4 aving the Des earned their 's four were gifts! e Weaver, 2 | Baker, cf .. Hoffman, Cease th 2 0 J. Miller, ss : 0 2 J, Heiserman, Gray, 1 IZABETHTOWN Trayer, p 1 Dif%enderfer, rf .......2 § 0 H. Miller, c 2.2 1 6 0 | Landisville 0051104 0x11 0| Lancaster .. 232100000—8 Two-base hit, Johns. Sacrifice 4 hit, V. Ault. Stolen bases, Graham, | Locker 2; Johns 2; Carr, Pool 2; | Waltman. Double plays, J. Miller MOUNT JOY | unassisted. Struck out, by Walters Porad, % I: “by Carr 5 by Teayer 9. Base on Kchock, j balls, off Walters 2; off Carr 2 Markley, Stand, eam, i out, hit by batted ball. Lutheran—Evangelical at best last Evans Roy Walters was his Thursday evening and all the delivery was two sacker batted ont both coulds get his nits, Totals Score E’'town WATT aid SH Corner Squs=re and E. Kin 1.30 EAC For Meii's $12.00 to $20.00 Suits That's the price of a stylish summer Suit to the men of caster shrewd enough to take advantage of a good thing. Models for young men and men. All sizes. Every Suit is a Watt & Shand Suit, from our own fine, regu- stocks, which bespeaks its style, quality, fit and The assortment is particularly good, and runs Summer's most popular models, and cludes quite a weights for fall wear. close out our surplus stocks. We never from one season to another, so disposal certain. Attractive Muslin Underwear Econmies Values you'll be glad to secure at these little prices: Corset Covers, made of fine Nainsook; lace or linen lace, beading and ribbon, 50c Corset Covers; made of fine Nainsook; lace or embroidery insertion, beading and ribbon: 50c Drawers; made of Muslin or Cambric; trimmed with lace or embroidery; Sale Price, 25¢ 75¢c Gowns; made of Mainsook; low neck and short sleeves; trimmed with lace insertion, beading and ribbon; Sale Price 59¢ Drawer and Skirt Combinations; with embroidery or White Petticoats; made of broidery or lace flounces; Sale Children’s 50c¢ Straw at 15c. Rough Straws w red or black bands; splendid for outdoor play wear. ! $1.00 and $1.25 Hats for children: navy blue; trimmed with Lan- lar character the full range all-wool -and in- This time we merchandise over $7.50 will make of fabrics few is the carry we clean house, their 25¢ trimmed with Sale Price 15¢ trimmed with Sale Price 25¢ Val made of Nainsook: Sale trimmed trim- Price 75¢ with Price, lace; med good cambric: em- 50¢c Hata sols cute ith Milans o ribbons: In Hemps; white, navy Sale Price 50c a VACATIONISTS--- Frege That $30 Dress Trunk in our East Window is cofecteofeofonfeofes? ° being reduced one dollar 7 -y 1 each aay unii soioq Tooke ofc ofsafesfes] Plesfuslectocfasfoulonteedsofecfoefnte Sofoeosoefucforfrefecesfosforfs J #vjoefecforfoeferoforfocfer Soofoefe defo fosfoteofoofeofe ends sfprissforiotedote ile ofortoedr ffosiosfoforforfoedosfenfolefodes ANN Myers Yerr, cf Myers, 15 0:0 2—5 00 0—1 12; on bases, Domble Hit b 290 2 81 by Walters Barr 1. Left | Lutheran 4; Evangelical 2. Funk to Johnston. Walters and Garber. Triple | play: G. Myers to Johnston, to H. | Barr to Funk, Umpire, Snyder. | Lutheran Hvangelieal Struck out: | Leib 2; by i : bv | plays, by | pitcher, Episcopal—Lutheran | The second and postponed | game in the Church League was | played on Monday when the Luther- i ans defeated the Episcopals by a i score of 9 to 3. The former brought [out a “dark horse” in Breneman as a twirler and but three bingles | were made off his delivery. This | win sent the Kern Pets from fourth | to second place and it looks very [ much as though this jas after that pennant. | last Eps.copal i. Brown, W. Ellis, Longeneck Brown, by pitche mpire, Snyde League Standing Ww : 1.000 1.000 500 500 Evangelical iad 2 000 ited Brethren deena 00d .009 [Lutheran dpiscopal reshyterians Church League Schedule 13—Evangelical Episcopal. 18—Presbyterian Lutheran. 20—Bethel Episcopal. 25—Evangelical vs. Presbyterian U. B. Lutheran. U.B Episcopal. VS. VS. VS. 27—Lutheran vs. 1—Bethe] 3—Evangelical 8—Presbyterian VS. VS. vs Postponed Game Monday, Aug. 17 Bethel vs. United Brethren. Diamond Dust postponed game League. and Good team. breaks Another in that Church Funk local The the locals on Saturday. Eilzabethtown would draw they played here again. have both quit were surely against well if Myerstown threw in- t¢ Lititz Saturday $ to 1. The Bethels and Lutherans now running a dead heat for the harpoon are that Something unusual. Every team in the Church League will play next shut out run om Heckinger Marietta Saturday. If Ephrata couldn't Chinks will they We'll see this evening. Schock amd putouts in ing’s for the Lutherans. Honest John was called in as a pinch Saturday and he was right with his bingle too. The Church League games are certainly affording lots of sport and attendance very Keep ’'er up. Jack Milley’s heim of Columbia, without a hit or beat those what do to us? had even- Hendrix Messrs. ] Thursday 1 the game hitter there is Man- lat- play Hortings made Saturday. The The Hortings step some to 1. month. the this season won 3 here this One of seen here stunts fast in fielding was a neatest triple play started Myers day [Looks by G. game. 3rubaker ball and evening's though get- He umpire as is > hig eye last. d a robbed him out of his second. Nearly all places on the at clean single the in this business little The industries That will against the town will close a earlier are also help some. the Chi- Markley Bea and lineup will here last year: include , mes- zabethtown 1er Joe of the Breneman on owd had hitg only 11 Ephrata r its 11% mn ” aggregation | The score: encouraging. | d Steel Stohe is still®awn by hand, even in great cities where the latest appli- ances of the mechanical art are to be found. Yet the mechanical sawing of rock is at least sixteen centuries old, and in recent years has reached a stage of perfection. The idea of using a metal cord and a mixture of sand and water for saw- ing stone was patented by Eugene Chevallier in France in 1854. His ap- paratus, with scarcely any change, was used last year in cutting a trench through the Pont Neuf in Paris. The principle upon which the me- chanical stone-saw works is described by Victor Raynourd in La Science et la Vie as follows: An endless rope composed of three : » : i steel wires twisted together is set in movement and draws with it a grind- ing granular substance, pressing this hard upon one that is to be sawn. The mordant substance is grit mixed with water. The stream of wa- ter renders the movement easy and prevents the heating of the cable. The ends of the cable are joined by splic- ing. The hardest rocks, such as porphyry, are, now sawn more easily than the softer, such as marble, but not so rap- idly, M at the rate nearly nine i from six t the = arble is sawn inches an hour. THREE Excavations Have § e cof Prehis- Vs. Proud, Imperial Race. The Peruy 5 are a proud, ir race, living amid the grandest scenery of the western hemisphere, and hold- ing high ideals of what is best in edu- cation and the unbought grace of life On the great country e there is fine tradition and chival- rous sentiment that came from the best people of Castile and Aragon. The Indians of the high plateaux are a unique reminder of a civilization that bourgeoned centuries before the face of the white man had blossomed like a flower in the western forests. The immemorial records of a civiliza- tion that vanished in the midst of man’s earliest recollections are faintly suggested in splendid ruins of the brilliant scenes. The name and fame of the brilliant men who built the walls and temples of Cuzco are lost, and all we know of the wonder and the charm of that forgotten culture in the Andes is found in the pathetic ruins of cities that are half as old as recorded time.—“The Empire Children of the Sun,” Peter MacQueen, in Na- tional Magazine. much of the Of Course He Did. A Scottish laddie, delivering milk, was stopped the other 'day on round by two police officers, thing in the milk. The officers, thinking they clear case of adulteration, offered the boy sixpence if he would tell them | what was put in it. “Ah,” said the boy, with a grin, “ye wadna gie’s the saxpence trough I tell't ye?” “Oh, yes, we will,” said the officers. “Gie’s it, then!” said the little fel- low. with the question: “Now, what does your employer put in the milk?” “Why,” sald the boy, with a cunning ' smile, “he puts the measure in every time he tak’s any oot!” Far From Barracks. A minister one day got into conver- sation with an Trish soldier who hap- pened to be stationed in Liverpool, and of whom he asked several ques- tions as to what regiment he was in, and so forth. Ultimately Pat thought ft was his time to ask a few questions. aid he, ‘1d to know like 3?” “I'm a soldier, too,” | “And what regi- where is it sta- ister, pointing to- “My regiment is man,” replied Pat, r from the bar- Only in this forme thirty men game, V games Jap Doremus Walters who r pitched and who is now for twirling Lancaster Independents, 5 t in the game That’s that. box Landisville on Saturday. 1 luck, Roy, but of pitchers get don’t mind best theirs ——— A — Joy’s Best Paper—Bulletin, Joy's Best Paper—DBulletin, Joy's Best Paper—Bulletin, of hour, granite at | | enamel of the teeth. THOUSAND YEARS OLD | . — | STOPPED Revealed Ancient | his | who | asked him if his employers put any- | | sitting “Oh, aye!” was the innocent answer. | when she fell from it, dying. had a | The sixpence was duly handed over, | tin a | Hawkins,” writes e Good Advice THat Vii! Toad to Save Many Extya Trig: { the Deytist. It is most unpleasant v ien teeth move because they are ! use in the gun sockets, but if the ruth is well washed out three times a day with bicarbonate of soda dissolved in warm water the gums harden and the teeth become firm again. Finely-powdered charcoal is supreme for making the teeth a gleaming white, and keeping the mouth sweet. The charcoal, too, renders innpcuous any decaying pieces of embedded food in the crevices. Teetn which from any cause—smok- ing, neglect, medicine, etc.—are in a very bad, black state should be cleaned with powered crttlefish, ob- tainable at a che: -*'s This should be used three timcs daily until the teeth are clean, and then no more. After that, any good dentifrice. Few know that sage leaves are most excallent for the teeth. The leaf can be rubbed on, or chopped very fine | and used with a brush. The effect is astonishing. * A little lemon juice is another good | it needs to be | tooth tonic, though used but occasionally. In default of tooth powder, common | soot—or either | The | salt mixed with fine of these alone—is quite good. soot makes the teeth wonderfully white, and the salt not only hardens the but puts a glitter on the gums, RT hi THE WHISTLE Hand-Organ People Obeyed Order, Police- and yard man’s Led the P raised policeman lips again, and in- t as of their e the rs: do, their outfit and They were off, wi trucks and wagons, alre following —New York T ri ari d at the started in rolling imes. About the Bottle Tree. The Sterculias is a genus represented in Queensland, and wide ly distributed. To it belongs the bot: tle tree of the west of Queensland Blacks eat the seeds of species of the coast, and in the Phil ippines those of apparently a closely ! are considered whole: | allied species some when roasted or boiled, though eaten in large quantities. The tree belongs to a good family, being re lated to the Theobroma (food of the gods), which supplies the world with | cocoa and chocolate. When the fruit splits open it is a brilliant scarlet, with an orange-tinted interior; along the parted edges are the seeds, i oval and black, covered with a rich purple bloom. The fruit, being tough and leathery, fective display in the gloem of the jungle.—T. P.'s Weekly. Identified by Dog. curly haired dog, by his grief, led to the identification of a Cleveland woman, who died in an ambulance en route to a hospital after she had collapsed from heart disease in a restaurant. He had accompanied her and was expectantly beside her chair Jump- ing up he tried to lick her hands. Then the animal endeavored to fol- low the ambulance, but was dis- tanced, and turned back whimpering. A policeman followed the dog to Chester avenue and found the home of the woman who had died who lat- er was identified solely through the faithfulness of her dog. little No Fresh Air for Him. No doctor would ever have made Lord Brampton—best remembered as Sir Henry Hawkins—subscribe to the new theory that it is beneficial to sit draft. “Few people had greater objection to fresh air than Mr. J. A. Foote, K. he had a sort of movable sentry box constructed gor his use in court, in order to prevent any possibility of a draft. He onc expressed his preference for suffoca tion rather than chill en the ground that it was a slower death.”—London Chronimse. C. “At one time has been Burglar. “You * said Bill the € ent to night school in de same pen.” ———- Ready for Business artin M Weitman, equipped engine and all kinds reasonable Mr. M of nea: Bacor mill, ‘ha himself up-to-date saw to do of very ve any sawing to a chance. e——————— nent WR Paper—Bulletin. Paper—Bulletin. Paper—DBulletin. ofesferocfocfesfecfasterferteciesd 1 that long line of | dy in motion, largely | one of the | remains on the | tree a long time, forming a most ef | i slocfoolssforfocfosfecfscocfoctecfocieciscfertsctesfoctoriosioniecfecforiesorfostecfecfortestonforfocfecsrioctonfonfosoriecioetoofoofofocionfoofecfoofa mfesfesiocfertorontecfesfucschoefebfesfoofochsefoak wie cioofoofoofococfootorioofeshosjockonfefesfociorionio fe ofecfe defotecfocfoforbrelesieofedoceopcfosiroiecoofo sop bpd ded drip Pd PR of ke ther?” | s was was Mr. Bacon's th rig that threshed.. over 600 §bush of wheat in the time meXtioneq and with only a 22-inch cylinder machine at that. in PY ite Notice is or and caster all Justi e and fles of, ty rapaster, and ¥here in thei sons with "heir rolls aminations. and inqY other remembers things which to t appertain in their behalf and also those who will az. inst the prisoners who shall be, in the jail o county of Lancaster, are and there to prosecu.: ag as shall be just. Dated at Lancaster, Pa day of August A. D, 1914, MILTON E COURT PROCLAMATION Whereas, Honorable Chas. I. Laws - dis, President and Hon. Aaron B. Hass sler, Associate, Judges of the Corr of Common Pleas in and for the tv of Lancaster, and Assistant Just! ces of the Courts of Over an’ Torn ner, and General Jail Delivery am Quarter Sessions of the Peace 'fiand for the County of Lancaster. have is sued their precept. to me directed requiring me, among other things to make public proclamation thru out mv bailiwick, that a Court of Ov ~r and Terminer and a General Jal Delivery, also a Court of the General their those Fodofudoerroeludedodoedoldodode odode dofologo dodo dobdododofododob doped NOTICE: STORE CLOSES DAILY ATS5P.M, EXCEPT FR AT 12 O'CLOCK NOON, SATURDAY EVENING AT 9 OC M. T. GARVIN & COp 31-37 East Hing Street, Lancaster Attractive--Stylish Appa For Women and Children Goole 2a 20. asda Cost Least Now Clothes you'll need the Y Oct Hig Satisfactio kinds of for mainder of the Season, clear into tl Sale measures up to for our we can recommend You OQ Now Z ind juniors embracing the plainer for women, misses heauties stvles trimmed Silk Dresses for Women At $5, $7.50 and $12.50 Instead of $10 and up to $25 Messalineete., are all all colors, including all Silk Suits for Women at $4.95 Instead of 15.00 and up to 20.00 and sizes up to 38; black pretty in sizes. de black, Crepe Chine, Voile, Sale, in navy, and small women’s colorings. WOMEN’S WOOL SUITS That Were 10.00 and up to 25.00; Now 3.95 and 4.95 few black, there are Misses’ of and variety All colors and charming to choose from. WOMEN’S TUB SKIRTS At 50c and to 2.00 Instead of 1.00 and up to 3.95 Including white, natural, and colors; reduced’ Women’s 5.95 and to 15.00 Top Coats At 3.00 and 5.00 Silk, Serge, Mixtures, etc,---in black and coloyg many everyone An Important Announceme Saturday, August 15th We Begin Our Big Annual Of Durable School Clothg Boys and Girls that sta hard wear at prices that are remarkably low. Watch Frid Big Assortments, Big Values, Clothing will City Papers for full particulars. Come in and investigate. ofeofosforfoctsofocforfocfecfocforfosfostoriosfocfefectociocfocerfociorocts Ta TheOnlyfeed Grinder That Grinds Wet Gra _ Without Clogging LU ’ You needn’t have trouble when you comg grind wet feed. We have a line of Feed Grit that will handle it at the same speed 2 SELF-SHARPENING LETZ =ususoe= DEED MI Give Letz Mills a trial and you will never use any kind. They are the fastest-working, easiest-running Feed Grinders made, and cost you least for gasoline. Grind Oat Hulls, Alfalfa, Hay, Corn with Cobs and Husk, Wheat Screenings and all Small Grains fine at a single grinding. Buhrs sharpen themselves. One set grinds 1000 to 3000 bushels. We can furnish you the right size Letz for your engine’s horse- power. See us about it at once. DF recurs a fio, 5 We - ; East JOY, OI § Jistributor MOUNT PENNSYL)
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers