BE A EA ER rr iI, Deworeaiic aidan Bellefonte, Pa., May 21, 1920. IF. Rudyard Kipling’s World Famous Poem. If you can keep your head, when all about | you Are losing theirs, and blaming it on you; ! If you can trust yourself, when all men doubt you, And make allowance for their doubting, too. If you can wait, and not be tired by wait- ing, Or being lied about, don’t deal in lies; Or being hated, don’t give way to hating, And yet don’t look too good nor talk too wise; If you can dream and not make dreams your master, If you can think and not make thoughts your aim; If you can meet with triumphs and disas- ter, And treat those two imposters just the same. If you can bear to hear the truth you've spoken, Twisted by knaves, to make a trap for fools; Or watch the thing you've given your life to, broken, And stoop and build out tools; it up with worn- If you can make a heap of all your win- nings, And risk it on one turn of pitch and | toss, And lose, and start again at your begin- nings, And never breathe a word loss. If you can force your heart and nerve and sinew To serve your turn long after they tre gone, And so hold on, when there's nothing else left in you, Except the will, that says to them, “Hold on!” about your If you can talk with crowds, and keep your virtue, Or walk with kings, nor lose the common touch; If neither foes nor loving friends can hurt you, If all men count with you, but none too much. If you can fill the unforgiving minute, With sixty seconds worth of distance run— Then, yours is the earth, and everything that’s in it, And—which is more—you'll be a MAN, my son. THE BOY IN THE CORNER. And Flore Dufresne, the Girl Who Danced at Holohan’s. When the last man had crowded to a place, and the door was shut; when enough, but not too much, had been: drunk; when the voices of the violins | behind the counter were no more than a piercing foam on the tide of sound; then, neither sooner nor later, Holo- | han gave the signal, and the girl came ! in and danced. The dance of moonlight on snow, | the dance of flowers in the wind, the! dance of a flame in grass—it was all these things. There was silence; men’s lives focused momentarily like beams to the prism of that figure on the grimy stage; breath was held hard, fists clenched unawares. Then, as she ceased and stood unsmiling, came the passion and the roar released. They shouted her name in a crash of sound —“Flore Dufresne!” and drank to her. Some went a little mad; a gray-beard- ed miner from the Far-Alone, who had seen no white woman for a year, ! strewed gold dust at her feet. The boy in the corner nearest the door, wet puddle of the floor where the changed to ice, touched his neighbor | on the sleeve. “Where does she come from?” he asked. The miner turned and looked at him with half-contemptuous friendliness. “From wherever they make ‘em like “You won't never see that,” he said. one to beat her, sonny!” “No,” agreed the grave-eyed boy; “she looks like a frozen flower.” As the girl stepped slowly down from her little stage, the boy stood up as if to go. silence must have reached her where many voices failed, for she suddenly looked up and met his eyes across the | breadth of the room. time. For that flying nition. Then she lowered her eyes; no word or look of the men in that room had power to change her. But now a faint, quick blush, like the re- flection on certain white roses, just colored her cheeks. The boy opened the door and went out. It was dark outside. gray gleam of stare. There was a showed petty and fugitive in the face of the vast night, as if a child had ! drawn straggling lines in the snow, and would presently wipe all out. The ! boy went home. He lived in a room over the town’s one clothing store, in which he worked by day. It was a tiny room, criss- crossed with whistling drafts, but it was clean and tidy; the stove was well blacked, and there was a rabbit-fur rug on the tiny bed. In the corner be- hind the stove and beneath the light of the window stood a thing strange in that town, where the yearly cold shaved everything bare as stone—a geranium in a pot. Before he went to bed, the boy watered it and picked off a dead leaf. Soon he was asleep, hold- ing the leaf between his cheek and the rough pillow. In his dreams he smelt its warm, coarse sweetness and smil- ed, a strange, faint, secure smile. The next evening, and for many more, the boy was in his cold corner at Holohan’s, drinking little, saying little, silent when the girl danced and the room rose in a roar. When she stepped down from the platform, he got up and went out. But first he paused by the door; and always across the room his gaze summoned hers. Hers never failed to obey. It was like the ordered sequence of music—his look, her half-startled response, the dropping of her pearl-white lids, the slow, faint blush. The young miner, He paused at the door, | the orly silent man in that place. His! It was the first | instant her! glance was that of half-scared recog- The streets and | buildings of the little mining town | keeping the boy company on the out- 'ermost bench, saw the unvarying | event. After some nights of it, he : spoke: | “«You know the lady, friend?” "The boy looked up in his grave way. | “No,” he said, “I’ve never spoken to | her in my life.” { “I thought—no offense, sonny—you i looked as if you knew each other.” “No.” The “Again, no offense,” he said; “but I'd eyed him curiously. | | like to know yer name an’ who you 1 miner { are.” “My name’s Saffrey,” said the boy | at once, “Tony Saffrey. I live over | MacDade’s store. I work there when there’s any work to do. There ain’t much just now.” He smiled suddenly. | “T'm twenty next June,” he went on, { “and I got all my own hair and teeth and a couple of hundred in the bank at Race. Now, how about it?” The young miner immediately held out his hand. “This about it,” he answered. “My name’s Orrin. If I | may say it, I like you, Saffrey. And i liking you, there’s one thing I wanter say.” His face hardened, though his i eyes were kind. “I'd cut out the looks I at Flore,” he said softly, “before Hol- ohan géts on to it. Holohan, he’s after big game. You're years younger’n me. This is just a friendly word. And | I say it because I like you.” | After a silence, Saffrey said quiet- !1y, “Do you know her?” | "Orrin flushed. “Yes,” he answered | grufily, “I do. And say the word, and i Tl interdooce you before the week’s out.” The miner’s face was strange. | A gleam came into the boy’s grave ‘eyes. “You think my chance’d be all ! as poor as that?” : «How much you say you got in the { bank 7” “Couple o’ hundred.” “Make it two million,” said Orrin roughly, “and then, maybe, she’d look | at you. She wants the earth.” “She’s looked at me now . . .” The words were a breath. Orrin did not hear. The watchful Holohan had sig- naled, the girl came in. Orrin rose with the rest, with the rest joined in the cry of “Flore!” that seemed as if it must split the walls. Her indiffer- ence warmed not by a breath for it all. She danced. And with the rest Orrin was still. When she had finish- ed, and the roar once more rose like a | form. The boy Saffrey, waiting by the door, had his look. He had more. She went to him, saying defiantly, “Why do you look at me like that?” She waited for no answer. It was as if she was afraid. He gave her none; opening the door, he went out. Many men stared after him. That night Saffrey found a leaf shoot thick as felt in the woody crotch of the old geranium, and within its clasp the velvet bundle of a bud. The next night when he left the cafe Orrin went with him. walked together in silence, hearing the applause die out behind them till it was of no more importance than the humming of bees in a bottle. The sigh of wind in the bull pines met them, and the flicker of the ice blink behind the northern hills. spoke: “You met her yet?” “No.” Saffery’s face was serene in the dark. Orrin wondered. He felt him- self in the presence of something nameless, implacably strong, of which he was a little afraid; but it was only Saffery here beside him, who was twenty in June, worked in MacDade’s store, and had two hundred in the bank. Orrin said: “Well, you've sense. No good entering to run when you ain’t got a chance.” Saffery’s young lips moved in their | faint, secure smile; in his heart was something warm-folded as a bud. He But | said, “You think I’ve no chance.” it was a gentle assertion, not a ques- tion. “Well, what you got to give vou a chance? She’s out for the best, is Flore Dufresne. There’s a dozen ready to give her all they got, marry her tomorrow, do anything. If she don’t choose between ’em soon, the town’ll bast up, that’s all. You heard the talk?” “No.” “She’s a birthday or somethin’ soon. Holohan’s havin’ up champagne. It’s been kind of fixed up that she'll choose the feller that gives her what she likes best—the present she’s most pleased with, that she’ll take and wear. It’s fixed with her. She won't gobackonit......'Oh, my God, she says, ‘how sick and tired I am of you all!” Orrin’s voice broke. Saffery heard They Orrin | minute the boy said, “Are you run- nin’ in this?” “Am I runnin’?” Orrin laughed harshly and stood still. “Feel that!” he said. Saffery ran his hand gravely over Orrin’s arm. “What do you feel?” said Orrin grimly. “Patches,” answered Saffery. “Your coat’s patched. It’s wore to the bone. And there’s a good deal of bone to your arm, Orrin. But you're making good money.” “I'm making good money. Feel here.” He guided Saffery’s hand to his breast; under the worn coat was a square bulge. “That’s my money,” said Orrin. “I’ve been livin’ like a Siwash these six weeks, savin’ every- : thing, so’s I could get Flore something ! she’d like. The best Than’s ! what she wants.” | “Maybe her best and your best aint | the same, Orrin.” Orrin stared. Then | he laughed. “You're a queer kid,” he cried roughly. “Diamonds is best to | any woman. I’m going to get her di- jamonds, Saffery, do you hear? I've ordered ’em up to Race. Next week | Ill go fetch ’em over.” He hesitated a minute. “You ain’t runnin’ in this, Saffery ?” he asked. “You ain’t going to buy anything for Flore?” | “No. I ain’t going to buy her any- thing.” | “Get a few days off and come with ‘ me, then. I'd feel safer, some way, { bringing her present back, with a | chum I could trust.” i “Tl come with you to Race,” said Saffery. i That night he found his geranium bud showing a faint white streak | through the downy green. His sleep had something starry in it, it was so calm. They started for Race the next day. Two days over the hills, a day and | a night in the town, two days back; so they planned it. They did not want to spend more than two nights in the open. They started in sun that held the first promise of spring; it warmed the rocks till they lost their sheathing of ice, melted little puddles beneath [then where mosses showed like wa- ter weeds in a bubbling ripple, set | streams streaking silvery down a hun-' dred hidden valleys. But at night the pools froze again, the stream choked, world glittered like a diamond; Orrin, from his blanket under some rock shelf where their fire strove valiant- | ly to outface the frosty stars, talked ! of diamonds for Flore Dufresne. The | boy, listening, gathered rimed peb- bles in his hand, and thought that the frost and the moon made them beau- tiful as diamonds; even the pebbles he handled as if he loved; he was tender with the grass and the fir buds; he walked like a lover of the world. He slept out on the bitter hills as though the night had arms to hold him and a heart that beat for him. They reached Race without any event. In a cheap jewelry store kept by a man he knew, Orrin found some- thing waiting for him that was not cheap, a pendant of diamonds set in! platinum. He trembled as the delicate thing lay in his rough palm; it felt light and cold as a thing of frost. He saw it glittering on Flore Dufresne’s neck. “All right,” he said hoarsely, “wrap it up for me.” While it was being wrapped up, he dealt out the greasy bills that were to pay for it with fingers that shook, as if he were dealing out his strength and his life. Afterward they went out and wander- ed about the town. Saffery’s gray eyes searched every street; he was lookng for a kind of store he didn’t find; he was pleased, in his quiet, as- sured way, that there wasn’t a store in Race where flowers could be bought. They met the next morning for their tramp home. Gusts of warm ; rain drove across the hills, and the steep streets of Race spouted like splices to the sudden melting of the snows. In brief sunbursts tie world steamed. Everywhere was the drum and rush of unloosened waters. And i now and then, very far away, came a dull and rolling reverberation from the heights, the voice of no storm, but the thunder of the snow slides set free in the untimely thaw. “Better wait,” said someone, “and see if it sets hard again.” Orrin hesitated. But Saffery said, “I guess I won’t wait. I must be get- tin’ back.” “What’s your hurry?” Orrin asked curiously. And the boy said, “I can’t let my geranium go without water longer’n this.” Orrin slapped him on the back, laughed, called him a great kid for joking. Saffery smiled grave- wasn’t worth while trying to explain this to Orrin. They swung out of the town toward the veiled hills; Orrin walked with his hand over the pocket where he kept the diamond pendant, and his hungry eyes fixed on the trail ahead. The boy had time to see every change and color of the day, every leaf beside the stones, every bird that crossed them. They walked in silence for the most part; at first from choice, then because the drive of the wind and the rain imposed it on them. At first Orrin was in the lead; later, Saffery was ahead and Orrin was hard put to it to keep up with him. “Where's your hurry, son?” yelled Orrin in the intervals of the gusts, and Saffery spoke back, “My geranium’ll maybe quit growing if I don’t water it reg- ular.” Orrin laughed and swore and followed. Marriage Licenses. Lynn W. Kerstetter and Georgiana Hampton, State College. Edward Merriman and Emma Fa- sig, Sandy Ridge. (Concluded next week.) HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA. Spring Debility Loss of Appetite, That Tired Feeling and Sometimes Eruptions. Thousands take Hood’s Sarsaparilla as their spring medicine for that tired feeling, nervous weakness, impure blood, and testify it makes them feel better, eat and sleep better, and “makes food taste good.” Spring debility is a condition in which it is especially hard to combat disease germs, which invade the sys- tem here, there and everywhere. The white blood corpuscles, sometimes call- ed “the little soldiers in the blood,” because it is their duty to fight dis- ease germs, are too weak to do good service. Hood’s Sarsaparilla increases the “little soldiers” and enables them to resist germs of grip, influenza, fe- vers and other ailments. It has stood the test of three generations, giving entire satisfaction. Get it today. If a laxative or cathartic is needed, wave, she came down from the plat- | his hard breath in the dark. In a [the mosses were setin glass, the ly; he wasn’t joking, but he knew it take Hood’s Pills. 65-19 i ? | REASURER’S SALE OF UNSEATED LANDS FOR NON-PAY- | Acr. Per. Warrantee Name Owner's Name Taxes & Costs | Acer. Per. Warrantee Name Owner's Name Taxes & Costs | | MENT OF TAXES FOR 1918 AND 1919. i Brown, Wm.........4 A Burkett!) i. l.......... D2 ass Slough, James....... EVR SBArer,. oni. ser nvaren 39. | Agree to the provisions. of the lu, relating to the sale of un. | ico Dn i Renn RE a i a r the non- xes, 5 5 Pe will re exposed to hs sale or outcry the following tracts or HOWARD TOWNSHIP 433 153 Siddens, Eleanor.... Thos, H, Lite & Robert dois parts of tracts of unseated lands in Centre county, Pennsylvania, for | 104 163 Brady, Johm......... Realty Estates............... 9.60 | 433 Smith, Mary 3 We THOME sss on vs 91.35 | faxes due and unpaid thereon, at the Court House in the Borough of : 433 153 Turner, Daniel...... Browh & Dyer. sr iisnae:- 39.13 i Bellefonte, on Monday, Jume 14th, 1920, at 1 o’clock p. m., and to con- i : HUSTON TOWNSHIP 3 6 Goer, RNG es B OF Pringle Ee i Hh 213 | tinue from day to day, if necessary by adjournment, until all are sold: [225 Unknown ........... J.. A. Mattern........... Sieve 70.361 ong Wilson, William... Ramey Water C0. rr. o ns-- 39793 BENNER TOWNSHIP LIBERTY TOWNSHIP 433 Wharton, i Kearney... FE. P: Blair, coco ove vnvives 39.13 Acr. Per. Warrantee Name Owner's Name Taxes & Costs 20 Honiton dane ah a A AL SPRING TOWNSHIP 50 Lingle, J. J......... J. Wells Smith............... $ 7.021175 Hess, Geo. G..vvnnns KatoiCoal Co... 15.19 100 Wilson, William..... Mrs. May Brooks............ 9.87 150 UNKNOWN. suoeesssss +H. C. RODINSON.. .o0vuvsrssss 7.22 | 95 Jackson, John....... A. BuTRetb iis vas os ssid 0.78 wn Wilson, William. ... William Biger.............. 6.50 BOGGS TOWNSHIP 400 Leach, Martha.......A. Burkett................... 27.261 2 Wilson, William. ....Charles Bilger............... 4.26 30.58 | 70 Parsons, Thos C...Sarah T. Gibbs.............. 614 | 47 Unknown ........... Charles Bilger............... 7.47 100 455 Carsoaddey, Dosesrodh Burkett srresasesvesservres 80s (115 Quigley, Jas. A..... Kate Coal: Co.....i... ol... 1398| 75 Unknown ........... J. Wells Smith Est.......... 21.52 | 33 163 Harvey, Jonathau...J. H. Long & J. B. Furst... 17.88 MARION TOWNSHIP SNOW SHOE TOWNSHIP 431 40 Hood, Moses......... . H. Long & J. B. Furst.... 17.74 50 Allison... Wm, ........4 Franklin. Weight............ 5.22 | 412 Carscadden, D. i 300 McCoy, Frank....... F.P. Blair............\ ..... 23.72 1125 Jackson. Jeremiah...H. H. & W. F. B 13.62 | 412 44 Carseadden, D. | 50 Packer & Luecas...../ A. D. Lueas.......cccevvnne 4.07 1 100 Laird, Matthew..... W. L. Cooke. 6.27 | 412 44 Carscadden, D. BURNSIDE ToWNSII® ? IE ol bite fen 415 Baron, John.i....... Kato Coal C0..iv.cnr-eensains 21.83 | of ; MOBI oy 3 Ml iSamuel Eby EB Boo | 4a Dalton, Hugh. . | 14°0f433 163 Barkelley, John..... H. 8. Taylor 1293 | &o ; Ye imon same Gore 457 obson, James { 14 of 337 121 Bell, William H. 8. Taylor 1.79 ad . ger. co Vos Phan wd | 434 Dobson, Samuel Lor «12 ti Gillam. eres Hoax Sian 60 Yeager, Simon....... W. L."Cooke.,. 0.42 | 433 nr Eddy, George. . | 14 of 433 153 Donnelson, J no...... H. S. Taylor. an MILES TOWNSHIP Is 0 = id Fiher, JRmes v i 5%. 133 Je SY on Ning Jnr TT states 29°63 | 200 Brady, John.........A. Burkett................... 11.31 | 383 Hale, James I... | 155 80 Guerney, Francis....H. Perkins Me 6.96 | 250 Cooper, Wni......... Mrs. E. A. Manning......... 14.37 | 50 Hale, James I. | 1.6 of 433 163 Hall, Henry “I'TA. Burkett 6.38 | 126 Dorsey, John........ J. R. Thompson, ......s.«+»» = 15311] 400 Holt, Edgar.. ; ino 163 Hall, Ronee. Luis Burkett. 16.85 | 200 Deering, Christ...... Jas. Buckingham............ 27.69 | 162 _. Jones, Richar La Hr WA. Thoma 9.43 | 12 a Chel W. F. Smith................ 3.61 | 433 153 Linn, Samuel. 5.3 of 433 163 Hall, Washington....Realty Estates 16.50 | 9D Hall ena Cre aihas Yur sesser Peidnvie ve inie sie 3% 39 hens Loomis. i | 7 of 433 163 Irwin, John......... H. S. Taylor. 10.88 405 \ ousel, Wm......... J. M. Heinle................. 52.2 35 Me Rays am : ! ii of 433 163 Irwin, Matthins..... H. S. Taylor. 10 88 | 250 Jackson, Jeremiah... A. Iarretts wessrnriveavasnaan 14.37 i organ, Fenian i | i; of 433 163 Johnson, Francis....H. S. Taylor 10 88 | 100 Parker... Wm......... John R. ompson.......... 19.50 i —, Mitchell, N. J... Kato Coal Qo. lr rh, x i J Ee ? rid 8 | 20 Shaeffer, Michael.... W. F. Smith................. 4.76 | 433 153 Milliken, M. F Kato Coal Co............... 50.48 i, of 433 163 Jackson, Jeremiah..A. Burkett... 8.0: > Sra y . : 0 4 1} of 433 163 Kerwin. Wm. D H. S. Taylor 10.40 | 12 Unknown'i........... B. F.‘Shaffer................. 3.60 | 400 Martin, Alex.. A Burkett... ........ccvenss 37.56 | Be Fons J. opt oay ad Kato Coal Co 17.27 | 125 Wharton, Moore...... J: Thompson, ............ 11.31 | 433 North, Josep JAD Burkett... 000. ih 0, 40.49 379 L ng Davis: ui Kato Coal C 20.00 | 315 Williams. Daniel....T. G. Crownover............ 16.08 | 433 153 Parker. Wm... TI IR 06.83 i % 130 153 nn David. ..... H. S. Taylor “5.65 | 150 Young, Benjamin....A. Burkett................... 9.27| 218 83: Parker, Jeremiah....W, D, Zerby................. 40.14 ' 33 163 Morris, Joseph...... Kato Coal Co 22.67 PATTON TOWNSHIP 216 Parker. Jeremiah....F. P. Blair.................. 21.65 | y 7 360 144 - Riley, John..... 63.39 . % of 433 153 Pe 3. Tare $011 90 Diehl, Adam......... F. PB. Blaifu,es.. 5.39 | 133 103 Stwriers, Andrew... $3.50 15 A a cb doa ane | 18 100 Diehl, Nicholas Sr.W. T. McCormick 4.46 | 433 163 Tellman, Benj.......Kato Coal Co. 49.61 | Y of 2 od Pian, Ce ar Xi o5'g7 | 10 Diehl, Nicholas Sr.Dani ! I. Johnson.. 4.07 | 260 : Tompkins, Jas. W. C. Heinle Es 25.50 483 163 Panclost, Samuel....Kato Gaal Co “549 108 Diehl, Nicholas Sr.Jno. I. Thompson Est. 15.40 | 190 J VanDyke, Ilenry S. Pp. Pringle & E 35.83 1, of 283 163 Pettit, Chas......... H. 8. Taylor. 1281] 8 Diehl, Nicholas Sr..Jno. I. Thompson Est 10.55 | 433 163 Valentine, A. S. 19.61 216 761 Parker, Jeremiah....A. Burkett. , atl a Diehl, Nicholas Sr..J. Thomas Mitchell 5.37 | 433 153 Wharton, Moore : 36.80 = 18 Rr Mane Roto Cl & 2267 | 150 Diehl, Nicholas Sr..W. G. Runkle........ v0... 20.18 | 433 153 Wharton, Eliz. 40.49 "3,0 433 153 Stewart Chas........H. S. Taylor 12.93 PENN TOWNSHIP = 126 Wain, Phocke,. fary Saylor ifearo 1110 1488 i 1063 Unknown ........ «ick % dy ny 120 20 Hamilton, Thos David & Henry Stoner...... 5.64 433 153 Wharton: Kearney. Rate Coal Co.o..s 10.49 Ch of .123 Wheeler, Henry.....John Hoy Est............... .65 12.3 of 400 Swineford, Geo...... Auman & Alexander......... 14.62 | 433 153 Wahn, Itebecca. ‘Roto Cock To. 67 | CURTIN TOWNSHIP POTTER TOWNSHIP 415 Wahn, Richard...... A. Burkett.... 38.87 300 19 Atwood, N. L....... J.-A. Heinle............ ...» 28.54 | 400 Cogswell, Du... 0. +4. Burkett................... 21.95 50 BOOKS, JONSe. «en rne 7. Eilis Harvey. 722 | 60 100 Felmlee, Moses. ..... W. ¥. Bradford...... 0.10! | oe TAYLOR TOWNSHIP 415 Brooks, Jesse........ J. Ellis Harvey 37.15 | 400 Forbes, James. ...... Realty Estates. ..... eainae 2195 | Anshultz, George....J. W. Thomas Est 6.61 415 Brooks. Jesse........ T 3 "Heinle, 37.15 | 400 Harrison, ‘Wn... A Tarbell reese 21.9 mn gowper, Fumes, nlond Livher 2s 119 Carscadden, D....... . D. Lucas. 23. Levy, Daniel......... ater Smith.................. 21.95 * Hs «ie ssies - A S...oen 1. © 208 Deflaven, Peter..... Kato con), Q 230 18 Moore. James....... Sharles PURE. .cvnorssiviinin x 5 39 Roni gomery: nos Met Rosa: Schiegle e418 294 Bruce, ERE , Negard... . PENOWR >. .......-+A. LL. Aoqman............... . 5 e y Be deanna LJ. LT 28. 311 Evans, Cadwaliader. Kato Coal C 42.07 | 100 Young, Samuel...... Wm PB. Woods. iid 5571 33 2 Sononok,s John, Jomn Nheanter, gat | Boot oo EHiot, WIN... eeenns Lat » 42 . . elvetS. J, DH] .; L300 SLY EB 23.62 RUSH TOWNSHIP 128 Thomas, June. W,,,.John W; Thomas 201 i 115 Gilbert. Wm......... Centre Brick & Clay C 56.42 | 40 10 Atherton Richard...David M. Ellis.............. 2972190 Thomas, dno. W.. John W paoim m3 { 133 163 Hale, Thomas ei E. c. Confer. S181 90 110 Arthur, Amn... ym. ci Heinle sb. oii: 35.47 | 100 Sao 0: Wau. JOM yy fiomas 15.00 ! rwin, Robert.......A. Burkett............. 27. 52 owman, Josep aney M. ompson....... 11.75 SP hasaaLn rit 4 | 0 Reis, Lepecea — kr en Longre Brox & Clay C S052 5 15 Brenner, Daniel. Christ Sharer Est... ik ai 30.13 92 Wallace, Thomas.... Realty Estates...... 11.90 elso, Rebecca...... J. s Harvey. .32 : estnu amue .Chris arer BEst,.......... 35.90 | 480 Kelso, Joseph....... 62.16 | “40 Chestnut, Samuel. ...Christ Sharer Est............ 6.44 | bint IO NY | 400 Long, J. B.......... 35.92 | 400 __ Copenhaver, Jno Burkett. li... 000 36.30 | 259 Deal, Anmises Ceres x I J, DIONer hers teecuy 181 20714 Lowns, Caleb........ 29.36 433 153 Dentler, Jacob,......Christ Sharer Est........... 39.13 | ,0= Fisher, mn. Hr Do B reper ein aisalen salaaio 2 207% Jongshatb, Tsane/lfato Son So Lh 31 " berms, Pui, Chittord Fee ress arasir ais 28.89 | 100 sher, Wm. P..... ora li. Kisher.............. 24 7 Mason, John S...... ato a isis x 5 wards, homa rs. A. J. Steinman......... 74.95 SN | Mitchell, M. J....... Clement Gardner. 4.20 { 433 163 Ehler, Daniel........Christ Sharer ESt........... 59.13 WALKER TOWNSHIP 100 Smith, Peter........ Bowers & Leather 11.32 | 433 153 Fitzgerald, Daniel...Christ Sharer Est........... 39.13 | 190 159 Evans, Jesse.......,.Joseph IH. Long Bst........ 6.16 io Taylor, JSogenh trae : 3 Mann... 3115: 50 70 French. Edward. S R Pringle. antl 11.41 2 98 Wy cena Donny Estates. Ree a5 22 ahn, Richard...... ato Coal Co 23.62 15 0 raff, Sebastian. ames. ¥. Stott.............. . , Peter......... Jose - Li Gstu..e... .e 2 | 433 163 White, James....... J. Ellis Harvey........ wie | 4 Of 433 153 Graff, Sebastian. John Smutzinger............ P38 100 McKee, Samuel...... B. I. Shaffer. ...c.ciciiviinses 6.51 | 188 Wiest Bad). Centre Brick & Clay Co. 29.36 | = 15 Suna ek -David ¥ Els oie oo So a i Shaffer Ma on eereens A > ki & <9. 2 i +. Thomas... «.. «I i, Sih ensiiarisiiess . «d= Fy voiae ls S. PL. seein naanens . | 1-5 of 160 Willis Jonathan.....Mary S. Fearon.............. B21 018 1 Homiten, Thom Pavia 2% Els a 21.97 A Parken Richard, BF Slater, its nied ne Sih i : arris. Wm. P. .B. J. Pruner Est............ 95 | 0 sey, sacred ur LC. Lita o.1o | FERGUSON TOWNSHIP 433 153 Hamilton, Hugh A Burkett... lowe ua 192 Warden. Jeremiah...B. F. Shaffer................ 9.61 | 100 Burchfield, Wm. W. G. Runkle................ 6.56 431 100 Harris, John P N.C Hine Est... sna 39'13| 88 Wickersham, Amos..Joseph H. Long Est......... 6.10 i 100 Hall, John....... .. 1. Bllenbherger.......s:«... 5.52 433 153 Irvin "Robert Mrs. A. J. Steinman. .... 74.95 ’ | 36 47 McCullough, Thos... W. G. Runkle............... 5.71 14 of 433 153 Irvin, Robert 8 CBrISE, 1rresrsenen iv 008 WORTH TOWNSHIP ie GREGG TOWNSHIP 433 153 . Christ Sharer Est... . 8033] 23 Climer, Henry.......John I. Thompson........... 9.96 141 11 Ackert, Wm J. F. Kline gg 433 ) .E. J, Pruner Est.. . 7495223 Hawthorn, James...L. C. Eller................... 10.04 PF 7 OREnown -. orl TQ Crownover. coeur: 390 396 .A. Burkett....... . 35.96 | 300 Hawthorn, James...John I. Thompson.......... 20.93 i 50 DETR i Ramo] DECKeT, svn. vers on 58 100 Boalty Balates 4 . 14 ii Kuh, Geo, & Math. Superior Silica Brick Co..... 89.21 } =. y 2 5 . . . einle Bl ave sannsnee « 48 « AX, Di. ueeieds . vi SIP. hese ees ol {1-300 FIRNOWE | csuviunsnth AMO) DOtROr «ses sures ses 87 IW. 33.81 | 260 Lawson, Geo........ John I. Thompson.......... 234.58 Dy HBLas msn i 15 Lawrence Casper.... 4.39 | 330 Maryland, Jasper....John I. Thompson........... 22.71 { HAINES TOWNSHIP im i= Lowen, Richard..... 39.13 1 Miles, Ranuel Sater, John I Apnson eden $040 2 K, JamMeS...esv.s C ithe everson: 15.03 x . 37.3%] 1 ] n, John. .....,: John 1. hOMPSON......0vv-» i | 96 ha ey nen i 1195 % of 433 15 'E. S. Christ..... 4625 | 86 Ross, JOIN. ........- John I. Thompson... ...... 82 | 185 Cowley, H, B.....\. Spangler & Smith........... 934 % of 433 15 EB. 57.04| 79 Swanswick. John....John I. Thompson.......... 57.36 200 Gratz,’ Simon........ Jas. T. Eisenhuth.......ov00 1.32 2 163 i 0.05 = Singer gn... des Join 1 Thompson, sliinitorie vans 530 | A oJ. 6 ppen, Wm. J..... 0 . pson.......... y | HALFMOON TOWNSHIP 433 153 .D. H. Hastings & Orvis..... 182.29 | 100 Unknown ........... Eliza P. Albrecht............ 6.2 12a) Curtin, Roland...... John I. Thompson........... 6.82 433 153 JP. BIR ccs, 39.13 [137 Wistar, Daniel.......John I. Thompson.......... 13. 18 Shearer, Isaac....... T.G. Crownover....../...... 5.16 433 153 .Christ Sharer BEst........... 182.73 | 30 Wistar, Wm......... ohn 1. Thompson.......... 38.73 il Thompson, Jno. 1...John x Thompson rin riencnie np ny i 7 vo DY -B ; Pi CCA 2848 55 Winning, Wilbur....Wilbur Winning...,......... 7.03 131 THROWN +. haa. in Ze J Fowler... ee... 82 4 0 . BE eters. chard......E. PISE.ceisinni contin ss b7. HARRIS TOWNSHIP EE ee Re L. FRANK MAYES, 400 Andree, Absolom....A. Burkett................... 19.72 106 Snyder, Barbara.....Christ Sharer Bst........... 36.79 |65-19-6t County Treasurer. i : | 7. i i REASURER’S SALE OF SEAT-|Jos. Green Est.—Lot......... 22.921 Mrs, Pear! Shank—1.......... 8717. 'M Houtz—-Liot....... uuu 25.78' J. O. Robins—Lot............ nos Harry Solt........iiiiiinnn. 4.31 LT FARR al hy es et Sone TW "" ‘coLLEGE TowNsmip (Ton M. Tobb-2b. CE IR Tap ret a the Treasurer's Sale of Gnseated MILLIEIM BORO. Rhoda Dillen—Lot........... 4.00, HOWARD TOWNSHIP Ye olin & Me 09 ! WR TOW re Inds. will be sold the following Bd. & Mrs. May Brown— KE. J, Dearmit—Lot.......i... 4.00{Mary Confer—92.............. 28.40 °F Nyhitehead—Lot. ....... TAYLOR TOWNSHIP tracts or lots of land returned by| % ACTe.............c....... 11.90|J. D. Campbell—Lot.......... 6.43|Clair Butler Est—I4 Acre..... 4.80 Yiorman Schiley—Lot......... glChristine Stiner—28.......... 9.88 the tax collector of the following PHILIPSBURG BORO. Lynn From—Lot............. 4.00| HUSTON TOWNSHIP Emma Fishert—Lot aa J. W. Thomes Est—63........ 18.99 districts respectively, for the years Nellie Ziegler—Lot 5.45/ Geo. Gummo—Lot............ TOE D. Byers,.165,..........,, LAS Trarry HArper—1l..... i evee- 13|Hepburn Washburn—100..... 40.13 1918 and 1919, to the Commission- Poste Na 0 £ fa pa W. Grauver—Lot.............. 4.00| Martha Gill Est—House & Lot 5.46 Harry Hamilton—Lot........ Emery Bovles—T76............. 24.27 ers of Centre county, for non-pay- a ID son Hor Bis Mrs. Elmer Graham—Lot..... 4.00{Oliver Irwin—Lot............. 747 James Homer na F. BB. Kennedy—68........... 24.27 eb of taxes, according to the Dro- | Nobie B Goss Lot... 515 Rlzbeth Lutesliot ceereiaaes 1001 R. R. Richards—6............ 5.46 Mercantile Reality Co-—Lots.. Goldie Long —50........ocunee 159 visions of the several Acts of AS-|John Stracham—Lot.......... ih a mG Nl + | LIBERTY TOWNSHIP Justin Ple—d................ Sanh Haas i000 5m sembly Felat oe ie sale ob seall SOUTH PHILIPSBURG BORO. William Rickert-Lut......... 400 Fe est1e. Seren 2H itis CL ore LT 12.06 |r Tudson—Lot......... 4.85| Nellie Shirk-—Lot............. 00 y N OWRD TB. Beam: La uy JOnes—25.. uu iaeerereees 4 BELLEFONTE BORO IT AA | Elizabeth Wilmert—Lot...... 4.00] MARION TOWNSHIP do PAT seen Shinty : - TRL Owner’s Name Taxes & Costs) & Lob... cor. sesvincersrssin 0.99/John Wagner—Lots.......... 6.43|Janc Sayers—House & Lot... 17.6% po "Frantz... 0. iin. UNION TOWNSHIX W. P. Brown—Lot $ 7.18/Alex Waring—Lot............ 8.9% CURTIN TOWNSHIP PATTON TOWNSHIP Gotlett TPULStEP.. ec is eaiensns Albert Peters—6........co0vnn 5.89 James Burns—Lot..... 7.30 BENNER TOWNSHIP J. Watson Lucas—3S......... ong David Biddle House & Lot.. 6.10/Fred Gressa—2............... WALKER TOWNSHIP Peter Conway Est—Lot...... 23.41iKlinger Fst—LoOt............ 3.67| Joseph Packer Est—69........ 20.50 Mrs. Sagan Kelley—13....... 34.43 SNOW SHOE TOWNSHIP inns D~ Flouie & Lot 6.97 Susan Fogleman Est—Lot... 14.78|Tohn Bressler Bst.—Lot 6.89| Daniel Percell Sr—85........ IP SOI Se I Ue a laa ny Be ralv : Bole de Teo Recsinger. i Martha Lane Est—House She Jacob Koch Bst.—Lot........ 3.55|d; Fred Youn —120 Sevan 16.69 | POTTER TOWNSHIP Janes Culver i 26:20 Gopps e a 60. Resting or sm LE i Bat iotd. 209,88 BOGGS TOWNSHIP AO SoTL be ysis uve 98715. D. Brighin & Co 140... 6.29 fonry Heiser Bs 50.07|McCoy ‘& Tinn--Ore rights... 103.74 & Howard Lingie st Lot " op5.97|Harry Quick—2 4.07 Rima Ni a 6. ani 1 John ¥. Glasgow Est—7... 8.5 Robert Lucas Est 26.59 , . afferty Hst— eels’ 2002 pry Quick—2............... 4.07| Eliza Foringer—6............. 41] v \ rw | ey = dk a c : Joseph Green Est.—100....... 17.12| Joseph ong Bst—436........ 18.99 RUSH TOWNSHIP _|John Miller Es 31.30 L F nk Ma es MILESBURG BORO Raymond Lucas—4.........:. 8.72| David McCloskey Bst—7...... 10.40/J. Postelwight................ 12.85 Hannah Reside 7.82 . ra YY 9 A. 8S. Smith Est—Lot... Sue Niles Est.—300........... 40.38| Mary McCloskey Est—45...... 14.04|James Biley....00........... 7.99 Patrick Ward.... . 45.31 ! Clement Dale—Lot........... Robert Spicer—6.............. 7.56|Clement Gardner............. 5.40/George Richards.............. 3.81 James C. Lucas Es 2 County Treasurer.