The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, August 14, 1912, Image 4

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PAGE FOUR
NATURE'S 1LAVWS,
Nature's laws are perfect if only we obey them, but disease follows disobed
ence. Go straight to Nature for the cure, to the forest s there,
some of which we can fathom for you Fake the bark of
with mandrake root, Oregon grape root, root, queen's root, blo
golden seal root scientific, glyceric extract of
proportions, and vou have
DOCTOR PIERCE'S GOLDEN MEDICAL DISCOVERY.
there are mysteric
the Wild«cherry
froot and
right
tree,
stone
make a them, with just the
pharma
y perfect
atest
assistance of two learned
of hard work
It took Dr
with the
Cists, many
Pierce hemists and
months experimenting
this vegetable alterative and toni extract of the gr
eclhciency
M AW f M A I wish
1 \ l you M 1 ’
1 \ Ww \ 1
turin I \ f ter !
Jl well and hearty, for which AR t extent owe
you and your ‘Go 1 Medical Discovery’ and
which we u when sic
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets regulate and invigorate
liver amd bowels Sugar-coated, tiny granules,
SOLD BY ALI
World's Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N.Y,
stomach,
DRUGGISTS.
C. W. PawLEy
a —
hat Appropriation Bill i rn lemonstrat work of
Congress on Wednesday 1greed which amount $50.000 vas allowed
t lisputed provisions of the f use in Penns nia ind other
A ippropriatior bill Northern Stat originally irged
wl na beer I mfiference since Congressman Griest last oar
M: th I expected that Pre —-———-—
ide ft w ompt ipprove the How much bett it to use
0 as to no onger delay exper- .,.y ps a Babbitt’s—that vou
ents 1 idvanta OW will d tl W vou
ous to the Ituris hought them for
ncaste 1 especially - ———— -
intereste Ie ortant pro- Read the Bulletin
visions o e Agricult bill, as
Ce SSI W N. G 18 su Shaving Hair Cutting
eee 11 ¢ £ cooperation
of the Department in Joseph B. Hershey
thr line ( ¢ ¢ ]
.
farm demonstration w Tonsorial Parlor
ca es i i 1 : 3 TN
: ast Main St,, MOUNT JOY
hace ving
Ve o1 ’ \ Three Chairs. No Waiting
ssuance of Agen for the Middletown Stean
of Lar iundry Goods called for Tuesda
330( he tension 1d delivered Friday
sloefecfesfeofeofoeororfeafoctocorfocfocorfocfesfociecfesforfoofeciocforfecfocforfoofesfosfosfacfurfeofufenfocfrefecfurfoofoforenfesfefortestecfesorte
+ 5
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ole fe
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3 ————— >
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be Ii y Or ( €€ very me ot the 1 1( t 5 t €( oe
&
of ) om [I sc I 11 ( Valley farms vou w 1 t 0 og
3 KE)
3 Ww t fit of 51000 0 Ma ) had 3
& 5
ye Ss Ollk¢ them ove » 100 oe
ge +
3 i y oo
& I S t vit | my custome om Chicago, Pitts-
+ J
* bu Philadelphia, and other places %
& 9
> 1d of a farn you wa { t 1 [ will +
4 3
+ return mail, giving cc ptions, lo- £
1 4 I 1 yot t *>
n Dnrices D OW F.arly e 11 y e oe
® 5
} 8 a
oh
oo
oo m \ C i LUC \ i y L a
of &
3 FOR SALI ACRES, w 1 1 ts, 2 m I
se HE : L
+ I, W r- fu é
x “
de . A
+ EE ——— dq
&* 4
> ’ x
* $ i 2
=
Real Estate and Insurance
Farmers Trust Builbing
829 Cumberland St. - - LEBANON, PENNA.
Woelreefuoforfesgorforforfoefoofocfoofscfecfoontonforfocgosfoofocforoofonforfurforforfenforfofosfesforfefosfeoforfentecfonforfonfoofenferfenfeofoofe
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doaoarfecdodfocfonodfocfocfoeloeforfocfosfoiioforfocfectustesfactnfeeferfosfecfoconfocfocieniofecfeciocioriochs ocfocfofecfocfs foefeford pdb
Summer Shoes Reduced
1 ¢ 11 . .
At cast a dollar 01
two less than
pairs as low as half price.
See Windows for Great Bargains
Get $2 to $4 Oxfords for $1 to $2
We fit you just as carefully, as though you paid
full price.
OXFORDS FOR MEN
1
Regular $3.
50, $4, $5 and $6 now $2.45
and $4.15
Joys’ $3 Oxfords at $1.85
SHAUB & CO.
BOOTS, SHOES, RUBBERS and HOSIERY
18 N. Queen Street, LANCASTER
speieaderiofeodesfocfocforfeniooforiordonioriodfeciciocforiedorosdeiocdecorieforiofedfocfeclecpe
Fr
nN
4 oR
sloofoeforfoconfecfosfocfeoforfortocfororfocfecfocfocfocfosfosfonpreieciectodesfocfocfosfosforferfe do 0 Jo fo do fo forforoofecfecie
dedi dd
PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD
ELEVEN-DAY EXCURSION
TO
Ocean Grove Camp Meeting
Asbury Park or Long Branch
. Saturday, August 24th, 1912
$4.25
Tickets good going only on train leaving 12:36 P. M.
Good returning on all regular trains
Round Trip From
Mount Joy, Pa.
Covers Closing Sunday and Monday of Camp Meeting
For detail intormation, consult Hand Bills, or nearest Ticket
Agent
THE BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA.
Rose and the
Lily
Jy KATHERINE COOPE
ary Press.)
(Copyright, 1918, by As ated |
Derek ink wearily Int the big
chair in whose ample arms here
usually lurked contentment and
ablding peace Not so tonight In
fact, Derek found himself inclined
to hurl brief, unflattering epithets at
himself and the world in general
A few hours before, Derek Vane
had dressed with unusual care and
had journeyed forth, with flowers
and candy, to the home of Lily Ran-
dolf. Once there, Vane had intended
to take the fair, delicate lily within
his arms and tell her that he could
not live without her
But alas! when the moment of
making the confession arrived, Derek
found that he could live very nicely
without her He realized, not with-
wut a sense of his own inferiority,
that Lily's white, unemotional beauty
failed in way to meet his de-
mands
some
He had, at times, during the con:
tentment of his evening with her,
longed for something stirring to hap-
pen. He wanted to feel active and
vital and strong. Instead, Derek exs
perienced a sense of monotony at the
calm, unruffled hour He recog-
nized, with a sense of shame, that
Rose Davenport would liven things
up.
So he had gone from Lily's pres-
lence with a knowledge of his own
unstable affections
“I am a vacillating, blow-hot and
blow-cold, cad,” he told himself, and
felt s etter and sufficiently at
peace with the world to light his
Rose is the girl
Derek blew a cloud of
perhaps
smoke and in it he hed a face
dev It wa v face that was
in a tangle of red brown
hai e « th: 1 back
! ¢ owing with the lure of
e ) A nother of
smol 1 figure of Rose, Vv
and \ very Joy
of liy ed before
€ 1e( ¢ float
aw dist e a his vivid
again went
11 row he
relved him in a
ime of scarlet.
and her red
g
v the moment he touched
t it would not be hard to
She would, in fact,
her hand t
propose to
lead him 3
7 had been together for perhaps
when Vane was conscious of
He felt {ll at ease,
notions and lack of
afforded a moment's
rves, Rose kept him too
ke. Derek longed for a
moment’s respite in which to collect
his scattered forces.
With de grin he knew that
Lily would, wi only a few words,
soul at and bring con-
tentment. But Rose was before him.
Later in the evening when he sank
down into the soft depths of his big
chair it with a sigh of relief. He
had not proposed to Rose.
“I could not be happy with either
Rose or Lily, but with both.”
Derek smiled half despondently.
“Perhaps if I coin it will
tell me which love.” TUnder
the frivolity of the thought there
was a strong vein of seriousness.
Rose.
1 On
e tO escape.
ner tal e€
sor ng that
rest to
forcefu
ep ch
set his
rest,
was
the
toss a
one I
Vane had looked for the right
girl long and earnestly. He was not
unusually hard to please, but he
wanted the most that life could give:
more did he crave it in
the marriage
His
had
espe
association
Randolf
sense of
with Lily
m a
always given
eontentment He felt now that with
her he wot have been moderately
happy in sinking down into an un-
even xistence. But into
this d happiness had
on the greater
5 of love
could him all
Id she give him the quiet
give
but co
B while there is no Pure Soap
Law as yet, tl is, and has been
since 36, one kind of soap
t meets every test, and that soap |
is B. T.
family
Babbitt's. Almost every |
in this community knows the
Babbitt’s with
name connection
soaps and cleansers
I ——— |
Fore powers are advised that |
the Monroe doctrine can “come |
|
back’. :
|
overtread his foot by stepping on a |
stone, |
verely that he is unable to be about | week
\
Wednesday, Augtit 14, 1912
moments as well? No. Thathe had |g mM A BE HN QA UE EE RA ET IR AID ANE IRN ENAERNAENRERRSS SEES
proven, She was the embodiment of | gp
energy and unrest |
“Oh for tl right woman!’ he A. 30 30
sighed with heartfelt regret w
He dropped off t eep then tom
dream of the happy medium-—~the girl » Th o i” 9 . n 2
win “comii si cea irty Boys’ Suits For School
characteristics in a rfect whe w 1 y J) A 1
if 1 his wm -— a -
fA WERE $300 TO $5.50
othe . 1 * .
n } te Ww W a
gtation to meet tv hums om the wm WwW
est when he overtook Rose and the No $2. 50
Lily walking arm 1 rr
“And where are the falrest of flow.
Arar GETZ BROTHERS
greeting : ®
“To meet a still fairer flower,” they
told him in unison. “Violet Gray, by ®
name.” ™
30
laughed Vane
girl even better,”
“I like the name
“You will like the
Lily told him
30
Iw
=
“We call Violet ‘our happy mee
dium,’ ” Rose informed him with an ORIGIN OF FAMOUS PHRASE \utoists’ Big Social Event MARIETTA
affectionate tug at Lily's arm “She In connection with the regular | Howard N. Cassel is visiting in
combines the things we lack E wite Belief that Common Political Term August meeting of the Land aster | Ilinois
She Is going to spend a week Ww Sprang From a Horse Race Held Automobile Club to be held Friday| John Miller has returned from a
me. v
“And a week with me.” In Tennessee. evening, August 16, Ladies Night | isit at Parkesburg
/ g ith n {
‘ . 9 — will be observed The meeting ill John D. Cassel 1 fan ?
“Perhaps [ may meet her,” laughed ” vill 1 ) rved The meeting will | assel and amil P
0 The political term “dark horse” is : . b 45s :
Derek “1 am expecting Ted Wey- POLI . B ¥ be held at the home of ex-Sheriff A.|Philadelph ire visiting in tow
|
thought to have had its origin in the
urn i y Bers o » three- 3 ‘ is tohrerstoy ¢ the is ‘the {1 ag vatuy
burn and Jimmy Rogers on the thre following circumstances: B. l.andis at Rohrerstown, and he] M Ethel Kraus has returned
ine ly!” chi 1 both girl In the last century there lived im Members of the Club remembering | from a visit through Perry county
ovely!” chime 0 zirls, . “ " v ¢ . Ea =i . \ \ 1
“uf : } I : ‘ p ” Bl L” sizhed Tennessee a “character” named Flynn, the grand success of a similar meet- Miss Mabel Engle of Philadelphia
see wher get left out,” sighec 1 2 |
Derek . : = an elderly person who dealt in horses. Ing there last vear are looking for he guest of Miss Emma Bucher
arek “ wh : \ ) 1m 1 r.
“We have decided that you Vio- Pron generally SoNesvel to OWN a ‘ward to this meeting with delightful Miss Maud Zink is the guest of
3 speedy ag or two for racing purpose - |
let must fall in love,” Derek in- = euy nag C I ra mg pu Dt 5 nticipations Each member is urg- er other, George, at Northumber-
for i if he could arrange for “a good thing | txt ladi ith 1 " s
ormec : d te ring one » more la wg with [land count
Wi iy Yi rad An 1 during his peregrinations throughout > 3 ; R he of e lagi :
1en Violet Gray turned from her the stats him There will be a special social Curie. Davis of Philadel 13
chums Derek was almost guilty of Wie . . . :
f : Fi , T 1 : | Tir or Wi en The best of Flynn's flyers was a |rommittee of eighteen to meet the |the gue of relatives i
orge 18 €( n( Jimm 1€ ‘1d . :
he bad erested tl : he turned quick coal black stallion named Dusky Pete, coming machines and see that!|here nd at Columbia
e ac greeted nen 1¢ irnec quicK- 2 on
1 st at oughbre abl X 1 , f il T
ly to Violet Gray and took her light 2lmost a thoroughbred and able to 80 qyveryone is properly taken care of Mrs. William Harper
hy 1 8 ) )1 1 y 1 11 1 “
uitcase in the best of co pray, Refreshments will be served The | burg w he guest f
“vv oT cw } ” One day Flynn visited a town where ; :
You people all know one another . : 3 veather cannot interfere witl the | My Vi So eer, of
He addressed th sed aquartette. 2 race meet] in progress. He 1
3 addresse« 1€ amuse juar tte. "ev : ¢ \ ‘ 8 1 ne 1 be \
“Miss Grav Ii Zot acauaint entered Pete I'he people, knowing in Vi LLandis’ home can 1
S# rls t acquaintg- 1 1 “ 1
70 y ne nothing of the horse's antecedents and reached by the Elizabethtown trol- I } Mr James
ea 3 3 1 {
Derek knew wl 3 wa not being over in ed by his ap- I cars which pass the door Y yf Middletowt
rex 1ev when he as i a
a : t local favorit Rp — - 4 .
the first time beside the Bh a8 Ite » fe ests o ves here or sev=
" : : ranger
rl in Puritanica that he : : eral day have eturned home
found the right woman Her Just as the beasts were being sad- Opened His Eyes. Mrs. Charl Swarmer
were not P nor were the | Gied for the race certain Ic haucer. Evicus. and 1 les Swarme has een
re No 1 ( ere n . he 3} ul 1 I 2
. ea. ‘wl wis the “orac of : . jeall ) the bedside her son Val-
oft curves of 8, but her vole Ho ya Lue Es ; t strolling by the :
) ( Ve ) f 8 th o opt Z th 5 pelval oi the . L ir ) ont in :
soft i x ‘ art or tne arrived on th t idyllic pair. “My ntir Warne vho i 1 a
u have come st at t ight | course and was made one of the ra broke forth the |€OI 0 I n, Pa He 13
moment.’ Juczes . 4 “Permit me to | blood poisoning
Something underneath oont na ue vhich thus my soul Samuel Acri has retu : ~
1 1 . . p 1 nas Iirned 01 a
of the owner of {
de ol 1 os v ears, so shelly sit at Harrisbur }
The n vik : Ri nning eve praise were made; !, : ; 3
y 1dee i t t C= mothe W 1rriy fr Bw
ww ful W Ifge mnsianly XK thine more neat, : : a
PE 1 ( hijomed nu Wi n-lit glade: your |” I only a few days ago
mn guise of mo horse in this of night; George H. Glattacker and wife
3 rac as t 13 : 3 3
“I would have married the wrong rage, 18 } X u vo 1] Id’s your hair; your [and son are visiting at the home of
y | le was 1 ark horse 15 y ' . {oe ”
g Vane told 1 1 2 2 : : dark he e lips ut Cupid's bow to scorn; your |Elmer Kaegel at Annville Mrs
let cast a quick glance at him; Ay back : ; ee-quarter pole t.oth are past compare.” But here a Glattacker was taker uddenlv il}
y as » ( wher y 1 1 . , . : (Ariattad r was agKen sSuddeniy 1il
then her lashe ered down WBS Te ;, Wh he went to the playful gust of wind gayly :
came
front wi 1d won the race.
and 1s in a serious condition
against the color that was creeping through the trees, and w ked his Ti )
stealthily into her cheeks, = =} 0 cum rrr darling’s hat and hair away upon its ie Presbyte n Sunday school
eeu on Derek While De. JUST A MERE SUGGESTION !roc%e! Alas! why did the mallen [Picnic will he held at Chickies par
gloried in the beauty of the third then permit herself to shout, and |on Tuesday, August 13 The
flower, “for the last five years 1 A cause her lover added pain to see her | Arcanum picnic be hel nt
have been seeking for the right girl.” Huby’s Plaint, However, Threatened teeth fall out? re 1 e held on the
ave § in h ght girl. ’ th fall out? uesdav Haw ° alana
“I judge,’ Violet said, determined to Develop Into a First-Class jue followir 20th instead
hile ie a oy Th : i i Leon Wels an orge i of
not to let this big man overcome Family Spat. i elsh and George Mead, of
her at their first meeting, “that you free Lucky to Get Anything. Washington, D. C., passed through
libri dat . : : thi : :
have found—" Gr rude: The law of the land had spoken, and this section on the Susquehanna
“Yes.” Vane's voice and eves were — > Sous, h the verdict was $5,000 damages. |river vesterday afternoon, on route
: ® ‘ va "Y arrie o ¥ 2 : To 3T Somat | ‘ : = .
serious. “She is a happy medium be- How ; ye hl € 2 oi Pe d loos Sanus ousand dollars!” muttered |to Sunbury in a canoe. This is the
10W to tal plainl t ach 3r, the rye ner in the leg: | Maan i.
tween two ¢ om I thought could A CE iH, ) ols lhe or partner in the legal firm (fourth time Mr. Welsh has made the
make me happy. There is no one now What's the matter now? who had managed the plaintiff's case : IR ye eb linfe 10
who could make me happy but this If 1 do something you don’t like I | «Not go bad.” jeri
one girl, and T am g to spend the nt you to tell me of it, and if you “I think it pretty good,” sald the | MI and Mrs. George Holstein, of
next two wesks tes ine hor that she ) thi I dc i like I think I ought junior tner. “How much shall | Washington, D, ( and daughter
x to t vou of them, too. : i oh hi
cannot li without me.” Derek fin- ‘¢ he w JOU Of [ : 2 jo» | We give ? Josephine, were the of
S r “] suppose ot suit ua 1? Savi 3 |
ished but Violet SL BupI080 o el nats : “H'm! said the senior [friends hexe for several days. and
sp 13i7Vod laugh had Yes you do, 1} 1k we ought x : ray ayn, a
cs laugh hac : 3 . ny : though No, stop a minute!” spent a day with Mr. and
only. str man's words to talk over our lil and dislikes. In “Well 2" ne oul 1 tna
nly st 1an’s 18. Ase Ak? F. Stibe an m
0 1 : that way we can get along s 3 y , | otibgen and }
“At the end of two weeks I am going ha AY We ¢ long so much “We mustn't be 1S said the |, 2 Ph
' 3 Yi A better.” ’ formerly resided her
to tell I love her and er Ye ae. I : jorstand SUCC! ssful lawyer vly. “Perhaps : Broth tds
you to understan : steir : §
please to get together led : : { k gnaen in you'd better write a1 romise to pay x ¢ ad hte (
" Vane olet’s ! ; x uy oyery him the three h i |Mr. and Mrs n
et his own. “Have you any V o: ! ow 10 rm————— oan The vere in town t st time 13
her Or no ) Al s to 1 I § 13
1ether or not she will : Mr. Harry Bro nd 1 friend years 0, and ne 1 !
i t h nd Miss Sybilla Boyce spent Tue Ss part of the r Drev
t
’ your te ( t Lititz ft £ 1 their residence n Wash-
a y I J ( Heaver of Philadel mn, ha I ere from Tex-
in sa 1 , ph I few with Mis
\ + th I w 7?” 2
Just f I y Phas i 1 Ce | F. Nixor of Ne
most anythin ou * y va : 1701 waen Mr. and Mrs Walter Bi Mr. 1 te 2
: 1 ( 1 SC ye better al 1 Walter B ] i here
Bo Te ould tie the knots on Harry Brown and lady friend are]! irs ago and was he
NO ATTRACTION TO BEHOLDER the outside, instead of the inside.” spending the day at Gettysburg. j 1OF once since
Yer SEA etn CEE TS Mi H G. Hagenberger and |time H member of
Appearance of Average English Houses New York Police Mascot, daughter Esther have returned|any H. 135th P. V. V., under com-
Forbidding in the Extreme, Ac-
: In addition to its official “yaller dog” home after spending a few days at
rding to Writer. 3 : . % : i : : :
29 gp masc Bum, the old Mulberry street Philadelphia and Atlantic City, N.
They do these things better in the Police station has sbi anoliter. J.
} 2, known as Peg st, e 1s also =
new countries. They do not make a SNOWR as reg fos. Ie ee
) aserve it af of an ochre tint, and his mysterious ie d
fetish of space or preserve it at any Large Tobacco Warehouse,
behavior has baffled the wisest sleuths
in the station. When the men begin
their tours on the stationary or “peg”
posts at ten o'clock at night, the dog in,
comes trotting from somewhere and
takes up his station with whichever
policeman on duty in the precinct suits
his fancy for that particular night.
Frequently he changes from one post
sacrifice, A house is allowed to spread
itself a bit, even if it is one of a row;
it has a gate of its own leading to the
back—to the pleasant garden or “back
yard.” Colonial houses human;
they suggest that human creatures live
in them, writes Sybil Carmack Smith,
in an exchange. Open windows give
glimpses of fluttering curtains and of
E. 1.. Nissley and Sons,
are erecting one
look
the country. Tt is forty feet wide]
and fifty feet long,
stories high,
i
by one hundred
and is three
the cheerful appointments of the (© another, and remains on watch basement. The structure will be of
3 : api I 21 LS I t : iv av rink idi
rooms within, even of the people who until the stationary posts give way brick and concrete blocks. A siding|
; ? ? 2 oul: atrol ot six. § ; "Ne. . >
live in those rooms. Verandas with tO regular patrol at six in the morn= has heen built from the main track]
ing. Then he trots away, and is not : |
chairs, a book or a worktable are evi- qt ut Offers of and cars can be run into the ware-|
“ : seen unt »xt night. ers |
dences of the life of the place. Open . ny he heXt 2 tistics have house.
: t s fr 3 n's ches £
doors speak of the same thing, and of 149ie8 from ihe mens n ; ————- Eee
been repeatedly refused by Peg Post
and his agility has thus far prevented
any one from learning the number of Ha
the dog license he wears on his collar,
—New York Tribune.
|
It’s Nothing Unusual |
recent the editor of|
“balled” things |
the cheerful hospitality which awaits
one within. The houses come to meet’
you—you do not need to approach
them as one would the gates of a
issue
our contemporary
prison. up so badly and later in the New|
“What is t} TA , chi ne. i
. ha she 430 of §ins) ne in Eng Era, as the local correspondent, |
land? n these lovely April mornings i r to i
LT rIoss y Apri g Aid to the Unlovely. ; that John Watchorn, religious di-|
the grim, austere houses give the same “I try to be an efficient city direc- tector f Landisvill Campmeetfin
’ 4 th . ; . : a ‘ector o andisville £
front to the world as they did In tory,” said the hotel clerk, “but balk : re bmee En
dreary November; none of the beauty | »4 recommending a beauty doctor to came forth with a half column ex-|
of nature can find a way in. I suppose | women guests. planation and denial in Monday |
I Tnelic n a | n : . y v |
the English people do not trust their “That is one of the first things they night's New Era. |
climate, but they might at least be op-
timistic enough to make the best of it,
These English houses are very solid,
of course; they stand in rigid blocks
as if they coulld defy the centuries,
rrr el ee {
|
Had Tonsils Removed {
Messrs. Harry Walters and John|
Givens went to the General Hospit-|
want to know. Churches, theaters,
even dressmakers can wait a few days,
but the beauty doctor is an immediate
necessity. Unfortunately, they do not
get much satisfaction out of me. Any
and as if they did mean to defy eVery | number of beauty specialists leave al at Lancaster last week where |
one who looked at them. Neither po- | cards for distribution, but so many of they had their tonsils removed. The!
sition nor means has much to do with ) y ve ixe i aws j : : |
#t: ‘the he ef teed : 1 of th them have been mixed up in lawsuits latter became so ill that he re-|
It; the houses of the poor and 0 1 | that I feel squeamish about delivering tavnid it h tial ori} his |
very rich give the same impression of | their cards. To satisfy my own cone urned to 1e hospital again this)
uncompromising rigidity. science and the women at the same Week.
But if the front of the houses is for- | {ino I hand out a bunch of advertise- | —_——————
bidding, the back is simply inexpress- | ments with the remark that I guess
ibly dreary. they are about all alike.
“Then they can pay their money
Babbitt's soap is not a mixture of | and take their choice, and if they lose |
any old thing, but each particular | their hair and complexion, they can’t
kind of Babbitt’s soap is come back on me for damages.”
the soap contains
Twin Girls Born {
Mr. and Mrs. Irid Grove of Lan-|
caster, announce the birth of twin |
daughters Monday. Early yester- |
day morning both died. Mrs. Grove, |
nee Elsie Hershey, is at the home|
of her grandmother on East Main
|
an inven- |
tion the proper
ingredients that will positively clean
oh Sie : | street. |
and purify. The Democratic National Com-|
comm AS Memes, “mittee is a deliberate body deliber-| |
ately doing what Gov. Wilson tells] While the old adage conserva-|
Sprained His Ankle [ : id
Fenstermacher lit to | tively recites that uneasy lies the
Mr. Harry Brown and lady friend | head that wears a crown,” we are
Philadelphia, are spending the reminded that a great many official
with his parents, Mr. and | chairs in these days seem to have
Walter Brown, sharp tacks on them
Postmaster J. F.
»
spraining his ankle so se-|of
the past few days. i Mrs.
the ex- | despite his age, and still
tensive leaf tobacco dealers of Flor-|Dbrinting
of the largest |Reich, of town, is
with a|p
mand of the late Samuel Miller, of
[th is place, and was an employe of
the Marietta “Register,” when
|late Frederick Baker
{Mr. Nixon is the picture of
business.
Mrs. Ella C.
a close relative
tobacco warehouses in this part of Mr. Nixon spent to-day at Mt. Joy
;
I _ —
Among tlie most famous of B. T.
abbitts Soap inventions are B T™
Babbitt’s Best Soap, Babbitt's White
Floating Soap, Babbitt’s 1776 Soap
Powder, Babbitt’s Naptha Soap
Babbitt’s Cleanser, Babbitt’s Pure
Lye or
Soap.
Potash, Babbitt’s
Borax
PUBLIC SALE
On Saturday, Sept. 14, 1912, will
be offered at public sale on the
premises, in Rapho township, the
following prescribed
wit: —
A TRACT OF LIMESTONE AND
GRAVEL LAND
Containing 70 Acres, more ar less
situated on the public road leading
Real Estate, to
from the Manheim and Mt Joy
road to Union Square, ahout mid-
way between Manheim and Mt.
Joy, adjoining lands of B. B. Gin-
der, Jacob E. Becker, D. S. Metzler,
A. K. Brubaker and Tohias Musser.
The buildings and improvements
thereon consist of a Two-Story
Stone DWELLING HOUSE, with
Two-Story Frame Kitchen attached,
Frame Bank Barn, Carriage House
with Horse Power Shed attached,
| Corn Barn with Tobacco Cellar, Hog
{ Stables, Poultry House, Wood Shed
and other outbuildings; a well of
water and cistern with pumps there-
in at the house, cistern at the barn
and running water between house
and barn: also a number of fruit
trees and grapevines in bearing or-
der. The entire tract is farming
land in a high state of cultivation.
Persons wishing to view the
above, before the day of sale, will
be shown same by calling on the
undersigned residing thereon.
Sale to commence at 2 o'clock p.
m. of said day when the conditions
will be made known by
E. S. METZLER.
S. G. Summy, Auct.
A. G. Hamaker, Clerk.
(nN
1
8
FY
IT ETE 500) 0