A ..c ie Bellefonte, Pa., September 9, 1927. THE STORY OF LIFE. Only the same old story in a different strain; Sometimes a smile of gladness, and then a stab of pain 3 Sometimes a flash of sunlight, again the drifting rain. Sometimes it seems to borrow from the rose its crimson hue; Sometimes black with thunder, changed to a brilliant blue; Sometimes as false as Satan, sometimes as Heaven true. then Only the same old story, but oh, how the changes ring! Prophet and priest, peasant, soldier and scholar, and king: Sometimes the warmest hand clasp leaves in the palm a sting. Sometimes in the hush of even, sometimes in the mid-day strife; Sometimes with dove-like calmness, some- times with passions rife, We dream it, write it, live it—this weird, wild story of life. —Boston Transcript. ANTOINETTE AND AUGUSTA. Since the day Augusta was born, Antoinette Harper had lived only for her; lived for her as an infant, as a little girl, as a schoolgirl. And then Augusta’s father died, and Antoinette was a young widow. And some way, everything was suddenly different. James Ponsonby Harper had been a somber man, and sixteen years older than his wife. She had been eighteen and: he thirty-four when Augusta, their only child, was born. And now Augusta herself was eighteen, and her father had been dead six months. Antoinette had been happy, as far as she knew, with Augusta’s father. She had loved him affectionately, re- spected him, looked up to him. James Harper had just the right sobering effect on Antoinette, her parents had said, through all their married life. And naturally then, when he went away, the sobering effect went with him. Every one was astonished at what happened, and Antoinette her- self was more astonished than any one else. It was as though James Ponsonby Harper had been a piece of chiffon hung between his wife and the world, not hiding her, but dulling her. And when the piece of chiffon passed from before her, all the colors of her personality shone out like a brilliant painting unveiled. Every one was startled to see how blue her eyes were, how golden her hair, how red her lips, and how full of life her words. “Antoinette!” her mother exclaimed when they were going out together to a bridge party one afternoon. “don’t sparkle so. You are dazzling!” Antoinette turned to her, a bright picture under her new hat. “You look so lovely,” her mother continued. “But can’t you quiet down, only a little? You are positively radiant.” Antoinette looked hurt, like a child who has been scolded by mistake. “My darling,” her mother tried to speak casually, “I want you to be happy, of course. But—James—such a short time ago. Oh, forgive me!” For her daughter had burst into tears. “I know,” she sobbed. “I loved him. I did love James. But, Mother—I can’t mourn.” The words were somewhat shock- ing. Antoinette’s mother was a sen- sible woman, and a modern woman, too. After all, she thought, why should she not be thankful her daugh- ter was happy, and was so young- looking at thirtv-six, and so pretty? After all. why should she trv to crush her daughter into the world’s idea of | a widowed mother? Antoinette raised a tear-stained countenance that weeping had only made more beautiful. There was something about her round, girlish face that made her mother think of a bough of rain-washed apple blossoms against a blue sky. “But, Mother, why am TI like this? Why am I not like other,” she hesi- tated at the word “widows” and said: “Why am I not like other women whose husbands have gone? T am so. ashamed to look happy. And it is not onlv the wav I look but the way I feel! I feel like something suddenly let free. My heart dances like some- thing golden—like those snring daffo- dils out there.” Her head dropped into her bent arms on the hack of the chair. Her mother’s voice was full of short breaths. “Perhaps it is all my fault, mine and your father’s she said. “We —we thought an older man like James Harper would sober you. And perhavs it was—not natural for you to be sober.” _ Antoinette was hot with indigna- tion. “But I loved James. I loved him dearly. I chose to marry him myself.” “Yes—you chose him, yourself. But, Antoinette, now that Augusta is grown up, you must realize that a mother can sometimes influence her daughter about men.” Augusta grown up! Of course, the young girls nowadays were very sophisticated, but her daughter grown up? Was life as short as that? She caught at her mother in a panic. “Tell me, am I old ?” she cried. “It seems only yesterday Augusta was learning to walk. Is life—so short?” Her mother was still a vivacious and life-loving woman herself. Her eyes were very wistful. “Life is, my dear, very short,” she said. Her voice hesitated, then went on. “Antoinette, I saw Jimmy Brown kiss Augusta yesterday.” Antoinette drew back, startled. “You are sure it was Jimmy?” “Yes.” Antoinete’s reply was slow, as though she were making a discovery for herself word by word as she spoke. “But Mother,” she said, “Jimmy Brown is only a year younger than I am! I still like—young people the age of Jimmy Brown— myself!” Tangled in her own thoughts, she became silent, staring out at the win- dow with perplexed, introspective eyes. “And I try so hard to mourn.” Her mother was quite still a mo- ment. Then she smiled, and her voice was easy and light. “Of course, you still like young people,” she said. “Why shouldn’t you? I think it is right that you should.” And she stood up to hide her startled eyes. “Why Antoinette, the .ruth is, you have never had a chance to be a young girl yourself. You were only eighteen when Augusta was born.” “Jimmy Brown doesn’t young to me.” “He is not so young,” her mother answered. “He is much too old to be about with Augusta. You must tell her so at once, and tell him.” “But,” Antoinette was struggling to understand something in her own mind, groping for a clew to that strange empty feeling, as though something had knocked the breath out of her. “But, Mother—I can never explain to Augusta about Jimmy Brown.” . “Why, of course, you can. She is better with younger boys—Harold Warren, for instance. She has always been friends with Harold.” “But, after all,” said Antoinette, with bent, puzzling brows, “Jimmy Brown is only seventeen years older than Augusta, and my husband was sixteen years older than I.” Her mother went to the little dress- ing-table and began tucking her hair neatly under the brim of her hat. “Dear me, Antoinette, we are ever so late. We must be going.” As they stepped into the car at the curb, a tall, dark girl came hurrying down the walk, chatting with a com- panion. The tall, dark girl was Au- gusta. “Mother,” she called, “I'm going for a ride with Jimmy Brown.” “No,” prompted Antoinette’s mother in a whisper. “He asked you to go too, Mother,” added Augusta, “but I see you are off already to your party.” Color flowed surprisingly into Antoinette’s face. “Isn’t Harold War- ren coming out this afternoon?” she temporized. “I’ve put him off until next week.” “Then go with Jimmy Brown, of course.” The motor whirred away, leaving the two girls looking after it. “Do you think Mother is beautiful ?” asked Augusta, speculation and ad- miration mixed. “Yes,” was the ready rejoinder. “And she simply fascinates every man, and she doesn’t even know she does it! All the young college boys just hang on her words. Harold War- ren is right, Augusta, when he says you will never be able to get married with your mother in the house— unless you take him. It’s some situa- tion to have such a stunning mother SO near your own age.” “Near my own age? How could a mother be near her daughter’s age!” Augusta replied, visibly nettled. But the companion did not notice Augusta’s irritability. She giggled. “Well, she is.” she said, “and you will soon look older, being so dark, and she so fair.” Then, after a while, the girl said slowly, “Augusta, do you suppose it is _a hard situation for your mother, too—¥ “mean, having you?” “Don’t be foolish,” Augusta an- i swered. To tell the truth, the idea had never entered her head before. “Mother wouldn’t—why, Father has only been—why, I don’t know what you mean!” In the warm dusk Augusta came home with Jimmy Brown. Antoinette had been an hour before them and had waited a little nervously. But when the two came laughing into the yel- {low light of the sitting-room, all the | vague apprehensions of the afternoon ‘ faded, and the three of them were as | merrv together as though they were ‘all of an age. “You'll stav to dinner, Jimmy?” Antoinette asked. When he hesitated, she threw the long silk scarf she was wearing in a loov over his head. “Come, Augusta, we will drag him | to the dinner table,” she laughed; “he shall not escape.” Then self-consciously, half-way down the hall to the dining-room, she realized it was not Augusta who was “dragging” him. Augusta, in fact was hanging back, and there was a little questioning, uneasy look about her eves. At the expression of her daughter’s face, Antoinette dropped the ends of the scarf. The scarf seemed to burn her fingers as the blood suddenly burned her ears. “Oh, you children tire me out,” she said, catching at something tactful to say. “An old woman like me can’t take part in your foolish games.” “Old woman like you!” Jimmy ex- claimed. pep of this flapper,” he mocked, throwing the scarf over Augusta’s head and drawing her toward him. “There, there,” Antoinette called, catching both ends of the long, bril- liant length of silk, with their two heads knocking together in the loop of it, “I'll drive you both along before me.” The maid had set a third place at the table without being told. And, still puzzled with the thoughts of the afternoon, Antoinette realized that the maid had sufficient reason to do so, for Jimmy Brown was just as often there to dinner as not. She hadn't ever really thought of it be- fore, cne way or the other. His presence at the table had bridged over many a difficult moment since she and Augusta had been alone. She had ac- cepted him gratefully, with never a thought as to how he came, so persist- ently to be there. Of course, now that the subject had been brought up, she saw his pres- ence in a new light. Naturally he was there to see Augusta. Augusta had so many beaux. The house fairly swarmed with boys still in college, with young men out of college and trying their hand at business for the first time, and there were even occa- sionally, men in the middle thirties, like Jimmie Brown. While her husband was living, and especially on account of his being older and sober, Antoinette had always made it a point to keep the house merry for Augusta, to encourage her young friends, both boys and girls. It had never occurred to her, through all these years, until today, that perhaps seem SO “Why, you've got twice the | she encouraged these young people just as much for her own pleasure as for Augusta’s. But now, in a flashing revelation, she remembered a remark one of Augusta’s friends had made a few days ago, a remark at which every one had laughed at the time. But now in this new way of looking at things, the remark no longer seem- ed amusing. She recalled the exact words: “Augusta, you certainly are out of luck with such a good-looking mother! Every man who ever comes to see you will fall for her! And as for Jimmy Brown—" Every word of this came back now to Antoinette as she sat looking keen- ly at Jimmy Brown across the table from her daughter. He was explain- ing some new scientific invention. Augusta was not attentive. She was not interested. In contrast to his earnest absorption in his subject Augusta did look like a little school- girl. She was obviously hungry, and all the worldly-wiseness of the girls of her age had given place, for the moment, to a particularly appealing greediness. Antoinette, who knew every expression of her daghter’s face so well, who read every faint. half- formed line, could not see her as grown up. however, much so in out- ward appearance it was the custom of her set to be. Perhaps Augusta’s contemporaries, perhaps the real flap- pers were grown up, but not Augusta. To her mother now she was so evi- dently but a young girl masquerading in sophisticated clothes and a sophis- ticated vocabulary. And Antoinette, watching them, was quite sure that Jimmy did not see Augusta as grown up, either. His family had lived in the house next door since before Antoinette was mar- ried. He was a big boy of seventeen when Augusta was born. He had helped her to school the first day she had ever gone to school. He had teased her, spoiled her, and even spanked her. And now he still looked was big, over six feet, and forceful, and was not talking to Augusta as to a person his own age. He was talking to her as to a child, as though he were —Antoinette puzzled over the exact feeling his manner conveyed to her— as though he were some one older—in her family. But that Augusta was misinterpreting his manner was also quite plain. To sharpened eyes it was evident that Augusta thought Jimmy Brown was in love with her! gusta a thing like this? For there was a vague, shadowy reason in her own mind that would seal her lips on this subject. Of course, if she were absolutely sure either way, she rea- soned, it would be unavoidable to speak. But how could any one ever be absolutely sure about such a thing —auntil it had been said. And when it had been said. it was too late to speak. Yet, if Jimmy did not con- sider Augusta grown up, if Jimmy did not come here to see Augusta—and she was certain he did not—then whom did he come to see? And as she asked herself this ques- tion definitely, his eyes chanced to turn from Augusta to her. And in their change of expression she read her answer surely. He had beautiful eyes, steady and dark, with little flecks of golden light in their depths. All this she noted, and then unexpect- edly she was discomfitted at his glance, and let her own eyes drop. A wave of confusion swept her. She was astonished. She thought of Augusta’s father. There was a quick mist of tears before her eyes. After dinner, so she could be alone to think things out, she sent Augusta and Jimmy to a motion picture thea- | tre. And she sat staring at the dusky opening of the window into the sum- mer night. “I'll never be able to tell Augusta this,” she could only say over and over to herself. Through the long night that fol- lowed she lay awake and made her plans. She and Augusta would go away somewhere. They could go to Europe for a year, perhaps. Then she need never try to tell Augusta this baffling, complex thing about Jimmy Brown. While as yet there was really nothing to tell, they would go away— and then there never would be any- thing to tell. But events moved too swiftly be- vond her planning. For what are human plans, when human life itself is but a shadow on a sundial ? It was the next midweek that she found Augusta crying alone in her room. Antoinette had come home un- expectedly early from an engagement, and half-way up the steps to her room, she heard Augusta. She listen- ed a moment before she dared to move. Augusta was crying with long, heart-broken sobs. It was a terrify- ing sound. “Augusta,” her mother cried, stumbling up the steps and throwing open the door into her daughter’s room. Augusta sat at her desk, her face buried in her crumpled sweater sleeves. At sight of her mother she made an effort to control her grief. “What is it?” Antoinette begged, bending over Augusta’s slim, hipless figure. “What is it?” In a quick frankness Augusta did not answer in words, but pointed to the picture of Jimmy Brown on the top of the desk. And her head went down into her shielding arms. What could he have done to make Augusta cry like this? Why hadn't she taken her mother’s advice and told Augusta everything? “Jimmy Brown!” Antoinette ex- claimed. “I will send him packing.” Augusta raised her head, entirely startled out of her sobbing. “Mother. won’t you just please keep out of this!” she demanded. Antoinette’s face went white, and there was a queer sinking feeling about her heart, as though she were going to faint. “I will keep out of it,” she said. “Since you ask me to, I will. But what did he do to you to make you cry like this?” Augusta dashed her head up, her eyes ruddenly hard. “Oh, he didn’t do anything. It was what he said.” “But, Augusta, after all, you are— Jimmy is——you can’t take seriously what Jimmy says, because you are so much younger than Jimmy.” How like her father Augusta look- ed, so quiet and sure! “I am the same age you were when you were mar- ried,” she said. “Every one thinks I am old enough to marry Jimmy— ex- cept you and Jimmy.” Her dark eyes logical and under- standing, Augusta looked certainly at this moment to know her own mind. What if she were right? Antoinette realized that she herself was now the one who was crumpled and unsure. “Every one thinks you are old enough to marry Jimmy—except Jim- my and me?” she repeated question- ingly after her daughter. “But Jimmy doesn’t want to marry me, and that’s that,” Augusta said. Yet Antoinette could see the light of evasive questioning in her daugh- ter’s face. She could see that one word of encouragement would make that hope flare up. For who is not willing, even those who are many times older and wiser than Augusta, to believe what they wish to believe, if only some other person will give credence to the lie? As she stood there, looking down ‘upon her daughter's dark head, all the possibilities of the situation re- viewed themselves mind. She was clearly conscious that she herself had been robbed, in a way, of her youth at the proper time. And now, here, for her—for her or her own free will to take or to leave— was another chance, a chance to take the love of a young man, to take the love of a man her own age, her own temperament, whom she believed now that she had always cared for in an! unacknowledged way, and who had i probably always cared for her also in i the same way. I And as for Augusta, she was yet so young—she would have many ‘chances. But she herself would have no other chance—this was her last chance. Should she then tell Augusta the truth and take her own last chance? Or should she lie now and give Augusta the chance? | She remembered how Augusta’s ' quite a generation older than she. He weeping had sounded from the stair- way. The sharp memory of that sound decided her, decided her against logic, against reason, against fairness itself; she knew she would never do anything to make Augusta unhappy. What her daughter wanted she would ! should like her more, that was all. Then, after he did, after he had learn- ed to love Augusta, what she was e a lie—then it would be the truth. She stood up, so young-looking and pretty, above her dark, sober daugh- ter. “Why, I don’t doubt that Jimmy Brown would want to marry you,” she said. “He may not have thought of to in time.” I “Snce I was three years old IT have expected to marry Jimmy,” Augusta | said. “I really can’t remember any- i thing else. But he has always been ‘so much more important than I, so jmuch older. Sometimes, | just lately, Mother, I have even | thought it was you he liked.” | Antoinette turned away. | “But, of course, | now.” Augusta hastened to add. “But | everybody does say you are so pretty, Mother. And—now that we are : speaking of it—I want you to know ‘I am not old-fashioned in my ideas. I, women do marry | know nowadays ' again—" | Antoinette was making it very {awkward by not replying. And al- i though she understood that Augusta | { was trying with difficulty to clear up | for them a situation beyond her years she | {and experience to understand, | could not bring herself to speak. i There was no doubt in Antoinette’s mind from that day on. She knew what her daughter wanted And she i felt she was able to get it for her. As to influencing Jimmy Brown, did not . mothers every day angle for suitable . matches for their daughters? She ‘felt in her heart that Jimmy was but clay to her fingers. It did not occur 'to her to question her right to mold ‘him to suit her wishes, to suit Au- | gusta’s wishes. What mother but has ‘thus leagued herself with her daugh- ‘ter, tacitly even if not openly! And how many, who knows, against their ‘own hearts also? : have done the ! many have taken their own chance instead! After this decision, there followed another, and many another night of ! Antoinette. | Over and over in her mind she revolv- she | | wakeful planning for ed the situation. There was, | thought, only one way out, only one . way to make sure that Jimmy Brown | would cease what she thought was only a helf-conscious interest in her- | self, and turn to Augusta. But that {way was a trap for her. Yet, if it i were really a trap, had she not been ! | trapped ever since Augusta was i born? Was the only way out for her {to be only Augusta’s mother, to seek i no life for herself? Since her prefer- | ences, her tastes, her interests clashed | thus strangely with her daughter’s, she must give them up. She must drop back with the people who had she must get older quickly, cultivate older tastes, feel older, look older, be older! As well as she could she threw of the depression of such thoughts and sat about her plans to make Jim- my Brown see how charming Augusta really was. Concluded next week. Cultivate Good Mind. Worry produces indigestion and dyspepsia; the gastric juices are not formed. Hate thoroughly, and you will be a martyr to neuralgia. Be voilently jealous, and the upset to the glands sows the seeds of cancer. Be malicious and cruel, and you'll get neuralgia. Be a fault-finder, a nag- ger, a scold and asthma comes. It is impossible to disconnect the mind and the body. An ill thought doesn’t stay in the mind; it hits the body some- where. It has been noted that ex- treme disgust will produce catarrh. It is not always possible to ward off external causes of disease, but we ought to be able to control our minds. Poison in the mind means poison in the body—suffering, and a shortening of life. Have a “good” mind, and youn have good health.—London Tit- its. in Antoinette’s | get for her, as far as she could. Jim- | {my Brown liked Augusta already—he ' going to tell Augusta now would not | And how could Antoinette tell Au- |b it much at this minute, but he is sure ' especially | I see differently : And how many opposite—how very been her husband’s contemporaries, | FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. DAILY THOUGHT. Don’t give a rap when they chaff with you; Don’t care a snap when they laugh at you. Every idea the world ever gained. Was scouted and hooted and jeered and profaned. The multitude never takes stock in a no- tion Until it’s established or plainly in motion. The price of ambition is heavy with hurt, You can’t find a new way to fashion a shirt, Build ships, houses, motors—make pepper or light, Witheut finding millions to say it’s not right. They'll check and retard you and dis- count the facts. They'll sneer at your blue-prints, your models and tracts. They'll bruise and abuse you until you succeed, But they’ll pay your own price, when you have what they need. Copyright, 1917, by Herbert Kaufman, Great Britain and all other rights reserved. The grand coutouriers, the little dress-maker of Paris, have had their openings. The much-talked-of, elab- orately hidden secrets are out, and lo, fashions have changed but little! line is modified here, a bit of pleat- ing gives new irregularty to skirts, everything is softer, a little lacier, a trifle more feminine. But there is a development, rather than a revolution. A more general fulness is one of the important changes that have made the new frocks so delightful to see and to acquire. Plaits no longer march in steady line about skirts, but form interesting groups of threes and fours to break up the plainness and the straight lines. Pleats have decreased in numbers and increased in originality. Pleated ruffles swirl up at one side. Closely related to the plait motif is the fulness that is gained by a flutter- | ing jabot, a silken cascade, a flowing bit of drapery, or the allure of float- ing angel wings. Jenny softens the side of an afternoon frock with a length of sudden fulness. Bows, after a tentative season or so of doing duty holding sleeves to- gether, or fluttering hither and yon on dresses, become enormous, and loop themselves nonchalantly where- ‘ever they find a bit of silk that is at ‘loose ends. Premet uses several bows, all different sizes, on the same frock, with an impartial hand. Sleeves are most important in the scheme of existence, but unimportant {in the scheme of decoration. Which ' means that they must exist, but you mustn’t notice them. And when the blouse is of contrasting color, the sleeves are more than apt to match the skirt. Straight and diagonal lines and | geometric forms are used, rather than | curves. Clear-cut and interesting are the zigzag harlequin designs embroid- ered across blouses, and the occasion- al monogram that encloses itself in a diamond bow at the right side near the belt. a fitted yoke for Worth repeats the Patou fashions i pleated skirts. | oriental girdle. The green dress with has the | i the metallic Incrustations wrapped and tied girdle that Doeuillet designed. Belts appear upon almost every model, in one form or another. The harness belt, narrow, buckled, still is a high favorite. Buckles do much to make this life a decorative one. Coats, although seemingly endless in variety, really settle down into the straight coats that are apt to have a box pleat back and the coats cut wide enough, in the fashion of Vionnet and , Patou, to wrap over to close at one ' side. Furs are much used on the soft, luxurious coats for formal wear, but the ever-ready, slim silhouetted top- coats often keep to the furless mode. It is simple then, to buy clothes for next season that are in the tune with the best designs of the Openings. Look for these details of line, of belt, of hem, by which you may know these new-coming fashions from Paris. —Wannamaker. Have you ever thought of discard- ing the old-fashioned shoe bag. on closet or wardrobe door—which is often an awkward thing at best and rot always coniderate of one’s even- ing slippers and such things—in favor of the newer style boxes, divided into | compartments, each of which is large enough to contain a pair of shoes , neatly and comfortably placed in it? ; These boxes may be good-looking ob- | jects, quite decorative, in fact. For the room with hangings of chintz, they may be covered with the same fabric, inside and out, and so will (take their places inconspicuously, | wherever they may be put. | Some of these boxes are long and | narrow. the width being slightly more than the length of an ordinary pair of | shoes, with rows or tiers of com- | partments, one above the other, hold- | ing eight or ten parts of shoes in all. { Such a box, with a hinged cover, or i just a curtain of the chintz to hang (down in front to conceal and protect the shoes, may be set under a window and the top used for a receptacle for a magazine or two, or any little thing of that sort which one may like to drop down in some convenient spot. If it is built strongly enough, it may do duty as a seat, as well, thus great- ly enhancing its usefulness. Supposing one has only a narrow space available for the shoe box; in that case, it may be built somewhat on the order of many a city skyscrap- er, tall and narrow, two compartments wide and five or six high, according to choice. Again, the top may do duty as a stand, and the front be covered. It would be an easy matter, if one should not care to cover such a case of compartments for shoes with chintz or cretonne, to make it of plain wood and then stain it to match the wood- work of the room. AY cor, i September Weather as Forecast by A. S. Kirsch, Barr Twp. Astrologer. Hard Winter Indicated. This Venus year is certainly keep- ing up its reputation for daily rains in the spring and heavy rains ! during practically the entire year. There will likely be some drought in places during the fall as the New Moon on August 27 and September 25 are in sign Virgo. During this year there is danger of blight and also rotting of grapes and fruit. Warm weather is indicated for Sep- tember since the Moon changes on 4th and 17th are near the node and the Full Moon on 11 close the Equa- tor. This Full Moon is similar to the one in September last year, being on the Equator and nearest the Earth ‘ the followng day after Full Moon in sign Pisces, indicating that some places will have sultry, cloudy, rainy weather with thunder and floods. A Mercury equinox is in force first half of September. Buckwheat in wet sections will be hard hit and cutting in some places delayed until middle of September. Jupiter is nearest the Sun this year and weakens animal life on this earth and when the other planets are set rght, anytime within a few years will bring an epideme, and a rather severe | winter with it, with deep snow fall. “Usually both come the same year. | Jupiter was nearest Sun in 1915 and { Saturn in 1916 and hard winter and ‘severe epidemic was delayed until 11918 when we had a double-decker on | account of two planets in perhilion. {—Mountaineer Herald. ——The “Watchman” is the most ‘ readable paper published. Try it. POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENTS PRESIDENT JUDGE. We are authorized to announce that W. Harrison Walker, of Bellefonte, is a can- | didate for nomination on the Democratic ticket for the office of President Judge of the courts of Centre county; subject to the decision of the voters of the county as ex- pressed at the primaries to be held on September 20th, 1927. To Democratic Voters of Centre County :— I am a candidate for the office of judge of your courts, subject to your decision at the primaries Senismber 0, 1927. incerely yours, W. D. ZERBY FOR SHERIFF. We are authorized to announce that Harry E. (Dep.) Dunlap, of Bellefonte, will be a candidate for the nomination on the Demo- cratic ticket for the office Sheriff of Centre county, subject to the decision of the Cen- tre county voters as expressed at the pri- maries to be held on Tuesday, September 20, 1927. We are outhorized to announce that Elmer Breon, of Bellefonte borough, wilk be a candidate for the nomination on the Democratic ticket for the office of Sheriff of Centre county, subject to the decision of the Centre county voters as expressed at the primaries to be held on Tuesday, September 20, 1927. FOR PROTHONOTARY. We are authorized to announce that Claude Herr, of Bellefonte, will be a candidate for the nomination on the Demo- cratic ticket for the office of Prothonotary of Centre county, subject to the decision of { the Democratic voters as expressed at the Primary tc be held Tuesday, September 20, 1927. FOR TREASURER. We are authorized to announce that Ly- man L. Smith, of Centre Hall, will be a candidate for the nomination for County Treasurer subject to the decision of the Democratic voters of the county as ex- pressed at the primary to be held Septem- ber 20, 1927. | We are authorized to announce that D. T. Pearce, of State College Boro., will be a candidate for the nomination for County Treasurer subject to the decision of the | Democratic voters of the county as ex- i pressed at the primary to be held Septem- { ber 20, 1927. i FOR RECORDER. i We are authorized to announce that Sinie H. Hoy. of DBeliefonte, is a candidate for nomination on the Democratic ticket for the office of Recorder of Centre county, subject to the decision of the voters of the county as expressed at the primary to be held Tuesday, September 20, 1927. We are authorized to announce that D. Wagner Geiss, of Bellefonte, Pa., is a can- didate for nomination on the Democratic ticket for the office of Recorder of Centre county, subject to the decision of the voters of the county as expressed at the primary to be held Tuesday, September 20th, 1927. . We are authorized to announce that D. A. McDowell, of Spring township, will be a candidate on the Democratic ticket for the office of Recorder of deeds of Centre county, subject to the decision of the Democratic voters as expressed at the primary on Tuesday, September 20, 1927. COUNTY COMMISSIONER We are authorized to announce that John S. Spearly will be a candidate for the nomination for County Commissioner on fhe Democratic ticket subject to the decis- ion of the voters of the party as expressed at the primaries on September 20th, 1927. We are authorized to announce that John W. Yearick, of Marion township, will be a candidate for the nomination of Coun- ty Commissioner, subject to the decision: of the Democratic voters as expressed at the primaries to be held September 20, 1927. Republican Ticket. PRESIDENT JUDGE We are authorized to announce that M.. Ward Fleming, of Philipsburg, Pa., is a candidate for romination for President Judge of the Courts of Centre county sub- ject to the decision of the Republican voters of the county as expressed at the primary to be held September, 20, 1927. We are authorized to announce that James C. Furst, of Bellefonte, Pa. is a candidate for nomination on the Republi- can ticket for the office of President Judge of the Courts of Centre county; subject to: the decision of the Republican voters of the county as expressed at the primary to be held September 20, 1927. We are authorized to announce that Arthur C. Dale, of Bellefonte, Pa., is a candidate for the nomination on the Re- publican ticket for the office of President Judge of the courts of Centre county, sub- ject to the decision of the Republican voters of the county as expressed at’ the- primary to be held September 20, 1927. TREASURER. I hereby announce that I am a candi- date for nomination as the Republican candidate for Treasurer of Centre County, subject to the decision of the voters of the party as eel at the primaries to be held Sept. 20, 1927. Your influence and support is earnestly solicited. JOHN T. HARNISH Boggs Township. PROTHONOTARY. We are authorized to announce that Roy Wilkinson, of Bellefonte, Pa., will be a: candidate for the nominaton on the Re- publecan ticket for the office of Prothono- tary of Centre county, subject to the de- cision of thee Republican voters as ex- pressed at the primary to be held Tues- day, Septmber 20, 1927.