PAGE BIGHT, Nature's Way Is The Best. Buried deep in our American forest we find bloodroot, queen's root, mane drake and stone root, golden seal, Oregon grape root and cherrybark, Of these Dr. R. V, Pierce made a pure glyceric extract which has been favorably known for over forty years. He called it * Golden Medical Discov ery.” This * Discovery '’ purifies the blood and tones up the stomach and the entire system in Nature’ own way, It's just the tissue builder and tonic you require when recovering from a hard cold, grip, or pneumonia, No matter how strong the constitution the stomach is apt to be *‘ out of kilter"’ at times; in consequence the blood is disordered, for the stomach is the lal oratory for the constant manus facture of blood. Dr, Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery strengthens the stomach puts it in shape to make pure, rich blood—helps the liver and kidneys to expel the poisons from the body, The weak, nery- ous, run-down, debilitated condition which so many people experience at this time of the year is usually the effect of poisons in the blood; it is often indicated by pin ples or boils appearing on the skin, the face becomes thin—you feel ** blue.'’ * More than a week ago I was su r with an awful cold in my head, throat, breas \ writes M JAMES G. KENT, of 710 I. Street. S I5., Washington, DI, « "Some called it La Grippe, some pneumonia. I was ad 2 by a friend to try a botiule of your *Goldea Medical D rf ery.’ I tried a bottle and it did me so much good that I g 7 © safe in saying it is the greatest and best medicine tl of ever took. My health is much better than it was | d using your medicine, It does all you claim for it AW J. G. Kent, Esq. satisfactory,” Guar-nteed SHOES Guaranteed We now have ! lines of Shoes for Men, Wome and Children will guarantee If they are not satisfactory we 1 ve youl a new pair or make any just claim good We also have the most comfortable Sho made 0 tendel feet This Shoe we do not guarantee as thes made Ww turned soles, in order to secure for you the comfort and ease, and rned soles will no give same wear as a welt shoe. We also have this e shoe, We do guarantee in a heavy welt sole We are pleased with satisfaction ziven by eare of our Shoes Note some c« mparisons, One customer bought a pair of Shoes elsewhere for $1 95 He wore same for 4 months—Result, dissatisfied Same mq ht a ii f Shoes from us, same style only better quality for .00—Result satis fied. Our Shoe wore him 18 months. Now he says to his friends, buy good Shoes. They are the cheap shoes. This is the kind of Shoes we will sell vou, a ——— ES. ARE (SE RAEI S. B. Bernhart & Co. East Main Street, Mount Joy THE BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY -—sen ii J. "Now, niy dear, it's your turn. Go hak | down to the creek and cross and turn | IN BLACKBERRY _——— to the left and follow it up till you | reach an old field. You'll find more | berries there than you ¢ pick in half (a day. I'd go myself, but am expect. {ing a tin peddler along any minute, Love and Fate Figure in Side Lines. — {and I must have a new dipper.” By JOHN PHILIP ORTH, The place was easily und, There Mr. Fred Islington was not referred | was not only an old field. put the ru. to In the papers as a Napoleon of [Ings of a dam and a sawmill that finance, but yet he held a responsible | Granny had forgotten to mention, As and well-paid position in an important | Miss May stood looking around her bank, she felt that she had visited the place Miss May Cranston was not men. | before, Yes? No? It had a tamil tioned as a second Patti but it was !|iar lcok, but she had never before admitted that she had a fine voice | been within miles of it. She sat down for song, and might some day become |on the turf and looked again, and | an operatic star, then she gave a little gasp. It would seem to the logical reason- The landscape by Mr. Fred Isling- er that Mr, Islington and Miss Cran- | ton, warranted all-wool-and-a-yard- wide, and true to nature in every de- tail, was before her. Yes, he had sat where she sat to sketch it. And, as if that was not enough, the painter him. self broke his way through the branches and stood before her, “Miss Cranston!” “Mr, Islington!” “I--I did not know" “Nor I, either.” He sat down about five feet away, ston ought to have kept clear of side. lines, and not have been tempted into risks, He took a few lessons in draw- ing, fitted up a garret studio and then | went into turning out landscapes in | his spare hours, They were not Corots nor Rembrandts. He was satisfied, | for the time being, to play second fid- ! dle to them, Miss Cranston selected sculpture as her side-line. She worked on ice cold butter. The same was 45 cents & pound, but cheaper at that than marble. Butter is also much easier to cut. She didn't astound the whole United States, but she was content to feel that every time she finished a | new bust there was a decided gain. It was a diversion now, but the profits | would come later on, One day, at the house of a firend, { Mr. Islington was shown a butter bust ed in the life and adventures of the grasshopper. Miss Cranston main- tained a steady gaze on her feet, “1 have been thinking,” he finally said. “Yes?” “We have been too hasty.” “Oh, I don't know.” “You your unjust provoked me.” criticisms see, : “Bi yy were just. Your | of what was called George Washing- But they were Dot unj i { i sketch shows an old mill with the | ton. He felt it his duty to remark roof half gone. ‘There is no roof at all { that it could just as well have been BR gone, e oe called Nero, Columbus, Napoleon or Shakespeare. That is a privilege art- ists have—to bat each other, tat it is always in a good-natured way. A few days later Miss Cghnston was shown one of Mr, Islingtorfs land- | scapes, by a young friend who had | received it as a gift on her birthday. | Her criticisms were very frank. !{ And later on came Fate. That but- | ter-artist and the landscape painter met, and admired, and fell in love. Neither had anything to say about their side-line for some time, and then “Umi” “The ereek flows to the right, as you see. In your sketch you have It flowing to the left or up-hill.” “Um!” “In your sketch you show an old water-wheel. There is none here. If there was one it could not ever have turned with the water flowing the wrong way.” “Ahem!” “Your sketch,” continued the young lady, “has a sunrise or sunset in it, Which is it?” | there was a row at once, Other “Sunset.” | i “But why do you have {t set in the | — 7h east? The top of a picture is like N // the top of a map—it's the north. Fig- / , uring from this, your sun has wobbled ’ around!” “That's queer,” replied the painter. “In an artistic way, and one proud- ly pointed out, you cover some of the fallen stones and stumps with what you mistake for brambles.” Boloedectdihalsdicloctoalonds cds dads abo leole Booleale ZoaTeotoek ETP PPTPTTTTTTTeTT or EE Is Your Piano In ertaining? You Say No! Why? ofedechooiosleone foolesfesfs fade C sacanse, perhaps, you cannot pay, and have to wait until > some one else comes to play for you. : Now, why have a silent piano in your home when wt will 5 L gladly exchange the piano you now ave for a % $ z i F He i $ amous Mardman Autotone i oe “ 4 Thtn, when you want music an netertainment, you don’t J oe 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 % % heard years ago, “Silver Threads Among the Gold,” and to know 3X ¥ you are playing it yourself is a pleasure you never know until you %* & have played the 3 ge 5 L J oe $ Hardman Autotone 3 I Our tasy payment plan will enable you to purchase a Hard- 3X $ man on strictly confidential terms, and have the World's Best Pis + 2 ayer in. your home. & 3 i a of & + > ° + & o* i Kir onmnson g,, } k fe 3 “9 3 a» fe $ 16 and 18 West King St. LANCASTER, PA. % Et AmctuiatsdhathabathatiolBodadiotsoResdsedilddodssidratoitoeidiedobodebodoiibob Rbabababdiia & 5 . 3 ESSERE Ebb bib didi didd ddd ddd dd dirt bd dd tb bbb opp HIGHEST CASH PRICES | PAID FOR DEAD ANIMALS WHICH WE REMOVE PROMPTLY BY AUTOMOBILE TRUCK. Ind. Phone No. 1299 — —— _—- _ _- dedeiedofoddedorerdiden, Foeoofefoefortonforiocfscfofocfroforfonfodoooofoef dod He * 3 . 3 i A Properly Fitted Shoe : ue wie ge * o y o 0 3 Can’t Hurt the Most Sensitive Foot : x In buying Shoes, place Fit above all else. Style and Service iy #§ are necessary, but if you sacrifice Fit, you suffer the loss of both 2 3 Style and Service. No Shoe retains its shape that does not fit. on 3 No Shoe wears well that does not fit. Why suffer? 3 ge This Shoe Store has a trained sale§force experts that know : how and will sell you correct-fittine Shoes. Easy every hour you $ & wear them. * 3 * $t TRY SHAUB'S SHOES THIS FALL # 5 a — 3 + . , 3 i Worth The Price, You'll Say I + a * ge BLY, a SENG 3 : SH = ‘ Fut bE ) a * HD de Cad rs fu} # ofe oe of 1 BOCTE, SHOES, RUBBERS and HOSIER He pl . < + t 18 N. Queen Street, LANOASTER i Weeder ilonp tcf apatnfeelo TP eegmeon “You—you must be mistaken.” “There they are, and they are hazel bushes. 1 have no more to say, ex- cept that your sketch purports to be an autumn scene, and yet you have the maples all red, and two or three apple trees over there of a vivid green. 1 now yield you the floor to criticize my butter bust of Washington!” “I thought—thought,” began Mr. Is- lington, and then paused. “Are you a good judge of butter?” asked the girl with a smile. “Why, I thought that particular but- ter was all right.” “So it was. The trouble was with me. I sculped Shakespeare and call- ed it Washington. If I had tried to \ sculp Nero people would probably have called it Xerxes. I am ready to ad- mit that I am a dead failure in sculp- ture.” “And I don't believe it i8 in me to be a landscape artist.” There was nothing further said for the next two minutes. Then the young man cautiously queried: “Wasn't there something said about the ‘Artistic Temperament?’ ” Yes, He Had Sat Where She Sketch. Sat te parties had repeated their criticisms, and they had naturally been added to. It is hardly fair to say there was fa row. It was more a chilliness, as if the wind had suddenly changed to the north, “Why, there might have been.” “Miss Canston,” (she had been “Do you think we have it?” “May” the day before), began Mr. Is- “Not being artists, how could we lington, “I understand you have harsh- have?” “That's so. That's so. And not having got it, what becomes of the vows—the vows—" “To be continued at the house!” laughed the blushing girl, as she ex- tended her hand to be helped to her feet. “How many quarts did you pick?” asked Granny, as she reached for the empty berry basket. “My stars, but I forgot all about em;” was the reply. “Never mind, deary. 1 didn't ex- pect you to pick a single one—not a ly criticized some of my work as a landscape artist.” “I thought I was justified, Mr. Is- lington,” (he had been “Fred” the day before), was the frigid reply. “I have also been informed that you criti- cized my efforts in sculpture very freely.” “If we both have what they call the artistic temperament—" “Yes ?"— “It would be better—better—" “Yes ?—" “I should not want to give up my ’ work.” one.” “No?” *But—but—" “And you would not want to give “You see, he was here the other up yours?” day while you were taking a nap, “Certainly not.” and he told me all about it, and I told | IE “Then, Miss Cranston—then—" him I'd send you down by the creek, “Then you have an important en- and Le and you and the blackberries gageément this evening, and I will not and the old mill and—and—and don't detain you!” you let him get away while I am get ting supper!” And Mr. Fred Islington didn’t get away. That was all. That “Artistic Tem- perament” never gives in once it gets its back up. The possessor may real- ize that he or 8he is in training for an idiot asylum, but they must stick to it. A month later, without havy- ing seen each other again, both went on a summer vacation. Mr, Islington went down to loaf at his brother's, and Miss Cranston took herself down to Granny White's to read and swing in a hammock, and think and won- der. She had sculped—she had loved | =—she had lost! Grandma gave her | joyful welcome, and though she saw | that something was amiss she was | discreet enough to ask no questions. | She offered a four-pound cake of but- | ter to be made into a bust of Cleo- | Isn't old enough now; she is just eight | patra, but when it was allowed to months old, but I do so like to look | melt in the sun she made no com. forward!” ments, It was blackberry time, and half a i | dozen times Granny had donned her | A young man who has bought noth- | sun-bonnet, and taken her basket on |ing but bonbons and violets for five her arm, and gone down the creek to | years can hardly be expected to be a gather the toothsome fruit, but on this | good judge of asparagus right after particular afternoon she sald: | marriage. (Copyright, 1912, by Associated Literary ) by Press. Looking Forward. The husband and wife were making a call on friends one evening. The wife was talking. “I think we shall have Marian take a domestic science course along with her music and reg- ular studies when at college.” “Ah,” said a man present, who had been a stranger until that evening, “you look rather young to have a daughter ready for college.” . “Oh,” sgjd the mother natively, “she | Uncle Pennywise Says: Mr. and Mrs. Davig Rettew enter- | /tained at a dinner on Sunday friends {from Lancaster, Columbia, [ville and this section. Mrs. Able Kise left for Harrisburg | Miss Lucy Smith, of Philadelphia, and Penbrook to spend a few days|en route te Rock Island, Illinois, is with friends. [spending some time with her parents CORDELIA Miss Eva Kratzer, of Columbia, is the guest of Miss Sue McCune. Mrs. John G. Eshleman, of Lan-| Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Smith. caster, is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Detwiler, of Frederick W. Hall, Tampa, Florida, who were visiting | Charles and Harry Kratzer, of here and at Columbia, for several Neffsville, were the guests several | weeks, left yesterday for home. | days of Raymond Bard. were former residents, They and for two long minutes was interest. Wednesday, October 9, 1912, +» PA, floodlit ieaaeellacalen ud The New Fall GOODS We Are Now Ready to Show You the New Suits, Coats, Millinery, Sweaters, Shoes and Many Other Lines of Merchan- dise Which Are Already In and Being Sold fu (0 (u Gl eo We welcome the opportunity to show you these @J new goods even though you do not come to buy. Ask to see a pair of our shoes for “Tender {@ Feet” To wear a pair of these comfortable shoes once is to wear them always. Great reductions on all our men’s and boys’ suits fu - e ( and overcoats. © 8 Try us before going elsewhere. It will mean o © 4 Ask For S. & H. Green Trading Stamps ® : ; D ; ; © fi @ ® ® 0) Opposite Union National Bank, “Dollars Saved For You” &) a (J @ uo] NEMAN © | . Mount Joy, Penna. Q 0) 0) VeegeeeeceRcce lecccaeeeeean A New Trick of the Tree Agent place This reaily a new trick on he will be accorded proper treat- I the part of swindling tree agent. ment, and will by this means obtain The owner of a young peach While there are many honest tree good trees in which the nurseryman orchard in Western Pennsylvania agents in this Sta who are doin es 1 vn reputation is at recently sent to State Zoologist H. much good for the ublic, there are The agent who comes of our A. Surface, Harrisburg, a few young many other V ) I'e i | urseries of course, much peach trees by exp i ble mea to push the sale more liable than the man who is ‘These trees were e ed by a ¢ 1 ese TSON s No more than a traveling tree nursery agent yesterday, who stated a rule, have tree hat to peddler, or who does not state that it was his opinion that thev had lant, definitely just where his trees are the “Yellows.” He asked or in- grown The latter often has some ‘ormation concerning pulling the This is the time of e i eculia contract that he wishes trees to plant others. The reply of the tree gel { 1npt 0 reap ned, and which, of course, should Professor Surface is as follows. vest, too often direct mis ¢ vided, entatiol Theil re itbout one re reall) YIP ere I have carefully examined the hundred and fifty reliable nurserie three ch tree which you sent to in Pennsylvania, and t is “not Cot erable tobacco in this s 1s by express, and can assure you difficult for any one wishing to remains to be harvested. Labor that they show no signs of Yellows plant trees bushes, shrubbery, etc See 3 scarce and many are working what ever. 1 this as a case to learn of the name in iddresses late at night, so the, frost qoes not where the nursery to of reliable nurse: ! riting to tech them, make you believe that the tree this office of the Department « in pds have Yellows, in order that yon Agriculture, Harrishurg He should would pull and burn them, and huy do this, and then write directly to Air. and Mrs. J. H. Stambaugh more trees of him, to plant in their the nurserymen, and be assured that “0d Mr. M. B. Hiestand are attend- | the York fair today rr AC EE 5. SES as BI AHS: B87 eo ———_———— 01 0 AOR ESR RE E101 1 ACH & CO. BIE 5 H iL i 1 8 CRETE = You Will Delight in Inspecting the New Fall i” Silks and Dress Goods | : ¥ 40--INCH CHARMUESE SILK, $1.75 and $2.00 = A silk with a beauty indescribable, both as to color and weave. as soft as down, as serviceable |B? {0 wear as pongee silk. = Considering width, you won't find anything equaling this for littleness of price. Remember, it is twice the width of most silks, ccnsequently half number of yards are sufficient for a dress. gauged ®% hy other silks. a 4 40 Inch Crepe Meteors, $2.00 = Since their first advent into the arena of high-class silks, some several years ago, to the present E time, crepe meteors have constantlygrown in popularity. = This season they are especially good, for they adapt themselves so readily to the Grecian effect B draped dresses—for evening wear especially. Beautiful tintings and Street shades, and white and black. And they are 50 inches widg. Here, again, width spells economy, as to the lesser number of yards you will need to buy for a gown in comparison with the average width silks Woolen Fabrics at 50c. The prettiest. woolens that we have ever shown in a 50c¢ fabric—the assortment is extra large and includes a big range of colors. The fabrics are whipcords-—38 inches wide-—French serges—38 in- ches wide—Wool batiste—38 inches wide-—Scotch mixtures—38 inches wide, D Fabri ress Fabrics at 75c. This assortment embraces four of the most wanted fabrics—as 40 inch English serges—40 inch wool taffeta and 44 and 50 inch Scotch Mixtures—the color range is complete. It’s a showing that would be hard to enumerate the exact weave and color. Dress Woolen at $1.00 fabrics we show at a dollar are quite as high grade as they look, and we offer a They are exquisite silk and wool poplins— poplins—the imported Zibelines The beautiful 1 @ particularly pleasing assortment from which to choose. the always desirable Imperial serges—the soft wool taffetas and wool and the fashionable whipcords in plain and two-toned effects. The New Corduroys are $1.00 Fashion authorities agree that corduroys will be much worn thisfall and winter. The Leinbach silk store is showing a wonderful selection of dependable qualities, They are 28 inches wide and come in beautiful shades of taupe, navy, brown, green and black. New Suitings, $150 and $3.50 At these prices you'll find such desirable weaves as close shirred Zibelines, Boucle Cloth, Heavy Scotch Mixtures, Chiffon Broadcloths, double faced plaid backs and the popular Whipecords. : 47-49 North Queen Street, Lancaster, Pa., 1G 0 E11 RR IRE} ads
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers