/ PAG FOUR PA LHSOIOOCRIVTOTOOCVOVVTD A | A TT T Se J { ™ i | ‘ \ W AT H/) NG i J YAR Au oJ Vi) Corner S;u=re and E., King sts A A CR I. EA A EAN: © RA A URN AS, MS A lay dale oi Muslinwear That is not only a little price event or a sale of this, that or the other kind of Muslinwear—but a real, live opportunity sale of every kind of Muslin Underwear a woman is likely to need during the summer. See these special values tomorrow: White Skirts, 50c 8-inch embroidered Special These are made of soft muslin, with an flounce; also, a lot of skeleton skirts, with scalloped edges. at 50¢ Extra Size Gowns at 59c¢ Both low and high neck styles, of Nainsook; attractively trim- med with linen lace, and cut wide and roomy. Special at 59¢ 5 Re Extra Size Gowns at 75c High neck gowns, of fine muslin, and low, round neck styles of Nainsook; both models are effectively trimmed with lace and em- broidery. Japanese Embroidered Gowns —made full and wide, of a fine, J soft quality Nainsook; laced slip-over styles a feature; Special 50¢ Drawers at 50c Circular, Nainsook. Regular straight leg styles; Isabellas, Marcella, Bloomer and Knickerbocker; made of Crepe All-white except the bloomers, which can be had in pink, blue or white, Wash Silk Bloomers are in white and black, and can be had at $1.00 Peg-Top Drawers, of Nainsook or Crepe, and are embroidery or Special at $1.00 50 Skirts—with deep flounce, ofvarious s of embroidery; some pointed and wide ribbon, beadiing or plain; Special, $1.00 Of regular 50c quality; with tucked yoke and hemstitched ruffle lace trimmed. 3 Special, 39¢ Gowns Gowns at 3Q¢ are of fine, soft finished muslin ith broad band of embroidery insertion, scalloped or blind patterns ound neck and sleeves; plenty of other styles, in Crepe, Nainsook, mbroidered or lace trimmed. Gowns at gH¢ are also very pretty Crepe, Muslin or Nainsook, and attractively embroidery. Empire effect, » and desirable; made of trimmed with lace or OO OOOOOOSCOOOOOOODTOOOOD NN NRAI RIANA Ne | ome \ “= £111 A) Harvester en- as any machine dozen years or | Not ev t The c Ww do not kn >u when you | Binder Twine write us ior catalog ® T 2 ? * International Harvester Company of America {Incorporated) Harrisburg Pa. Champion Deering McCormick Milwaukee Osborne core memes mr 3O00000000000000000000000O0! RAIN NNRIH II I - I. a 101 01 ONT 1 OT AT KRECKELSI We have never held any so-called “sales.” We are an “old-line” house, our prices were always as low as we could afford to do busi- ness on, so we never got into any “sale” stunts. We now have too many Trunks, over-bought ourselves, more coming, so, Kreckel’'s are going to have a “sale.” We never made a misstatement, and we are not going to now. This is a real sale. Prices are in plain figures, just as they have always been at this store. Here's a sample: $26.50 TRUNKS CUT TO $15.00 TRUNKS CUT $14.00 TRUNKS CUT $13.50 TRUNKS CUT $1200 TRUNKS CUT [11 I with vesnswmssdiie- seers S193 $12.47 $11.25 $10.48 --- $9.65 11 $ 950 TRUNKS CUT TO ...... sttpevieni seers SE 48 $ 850 TRUNKS CUT TO ...... Carries nari R% 00 $7.00. TRUNKS CUT TO .......... a eee $5.35 We keep all Trunks in repair for you one year. During this gale, which wil] last during the month of May, we will give double S. & H. Green Stamps. = We have the largest assortment of Trunks in Lancaster, KR FC K Fl S--on The Square TB IA EE AS SOE ILS ir esa 1 RRR RR 3SFUL PIANO RECITAL | Sy Ee & ~ ' | A s = Barnhart’s Pupils Please] in a Musical Treat { the h al Last pupils of Miss Alice] | pres- Hassinger and Della Lewis; Cunning {Cupid March, Naomi Freymeyer; Dashing Troopers, Harvey Leedom; Duet, Value Caprice, John Booth and Alice Barnhart: Song, Come play Helen Stoll and Naomi Violin Solo, Colleg Harmon; Melody of Love, Goldie Heilig; Duet. Lenwood Waltz, Jean and Walter Younger Set, Barbara Sauders; Vio- lin Solo, Hesitation Waltz, Harold Harmon: Italian Dance, Anna Eshle- man: Under the Orange Blossoms, Erle Baer: Shades of Evening, Jean Wayside Chapel, John Booth; [Under my Loves Window, Naomi Brown: Duet, Isis Intermezzo, Alice |Barnhart and Florence Heilig; Star- [light Waltz, Riba Lions; Dubantne Waltz, John Bear; Morning Prayer, [Della Lewis; The Ruppets, Helen [Stoll: Duet, no Surrender march, %® | Naomi Brown and Alice Barnhart; [orl Springs, Mary Hassinger. eet) eee | ELIZABETHTOWN | | | with me, Freymeyer; Medley, Harold Thome; | Thome; : 1 S ndered in the ce ( 1 la audience, The follow ing program was rendered: Violin Solo, Melody in | Harold Harmon; In the Park, Elizabeth Brown; Duet, Gitanes, Louis Wiley and Alice Barn- | hart; Primrose Waltz, Mary Bicher-| ly: Playing with Kitty, Walter Thome: Shower of Roses, Florence |Heilig: Song, Little Wee-Wee’s, Grace Garber; Duet, L.a Grace, Mary Chas. Kapp and wife announce the |arrival of a young daughter. | Miss Flora Gross of Lancaster, was| the guest of Amos Wenger and fam-| lily this week. | A. G. Longenecker and wife of Pal-| a are the guests of E. A. Fack- rs. J. G. Wilson has returned from relatives and friends at W. Va. ren in Christ will hold lovefeast in the borough | , May 27th and 28th. \ large number of members of ge N 128, 1. 0. O.F. paid a fra-| to the lodge at Manheim | hursday evening. David Stevens and 1 Harry Parthemer and wife of spent the week with J. H. Parthemer and daughter. Dr. A. W. Shultz, physician and | surgeon at the Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Home at Erie, was the guest of Dr. H. K. Blough and family this week. On Memorial Day Chiques park will be formally opened witha publie |dance in the afternoon and evening. [Krodel's orchestra will furnish the music. Fridy of South River South Dakota and John Friday and daugh- |ter Pauline and son Vernon of Barnes { Colorado, are the guests of Amos Fri- day and wife on South Market street. The stores of the borough will ob- ve the summer schedule begin- ning Monday, May 18 by closing 6 p m. until September 15th ex- M cept Saturdays when they will close at 10 p. 1 | William S. Grenoble bi a i In ii ic folk 1 Gretna and will be it 1 S Jordan, i 1 { Virs. A. B i . it : il ch 101d S Bil Y- - ered fil r Cot Historica he Donegal Chapter D i ¢ L Ker N 2 APHO : I 2APHO Hi c € e i 11t i ( e i prix ( i of ¢ ii ’ P £ E ¢ own i LT ch € ' Jno. I elie 0 1per- hd iS( 5 e utting a (crown) on ou 3 Mrs 1 on Miller of n, we Sunday guests in the home of the cor lent rornen Ex School Director . Eby s he likes spreading lime best when its | , +h > me about finished. He’s not the only on the beach. B| pring your eggs to A. S. Hollinger ® to have them hatched in a 240-Prairie peep Or ®m State incubator, at 2c per gf $1.75 per hundred eggs. EP - = Thieves Active at Lawn Thieves succeeded in y more than $100 @ into several homes e in the northern butcher and M. were ransacked by the in nders, who were only tempts were made to enter es of Oscar Flory, freight agent rh burglars were the gained entrance. eel eee LANDISVILLE S000 EO D0 OO 1 A public meeting was held in the f Church God at lay af a | ( < er the ices of the] 4 ( cense League. The meet of Rev. J. 'H charge ng was in Vi llersville State { @ : Ta Th B T a 8 5 and r. George W. Hull Buch's Sons ’ Adveriise =i) <h e : ulletin 5; Mii or re dow DO mashed while at gave an address, {to communicate with each per | ture at Washington, D. C., wife of Clay, | obtaining | station, kind of in cash by breaking|amount of each kind at Lawn, a little have for sale and I shall place your end of the|[name on the “White List,” and try The homes of D. B. Flory, | to connect you with reliable buyers, Haldeman, a black-| who will be anxious to meet you, es- after cash. | fruit. from these places. At-|county will the! 9. It you have Monroe Miller a farmer but the| richtened off before|ment and rice President of the County | FRUIT MEN READ THIS An Open L.etter to Our Local Fruit Growers Our proposition to publish a “white ist of Pennsylvania fruit growers” 1as met with the most cordial ap- proval of the prominent fruit growers and public men, and especially the press of Pennsylvania. I now wish son in Pennsylvania who grows fruits for sale, What I have to say below is for your welfare, and also for that of consumers, and for all citizens in the great state of Penn- sylvania. 1. Learn the needs of your trees and treat them accordingly. See how your nearest successful growers are meeting such troubles as you have. Visit one another and become ac- quainted; exchange ideas and profit by experience. 2. Form a local or county fruit growers’ association, and keep it alive by developing and making use of home talent, Prepare to make an exhibit this fall that will make your county famous for its fine fruits, as it can be and should be. Remember | = that no person takes prizes who does not begin early, and prizes are not! won by haphazard or careless meth- ED decidedly ods. |B 3. Solve the problem of what to @ do with culls by not producing them. a Practice those ' methods that will |= eliminate the culls and give you high a grade fruits. Learn what pests are |: liable to come to each kind, and spray '® to prevent them when preventive 'm sprays will be effective. Write to the | m3 office of the Economic Zoologist, Har- i risburg, for information as fo what to 5 use and when and how. | 4, Do not depend upon statements | made by advertisers or agents or oth- | ® er persons who can not prove them- | selves able to speak from extensive | go practical experience or scientific au- | thority. If you receive circulars of | materials or apparatus do not put | | dependence on them until you com-|*# municate with some reliable sources, | ¥ and obtain furthr information about | sz them, Write to the State Department | 4 of Agriculture at Harrisburg, or the | : | | { State College or State Experiment Station, at State College P. O. or to | * the Federal Department of Agricul- | ® or, better, | @ to all of them. a | Obtain and read the Bulleting is- a sued from each of the three distinct | | sources mentioned above, and sub- = scribe for at least one or two horti-| = | cultural journals that will keep you #4 | abreast of the times. If you have | 3 | worked out some good “stunt,” or | am | have proven some variety to be es- | pecially valuable, give it to your county fruit growers’ association, and see to it that it is published in your local papers. s | 6. Develop your home markets [rather than working for a shipping | market. Advertise locally. This will 1t be one of the greatest fruit years ever known in many parts of Penn- markets Develop sylvania. The shipping [doubtless will be glutted. market, and thus save the shipment, the damage to the home expense of fruits and commission charges. 7. Grade your fruits to uniformity o1 f size and quality in the same pack- 1 0 ge, Mark the or grade, the name of the variety, your name and | , ldress and the weight tated, but | u to do more. Above all else pre-| | an telligent and honest pe I by | o De Oop you home trade and | iq | ur customers | 1 x 1 er that the present law Is |} tain a bushel at least 64 pound pounds and 64 pounds. | A half 1 oe must con- | n atleast one-half of the respective jount of each. A quart must con-j kr n one-thi cribed for a bushel. If your | sa} ckage does not hold a unit, such |fo 5 7 quarter peck, half peck, | bt eck, half bushel or bushel, mark on | bc t the number of pounds it contains and sell it for such aw prevents the selling of a “short |er measure,” like fourteen quart basket, for a half bushel i 3 I you have spray sprayed or intend this spring to your trees for the pests that will fruits and if you will have more fruits of any one or more kinds than you can handle in your local market, once stating | | please write to me at address, fruit and estimated | tr | your name and pecially if you produce first class This “White List” for each be published extensively. pests or desire to the line of pest manage- ask questions along suppression, horticultural related subjects, write di- rectly to the office of the Economic | Zoologist, Department of Agriculture, | Harrisburg, alwags sending samples { with inquiries. Respectfully, H. A. SURFACE, Economic Zoologist. met » 1 of pests | Fingers Mashed Henry Kaylor, an employe of A. a Dlizabethtown, had | work last week. serted here for any length of time, provided we This is excellent advertising because uotice such surely bring the buyers: Keller & Bro. n Marietta street, quinces and | quet. WHY MOUNT JOY second of the amount| know this much; when we amount. This |of Mount Joy business are advertis- rs in the Bulletin. damage Your|io your De and young, are diseases as shipping | colds and germs. To diseases. and should be in constant use. E 3 : Q 0 2 Drug 1000 RR May 20, 1914 & 8 Hii { Qur Competitor _ We don't know what competition will say in answer to this unusual time competition has been asked to make such a compraison with so remarkable a a price. So far as we are concerned, we don't much care what they say. We are building ears proposition comes out, This warning is net the result how to meet the other man’s dealers and owners. When a proposition is as many sales to us because the dealer or merit, at such a abuse and crit Remember that the only comp competition is a compliment. Ask ¢ ists that difference in price between a Rireems 0 rR EE EEE Bm SALE REGISTER : A FREE notice of your sale is in ERR HY LE print your sale bills. is read by so many people and a as the following will Friday, May 22—At their stock ‘ds in Mount Joy, 51 head of cows, 4 fers, bulls, shoats etc, by J. B. i] Aldinger, auct. “3 Saturday, May 23—At his stables 4 Mt. Joy, 25 head i# acclimated horses consisting of all 1s of good workers, drivers, etc. Iso some fine colts by Mr. Ed Ream. | 3 1 , auct. sday, May 26—At sidence late Mary A. ¢ corner | 4 and New Haven stre Mt. | a large lot of household goods | Messrs. Harry N. Nissley and Dav. H. Engle, executors. Z auct. | I lay, Ma -A \ I I 1 able J ad of h cows anc I { head | 4 hoats by C. S 1 linn — ——l Oe —— SHOULD ADVERTISE BULLETIN | 74 Abraham Lincoln said: “I do not yow much about the t e buy goods road we get the goods and the|d reigner gets the money; when we 1y goods made at home, we get|3 yth the goods and the money.” Those who get the “ lion’s share” BERGE Chickens well as attention Chickens Nothing pays so chickens. Because of ex- sure to climatic changes fowls, old susceptable to such gapes, roup, cholera, prevent these their oubles keep constantly in I that you will drinking water. for our dealers and their people; not for com petition. competition generally warns both deale:s and buyers to stay : fine moral standard, but it is the natural fear of not knowing 5 proposition until after they have seem what approval it will find good as the Herff-Breoks propositicn com petition doesn’t mean the loss of owner has only to see the Herff-Brooks to realize that against such must fal] away unnoticed. we will have is cars costing from ion the price of his car; then make him he has to offer you and the Her ff-Brooks ¢ 3 TONER advertisement. It's the first When $1,750 to car at so remarkable so unusual & vway from it. from most $2,000 and that prove that there ex- at $1,375 wn Special Pickup of Suits Worth $18 To Go at $15 #~%. OING RIGHT on to the floor of a JB facturer, we made a virtual Spring stock at a figure that permits us be regular $18 Suits at the att $15. They were made up to sell at $18 : ng the entire line, we price that “lets us out” at $15. Some run six suits to In every pattern, igh as twelve or fifteen. FROM OUR LONG experience in C the figure at which these § more than the mere cost of materials and we have added a small, legitimate profit SAVING which we effected by enterprisin ods and getting in on the ground floor for a COMES STRAIGHT BACK TO YOU-—an want it most, 0 SOAP, WATCH FOR THE GREATER GROFF & WOLF STORE. Groff & Wolf Co. 26-28 North Queen Street LANCASTER, PENNA LANCASTER'S FASTEST GROWING STORE Of course, we cannot promise a compl New York manu- 4 So l¢ t, and a few 5 hougl them all at a £ E ¥ [+ is 3 ange of sizes 8 pattern some q i $ 3 ng, we Know A a represents no making, To this SO THAT THB g business meth- rea] bargain d just when. you Chicken Cholera Remedy for Cholera, Gapes and other poultry This is a splendid tonic up in pint bottle for 25c. For Sale at Chandler's West Main Street, Mount Joy, Pa. Sunday Hours, 8 to 9 A. M. Sunday Hours 5 to 7 P. M - p—— DOOODOD0O0O00O0DOOOLOLLIOOOLIIINIAIOIOGOOOOLOOOOOOOOCOOOOON Unsual Wall Papers the attractiveness of our WALL the service rendered. thankful that our business has stea t we realize that we can only continue to grow by serving our patrons better OOOO OCOOOONIININII DE) live our growth depends on two things PA PERS and While we are pleased and :ach day if possible. BRINKM AN 28-30 EAST ORANGE STREET Thirty Years in Business 5% dily increased DOOGOOOCCO000000O0000ON00000OOOOONN ROOO0000000000000E srs —— —t 3 i g
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers