, do hold ten certain certain messuages, tenements and tracts of land situate in Centre county, Pennsyl- ania, bounded and described as follows, wit: No. 1. All that certain messuage, tene- ment and tract of land situate in the Township of Boggs, County and State aforesaid, beginning at a walnut corner, thence North 28%; degrees West 130 perch- es to a white oak stump corner, thence South 56 degrees West 80 perches to stone corner, thence South 32 degrees East 52 perches to a stone, thence South 56 de- grees West 18 perches tc a stone corner, thence South 30 degrees East 56 perches to stones, thence South 59 degrees West 16 perches to stone, thence South 32 degrees ast 5 perches to a fallen cherry on the bank of Bald Eagle creek, thence North 4 degrees East 37 perches to a post, thence North 50 degrees East 14 perches to a post, thence North 30 degrees East 16 perches to post, thence North 18 degrees West 204-10 perches to post, thence North 77 degrees Kast 19 perches to the Place of beginning, containing 68 acres and 78 perches net. Being part of a larger tract of land originally surveyed in the name of Christian Spade, see Patent Book AA” Volume 13, page 212, and being the same premises which Jacob Kidlinger and Mary his wife, by their deed dated Janu- ary 1, 1864, recorded in Centre County in Deed Book “Y,” page 0502, etc., granted and conveyed to John Bronoel (the name of said Bronoel in said Deed having been incorrectley spelled Brunewell), and the said John Bronoel having been so thereof seized died leaving to survive him a wid- ow, Mary E. Bronoel, (afterwards inter- married with John Rolly and the said John Rolly now being dead), and eight children which by deed from the heirs of John Bronoel bearing date the 11th day of December, 1883, and recorded in Centre County in Deed Book “V’” No. 2, page 633, became vested ir Alois Kohlbecker except- ing, however, two tracts heretofore con- veyed to R. R. company containing .789 acres and about 10 acres respectively. No. 2. All that certain messuage, tene- ment and let of ground situate ng Central City, in the Township of Boggs, County and State aforesaid, and designated as Lot No. 112 in the general plan of said Central City, bounded and described as follows: On the South and West by pub- le road leading from Milesburg to Unien- ville, on the North by the said Bald Bagle Valley railroad, and on the East by lot of Samuel Orris, it being the same lot of ground which E. C. Humes and Adam Hoy, administraters of James T. Hale, de- ceased, by their deed dated March 14, 1867, conveyed to Rebecca Linn, which by gouveyatices became vested in Alois Kohl- ecker. No. 3. All that certain messuage, tene- ment and tract of land situate im Central City, Boggs Township, County and State aforesaid, numbered 115 according to the plot or plan of the said town, and bound- ed on the West by Lot No. 114, on the North by an alley, and on the East by Lot No. 116, and on the South by the turn- pike, being the same premises which John C. Swires, et ux, and C. C. Swires convey- ed to Alois Kohlbecker, said deed bein, recorded in Centre County in Deed Boo No. 66, page 68, etc. ’ No. 4. All that certain lot or piece of ground situate in Central City, Boggs Township, bounded and described as fol- lows, to wit: On the North by the old turnpike, on the East by the western line of Lot No. 11 extending across the turn- pike to the Bald Eagle creek, on the South by Bald Eagle creek, and on the West by lot of Daniel Mahone, being the same premises which E. C. Humes and Adam Hoy, administrators of James T 1 Hale, conveyed to Alois Kohlbecker by their deed dated September 1, 1883, record- ed in Centre County in Deed Book “V2,” page 652, ete. : No. 5. All that triangular piece of ground lying at the junction of the Snow shoe pike, Bald Eagle creek and Bald Ea- gle Valley railroad, west end of Central I City, Pa., bounded on the North by alley sin town plot of Bald Eagle railroad, on | the South by Bald Eagle creek and Snow Shoe turnpike, on the Kast by alley on 8. VW. . town plot, and on the West by B. E ' Railroad and Bald kagle creek and turn- pike crossing, at which point the land ter- minates in sharp point, thereby making it three-cornered, containing 20 square feet more or less. Being the same premises "which E. B. Lipton, et al, by their deed The undersigned an auditor appointed | by the above named Court, to pass upon the exceptions to the account of the ac- countants and restate the account in ac- cordance with his findings and make dis- tributions for the funds found to be in the hands of accountants to and among those legally entitled thereto, will meet the par- ties interested for the performance of his appointment, on the 5th day of April A. D. 1920, at 11 o'clock a. m., at his office, Room No. 14, Crider’'s Exchange, Belle- fonte, Pa. When and where all parties are required to present and prove their claims or be forever debarred from com- ing in on said fund. KLINE WOODRING, Auditor. 65-11-3t Bellefonte, Pa. UDITOR’S NOTICE.—In the Orphans’ A Court of Centre county. In the matter of the estate of Henry IM Kessinger, late of Liberty township, de- ceased. The undersigned, an Auditor appointed by the Orphans’ Court of Centre county, account of the Accountant, and re-state the account if necessary, in accordance with his findings, and make distribution to and amongst those legally entitled thereto, in the estate of Henry F. Kessing- er, late of Liberty township, deceased, will attend to the duties of his appoint- ment and meet the parties in interest at his offices in the Masonic Temple Building, Bellefonte, Pa., on Wednesday, April 7th, 1920, at 10 o’clock a. m., when and where the parties in interest are required to ap- pear, present their claims, or be forever barred from coming in upon the fund as shown to be due for distribution purposes in said estate. W. HARRISON WALKER, 65-11-3t Auditor. \ T PPLICATION FOR CHARTER.—No- tice is hereby given that an appli- cation will be made to the Gover- nor of the State of Pennsylvania on Mon- day, the 22nd day of March, A. D. 1920, at ten o'clock a. m., by G. F. Musser, Richard Brouse, BE. B. Bower, A. J. Heverley, Thos. §. Hazel, J. Frank Smith, and For- rest Ocker, under the provisions of an Act of Assembly of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, entitled, “An Act to Privide for the Incorporation and Regulation of certain Corporations,” approved April 29th, 1874, and the supplements thereto, for the charter of an intended corporation to be called THE G. F. MUSSER COM- PANY, the character and object of which is to conduct a general mercantile business at wholesale, consisting of groceries, sta- ple notions, flour and feeds, produce, can- dies, tobaccos, hardware, wood and wil- low ware, and articles of a similar and cognate nature, and for these purposes to have, possess, and enjoy all the rights. benefits and privileges of the said Act of Assembly and its supplements. SPANGLER AND WALKER, 65-9-4t Solicitors. OTICE BY PUBLICATION.—In the N Court of Common Pleas of the County of Centre, State of Fenn- sylvania, No. 76, May Term, 1918. Henry J. Kohlbecker vs. Frank C. Kohl- becker, Stella M. Kohlbecker, Frances A. Kohlbecker, Josephine A. Kohlbecker and Alois Kohlbecker, Jr., of Charleston, West Virginia; Henry J. Kohlbecker, Guardian of Emma Kohlbecker, of Boggs township, Centre county, Pa.; and Mary C. Valli- mont and Felix Vallimont her husband, of Coudley, Pa. To Frank C. Kohlbecker, Stella M. Kohl. becker, Frances A. Kohlbecker, Josephine A. Kohlbecker, and Alois Kohlbecker, Jr, of Charleston, West Virginia, Mary to pass upon the exceptions filed to the dated April 18, 1890, recorded in Centre County in Deed Book 64, page 178, veyed to A. Kohlbecker. No. 6. All that certain messuage, tene- ment and tract of land situate in Union Township, County and State aforesaid, beginning at a chestnut oak on line of land of Reuben Iddings’ heirs, thence along same South 60 degrees West 102 perches to stones, thence along land of Joseph Hoover 30 degrees East 82 perches to a chestnut oak, thence along land of William P. Fisher 60 degrees East 102 perches to a post, thence along land of Jacob Hoover's heirs North 30 degrees West 82 perches to chestnut oak, the place con- . of beginning. Containing 52 acres and 44 . last recited. perches neat measure. Being the same premises which William ¥. Way by deed dated October 28, 1899, recorded in Centre County in Deed Book 82, page 198, convey- ed to Alois Kohlbecker. Ii'or right of way in connection with this property see deed No. 7. All that certain lot of ground situate in Eagleville, County and State aforesaid, beginning at a point in center + of public road, thence joining lots of Mrs. Maggie McCloskey 280 feet to a post, thence joining lands of David Kunes 10 feet to a post, thence by S. M. Hall 280 feet to a post in the center of the public road 10 feet to the place of beginning, containing 2800 square feet, being the same premises which Sarah McCloskey by her deed dated March 16, 1897, recorded in Centre County in Deed Book No. 76, page 40, conveyed to Alois Kohlbecker. . No. 8. All that certain lot of ground situate in the Village of Eagleville, Coun- ty and State aforesaid, beginning at a stone corner in the center of the public road, thence along the line of Samuel H. Kunes and James I. Kunes 280 feet toa post, thence along land of David Kunes, Sr., 43 feet to a stone cor- ner, thence along land of McCor- mick Hall 280 feet to the center of public road, thence along said public oy 42 feet to the place of beginning, containing a quarter of an acre more or less. Being | the same premises which Sarah McClos- key by her deed dated March 16, 1897, re- corded in Cemtre County, Volume 76, page 41, conveyed to Alois Kohlbecker. No. 9. All those four certain lots of ground situate in Central City, Boggs Township, Centre County, and State afore- said, fronting on the Township Road lead- ing from Milesburg to the Ridges, bein designated in the general plan of Centra City as Lots Nos. 28, 29, 30 and 27, there- on erected a two and one-half story frame dwelling house and other temporary build- ings. The same was conveyed to Alois Kohlbecker by deed poll of Robert Cook, Sheriff, August 20, 1888, recorded in Cen- ie County in Deed Book Volume 54, page No. 10. All that certain lot, piece or parcel of land situate in Central City, Boggs Township, County and State afore- said, fronting on Railroad Street 50 feet and running back to an alley 190 feet, ad- joining lot of Benjamin Snyder, and being numbered in the general lan of said Central ily as Lot No. 165. Being the same premises which John G. Uzzle con- veyed to Annie M. Kohlbecker, by deed dated October 18, 1895, recorded in Centre County in Deed Book Volume 73, page 51. With the appurtenances, they the said defendants partition thereof between then, according to the laws and customs of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, to be made do gainsay and to the same to be done do not permit very unjustly and con- trary to the same laws and customs, etc., the same Frank C. Kohlbecker, Stella M. Kohlbecker, Frances A. Kohlbecker, Josephine A. Kohlbecker, and Alois Kohl- becker, Jr., of Charleston, West Virginia; Henry J. Kohlbecker, Guardian of Emma Kohlbecker, of Boggs Township, Centre County, Pa.; Mary C. Vallimont and Felix Vallimont her husband, ef Coudley. Pa., thereof between them to be made accord- ingly to the laws and customs and have vou then and there this writ and the sum- moners. By order of the Court, this 27th day of February, A. D., 1920. HARRY DUREMAR heriff. Sheriff’s Office, Bellefonte, Pa. March 2, 1920. 65-10-6t Slt