The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, October 16, 1912, Image 3

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    PAGE THREE
THE BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY,
a
PA.
pry
NE
=
Ee
l
AT
A!
Eo ht \ lk
%,
rse
Blankets
Wear The Longest
They can’t help it. Wear is bred into them. It took us years to learn
how, but we stuck at it; now our 5A Blankets stand supreme—
they outwear three ordinary blankets. Every 5A Blanket is closely
woven from the strongest, tightest-twisted yarns our expert spinners
can make. And it is all done to save you money—to make one
blanket do the work of three—to save you trouble and expense.
BA Horse Blankets are sold by the largest’horse-blanket factory in
the world direct to your dealer. Here, again, we save you money by
cutting out all jobbers’ commissions. You pay but one profit.
The 5A Storm King is the most popular medium-priced square
blanket on the market. Extra large, extra thick, extra strong, extra
warm. Weighs 8 lbs., measures 84 x 90 inches. Price only
worth twice as much. See them before you buy any other.
Buy a 8A Square Blanket for street use. Buy a 5A Bias Girth Blanket for stabi ust
Buy a 5A Plush Robe for carriage or auto.
WM. AYRES & SONS, Philadelphia, Pa.
SLO
i
Al a id
g Since taking charge of the Yoblonovitz Shoe store I have added
one of the finest lines of i i
’ YY’ E] 1
= os 3 "Co vi
Men's, Women's and]
Children’s Shoe
At From 98¢ te $2.42
wn
found in this town. They com-
rise the best there iis in shoes and
|
to be
should be considered when you pur-|
3 chase that next pair ef Shoes.
All Kinds
I ng modern machinery I am|
3 ed to do repairing on short|
» ) and at right price Give me |
0 next job lei me show you. |
LASKAMITZ |
fOUNT JOY, PENNA |
Hers y Rares Moderats |
— ¥ y |
In vy “Fn!
TOP voana Into
S Kxcnenge ote
7 : Sinn a3 ler 6 5
Experimenting with The Mount Joy, Pa. |
4 v re T N/ £3... ba
Just-as-Good-Kind J. M. Backenstae, |
> ® % "0
And Buy A |
uf Has just beep remodeled thruout |
a {as all modern conveniences suct |
1 iN Bat Hot and Cold ‘ater, Steanp |
i feat Flectric Light, Ete
we Table is Supplied With ile Bes
SOLD STRICTLY ON ITS MERITS the Market ford:
. - ° . ®
f
3 1 Aliso Lunch Counien
New 1913 Cars Now Here To
Vhers Soups, sandwiches, (Cheese
im ——— Tripe, Etc., Et are ser i
. -
| Codomidile 44 18 hoice Prime Oysters
aneactiap HOH a i .
$ Lan aS AUHOBI L4,
GARAGE NEVER CLOSED
230-238 W. King St,
LANCASTER - w= PENNA. ;
¢e e200
: — Good Stabling Accomodatior |
The largest and only strictly first | (.ocal and Long Distance Telephone |
& 3 class fireproof garage and repair r
{ shop in Lancaster City of County. It's A Cure That's Sure
SFOR-
= | Eh | BER ISM. GOUT.
SCIATICA, AND
SPeBLPOLDESOD s&4
v
®
LUMBAGO {
We have cured Thousi with
JONES BREAK-UP
AND IT WiLL CURE YOU
Always in stock at
W. D. CHANDLER CO.
'DRUGGISTS AND APOTHECARIES|
| West Main St.,
| Sept. 4-3mo.
We are Always Prepared to serve
Pure
Spring
Water
ICE
IN ANY QUANTITY at Very
Moderate Charges.
Don’t fail to see us before plac-
ing your order this year.
J. N. Stauffer & Bro.
Mount Joy, Penna.
9606600020600 09
Mount Joy, Pa. |
Gonstipation|
“For many years I was troubled, in
spite of all so-ca!'ed remedies I used.
At last I found quick relief and cure
in those mild, yet thorough and
really wonderful 1
DR. KING'S
NewLifePills
Adolph Schingeck, Buffalo, N.Y.
25 CENTS PER BOTTLE AT ALL DRUGGISTS.
Ge
|
9000909990000 040
CPCOPLOLOD0OHY
THEEL & DR.W. L. THEEL
OLD DR.
1719 Spring Garden St., (formerly 535 N. 6th
St., Phila., Pa.) Ein Deutscher Artz, Only German
Specialist. The German Treatment, the only
Guaranteed Cure for Specific Blood Poison, others
ean’t Care, all use Mercury & Arsenic, worse than
the Disease itself, it’s a curse of humanity. All
Bkin & Private Diseases, Excesses, sex, Abnses, Weake
messes. Nervous Debility, Lost Manhood, I Atrophy,
Piles, Losses, Varicocele, Hydrocele, Rupture & Stricture,
ee sutting, Kidney, Bladder, 46 yrs. practice & 6 yrs. Hosp.
Exp. In Germany. Book tellgall, exposing Museums,
“sty & Country 4 vertising Frauds. Hrs. 9-4,6-93 Sun. 8-3
EXHIBITS ARE
Great Missionary Exposition Is Soon
to Open in Baltimore--Native
Life of Distant Places To
Be Pictured.
Baltimore” will be
exposition on a
“The World In
the third Missionary
world-wide scale to be held in the
United States, From October to
November 80, 1912, it will occupy the
Lyrie Theatre and a specially con
struoted hall in Baltimore
Education and inspiration are the
objects of the exposition It
been organized and is under the man
agement of committees of Baltimore
men of the highest standing and repu
tation, who have provided a guaran
tee fund of more than $50,000 to fi-
9
«0
has |
SHOWN
FROM MANY CLIMES
be little shops and rooms from Japan
ese houses,
The China scene will have its tall
central Pagoda, its temple shrines
and itg native homes. In Korea there
will be a farmhouse and other build
ings, with a peculiar wayside shrine
and a devil post. Then there will be
lan India village, made up of a Kall
[ Temple and a Bengali Zenapma, a ba
| zaar of shops, the Towers of Silence
and a Monkey Shrine. An African
village will have its huts, native
blacksmith shop, schoolhouse and
| granary In the section devoted
which visitors
may through the Damascus
gate, there will be a rich man’s house,
a Bethany home, a Turkish Khan and
a Bedouin tent, Houses which you
| would see if you visited Arabia and
Mohammedan lands,
enter
i
Kd
oy
Lu om
to |
PAGODA IN CHINA, “THE WORLD IN BALTIMORE.”
nance the exposition. It is hoped that | Persia, with the kind of shops you
the admission fee, which the visitor | would find in a Turkish city, will also
will be asked to pay, will enable 8’, | be a part of this section of the ex-
expenses to be met, and any money | position.
advanced by the guarantors to be re- One part of the Exposition will be
paid. Should a profit remain after.| filled with sections and scenes repre-
this has been done, it will be turned | senting Christian Missions in all
over to the Missionary Education | parts of the United States. The vis-
Movement for the extension of mis- | itors will first enter a large space
sionary education. The great mis- | where there will be represented the
sionary boards and societies are sup- | life of the American indian and the
porting the exposition through the | Eskimo of Alaska and the results of
Missionary Education Movement. Christian work among them. The
The exposition will demonstrate to | scene will have all of the character-
the eye, by providing beautiful, artis- | istics of a large encampment of In-
tic things to see, the scenery of all | dians in the northwest Another im-
lands where the work of Christian | portant department of Home Missions
missions is being carried on, the life | will be illustrated in the Frontier
of the people of these lands, their | scene. Visitors will be surrounded by
native religions and their needs from | views of prairies amd mountains.
both a humanitarian and religious One of the most interesting sec-
point of view. tions will be that devoted to work
Life-like scenery will surround each | among immigrants at the Ellis “sland
gcene and section, enclosing groups | Immigration Station, New Yorg Har-
of buildings copied from the charac- | bor. Splendid results in th. Ph
teristic town or village structure of | pines, and in Hawa Porto tico and
each land. The first sensation of visi- | Cuba, of developing the religious life
tors will be the recognition that be- | of the people, will also be illustrated
fore their eyes is a feast of color and | in a most interesti: way.
8 spectacle such as rarely meets the | Populating all the scenes, both of
gaze of the untraveled American. In | the foreign lands and the home land,
one part of the hall, to be called the | impersonating the natives of every
“Hall of Nations,” will be located the | country, interpreting to visitors the
sections devoted to foreign nations. | meaning of everything they may see,
As the visitor enters, before him will | will be an army of 5,000 steward:
be a Japanese scene of peculiar | from churches of Baltimore. These
beauty. From the beautiful temple | will be prepared to answer the ques-
garden of Japan you can step into a | tions of visitors by weeks of study
walled Chinese ity and then walk | from appropriate textbooks Nearly
through a Korean village street. Onty | all will wear the costume of the scene
a little imagination is needed to make | tc which they are assigned, and they
you feel you are trave g in the | will serve in relay so that at all
Orient. The Japanese e will be | ti s there will be a sufficient num
dominated by a Buddhist temple with [.ber on duty to give life, character
the Torii arch before it. There wilt | ana color to the exposition.
A
i
ISSIONARIES
WILL PARTICIPATE
SIXTY
A large number of leading
aries from all parts of the w
to be in Baltimore during “Th
in Exposit wl
be ber 25 to ve
They wiil take a prominen
Africa Scene, “The World in Balti-
more Exposition.
life of the
expected
having
exposition. = Many of
are veterans in the
spent the larger part
of their lives in foreign countries.
the
those
service,
Log House, Frontier Scene, “The
World In Baltimore.”
{and mann : lone val
| uable work in th of coun
| tries where they have been stationed,
| while others, fulfilling ex-officio the
[duties of ambassadors, have given
{ valuable assistance to the United
| States government and also to our
{ citizens traveling abroad.
While in Baltimore they will be on
duty at Exposition Hall, in the de-
partments which are representative
ot -the countries from which they
come. Their duties will consist of
giving information to visitors aud in
structing the stewards of the expo
gition in their work. Short addresses
by the missionaries will be given
daily upon interesting subjects bear
ing upon foreign life and conditions
of which they are recognized au
thority.
INpia is filled with wayside shrines
Among them are noted authors of
works descriptive of the foreign life
¥ $100 Reward, $100
The readers of this paper will ol
pleased to learn that there is at least one
dreaded disease that science has been
able to cure in all its stages, and that is
Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only |
positive cure now known to the medical
fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional |
disease, requires a constitutional treat- |
ment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken in-
ternally, acting directly upon the blood |
and mucous surfaces of the system, there- |
by destroying the foundation of the dis- |
case, and giving the patient strength by |
building up the constitution and assisting |
nature in doing its work. The proprietors
have so much faith in its curative pow-
ers that they offer One Hundred Dollars
for any case that it fails to cure. Send
for list of testimonials,
Address F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, Ohio.
Sold by all Druggists, Tse.
Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation.
|
}
and one of them will be shown at
“The World in Baltimore.”
Public Sale of Furniture
Saturday, Oct. 19, Mr. D. H.
will dispose of a large lot of
furniture at his warerooms
W. Main street, in this place at pub
He will sell parlor suits,
Bedroom suits, Springs, Mattresses,
Iron and Brass Bedsteads, Cribs,
Cradles, Dining Room Chairs, Side-
Boards, China Closets, etc., ete. 2t
— Eee
Subscribe for the Mt. Joy Bulletin
Read the Bulletin
On
Engle
new on
lic sale,
“
ROPOSED AMENDMENTS TO THE
CONSTITUTION SUBMITTED TO
THE CITIZENS OF THIS COMMON.
WEALTH FOR THEIR APPROVAL OR
REJECTION, BY THE GENERAL AS- |
| BEMBLY OF THE COMMONWEALTH
OF PENNSYLVANIA, AND PUBLISH
ED BY ORDER OF THE SECRETARY
OF THE COMMONWEALTH, IN PUR-
BUANCE OF ARTICLE XVIII OF THR
CONSTITUTION
Number One.
A JOINT RESOLUTION
Proposing an amendment to article nine,
section four, of the Constitution of the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, author-
izing the State to Issue bonds to the
amount of Afty millions of dollars for
the Improvement of the highways of the
Commonwealth
and House of Representatives of the Come
monwealth &f Pennsylvania in General
Assembly met, That the following amend-
| ment to the Constitution of the Common-
| wealth of Peansylvania be, and the same
Is hereby, proposed, 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 except to sup-
ply casual deficiencies of revenue, repel
Invasion, suppress insurrection, defend the
State In war, or to pay exlsting debt; and
the debt created to supply deficiency In
revenue shall never exceed, in the aggre-
gate at any one time, one million of dol-
lars,” 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 deflelencies of revenue, repel inva-
8ion, suppress insurrection, defend the
State In war, or to pay existing debt; ar d |
the debt created to supply deficiencies in |
revenue shall never exceed, in the aggre- |
gate at any one thne, one million of dol- |
lars: Provided, however, That the General |
Assembly, irrespective of any debt, may |
authorize the State to issue bonds to the
amount of fifty millions of doMars for the |
purpose of improving and rebuilding the
highways of the Commonwealth.
A true copy of Joint Resolution No. L
ROBERT McAFER,
Secretary of the Commonwealth.
State
Number Two.
A JOINT RESOLUTION |
Proposing an amendment to section sev-
en, article three of the Constitution of |
Pennsylvania, so as to permit special |
legislation regulating labor.
Section 1.
and House of Re
Commonwealth of
8
presentatives of the |
:unsylvania in Gen- |
I
eral Assembly met, That the following 1s |
propused as an amendment to the Con- |
stitution of the Cor mwealth of Penn- |
sylvania, in acc e with the provl- |
slons of the enth article thereof
Amendment to Article Three, Section |
Seven, |
Bection 2. Amend section seven, article
three of the Constitution of Pennsylvania, |
which reads as follows:— |
“Section 7. The General Assembly shall
not pass any local or special law author- |
izing the creation, extension, or impalr- |
ing of liens:
“Regulating the affairs of counties,
cities, townships, wards, boroughs, or |
school districts |
“Changing the names of persons or |
place |
“Changing the venue in civil or crim- |
inal cases |
“Authorizing the laying out, opening,
altering, or maint
streets or alley
“Relating to ferries or bridges, or in- |
corporating ferry or bridge companies, |
except for the erection of bridges cross- |
ing streams which form boundaries be-
tween this d any other State:
tining roads, highways, {
s
“Vacating roads, town plats, streets or |
alleys |
“Relating to cemeteries, graveyards, or |
public grounds not of the State:
“Auth i the adoption or legitima-
tion of n
“Locating or changing county-seats, |
Ing new counties, or changing county |
ties, towns, or villages,
charters:
y and conducting of |
or changing the place |
ng
hips or boroughs,
cha h lines, borough limits
or listricts
. t fices, or prescribing the
po an s of officers in counties,
efti townships, election or
Changing e law of descent or succes-
e practice or jurisdiction
les of evidence in, |
or Inquiry before
s of the peace
arbitrators, au
ery, or other tri-
r changing methods
bts, or the enforc-
ribing the effect |
l estate:
or extending the |
men, justices of |
constables: |
1 ent of public
repairing of school |
g of money for such
powers and
the peac 1
‘Re
schools,
1
d |
» of Interest:
minors or per- |
ay ept after due no
1 est, to be recited |
le z fin penalties and forgel- |
ture r moneys legally paid |
into t
“Exempt perty from taxation
““Regulatir bor, trad nining or man
ufacturir
)rpora-
the right to |
ual
ene ssembly indi
local law by
law; but
acts may
{a}
pecial
8
ase where
and privile
passed grantin
AT
g
tion to
gran
shall
iuthoriz
airing ot
r imp
of counties, cities
, or school dis
ons or places
Ch: g th 1 il or criminal
cases:
Authorizing the it, opening, al-
tering, or ads, highways,
streets or ¢ |
Relati t bridges, or incor
porating ferr companies, ex-
cept for the ere bridges crossing |
streams which form boundaries between |
this and any other State: |
Vacating roads, town
alleys:
Relating to cemeteries, graveyards,
public grounds not of the State.
Authorizing the adoption, or legitima- |
tion of children:
Locating or changing county-seats, |
erecting new counties or changing eeanty |
Unes: |
r
tion of
plats, streets or
or
Incorporating cities, towns or villages, |
By changing their charters:
Saves Leg of Boy
“It seemed that my 14-year old
boy would have to lose his leg, on |
account of an ugly ulcer, caused by |
a bad bruise,” wrote D. F. Howard. |
Aquone, N. C. “All remedies and |
doctors treatment failed till we tried |
Bucklen’s Arnica Salve, and cured |
him wih one box.” Cures burns,|
boils, skin eruptions, piles. 25c at]
S. B. Bernhart & Co's.
——— DG ee.
Subscribe for the Mt. Joy Bulletin.
|
| eral
| of Represent
| amendment to the
I,
For the opening and conducting of eleo-
tions, or fiking or changing the place of
Young
Granting divorces
Erecting new townships
changing township lines,
or school districts
Creating offices
or boroughs,
borough
or prescribing the pow-
ers and duties of officers In counties,
elites, boroughs, townships, election or
school districts
Changing the law of descent or sue-
cession
Regulating the
of, or changing the rules of evidence in,
any judicial proceeding or inquiry before
courts, aldermen, Justices of the peaee,
sheriffs, commissioners, arbitrators, au-
ditors, masters in chancery or other tri-
bunals, or providing or changing methods
for the collection of debts, or the en-
effect of judicial sales of real estate:
Regulating the fees, or extending the
powers and duties of aldermen, justices
of the peace, magistrates or constables:
Regulating the management of public
schools, the building or repairing of
school houses and the ralsing of money
for such purposes
Fixing the rate of interest:
Affecting the estates of minors or per-
sons under disability, except after due
notice to all parties in interest, to be re-
cited in the special enactment:
Remitting fines, penalties and forfel-
tures, or refunding moneys legally paid
into the treasury
Exempting property from taxation:
Regulating labor, trade, mining or man-
ufacturing; but the
ulate and fix the wages
hours of work or la and make provi-
glon for the protection, welfare and safety
of persons employed by the State, or by
any county, city, borough, town, town-
ship, school district, village, or other civil
division of the State, or by any contractor
or sub-contractor performing work, labor
or services for the State, or for any coun-
or salaries,
’"
ty, city, borough, toy township, school
district, village or other eclvil division
thereof:
Creating corporations, or amending, re-
newing or extending the charters thereof:
Granting to any corporation, association
or individual any special or exclusive
privilege or immunity, or to any corpora-
tion, association, or individual the right to
lay down a railroad traek:
Nor shall the General Assembly Indi-
rectly enact such special or local law by
the partial repeal of a general law; but
laws repealing local or special acts may
be passed:
Nor shall
any law be passed granting
Je It resolved by the Senate | powers or privileges in any case where |
the granting of such powers and priv-
{leg shall have been provided
general law, nor where the courts have
®
practice or furisdiction |
limits |A0Y
\ H
Wednesday, October 16, 1912,
ARTIOLE IX
Section 15. No obligations which
have been heretofore Issued, or
which may hereafter be issued, by
county or municipality, other
than Philadelphia, to provide for
the construction or acquisition of
waterworks, subways, underground
railways or street railways, or the
appurtenances thereof, shall be con
sidered as a debt of a municipality
| within the meaning of section eight
Bectlon 1 Be It resolved by the Senate forcing of judgments, or prescribing the |
|
{of article nine of the Constitution
of Pennsylvania or of this amend-
| ment, if the net revenue derived
from said property for a period of
five years, either hefore or after the
acquisition thereof, or, where the
same is constructed by the county
or municipality, after the compile
| tiom thereof, shall have been sul
client to pay interest and sinking
fund charges during said period up-
on said obligations, or if the said
obligations shall be secured by liens
upon the respective properties, and
shall impose no municipal liability.
Where municipalities of counties
shall issue obligations to provide
for the construction of property, as
herein provided, said municipalities
or counties may also issue obliga-
tions to provide for the interest and
inking fund charges accruing
thereon until said properties shall
have been completed and in opera-
tion for a period of one vear: and
said municipalities and counties
shall not be required to levy a tax
to pay said interest and sinking-
fund charges, as required by section
ten of article nine of the Constitu-
tion of Pennsylvania until after said
properties shall have been operated
by said counties or municipalities
for by |
during said period of one year. Any
of the said municipalities or counties
may incur indebtedness in excess
of seven per centum, and not ex-
ceeding ten per centum, of the as-
sessed valuation of the taxable
property therein, if said increase of
indebtedness shall have been as-
i sented to by three-fifths of the elec-
tors voting at a public election, in
such manner as shall be provided
by law.
A true copy of Joint Resolution
No. 5.
Jurisdiction to grant the same or give the
relief asked for.
A true copy of Joint Resolution No. 2
ROBERT McAFEE,
Secretary of the Commonwealth.
Number Three.
. A CONCURRENT RESOLUTION.
Proposing an amendment to section three
of article eight of the Constitution of
Pennsylvania,
Section 1. Be it resolved by the House
of BPepresentatives of the Commonwealth
of Pennsylvania (if the Senate concur),
That the following is proposed
amendment to the Constitution
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,
cordance with the provisions of the eight-
eenth article thereof: —
Section 2. Amend section three of arti-
cle eight, which reads as follows: “All
Judges elected by the electors of the State
of the
at large may be elected at either a gen- |
or municipal as circum-
stances may require.
judges of the courts for the several judi-
cial districts, and for county, city, ward,
borough, and township officers, for regu-
lar terms of service, shall be held on the
election,
s
| municipal election day; namely, the Tues-
day xt following the first Monday of
November in each odd-numbered year, but
the ( eral Assembly may by law fix a
different day, two-thirds of all the mem-
bers of e 1 House conmsenting thereto:
Provided hat such elections shall al
ways be held in an odd-numbered year,’
80 as to read:
Section 3. All judges elected by the
electors of the State at large may be
elected at either a general or municipal
| election, s circumstances may require
All elect 5 for judges of the courts for
the sev judicial districts, and for
county, , ward, borough, and town-
ship offic for regular terms of service,
the
municipal election
‘uesday next following
shall be
d
ay;
the of November in each
odd-nur ", but the General As
sembly fix a different day,
two-thirds of Il the members of each
House consenting thereto: Provided, That
such electior | be held in an odd- |
numbered y Provided further, That
| all judges f¢ e cou of the several |
Judicial dist holdir office at the
present time e terms of office may
end in an odd ibered year, shall con
tinue to hold ir offices until the first |
Monday of Ja ry in the next succeed
ing even-nun ear |
A true copy of Concurrent Resolution |
No. &
ROBERT McAFEE,
Secretary of the Commonwealth
Number Four
A JOINT RESOLUTION
Proposing an a ndment to section one
of article ( tion of
Per Ivani
Section 1. 1 nate
and House of Re nta f (
{ monwealth of Per 1
As: y met, f
poszd us an a idment to
tion of the Comm
vania, in a
of the eig
Sect A
ticle
var A
th
82 A I
tori: its yi
tax
under r
semt a
fr tic
pul
Ww 1
ritor S :
he t a : :
under g
tax I be
of gS ¢ 2
but the General A
eral laws, exempt f tax
pr 1 for i I actual
places of religi 5 1068 of
butial not 1 of i ate or
corporate [| d institutions of pure
| ly public
A true c utd No. 4.
McAFERE
mmonwealth
imber
A JOINT
Proposing an amendment to the Constitu- |
tion of Pennsylvania. {
Be it resolved by the Senate and House
tives of the Commonwealth
of Pennsylvania in General Assembly met,
That the following is proposed as an
Constitution of Penn-
sylvania, in accordance with the provi-
sions of the eighteenth article thereof: —
Five.
RESOLUTION
&uas. Bf. ZELLER
REAL ESTATE AND
INSURANCE
E. Main St, Mount Joy |
alling and Clerking of Public Sales
Settlement of Estates.
Collection of Rents.
Surveying and Convevancing.
Advertise In the Mt. Joy Bulletin
' East Main St,
as an |
in ac- |
|
|
|
All the elections for |
ROBERT McAFEE,
Secretary of the Commonwealth,
GO TO
W.B.BENDER
Mount Joy, Pa..
FOR A '
GOOD SHAVE
STYLISH HAIR-CUT
REFRESHING SHAMPOO
or anything in the Barber Line.
TAKE ALONG A
IT WILL ADD TO THE VACATION
FUN OF ALL THE FAMILY
take good pictures
with a Brownie Camera.
Brownies, $1.00 to $12.00
The two best sellers are the $3.00
and $7.00.
Anybody can
|T also carry as a side line
Camera and Photo Supplies
| Agen: for Standard Steam Laundry.
Oh mr ——
1s
Lea rful
feed fr Y Book.
Worth a d I . We
furnish it to you free,
Brandt &Stehman
MOUNT JOY, PENNA.
BONE
MEAL
for Fertilizer
Hafleigh & Co.
Philadelphia