NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. garage at 203 east Linn St., Belle- fonte. Toguize of GH N. CRIDER, 5%. Harvard Ave. Ventnor, N. J. F* SALE OR RENT.—Residence and 72-32-tf dry writs of Fieri Facias issued out of the Court of Common Pleas of Centre County, to me directed, will be exposed to public sale at the Court House in the Borough of Bellefonte OL SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1927. The Following Property: All that certain tract of land situate in Curtin Township, Centre County, Penna., bounded and described as follows, to-wit: Beginning at a post on line of lands of Hiram Young and land in right of Thomas Grant, thence by last mentioned tract North 17 degrees Bast 160 perches to stones; thence North 84 degrees West 64 perches Lo Dogwood ; thence South 42 degrees West 82 perches to a Chestnut Oak; thence South 74 degrees west 20 perches to a chestnut oak; thence South 14 degrees west 40 perches to stones; thence South 37 degrees East 99 perches to a fallen whiteoak; thence by land of Hiram Young North 88 degrees East perches to the place of beginning. Con- taining 117 acres, be the same more OT less. Being the same premises which John Daa toy his deed bearing date June 15th, 1918, and recorded in Centre County in Deed Book No. 122, at page 267, granted and conveyed unto "James Butler. The assessment as to the above tract of land shows 97 acres timber land, 20 acres clear and a total acreage of 117 acres. Seized, taken in execution and to be sold as the property of James Butler. S HERIFF'S SALE.—By virtue of Sun- Sale to commence at 11 o'clock a. m. of | S214 day. E. R. TAYLOR, Sheriff. Sheriff's Office, Bellefonte, . Pa., August 22nd, 1927. 2-33-3t Notice to Satisfy Sey To Thomas Dale and Evan Williams, Exe- cutors of the Last Will and Testament of William Williams, Deceased. Please take notice, and you are hereby notified, that a petition has ben pre- sented to the Court of Common Pleas of Centre County, Pa., to No. 203 September Term, 1927, by Russell O. Shirk, setting forth that the premises hereinafter de- scribed is encumbered by a certain mort- gage dated May 23rd, 1871, and recorded in the Recorder’s Office of Centre county, in Mortgage Book “G”’, page 400, for $1500.00, given by Robert Corl, Evan Williams, Thomas Williams, Nelson Williams and James Williams to Thomas Dale and Tvan Williams, Executors of William Wil- liams, deceased, and that said Mortgage is a lien upon all that certain messuage, tene- ment and tract of land situate and being in the Township of College, County of Cen- tre and State of Pennsylvania, bounded and described as follows, to- wit: BEGINNING at an Elm corner of lands of William Lytle and Moses Thompson, thence by land of the latter, South 84 deg. East 140.8 perches to Black Walnut stump; thence by the same lands South 89% deg. East 54,6 perches to Hickory; thence by same lands North 15% deg. East 92 perches to stones; thence by land of John Wasson North ’4914 deg. West 43.3 perches to stone; thence by lands of John Shuey and Halderman’s heirs South 82 deg. West 168.8 perches to stones; thence by land of John Williams South 11% deg. West 12 perches. thence by same lands South 82 deg. West 13.3 perches ; thence by land of heirs of William Williams, decd. South 19 deg. West 11 perches ; thence South 26 deg. West 16 perches ; thence South 3 deg. East 10 perches; thence South 39 deg. East 14 perches; thence South 61% deg. West 10 perches: thence South 46 deg. East 2.8 perches; thence South 61% deg. West 10 perches: thence South 45 deg. Bast 6 perches to Elm, the place of beginning. Containing 129 acres and 11 perches neat measure. Said petition further sets forth that the presumption of payment has arisen of said mortgage and that upon proof thereof said Court will be requested, upon pay- ment of costs due, to make a decree au- thorizing and directing the Recorder of deeds of Centre County to enter satisfac- tion upon the margin of the above stated mortgage of which proceedings the under- signed by the decree of said Court dated August 8th, 1927, was directed to give notice by advertisement of the facts set forth in the petition once a week for four successive weeks after the presentation of this petition in a newspaper of general circulation published in the Boro. of Belle- fonte Pa., commanding said persons to appear before said Court Monday, Septem- ber 5th, 1927, at 10 o'clock A. M., to show cause why the proper decree should not be granted and satisfaction of the said Mortgage should not be entered on the record thereof by the Recorder of Deeds in and for the County of Centre. 72-31-4t E. R. TAYLOR, Sheriff. wvatural Markings The three dents in the end are part of the physiological make-up of the coconut. The tissue at that point is not so dense and woody and the cov- ering is thinner. Costly Chinese Custom Chinese are estimated to destroy $10,000,000 worth of gold yearly by their custom of burning small pieces of gold leaf .on certain anniversaries. Coliseum a “Rush Job” It is said that the Coliseum at Rome was completed in one year, the com- pulsory labor of 12,000 Jews and Christians being employed. Famous Pottery Majolica is a valuable kind of pot- tery, deriving its name from Majorca, an island in the Mediterranean, where it was originally made, Inventive Woman Women are said to have Iittle in- ventive genius, but we'll bet that one of them invented alimony.—Florence Herald. Then They Loom Ug Most of the splinters in the banis- ter of life are unroticed until we be gin to slide down. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. OR SALE.—- Walnut bureau, 1 Wal- nut wardrobe, 2 walnut tables, 1 double white iron bed. Inquire of Mrs. J. M. Curtin, at the home of the late Mrs. Geo. F. Harris, on east Linn St. 32-tf HERIFF’'S SALE.—By virtue of Sun- dry writ of Fieri Facias issued out of the Court of Common Pleas of Centre County, to me directed, will be ex- posed to public sale at the Court House in the Borough of Bellefonte on SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 10th, 1927. The following property: Beginning at the Turnpike (now State Highway and corner of lot No. 3 in the plan of said Borough of Milesburg; thence along said lot 100 feet; thence across lot on line parallel with said Turnpike or State Highway to lot now or late of S. M. Huff; thence along said S. M. Huff lot 100 feet to Turnpike or State highway; thence along said Turnpike or State Highway 46% feet to the place of beginning. Reserving thereout and therefrom a Ten- foot Alley or Driveway to be opened along the South side thereof. Seized ,taken in execution and to be sold as the property of H. T. Mann, who sur- vives Maude B. Mann co-obligor. Sale to commence at 1.30 o’clock p. m. of suid day. E. R. TAYLOR, Sheriff. Sheriff’s Office, Bellefonte, Pa., August 9th 1927. 72-32-3t : Sealed Proposils for Spring Twp. School, Centre County, Pa. Sealed proposals will be received by the Spring Toownsmp School Dist.,, Centre County, John H. Barnhart, Secretary, AT Pin until Wednesday evening, September 7th’ at 7.30 at the law offices of Orvis, Zerby ont Dale, Temple Court, Bellefonte, Pa. 1. For the erection of a one story, room brick school building. 9. Tor a system of heating and venti- lating. 3. For a system of plumbing. 4. Tor a system of Electric Wiring. A certified check each bid for the following amounts: General work, $400.00; heating and venti- lating, $200.00; plumbing, $150.00: electric wiring, $50.00 Each check will be made payable to the Treasurer of the School District and shall be forfeited in case the bidder awarded the contract fails to exe- gute sald contract and furnish satisfactory bon Plans and specifications may be secured from the office of Ilersh and Shollar, Architects, Altoona, Pa., on receipt of a deposit check of $15.00. Check to be Sorteling in case contractor fails to place a bona fide bid. The Board of Directors reserve the right to reject any or all bids. By Order of the Board, JOHN H. BARNHART. Secy., Hersh & Shollar, Bellefonte, Pa. Registered Architects, Altoona, Penna. 72-31-3t four own. In a pocket. Invest in an ELGIN watch as you'd Intent in a home T= standing of wibsmmis) men and women in any community is judged, largely, by the homes and securities they great many instances, they have found it advisable to make such purchases out of income rather than directly out of You can follow their good example in the purchase of an Elgin Watch, a gilt- edge investment that pays daily dividends of service and satisfaction for a lifetime. Through our Satisfied Owner Plan, you make only a small initial payment; the balance is divided over many satisfied months . Elgin while you're enjoying it. F. P. BLAIR & SON ... Jewelers . . . BELLEFONTE . you pay for your will be required with | U.S. MARKET SERVICE COVERS GREAT AREA Million Dollar Bureau Gives Free Aid to Farmers Washington.—Every farmer in the United States has access to a million- dollar information bureau. It is Uncle Sam’s market news serv- ice operated by congressional appro- priation. Daily, throughout the coun- try, it correlates the radio, ocean cables and miles of telephone and tele- graph wires in distributing quotations. Allied with the titanic system, co- operative “listening posts,” clearing houses of information, are supervised by the bureau of agriculture econo- mics. The newest such institution has been established in San Francis co, at request of the California Vin- yardist association. It will gather data on prices, supply and distribu tion of grapes. Lists Number of Carloads. The information will show the num- ber of carloads of each variety and grade sold at different prices. Rail roads will supply figures on the num- ber of cars of each variety of grapes moved to the market. Eastern points will send supplemental reports every 25 hours on shipments received and distributed. Similar plans for the citrus indus- try were discussed at a conference here between Secretary of Agriculture Jardine and Florida representatives. Georgia peach growers, and producers of other material crops in all parts of the United States may likewise avail themselves of governmental co-opera- tion during the market season. “These clearing houses for markel information,” economists say, “insure an even distribution of products and an even tenor in prices. By knowing where his produce is needed, the ship- per is not faced with the probability of a flooded market one day and a skimped one the next. Steady flow to the market solves the problem of individual overproduction and works to a better average price for each grower. “Through the market news service any part of the country may know exactly how many barrels, bushels or pounds of farm products are rolling to market every hour in the day and the prices offered at all terminal points. The Network of Wires. “Compilation of such vast knowl 2dge is made possible through uniform operation of 7,351 miles of govern- ment-leased telegraph wires, working 12 hours a day. More than 2,000 mar- ket reporters supply detailed informa- tion from all principal centers in the United States and abroad. Cabled in- formation is obtained from the Inter- national institute at Rome, to which 90 countries subscribe. “By telephone at 38 relay points «nd through more than 100 radio Std tions every individual or institution in the land interested in any manner of produce market reports has con- stant access to the most complete quotations in the world.” Typhoid Germ Lives Years, Science Learns | San Francisco. — Disease-causing bacteria have many devices to perpet- uate their kind in an adverse world. Bacteriologists of the Hooper foun- dation for medical research, Univer- sity of California, have shown that tet- anus spores may resist the tempera- ture of boiling water for 90 minutes, botulinus in vegetable juices for 5% hours and those of a closely related but harmless species for 82 hours. Other workers have proved that ty- phoid and other organisms may re- main alive for years at refrigerator or lower temperatures. This happy provision of nature— nappy, that is, for the bacteria—con- stitutes a factor of great danger for man and animals which it is the funec- tien of scientific research to obviate, says Dr. George E. Coleman of the Hooper foundation. ‘“The brilliant success,” he states, “that has been at- tained already, in which the experi: mental use of mice and guinea pigs has played a large part, is constantly being proclaimed by statistical evi- dence of fewer food poisonings and typhoid fever outbreaks, as well as by increased protection frem many of our other microscopic foes.” Spruce Lumber, Cut for War, to Be Used in Peace Port Angeles, Wash.—Millions of feet of spruce lumber logged and sawed by government forces during the latter days of the World war are now in demand for building the air- planes of peace, according to numer- cus inquiries received here the last two wéeks. The spruce lumber stored in the war basis sheds to season 1s in excellent condition for airplane needs while most of the logs lying in the assemblying yards are sound as the day they were felled. Old Salt Finds Lump of Ambergris Worth $12,500 Cape May, N. J.—A 28-pound lump of ambergris—nugget gold of the sea —was found about 15 miles off shore here by Jeremiah Pratt, seventy-four- year-old seaman of the fishing schoon- er Mary Ann of Gloucester, Mass. The old seaman said he had been offered $448 a pound, or about $12,500 for the foul smelling mass by a New York perfumer, and intended to use the money to retire and buy a chicken farm, NEW-RICH ————— NEW.RICH OSAGES | | verve BUY CATTLE NOW Wild Spending of Sudden Wealth Stops. Pawhuska, Okla.—The Osage Indian, who has been groping around trying to find some satisfactory way to spend his oil riches, at last is achieving suc- cess, Where seven years ago the Osage was bewilderedly surveying his bank book and trying to see how fast he could spend his mounting wealth on fancy motor cars, fine clothing and other gewgaws, he now is contentedly building fine homes, buying pure-bred live stock and reaping benefits from his millions. The shock of sudden wealth, which came when oil wells spurted black gold all over the hill-dotted Osage prairies, floored the tribe for nearly ten years. The government stepped in with a law restricting the disposal of Indian money to curb the spending orgy. Two classes of Indians were estab- lished by this law—the competent and the incompetent. The competent In- dian could draw his full allotment each quarter, while the incompetent could draw only $1,000 of his allot- ment, the remainder going into a trus* fund at Washington. Under this law there were certain ftems, however, for which money could be withdrawn from the trust fund. One of these was for the pur chase of live stock. Since January 1 figures at the agency here reveal that more than $30,000 has been alotted to the re- stricted members of the tribe for the purchase of pure-bred live stock. This. however, is but a small portion of the total expenditure for this purpose, as thousands of dollars have been spent by the competent members of the tribe. Henry Tall Chief, a full blood, owns one of the finest herds of shorthorns in the state. He has 40 registered head that cost him $12,000. He owns a modern home and is one of the lead- ers in a movement to interest his tribesmen again in tilling the soil. Fight for Healthier Cows Aids Dairy Farms New York.—Ten years ago the Department of Agriculture inaugu- rated a campaign against bovine tuber- culosis. Opposition was great. What is at least partial success, however, was reported by Dr. John R. Mohler, chief of the bureau of animal indus- try, at a recent eastern states tu- perculosis conference. While almost 1,000,000 dairy cattle out of 30,000,(:)0 head tested have been destroyed be- cause of their tubercular state, he in- dustry today is in better condition than it was in 1917, Doctor Mohler said. Fear expressed by many persons in the beginning that the campaign would turn the public taste against milk consumption proved unfounded, according to Doctor Mohler, who says the annual consumption of milk in the United States has increased more than forty-nine quarts per capita since 1918. During 1926 the public consumed 56,000,000,000 pounds of milk and cream, an increase of 2,(Kh)- 000,000 pounds over the quantity con- sumed in 1925. Society Girl Heads Personnel Business New York.—Miss Jessie Jerome fanshawe, daughter of the late Wil- dam S. Fanshawe, banker, and well- known socially, is heading a success- ful business venture of her own. it was learned. She maintains a bureau of personal service, with a force of workers. Miss Fanshawe’s service is novel in ¢hat it does things for people that they ordinarily find troublesome to do themselves. For instance, she will close a town house or apartment, af- ter a family has gone to Europe or Newport, and then set the house in order for their return. She provides chaperons for debu- cantes during the season in town, and also fills rush orders from hostesses who are giving dinners either at their town or country residences and who want some form of entertainment, Recently during a charity drive, oliss Fanshawe was called upon to follow up in some way the appeal that had been made to thousands by letter. | he immediately put in three special telephones, engaged girls with “attrac- tive” voices and 5,000 telephone calls were made, Resents Nickname Bluefields, W. Va.—Resenting a nick: pame which several boys shouted as they passed his hut near here, F. B. O'Brien shot and killed George Bucchi, , one of the lads. Irish Coins to Portray Pig, Bull, Dog and Hen Dublin.—A half-crown horse, a florin salmon, a stilling bull, a sixpenny Irish wolfhound, a threepenny hare, a penny hen with brood, a halfpenny pig with litter and a farthing wood- cock are the designs emblematic of Ireland's products, which will pe seen on the new Irish Free State coins shortly to be issued. But Ireland had to go out of the country for patterns, for a young Yorkshireman designed them. The Value of an Insurance Trust To is no longer any debate about the value of Life Insurance for men in every walk of life. The value of an Insurance Trust where- by the beneficiary is spared the risk and trouble of investing an insurance fund, is al- so plain. Why not talk it over with us. The First, National Bank BELLEFONTE, PA. something each week just as I've always paid other people. Then ACT — open an account in this Bank and deposit a few dollars each week. ¢ ¢ I= going to begin paying myself » 3 per cent Interest Paid on Savings Accounts ‘THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK 2 STATE COLLEGE, PA. AN NAN VEARMNRBAR AMA OR AAAI YOR AA ANMEA MAAN MERA NAV ATA MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM Lh o Es Los Sa SE CT ERAN AAA) SALE OF Boys’ School Suits AT FAUBLE’S $16.50 Suits now $9.85 13.00 Suits now 8.85 10.00 Smits now 6.85 Only 3 weeks until school opens. Be zm ane of the lucky ones. Only 68 Suits in this lot.—they won't, last. long.