Si "Bellefonte, Pa., September 7, 1928. HOW TO QUALIFY TO VOTE FOR PRESIDENT NOV. 6. Qualification for assessment and registration, a preliminary to voting in November's presidential election, 4s a matter of greatest importance to the voting population of Penn- lvania right now. aot Di importance in the presidential campaign is personal ‘registration in cities of the first, sec- «ond and third classes, and assessment and registration in boroughs and townships. : “One must have been a resident «of the State for one year to be qual- ified to vote, but a native Pennsylva- nian, or one who had been a qualified elector of the State and moved else- where and returned, must have ve- sided in the State thereafter for at least six months. “One must be a resident of the precinct or division in which he or she desires to vote for at least two months prior to election day, Novem- ber 6th. : “In order to vote, a citizen must have paid a State or county tax with- in two years of the November elec- tion. 3 “Saturday, October 6th, is the last «day upon which tax can be paid to «qualify voters for the coming election. “Electors in townships and boroughs should keep these facts in mind: If you are already enrolled and register- ®d in your election district in a town- ship or borough, it is not necessary To do so again. “If you are a new resident in a ‘township or borough, or having re- moved from another district, you should call on the assessor and have him add your name to his list. In- «quire of your neighbors or visit the polling place to ascertain the name and address of the assessor. The assessor is required by law to be at ‘the polling place on September 4th and 5th. These dates apply, but are in force in cities of the first, second and third classes. “Assessors in boroughs and town- ships may be called upon at any time before these last two days for the purpose of being assessed, and, where «convenient, every prospective voter should attend to the matter before ‘these days arrive and make certain that their names are properly assess- ed and registered. “As to residents of cities: “If you require a poll tax to vote, ‘vou must see that your name is on ‘the assessors, list, otherwise you can- mot pay a poll tax. “Go to the assessor in your divi- sion on Tuesday, September 4th, or Wednesday, September 5th, and have him add your name to the list. “Then you must be registered. All ‘previous registrations are void in cities of the first, second and third classes. “Therefore, you should go to the polling place on one of the following days to be personally registered: First Registration Day— Thurs- day, September 6th. Second Registration Day—Tuesday, September 18th. Third (and last) Registration PDay—Saturday, October 6th. “Electors not able to show any other tax receipt may obtain a poll ‘tax receipt at the time of registering “from one of the registrars. “First voters who desire to quali- Ty For the presidential election will be interested in the following facts From the official digest of the Elec- ‘tion Laws of Pennsylvania. They pro- “vide that ‘If over 21 years of age and less than 22 at the date of election, ‘they can vote without having paid 2a tax by making affidavit as to their age, and if residing in ‘the city, hav- Ing been registered. “ ‘A voter becomes of age on the day before his 21st birthday. This year a person born on November 7th can vote on election day, November bn Jf registered and otherwise quali- fied. ree eres P. R. R. Awards Safety Trophies. T. H. Camrow, superintendent of safety of the Pennsylvania Railroad, announces the gold and silver safety nners awarded the second quarter of 1928 to division in each region and shop in Altoona works, as follows: Gold banners awarded for the lowest number of casualties to employes on duty per million man-hours: Renovo, Delaware, Indianapolis divisions, and Juniata shop. Silver banners award- ed for the greatest reduction in cas- udlties to employes on duty: Toledo, Renovo, Elmira divisions, and Juniata shop. The Pennsylvania Railroad company Is stressing the work of its safety department at every vantage point, and the results being attained through the co-operation of officers and employes, show reduced casual- “ties as compared with former periods. General W. W, Atterbury, president «of the company announces that the department safety trophies are ‘awarded the departments of the reg- ‘ions shown below for the best safety record among employes during the ‘second quarter of 1928: 1. Station de- ‘partment, western region; 2. Mainten- ance of way department, central re- gion; 3. Maintenance of equipment de- partment, western region; 4. Engine service department, central region; 5. Train service department, central re- gion. The trophies are awarded on the basis of accidents to employes on duty per million manhours, as report- ed to the Interstate Commerce Com- mision. The reduction in fatal injur- jes to employes per million manhours ‘was equivalent to 21%, and in non- Fatal injuries 41% in the second quar- ter of 1928 compared with same per- iod in the previous year. President Atterbury congratulated, not only the winners of the trophies, but all offi- cers and employes who, through their interest in accident prevention, con- tributed toward this excellent per- formance. The goal is set for “not more than ten casualties to employes per million manhours by the end of 1928.” i —— FARM NOTES. —Sweet clover is hard to cure when cut for hay and there is some danger in feeding when moldy. —One of the important methods used to improve fruit trees is called budding. This is the time of the year when the work should be done. —Wheat should not be allowed 7o lie unthreshed in the mow. An ex- tended period of hot weather will .e- sult in great damage from moths. —To prevent pullets fiom becom- ing infested with worms, place the birds in a clean laying house away from the bare contaminated range. Satisfactory results cannot be expect- ed from worm treatment unless the birds are taken away from the ground where there is infestation. —Do not stop spraying potatoes now or the late blight will soon short- en the growing period. Many farm- ers find that the yield is increased 25 bushels an acre each week in which growth can be extended at this time of the year. Increased profits are the result of consistent spraying. —Stinking smut is the worst dis- ease on wheat in thig State. Last year it destroyed 1,400,000 bushels of grain for Pennsylvania farmers, be- sides inflicting losses through dock- age of smutty wheat. Two and one- half ounces of copper carbonate dust will treat a bushel of seed. It is better to control than to pay smut toll. —Be sure that you know the dif- ference between the various kinds of lime on the market. The law re- quires that the analysis of each kind be made public. Ask the county agent to help you to determine what you are getting for your money. It is a question of interpreting the an- alysis in terms of the actual active agent in the form of lime purchased. —Brood sows need exercise. They also need alfalfa in the ration. If the alfalfa is fed in a rack placed some distance from the place where the sows sleep they will get both the ex- ercise and the alfalfa. —All ewes in the flock should be placed on a light grain ration about six weeks before lambing. About a half pound a day of a mixture of three-fourths oats and one-fourth corn makes a good ration. —The cost of raising beef calves will be determined by the cost of maintenance of the breeding herd. —Tankage in the ration of pigs be- ing finished for market occupies a position of extreme importance ac- cording to the Kansas agricultural experiment station tests which are discussed in the Agricultural Student. One phase of experiments conduct- ed last summer was to determine the value of tankage as a protein supple- ment for fattening spring pigs on al- falfa pasture. The pigs used weighed approximately 90 pounds each and the feeding test covered a period of 115 days. One lot of these pigs was fed corn and tankage in a self-feeder and another lot was fed corn alone in a self-feeder. Both lots were run on alfalfa pasture of similar quality. The pigs receiving no tankage gained .85 pounds per head per day; those receiving tankage, 1.34 pounds. —A survey of the various feed markets indicates that wheat bran usually reaches bottom price in June, July and August; linseed oil meal in May, June and July; cottonseed meal in August, September, January and February, and gluten feed in May, June and July. By making out their feed budgets accordingly and buying what feed they need at the proper time, dairymen not only can make an important saving in feed costs but also will probably feed a better ra- tion, it is pointed out by C. S. Rhode, dairy extension specialist of the col- lege of agriculture, University of lill- inois. Illinois dairymen should, and do, produce most of the feed that is necessary for their cows, but in most cases it is advisable to balance the home-grown grains with high protein feeds. It therefore is to the advan- age of the dairymen to study the feed riarkets and determine when these fceds can be bought at the best price, he said. —If breeding ewes can be made to walk at least one mile every day in getting a large part of their rough- age, the chances for a crop of strong, thrifty lambs next spring are much better than if the ewes are allowed i to loaf in the yard around the barn or shed. It is a good practice to scatter the iroughage in the fields or pastures each day during clear weather when ! the ground is frozen or dry, they say. i In this way the ewes will have to take j exercise in getting the roughage feeds. When it can be done, the flock should be shut away from the barn- yard in the field or pasture during {the day and made to rustle for its feed. | In so far as housing is concerned, i warm barns, except during the lamb- ,ing season if the lambs come in cold weather, are not desirable for breed- ing sheep. The wool protects the sheep from cold and all it needs is a shelter from cold, sharp winds and a dry place to sleep. | —Many farmers have difficulty in 'raising vigorous, healthy pigs. Hog lots that are occupied year after year , without cleaning bring about unsani- (tary conditions. Some of the common diseases of hogs have their beginnings within the first few weeks of the life of the pig. That an excessive number of pigs are lost during the spring and summer months on many farms has been ob- served. Unlike hog cholera, when a large number of animals die within a short time, the pigs with the filth dis- eases often live for a much longer period. Such pigs as do survive these filth diseases are the so-called runts and it is seldom profitable to feed them. Intestinal round worms and pig ty- phoid are two common diseases of young pigs which are ‘found under filth conditions. When these pig dis- eases occur they invariably break out on farms where the same hog lots, pens and wallows are used for years. The soil is loaded with worm eggs and swine sewage bacteria which are ready to attack the young pigs. For Preservation of Fine Colonial Homes More than any other city in the country, the atmosphere of the Seven: teenth century is retained by the city of Annapolis. It has many landmarks and institutions of the pre-Revolution. ary days, including anclent trees, structures and customs around which the romance of history has been woven. There are several particu- larly fine specimens of homes of that period, but the touch of modernism has threatened some of these and the movement to preserve them for all time has been inaugurated by the ad: ministrators of St. John’s college, it. self one of the oldest institutions of higher learning in this country. Three signers of the Declaration of Inde- pendence aided in the formation of the college and their homes, still pre- served, are but a short distance from the college campus. The houses which the college proposes to preserve are the Pinckney house, the Brice house, the Hammond-Harwood house and the Peggy Steuart house. The latter was built by the owner of the vessel which caused the Peggy Steuart Tea party, which was a counterpart of the Bos- ton Tea party. Query as to “What's in a Name?” Answered Mitchell Kennerly, the art expert, said at the Lotus club in New York® “What’s in a name? Lots.” He laughed and then went on: “There’s too much in a name. All the French art world is agitated just now over an old painting found in a cellar. Is it a Goya or not? If it's a Goya it’s worth a fortune. Merit has nothing to do with the matter, The name alone will determine this faded and moldy picture’s worth. Another laugh, “Once in a famous gallery a famous oritic said to me: *“ ‘Look at that daub in the corner. Did you ever see such muddy colors. such ridiculous drawing, such—’ “ ‘But that’s a Rembrandt,’ said IL “ ‘Oh, what a magnificent work,’ said the critic, ‘now that I've shifted my position so as to get it in the proper light.” "—Springfield Union. Indians’ Use of Metals The bureau of American ethnology says that Indians and Eskimos were not skilled in the working of metal previous to the coming of the whites, although copper had come into use in the Great Lakes region. However, the copper implements were made by ham- mering the soft metal. Ivory and bone were used by the Eskimos, and there have been a few occurrences of meteoric iron being worked to a lim- ited degree. The Indians used stone, bone and shell implements extensively. Metal working in copper and bronze was quite highly developed among the Indians of Central America and north- ern South America before the arrival of the whites. New Mesopotamia In the northern part of Argentina. touching the borders of Brazil, Para- guay and Uruguay, is found a country whose physical condition is strikingly similar to that of Mesopotamia, earli- est cradle of civilization. It is bor- dered by two rivers, the Parana and the Uruguay, corresponding to the Asian Tigris and Euphrates. Formed between them is a fertile valley, as yet little developed, says the Depurt- ment of Commerce, but capable of supporting a large population, Its cli- mate, too, is much like that of an- cient Babylonia, for it is just about as far south of the equator as the latter country is north, Self-Education Ignorance is no sin, but to remain in ignorance and not to strive for the aquisition of knowledge is sin. The most important and most vital lessons of life may be learned without a col- lege education. Love and kindness and unselfishness and gentleness need not be learned in colleges. They are within reach of all who desire to at- tain them. Men and women of energy and character should not be dismayed by their lack of education. They can educate themselves. The hard and rugged facts and truths of life will be the objects of their pursuit.—True Ex- periences Magazine. Mazamet Wools Mazamet is a small town in south- ern France, where the principal busi- ness is the pulling and scouring of skin wools; that is, wools imported on the skins. These skins may be from Australia, South Africa or elsewhere. Therefore, there is no such thing as Mazamet wool entering into direct competition with our domestic prod- uct. Wools pulled and scoured in that town are known in the trade as Maza- met wools, but that has little signifi- cance, as such wools are actually classed as Australian, or what-not, when they come to be resold. An Up-to-Date Girl On his first visit to the hospital to see a new baby sister, four-year-old Paul seemed much interested in the strip of tape about her wrist, which bore a number. On his second visit several friends ox the family were present. As soon as the baby was brought in he rushed to the bedside and began to undo the blanket about her. “What are you doing?” his another asked. “I want to show them her license,” was his matter-of-fact reply.—Chil- dren, the Magazine for Parents, FIND WAR VETERAN FIVE YEARS “DEAD” Officials in San Francisco Identify Shock Victim. San Francisco.—Unable to account for many blank years and long thought dead by relatives, Nathaniel William Emery, thirty-eight, Bloomington, Ind., shell-shock victim of the World war and former lieutenant in the United States Marine corps, has been found. ill and destitute, here. Robert C. Stillwell, secretary of the United Veterans’ service commission, No. 312 Jessie street, has received in- formation that clears up the mystery and steps have been taken to place Emery in a government hospital Emery wandered into the commis- sion’s office looking for a job. He said he wanted work of any kind as he was homeless, penniless and had been sleeping in Golden Gate park. He knew he had been in the Marine corps; that he enlisted in 1915 and was discharged in 1919; he recalled something abeut service on the battle- ship Texas, and with the One Hun- dred and Thirtieth company, Eleventh U. 8. M. C. Beyond that he knew nothing about himself, Emery was given temporary relief and Stillwell wrote to James E. Wat- son, United States senator from [n- diana. The reply unraveled the tar- gled skein. Emery, it was divulged, had escaped from a Madison (Ind.) hospital in 1923, to which he had been sent from Bloom- ington in 1921. Since his escape noth- ing had been heard from him. His wife, struggling to support their nine- year-old son and herself, had given him up for dead. divorced him and remarried. Emery had had a hazy recollection of having a brother in the army and apparently had wandered over the country looking for him. The brother is Maj. A. R. Emory, formerly sta- tioned at the Presidio, now at Fort Hunt, Alexandria, Va. He has been apprised of Emery’s condition. When Emery fled the Madison hos- pital the government stopped paying him compensation. In five years this has accumulated to several thousand dollars, and an effort is being made to have this restored. At the request of Emery’s Blooming- ton friends, Stillwell now seeks to have him removed either to the Madi- son (Ind.) hospital or to Palo Alto from Napa, where he is receiving temporary treatment. Gain in Flying Leads U. S. to Tighten Regulations Washington.—Air trafic has In- creased to a point requiring the stiff- ening of federal regulations aimed at its control. In 1926 the Commerce de- partment laid down the first set of rules for the air, intended to safe- guard and facilitate commercial aero- | nauties, and it has now undertaken a revision of the original code, which will result in a more stringent set of provisions. By the new rules aviation instruc- tors will be required to have 200 hours’ solo flying instead of 50 before training new pilots. Persons flying private planes must have ten hours alone in the air before obtaining their certificates. Pilots and mechanics must pass their examinations for Ii- censes with a grade of 70 per cent in each subject included instead of with an average of 70 per cent for all sub Jects. At least two years actual experi ence In engine maintenance and re- pair will be required from engine me- chanics. Explosives other than fuel may not lawfully be carried in air- planes, nor may drunken or drugged persons be taken up as passengers by a licensed pilot. Pilots will be forbidden to under take aerial acrobatics at any level under 1,500 feet, and they will be further forbidden from alighting or flying off from any public street or highway without special permission. In order to make sure that pilots have retained their original compe- tency, the new regulations will au- thorize the secretary of commerce to require any person seeking a renewal of aeronautical certificates to be re- examined if the step is considered necessary. Back and Forth New York.—Dr. Philip G. Peabody, seventy-two, retired lawyer, is on his 113th crossing of the Atlantic. In 86 years he has visited 43 countries. He plans his 114th crossing in July. his 115th in August and his 116th ip November. Teach Flying Berlin.—Seventeen German educa- tional institutions are to give summer courses in flying. A club is to send an exhibit of 20 types of German air- craft on tour. Asp Venom Is Found Curative of Rabies Paris.—The asp, which pro vided Cleopatra with a solution of her love problems, is also. it appears, death to rabies. The discovery was made by a well-known French woman phy sician, Dr. Marie Phisalix. In a paper read to the Academy of Sciences, she told of having es tablished that the venom of the asp when mixed with virus of rables makes the latter harmiess and noninfectious. RH HHH HCHO HHH HCH HERIFFS SALE.—By virtue of a S writ of Fieri Facias issued out of the Court of Common Pleas of Cen- tre County, to me directed, will be ex- posed to public sale at the Court House in the Borough of Bellefonte, on FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 14th, 1928. The Following Property: All those eighteen certain lots of ground known as Lots, Nos, 18, 75, 96, 121, 124, 125, 191, 192, 194, 195, 196, 197, 198, 199, 200, 201, 202, and 203, on a plot or plan of lots designated as ‘Beaver Lawn,” State Col- lege, Centre County, Pa., more particular- ly bounded and described as follows: Lot No. 18: —BEGINNING at a point 20 feet south from an iron pin ‘located at the intersection of Calder Alley and High Street and extending back in a southerly direction 48.55 feet along High Street to line of Lot No. 19; thence along line of lot No. 19, in an easterly direction 120 feet to a sixteen foot alley; thence in a northerly direction along last mentioned alley 39.4 feet to Calder Alley; thence in a westerly direction along Calder Alley, 120 feet to High Street, and the point of beginning. Lot. No. 75:—BEGINNING at corner of lots Nos. 75 and 76 on Markle Street ; thence in a northerly direction along Markle Street 42.5 feet to the south bound- ary of lot No. 74, 130 feet to the eastern boundary of lot No. 73; thence along line feet to line of lot No. 76; thence in an easterly direction along the said line of lot No. 76; 144 feet to Markle Street and the point of beginning. Lot No. 96: —BEGINNING at a point on Centre Street 70 feet south frem an iron pin located at the corner of Centre Street and Markle Street and extending in a southerly direction 40 feet to the north boundary of lot No. 97; thence along said boundary in a westerly direction 150 feet to a 20 foot alley; thence along said alley in a northerly direction 40 feet to the south boundary of lot No. 95; thence along the last mentioned boundary in an easterly direction 150 feet to Centre Street, and the point of beginning. Lot No. 121: —BEGINNING at the corn- er of lot No. 121 and 122, on Foster Ave- nue; thence in a southerly direction along line of lots No. 122, 174 feet to a 20 foot alley; thence along line of said 20 foot al- eastern boundary of lot No. 120; thence ter Avenue, thence in an easterly direc- i tion, 48 feet along Foster Avenue to the | point of beginning. the corner of lots Nos. 123, and 124, on Prospect Avenue; thence in an easterly direction 102 feet along Prospect Ave- ue, to the west boundary of lot No. 126, 126, in a northerly direction 200 feet to a 20 foot alley; thence in a westerly di- rection along said alley, or less, to line of lot No. 123, thence along line of lot No. 123, in a southerly direc- tion 216 feet to Prospect Avenue to the i point of beginning. : point on the northwest corner of Hamil- | ton Avenue and Oak Street, 50 feet from an iron pin located at the northeast cor- ner of Hamilton Avenue and Oak Street and extending in a northerly direction 150 feet along Oak Street to a 20 foot al- ley; thence in a westerly direction along the said alley 155 feet to another 20 foot : alley; thence along the last mentioned al- ley in a southerly direction 165 feet to Hamilton Avenue; thence in an Easterly { direction 100 feet along Hamilton Avenue to the point of beginning. Lots Nos. 194, 195, 196, 197, 198, 199, 200, { 201, 202 and 203; Beginning at a corner of lots Nos. 193, and 194 on Hamilton Avenue; thence in an easterly direction along the line of Hamilton Avenue; 500 feet to corner of Hamilton Avenue, and Spring Street; thence along line of Spring | Street in a northerly direction 140 feet to a 20 foot alley; thence along said 20 foot alley in a westerly direction 500 feet more or less, to line of Lot No. 193; thence in ‘a southerly direction along the east liné ‘of lot No. 193, in a southerly direction 150 feet to Hamilton Avenue the place of be- ginning. | All those certain lots of ground known ;as Lots 19, 119, 120, on the plot or plan ‘of lots designated as “Beaver Lawn” State College, Pennsylvania, more particularly | betindeq and described, as follows, to | Wit i— Lot No. 19: —BEGINNING at a point 68.55 feet South from an iron pin located at the intersection of Calder Alley and High Street; thence in a Southerly di- rection forty-five feet along High Street to point at line of lot No. 20; thence East along line of lot No. 20, one hundred and twenty feet to a sixteen foot alley; thence North along said sixteen foot alley forty- five feet to line of lot No. 18; thence West aiong line of lot No. 18, one hundred and twenty feet to High Street and the point of beginning. Lot No. 119: —BEGINNING at a point one hundred and fifty feet West from iron pin located at the Southwest corner of Foster Avenue and Markle Street and ex- tending in a Southerly direction two hun- dred feet to a twenty foot alley; thence in a Westerly direction along said Alley, thirty-five feet to the Intersection of an- other twenty foot alley; thence along the last mentioned alley thirty feet in a north- erly direction to the boundary of lot No. 118; thence in a Northerly direction one hundred and eight feet along the bound- ary of lot No. 118 to Foster Avenue; thence in an Easterly direction fifty feet along Foster Avenue, to the point of be- ginning. Lot No. 123: —BEGINNING at an iron pin located on the Northeast corner of Prospect Avenue and a twenty foot Al- ley; thence in an Easterly direction for- ty-eight feet along Prospect Avenue fo the western boundary of lot No. 124; thence along said line of lot No. 124 in a Northerly direction two hundred and six- teen feet to a twenty foot alley; thence in a Westerly direction along said Alley fifty feet to another twenty foot alley; thence along last mentioned Alley in a Southerly direction two hundred and twenty-five feet to Prospect Avenue and the point of beginning. ‘All those three certain lots of ground known as Lots, 20, 92, and 122 on plot or plan of lots designated as Beaver Lawn, State College, Centre County, Pennsyl- vania, more particularly bounded and described, as follows :— First:—Lot No. 20: Bounded and de- scribed, as follows, to wit:— BEGINNING at a corner at the Inter- section of High Street and a fifteen foot ! Alley; thence along line of said fifteen foot Alley one hundred and twenty feet 1in an Easterly direction to corner at In- tersection of lot No. 19 and lot No. 20 on teen foot alley in the rear of said lot; thence North along said sixteen foot al- ley 45.93 feet to corner at intersection of lot No. 20 and lot No. 19; thence along the Southern boundary of line of lot No. 19 in a Westerly direction 120 feet to in- tersection o flot No. 19 and lot No. 20 on High Street; thence along High Street, {in a Southerly direction forty-five feet to corner of High Street and a fifteen foot alley, the place of beginning. Second :— Lot No. 92: Bounded and de- | scribed, as follows, to wit: — BEGINNING at a point 100 feet North from an iron pin located at a street corn- er and extending in an Easterly direction one hundred and ninety feet to a twenty foot alley: thence in a Northerly direc- tion fifty feet along the said Alley to the Southern boundary of lot No. 91; thence along the said boundary one hundred and eight feet in a Westerly direction to Markle Street thence along Markle Street fifty feet in a Southerly direction to the point of beginning. Third :—Lot No. 122, Bounded and de- | scribed, as follows, to wit: — BEGINNING at an iron pin located at the Southwest corner of Foster Avenue ‘and Markle Street; and extending in a ' Southerly direction one hundred and six- ty-five feet along Markle Street to a twen- ty foot alley; thence along the said Alley in a Westerly direction eighty-two and one-half feet to the Hastern boundary of {lot No. 121; thence in a Northerly direc- | tion along the last named boundary, ap- ‘ proximately one hundred and eighty feet to Foster Avenue; thence in an Easterly direction fifty-seven feet along Foster Avenue to the place of beginning. Seized, taken in execution to be sold as ' the property of J. M. Stewart or J. Max , Stewart. | Terms of sale—Cash. { Sale to commence at 1:30 o'clock p. m, of said day. H. BE. DUNLAP, Sheriff. | Sheriff's Office, Bellefonte, Pa., August 20th, 1928 73-33-3t. of lot No. 73 in a southerly direction 40 ' ley in a westerly direction 90 feet to the ° in a northerly direction along the line of | | lot No 120, 186 feet, more or less to Ios- : Lots Nos. 124 and 125, BEGINNING at | i thence along said boundary of lot No. | 100 feet more ' Lots Nos. 191 and 192, BEGINNING ata 36 Killed at Corssings. Collisions at steam railroad grade crossings during the first six months of the year caused thirty-six deaths and injuries to 256, according to the report of the Bureau of Accidents of the Public Service Commission. i Public Sale of House and Lot in Port Matilda Notice is hereby given that the under- signed, J. C. Weston, Trustee of the Hs- state of Susan E. Price, late of the Town- ship of Worth, County of Centre, State of Pennsylvania, Deceased, in pursuance of an order issued out of the Orphans’ Court of Centre County, Pa., will expose to pub- lic sale, on the premises hereinafter de- scribed SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1928, at 2:30 o'clock p. m., in the village of Port Matilda, Centre County, Pa., all that cer- tain messuage, tenement and lot of ground situate in the said Village, bounded and described, as follows: — Beginning on Main Street corner of Cherry Street, thence East along Cher- ry Street 195 feet to Wood: Street, thence along Wood Street South 180 feet to line of lot No. 113, thence West along the line of lot No. 113, 195 feet to Main Street, thence along Main Street 180 feet to Cherry Street, the place of beginning; being lot Neo's 107, 109, and 111, as shown on the plot or plan of the Vil- lage of Port Matilda, Centre County Pa. having thereon erected a dwelling house and other outbuildings. TERMS OF SALE:—One Hundred and Fifty Dollars to be paid in cash when the property is knocked down; the remainder - of the purchase money to be paid on con- firmation of sale by the Court and de- livery of the deed by the Trustee. 73-33-3t. J. C. WESTON, Trustee. are included in the \ Merriam Webster, R\such as aerograph, D\ broadiail, credit Zs” union, Bahaism, Datrogenesis, etc. New names and places are listed such as Cather, Sandburg, Stalin, Latvia, etc. Constantly improved and kept up to date. WEBSTER’'S NEW | INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY Get The Best The “Supreme Authority” in courts, colleges, schools, and amon, government officials both Federal and State. 452,000 entries including 408,000 ; vocabulary terms, 32,000 geographical i subjects, 12,000 biographical entries. i Over 6,000 illustrations, and 100 val- : sable tables. Send he Free, new, richly ciated Dampblet containing sample pages o the New et G. & C. Merriam Company Springfield, Mass. New? OR Dry Cleaned? The only difference between a brand new suit and one that has been dry cleaned by us is the difference be- tween $1.75 and whatever you usually pay for a new suit. Try Us and See Phone 362-R Stickler & Koons 8 West Bishop St. Cleaners - - Dyers - - Tailors Hat Renovators som CHICHESTER SPILLS | { i | EL
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers