Bellefonte, Pa., August 6, 1920. —— THE FISHING OUTFIT. You may talk of stylish raiment, You may boast your broadcloth fine, And he price you gave in payment May be treble that of mine. a But there's one suit I'd not trade you Though it's shabby and it’s thf, For the garb your tailor made you; That's the tattered, Mud-bespattered Suit that I go fishing in. There's no king in silks and laces And with jewels on his breast With whom I would alter places. .. There's no man so richly dressed Or so like a fashion panel That his luxuries to win I would swap my shirt of flannel .. And the rusty Frayed and dusty Suit that I go fishing in. *Tis an outfit meant for pleasure, It is freedom’s raiment, too; It’s a garb that I shall treasure Till my time of life is through Though perhaps it looks the saddest Of all robes for mortal skin I am proudest and I'm gladdest In that easy Old and greasy Suit that I go fishing in. (Copyright by Edgar A. Guest.) THE DOG AND THE CROOK This is only partially a dog story. Otherwise it is a man story. Seymore Kent was a good man and intelligent. His dog “Doc” was an Airedale, and his goodness and intel- ligence were not recognized so gener- ally as they were entitled to be re- nized. “Doc” never liked Henry Bross, who for six months of a certain seed- time and harvest worked at the Kent farm. He would not make up with im. ® Henry Bross was well thought of by the Kents. He resigned his job late in October to go to the city. Only “Doc” was glad. He trailed the man down to the road with never a tail-wag, and then, having watched him go over the hill towards the rail- way station, wagged his tail back to se. By said Mr. Kent, thoughtful- ly. “Doc, old boy, what’s wrong with Henry ?” J The animal answered the question later. ; fwd Mr. Kent arose one moring to fin his automobile gone. Also to find his one. oi after breakfast the dog came back. He yas yo weary and spattered with mud. : rat telephoned to the sheriff, reporting the theft, and went on with Lis work. The dor Sicha out on the porch and rested. “The py accompanied by a dep- uty, appeared presently in a igh powered car. The dog arose, yawne and joined the men at the garage. He followed when they traced the wheel- the road. : en: north,” said the sheriff. After the tracks turned into the were lost. : : Te north.” The sheriff clim- bed into his machine and called to the eputy. 9 RWait,” said the i dog i ing to say something. ® Bo ad A naarad a sympathet- jc and understanding spirit in the deputy and was alternately looking up into his face and running down the and back again. road 2 says,” said the deputy, “that there is something he wishes to show me in the other eioeion from which are headed sheriff. : YFiddlesticks!” said the sheriff. “Likely a squirrel’s nest.’ : But he too was an understanding man in a way, the sheriff, and he look- ed at the dog seriously. “Follow him and see what you find,” he ordered. The depaty ed the dog down the road for perhaps three hundred vards. At a clump of bushes by the roadside the dog stopped and wagged his tail. “Well, what is it? ; Into the thicket and out again went the dog, greatly excited. “Your meaning is plain enough,” said the deputy. “I reckon I'll have to accept your invitation and crawl in there.” Which he did, emerging presently with an iron registration tag such as is in common use for attaching to automobiles. “Well, I'll be jiggered!” ejaculated the deputy, and hurried back to where Mr. Kent and the sheriff were waiting. “Was this tag taken from your car?” he asked. “That is my registration,” declared Mr. Kent. “Then,” asserted the deputy, “who- ever took your car went north for only a short distance, probably to the crossroads, as a blind, and then turn- ed into the thicket younded. The dog saw them do it. Some dog.” At this juncture Mr. Kent, stand- ing with his hand on “Doc’s” head, began to put two and two together, as the saying is. He reasoned aloud for the others’ benefit. The dog must have followed the thieves for miles. You will see he is spattered with red mud, and there is no red soil this side of the Riverton district. But why did he come back ?” There was very little gasoline in the tank. It is possible the car stopped.” “And he came back to get you be- fore it started again,” suggested the deputy, “and he couldn’t make you underst:nd. Is that the way of it, Mr. Dog?” “Doc” wagged his tail violently. “I is, by thunder,” cried the sherif?. “Get in here, both of you—all three 2 and we’ll see what we can nd.” After an hour’s rapid driving, the deputy suddenly put a hand on the sheriff’s arm. “There they are,” he said. hard, sheriff.” The car they were in quest of sto'xl by the roadside at the foot of a long hill. As they approached, a man jumped from the car and started to run across a field towards the timber. “Shoot!” ordered the sheriff. “Drive The deputy drew his pistol and fired. The man stopped and put up his hands. 4 “Fine!” grunted the sheriff. “Go get him.” The deputy obeyed. “Your car?” asked the sheriff when the man stood before him. “Mine and my partner’s.” “Where is your partner?” “Gone over yonder for gasoline.” “IT see. Well, we’ll just put our- selves out of sight behind that straw- stack and wait for your partner. “Take down the bars, Bill.” It was perhaps a half-hour later when a peculiar growl deep in the throat of the dog, and a lifting of the hair of his back gave warning that someone was approaching. Yet no one was in sight upon the road. “Look!” whispered the deputy. “Follow the dog’s nose. See! There he is with a gasoline can, edging out of the woods. He’s the foxy bird of the two.” “Henry Bross!” muttered Mr. Kent. “Watch close!” commanded the sheriff. “There! I knew it! He's seen us. We'll have to run if we get him. Shoot, Bill. Maybe he’s as yel- low as his partner. What the— With a growl which was almost a roar “Doc” had broken away, and it was less than three minutes later when Henry Bross meekly clambered down from a tree at the sheriff’s re- quest. “How much for the dog. Kent?” asked the sheriff, as they stopped at the Kent place on the return trip. “You're owing him something, for I fear these birds would have got clean away if it hadn’t been for him.” “Not for sale, Sheriff,” replied Mr. Kent. And then, obeying a sudden impulse, he dropped to one knee ard put an arm affectionately around “Doc’s” neck. “You good old—mis- understood — Unappreciated— broth- er!” he whispered brokenly. More Sugar for You. People who have soft-pedaled the sugar bowl for six years may be in- terested in the statement that crop conditions on July 1 promised an in- crease in next fall’s sugar production in the United States; an increase amounting to, approximately, 333,000 tons or enough to load a train of freight cars 70 or 75 miles long, al- lowing 40 tons per car. This pros- pective crop is equal to more than 22 pounds of sugar for every man, wo- man, and child within the United States, and the increase over last year equals more than six pounds per per- son. The sugar-beet crop this year covers almost a million acres as against the 5-year average of about two-thirds of a million; and the growing conditions on July 1 were about the 10 year average. More than half of which is intended for sugar and the other half for syr- up, after deducting considerable amounts for planting the next crop. There is a substantial increase in acreage over last year, especially in Louisiana where nearly all the cane sugar of the United States is made. The growing condition of the cane in Louisiana is much better than last vear but considerably under the aver- age for the pastnine years. The De- partment of Agriculture, which has carried on a number of projects lool: ing toward making this country self- sustaining from a sugar standpoint, in cooperating with other agencies in protecting the crops from insects an:! disease and otherwise promoting the production and utilization of a bump- er sugar crop. It should be borne in mind, however, that the forecast for 1920 is based upon conditions on July 1, and the actual outrun would be above or below this forecast accord- ing as conditions between July 1 and harvest are better or worse than av- erage. Potato Wart Makes First Appearance. The dreaded potato wart disease, imported from Europe to Pennsyl- vania two years ago, has been found to attack the tomato plant in the in- fected districts of Pennsylvania, through the investigations carried on since its discovery. Small galls are to be found clinging to the roots of tomato plants growing in soil that has produced warty potatoes, but so far as now known, the disease pro- duces no further injury to the plant and does not effect the fruit of the tomato. Specialists from the Penn- sylvania State College continued their investigation of the wart disease at Freeland with renewed efforts this spring, in cooperation with the U. S. Department of Agriculture. All of the usual truck and farm crops have been tried on the infected soil, but the tomato is the only plant attacked. It has been found that seventeen of the sixty-three American varities of potato grown at the Freeland laboru- tory are immune from the disease. More native varities are beine tested this year. Parts of seven Pennsyl- vania counties are infected with the disease, and quarantines have been placed in a number of towns and dis- tricts in Luzerne, Carbon, Schuylkill, Lackawanna, Cambria, Centre and Clearfield. Only immune varieties are undesirable necessities. Thus far it has been proved that steam sterilization of the infected soil will kill the disease, as will also steam and formaldehyde combined. But these are expensive methods, and the work this year may bring out a Lette plan for complete eradication. Big Trade in Old Papers. A curious item of commercial news is that the east coast district of the island of Sumatra in 1918 imported 886,835 pounds of “second-hand news- papers” from the United States. Im- ports of the same of merchandise from January 1 to September 1, of last year, were 572,585 pounds. The papers are wanted to cover young sprouts of rubber trees and sugar cane. The climate of the island iz very hot—as might be surmised from the circumstance that the equator runs through the middle of it—and, to prevent the sprouts burning up in the fierce sunshine, sheets of paper are spread over them. Old newspa- pers serve the purpose very well, each sheet being held down with stones at the corners. In Hawaii the same method of protection is adopted, but in that archipelago sheets of rice pa- per, imported from Japan, are used. INDIAN SYMBOLS To the old-time Indian warrior the wearing of feathers was a serious matter. He adopted only the feath- ers of certain birds and wore them in accordance with well-understood law and custom. He held in high honor the eagle, the raven and the falcon, commonly called the hawk. The owl and some of the waterfowl, such as the loon, the cormorant and the pelican, played a minor part in Indian myths and folklore, for in the warriors’ codes and emblems only the dashing and cour- ageous birds of prey were permitted to appear—the eagle standing first. The feathers of this bird were highly prized, since they stood for brave deeds. They were variously worn among different tribes. Perhaps the best and completest system was developed by the Sioux nation, a system that their neighbors on the plains gradually adopted. No Sioux could wear an eagle’s tail feather unless he had counted a coup, or stroke, upon an enemy dead. or alive. In a battle his fellow warriors were witnesses of the deed; but if he was alone when he made the count, to obtain the feather he must have unmistakable proof. There were four coup counts on each enemy. If a man struck an en- emy in a hand-to-hand battle and got away without being killed or even seriously hurt, he could count one coup, but he might not kill his foe and yet be able to count no coup. The eagle feather is the only one that represented a coup given in battle, but other feathers and, subsid- lary trimmings were used to express various degrees of courage and endur- ance. For example, a group of raven on the sides indicated tna? the wear- er had been wounded in a battie more than once. A single goose feather dyed red and trimmed meant that the wearer was severely wounded in battle. Sometimes a man wore an eagle feather dyed or trimmed, mean- ing that he was wounded at the time he counted the coup. An eagle feath- er with a notch dyed red meant that the wearer counted the coup and took the scalp also, but was wounded while accomplishing it. Perhaps he had the feather cut off at the tip, showing that he had killed his foe and counted the coup on the same enemy. If he had a desperate battle, with the odds against him, in which he come off victor, he might tip his eagle’s feather with buffalo hair; and if he counted coup in a charge on horseback in the face of imminent danger, he was privileged to tip the feather with hair from a horse’s tail. Among some tribes, the wearing of a split feather denoted that the wear- er had been wounded, and when the feather was clipped off at the tip, that he had taken a scalp. When a war- rior wore one eagle feather upright and the rest drooping it indicated that he was surrounded in company with a party of warriors of whom he was the sole survivor. When the Indian had won a number of eagle feathers and had been sur- rounded by the enemy, but succeeded In getting away, he was entitled to 2 war bonnet. Only an exceptional record of many battles in which he had shown great coolness, skill and daring entitled him to the long, trail- Ing war bonnet of many plumes. Other ornaments and parts of u warrior’s dress bore a special signif- icance. If he had been in the van- guard of battle more than once and had led counter-charges he might wear the whole skin of a raven on his back in the dances. If he had pursued his enemy into the hostile camp and killed him there, he might wear over his shoulders an otter skin with the head hanging upon his chest. A gart- er made of skunk’s skin with the head and tail on showed that he had suc- cessfully taken a scalp under the enemy’s fire. He adorned himself with a grizzly bear’s claws if, on having been surrounded, he had charged singly, bear like, and repuls- ed the enemy. The paws of a grizz- ly bear, claws and all, donated that he had knocked off or pulled off the foe in a mounted encounter. The addition of an ermine skin to the war bonnet is an honor that few warriors earned in the old days. It was a degree of the highest type. The man who was recognized as a past master of courage, who had achieved all the decorations of a pat- riot and a true warrior, who was dauntless in war, yet gentle at home, a friend and a brother—he alone might wear ermine upon his war bon- net or trim his ceremonial shirt with the beautiful white fur. The addition of buffalo-hair trim- ming to a warrior’s bonnet or shirt or leggings indicated that he had taken many scalps. If he was a chief, he might even have a buffalo tail dangle from one of his tepee poles. Favoritism was unknown. No hon- crs without the authority of the tribe and the highest degrees were conferr- ed only upon men who had been tried again and again by every conceivable ordeal. At a public dance the warrior re- counted his deed, acting it out for the benefit of the younger element. He could not add anything to it, be- cause the event was already well known. When the old customs were intact, it was the old warriors who claimed this privilege, and they, too, were allowed to paint their bodies in imitatiom pf their severe wounds. I remembe¥r very well in a great tribal dance that there were so manv of these old men who enacted their deeds with great spirit. One had painted the upper half of his face black, with zigzag lines representing lightning, the whole symbolic of a terrific battle. The lower part of his face was painted red, with streaks running from the mouth to the chin; every Indian knew that he had been wounded in the mouth. Another had painted in the middle of his broad chest a red hole, and from it there ran red streaks, with a Crow arrow depicted in realastic fashion. These customs have their barbaric side, but a really touching part of them is that a warrior always shar- ed his honors with his war horse. Such a horse wore an eagle plume in his forelock as proudly as his master, and his tail or mane was trimmed and dyed according to his rider's war rec- ord. Sometimes an acknowledged war- rior decorated his long pipestem or the handle of his war club. But no Indian wore the honorable insignia of another; in fact, he wore only what had been awarded to him in due course by the council of his tribe. The Boy Scouts may, if they choose, adapt this counted in their organization, grad- ing the various exploits in accordance with the real manhood needed to ac- complish them. Paid for His Paper and Costs. The Court of Common Pleas of Lawrence County recently decided a small case involving $5.40 in the in- terest of a newspaper published in | that county. It appears from the evidence that a carrier delivered a paper for a year and several months to one Henry Seiber who refusd to pay for it because he hadn’t ordered it. Seiber accepted the paper and the family read it. The court in in- structing the jury said among other things that Seiber in not refusing the paper was party to an implied contract to pay for what he got on the same theory that if a merchant delivers groceries to the wrong house and the person who got the groceries and used them, was liable, or a man called to do a day’s work in a gar- den and gets in the wrong lot and works a day with the knowledge of the owner of the lot, the man who re- ceived the benefit of that man’s work was under obligations to pay for tha labor, or the man who cleans anoth- ‘er’s pavement while the owner looks on without ordering the workman to stop, there is an implied contract to pay .for that man’s service. The same principle of law holds good, said the Judge, when you receive a paper through the mails. In accept- ing the paper there is an implied con- tract to pay for it. The decision by the court in di- recting a verdict against the mun who read the paper in favor of the publisher is not new as the question has been decided by many of the lower courts and upheld by appellate courts of nearly every State in the Union.—Huntingdon News. Infected Areas are Under Scrutiny. Ebensburg, July 29, 1920—Inspect- ors D. C. Reese and H. L. Roberts of the Potato Wart Quarantine Office here, this week began the work of visiting gardens in the districts quar- antined for. Potato Wart Disease in order to ascertain whether or not each person who has planted pota- toes has the necessary permit. Dur- ing these visits the inspectors are counting the rows, and the length so that when digging time comes in the fall there will be no mistake as to the amount to be inspected. Every grow- er of potatoes in infected areas should read the reverse side of the permit, with special attention to paragraph 2, which provides for the present and future in prohibiting the digging, har- vesting or removal from the soil cf any potatoes grown under the permit except in the presence and with the consent of an authorized inspector or by his written permission. All per- sons concerned will be visited prior to the time of digging to arrange dates for the inspection of the crop. The foregoing applies only to the Bor- oughs of Nant-y-Glo, Vintondale, tilly with the adjoining area of Washington township, villages of Dunlo and Llanfair with the adjoin- ing area of Adams township, borough of Osceola Mills, with the adjoining area of Rush township (Newtown), Snow Shoe borough with the adjoining area of Snow Shoe township, (Clar- ence.) For information regarding any mat ters connected with the Potato Wart Quarantine in the districts named, pecple interested are requested to write or phone to the Potato Wart Quarantine office, room 203, Cambria Trust Building, Ebensburg, or Bell ‘phone 21-M. Something Else Again. jenchere When did Rome begin to fall ? Freshie—I don’t know the exact date, sir, but I see that roller skating dates back to 1790—Buffalo Express. ——Subscribe for the Watchman. ROPOSED AMENDMENTS 7»? THE P CONSTITUTION SUBMITTED TO THE CITIZENS OF THE COM- MONWEALTH FOR THEIR APPROVAL OR REJECTION, AT THE ELECTION TO BE HELD ON TUESDAY, NOVEM- BER 2, 1920, BY THE GENERAL AS- THE COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA, AND PUBLISHED BY ORDER OF THE SECRETARY OF THE COMMONWEALTH, IN PUR- SUANCE OF ARTICLE XVIII OF THE CONSTITUTION. Number One. A JOINT RESOLUTION Proposing an amendment to section eleven of article sixteen of the Constitution of Pennsylvania. Be it resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in General Assembly met, That the following amendment to the Constitution of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania be, and the same is hereby, proposed, in accordance with the eigh- teenth article thereof: — Amend section eleven, article sixteen of the Constitution of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, which reads as follows: “No corporate body toe possess banking and discounting privileges shall be created or organized in pursuance of any law without three months’ previous public notice, at the place of the intended loca- tion, of the intention to apply for such privileges, in such manner as shall be pre- scribed by law, nor shall a charter for such privilege be granted for a longer period than twenty years,” so that it shall read as follows: The General Assembly shall have the power by general law to provide for the incorporation of banks and trust com- panies, and to prescribe the powers thereof. A true copy of Joint Resolution No. 1.. CYRUS E. WOODS, Secretary of the Commonwealth. Number Two. A JOINT RESOLUTION Proposing an amendment to article nine, section eight of the Constitution of Pennsylvania. Section 1. Be it resolved by the Sen- ate and House of Representatives in Gen- eral Assembly met, That the following amendment to the Constitution of Penn- sylvania be, and the same is hereby, pro- posed, in accordance with the eighteenth article thereof: — That article nine, section eight, be amended to read as follows: Section 8. The debt of any county, city, borough, township, school district, or system to the honors: other municipality or incorporated dis- trict, except as provided herein, and in section fifteen of this article, shall never exceed seven (7) per centum upon the assessed value of the taxable property therein, but the debt of the city of Phila- delphia may be increased in such amount that the total city debt of said city shall not exceed ten per centum (10) upon the assessed value of the taxable property therein, nor shall any such municipality or district incur any new debt, or increase its indebtedness to an amount exceeding two (2) per centum upon such assessed valuation of property, .without the con- sent of the electors thereof at a public election in such manner as shall be pro- vided by law. In ascertaining the bor- rowing capacity of the city of Philadel- phia, at any time, there shall be deducted from such debt so much of the debt of said city as shall have been incurred, or is about to be incurred, and the proceeds thereof expended, or about to be expended, upon any public improvement, or in the construction, purchase, or condemnation of any public utility, or part thereof, or facility thereof, if such public improve- ment or public utility. or part thereof, whether separately or in connection with any other public improvement or public utility, or part thercof, may reasonably be expected to yield revenue in excess of operating expenses sufficient to pay the interest and sinking fund charges thereon. The method of determining such amount, so to be deducted, may be prescribed by the General Assembly. In incurring indebtedness for any pur- pose the city of Philadelphia may issue its obligations maturing not later than fifty (60) years from the date thereof, with provision for sinking-fund sufficient to retire said obligations at maturity, the payment to such sinking-fund to be in equal or graded annual or other periodi- cal installments. Where any indebtedness shall be or shall have been incurred by said city of Philadelphia for the purpose of the construction or improvements of : public works or utilities of any character, { from which income or revenue is to be derived by said city, or for the reclama- tion of land to be used in the construction of wharves or docks owned or to be owned by said city, such obligations may be in an amount sufficient to provide for, and may include the amount of, the interest and sinking-fund charges accruing and which may accrue thereon throughout the period of construction, and until the expiration of one year after the com- pletion of the work for which said in- debtedness shall have been incurred; and said city shall not be required to levy a tax to pay said interest and sinking-fund charges as required by section ten, article nine of the Constitution of Pennsylvania, until the expiration of said period of one vear after the completion of said work. A true copy of Joint Resolution No. 2. CYRUS E. WOODS, Secretary of the Commonwealth. CONSTITUTION SUBMITTED TO THE CITIZENS OF THE COM- MONWEALTH, FOR THEIR APPROVAL OR REJECTION. BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSLYVANIA, AND PUBLISHED BY ORDER OF THE SECRETARY OF THE COMMONWEALTH, IN PUOR- SUANCE OF ARTICLE XVIII OF THE CONSTITUTION. Number One-A, A JOINT RESOLUTION Proposing an amendment to article three (III) of the Constitution of the Com- minwealth of Pennsylvania. Section 1. Be it resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives of the Com- monwealth of Pennsylvania in General Assembly met, That the following amend- ment to the Constitution of Pennsylvania be, and the same is hereby, proposed, in accordance with the eighteenth article thereof :— That article three be amended by add- ing thereto the following: . Section 34. The Legislature shall have power to classify counties, cities, bor- oughs, school districts, and townships ac- cording to population, and all laws passcd relating to each class, and all laws passed relating to, and regulating procedure and procezdings in court with reference to. any class, shall be deemed general legis- lation within the meaning of this Con- stitution; but counties, cities and school districts shall not be divided into more than seven classes, and boroughs into not more than five classes. 3 true copy of Joint 1A. Pron AMENDMENTS TO THE Resolution No. CYRUS E. WOODS, Secretary of the Commonwealth. Number Two-A A JOINT RESOLUTION Proposing an amendment to article three, section six of the Constitution of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, so that the subject of an amendment or supplement to a law and the subject to which such law is extended or on which it is conferred shall be clearly expressed in its title. Be it resolved by the Senate and the House of Representatives of the Common- wealth of Pennsylvania in General As- sembly met, That the following amend- ment to the Constitution of Pennsylvania be, and the same is hereby, proposed, in accordance with the eighteenth article thereof :— That section six of article three be amendad so as to read as follows: Section 6. No law shall be revived, amended, or the provisions thereof ex- tended or conferred, by reference to its title only. So much thereof as is revived. amended, extended, or conferred shall be reenacted and published at length, and the subject of the amendment or sup- plement and the subject to which such law is extended or on which it is con- ferred shall be clearly expressed in its title. a true copy of Joint Resolution No. CYRUS E. WOODS, Secretary of the Commonwealth. Number Three-A. A JOINT RESOLUTION Proposing an amendment to section one, article eight of the Constitution of Pennsylvania. Section 1. Be it resolved by the Sen- ate and House of Representatives of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in Gen- eral Assembly met, That the following amendment to the Constitution of Penn- sylvania be, and the same is hereby, pro- posed, in accordance with the eighteenih article, thereof :— That section one of article eight, which reads as follows: “Section 1. ¥Every male citizen twenty- one years of age, possessing the follow- ing qualifications, shall be entitled to vote at all elections, subject, however, to such laws requiring and regulating the regis- tration of electors as the General As- sembly may enact: “First. He shall have been a citizen of the United States at least one month. “Second. He shall have resided in the State one year (or, having previously been a qualified elector or native-born eitizen of the State, he shall have re- moved therefrom and returned, then six moni), immediately preceding the elec- tion, . “Third. He shall have resided in the election district where he shall offer to vote at least two months immediately preceding the election. “Fourth. If twenty-two years of age and upwards, he shall have paid, within two years, a State or county tax, which shall have been assessed at least two months, and paid at least one month before the election,” be amended so that the same shall read as follows: Section 1. Every citizen male or female of twenty-one years of age, pos- sessing the following qualifications, shall be entitled to vote at all elcetions, sub- ject, however, to such laws requiring and regulating the registration of electors as the General Assembly may enact: First. He or she shall have been a citizen of the United States at least one month. Second. He or she shall have resided in the State one year (or, having pre- viously been a qualified elector or native- born citizen of the State, he or she shall have removed therefrom and returned, then six montlis), immediately preceding the election. Third. He or she shall have resided in the election district where he or she shall offer to vote at least two months im- mediately preceding the election. Fourth, If twenty-two years of age and upwards, he or she shall have paid, within two years, a State or county tax, which shall have been assessed at least two months and paid at least one month before the election. Fifth. Wherever the words “he,” “his,” “him,” and “himself” occur in any sec- tion of article eight of this Constitution, the same shall be construed as if written, respectively, ‘he or she,” ‘his or her,” “him or Ler,” and “himself or herself.” a true copy of Joint Resolution No. CYRUS E. WOODS, Secretary of the Commonwealth. Number Four-A. A JOINT RESOLUTION Proposing an amendment to section one (1) of article fifteen (XV) of the Con- stitution of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. Section 1. Be it resolved by the Sen- ate and House of Representatives of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in Gen- eral Assembly met, That the following amendment to the Constitution of Penn- sylvania be and the same is hereby, pro- posed, in accordance with the eighteenth article thereof :— That section one of which reads as follows: “Section 1. Cities may be chartered whenever a majority of ‘the electors of any town or borough having a population of at least ten thousand shall vote at any general election in favor of the same,” be, and the same is hereby, amended to read as follows: Section 1. Cities may be chartered whenever a majority of the electors of any town or borough having a population of at least ten thousand shall vote at any general or municipal election in favor of the same. Cities, or cities of any partic- ular class, may be given the right and power to frame and adopt their owa charters and to exercise the powers and authority of local self-government, sub- ject, however, to such restrictions. limi- tations, and regulations, as may be im- posed by the Legislature. Laws also mdy be enacted affecting the organiza- tion and government of cities and bor- oughs, which shall become effective in any city or borough only when submitted to the electors chereof, and approved by a majority of those voting thereon. 12 true copy of Joint Resolution No. article fifteen, CYRUS E. WOODS, Secretary of the Commonwealth. Number 5-A. A JOINT RESOLUTION. Proposing an amendment to article nine, ® section seven of the Constitution of Pennsylvania. Section 1. Be it resolved by the Sen- ate and House of Representatives of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in Gen- eral Assembly met, That the following amendment to the Constitution of Penn. sylvania be, and the same is hereby, pro- posed, in accordance with the eighteenth article thereof :— That article nine, section seven amended to read as follows: be Section 7. The General Assembly shall not authorize any county, city, bor- ough, township, or incorporated district to become a stockholder in any company, association, or corporation, or to o tain or appropriate money for, or to loan its credit to, any corporation, association, institution, or individual. This section shall not apply to any con- tract entered into by the city of Phila- delphia under legislative ahonty with respect to the use or operation of transit facilities, whether furnished by the city or by a private corporation or party or jointly by either or both. Nor shall this section be construed to prohibit the city of Philadelphia from acquiring by contract or condemnation in the franchises and property of any company owning or operating transit facilities, or any part thereof, within its corporate limits or the shares of stock of the corporation owning cr operating the same, or any part thereof. cd true copy of Joint Resolution No. : CYRUS E. WOODS, Secretary of the Commonwealth. Number Six-A. A JOINT RESOLUTION Proposing an amendment to the Consti- tution of the Commonwealth of Penn- sylvania so as to consolidate the courts of common pleas of Philadelphia County. Section 1. Be it resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives of. the Com- monwealth of Pennsylvania in General Assembly met, That the following amend- ment to the Constitution of Pennsylvania be, and the same is hereby, proposed, in accordance with the eighteenth article thereof :— That section six of article five be amended so as to read as follows: — Section 6. In the county of Philadel- phia all the jurisdiction and powers now vested in the several numbered courts of common pleas of that county shall be vested in one court of common pleas com- posed of all the judges in commission in said courts. Such jurisdiction and powers shall extend to all proceedings at law and in equity which shall have been in- stituted in the several numbered courts, and shall be subject to such change as may be made by law, and subject to change of venue as provided by law. The president judge of the said court shall be selected as provided by law. The num- ber of judges in said court may be by law increased from time to time. This amendment shall take effect on the first day of January succeeding its adoption. In the county of Allegheny all the juris- diction and powers now vested in the sev- eral numbered courts of common pleas shall be vested in one court of common pleas composed of all the judges in com- mission in said courts. Such jurisdiction and powers shall extend to all proceed- ings at law and in equity which shall have been instituted in the several num- bered courts, and shall be subject to such change as may be made by law, and sub- ject to change of venue as provided by law. The president judge of the sald court shall be selected as provided by law. The number of judges in said court may be by law increased from time to time, This amendment shall take effect on the first day of January succeeding its adoption. ob true copy of Joint Resolution No. CYRUS E. WOODS, Secretary of the Commonwealth. 65-31-13t. nm MEDICAL. A Safe Test For those who are in need of a rem- edy for kidney troubles and back- ache, it is a good plan to try Doan’s Kidney Pills. They are strongly rec- ommended by Bellefonte people. Mrs. J. F. Thal, 23 N. Thomas St., Bellefonte, says: “I suffered with backache and severe pains through my kidneys. I had headaches and dizzy spells, when I first got up in the morning and my kidneys acted irregularly. My attention was called to Doan’s Kidney Pills and I heard of so many being benefitted by their use that I procured a box at the Green Pharmacy Co. That one box remov- ed the backache. The headaches and dizzy spells left and my kidneys be- came regular and I felt better in ev- ery way. I cheerfully recommend Doan’s to anyone who suffers as I did.” (Statement given October 19, 1916. On October 18, 1918 Mrs. Thal said: “I am very glad to, confirm my form- er endorsement of Doan’s Kidney Pills. Today I am a well woman and to reccomend Doan’s is a pleasure.” Price 60c, at all dealers. Don’t simply ask for a kidney remedy—get Doan’s Kidney Pills—the same that Mrs. Thal had. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfrs.,, Buffalo, N. Y. 65-31. Jee ar