Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, September 01, 1922, Image 6

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    Benoit
“Bellefonte, Pa., September 1, 1922.
THEN AND NOW.
‘When Washington was President,
As cold as any icicle,
He never on a railroad went,
And never rode a bycicle.
He read by no electric lamp,
Nor heard about the Yellow Stone;
He never licked a postage stamp,
And never saw a telephone.
His trousers ended at the knees;
By wire he could not send dispatch;
He filled his lamp with whale-oil grease,
And never had a match to scratch.
But in these days it's come to pass,
All work is with such dashing done—
We've all those things; but then, alas—
We seem to have no Washington.
—Robert J. Burdette.
FOOD HANDLERS AT COUNTY
FAIRS TO BE INSPECTED BY
HEALTH OFFICERS.
Orders are issued by the State
Health Department through the Di-
vision of Restaurant Hygiene, to have
all persons engaged in the preparation
or handling of food at county fairs
undergo the required physical exam-
ination and furnish to health officers
a certificate stating that they are free
from the diseases mentioned in Act of
Assembly No. 169, part of which reads
as follows:
“Every person before operating or
being permitted to work at a public
eating or drinking place shall obtain
a certificate from a reputable register-
ed doctor of medicine, certifying that
such person is free from trachoma,
active tuberculosis of the lungs, open
skin tuberculosis, syphilis, gonorrhea,
open external cancer or barber’s itch
and are not typhoid carriers. These
certificates must be filed with the
proper health authorities within five
days of date of examination and are
valid for a period of six months, but
may be revoked at any time prior to
this if the condition of such person
warrants it.”
Forms 961, for this purpose, will be
forwarded from the Department of
Health to the secretary of each fair
ten days before the opening, and can
be secured from him when application
is made to conduct refreshment stands.
Food handlers may also make applica-
tion direct to the Department for
forms 961. This will save time and
trouble as excuses will not be accepted
by the health officer when inspection
is made. A health officer has been as-
signed to each fair to collect these
certificates and see that other health
laws are being obeyed.
Mr. John M. DeLaney, chief of the
Division of Restaurant Hygiene, calls
attention to the fact that hot water
and soap must be used in the cleans-
ing of table linen, towels, cooking,
eating and drinking utensils. He said,
“The roller towel and common drink-
ing cup will not be allowed. Two
million people attended fairs in Penn-
sylvania last summer and many re-
freshment stand proprietors furnished
paper cups, straws, plates and nap-
kins for patrons who appreciate san-
itary service. There have been nu-
merous infections with communicable
disease by the use of improperly
cleansed eating and drinking uten-
sils.
“Handling of garbage and other
refuse at the fair grounds will be un-
der health officer supervision; manure
must be removed from the grounds
each day and disposed of in a satis-
factory manner.”
All fair grounds in the State have
been inspected by the Department of
Health and notices sent to fair offi-
cials regarding adequate toilet facili-
ties. In every case the officials agreed
‘to make the required changes and im-
provements, but if this has not been
done before the opening of the fair,
prosecution will be started in order to
get results.
Water supplies also got the once-
over from the department, and cor-
rections made when necessary.
72 fairs, including 2301 refreshment
stands were covered by the instructors
last summer, and this year 82 will be
visited. Several persons were refus-
ed certificates and a few stands clos-
ed, but on the whole splendid co-oper-
ation was given by the fair officials
and the food handlers themselves. Mr.
Delaney says the public could help in
securing their own protection against
disease by refusing to patronize
stands that are not clean and where
proper methods of washing dishes are
not used.
SE ————— ef ———
State Plans Tree Cutting for Fuel.
le
" Harrisburg, Pa.—The State Forest
“Commissian has taken steps to facili-
“tate cutting of timber for fuel in
state forests, there being a large
: amount of chestnut timber affected by
‘the blight which is available.
Tracts in Tioga, Monroe and other
«counties, damaged by fire or over-
‘mature, were also ordered cut.
Plans were also made by the Com-
mission to have patients at the Cres-
son State sanitorium act as fire out-
looks at the Cresson fire station. The
men will be put on short shifts as a
means of helping their condition.
An auxiliary reserve of 6654 acres
was created in McKean county, and
the medallion and bust for the Beth-
rock memorial were approved.
P———————e
Penn State Conducts Man and Woman
Hunt.
Using two-cent stamps instead of
blood-hounds, The Pennsylvania State
College alumni office has begun a man
and woman hunt that is unique in the
annals of the college. Instead of an
endeavor to locate lost graduates of
Penn State, this hunt is to get on the
trail of all former students who never
did qualify for their diplomas. From
1859 to the present time, a total of
more than 5,000 men and women en-
tered and then dropped out of college
before completing their course. They
are all eligible to membership in the
alumni association once they are lo-
cate. At least a dozen Civil war vet-
erans are included in the list.
RAILWAY DISPELS
ALASKAN GLAMOUR.
Anchorage.—“All aboard, through
rain for the interior,” thus sings out
the white-coated porter standing with
step in hand at the rear of the “Sour-
dough” limited. A glance along the
train shows it made up of express and
baggage car, day coach, Pullman
sleeper and an observation chair car.
It seems incongruous that this
equipment is. ready to dash through
the heart of Alaska and bring up on
the banks of the Tanana river, that
mighty stream whose mere name con-
jured up visions of argonauts, dog
teams, myriads of caribou and the
old days when only strong men reach-
ed the Tanana.
On July 13th the through freight
took the place of the mixed train op-
erated heretofore, and a regular bi-
weekly passenger and freight service
has been installed.
OLD WAY WAS ROUGH.
Travelers recall a trip over this
route two years ago. It entailed a
mixed train and began to crawl along
as it entered the Broad Pass country,
where operation extended almost to
the last rail laid. Then came the
horse-drawn sleigh or or dog team to
the next roadhouse at Summit, a bleak
desolate spot in winter, hemmed in by
icy mountains and swept by wintry
blasts. Over night at the crude road-
house and the trip was continued to
Nenana, on the banks of the Tanana,
down a dangerous canyon where the
dog sled clung to the beetling cliffs by
the teeth of the brake. Maybe it was
40 degrees below zero and only the
hardy of those compelled to take the
trip braved it.
Today this same country is unfold-
ed in scenic grandeur from the win-
dow of the Pullman or the rear plat-
form of the observation parlor car, or
mayhap while the traveler dines in
the buffet car ahead. The bleak, icy
mountains are bathed in mysterious
light. Little rivulets rush down from
the mountains to join the noble Sus-
itna, carrying its turbulent flood into
Cook inlet.
The system of crossing the Tanana
in winter on rails laid upon the ice
soon will be supplanted by a 700-foot
single steel span bridge, with ap-
proaches well above the flood of the
stream; the narrow-guage Tanana
valley “dinkey” line will retreat be-
fore the oncoming of the mogul en-
gine and its serpentlike string of mod-
ern equipment.
CHANGE SUDDEN AND COMPLETE.
“Fairbanks,” shouts the porter, and
old Alaska has vanished; the great
land of mystery along the Yukon be-
comes but a banal echo of something
that has been, but is no more.
The change has been so sudden and
so complete that the old-timers are
finding it hard to readjust their lives
to the new conditions. The railroad
has wiped away the dog team as a
means of transport to the interior,
the horse-drawn sleigh over the Rich-
ardson highway, from Valdez, is but
a tourist adventure; automobiles take
the place of the stage in summer and
the railroad now serves a country ex-
tending to Nome on the northwest and
the Arctic slope to the north, down
the Tanana from Fairbanks to the
Yukon, and up the Yukon to Dawson
—a veritable adventure for the tour-
ist who has absorbed the romance of
the days of "98.
The old-timer says the Dawson
days will come again; when, he is un-
able to state; but the lure of = the
“shovel-in” ground beckons, and as
the railroad threaded north the pros-
pector broke new trails. What the
future holds for the dreamer is as
problematic as the first venture into
the forbidding country that has so
suddenly been transformed into a re-
gion wherein the most delicate may
live and prosper.
en —————— ee ——
Real Estate Transfers.
Daniel M. Burlew, et ux, to Roy
Burlew, tract in Liberty township; $1.
Fred Leathers, et ux, to Catherine
K. From, tract in Port Matilda; $175.
J. K. Johnston, et ux, to Elsie H.
Noll, et bar, tract in State College; $1.
Ida E. Wetzel, et al, to Ella J. Hof-
fer, tract in Philipsburg borough;
$2,000.
John M. Hartswick, et al, to John
C. Rupp, tract in College township;
$250.
Anna Elizabeth Martin, et bar, to
Harriet Elizabeth Olmstead, et bar,
tract in State College; $6,175.
Mrs. Elsie H. Noll, et bar, to J. K.
Johnston, tract in Centre county; $1.
Nancy Margaret Bennison, et al, to
Robert H. Bennison, tract in Marion
township; $12,000.
John L. Holmes, et al, to M. W.
Neidigh, tract in Ferguson township;
$400.
Cornelius Musser, et ux, to John D.
Musser, tract in State College; $5,800.
U. S. Walker to James H. Walker,
tract in Boggs township; $3,000.
Mary L. Orvis, et al, to Laura E.
Wright, tract in Bellefonte borough;
$1,500.
Wm. H. Noll, et al, to Frank Barnes,
tract in Spring township; $120.
Frank Barnes, et ux, to John E.
Davis, tract in Spring township;
$1,500.
Mary D. Bayard, et al, to John H.
Cadwalader, tract in Unionville; $1.
Philipsburg Coal and Land Co., to
Daniel L. Moore, tract in Rush town-
ship; $150.
Edward Peters, et ux, to Justice A.
Hoff, tract in Union township; $4,500.
Doris A. Stine, et ux, to H. A.
Marks, tract in Philipsburg; $450.
Rebecca Jane Tate to Olive Tate
Malone, tract in Coleville; $1.
James H. Runkle to Lettie Rose
Harma, tract in State College; $4,750.
E. P. Snook to H. W. Loneberger,
tract in State College; $425.
Marriage Licenses.
James W. Elliott and Eva V. Mer-
ritts, Lemont.
Paul M. Heverly, State College, and
Sara E. Remaley, Indiana.
George Colarie, Rankin, and Mary
E. Rodavich, Bellefonte.
MEDICAL.
Of Local Interest
Some People We Know, and We Wiil
Profit by Hearing About Them.
This is a purely local event.
It took place in Bellefonte.
Not in some far-away place.
You are asked to investigate it.
Asked to believe a citizen’s word;
To confirm a citizen’s statement.
Any article that is endorsed at
home
Is more worthy of confidence
Than one you know nothing about,
Endorsed by unknown people.
H. C. Young, S. Water St., Belle-
fonte, says: “Some time ago I was in
2 bad condition with kidney trouble.
My back ached and gave out sol
couldn’t do a day’s work. I was a con-
stant sufferer. When I stooped I had
dizzy spells and a swimming sensa-
tion in my head. My kidneys acted
irregularly. I read of Doan’s Kidney
Pills and used them, getting my sup-
ply at the Parrish Pharmacy. They
soon fixed me up in good shape. The
aches and pains left. The dizziness
didn’t trouble me and my kidneys
were regulated.”
60c, at all dealers. Foster-Milburn
Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. 3-34
ROPOSED AMENDMENT TO THE
CONSTITUTION SUBMITTED TO
THE CITIZENS OF THE COM-
MONWEALTH FOR THEIR APPROVAL
OR REJECTION, AT THE ELECTION
TO BE HELD ON TUESDAY. NOVEM-
BER 7, 1922... BY THE GENERAL AS-
SEMBLY OF THE COMMONWEALTIL
OF PENNSYLVANIA, AND PUBLISHED
BY ORDER OF THE SECRETARY OF
Tog, MON ram, IN PURSU-
NCH 2% LE XVIII i" i
CONSTITUTION. or
Number One.
A JOINT RESOLUTION
Proposing an amendment to section one
(1) of article fifteen (XV) of the Con-
Siijniion of the Commonwealth of Penn-
Sylvania.
Soction 1. Be it resolved by the Senate
and House of Representatives of the Com-
monwealth of Pennsylvanian in General
Assembly met. That the following amend-
ment to the Constitution of Pennsylvania
be, and the same is hereby, proposed, in
accordance with the eighteenth article
thereof :—
That section one of article fiftee -
reads as follows: een, which
“Section 1. Cities may be chartered
whenever a majority of the electors of any
town or borough having a population of
at least ten thousand shall vote at any
general election in favor of the same,” be
and the same is hereby, amended to read
as follows:
Section 1. Cities may be chartered
whenever a majority of the electors of any
town or borough having a population of
at least ten thousand shall vote at any
general or municipal election in favor of
the same. Cities, or cities of any partie-
ular class, may be given the right and
power to frame and adopt their own
charters and to exercise the powers and
authority of local self-government, sub-
ject, however, to such restrictions, limi-
tations. and regulations, as may be im-
posed by the Legislature. Laws also
may be enacted affecting the organization
and government of cities and boroughs,
which shall become effective in any city
or borough only when submitted to the
electors thereof, and approved by a ma-
jority of those voting thereon.
A true copy of Joint Resolution No. 1.
BERNARD J. MYERS,
Secretary of the Commonwealth, |
| no sheriff or treasurer shall be eligible for
ROPOSED AMENDMENTS TO THE
P CONSTITUTION SUBMITTED TO
THE CITIZENS OF THE COM-
MONWEALTH, FOR THEIR APPROVAL
OR REJECTION, BY THE GENERAL
ASSEMBLY OF THE COMMONWEALTH
OF PENNSYLVANIA, AND PUBLISHED
BY ORDER OF THE SECRETARY OF
NCE JB Ty OF 'T
CONSTITUTION. He
Number One-A.
A JOINT RESOLUTION
Proposing an amendment to article seven-
teen, section eight, of the Constitution
of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,
authorizing the granting of free passes
or passes at a discount to clergymen.
Section 1. Be it resolved by the Sen-
ate and House of Representatives of the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in Gen-
eral Assembly met, That the following
amendment to the Constitution of Penn-
sylvania be, and the same is hereby, pro-
posed, in accordance with the eighteenth
article thereof: —
That section eight of article seventeen,
which reads as follows:
“Section 8. No railroad, railway, or
other transportation company shall grant
free passes or passes at a discount to any
person, except officers or employees of the
company,” be amended to read as follows:
Section 8. No railroad, railway, or
other transportation company shall grant
free passes or passes at a discount to any
person, except officers or employees of the
company and clergymen.
1 4 true copy of Joint Resolution No.
BERNARD J. MYERS,
Secretary of the Commonwealth,
NUMBER 2-A.
A JOINT RESOLUTION
Proposing an amendment to article nine,
section four, of the Constitution of the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
Section 1. Be it resolved by the Sen-
ate and House of Representatives of the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in Gen-
eral Assembly met, That the following
amendment to the Constitution of Penn-
sylvania be, and the same is hereby, pro-
posed, in accordance with the eighteenth
article thereof: —
That section four of article nine, which
reads as follows:
“Section 4. No debt shall be created
by or on behalf of the State, except to
supply casual deficiencies of revenue, repel
invasions, suppress insurrection, defend
the State in war, or to pay existing debt;
and the debt created to supply deficiencies
in revenue shall never exceed, in the ag-
gregate at any one time, one million dol-
lars: Provided, however, That the Gen-
eral Assembly, irrespective of any debt,
may authorize the State to issue bonds to
the amount of fifty millions of dollars
for the purpose of improving and rebuild-
ing the highways of the Commonwealth,”
be amended so as to read as follows:
Section 4. No debt shall be created by
or on behalf of the State, except to
supply casual deficiencies of revenue,
repel invasions, suppress insurrection, de-
fend the State in war, or to pay existing
debt; and the debt created to supply de-
ficiencies in revenue shall never exceed, in
the aggregate at any one time, one mil-
lion dollars: Provided, however, That
the General Assembly, irrespective of any
debt, may authorize the State to issue
bonds to the amount of fifty millions of
dollars for the purpose of improving and
rebuilding the highways of the Common-
wealth: Provided further, however, That
the General Assembly, irrespective of
any debt, may authorize the State to
issue bonds to the amount of thirty-five
millions of dollars for the payment of
compensation to certain persons from this
State who served in the Army, Navy, or
Marine Corps of the United States,
during the World War, between the sixth
day of April, one thousand nine hundred
and seventeen, and the eleventh day of
November, one thousand nine hundred
and eighteen.
Section 2. Said proposed amendment
shall be submitted to the qualified elec-
tors of the State, at the general election
to be held on the Tuesday next following
the first Monday of November in the year
nineteen hundred and t¥entysfour, for
the purpose of deciding upon the approval
and ratification or the rejection of said
amendment. Said election shall be
opened, hetd, and closed upon said elec-
tion day at the places and within the
hours at and within which said election is
directed to be opened, held, and closed,
and in accordance with the provisions of
the laws of Pennsylvania governing elec-
tions. Such amendment shall be printed
upon the ballots in the form and manner
prescribed by the election laws of Penn-
sylvania, and shall in all respects conform
to the requirement of such laws.
A true copy of Joint Resolution No.
BERNARD J. MYERS,
Secretary of the Commonwealth.
Number 3-A.
A JOINT RESOLUTION
Proposing an amendment to article nine
section four, of the Constitution of the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, au-
thorizing the State to issue bonds to
the amount of one hundred millions of
dollars for the improvement of the high-
ways of the Commonwealth.
Section 1. Be it resolved by the Sen-
ate and House of Representatives of the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in Gen-
eral Assembly met, That the following
amendment to the Constitution of Penn-
sylvania be, and the same is hereby, pro-
posed, in accordance with the eighteenth
article thereof :—
That section four of article nine, which
reads as follows: :
“Section 4. No debt shall be created
by or on behalf of the State, except to
supply casual deficiencies of revenue,
repel invasion, suppress isurrection, de-
fend the State in war, or to pay existing
debt: and the debt created to supply de-
ficiencies in revenue shall never exceed, in
the aggregate at any one time, one mil-
lion dollars: Provided, however, That
the General Assembly, irrespective of
any debt, may authorize the State to
issue bonds, to the amount of fifty mil-
lions of dollars, for the purpose of im-
proving and rebuilding the highways of
the Commonwealth,” be amended so as
to read as follows:
Section 4. No debt shall be created
by or on behalf of the State, except to
supply casual deficiencies ~ of revenue,
repel invasion, suppress insurrection, de-
fend the State in war, or to pay existing
debt; and the debt created to supply de-
ficiencies in revenue shall never exceed,
in the aggregate at any one time, one
million dollars: Provided, however, That
the General Assembly, irrespective of any
debt, may authorize the State to issue
bonds, to the amount of one hundred mil-
lions of dollars, for the purpose of im-
proving and rebuilding the highways of
the Commonwealth.
A true copy of Joint
3-A.
Resolution No.
BERNARD J. MYERS,
Secretary of the Commonwealth.
Number Four-A.
A JOINT RESOLUTION
Proposing an amendment to section one
of article fourteen of the Constitution
of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
Section 1. Be it resolved by the Sen-
ate and House of Representatives of the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in Gen-
eral Assembly met, and it is hereby en-
acted by the authority of the same, That
the following amendment to section one
of article fourteen of the Constitution of
the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania be,
and the same is hereby, proposed, in
accordance with provisions of the eight-
eenth article thereof: —
That section one of article fourteen,
which reads as follows:
“Section 1. County officers shall con-
sist of sheriffs, coroners, prothonotaries,
registers of wills, recorders of deeds, com-
missioners, treasurers, surveyors, auditors
or controllers, clerks of the courts, district
attorneys, and such others as may, from
time to time, be established by law: and
the term next succeeding the one for
which he may be elected,” be amended so
as to read as follows:
Section 1. County officers shall consist
of sheriffs, coroners, prothonotaries, regis-
ters of wills, recorders of deeds, com-
missioners, treasurers, surveyors, audit-
ors or controllers, clerks of the courts, dis-
trict attorneys, and such others as may,
from time to time, be established by law;
and no sheriff, except sheriffs in counties
having a population of less than fifty
thonsand inhabitants, and no treasurer
shall be eligible for the term mext suc-
ceeding the one for which he may be
elected.
4 true copy of Joint Resolution No.
4-A.
BERNARD J. MYERS,
Secretary of the Commonwealth.
Number 5-A.
A JOINT RESOLUTION
Proposing an amendment to article nine,
section one, of the Constitution of the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, so as
to permit the exemption from taxation
of real and personal property owned,
occupied, or used by any branch or post
or camp of the Grand Army of the Re-
public, the Spanish-American War Vet-
erans, the American Legion, the Vet-
erans of Foreign Wars, and the Mili-
tary Order of the Loyal Legion of the
United States.
Section 1. Be it resolved by the Senate
and House of Representatives of the Com-
monwealth of Pennsylvania in General
Assembly met, That the following amend-
ment to the Constitution of Pennsylvania
is hereby proposed, in accordance with
the eighteenth article thereof :—
That section one of article nine be
amended so as to read as follows:
All taxes shall be uniform, upon the
same class of subjects, within the terri-
torial limits of the authority levying the
tax, and shall be levied and collected
under general laws; but the General As-
sembly may, by general laws, exempt from
taxation public property used for public
purposes, actual places of religious wor-
ship, places of burial not used or held
for private or corporate profit, insgtitu-
tions of purely public charity, and real
and personal property owned, occupied,
and used by any branch, post or camp
of honorably discharged soldiers, sailors,
and marines.
5-A
BERNARD J. MYERS,
Secretary of the Commonwealth,
Number 6-A.
A JOINT RESOLUTION
Proposing an amendment to section one,
article nine, of the Constitution of the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
Section 1. Be it resolved by the Senate
and House of Representatives of the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in Gen-
eral Assembly met, That the following
amendment to the Constitution of the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania be, and
the same is hereby, proposed, in accord-
ance with the provisions of the eight-
eenth aritcle thereof: —
That section one of article nine, which
reads as follows:
“A]l taxes shall be uniform, upon the
same class of subjects, within the ter-
ritorial limits of the authority levying
the tax, and shall be levied and collected
under general laws; but the General
Assembly may, by general laws, exempt
from taxation public property used for
public purposes, actual Places of religious
worship, places of burial not used or held
for private or corporate profit, and in-
stitutions of purely public charity,” be,
and the same is hereby, amended to read
as follows:
All taxes shall be uniform, upon the
game class of subjects, within the terri-
torial limits of the authority levying
the tax, and shall be levied and collected
under general laws; but subjects of tax-
ation may be classified for the
purpose of laying graded and progressive
taxes, and, in the case of inheritance
and income taxes, exemptions may be
A true copy of Joint Resolution No.’
granted; and the General Assembly may,
by general laws, exempt from taxation
public property used for public purposes.
actual places of religious worship, places
of burial not used or held for private or
corporate profit, and institutions of purely
public charity. *
e3 true copy of Joint Resolution No.
BERNARD J. MYERS,
Secretary of the Commonwealth.
Number 7-A.
A JOINT RESOLUTION
Proposing an amendment to article three
(III) of the Constitution of the Com-
monwealth of Pennsylvania.
Section 1. Be it resolved by the Senate
and House of Representatives of the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in Gen-
eral Assembly met, That the following
amendment to the Constitution of Penn-
sylvania be, and the same is hereby,
proposed, in accordance with the eight-
eenth article thereof :—
That article three be amended by add-
ing thereto the following:
Section 84. The Legislature shall have
power to classify counties, cities, bor-
oughs, school districts, and townships
according to population, and all laws
passed relating to each class, and all
laws passed relating to, and regulating
procedure and proceedings in court with
reference to, any class, shall be deemed
general legislation within the meaning
of this Constitution; but counties shall
classes, school districts into not more
than five classes, and boroughs into not
more than three classes.
= 2 true copy of Joint Resolution No.
=a.
BERNARD J. MYERS,
67-31-13 Secretary of the Commonwealth.
Fine Job Printing
0—A SPECIALTY—o
AT THE
WATCHMAN OFFICE.
There is no style of work, from the
cheapest “Dodger” to the finest
BOOK WORK
that we can not do in the most sat-
isfactory manner, and at Prices
consistent with the class of work.
cz on or communicate with this
office.
DIAMOND BRAND,
CHICHESTER S PILLS
ae Ask for
IAMOND BRAND PILLS, for
Safest, Always Reliable
t be divided int th ight yearsknown as Best,
or be Aided a Ie a SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE
NE VEER |
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A Men’s Store you will like.
Always on the square.
Only the Best Merchandise in the
Market can find room Here.
We try to have you like us.
The Merchandise, the Service, the
Value all combine to make you sure
that ours is the best Men’s Store
in Central Pennsylvania.
A. Fauble
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