iA trip, ‘Bellefonte, Pa., June 10, 1927. UNCIVILIZED. An ancient ape, once on a time Disliked exceedingly to climb, And so he picked him out a tree And said “Now this belongs to me, I have a hunch that monks are mutts And I can make them gather nuts And bring the bulk of them to me By claiming title to this tree.” He took a green leaf and a reed, ‘And wrote himself a title deed, Proclaiming, pompously and slow: “All monkeys by these presents know.” Next morning, when the monkeys came To gather nuts, he made his claim: “All monkeys climbing on this tree, Must bring their gathered nuts to me, Cracking the same on equal shares, The meats are mine, the shells are theirs.” “By what right,” they cried, amazed, Thinking the ape was surely -crazed, “By this, he answered, “if you'll read You'll find it is a title deed, ‘Made in precise and formal shape And sworn before a fellow ape “Exactly on the legal plan Used by the wondrous creature, man, In London, Tokio, New York, ‘Glengarry, Kalamazoo and Cork. “Iinless my deed is recognized. ‘It proves you quite uncivilized. “But,” said one monkey, ‘“you’ll agree It was not you who made this tree.” “Nor,” said the ape, serene and bland, “Does any owner make his land, ‘Yet it, and all of its hereditaments Are his, and figure in the rents.” The puzzled monkeys sat about, They could not make the question out. Plainly, by precedent and law, The ape’s procedure showed no flaw; And yet, no matter what he said, The stomach still denied the head. Up spoke one sprightly monkey then, “Monkeys are monkeys, men are men. The ape should try his legal capers On man, who may respect his papers. We don’t know deeds! we do know nuts; And spite of ‘ands’ and ‘ifs’ and ‘buts,’ We know who gathers, and unmeats ‘em By monkeys practice also eats ‘em. 80 tell the ape and all his flunkeys NY man tricks can be played on monkeys.” Thus, apes still climb to get their food Bince moukeys minds are crass and crude, And monkeys, all so ill-advised, Still eat their nuts uncivilized. " —By Edmund Vance Cooke. UNIFORM TRAFFIC RULES ASSURED BY NEW CODE. Uniform traffic regulation for Penn- sylvania is assured by the provisions of the so-called “motor code” passed by the Legislature. Governor Fisher approved the measure within the specified time. His administration sponsored the code. Article 10 of the code contains the provisions under whieh traffic control is to be standar- dized. The code will become effective January 1, 1928. After that date motor patrolmen attached te the State highway depart- ment will be invested with authority to arrest on view when in uniform without writ, rule, or other process any person violating the provisions of the motor code. Ro residence district” shall give audible warning with his horn or other warn- ing device before attempting to pass a vehicle proceeding in the same di- rection. : Under the new law, no motor ve- hicle may overtake and pass another proceeding in the same direction upon the crest of a grade or upon a curve in a highway where the driver's view is obstructed within a distance of 300 feet ahead. Passing a vehicle at a steam or electric railway grade- crossing or at any uprotected high- way crossing or at my unprotected highway intersection is absolutely forbidden. : The law provides particularly that the driver of a vehicle about to be overtaken must give way to right and under no circumstances may he arging passengers, except | where safety zones have beer estab- lished or at intersections at which the traffic is controlled. The speed limit ! at such places is ten miles per hour. | Parking of motor vehicles upon | highways is prohibited unless a clear i and unobstructed width of not less than fifteen feet exists upon the main traveled portion of the highway, op- i posite the parked vehicle. This fif- , teen-foot must be left open for free i passage of other vehicles. No vehicle may park unless a clear view of the vehicle may be obtained from a dis- (tance of 200 feet in each direction. { Peace officers are permitted to move {illegally parked vehicles or require the driver or person in charge to move the vehicle. The provisions of this | section do not apply to a car disabled | or disch Publication -of -Copy - of -Petition 2 and ES a of edt 4 and Rule Therein Contained, with Notice to Persons Interested. In the Matter of the Petition of BALTI- MORE YEARLY MEETING OF FRIENDS (ORTHODOX), a corporation created and existing under the laws of the State of Maryland, for its appointment as succeed- ing trustee of the Meeting House Proper- ty and Burial Ground, situate in the Bor- ough of Bellefonte, in the County of Cen- tre and State of Pennsylvania, and any other property and assets of what was formerly the Centre Monthly Meeting of Friends. In the Court of Common Pleas of Cen- tre County, Penusylvania. No. 195 May Term, 1927. : To the HONORABLE JAMES C. FURST, President Judge of the said Court:— The petition of BALTIMORE YEARLY increase the speed of his vehicle until | in such manner that it is impossible MEETING OF FRIENDS (ORTHODOX), completely passed by the other ma- chine. ; Motor trucks when traveling upon open sections of highway outside of business or residence district shall not follow another such vehicle within 100 feet. The law provides also that op- erators of passenger cars shall not follow each other “more closely than is reasonable and prudent.” Beginning with Section 1015, the motor code discusses the operation of vehicles within municipal limits, al- though the same provisions apply to operation on State highways. The driver of a vehicle intending to turn to the right of an intersection must approach the intersection in the traffic lane nearest the right-hand side of highway and in returning keep as close as practicable to the right-hand curb or edge of the high- way. In turning to the left, he must approach the intersection in the right hand traffic lane nearest the center line of the highway and when turning shall pass beyond the center of the intersection before making his left- hand turn. The “center of the intersection” is | the meeting point of the medical lines | of the highway intersecting one an- | other. Municipal authorities or the State Highway Commissioner may modify the foregoing method of turning at intersections if they clearly indicate by buttons, markers, or other direction signs the course to be followed. By the erection of proper signs authori- ties may prohiibt turning at intersec- tions. Drivers of motor vehicles must have | regard for the rights of pedestrians and other motor vehicles, the law provides. Operators are required to signal either by means of a hand and arm or by an approved mechanical or elec- trical device. If a vehicle is so con- structed or loaded as to prevent vis- ibility of hand or arm signals, the signal shall be given by a device ap- proved by the Secretary of Highways. When the signal is given by means of the hand and. arm the driver shall indicate his intention to start, stop or turn by extending his hand horizon- tally beyond the left side of the ve- hicle; or if the vehicle is a closed model, by his hand and arm in such way as to be visible through the Fvindow in the rear. ] This signal, of course, gives the op- erator of the machine following abso- lutely no idea of what the operator ahead of him intends doing. He has as usual, three guesses—the machine is either going to stop, turn to the left or right. When the patrol | Except where traffic is controlled was created several years ago it was, by signals or officers and except on denied authority to arrest because it was feared it would be employed in the enforcement of other than the motor laws. During the last session of the Legislature no opposition was expressed to clothing the patrol with police powers. Pennsylvania's new speed limit is thirty-five miles an hour. lature did not fix a minimum speed limit as was suggested to it—that is, a speed lower than which it would be illegal to operate a motor vehicle. Under the present law only two The Legis- | "curb has the right-of-way over ve- speeds are designated—fifteen miles | an hour in sections which are prop- erly marked and thirty miles an hour . elsewhere. The new act places the following limitations: Twenty miles an hour when ap- proaching grade crossings of steam or electric railways; fifteen miles pas- sing a school during recess or im- mediately before or after closing hour; twenty miles at highway inter- sections within business or residence districts; twenty miles in business or ! { i i resident district where the author- | ities have erected signs to that effect; thirty-five miles under all other con- ditions. The code provides that a motor vehicle must be brought to a complete | through-traffic highways, when two vehicles approach or enter an inter- section at approximately the same , time, the driver of the vehicle on the left shall yield the right-of-way to the vehicle on the right. The driver of a vehicle traveling at an unlawful speed forfeits his right-of-way. A pedestrian once legally off the hicular traffic under the provisions of the new act. This is in accordance with a decision recently rendered by Justice John W. Kephart, of the Penn- sylvania supreme court. The act says that the driver of any vehicle up- on a highway within a business or residence district “shall yield the right-of-way to a pedestrian crossing such highway within any clearly marked crosswalk or any regular pe- destrain crossing included in the pro- longation of the lateral boundary lines of the adjacent sidewalk at the end of a block,” except where traffic movements are regulated by officers or direction devices. Every pedestrian crossing the high way at any point other than at a pedestrian crossing, crosswalk or in- tersection, shall yield the right-of- way to vehicles upon the highway. The driver of a vehicle entering a stop before traversing a railway or highway from a private road or drive interurban grade crossing when a clearly visible and positive signal gives warning of the approach of a train or car. The aet fixes the speed limit at which motor trucks may operate. The truck is designated by the letter which appears on the license plate preceding the numerals. The limits for trucks with pneumatic tires are as follows: Class R, 26 miles per hour; S and T, 24 miles; U, 22 miles; V and W, 19 miles; Y, 16 miles; Z, 14 miles; ZZ, 12 miles. Trucks with solid rubber tires are differently classified as to speed as follows: R, 24 miles; S and T, 20 miles; U, 18 miles; V and W, 15 miles; Y, 12 miles; Z and ZZ, 10 miles. Speed limitations as set forth in the act do not apply to vehicles operated with due regard for safety under the direction of police or firemen travel- ing in response to alarms nor to ambulances when traveling in emer- gencies, but the exemption will not protect the driver of any such vehicle from consequences of a reckless dis- regard for the safety of others. The code re-enacts the provision that operators of motor vehicles shall drive on the right side of the high- way, particularly in crossing inter- sections or railroads. Promiscuous and useless blowing of horns in business or residence ' dis- tricts is discouraged in Section 1012 of the new act, which sets forth that the driver of an overtaking mctor vehicle “not within a business or i | | must yield the right-of-way to ve- hicles on the highway. Drivers of all | vehicles on the highway shall yield the right-of-way to police and fire- department vehicles .and ambulances, when such vehicles are operated upon official business. This provision, how- ever, does not relieve drivers of such vehicles from the duty to drive with due regard for the safety of all per- sons, nor does it protect the driver or police or other such vehicles from due regard for the safety of all per- sons on such right-of-way. Present provisions relating to clearing the highway for police or fire department vehicles are re-enacted. It is also provided that no motor vehicle shall drive into or park within the block where fire apparatus has stopped in answer to an alarm. The Secretary of Highways and the authorities of all Pennsylvania cities are authorized to designate main traveled or through highways, which to avoid stopping. The code contains the usual provis- | ions forbidding parking in front of fire i hydrants, fire stations or too close to highway intersections. | Reckless driving is defined as the operation of a moter vehicle “care- lessly and willfully or wantonly dis- regarding the rights or safety of others, or in a manner so as to en- danger any person or property.” i An operator is guilty of reckless driving when investigation into an accident discloses that the accident , occurred because the front seat of the motor vehicle was occupied by more than three persons. | ! The code forbids the throwing of | missiles, such as circulars or pam- ! phlets, at the occupants of a motor ve- | Chicle or the throwing or placing of | {any substance upon a public highway , which may be injurious to a motor | . vehicle or its tires. No persons may | hang on ‘te. nor ride on the rear end i - of a motor vehicle, or no persons on a bicycle, roller skates or any similar | | device shall hold fast to a moving 1 motor vehicle. Drivers of motor vehicles involved in accidents shall immediately stop such vehicle at the scene of the ac- cident. The code provides that opera- , tors must give their names, addresses and registration numbers, exhibit , their operators’ license to the person struck or the driver or occupants of vehicle collided with; shall render any reasonable assistance, including | the carrying of injured persons to | physician or surgeon. Operators involved in accidents re- sulting in injuries or death or prop- . erty damage to an apparent extent of 1 $50 or more must within twenty-four hours report the accident to the State highway department except that when an accident occurs within an in- | corporated city or town the report must be made within twenty-four hours to police headquarters. Every , Police department must forward a copy of each report to the State high- way department. The latter may re- quire operators or police department to file supplemental reports. No such report shall be admissable in evidence for any other purpose than to prove , a compliance with the act. | Owners of garages or repair shops must report within twenty-four hours , to the nearest police station or sher-, ifi’s * office the reception of a moter vehicle which shows evidence of hav- ing been involved in a serious acei- dent or which has been struck by ‘bullets. Reports must contain com- plete information about the automo- bile and the owner or operator. Operators of motor vehicles must stop upon request or signal of any uniformed constable, police officer, sherift, deputy sheriff, State police- man or highway patrolman. The of- ficer must exhibit his badge or other sign of authority. The operator, up- on request, must exhibit his registra- tion card, operators’ card or learners’ permit and shall write his name in the presence of the officer, if required to do so, for the purpose of establishing his identity. The officers named may Insepect motor vehicles, but only as to equipment, operation or engine num- bers. This applies also to motor ve- hicles in garages or repair shops. | | Officers are given authority to re- move abandoned or wrecked motor vehicles from highways to the nearest point where such vehicles will not in- terfere with or obstruct traffic. i The secretary of highways is auth- orized to classify and designate ‘in- trastate and interstate highways in Pennsylvania and to provide a uni- form system of marking and signing such highways. This system shall correlate and conform to the systems adopted in other States. Local parking and. other regula- tions are not enforcable against al- leged violators unless at the time and “place of the violation an appropriate sign giving notice of the regulations is in proper position and sufficiently legible to be seen by an ordinarily observant person. ' The chief aim of the Pennsylvania , Motor Federation in calling the May- i or’s conference last fall and in urg- | ing the adoption of uniform traffic reg- ulations was to secure uniform in- terpretation of automatic and other ' signals. : Under the new code, where a traffic control signal consists of three eol- ored lenses, the amber or yellow lense shall be in the center. Red lights in- dicate “Stop.” No movement or turns shall be lawful on the red light ex- cept that “U” turns may be made on a two-way street back of the point of intersection. A green light indicates “Go” and permits traffic straight ahead and all right and left turns except where signs indicate that such turns are not permitted. No movement of traffic is permitted on an amber or yellow light except that when within the intersection of ‘ State of Pennsylvania, and a “U” turn on.a two-way street back of the point of intersection. Iocal authorities may Provide for left turns on amber, or yellow lights, in which case such turns must not be made on the green. Proper signs must be ex- hibited calling attention to this change. Warning or direction signs, mark- ers or signals in imitation of official devices are prohibited. No advertis- ing signs or signals may be erected within the le limits of the high- way except that the secretary of high- ways or local amthorities are author- ized to permit organizations to erect no vehicle may enter or cross with- out coming to a full stop. At the entrance to through-traffic highways signs must be erected bearing the words, “Thru Traffic Stop” in letters six inches in height. . The code provides that motor ve- hicles shall not pass upon the left any street car proceeding in the same direction, whether actually in motion or at a rest when a travelable portion of the highway exists to the right of the street car—except on a one-way street. The provision is re-enacted whereby no motor vehicle may pass on the right of a street car that has stopped for the purpose of taking on | signals bearing their name. respectfully represents: _First.— That it is a corperation duly in- corporated and existing under the laws of the State of Maryland and so incorporat- ‘ed by Act of the General Assembly of the State of Maryland, entitled “An Act to incorporate the Baltimore Yearly Meeting of Friends (Orthodox),” approved April 7, 1886, being Acts of 1886, Chapter 327, which Act of Assembly in its entirety reads as follows: Section 1. Be it enacted by the Gener- al Assembly of Maryland, That Francis T. King, James Carey, James Carey Thomas, Joseph P. Elliott, Francis White, Jesse Tyson, Chas. W. Davis, Simon J. Marten- et, James Carey, Jr., Joseph Edge, George L. Scott, John B. Crenshaw, John Pret- low, Thomas McCoy and Zachariah Me- Naul, and all those persons now con- stituting the religious Society known as the “Baltimore Yearly Meeting of Friends for the Western Shore of Maryland, Vir- ginia and the adjacent parts of Pennsyl- vania, in unity with the Ancient Yearly Meeting of Friends,” who now hold their yearly Meeting on Eutaw Street in the City of Baltimore, and all those persons who may hereafter become members there- of, agreeably to the rules and discipline of said Society, or such rules and disci- pline as may hereafter. be adopted there- by, be and they are hereby created a body politic and corporate by the name of the Baltimore Yearly Meeting of Friends (Orthodox), and by that name shall have perpetual succession, and be able and capable to sue and be sued at law and in equity, to have a common seal, and the same to change, altar and renew at pleasure, and to do all acts necessary and lawful for carry- ing into effect the objects and purposes of the aforesaid Society, and they are hereby authorized and empowered to re- ceive and hold by gift, grant, devise, purchase, or otherwise, real and person- al estate and other effects and property, and the same to grant, mortgage, de- mise or otherwise dispose of, the whole or any part or parts thereof; provided, the clear yearly incme from the prop- erty of said Corporation shall not ex- ceed the sum of twenty-five thousand dollars, Section 2. And be it enacted, That the objects of the Corporation hereby creat- ed are for the adoption and carrying out the rules and discipline of the re- ligious Society of Friends, who now hold their Yearly Meeting on Eutaw Street, in the City of Baltimore, and for the carrying out such religious, edueca- tional and charitable work as that in which the said Society of Friends has been or may hereafter be engaged. Section 3. And be it enacted, That the rules and discipline of the said Society of Friends, as laid down in its last Book of Discipline, * adopted * by said Yearly Meeting in the year eighteen hundred and seventy-six, shall be the rules and discipline of the Corporation hereby created, and the same may be altered and changed in such manner as has been or may hereafter be adopted by said Yearly Meeting. Section 3. And be it enacted. That this Aet shall take effect from the date of its passage. Approved April 7, 1886. Secona.—That for a great number of years and in the year 1834 and subsequent thereto the legal title to the Meeting House property whereon was and is erect- a Meeting House constituting the church formerly of the said Centre Month- ly Meeting of Friends, in the Borough of Bellefonte, in the County of Centre, and the Lturial ground of said Centre Monthly Meeting of Friends, situate in the same place, was held under a deed dated the twenty-seec- ond day of the tenth month (commonly known as the month of October) in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hun- dred and thirty four, recorded in the office for the recording of deeds, &c. in and for the said County of Centre on the twenty- fourth day of October, A. D. 1839 in Deed Book M. page, 432, et seq., being a deed from George Valentine and Mary, his wife, Reuben B. Valentine and Sarah, his wife, Abraham 8. Valentine and Clarissa, his wife, Bond Valentine and Izgia, his wife, and William A. Thomas and Eliza, his wife, of the first part, and Isaac Miller, of the second part, conveying to the said Isaac Miller, the party of the second part, and to his heirs, according to the course of the common law of England and his as- signs in trust nevertheless. as thereinafter in said deed set forth, the said premises therein described as follows, to wit: “ALL that certain lot or piece of land situate in Bellefonte, bounded on the East by lot of Hugh McGonigle, on the West by James D. Harris Mill traet with a Friends Meeting house thereon erected : Lesining at a post on the line of said Mill tract thence North seventy five degrees East eighty eight and a haif feet to a post, thence South twenty-five degrees East eighty eight feet to Mc- Gonigle’s lot to a post; thence South forty degrees West sixteen feet by the road leading from Bellefonte to Harris Mill sixteen feet to a post, thence North twenty five degrees West twenty feet to a post thence south sixty degrees west seyenty-two feet to a postin the line of said Mill tract, thence North twenty-five West one hundred & two feet to the place of beginning; also a certain lot or piece of land situate on the Northern Border of the Forge tract adjoining a lot of Doc. Daniel Dobbins on the North and in- closed by a stone wall occupied and de- signed as a place of Burial.” “In trust nevertheless to and for the use, benefit and advantage of the religious society of the people called Quakers belonging to Centre Monthly Meeting, held at Belle- fonte in Perpetual succession forever.” Third.—That subsequent to the death of the said Isaac Miller, on petition to your Honorable Court of Eliza M. Thomas and others, all the then members of the Cen- tre Monthly Meeting of Friends, to No. 33 August Term, 1901, under the following caption, viz. “In the matter of the Peti- tion of the Members of Centre Monthly Meeting of Friends, for the appointment of new trustees of the Meeting House property and Burial Ground, in the place and stead of Isaac Miller, deceased;” by decree of your Honorable Court dated and filed in said proceeding May 1, 1901, your Honorable Court entered the following de- cree: “And now May 1, 1901, the foregoing petition read and considered, whereupon the Court does hereby grant the Lraver thereof and does hereby appoint corge Valentine, Jr., Edmund Blanchard and Joseph D. Mitchell, Trustees of the Cen- tre Monthly Meeting of Friends and of the Meeting House Property and Burial Ground and all the premises mentioned and described in the aforementioned deed conveying the same to Issac Miller, Trustee, dated October 22nd, A. D. 1834, and recorded in the office for the record- in of deeds, &c. in and for Centre County, Pennsylvania, in Deed Book “M,” page 432 &c., the said Trustees being hereby appointed in the place and stead of the said Isaac Miller, deceased, with all the powers and title, duties and obligations originaly vested in and imposed upon the said Isaac Miller by virtue of the said deed, and this appointment being made without requiring any bond from said Trustees. By the Court.” Fourth.— That by their deed dated September 4, 1898, and recorded in the of- fice for the recording of deeds, &c. in and for the sald County of Centre on February 8 1809 in Deed Book 75, page 605 &c., George Valentine and Emily J., his wife, 1 Abram 8.-Valentine and Lillie U., his wife,” Mary. V.- Hale,>Robert-Valentine and Mary N., his wife, Mary B. J. Valentine, Anna J. Valentine, Caroline M. Valentine, De- borah D. Valentine, George Valentine, Jr., Jacob D. Valentine, Jr., Louise M. Valen- tine, Ellen D. Valentine, Robert Valentin Jr. and John P. Harris, Trustee, convey to Ife Valentine, Jr. and Edmund Blanchard, Jr., and to their successors and assigns, the said premises therein de- ! scribed as follows: ALL that certain tract of ground sit- uate in the Township of Spring, in the County of Centre and State of Pennsyl- vania aforesaid, bounded and described as follows, to wit: Beginning at a post north of an oak pointer, on the south- ern line of the said Borough of Belle- fonte at the northwestern corner of the farm tract, other land of the said par- ties ‘of the first part, thence along said Borough line south’ seventy seven and one-fourth degrees west twenty two and four-tenths perches to stones, thence by land now or formerly of the Valentine Iron Company south twelve and three- fourths degrees east thirteen perches to stones, north of dead pine pointer, thence by same lands north eighty three and one-fourth degrees east sixteen and five tenths perches to post, the north- western corner of what is known as the Workmens Cemetery, thence by same north seventy seven degrees east six and two-tenths perches to the western line of said farm tract, and thence by said line north eleven and one-fourth degrees west fourteen and six-tenths perches to the beginning; containing one acre and one hundred and forty perches more or less, and also containing a graveyard on about forty five perches of ground surrounded by a stone wall;” “in trust nevertheless to and for the use and bene- fit and advantage of the religious society of the people called ‘Quakers’ belonging to the Centre Monthly Meeting held at Bellefonte, in perpetual succession for- ever, to be used as a place of burial un- der the direction and control of the said Centre Monthly Meeting.” Fifth.— That in and by the last will and testament of Mary V. Hale, late of the Borough of Bellefonte, in the County of Centre and State of Pennsylvania, deceas- ed, dated November 12, 1900, and probated before the Register ‘of Wills for Centre County, Pennsylvania, at Bellefonte, Pa. : 8 and remaining. on file .in the office of the said Register and thérein recorded in Will Book ‘KE, page 541; .&c. the said testatrix made a bequest as follows, to wit: 0 a a a a a a 0; or Trustees of Centre Monthly Meeting of ! Friends, Bellefonte, Penna., or to the per- son, persons or body corporate, holding the legal title to the Meeting House and grave-yard properties of said Monthly | Meeting, at the time of my decease, or in whom the legal title to said properties may then or shall thereafter be vested, his, her, or their successors, the sum of One thousand dollars ($1,000) to be paid by my executors, hereinafter named, within three years after my decease, in- terest on said sum of one thousand dol- lars, to be likewise paid by my said exec- utors from the date of my death until the aforesaid payment of the said prin- cipal sum, at the rate of five per cent. per annum thereon, payable yearly, the first payment of said interest to fall due one year from and after my decease; in trust nevertheless to invest the said sum of one thousand dollars on good and sufficient security to keep the same thus invested from time to time to collect the income and profits arising therefrom and to appropriate said income and prof- its from time to time together with the interest to be received from my said ex- ecutors prior to the payment of the said principal sum as aforesaid, in manner following, to wit: First, to the preser- vation in good order and condition at all times of the graves of my grandmother, Ann Bond Valentine, my father, mother and brothers, in the graveyard of the said Centre Monthly Meeting; and see- ond, to use whatever remains of said in- come for the proper care of these graves, for the care and maintenance of the Meet- ing House property of the ssid Centre ; Monthly Meeting in such manner as the said Centre Monthly Meeting shall di- rect; it being, however, a condition of this trust that these graves shall at all. come and pro from this fun superior and primary charge thercon, and that enly so much of said income and profits shall be appropriated each year to the aforesaid uses of the Meet- ing as remain after paying the expen- ses and charges for such care of the said graves; the said beauest to terminate | and the entire fund to revert to my es- tate in case of a failure at any time to | comply faithfully with the terms of this condition.” Sixth.—That on or as a a about April 4, 1902, Trustee of said individual church, board tre Monthly Mee th held in trust for some speci to be used for the advancement genera) work funds held by such qd shall be admh igtontinued “inspect necessary, titles to Pe belonging to any been connected, Monthly fully prays as fol Edmund Blanchard or Edmund Blanch termination of the trust under the wil doing so | that said | thereunder, from the said trust fi “I give and bequeath unto the Trustee tioned Caen b maining set forth tion numbered Eleventh b th board or Centre (Pamphlet Laws, cordance with an in such case made and provided AND your petitioner Sh pray, &e. i fore me, tin and fo and profits each year after paying | ¢ + Julia B. Robinso I'Notary's ) “appointed by - ‘your onorable Court in the place and stead of said above mentioned Truste bered Fourth; and that thereupon your mer Shall be aos inted op:d as T ‘agency, that is to say, of the said Cen- of Friends and of 11 the said remaining trusts relative ereto. Twelfth.—That under the constitution nd discipline governing the said Balti- mere Yearly Meeting of Friends (Ortho- dox), among other that “when a meeting is discontinued the Property belo! things it is provided ng to said Meeting shall e Yearly Meeting, © to be fic purpose, or of the Yearly M Ho the ee body may determine :” and that vested in t at "u} nistered in accordance wi among oth- i other Meeting.” estates Thirteenth.—That corporation js ustee as aforesaid Fourteenth.—That, as nd by reason beteln sot forth thereof, the said Ce Meeting of Friends has ning and its broperty is liable to be wasted or destroyed WHEREFORE, Four petitioner respect- ow : A. That the said George Valentine, : d 1d Joseph D. Mitchell, as T a foresaid, be authorized to Fling ® oe V. Hale, deceased, and be the o uthorized to complete the reversion. non trust fund, or be ratified f this petition numbered Tenth B. That upon their release and discharge above men- the said three trustees shall ro e released and discharged from all re- trusts under their trusteeship, as That thereupon your C. € appointed of the church agency, that is to say, of the said Monthly Meeting of Friends vhs the then remaining trusts relative and barticularly of the trusts rel- the Meeting House property ang in the para- petition numbered Second, Burial? . 1921 Page 861, &ec.) and in ac- y other Act of Assembly BALTIMORE YEARLY MEETI FRIENDS {ORTHODOX) TING oF y omas W. Y. Clark Clerk of the Permanent A oerd State of Maryland, City of Baltimore, SS: On the 11th day of May A. D 1927, be- the subse iber, a Notar Pi ic r the said State, ; ALL fidavit for and on behalf of the said peti- Loner, that he is well acquainted with the times thus be yared for out of the in- Lay io s forth in the said etiti faets therein: ition, ang set. .forth -are ‘true, to the best of his knowledge, information nd belief. Affirmed and subscribed to before me ihe day and year above written. THOMAS W. Y. CLARK. n Notary Public. My Commission expires May 6, 1929. Seal] DECREE. And now May 13th 1927, the foregoing the above named George Valentine. Jr. | petition presented and directed to be tiled Edmund Blanchard and Joseph D. Mitch. | «nd the Court hereby grants a rule upon ell, Trustees of the Centre Monthly Meet- | all parties interested to show cause why ing of Friends, received payment of the above mentioned legacy from Ellen Hale Andrews and George Murray Andrews, Executors of the last will and testament of the said Mary V. Hale, deceased, since which time the fund viz. $1000, had been invested by said Trustees and the income derivable therefrom collected and disposed of by said Trustees. Seventh.—That in later years, because of deaths, changes of residence and for other reasons, the membership of the said Monthly meeting became very small and attendance of meetings for worship in said meeting house and of business meetings of the said Monthly Meeting became small- er and smaller, until such meetings for worship entirely ceased, and it became impracticable for said Monthly meeting to funetion as the local organization of the said religious denomination ; whereupon by appropriate action by the said Yearly Meeting, the chief governing body, in accordance with the views ‘of the remaining members of said Month- ly Meeting, and in accordance with the rules and discipline of the said Yearly Meeting, the said Centre Monthly Meeting was formally “laid down” or discontinued and thereby ceased to exist, on or about May 5th 1919. : Eighth.—That for many years last past the said Joseph D. Mitchell, one of the Trustees above named has permanently resided in Lewistown, Mifflin County, Pennsylvania and, as your petitioner is in- formed, has affiliated with the Protestant Episcopal Church of America; and that for a number of years past the said Ed- mund Blanchard or Edmund Blanchard, Jr., another of said Trustees, has been liv- ing in the State of Texas, so that the said George Valentine, Jr., is the only one of said Trustees now residing in Bellefonte, Centre County, Pennsylvania, and the d n u € the prayers should not be granted, which i returnable on Tuesday Ye Ta ade July A. D. Bellefonte, principal amount of said | A. copy of the foregoing petition that said tioner for four said County of Centre, porous of Bellefonte, at said time and place the said matter will be Court to enable it to make such order in the case as shall serve the property of the Monthly Meeting of Friends in the inter- ests of the denomination, tition, decree and rule, the foregoing petition twelfth day of 1927, at the Court Bors in Pennsylvania, at ten o'clock M., and it is hereby directed that a and of this: said rule so a copy of : said peti- successive weeks in one ewspaper of “general circulation of the published in the Pennsylvania, and day of said rule a full hearing of had by the said ecree (which decree contains 4 copy thereof includes rule), be published by the at on the said return be most likely to pre- said Centre according to the ses to which it was intended to be de- voted, and to determine all other matters involved in the prayers tion, at which time and interested may be heard. of the said peti- place all persons By the Court JAMES g Funse oT, Notice of the feregoing copy of pe- is hereby giv- n to all persons interested who are hereby notified that they may appear and be heard by the court at the time nd place named in the above men- tioned decree. BLANCHARD & BLANCHARD, Attorneys for Petitioner. 72-21-4t only active Trustee. Ninth.—That the said individual church, board or agency of the said religious or- ganization known as the Baltimore Yearly Meeting of Friends (Orthodox), that is to say, the said Centre Monthly Meeting of Friends, has thus become extinct. Temth.—That for the reasons above set forth, it has become impracticable for the said Trustees to fulfill or comply with the conditions of the bequest under the said will of Mary V. Hale, deceased, as set forth in the paragraph hereof number- ed, Fifth, and that, therefore, it is the de- sire of the remaining former members of the said Centre Monthly Meeting of Friends and of your petitioner and of the said Trustees that the said Trustees be authorized to declare the termination of said trust and the reversion of the said principal fund constituting the corpus of said trust, to the estate of the said Mary V. Hale, deceased, in accordance with the terms of her will, and be authorized to pay over or transfer to the executors of the said Mary V. Hale, deceased, the said principal fund, in termination of said b [) looking seedlings cent. of them grow, they will, in due time, add thousands forests of Pennsylvania. Ee — Many Seedlings Shipped from Rock. view Nursery. Thousands of seedling trees, mostly pine, have been shipped from the nur- sery at the Rockview reforestration the State this which are from fifteen to eighteen inches in height, are packed in strong penitentiary, for purposes throughout spring. The seedlings oxes, seven to eight thousand in a X, to assure their delivery in good rder. They are healthy, thrifty and if fifty per of dollars to the The penitentiary officials have ar- ranged for planting fifty thousand trust and satisfaction thereof, or that their acts in doing so be ratified and confirmed, and that thereupon the said Trustees shall be released and discharged from all ob- Hgations arising relative to said trust und. Eleventh.—That for the reasons above set forth, it is also the desire of the said remaining former members of the said Cen- tre Monthly Meeting of Friends and of your petitioner and of the said Trustees, that upon their release and discharge from the ah trust fund referred to in the par- agraph hereof numbered Fifth, the said Trustees shall also be released and dis- charged from all remaning trusts under their trusteeship, and particularly from the trusts relative to the Meeting House seedlings on Nittany mountain, on what was once cultivated farm land but which has been lying idle since its purchase by the State. The plant- ing of trees will not only increase the value of the forest land belonging to the penitentiary but will improve the water shed which is the source of the institution’s water supply. Most of the seedlings in the peni- tentiary nursery are pine, although those in charge of the work planted several dump-cart loads of walnuts last fall, and this spring and summer Jroperty and Burial Ground, referred to n the paragraph hereof numbered ond, and the additional Burial Ground referred to in the pargraph hereof num- are experimenting, to see whether they can be transplanted, and how they grow.- ‘