10 I The Pride of a Good Housekeeper Is a Good Range 1 \A7 have been selling this make of stoves C_i) "'for the past fifteen years. We know || K- from experience that they are satisfactory to ogj the most exacting housekeeper. ./-? Large size. Complete as shown and in- eluding stove pipe, set up in your home ready fej I Price $28.00 g«lr ;i yon Can Save Money by Shopping Uptown V,: Many people are realizing that it is very Br much to their advantage and profit to do their Shopping in the up-town stores. There is no doubt but what the lower v, rents and the other more economical expenses of the up-town business estab- pj g', lishments mean much saving of real money to purchasers. Try it out and prove «] it to your own satisfaction. We invite you to begin with our store by inspecting our large stock of Furniture and other home furnishings at our money saving j|| prices. §| BROWN & COMPANY The Big Up-town Homefurnishers 1217-1219 N. Third Street gl Ttgy nteßes Every Man a Peter Pan By DOROTHY DIX One of the reasons that the two j sexes understand and sympathize with each other so little is because women are always so much older than men, no matter what relative age they really are. Women are born grown up. They are mature even in their cradles, but the majority of men are still boys at heart even when they are gray and gouty. Not without reason did Barrie make Peter Pan of the masculine per suasion. No female creature is ever h Peter Pan at heart, however much she may affect the role in her clothes. ; She may rig herself up in infantile 1 white muslin and blue ribbons, and wear curls, and affect the baby stare, ! but underneath her pose of youth, her ! soul has wrinkles and crow'-s feet on it. Women recognize the fact that men keep their physical youth much longer than they do, and that a man of forty ; still looks boyish, while a woman of that age is frankly middle-aged, and Heaven alone knows the work and worry, and dieting, and massaging, and general martyrdom that wives go through in order to keep in their hus bands' age class That is why custom has decreed that the husband shall be older than the wife. Experience has shown that even when he has the lead of her by ten or twenty years she will catch up with him before the tin wedding anniversary rolls around. Men Remain Boys to the End, Both in Spirits and Body But if men keep young in body longer than women do, still more do they keep young in spirit. They are boys to the end of the chapter, and this is what their wives never com prehend. When a woman is grown up she is all grown up. She is sophisticated, and of the world, worldly. The things she enjoys, the books she reads, the | plays she sees are strictly for grown ups, not for children. On the other hand, no matter how ■ •levfcr and intellectual or how big and powerful the man gets to be, he still keeps somewhere in his soul the spirit of a boy. His idea of having a per fectly gorgeous time is to get away from people and go fishing with a stick for a fishing rod, and a tin can of worms for bait, as he did when he was ten years old. It is men who pre *Vr musical comedy and farces to the i problems of Ibsen and Sudermann. and j it is men who like to read detective stories and ten-cent thrillers. It is this boy spirit that makes men I collectors, and that raises wifely wrath j because husbands —until they are taught better by their spouses—clutter up the house and spend perfectly good money on butterflies, or postage stamps, or old prints, or something else that the mature ladies to whom they are married consider childish and foolish. Most Marriages That Go to Smasli Founder on Age Rock Most of the marriages that go to smash founder on the rock of age. The wife lacks the fine vision to see that in the shadow of her big. strong, com- Thousands have this I* disease—and don't know it f You may be afflicted with that in the convenient form of Senreco 8 dread disease of the teeth, pyorr- Tooth Paste. hea, and not be aware of it. It is Senreco contains the best cor- i the most general disease in the rective and preventive for pyor- I world! The germ which causes it rhea known to dental science, i inhabits toery human mouth— -Used daily it will successfully pro- i your mouth, and is constantly try- tect your teeth from this disease, i ing to start its work of destruction Senreco also contains the best @ there. # _ harmless agent for keeping the I Don t wait until the advanced teeth clean and white. It has a i stages of the disease appear in the refreshing flavor and leaves a £ form of bleeding gums, tenderness wholesomely clean, cool and pleas- § in chewing and loose teeth. You ant taste in the mouth, can begin now to ward off these Start the Senreco treatment f terrible results. Accept the ad- tonight—full details in the folder § vice dentists everywhere wrapped around every tube. | are giving, and take special Symptoms described. A I precautions by using a local 25c two oz. tube is sufficient 1 treatment in your daily VV 11 for six or eight weeks of the | toilet. \ffjra pyorrhea treatment. Get | To meet this need for lo- Senreco at your druggists cal treatment and to enable Vyl today, or send 4c in stamps everyone to take the neces- \ or coin for sample tube and sapr precautions against I "jl folder. Address The Sen this disease, a prominent I A tanel Remedies Co., 504 L dentist has put his own pre- C- Union Central Bldg., Cin scription before the public Sampl* •<» cinnati, Ohio. iMamiiMiNiiHaNiMiiftttiaiititifiiiiicQsiiHittttiNaiiMiitiiiffaiitiiiiiiiMaiiiiiinfiiicSelaivtiiiunnaniiiiiHiiiaiiiniotnmmnMniiicS Try Telegraph Want Ads Try Telegraph Want Ads THURSDAY EVENING, petent husband there lurks the little shy boy to lie played with, and cod dled, and petted, and mothered. And it is this little boy who finding no welcome nor recognition at home, so often runs away to some other woman in his 'desperate hunt for a playfellow. You can see ample proof of this in the letters that are pathetic, as well as ludicrous, that form the main exhibit in almost every divorce suit, and in which the writers, often men who have amassed millions by their own shrewdness, or men who have achieved fame in some profes sion, sign themselves "Your Little Boy Blue." or "Your Billy Boy," or some other imbecility that belongs by right to the age of calf love instead of the love of maturity. Also it is to be noted that the method of fascination that appears to be used by these sirens who break up homes consists in treating their elderly admirers as if they were in deed Billy Boys instead of respected Williams, with a high position in the community. There is food for thought for wives in these revelations of the divorce court, for they show that a man never gets so old that he doesn't want to be petted and jollied and made much of. Even when he has only scant hair to brush across his bald spot he desires just as ardently to have some woman curl it around her finger as he did when he had ambrosial locks that were a temptation to the hands of every feminine beholder. Likewise he desires to talk nonsense and to listen to nonsense, the gay non sense of youth, and this is another side of man's eternal boyishness that his wife can never grasp. She cannot understand how a man who has achieved big things can turn in a minute from big tilings to little things, from being sixty years old to being six or sixteen. Women Wlio Succeed in .Marriage Are Those Who Sec Boy in Slan The women who make successes of matrimony are the ones who have the inspired sight to see the boy in the man, and whose love has a large ele ment of the material in it. They rec ogniee that many of the faults of hus bands that so many wives find unfor givable are simply the irresponsibility of eternal boyhood, and mean far less than they seem to mean. These are the women who sense a great truth—that the boy in a man may be carried away by a pretty face, or the temptation of a moment, or the waywardness of a fleeting impulse, and yet leave the heart and soul of the man himself absolutely true and devoted to his wife, and that he comes back to her all the more devoted for having wandered away a bit. He comes back to her inevitably as a boy comes back home. And it is the wise woman who treats the boy in her husband as she treats her own three-year-old—who kisses him when he's good, and scolds him when he's bad, and shows him off be fore company, but makes him feel that the safe harbor of the world is in the hollow of her shoulder where his head can rest. A SMART FROCK ADAPTED BOTH TO STREET AND TO INDOOR WEAR The Pattern for this Design Be sides Allowing for All Seams, Gives the True Basting Line and shows Diagrams for Cutting and Making. Each Pi«c« of th« Pattern Xiao la UtUr«4 for Identification. By MAY MANTON 8783 (With Basting Lin « and Added Seam Allowance) Onc-Piece Dress for Misses and Small Women, 16 and 18 years. Here is a one-piece frock that will •urelv appeal to young girls and to small women. As it is snown here, it it made with a yoke and with trimming tabs below, but it for any reason long lines are to be preferred, the yoke can bs omitted. Tne pockets with their turned over tabs are distinctly new and inter esting. The frock is one of the simplest in the world to male And is always surt to be successful, for it hangs in straight lines fiom the shoulders and is com pleted by a belt at the waist. Here, it »s made of gabardine with trimming oi velvet and it would be difficult to find a more fashionable or satisfactory ma terial, but there are of course «i great many others that are correct. For th« dressy frock, broadcloth is pretty. For the every-day frock of hard usage, serg« makes an excellent choice and woo' poplin is good. All seams are allowed.on the pattern and the perfect basting line also is given. Blouse and skirt portiont are cut in one and there are only shoulder and u&der-arm seams. For the 16 year size will be needed 7 yds. of material 27 in. wide, 4s£ yds. 36 or 44; the width of the skirt is 3 yds. ana 28 in. The pattern No. 8783 is cut in sizes fot 16 and i 8 years. It will be mailed to anj address by the Fashion Department oi this paper, on receipt of ten cents. COLONHAL DAMES MEET Lancaster, Pa., Oct. 28.—Yesterday the annual conference of officers and board of managers of the Pennsyl vania Society of Colonial Dames of America was held here. Mrs. J. W. B. Bailsman, chairman of Lancaster county committees, delivered an ad dress of welcome. CUMBERLAND COUNTY VOT ERS! PLEASE TAKE NOTICE It is known that a sharp con test was waged for the nomination of the office of Clerk of the Courts and Recorder of Deeds by the three contestants, W. Frank Hart zell, Dr. T. W. Preston and J. A. Kunkel and that W. Frank Hart zell obtained the nomination. The undersigned take this method of advising the voters in general thai being thankful to their many friends for the ardent support given in the Primary Campaign, they now desire to urge their friends throughout the County to support W. Frank Hartzell. the nominee, who is in every sense of the fully competent'to fulfill all the requirements of the said office. DR. THOMAS W. PRESTON. J. A. KUNKEL. r—Adv. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH* NEW STATE ROAD IS TO BE MODEL ONE Cement Process Has Attracted Much Attention From Engi neers of State Tho Slate Highway Department is constructing a road between Allentown unci Easton under processes which are considered so exact and scientific that the taxpayer would be deeply inter ested had he the opportunity to ob serve this modern method of building a durable road. The road in question is to be a concrete thoroughfare six teen feet wide. It runs from Allen town to Gaston via Bethlehem, thus connecting three important cities. The construction of this road will represent the highest standard of mod ern engineering practice, but it will be built as economically as possible. This will be facilitated through the use of mechanical appliances and road ma chinery of the most modern type as well as the economical distribution of | all materials and equipment. But not ; withstanding these elaborate engineer ; ing preparations and the superior qvallty of the road as it has to do : with durability and low maintenance. ■ it is not Intended as a particular road for a particular place, but will be of a type adapted to less important thor ! oughfares. The highway department : intends to demonstrate that the methods employed are so thoroughly | practicable as to be applied to any i contract job. | The building of the road presents a ! stirring scene with its camp of some | two hundred laborers and big out tit, . consisting of road rollers, stone crush | ers. concrete mixers and the many minor tools and apliances required for this type of construction. The highway is subjected to ex cessive traffic of all types and the road will become an object lesson of great i practical value to the State as well as to other sections of the country. The work on the Easton-Allentown road is progressing rapidly. It began half way between Easton and Beth lehem and is being pushed in each direction by two completely equipped crews. At present about four miles have been graded, two and a half miles subßraded and more than a mile and a half concreted. The road is being built tinder the direction of W. D. TThler, chief engi neer of the Pennsylvania State High way Department, and Oeorpre H. Biles, Second Deputy Highway Commis sioner. J. T. Gephart, Jr., is acting engineer of the district and J. E. Sampson, superintendent. New Yorker's Granddaughter Made a Prisoner of War -VM.: / j LAOY ralph London, Oct. 28. Reports have reached here that Lady Ralph Paget, granddaughter of Mrs. Paran Stevens of New York, has been made a pris oner of war by the Bulgarians. Lady .Ralph was a leader in the British Red 1 Cross work in Serbia and has been ac > tive. in attending the wounded there I since the war began. Her husband I was formerly Minister to Serbia and i she has spent much of her life in that , country. Baldwin Locomotive Is I After Baltimore Plant ■\ Special to The Telegraph j Baltimore, Md., Oct. 28.—The Bald- I win Locomotive Works at Philadel- I phia, which it is said has war con . tracts aggregating $80,000,000 . is [ negotiating for the purchase of the . plant of the Baltimore Malleable Iron and Steel Casting Company, at Charles | and Wells streets, which is now en ■ gaged in filling war contracts. j ;fH'Ht*-i --;j:t Ends Dry, Hoarse or I i ;; Painful Coughs i ;; Quickly + ~ A. Simple, Honr-MRde RcmHfi T 0 Inexpenalre but Uneqnaled T ' u T ¥, P rom P t and positive results given by this pleasant tasting, home-made cough syrup has caused it to be used in more homes than any other remedv. It . gives almost instant relief and will usual .. ly overcome the average cough in 24 1 hours. ;! . Get 2% ounces Pinex (50 cents worth) from any drug store, pour it into a pint bottle and till the bottle with plain granu lated sugar syrup. This makes a full Dint—a family supply—of the most ef fective cough remedy at a cost of only 54 cents or less. You couldn't buy as much ready-made cough medicine for $2.50. Easily prepared and never spoils. Full directions with Pipex. The promptness, certainty and ease with which this Pinex Syrup overcomes a bad cough, chest or throat cold is truly remarkable. It quickly loosens a drv. hoarse or tight cough' and heals arid soothes a painful cough in a hurrv. With a persistent loose cough it stops the for mation of phlegm in the throat and bron chial tubes, thus ending the annoying backing. Pinex is a highly concentrated com pound of genuine Norway pine extract, rich in guaiacol and is famous the world over for its splendid effect in bronchitis, whooping cough, bronchial asthma and winter coughs. To avoid disappointment in making this ask vour druggist for "2% ounces of Pinex,' and don't accept anything else. A guarantee of absolute satisfac tion. or money promptly refunded, goes with this preparation. The Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind. t Sjj J Eat Breakfast Warm ffejj I as Toast I ' u I You've always been a lot surer of a ji • ) 1 warm breakfast than of a warm din / %yj V*lw room * morning hours the I /_ furnace is always an uncertain quan- J tity and usually the earlier you eat fl breakfast, the colder the room in H I which you eat. || But that can all be changed, easily I } I anc * inexpensively, by getting a p Y PERFECTION I \ I (ii Smokeless | \ 1 Oil Heater § \\ ■ ~ , . —. _ . Light it in the dining room when you I ii ■ Just a few drops of Atlantic , . , L r , u i L Rayolight Oil in the soap Start t-110 11X6 111 vil6 K.ltCrien-"—-then n // m tad* used for washing Kno. you're sure to eat your breakfast n II H leum, will preserve it* sur - « «• T, , , AL 9 ji face and at the iami time HS W3.FITI 2S IS tllC tOHSi Oil tllC I // H ke€p foo *" l|r * li,t€nin j- table. Because you've breakfasted in I II V new. That I economy for R , , L 1A Jl_ I I 9 you . How do you make comfort, you 11 feel better and cheerier I II ■ * e "T n * I .* at '* y»a mon*y? a li through the day, and that, too, you I II ■ Think—because these ad - x xu n r x* 11 ■ vertisements will show you a CcLIl CrGCllt tO tllC I CTieCtlOll* \\ ■ way to make good, profitable M L n-C X* L I I_ I U ■ use of your experience. The Perfection burns kerosene —burns 9 • it without smoke, soot, ashes or odor. I VlB After meals you can carry it into the I kW next room while lighted. It is abso- p Jk£. ~~—lutely safe. Because of its gallon tank. ■ r/yy) \ there is no need of constant refilling. g| I — S \ Used with Rayolight Oil. the Perfection I rtifc' \ burns with intense heat and extreme economy of fuel. I 4L\ \ Your dealer sells the Perfection from $2.75 M \ \ to $5.00. See one before the next cold B snap " NOW - I * W <jy\ THE ATLANTIC REFINING CO. I Heavy Traffic at Sunbury; Use Old Cars For Cabooses Special to The Telegraph Sunbury, Pa., Oct. 28.—Every avail able locomotive in the big classification yards of the Pennsylvania Railroad here is in use. Fifteen cabooses are being rebuilt for road work. Old pas senger cars are being used on the Wil liamsport division. A new tower has been put in place at Dcwart and more j will be opened soon. More business is being handled than at any time in a quarter of a century, is the statement, of railroad heads here. Beware of Ointments for Catarri That Contain Mercury it mercury will surely destroy the sensp of sine! and completely derange the whole system wbtfi entering It through the mucous surfaces. Sucl articles should nerer be used except on prescrlp tlons from reputable physicians, as the damage they will do Is ten fold to the pood jou can pne slbiy derirc from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, ! manufactured by r. J. Cheney k Co.. Toledo, 0.. I contains no mercury, and Is taken Internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous sur faces of the syatem. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be aure you get the genuine. It Is taken Internally and made In Toledo. Oblo. by K'. J. Cheney 4 Co. Testimonials free. Bold by Druggists. Price, 78c. per bottle. lake Hall's Family Pills for constipation, LEGAL NOTICES NOTICE I LETTERS OK ADMINISTRATION on ' the Estate of Lucy E. Jackson, late of Harrlsburg. Dauphin County, Pennsyl vania, dei eased, having been granted to the undersigned, residing in the City of Detroit, Michigan, ail persons in debted to said Estate are requested to make immediate payment, and those having any bills to present them for collection. LAURA E. GASKILL. 829 Cadillac Avenue, Or to • Detroit, Michigan. J. CLARENCE FUNK. ESQ., I 600 Telegraph Building Harrlsburg, Pennsylvania. ' NOTICE betters of Administra tion on the Estate of Henrietta L. Seitz, late of City of Harrlsburg, Dau phin county, Pa., deceased, having been granted to the undersigned residing In said city, all persons indebted to said Estate are requested to make immedi ate payment, and those having claims i will present theni for settlement. COMMONWEALTH TRUST COMPANY (222 Market Street), Administrator. DAN'L S. SEITZ. Attorney. NOTICE By virtue of a decree of the court of ! Common Pleas of Daupnln County, sit ' ting in Equity, filed to No. 550 Eaulty i Docket, the undersigned will expose at 1 public sale and sell to the highest I und best bidder, in accordance with the | terms of the decree aforesaid, at the Courthouse in the City of Harrlsburg, on Friday, the 6th day of November, 1916, at 2 o'clock in the afternoon, all the lines of telephone and system of telephone comnu nicatlon of the Cum berland Valley Telephone Company as now constructed and In operation, whether constructed by said company or acquired by purchase, lease or other wise: Located in the Counties of Dau phin, Yoj-k, Adams, Cumberland, Frauli- 1 OCTOBER 28, 19T3. I in, Perry. Juniata, Mlfllln, Snyder and Schuylkill in tne oiaie ui commencing in the City of Harrisburg, thence extending southwesterly through Mechanics burg, Carlisle, Newvllle. Ship pensburg. Chambersourg, Greencastie to Maryland Slate line; trom Chambers burg southeasterly through Fayette vllle, Graffensburg, Casn Town, Mc- Knlghtslown, Gettysburg ana thence to Llttlestown to Maryland State line; from Getty jburg to and through New Oxford, Hanover, Spring Grove and thence connecting with the York Tele phone and Telegraph Company; from New Oxford through East Berlin to HamptQon; from Chambersburg west to St. Thomas and Richmond, connect ing with the Orbiaonia Telephone Com pany; south from St. Thomas through Mercersburg to Welsh's Run; from Greencastle southeast through Waynes boro, thence to Maryland State line; from Gettysburg through Seven Stars, BiglervUle to York Springs and Latl inore; from Shiypensburg through to Orrstown to Strassburg: from Newvllle to Green Spring connecting with the Hopewell Telephone Company; from Carlisle through Mount Holly to Pine Grove; from Carlisle through Church town to Boiling SDrlngs; from Carlisle through Elltottson to Plainfield; from Mechanicsburg south through Shep pardstown; Bowmansdale to Grantham; from Mechanicsburg to Hogestown, from Harrisburg to West Falrvlew and Enola, thence connecting with the East ern Perry Telephone & Telegraph Com pany; from Harrisburg to and through Steelton to Obcrlln and Highspire, con necting with the Mlddletown Telephone Corn pan v; from Harrisburg through Penbrook to Progress, connecting with the East Hanover Telephone Company; from Harrisburg east through Paxtang, Rutherford. Hummelstown, • Hockers ville, Hershey to Campbellstown, con necting with the United Telegraph & Telephone Company; at Hummelstown connecting with the Farmers Mutual Telephone Company and at Hockersvllle connecting with the Derry Township Telephone Company, also connecting at Hummelstown with the Mlddletown Telephone Company; and from Harrisburg north through Rock vllle, Dauphin, thence to Mata moras, there connecting with the Lykens Telegraph & Telephone Com pany, with all trunk and other lines connecting and uniting the same, ali branch and service lines In the cities and boroughs and townships of the counties named, all exchanges, private branch exchanges, exchange and station outfits, switchboards, supplies and ap paratus and transmitting communica tions. cables and wires, overhead and underground. In buildings or exposed, all telephones and transmitters, whether placad In the property of Cum berland Valley Telephone Company or of other corporations, firms or Individ uals, together with all branches and extensions thereof and therefrom, alt lines and rights of way occupied by lines of said Company, granted by municipal or proper authorities of cit ies. boroughs and townships, and all the estate, right, title and Interest of tho Cumberland Valley Telephone Com pany In and to all the aforesaid, and all leases and contracts and all the es tate In leased lines and al! extensions now belonging and maintained by Cumberland Valley Telephone Com pany, constituting and making an en tire plant and system of communica tion. Improvements and hereditaments used for the purpose of operating and conducting the business of a telephone company, together with all private branch exchanges, furniture, tools, im plements and materials belonging to said Cumberland Valley Telephone Company, and together with all and singular the ways, easements, rights and franchises to operate said line of telephone company, liberties, privi leges, hereditaments and appurtenances, as well as the rents, tolls. Income, Is sues and profits, and generally all the estate, real and personal, and all the estate, right, property, interest, claim and demand whatsoever of tho Cum berland Valley Telephone Company, in law or in equity or otherwise howso ever. AJUo all tlx* right, title, interest and ownership of said Cumberland Valley Telephone Company In and to the fran chises. property, rights and crealts formerly of a corporation known as the Juniata & Susquehanna Telephon< Company, all of whose property is sub iect to a mortgage of tne par value of 55.000.00 and consists of certain tele phone lines and property situate in the counties of Perry. Snyder. Mifflin, Juni ata, Dauphin and Schuylkill. In the State of Pennsylvania, the terminal §oints thereof being as follows: The oundary line between Centre and Mif flin counties at a point near Mllroy, also Belleville, Mifflin County; also a point on the west bank of the Susquehanna River at the end of the railroad bridge opposite Sunbury, Northumberland County; also New Bloomtield, Perry County; also East Waterford, Juniata County; also Montgomery's Ferry In Perry County, and certain lines built in the Liykens Valley in Dauphin County, connecting with the lines of the Lykeua Telegraph and Telephone Company. And also, all the right, title. Interest and ownership of the said Cumberland Valley Telephone Company In and to $10,000.00 par value of the capital stock of the Lykens Telegraph & Telephone Company, a corporation of the State of Pennsylvania, being the total issue thereof; and 1138,760.00 par value 01 the capital stock of the Cumberland Valley Telephone Company of Balti more City, a corporation of the State ot Maryland, doing business In the States of Maryland, Virginia and West Virgin ia with exchanges In Hagerstown and WlUlamsport, State of Maryland. In Martlnsburg. West Virginia and Win chester, Virginia, being the total Issue thereof; ana all the right, title and in terest of the said Cumberland Valley Telephone Company In and to a claim against the United Telephone & Tele graph Company for an amount not less than 1300,000, said amount being due as rentals to said Cumberland Valley Tele phone Company. More definite Information as to the quantity and location of property to be sold, if desired, may be obtained upon application to the undersigned. All the property above described and referred to will be sold as an entirety to the highest and best bidder. No bid less than fifty thousand dollars will be accepted, and no bid will be received from any bidder who shall not deposit with the undersigned, as a pledge that he will make good his bid in case of its acceptance, the sum of five thou sand dollars in cash or In a certified check on a National Baj>k or Truss Company in the State or Pennsylvania Deposits of unsuccessful bidders will be returned when the property has been stricken down and tho deposit of the successful bidder will be applied on account of Ills bid. Twenty per cent, oi the purchase money must be paid lu cash to the undersigned within ton days after the property Is stricken down, the deposit above provided for to be part of said 20 per centum and the rest of the purchase money shall be paid to the undersigned within three weeks after the date of confirmation ot sale by the Court, application for which confirmation will be made two weeks after the property shall have been sold. The purchaser In making payment of 80 per cent, of the purchase money will be entitled to deliver to the Trustee and use toward the payment of said 80 per cent, first mortgage bonds of the Cumberland Valley Telephone Company at such values as the Trustee may esti mate. as provided In the decree direct ing this sale to bo made. For further particulars apply to the COMMONWEALTH TRUST COMPANY. Trustee, Harrisburg. Pa. NOTE—lncluded In the property to be sold as the property of the Cumber land Valley Telephone Company is the lot of ground, with the improvements thereon, being No. 227 Walnut Street, Harrisburg, Pa., and occupied by the Company as an office and exchange building; size of lot, 24'2"x100'x23'3"x 100'; subject to mortgage for |3.333.3« and interest; (see Mortgage Book "A," Vol. 3. page, «60, Recorder's Office, Har* riaburg. Pa.), -
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