"■■■" , 1 1,. ""... Sheriff's Sales Bv virtue of certain writs of Fi. Fa.. Vend. Ex. and Lev. Fa., issued out of the Court of Common Pleas of Indiana county- and to me directed, there will be exposed to public vendue or outcry at the Court House, Indiana, Pennsyl vania, on Friday, Sept. 8, 1916 AT 1:15 O'CLOCK* P M the following described real estate, to- W All the right, title, interest and claim of the defendants, CHARLES CICERO and FRANK CICERO of, in and to all those two certain pieces, parcels or lots of ground situate in the township of Pine, county of Indi ana and State of Pennsylvania, bound ed and described as follows: Beginning at a post in the middle of the public road, corner of lot belonging to Sara Lipscher; thence along the middle of said public road south 35 degrees 35 minutes east 53 feet to a post; thence by other lot of party of the first part south 49 degrees 56 minutes west 259 feet to a point in line of Weaver Coal Company; thence by land of the Weaver Coal Company north 85 degrees 25 min utes "west 42 feet to a post and corner; thence by same north 4 degrees east 2S feet to a point: thence by lot of Sarah Lipscher south 49 degrees 56 min utes west 271 feet to a post, the place of beginning. The second lot beginning at a post in center of public road; thence by cen ter of said public road south 35 degrees 35 minutes east 70 feet to a post: thence by lot conveyed to George Casora south 49 degrees 56 minutes west 184 feet to a point in line of Weaver Coal Com pany ;thence by line of Weaver Coal Company north degrees 25 minutes west 9S feet to a point corner of the above described lot; thence by the aboVe described lot south 49 degrees 56 min utes west 259 feet to a post, the place of beginning. Being the same two lots of ground conveyed to Frank Cicero and Charles Cicero, by deed from Luigi Matagrano and Marie Matagrano, dated February 16, 1906, and recorded in Deed Book, Vol. 93, page 216. Excepting and reserving all the coal underneath and all the minerals, also excepting and reserving to party of the first part, his heirs and assigns the right to the free and uninterrupted use of water from the spring on the second lot contained in the above grant so long as he, his heirs or assigns shall occupy the three-cornered lot adjoining the se cond lot above described. It is under stood that the use of the water from said spring is only for domestic pur poses to the party occupying the lot adjoining as aforesaid. Also, theright of ingress and egress to and from said BP All g that certain piece, parcel or tract of land situated in the township of Pine, county of Indiana and State of Pennsyl vania, bounded and described as follows, to-wit: Beginning at a post ard's Run on line of lands of Samuel Misener, now Penn MaryCCoatl tt C°mpany, thence south 87 1-2 degrees east 37' per ches, more or less, to a post, thence by j land formerly of George Roser, comoanv owned by Penn Mary coal Company I and surfice by Dennis Rosersouth 2 1» decrees west 55 perches, more or less, to a hemlock; thence by meajiderings I of Leonard s Run to the beginning, coo -1 taining eight acres, more or less. Beinsr the same tract of l anc * 0 5 "'•became 0 vested in Charles Cicero by deed from L vH. Maloy and Rose his wife, datfd November 28. Ml 1. and recorded in Deed Book No. 126, page I®°* . ' All that certain piece parcel or lo Of ground sitof Pine, county ln d T and described as j Pennsylvania, & post follows, to-wit. nr<H)ertv, in township corner of * oe nter of said road road: thence along „,.feet to a post; I south 32 degrees east *. • 35 rain ' thence by same south 35 a.gr by utes east 34 feet to S outh 49 degrees lot of Max Fried m | o2 feet to a post; 56 mmutes Vnf Weaver Coal Com- St the „lace of Wi, a 1d s ffiVci: veyed to P ra " k n V sarah Lipscher and ! cero, by deed of Saranj p Jan . ! "and'' »S&d in Deed 1, SSF reserving from the minersus and ajll th ~"c e tenement or i All that certain messuage, :>tont ! parcel of ground f Penn gornery tov, nd described as i sylvania, bounded a street leading follows: On the nonn on the east ; to residence ol A. B. Qn the SO uth jby Mar U-t !< k lock 28, and on the west , by h° T?i<rh?-of-Way Hooverhurst by ° * d known as land Southwestern "V \ G 28 in the rtan N of S 'lots of the dniy re corded in the r « c f >r '?" 0 s ground i Bei "f1 th ,n Frank Cicero and' Charles hy\%|ed of the SSKS- in at Deed Fe ß0 U ok ' "B." Vol. 89, r\pc4B3. . Kveeoting and reserving the coal, coal ?!L Si fl t r fe 0 timber "M removing the same, together with the ttwrwfwrs u'c to Wilgus Land company. j in A l^ilTo n t %mo?rs n^ u^ I Wghl line |eing corner of Lot £o. n. 5Q ft to I on 'the-'so^fhtide an alley 20 feet wide 1 thence by the south side o said alley south 95 3-4 degrees west 50 feet to a -post on the east side of an south sTT degrees west hr S P 4°0 St fe°e n t 0 M Wilson °and'^Jeing out , tract of land, the title El W SsftraLenf y ft^°°duly n^r^d i;£l4%i?s S on C °«pff|e| the "Ime^o^ °g/ounS whieh became^vested in Charles Cicero, b^ dgd &; a 4? b l9afanf; recorded in Deed Book No. 92, page 86. First Taken in execution at suit. SSSWKES, bounded and describe* as lsaiah Brondlinger; thence by said elands edge of old dam; thence north alon^ public d fa g n3o^fl d^ri o r PhMack P® rc £ e o^^lfz^be^Shaffer; Whence 3 north merly of Elizaoetn ' hes to stone corner; Vorth 25 decrees jvest^9 s-ss became vested in Lizzie rial bv will of John Maites, deceased. Bfisruvz-* .sr» S"Jd" «?*&& ££»«» of the last will and testament of John Maites, deceased, Fi. Fa. maCK / "SSSfcCT «ho l6 rlght, title, interest STIU Ia wAZDECK|I« MIKE HODES or lot of d lan°d of Pine county of Indiana and State of Pennsylvania, bounded and described as follows; Beginning at a point between lands of George Hoffman, deceased, of +Wa was a part, and running feet, bounded on the north by fands of Penn Mary Coal company; thence running south al ° fuw£ft to same* thence running west 100 feet to a corner, bounded on south by lands of George Hoffman, deceased; thence north 100 feet to place of beginning, contain ing nine-fortieth acres, having thereon erected a frame dwelling house and ♦ v.iii ldiwits Being the same lot which became -vested in Mike Wazdecky (or ' Mao Lrttskv) by deed from Joe Rog ers/ recorded in Deed Book 145, page 13-.; Tiken in execution at sul t ot c. i. Lew in? Alias Fi. Fa. No. 1, September, Term, 1916. MACK. ALSO—AII the right, title, interest and claiin of the defendant. FRANK PALMER n f i n an( j to that certain lot of ground Ornate in the township of Burrell. coun-- tv of Indiana and State of Pennsylvan ia, bounded and described as On the north by Church street, on the Sist by lot No 3, owned by Margaret Wilk; on the west by lot No. 1, bv L. O. Johnston, audi on the south by a'ls-foot alley,-being lot No. 2 lp Block No 5 of plot of lots as recorded in Deed Book "B" 83 page.62o; having thereon; erected a one story frame house. < Taken in execution at Suit of Davis A. Palmer Fi. Fa. No. 48, September Term 1916. MACK ( ALSO —All the right, title, interest and claim of the defendant, J. K. MARSHALL, «] of ( in and to tfie ft>T!owing described lot 1 of ground situate ia the township of Montgomery, county Of Indiana and State of Pennsylvania, bounded and de r scribed a a follows: Beginning at a post , corner of lot 25T0. 0 arid-No. 1" south 3 de-. > grees 45 minutes west 142 feet to a*, stake at alley; thence along Railroad street south 73 degrees west 25 feet to a|, staKe; thence along alley 86 degrees'ls ( minutes west 276 feet to stake; thence along lot No. 2 3 degrees 45 minutes I 150 feet to Chestnut street; thence along. Chestnut street 86 degrees east 50 feet , to place of beginning, being lot No. 1 in J. H. Smith addition to Gipsy. Except- j ing and reserving coal and coal rights as contained in deed to defendant, re corded in Deed Book 98, page 550. Hav- < ing therein erected a two-story frame house and other outbuildings. « Taken in execution at suit of Wash ington Camp No. 61® P. O. S. of A., Fi. Fa. No. 63, September Term, 1916. ' ELKIN & CREPS and MACK. ] NOTICE—Any person purchasing at the above sale will please take notice , that at least $lOO.OO (if the bid be so ' much) will be required as soon as the i property is knocked down unless the purchaser is the only judgment creditor, in which case an amount sufficient to ' cover all costs will be required and the " balance of the purchase money must be i ii?*& 3- JtajfaMcr- - 11..| 11 ■ j.l in, L ll —mwiHMK ! F&Cts versus I *< Fallacies . FACT is a rc~: state of things. FALLACY is en appar rvtly opnitivr 7 -'t rrally or argument. T N THIS series cf "PACTS V3KU 3 F.AXLACT2S,'' __ v | 1 comparisons v.-ere cited- .at than twice as many arrests were made ' *: • ~er fcr u;; *e:.:tess .n hi > -£> j j Prohibition city of Tcpeka. -n<a\ ::s* there were in the \ 4Tv > i ' 7* : j| "wet" city of Chester, Pa.; e- i three tlmps as many arrests ilatsc t/.re* cities j for drunkenness in tits Pre '..'iticn cl ycf I ;.;krord, ll■ i- / Hav? about | hois, as there were in Chester J. three cties btl:::; about the \*s tls* sams j same in population. /."lit -* instructive ; ho further •' 7* si*e?4 • || the FALLAC 7cf Prohibition .'rem a review c * a reparative *-r"V-*tw,.l J., FACTS iu the Racine (\vis. ..id;:) * Jwhich says: J 3 -~d'- ' , rc"crt of the Poace Dc-artrtent of [n] 1/V\.•l , . . . . *■ .— v . . —w.a, has been received, and as dock- !~ d if IT*.? ;d :.a- tha same population aa Ra-.ine, and is "dry" while J\ : l;e ;s ' wct/M; cder~ an interertir- com anccn wu i. £? /i Af<-or -1 -f\'* 4 - report, whirl: wee issued aeeut a week ag;o. J'i Ib •£ 3dL Jk '•±**2/4>w vj. J-. ? __ d - r the fact that Klines has Id aaben.- i n [j I -- ~ flli "--/ ocr permuted this city by law, ne dd > j f]« **rs *•> f> * i r:rd report chows there were 131 more arrests for mto. ic.:- H ill idTY 2\DC-.i».iddlt j ;en in Rockford, where no saloons are aUoweo, than m j J r J 1 .. lacine. There were 075 persons arrested in 191 i fcr oein^ 'T|j ]' " , : ttoxieated in Rockford, while in R-.cire there were Jli K —r-ytr.' ruch T: e report also show;, that notwithstanding j U''"' ■■ I■' 2 FAC - >. : iCockford has no licenses, ih r wcr : I j ' 7~ - .-rests in I.c t v for violation ox t' J liquor .ar .., »va. »In Racine there were on 7 10 arrests iar l-ls chcn:;e. | ZZPOnTT- from Rockfard are ta -the effect that the f —"— - , ■■ ■ ... . ; .L'i lid is clamped down rght, and yet there were 91 1 ' V j i j c rrests there fcr gambling, vh; in Racine there were only ~ _■' ' J | •! Jjl arrests for this offense :i: :,i Rock Ford requires 33 iopeAa :| policemen to protect :1s pec 'a, while in Racine tl.ere are ~a —- . Ci GMPARATIVE figures, based upon actual FACTS, as I=^l t authenticated by Police Department reports of cities' I. r-fX? 1 experiences under Prahibnion lav/, as compared with the j' v> f a:aVu JWif ! | license system of liauor disoensation, decisively refute "dry" ) := y\ y3f £ FALLACIES. * V N L f|j Pennsylvania State Brewers* Association -- —> i°J 1 iIMM!RcI Id|H!'^ paid in full or receipt given by th.e judg ment creditor oh or before the second Monday of Sept. court. No deed will be offered for acknowledgment unless pur chase money is fully paid. The sheriff reserves the right to return his writ "property not soid for non-payment of purchase money." H. A. BOGGS, Sheriff Sheriff's Office, Indiana, Pa. Aug. 16, 1916 PENNSYLVANIA NEWSjN BRIEF Interesting Items From All Sec tions ot the State. CULLED FOR QUICK READING News of All Kindt Gathered Prom Various Points Throughout the Keystone State. Carbon county is chuckful of ground hogs. There are 900 children of school age in Palmerton. Gored by a bull, Charlee Bell died at Fowlerville. Juniata Valley towns' water supply Is getting low. Some miscreant dynamited the fish in Reinert's dam, at Shanesville. Shortage of labor has closed the Sun set Shirt factory, at Danieflsville. A $lOOO check was sent to Belgium by the Reading Belgium Relief com mittee. Mr. and Mrs. Adam Paine, Lebanon, ! celebrated their golden wedding anni- j versary. William Palmer, superintendent of the Girard Mammouth Coal company, has resigned. Fishing with a gig, Adam Miller, of ' Allentown, was caught and fined $24.10 at Bethlehem. Work has. been started on the Worn elsdorf, Richland and Myerstown elec tric railway. The Rumanians of South 1 Bethlehem, more than 800 strong, have decided to erect a church. Daniel Murphy, a Bethlehem resi dent, was found drowned in the Lehigh J canal by Elmer Mill. A rotten egg bombardment was in flicted 'Mi mission worshipers at 122 Plum street, Reading. A half score cases of typhoid fever have been reported at Duncannon and an epidemic is feared. Fourteen Reading boys are members of the Fifth United States Infantry, ' serving in the Canal zone. Because he wore, the button. John Turl had to join the Min& Workers and- pay $lO fine In addition. Injury to his right foot caused the death of Walter Hogan, thirty years old, of lockjaw, at Shenandoah. A bull gored John O'Neill, aged eighty, to death at hia farm in War ren township, Bradford county. The Northampton Silk company, of Easton, has presented each of its em ployes with a life insurance policy. One of the few remaining slaves, John Striplin, a ninty-eight-year-old no gro, died from paralysis at Dauphin. In a day ' 3 fishing on the Perkiomen, L Oliver anil Enos Krauss, of Pennsburg, ; landed a string of thirty-four pounds of fish. Second .Lieutenant E. T. Miller, Lock Haven, has been promoted to be first lieutenant of Troop K, First Cav alry. York bakers threaten to advance the price of bread on account of the advancing cost of flour, sugar and lard. The estate of the late General Da vid McM. Gregg, Reading, is valued at $20,810.69, according to the appraise ment. The Summit Hill school board has awarded a $2BOO contract for a heating and ventilating system in the high I school. Water is so scarce at Weatherly that the water company has ordered patrons not to sprinkle streets or pavements. Constable William Holland, of Wash, ington township, shot twenty-three dogs in one day for neglect of owners to pay tax. Using his suspenders, Conrad Hant zel hanged himself in the Northamp ton lockup, while awaiting mental ex amination. When their auto overturned in a collision, Robert Ent was seriously in jured and Eli McAfee less seriously, near Berwick. The National Slag coifipany, with crushers at South Bethlehem and Hel lertown, is erecting a new crusher at Hokendauqua. Delwyn S. Wolfe, of Hazleton, has been appointed superintendent of the Mahanoy division of the Lehigh Valley Coal company. Within ten years Reading has gain ed eighty-one new factories, increasing the number of wage-earners from 18,053 to 24,131. The outlook in lower Schuylkill county for the potato crop is discour aging to the growers because of brought and blight. Melancholy, Mrs. Julia Graaf, a 70- year-old widow, of Haaleton, ended her life by inhaling gas from a hose insert ed in Ifer nostrils. Stricken by apoplexy as he and his wife returned from a party, E. A. ! White dropped dead in front of his . home at Towanda. His groin penetrated by a sham 1 board in a fall, Philip Dollett, aged eight, is in Lewistown hospital in a precarious condition. The first blacksnake seen for years in Reading was killed at Perkiomen avenue and Chestnut street and meas ured five feet in length. The local National Security League branch has opened recruiting offices in the Halleton city hall to get more men for Battery A, Third Artillery. Berks forest fires last year burned over 3255 acres, causing a damage of $24,850, railroads causing eight and an incendiary one—a $23,000 blaze. Sudden Decease. Mr. Dow met Mr. Duff with a bit of startling news. "Rather sudden that about Jones, wasn't ltr he said. "Died at 6 o'clock this rooming." Mr. Duff nearly collapsed. '•Good graciooa, yon don't say aor be said. "Why, I met Mm In the sub way station last night, and —and—he was afrre then?"— New York Times. ; COMING BACK ! UNITED DOCTORS SPECIALIST WILL AGAIN BE AT •- ' ■-liiiwirfrii; I INDIANA, Pennsylvania New Indiana house, ♦ Thursday, September 14 ! HOURS—IO A. M. to 8 P. M. Remarkable Success of Talented Phy sician in ,the Treatment of Chronic Diseases Offer Services Free of Charge The United Doctors Specialist, li censed by the State of Pennsylvania for the treatment of all diseases, in chronic diseases df men, women and children, offer to all who call on this trip consultation, examination, advice free, making no charge whatever, ex cept the actual cost of treatment *AU that is asked in return for these valu able services is that every person treated will state the result obtained to their friends arid thus prove to the sick and afflicted in every city and lo cality, that at last treatments have been discovered that are reasonably sure and certain in their effect The United Doctors are experts in the treatment of chronic diseases aud so great and wonderful have been their results that in many cases it is hard to find the dividing line between tkill aod miracle. Diseases of the stomach, intestines, liver, blocd, skin, ner<es, heart, spleen, rheumatism, sciatica, tapeworm, leg ! ulcers, weak lungs and those afflicted with long-standing, deep-seated, chron ic diseases, that hr.ve baffled the skill of the family phjsician, should not fail to call. Deafness often has been cured 1 in sixty days. Acco aine 10 their system no mna» [operation for appendicitis, gall stones, tumors, goiter, piles, etc., as all cases ; accepted will be treated without oper ation or hypodermic injection, at they were among the first in America t»> earn the name of "Bloodless Surgeons'* by doing aw 4 y with the knife, with blood and with all pain in the success ful treatment of the.*© dangerous dis eases. <§ No matter what o"r ailment may te. no matter what others may have told >ou, no matter what experience you may have had with other phyjtfr cian3, it will be to your advantage 10 see them at once. Have it forever set tled in your mind, jf your case is in curable they will give you such advice es may relieve and stay the disease, , Do not put off this duty you owe your self or friends or relatives who are suffering because of ycur sickness, as a visit at this time may help you. Worn-out and run down men or wom en, no matter what your ailment may be, call, it costs you nothing Remember, this free offer is for this visit only. Man led ladies come with their hus bands and minors with their parents, '•laboratories, Milwaul ee, Wisconsin.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers