DOYLESTOWN, Pa. (AP) — Voters in a populous suburban Philadelphia county heavily courted by the presidential candidates have one more day to apply for a mail-in ballot. Bucks County voters have until 5 p.m. Friday to apply for and receive a mail-in ballot. The court-ordered deadline is a three-day extension, stemming from a lawsuit brought by Republicans alleging that voters faced disenfranchisement when they were turned away by county offices that had closed. Meanwhile, a judge in Erie County, in Pennsylvania’s northwestern corner, ruled Friday in a lawsuit brought by Democrats that some 15,000 people who applied for, but didn’t receive a mail-in ballot, can go into the county elections office and get a replacement.