i'S SALE OF 1} TAXES OF 1%e the provision ES hin ses 1907 relating. to AND of law hui nt Bellefonie, on and to eintinue the Borough of 1 o'elotk p. mo, by adjournment 50 00 20 45 2 BENNER TOWNSHIP Warrantee, Supposed Owner Andrew Wm. CC. Haine M Wir CC. Heinle M. A. P. Morrison Paul W. Thomas, Per. Coon, Hale, J. Hale, 1: Kunea, Kunes, 1 nomas, i Levy Wolf Richard «vv. a rR A. Thomas, Heinle Morrison Rowe Kunes, Simon Moore, John Unknown . Unknown ’ John C DOGGS TOWNSH 2.86 43% 183 Putier, Margaie: Miller & 424 3 tinger Gal t CC} l 400 arscaddsn 1, iis | oO aa 168 Gray. William 433 153 lewis, David 150 lane, Sarah 130 Lacas, J. M ds BB Pac & {Inknown . i John bs 50 30 100 Sexton Hewett Heinle Morrison Morrison Helnile re.t Charles ~ acke futas,, J Bt SE ok So nd bk i 50 cer oo 80 433 163 1-3 433 163 a] 1-2 140 43 163 a7 oil. William John 22 Cox. Davi 140 146 422 1-8 433 163 Hall, 23 163 Hall, 2.3 433 13 Hall, 2-6 433 183 Hall, 423 58 Unk: 1-4 433 415 64 216 415 415 41 3-4 a3 410 433 163 ry favrisn TOWNBHIP Rosanna C H. C. Bet Wm an 309 300 w Irooks Bron ks, rank Bross PR om oe ow lo it book os pol 1°» FERGUSON ndersos Bar t Juckhes, 1.3 Burchfield, Wm Dat n. Samuel Hull, John Horner Hal Kohin Miles Manie Mon lg NE After Erp Mitche Moore Q Do Wild Animals Die? 7 Ey Dr. Theodore Zell. what becomes of enough and easily HERE do wild animals die and Ww after death? The question is simple swered in some cgses but extremely difficult in other In a large number of cases the animals are killed by animals or by man and eaten. They find their graves the maw of thelr enemy, who in STAY the stomach of some other more powerful creature. Of living creatures man is the most bloodthirsty, and more an {mals fall victims to his greed, cruelly or appetite than to the murderous instincts of carnivorous or animals It has been asserted that man is compe ied to kill to prevent an excessive increase in the number of animals which would threaten his very existence, The niigsion 6f the earnivorous ahimals seems to be a similar one. In Rus gia 180.000 head of cattle and other large animals and 560,000 gmaller animals are killed by wolves évery year, not countin the poultry which becomes their prey. Some “ave made the assertion that certain animals, when they feel the spproech of death retire to some hiding place, a eave, hollow tree, or some crevice in the rocks, and there await the end. That may be true and is deeid edly probable, but does not explain the fact that only in rare cases are the re mains of dead animals found in such places. [t'has often been commented apon that even in the districts where monkeys are abundant dead monkeys are scarcely ever found. Ancient writers like Pliny speak with remarkable eru- dition of the age which certain domestic and wild animals reach, but their writings throw no light upon the question as to what becomes of the animals after death. The number of carcasses and skeletons which are actually found is fr too small te give a satisfactory evplanation of the puzzling question which is still witing for its Oedipus. ~—Chicago Tribune 0000000000000 099000009009% Gambling In Cuba. MERICAN influence has brought about some Important changes in Cuban customs and notably in the abolition of the bull ring and the cock pit, which used to be the chief Bunday attractions of the populace, Not a few of the better class of Havanese de gire the same fate for Jal Alal and would rejoice to see the Fronton closed forever. High and low wager Immoderately on this game and many stories of ruined reputations and wrecked businesses are connected with it. Every race has its prevailing vice and “its comparative freedom from others. The Cubans are incurable gamblers, but drunkenness is virtually unknown among teem. Roth sexes in Havana spend a great deal of time in the numerous open air cafes, but they drink, for the most part, ncn-alecholle, fruity beverages, of which there are an extensive variety peculiar to the covutry.~The World Today. : turn may find his other oo = i i : 3 Gephart Heinle Dorpblaser or Piorce & Seymour Engle Ulrich + . W Relfany'r nn. C. Henle Daniel Engle ais awd K & J W Relfsnvd r 4 I. E. Btover A P. Morrison. Wm. CC Heinle Wm. CC, Heinle Wm. ' Heinle Wm. C. Heinle TOW NSBHIP, cod ulifus , Daniel Amelia McKean, Rob ] PENN Kreamer, Bwineford, POTTER Anderson, Joh Brady, "Wm. Hargor, Brown, Jolin Chmeron, - Lnmeron, Piewart, Ewing, Kmeriok, Forbes, Fulmer, Getnig Goben, Wm J ASOT Joh H. Christ Charle Wm ert... T TOWNBHIP ad KK & JW Relfsny'r Brover & Alexander TOWNSHIP «s Linden Hall sedary M, Frank A818 voibidnden Hall Lum Hamilton vy 1 Laim Cod y 13 Adnden Hall Lum Co iu. Linden Hall lam Co don D Linden Hall Lum oo. Ldnden Hall Lum 3.0 Litiden Hall Lum A F. Marrison én Hall Lum n inden Hall Lum 8 Linden Hall Lum A » Helnie Decker Blough, smith, Boent George John ie Johm 5. Juries Hannuh James calvin Bharter ¥. Gray. Meey ¥ HC Neanet, & Co. 21.9 spline HH Beymour 16.05 AF. Morrison 49 + Bh, Newport + Heine | Pringle a Bharrer Pringle Turner, Turner, ites 8.08 IRIS 1 Al W atta McVey. four AES By Helen that a rontented spirit Cr ra ¥ urges one can have, and ooniends individual is to Pe ruled an Well, maybe. It ich the matter ease and freedom from care, perliass the con sets him apart from the world’s unrest is good; convince an aspiring, ambitious that suce discontent which makes one miserable, peevish fret a very bas thing: but the discontent which ia the outcome of the that what we have is not the best that may bo had. asd which urges reach out after the better, no matter what individual cost to ourself, is the discontent which spurs the world on to prog Ambitious, aspiring workers find thelr great happiness in following “he leading pathways, and they glory in overcoming the obstacles they en They courageously take the hard knocks and enjoy the discomforts, n befall jepends very witch upon is seen. If ong considers i ¥ ig’ He pol dd ndiviaua tentment be very hu ous person re ie and envious ia is > tn th fealin us ress out. ovunter i ! i ! i i Without this spirit of discontent to to barbarism, content with the cave achievement would never be known. test of others shall carelessly follow arge the world on, men would return and the bed of leaves, and the glory of »Rlegsed are they that do His commandments™ work of world-building The Commoner. Do Hornets Keep Guard * By Dr. H. C. McCool. a hornet's nest guarded by sentinels, after the manner of ant hills? 1% Is not so easy to decide, for their private habits Jo not invite familiar approach. Dut some experinionts seemed to point that way. No noises, however near or strident, had the feast effect upon the workers. Blow on divers instruments as loudly and shrilly as 1 would, they poured in and out of the gate or Inbored on the walls, intent wholly upon their own af But at the slightest jar upon the window or shutter, out flew a pest wit de fend thelr home, It was always #0; a squad of workers, free and ready for aggressive duty. seemed to be lurking near the gate, prompt to sally forth upon a's.m. Even at night a few kept near by, and although their port had airs. of irate Insects, and flung themselves against the wire window screen watchmen, as doubtless they were, they loft upon the observer the im that they were on sent'nel service n which the ¥ i Loum ————————— i Why There Should Be Less Haste In Trust Crusading By President Doodrow Wilson, of Princeton. Wal bm] fe dreineeees @ “ : A “ 4 Oded Pd Gelpaleead Goaeale ied dele frie Dee foile Or spaieende oie pind PASSION for regulative legislation, seems to have taken po session of the country of late; but it came upon it so sud denly, so much more like an impuise of impatience than like a deliberate purpose, that there is every indication hat the careful thinking upon which it should have been founded will succeed 1t after it has spent its force, rather than accompany and give form and direction to it We have passed laws forbidding such combinations and such practices as would virtually constitute monopolies and have attempted to enforce them. We have forbidden discrimination in freight rates by railway companies and have tried to detect and punish them. We have gone further still and endeavored to prescribe passenger rates as well, undertaking to look inside railway business and determine through public commissions what rates it is equitable for them to charge. Governmental control, which we are undertaking so extensively and with so Nght a heart, sets up not a reign of law but a reign of discretion and fndividual judgment on the part of governmental officials in the regulation of the business of stock companies owned by innumerable private individuals and supplying the chief investments of thousands of communities. I can see no radieal difference in princinie between governmental ownership and gow ernmental regulation of this discretionary kind. Regulation by commission is not regulation by law, but control according to the discretion of govern. wental officials. Regulation by law is judicial, by fixed and definite rule, whereas regulation by commission is an affair of business sense, of the com- prehension and thorough understanding of complex and various bodies of business. There is no logical stopping place between that and the actual conduct of business enterprises by the government. Such methods of regulation, it may be safely predicted, will sooner or later he completely discredited hy experience. Commissions in the future as in the past will reflect rather public opinion than business discretion. The only safe process, the only American process, the only effective process, is the regulation of transactions by the definite prohibitions of law, item by item, as experience discloses their character and their effects, and the pun. ishment of the particular individuals who engage in them. The sets of corporations themselves must be checked not by futile blundering attempts to dictate to each corporation how its business shall conducted, but by bringing the officials directly to book who are res tor forbidden or questionable transactions. The corporation itself never to find the really responsible official in its own processes of discipline, be made to disclose i the public prosecutor the names of the So Pbdd a a a a