The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, September 25, 1912, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR
“How The Body Kills Germs.
Germs that get into the body are killed in two ways—by the white corpuscles
©f the blood, and by a germ-killing substance that is in the blood. Just what this
substance is, we do not know, he blood of a healthy person always has some
germ-killing substance in it to ward off the attack of disease. The fountain head
of life is the stomach, A man who has a weak and impaired stomach and who
does not properly digest his food will soon find that his blood has become weak
and impoverished, and that his whole body is improperly and insufficiently nours
ished. To put the body in healthy condition, to feed the system on rich, red blood
and throw out the poisons from the body, nothing in the past forty years has
excelled Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, a pure
glyceric extract (without alcohol), of bloodroot, golden
seal and Oregon grape root, stone root, mandrake and
queen's root with black cherrybark,
“My husband was a sufferer from stomach trouble and
impure blood,” writes Mrs, JAmks H. MARTIN, of Frank-
fort. Ky. “Ho had a sore on his fuce that would form a
scab which would dry and drop off in about a month, then
another would immediately form. It continued this way
for a long time, He tried every remedy that any one would
suggest but found no relief. He then tried Dr. Pierce's
Golden Medical Discovery which completely cured him, He
has stayed cured now for two years, and I recommend this
valuable medicine for impurities of the blood.”
Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets regulate and invigorate
stomach, liver and bowels, Sugar.coated, tiny granules.
J, H. MARTIN, ESQ
ARaasasasaady od
A Properly Fitted Shoe
Can't Hurt the Most Sensitive Foot
bie
In buying Shoes, place Fit above all else Style and Service
are necessary, but if you sacrifice Fit, you suffer the loss of both
Style and Service, No Shoe retains its shape that does not fit,
No Shoe wears well that does not fit. Why suffer?
This Shoe Store has a trained salesiorce—experts that know
how and will sell vou correct-fitting Shoes. Easy every hour you
wear them.
TRY SHAUB'S SHOES THISFALL
Worth The Price, You'll Say
odedlecfeofoferpoirofecfodasfecofodeflide po bo
¥
SHAUB & CU.
: A » J ;
#1 nd a w i
BOOTS, SHOES, SUBBERS and HOSIERY +
? oe = 4
18 N. Queen Street, LANCASTER i
Ao alleen seit esti ee
ejosjore
+
Is Your Piano Intertaining? #
S YOUr r'ianoc miertainings 3
(- x
You S 1 Why? :
ou Say Nol NE ;
y Kecapse, perbaps, you cannot pay, and have to wait until x
some one else comes to play for you. 3
Now, why have a silent piano in your home when wt will 3
gladly exchange the piano you now ave for a +
: i
Famous Hardman Autotone 3
Thtn, when you want music an netertainment, you don’t i
have to wait, you simply place a rol of music on the piano and %
tread, and you have the finest music in the world right in your =
own home. &
Just to think how nice it would be to hear that song you 3
heard years ago, ‘Silver Threads Among the Gold,” and to know i
you are playing it yourself is a pleasure you never know until you I
have played the
>
Feolefrolee
Hardman Autotone
Our tasv payment plan will enable you to purchase a Hard-
man on strictly confidential terms, and have the World's Best Pi:
ayer in your home.
A ——
Kirk Johnson
16 and 18 West King St.,
Joefosfestesfoofoce-iocfecfocfocforforfectocfrefoofecioofortesfesfosforfosorfocfonirefosionfoofi coofoc
& Yd 0 og
LANCASTER, PA.
FP if
jo ak
ed Pr eb rb rb ebPet
oe,
bof apes cfpojevfosierfe fe ofeo]s toes Jeodeforioseo
AT ES CT MME FIT hd Ne
elonjoctonfonfooeotesforfonfecfontoafrrfeaforosfesfosionioofuofovferforfosiaciocfeciory ol]
HIGHEST CASH PRICES
PAID FOR. DEAD ANIMALS
WHICH WE REMOVE PROMITI.Y BY AUTOMOBILE TRUCK.
EERO | A RATE
unl a EN 2
aparter’s Sons
George La:
LANCASTER, PENNA.
Bell Phone No. 920. Ind. Phone No. 1299
we vievie erie sfecesfosforeedejodfecfolecfesiorforfocfesfaciening
The favorite with experienced motorists,
The right gasoline for safety, comfort and
speed. Instantaneous, powerful, clean ex-
plosion, quick ignition, no carbon deposits
=all these are guaranteed.
We make three grades of
76° — SPECIAL — MOTOR
Power Without Carbon. All Refined Products.
No “natural” gasolines used. At your dealers.
WAVERLY OIL WORKS CO.
Independent Refiners Pittsburg, Pa.
Also makers of Waverly Special Auto Oil.
FREE-200 Page Book-—tells all about oil.
d Mi
| if
< fi
é : MAKES THEM _——-= Lx hy
- <7 0 C/N {
* LAY OR BUS & Ne i
& 46 CANAL & 139 FRIEND ST © 3 N W
BOSTON.MASS. Taba 2 Hl
ASK THE [AN WALD FeEDS IT 0
A fresh lot of J
Beef Veal ~ Beef Serap ~ Poultry Bone 0
in three sizes MN)
; Direct from the manufacturer. Ask for prices : 2 i
pe BRANDT & STEHMARN ~ (Mount Joy, Pa.
If you are hungry sor Buckwheat Cakes, the kind mother used te
Dake, we still have Buckwheat flour on hand. '
d.T he Bulleti
your
large, medium, or smal styles.
4
THE BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA.
DREW A FUNNY LITTLE MAN REALIZE LACK ur CUNDITION: Phuadelphia Man Has No Need to
Bagamore Signature to Indian Deed
Recorded in Malne—HIis Signa-
ture Was a Bow and Arrow,
A funny little man, drawn all with
black ink, his inch-high body standing
club-footed and with arms like a
poarecrow--~this is the signature or
“mark” to the first Indian deed re-
corded in the state of Maine. This
deed conveyed land in South Berwick
on the Plscataqua river, and was made
in 1643. It is much briefer than pres.
ent-day deeds, as will be seen:
“Know all who these may con-
sarne that Humphrey Chadbourne
have bought of Mr. Roles the Saga-
more of Newichawanuke Half a Mile
of Ground which lieth betwixt the
Little River & the Great River to be-
gin at the Northern Side of ye old
Ground & for the Conformity thereof
the aforesd Sagamore Mr. Roles hath
hereunto set his Hand May the 10th
1643. And the sd Mr. Roles doth ex
cept a Parcel of Ground called by the
Name Comphegan wch he doth keep
for himself.”
The signature of Samoset, he of
“Welcome, Englishman,” fame, was a
bow and arrow, as seen on the deed
he made to John Brown of Pemoquid
Jong before the deed of “Mr, Roles.”
But most Indian signatures deeding
land to white men were random touch.
es of pen to paper, always, however,
“In the presence of" white men as
legal witnesses.
The eastern colonies early forbade
buying lands of Indians except with
the permission and approval of the
general court; yet they did not pro-
nounce Indian deeds as such to be in.
valid. But by an act of 1715, no one
not in actual possession on July 31,
1720, could hold under an Indian deed
in Maine thereafter.
CHARACTER TOLD BY TONGUE
Many Ways by Which That Organ Re-
veals the True Disposition of
Its Owner.
Germany has taken up the pastime
of reading character and telling for
tunes by the tongue. A long tongue
is said to denote openness of charac
ter; it suggests generosity and free
handedness. Its possessor makes
friends and enemies easily, but does
not save money.
When the tongue is long and thick
the openness degenerates into a ten-
dency to gossip and scandal. The fu-
ture of the owner is beset with trou
bles of his own making. ‘It also in-
dicates flightiness and inconstancy.
Short tongues indicate secretive
ness and dissimulation. Their owners
make good detectives and attorneys.
The owner may acquire some money
by economy and guile, but has not
largeness of spirit to make a great
fortune. Very thin pointed tongues
are found in different people who do
not succeed in life
Short and broad ones accompany
craft and falsehood, the person who
has such a tongue is compelled by it
to deceive and betray, whatever ef-
fort he may make to keep straight.
The vibrant, quiver tongue de-
notes the artistic temperament. Bril-
liant carmine hue is a sign of long
life, pale pink tongue denotes both
weakness of character and delicacy of
constitution.
Canned Whole Hams.
Among the methods of sending
cured hams into the market, that of
canning the whole ham has been in-
troduced by an innovating German
meat packer. This was several years
ago, and the new idea seems to have
taken firm root in that country.
The canning process, as applied to
whole hams, is comparative simple,
says Pure Products. After being salt
ed, smoked and otherwise cured in
the usual manner, hams . are
placed in a can of suitable size and
shape. It is then weighed and the
weight marked on the outside. The
space left in the can may be filled
either with clean water or the ham
may first be boiled and the broth, af-
ter the removal of the fat, may be
placed with it in the can. The can
is then closed and the contents steri-
lized.
The popularity of canned whole
ham may be inferred from the num-
ber of patents which have been issued
to various inventors, who have cow
ered every possible form of can for
this purpose.
the
Turkish Island Rebels.
The Turkish i of Niecarla in
the Aegean sea has proclaimed its
independence. The bitants, who
ed im-
and
1ich has
area of about 56 > miles, is
famou i
an
1 of
ted
d almost
5 Greek
ipal town is Mes: b
of a group of about 200
have hithert )
to the Pas}
it is ocenpi
ria, wi
S181
The islanders
annual tribute
Rhodes.
Vindicate the Divining Rod.
Official experiments made
South
Ger-
ica with the divining
rod as a means of detecting hidden
water seem to vindicate the efficiency
in
man
of witch hazel stick. About 800
trials were made a rod was
successful in 80 per cent. of them. It
has also been made use of in Han-
over with
tion vei
Thage 7
These res
the
aad +h
1a ine
gome success in the loca-
potash.
calts
of
of of the
attention
eee etl Ae eee.
GRAND OPENING OF FALL
WINTER MILLINERY,
SEPT, 28, 1912
‘n unusual display
AND
SAT.
of all
and trim-
the
st and best in hats
mnings.
The
carried,
large assortment
makes it
taste whether
eof hats
to suit
they be of the
possible
The trimmings this Season are of
especial value and beauty.
A mest eordial imvitatien is ge Tioloef Agent.
Summer Tin: and a Bathing Sulit
Combins to Wales Un the Too
Fat Business Man,
“From the letters pouring In from
the shore, it's evideut I must enlarge
my gym again this car
The speaker, a noted physical in.
gtructor, cwung round from his unus-
ually heuvy mall
“It's at the seasiore—in his bath-
ing suit at the scashore—~that the
American business-man first realizes
his welght,” the instructor continued.
“Stend on a s=un.drenched August
beach and waich (he whitelegged,
white-armed business-man, just ar
rived for his vacation. Watch him
puff out his chest as he walks sea-
ward. Watch him keep a sharp eye
on his stomach, lest it stick out far
ther than his chest does. Talk about
the vanity of woman,
“But, if you keep on watching you'll
pee his smile turn to a worried look.
You'll see his ballooning chest, tired
put, collapse. You'll see his stomach
resume its rightful position, on ahead
of him, like a captain, leading the
way.
“And as the business-man eyes with
anxiety and disgust his protruding
stomach, he realizes at last that he Is
becoming that hated thing, a fat man,
and his thoughts turn to dumb-bells,
golf and tennis, and he resolves to
write to me.
“He writes that afternoon after an
unusually abstemious luncheon. And
tere are his letters—50 of them—50
by every mail—dated from Atlantic
City and Bar Harbor, Long Branch
and Cape May, Narragansett and Bay
Head.”
CITY’S MEAGER MILK SUPPLY
Spanish Capital No Place for One In
Any Way Fond of the
Lactea! Fluid.
There are no large dairying con-
cerns in Madrid. Part of the milk
supply comes from goats and a few
cows pastured near the city and kept
in lecherias in the city, where they
are milked; some is brought in from
near-by farms, usually about six gal-
lons in tin cans in straw baskets
slung across a horse upon which the
rider mounts; some from neighboring
villages by train or wagon, all in tin
cans; and a small amount from north
ern Spain by train—a twenty-four-
hour trip. Deliveries to regular pat-
rons are made by mozas carrying a
frame from which are suspended
about eighteen small pails or bottles,
each holding about a quart, but it is
probable that most of the families in
Madrid do not receive regular sup-
plies, such as is needed being brought
in by some member of the family, or a
servant, who carries any convenient
vessel or pitcher from the house, This
milk is secured from small milk shops,
called lecherias, of which there are
about 550 shown in the city directory.
The milk is always boiled as soon as
it is brought into the house. It is al-
most impossible to secure cream and
it is almost invariably sour when ob-
tained.
Reindeer in Alaska Increase.
From 1892 to 1902 the United States
bureau of education introduced 1,280
European reindeer into Alaska at a
time when the natives were threaten-
ed with starvation. At the present
time these herds have increased to
a total of 33,629 head. Their meat
is In great demand by both whites and
natives, and their skins supply the
best winter clothing. It is expected
that the exportation of reindeer meat
will soon become an important indus-
try. Above all, the reindeer has
proved a most efficient civilizing
agency. The success of the Alaskan
reindeer enterprise induced Dr. Wil-
fred Grenfell, in 1908, to import 300
reindeer from Lapland into Labrador,
where they have now increased to
about 1,200, and are a great boon to
the natives. Last year the Canadian
government bought 50 of Dr. Gren-
fell’'s herd for introduction into north.
ern Canada,
Stupendous Figures in Fly Descent.
Dr. Howard of the bureau of eth-
nology, Washington, calculates that
a single horsefly, starting about April
15 with an average brood of 120,
would, if all her eggs were hatched
and all in turn reproduced in like
ratio, see by the end of the season
her progeny to the number of 1,096,-
181,249,311,720,000,000,000,000.
As each female usually lays four
batches of their unchecked de-
velopment through twelve generations
would make a mass of flies measur-
ing 268,778,165,861 cubic miles, or
considerably more than the size of the
earth.
“Fortunately,” comments the Medi:
cal Record, “there are many things
destructive to eggs, larvae and adult
flies, so the number of the latter ig
kept down to a possible figure.”
eggs
Small for Its Size,
An admiring constituent gave Con-
gressman Legare of South Carolina
one of those vest pocket edition Lili-
putian Mexican dogs to take home to
the children. Legare—pronounced
Leg-ree, by the way—was leading the
dog along by a cotton string, when a
South Carolina mountaineer stopped
him.
“Are it a reg’lar dog?” the man ask-
ed.
“Yes, it’s a Ch-—— Well, 1 can’t
pronounce the name of it,” said Le-
gare, “but it’s some kind of a Mexi-
can dog.”
“Just a pup, 1 recken.”
“No; it’s fall grown.”
“Well,” opined the mountaineer,
“that’s the least cog [ ever seen at
ne."—Phuiladclonia Telegraph,
\
EE a
tended to all patrons and friends to
28th.
F. R. LEICHT
Seeond floor Huntzberger-Win-
ters Co., Elizabethtown, Pa.
eee tl AAR.
Low Fares to the West
Pennsylvania Railread. Tickess
#® Rocky Mountains, Pacific Coast,
Western Canada, México and Sowth-
western poinie om sale every day
fsom September 24 te Oetober 9,
imelusive, at reduced fares. @eomsult
the Opening Saturday, Sept.
i
i
| Worry About Getting a Suitable
Office Boy,
“Talk about luck In having office
boys,” sald a well known Philadelphia
business man. “I have hit it great,
Back in 1887 I took on my first boy,
and he was all that could be desired. |
After he had been with me for over
three years and began to get nearly as
tall as I was, he decided that he
gholud learn a trade. Before he left
he told me he had a younger brother
who would like to take up the job.
‘If he does as well as you did, he
will do all right,’ I sald.
“The second brother came, and aft-
er four years' service he decided on a
trade. But before he left he brought
his younger brother, who took up
the work. He proved as good as the
first two, and then he grew too large
for a $3.50 a week job and passed
it along to the next in the family.
Well, the fourth brother went to a
trade and two more after him. I be.
gan to think that it was going to be
perpetual. Then I learned some-
thing. The boys were all used up.
There were no more to come.
“While I was wondering where to
get another good boy, he spoke for
his nephew. ‘Who is your nephew? 1
sald. ‘John's boy,’ said he. It was
the son of the first boy that I had
started in 25 years before, and he
had grown up to the same age as his
five uncles and his father when they
began. ‘Send him along,’ I said. He
has been with me for several months
and is as good as any of his uncles.
From last reports I understand 1 am '
good for a supply of good boys for
the next 25 years.”
Wednesday, September 25th, 1912
000 OO OR UR OED
{LEBANON VALLEY
FARMS
ow
Eales eeNs
«
n
"
w >
! I have Lebanon Co. farms for sale at $60 TO $100 PER
wh 1
ACRE that are equal and in some respects better than some =
wu =
- farms | saw in Lancaster that were recently sold at public sale -
® FOR OVER $150.00 PER ACRE. =n
" I can show you tobacco raised in Lebanon Co. that equals =m
u : X =
any vou can produce in Lancaster Co. £
n »
© Write me kind of a farm you want to buy and I will send ®
#@ yon a big list to look over and make arrangements to show you #
® any of the farms that you want to see. u
w =
m #
Ee »
@ » ° *
Ww "
2 Farmers Trust Bldg. Lebanon, Pa. =
7] |
TERR seme my
Lebanon Valley Farms, Grist Mills,
Hotels, Cigar Factories, Etc.
ings, close to good town, Great bhar-
gain at $8000,
NO MIRRORS IN ELEVATORS 180-acre gravel and limestone 108 acres, 2 miles east of Millers-
—— farm, at good town, R. R. Station. burg. Fine buildings. Good stock
Reasons for Their Removal in Public | Good buildings, running water. 25 or dairy farm, £200,
y
Buildings and Hotels in acres of extra good tobacco soil.| Residence and cigar stand with
Philadelphia. $75 per acre. factory, Good central Lebanon lo-
Mirrors in Philadelphia elevators 137-acre Limestone farm, good cation.
are doomed says a New York World's buildings. Located within about a {-story brick cigar factory, good
correspondent. The order for their square of the Ephrata & Lebanon central location, close to I.ebanon
removal from elevators at city hall trolley line. Best Lebanon county business center. $6500.
wen out yecently, sd SL be follow limestone soil and location. About 130 acres, 1 mile from R. R. sta-
ed by similar orders in the leading ho- . Voie he You Te LF rnd
tels and office buildings, notably the 3 miles from Lebanon, Great bar- tion. Fairly good stone house,
Bellevue, Stratford and the Land gain, poor barn. Good pasture land, run-
Title. 52-acre Limestone farm, on Berks ning water, etc. Well adapted for
The mirrors are being done away | & Dauphin Turnpike and trolley fruit. $1500,
with as the result of numerous com-|line, hetween I.ebanon and Myers- 123-acre farm at Colebrook sta-
pising made. Condaviars In fue City | town. Good stone house and run- tion, on C. & I. R. R., 2 miles from
7 se arly ever, . -
2 elevators agsorl 114i neatly y ning water. $7000.00, Mt. Gretna. Fine home and sur-
girl who rides becomes so engrossed i i ; My : :
fn “primping” before the silvered 29%-acre Limestone farm at My- roundings. Great bargain at $6000.
glasses in the elevators that they for- | erstown, $6000.00, 160-acre stock and dairy farm,
get what floor they want and cause | Farm, Grist Mill and Saw Mill— good location. $6850.
, | : Q . J
delay. a | 32 acres. Brick house—18 rooms, Central Boarding Stable, best
fn te hotels guy Smeshalidiagy the one brick and one frame barn, wag- Lebanon trade. Paying proposi-
Sonfliolors © te slevators, N10 on shed, tenant house, pig sty 50 ft. ti 1 i
: ale n ’ h 1 3 ion. nquire.
are instructed not to speak to the oc- : . : :
cupants, utilize the mirrors to flirt ON. Full roller process flour Write me kind of farm you want
with fair passengers, with the result ill. Modern saw mill. $6000. and get one of my large lists of
that they pass the floors while ogling 71-acre farm and hotel near Lebanon Valley farm bargains.
hs a Soar censea Jy due i Jonestown, on State Road. $5200. Save 25 per cent to 50 per cent.
ls w g nirrors e - 3
: g 9.acre fe rear Se fers- Ask your neighbor who bought.
casionally a passenger from the roof 12 acre farm, Neur. BC haeffers : ry
gardens becomes too boisterous and town, with saw mill. Large custom et O-—e
buts his fist through the glass, cutting saw business, $4300. i — ; .
pL 8 SES g : | The Men Who Succeed
his hand and afterward suing the hor E0.acre. far : , :
50-acre farm, 1 mile from Leban- ,. vd’ of Area. Antorpri ap
tel company as heads of large enterpris are
oe ————————————— on, with extra. fine buildings; 5 pan of great energy. Success, to-
Liquid Air as Motive Power. acres of timberland marketable at jay demands health. To ail it to
Scientists declare that as a motive $650; adjoining small town. $6, ¢741 T1¢'s utter folly for 4 man
power for operating automobiles and S0( endure a weak, run-down, half alive
the electric storage air is superior to : : Y 2 i oo : at 2
tht ws ogee A pa it 60 acres, between Campbelltown condition when Electric Bitters
- € € er) ’ k ce 3 0 3 - . . : : . ~ :
requires no tedious waiting for the “Md 3achmansville. 2 brick houses, will put him right on his feet in
process of recharging and it delivers 7 rooms, larg stone bank barn short order. ‘Four bottles did me
more than doubke the power of.for- 48x70 ft Very nice farm at $4650. more real good than other
mer, with half the weight. Gasoline Totel and 64-acre farm at Bord- medicine I ever took,” writes Chas.
js Bo 18 Ye game Sia with Luly nersville, 1 mi. from R. R. sta. B. Allen, Sylvania, Ga. “After
a 1e latter emits no noxiou Ni . id : :
odors nor is there any danger of ex: Good buildings. $7250.00, vears of suffering with rheumatism,
5, i 3 any an 2 X« s : 5 oy i a
plosions. As a refrigerant there #s no T0-acre Gravel and limestone liver trouble, stomach disorders,
source of cold like liquid air. Other farm, 3 mile from Berks and Dau- and deranged kidneys, I am again,
rating ) IV 4 3 3 he °s Mectrie itters son
jen Operating Auigmabiies i big phin turnpike, mile from R. R. thanks to Electric Bitters, sound
ng as a refrigerant there is har a : ; ‘ ell.” Trv > rE
thing the human mind So think of station. Brick house—10 rooms, and “well PY Shem, Oy 0
A at ’ ’ Sw Tarn ote. Neos Heniv CG i3nov. cents at'S. B. Bernhart & Co's.
that liquid air cannot do, from provid- | "€VW barn, ete. Near Henry C. Snay ? !
ing a magical entertainment to the | 13 s fruit farm. $6250.
Produstion of continuous power. Yet| g0.acre limestone farm, extra The man who takes the job of
Tiere 1s iin ee % Walch 3 ans, on Ephrata & Lebanon trolley ticket chopper for the Panama Can-
i ce Nes Y ‘nou + a= . :
sompete with other sources of ny line, 23 miles from Lebanon. al will probably have to be gome-
orces now in use. 107-acre farm, extra fine build- thing of a diplomat.
gE) 1 1111
5 "
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8 |]
=
= | |
=
=m EA KARE)
Bm
| VISITORS TO THE LANCASTER COUNTY FAIR ARE INVITED TO COME TO THIS STORE
B AND MAKE THEMSELVES AT HOME, THE DOOR SWINGS WIDE EVERYBODY IS WELCOME,
HB THE REST ROOMS ON THE SECOND FLOOR PROVIDE A COMFORTABLE RESTING PLACE FOR
# WOMEN WHO ARE TIRED. THERE ARE TOILET ROOMS IN CONJUNCTION AND FREE TELE-
@ PHONES—IREE WRITING PAPER; MEET YOUR FRIENDS HEREASK US FOR INFORMATION.
IN FACT. MAKE LEINBACH'S' YOUR HEADQUARTERS.
2
(0 wollen
special
A very
French serge—and lined with
Nowhere else are such
1 0 0 1G OR
ing—the fit—the style and
= y
= The newest style for fall
terials. Has the new collar and
$9.75.
find all the attr:
our
offer to fair
in
Gu
is the Johnny coat.
is a coat that sells for
Fair Week Offers
Remarkable Values Herel
wction of fair week at the fair groun
showing of new fall suits and co
Here Rre Two Specials
$20.00 Blue Serge Suits, $14.75
visitors. They are beauties too
aranteed Skinner's satin.
suits sold for $14.75. Just call and ir
the quality.
To $16.50 Johnny Coats $9.75
Made of beautiful
$15 to $16.50—special
ds There are lots of things
ats.
J 0
-strictly mal
spect them-—note the fine tailor-
5
. a
plaids and coarse weave ma- =
. . a
during fair week =
=
47-49 North Queen Street, Lancaster, Pa.
ERNE RAGS 2 BD MBA ACTER EVI EE 0 OF
ry
-
—