The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, May 26, 1915, Image 4

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? ® ! ] i 1!
Have All Gone Since Taking
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg-
etable C ompound.

in sides, and press-
ing down pe

Since I have taken
had no appetite.
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- |
pound the aches and pains are all gone
and I feel like a new woman.
raise your medicine too highly.”’—Mrs. |
ghly
AvucusTtus Lyon, Terre Hill, Pa.
It is true that nature and a woman’s
work has produced the grandest remedy |
for woman’s ills that the world has
ever known. From the roots and
herbs of the field, Lydia E. Pinkham,
forty years ago, gave to womankind
a remedy for their peculiar ills which |
has proved more efficacious than any
other combination of drugs ever com-
pounded, and today Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound is recognized
from coast to coast as the standard
remedy for woman's ill
In the Pinkham Laboratory at Lynn,
Mass., are files containing hundreds of
thousands of letters from women seek-
ing health — many of them openly state
over their own signatures that they have
regained their health by taking Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound;
S
and in some cases that it has saved them |
from surgical operations.

RAMSEY'S CORNER
Mr. Martin Ramsey of York, spent





Thursday at Charles Frank's.
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Derr spent a
short time at Frank Felty's on Sun-
day.
Mr. Clayton Farmer of Pennsyl-
vania College, Gettysburg, spent Sun-
day at his home
Misses Dora and Melva Good and
brother Ralph. attended church at
Risser’'s on Sunday
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Landvater and
family spent Sunday Florin as the
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob LL.and-
vater, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Hershey and
daughter Sarah and Mr. Elmer
Jrandt a business trip to Mt
Joy on y
Mr. ar Mrs Christian 3randt,
Misses Annie Li Brandt and
Ellsworth Bz spent Thursday at
the home of Chas Welchans
Middletown
EP ———
Hand Mangled
Last Wednesday afternoon Lloyd
Kautz, aged 24, an employe of A.
Buch’s Sons Co. while at work at
a spoke machine had his right hand
caught and badly mangled. The in-
dex finger wag cut off and two
others severely injured. He was
taken to the office of Dr. Vere
Treichler, where his injuries were
dressed. He suffers considerable
pain and will be off duty for some
time,
CHARTER NOTICE
Notice is hereby given than an ap-
plication will be made to the Govern-
or of the State of Pennsylvania, on
Friday, June 4, 1915, by John A.|
Bachman, J. N. Hershey, J. T. Snoy-
der and H. H. Engle, under the Act!
of Assembly of the Commonwealth
of Pennsylvania, entitled “An act to
provide for the incorporation and
regulation of certain corporations,”
approved April 29, 1874, and the sup-
plements thereto, for the charter of
an intended corporation, to be called
Bachman Chocolate Manufacturing
Company the character and object of
which is the purchasing, manufactur-
‘ing, preparing for market, marketing,
buying, selling,
dealing, in and with cocoa, chocolate,
cocoa-butter, candy, sugar, Syrup,
fruits, nuts and confections of all
kinds, and the raw materials from
which they are made, and the pro-
ducts whatsoever used in their manu-|
facturing and all materials, supplies
and other articles necessary Or con- |
connection with |
and in carrying on the business here-|
part thereof, |
venient for use in
in mentioned or
also buy, sell,
deal in any and all
milk products, and
and preparing for market such milk
any
import, export and
and milk productg in all their various |
forms, and for these purposes te |
have, possess and enjoy all the
rights, benefits and privileges, of the
said Act of Assembly and its supple-
ments.
H. EDGAR BARNES,
JOHN A. HIPPLE,
Solicitors.
5600000000000
D








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.


could not sleep and | Thur
I cannot |
exporting, importing, !
kinds of milk, !
manufacturing |
00RR0OREOR®
Hele on Sunda,
Peaches promise fair, cherries











= Y A LES WRITTEN EX-
PRESSLY FOR THE MT. JOY
BULLETIN BY DR. DAVID H.
REEDER OF CHICAGO, ILL.
| good.
| Corn is coming omewhat slowly |
and not very regular.
Mo apple
( io
M 1
’ Geo I
MV \ f ¢
S 8 16
M \ V Vrs Vi
a S 1 (
D
1 M Ss co He Wtend
he f & S
| the
€ € De
Re 1 l eeting of the
Aux y e General Hospital at
¢ In Mrs Philip Metz
| Wednes June 2
1 Comn ol 1d baptismal services
in the M. E ( rch by the Pastor
(Rev. E. H \ker next Sunday morn-
ing «¢ 0: 3¢( Come 1d welcome.
|
| We have an i 1 in our com-
though tough with
| munity
|

who we really believe

1Imost old
woman

ny


|
{ who st
0 os he
Wi 1is neighbor, have
| vou The village doctor
|
| drawled no couple days more rain
[youd suit me When pressed for a
| reason a leaky cictern was the reply.
| Mr. and Mrs FS Strickler on
| Sunday entertained her parents, Mr.
| and Mrs. Amos Doerstler, also her
| brothers Amos. Jr, and wife and
| Howard ana wife and two children
all of Centra] Manor




Mr, Howard Peifer is now deliver-
ing milk to the Sanitary Milk Co.
[.ancaster. He covers quite a large
route and is in shape to take in
more of the Lacteal fluid should
| other parties desire to avail them-
lves of the opportunity
Mr. and Mrs. A. G, Miller of near
Hambr entertained her brothers
{ Ephr Li z, Samuel of Sa-
| lunga. Reuben of Lancaster and
| Blias N. Eby of Petersburg. All had
a very pleasant time. Boyhood
reminiscences were very much enjoy-
| ed by other nwemberg of their fami
‘lies present
{ ee tree
PLEASANT VIEW 3
Correspondent Finds an American

Half Dime Dated 1860
Hostetter Sunday
at Lawn,
Jreneman
31
James spent at
| his home
Mr.
on
Ed visited 1n this
sect
Mi
» had a serious
Mr, and Mrs,
Elizabethtown,
of Oliver
Cora
nd
on Sunday.
s. Annie Ebersole ill, having
Is
rheumatism
He I1S€
Sunday in
attack of
John of
spent the
Hite.
Gruber,
home
Miss
Heisey
Willis
at
Messrs
Bangus called
Joe


the Ci
Mr. C.
cattle
SI
P. FE
Gingrich
and delivered
Miss Stella
proving after
the
rheumatism.
{ Mr. and Mrs.
daughter Ada
Menno ser
Berks
Miss
Gruber
rings on Sunday.
hleman sold his fine
Bros. of Lawn
Saturday.
slowly im-
) the
with


to
same on
Greiner
confined
weeks
is
being tc
house past three
E. Eshleman and
and Mr. and Mrs.
took an spin to
last week.
Miss Gruber, Mrs.
Roy were e€en-
the Eshleman
Sunday.
Gerlach and family, John
| Shonk and family and Mr. and Mrs.
Hiram Ginder entertained in
the Jacob Ginder home on Sunday.
It is rumored that Wm, Kolp of
Willow ordered a
1916 which he
the West next
P,
Ris auto
county
Herr,
and
in
Heisey
tertained B. K.
home on
Daniel
were
Creek farm has
model motorcycle on
contemplates touring
year.
Mr, and Mrs.
| entertained Mr
children
nd Mr,
E.
and
P
Mrs
Alvin,
Joe
Eshleman
Elam Ris
Paul and
Baker, on
ser
and

Florence
| Sunday
Mrs, John Stern
Mrs, Earnest
Alice Pierce
Thursday
Eshleman,
daughter,
and
were
Mrs.
View
and
Harrisburg
of Elizabethtown,
of Mr. and
the Pleasant
of
guests
on
farm.
The
the home
Greiner:
following spent Sunday in
of Mr. and Mrs. N. L
Mr. and Mrs. John Her-
shey and son. Miss Fannie Good.
Miss Anna Good and the Messrs.
Jacob Brandt and Amos Keener,
| Some time ago the P. V. corres-
pondent found under some stones,
a coin much resembling a 10-cent
| piece, only not quite as large. A
few days ago the tarnish was
polished off, and it was discovered
that was an American half
dime 1860. The lettering and
quite plain.
the coin
dated
figures are
- eel fiers
Where, O Where Can He Be?
Clayton well known
farmer the Dunkard
home, Neffsville, is among the miss-
Monday. The last
was that morning
he left home, saying he was
going to see a doctor.
ntl, CR ————
Deeds Recorded
J. N. Hershey B. H. Engle,
{tract of land in East Donegal, $300.
H. Hershey to E. H. Engle
3 acres and 110 perches of land in
Donegal, $15,000.
ree -—
Gantz, a
living near
since last
of him
| ing
seen
when
to
Lizzie
1:
East

Mt. Joy's Best Paper—Bulletin.
Subscribe for the Mt. Joy Bulletin

Dyspepsia: A term that has many
meanings, depending upon the per-
on using 1t, Faulty or imperfect
digestion of food would be the
commonest and simplest meaning,
I have heard of mental dyspep-
tics, people who could not digest or
assimilate the simplest nforma-
on 0 people tha had read sO
mal boo that they were surfeit-
ed, just as one may eat too much
ind no longer enjoys food nor can
he assimilate or digest it.
In most cases the primary cause
lies in improper mastication, bolting
the food as some call it. In some
cases of this kind the partly chewed
food is washed into the stomach
with tea. coffee or other unneces-
gsarv drinks, possibly with soups,
but in any event the food is not
properly masticated, and the taste
bulbs of the mouth do not get a
chance to find out whether it is
good, bad or indifferent. As there
is no chance for real satisfaction of
the mouth hunger, there ig a vast
quantity of food hastily washed into
the stomach, absolutely unprepared
for the gastric juices.
Many of serious dyspepsia
could easily be cured by the simple
of quietly. leisurely and
thoroughly chewing the food, but
some are not of that Kind.
They must studied and the
cause located before a method of
treatment can be decided upon.
Fear and worry are factors in some
cases
process
cases
be
cases and strange to say, fear and
worry about what and how to eat
are sometimes the very worst caus-
es of dyspepsia.
1 pity the person who thinks he
must have a pair of scales and a
carefully prepared chemical analys-
is of all the varied food on the ta-
le in order that he may partake of
amount of mineral ele-
ments along with the proper amount
of and pro-
the correct
sugars, fats, starches
terns
All
ractical
such information. that is
working knowledge of the
combinations of food can be
book form now
plan a simple
course of diet
ailment that is due
but when the
it is well to be
some one that
of a
]
various
easily procured in
readily
understood
ind one
can
nd eas
for almost
dige
lition
any
to stive disorders,
serious
advised by
on
properly

{NOWS.
A very good illustration of an old
ving comes to mind—“One man’s
meat 1d another man’s poison.”
In this case, a man and wife were
apparently eating similar foods for
y number of vears. The man kept
growing fatter and fatter while the
woman grew thinner and thinner.
He laughed good naturedly and she
scolded and fussed. A very simple
change in their diets and one that
proved to be greatly to their liking
directed and the last reports I
showed the woman to be of
normal weight and full of joy and
laughter while the man, although
still full of humor and always ready
with a laugh. wag no longer a bur-
den to himself an object of
ridicule for others,
was
had,
and
Injured His Eye


Last Tuesday Mr. Charles Murray
of near Oyster Point, a son of
John Murray, a former saddler here,
met with a very painful accident
He is employed on the Pennsy and
was in the act of reaching into a
locker at Jersey City, when he
struck his left eye on the sharp
latch of a door, cutting a bad gash.
At first it was thought he would
jose his eye sight but when seen on
Monday he told us he can see Ob-
ts but not very distinctly as
His many friends here will
egret to learn of his misfortune,
ro —
Very Large Bull Shipped
Gingrich Brothers, cattle dealers
of Lawn, purchased from Mr, Alvin |
litz of Bismarck, one of the largest
bulls ever seen in that section, It
weighed 2,250 pounds and was ship-
ped over the Pennsylvania railroad
to Philadelphia, Hundreds of farm-
ers, stock dealers and others looked |
the bull over before he was shipped
and were surprised at his splendid
appearance.

Evangelism Sure Pays
The work of Billy Sunday, the
evangelist, for a season of thirty-
four weeks, has netted him as fol
lows:
Paterson .$24,000
Denver, Col. .. .. 16,000
Des Moines, Ia. .. 14,000
Philadelphia . 53,000
Total ve ....$107,000
a
Elizabethtown Pitchers Signed
| Benjamin Bishop, a well
pitcher of
la contract to pitch for the New Cum-
berland club.
Maynard Hess of the place,
pitch for the Highspire club.
rr el
| same
|
{ will

(Maytown Lady Recovering
| Mps. Salome
Mayfown who has been seriously
ill since April Tth with typhoid
oo is reported to be recov-
ering
many | friends.

FIN
| w

known !
Elizabethtown, has signed |
Hummel Kame of |thing printed
"OTHERS COWARDS
Those of Soft Wood were Driven
to Poor Soil by Their Hard-
wood Enemies.
Do you know there are brave and
cowardly trees? Some people suppose
that the stately white pine occupies
sand, swamp and rocks because it likes
those conditions best, but men who
have studied the subject say that trees
do not seek poor places from choice.
Back of their presence there it may
be taken for granted that there is
compulsion somewhere.
As a rule the broad leaf trees are
better fighters for ground than the soft
woods. The trees which bear broad
leaves—that is, the hard woods—have
been the principal means of driving
the pines, cedars and cypresses to
sand, rocks and swamps. The hard
woods are handicapped, however, by
their inability to prosper on poor soil.
They can crowd their competitors off
the fertile land, but cannot follow with
much vigor upon sterile soil.
The oaks may be classed as the
strongest of all trees; that is, they can
hold their own in more kinds of soil
than most others. It is believed that
the first trees on earth were the soft
woods or the needle leaf species. They
had full possession once, if that theory
is true. When the broad leaf trees ap-


peared, in the course of ages, they |
had to fight for every acre they got.
Up to the present times they have
suceceded in taking most of the fer-
tile land, but the ancient species, the
soft woods are yet able to hold the
poor places.
Pines, spruces, cypresses and other
soft woods flourish on fertile land
when given a chance. This is shown
by the vigor of planted and protected
trees, in parks and in woodlots. It
appears evident that the soft woods
did not betake themselves to sand,
i doing his full
rocks and swamps because they liked |
| other that a great many persons seem
those places better, but because they
were driven there by competition
which they could not successfully
meet.

Laughter or Tears—Which Is Best for
Audiences?
“Plays have undoubtedly a most con-
siderable effect on the minds of the
spectators, and through their minds
they effect their health,” says Arnold
Daly, in an article in the Green Book
Magcazine. “Hence this question, ‘Is
it better for the audience to laugh or
cry?
“Against all pre-conceived notions
on the subject, the doctors are now
telling us that, speaking generally, it
is best for us to cry, and that tragedy
is more healthgiving than comedy. I
would say that if you are feeling friv-
olous and giddy, or that is the com-
mon condition of your mind, you
should go to no plays but those that
will make you laugh, and the more
they will make you laugh the better
it will be for you. If you are depress-
ed and sad, go to the most gloomy
and tragic play you can find, and it
will cheer you up. Using plays in this
way frees your suppressed emotions
Never carry around pent-up feelings.
Let them loose.
“But of course this still leaves open
the question of whether a good play
should make its audience laugh or
cry. Apparently, if one followed the
doctors, it should not do both, though
that would be my taste in the matter.
This prescribing a visit to the theater
in place of medicine is becoming quite
common with medical men, and is said
to be remarkably effective. A woman
patient is in delicate health and suffer-
ing from nerves. ‘Go to the theater
and see a tragedy, says her doctor. ‘A
tragedy! Why, that would drive me
mad in my state,’ the woman thinks.
“Not a bit too much,’ says the doctor.
‘Being driven mad a bit is just what
vou need.’ ‘It will only distress me
and make me more miserable than I
am, pleads the patient. ‘Nothing of
the sort’ returns the doctor. ‘Go
and be as miserable as you can at the
theater, and you will come back cheer-
ful and well’
The doctors say this is due to the
doctrine of opposites. Tell a man to
forget a thing and he remembers it.
Tell him to remember it and he forgets
it. It is due to the reflex action of the
nerves. Ghost stories after supper
are never followed by nightmare. It
ig only when you go to bed laughing
that you are ikely to have unpleasant
dreams.
“The purpose of a play is not to put
the druggist out of business. Whether
the old Greeks were cured of hysteria
by the tragedies of Aeschylus or not
I do not care a fig. They probably
never had hysteria, anyway. What
| we, who are alive today need is plays
that will make us think, and then
they will be good whether they make
us laugh or make us cry, or both.”


In a costly watch that has been made
for exhibition purposes there is a
wheel that makes a complete revolu-
tion only once in four years, operating
a dial that shows the years, months
and days.
ree
In Korea widows never remarry.
Even though they have been married
only a month, they must not take a
second husband.

! A new iron pipe fence post anchors
| itself as it is driven into the ground
| ag the lower end is divided into four
| sections that separate.



The frame of a new bicycle is made
Inog enough for a package carrier to
be mounted behind the handle bars.
|
cm—— Qn
We Furnish Them
| We have arranged with one of the
|largest manfacturers in the United
| States to supply any thing in the
{line of lead, slate, copying pencils,
| with or without erasers, also many
| designs in pen holders, with any-
thereon you wish, at
| prices that will astonish you. They
|are a crackerjack advertising nov-
| etty and we will be pleased to show
which is good news to her |samplegs and quote prices to any one
| interested. tt.
.
heerfulness is
Pusible for
lilness.
A famous physician once said that
over half of all who call in the doctor
would get well without any medicine
if the doctor only keeps them cheer-
ful, that many of the remaining half
needed only a bare pill—their imagina-
tion would do the rest.
Imaginary ills, or ills produced by
the power of the mind, often baffle
physicians. We all know how some
people in reading patent medicine lit-
erature become seified with all the
symptoms they find described. And it
is largely in the cases of people like
these that patent medicines have
wrought their cures, for no one can
dispute that many imaginative people
have felt beneficial effects from such
nostrums.
It is largely in imaginary ills simi-
lar to those I have mentioned that
mental science has worked its good.
\
It has also effected cures in ills other |
than imaginary, but the sickness was
largely brought on through fear, or
some other wrong thinking and the |
cure was worked by the suggestive in-
fluence of one person’s mind over an-
other’s.
Even if these functional diseases are
tient as much pain and incapacitate
him as much for work as any organic
disease. It is a physician's duty to
heal the sick, whether it is a sick body
or a sick mind. Physical disorders
| need physical treatment, but mental
disorders need mental treatment. A
physician who would neglect the mind
while treating the body would not be
duty. Probably few
movements in the history of mankind
have been of more vital significance
than that now on foot in America "to
put psychotherapy to effective use.
And it is largely to physicians that the
world now owes the usefulness of
psychotherapy, for they have had a
vast lot to do with bringing it to the
place it now holds in science.—
Woman's World.
Minding One's Own Business
If there is one thing more than an-

really to enjoy, says the Ledger, it is
minding other people’s business and at-
tempting to manage their affairs for
them: and take it all in all, there is
no occupation that can be followed
that pays less interest on the invest-
ment. Nobody ever yet got rich mind-
ing other people's business, but a great
many have attained wealth and honors
by looking out for their own to the
neglect of all other occupations. This
tendency to look after other people is
born largely of conceit, and inordinate
opinion of one’s own ability, and is
more highly developed in people who
are notoriously weak in judgment than
in any other class of individuals. The
really wise, clear-headed, far-seeing
friend usually has quite enough per-
sonal matters to to without de-
siring to monopolize the cares and bur-
dens of others.
It is a curious fact that the very
people of whom we would gladly ask
advice are very chary of giving it,
while those whose counsel is not worth
a rap thrust their opinion and assist
ance upon us from all quarters.
As a comprehensive proposition, it
may be said that those who have them-
selves made a success in any line are
safe advisers, but these people rarely
meddle, and still more rarely are they
willing to assume charge of any affairs
that they can avoid. But these inter-
ested persons, these people who attach
themselves to others and cling like
barnacles, who have never accomplish-
ed anything themselves, and never will
while time lasts, these are they who
are never satisfied with the way we
have managed our concerns. But they
are ever ready with hand and tongue
to help us out with their usually worth-
less advice.
One of the wisest men of the gener-
ation past brought his children up
with the thoroughly ingrained idea
that nothing was so valuable to the
{ndividual as the habit of minding
one’s own business. So deeply fixed
was this part of their instruction that
more than once when some trifling
disturbance occurred on the street or
in the neighborhood, these people put
themselves as far as possible out of
reach of it with all convenient dis-
patch. This man’s theory was that if
one stayed around where there was
trouble it was impossible to avoid get-
ting into it, and that the safest and
best way to do was to get as far away
as one could. It is needless to say
that, acting upon such a principle, the
family was comfortable, prosperous,
thoroughly respected and rarely got
into difficulties of any sort. He taught
the family that of all paying occupa-
tions the most profitable was studious-
ly and industriously to mind one’s
own business and let that of other
people entirely alone.
see

Attracting Attention
Edward was the proud owner of
his first pair of pants. On the occasion
| of his first wearing them a neighbor
| happened in and was chatting with his


father, but, much to Edward's disgust,
the all-important subject was not men-
tioned. The little fellow stood it as
long as he could, then, in a very in-
different manner, remarked: “There
are three pairs of pants in this room.”

If you put stones under the posts
of your corn house have them thick
enough and large enough so that the
| frost will not get below them and
break them to pieces.

Mix your griddle cakes, waffles, frit- }
ters, etc., in the upper part of a double
boiler instead of in an ordinary mix- |
ing bowl, and you will find the handle
very useful to hold # by when frying
hem.
eel ee
MAYTOWN

Pupiis of Miss Adella H. Grove
Render a Fine Program
The pupils of Miss Adella Grove
of Maytown, Friday evening at 8
o'clock, held a recital in her studio
at Maytown, The participants all
gave numbers on the piano, The
program is as follows: Minuet, OD.
14, No. 1, Pederewski, Susannah
White and Miss Adella H. Grove;
Gavotte in D Major, Bach, Valse


| purely imaginary, they cause the pa- |
| Lynes, Song Without Words, op. 102,


N
TW
Joolesgerfeefesferderiecieriantooie forge ete vet at HN SE SSS RISNNTERTESOES
on Inu
The Great Sale ¥
MEN'S
CLOTHING
The Big Purchase From The Full
worth Clothing Co at One Third
Less Than The Regular
Low Prices
[AY week we gave the complete "details of this
most extracrdinary transaction whereby we be-
came the possessors of The Fullworth Company’s
surplus Stock of Men’s High Class Summer Suits.
Suffice to say--and every man who attended the open-
ing day of the sale will agree with us,--that
Greater Values
Are Impossible
THE STYLES:
Are
of
RDP RNS
SS SE Et SESS TSS De ob D0 0.8 Po SestectesoccoTeotsofooterSeoFonToofect
TTT PTT TTT TTT TT NEE
RPA TT
up-to-the-minute and
all
include models suitable for men
ages, all sizes and all builds.
THE QUALITY:
eS SE BT he Te aBe cD TosBoTocBe rte sSoeootocte oo ctootootestoeTeotostootootontn Tec To oTe ote ste oTe eZee ote oTe Zee ode ote Toco she fo oe
Jeogecfesfocfocfoctesfecfosfenforfe cio eo ae E S S R N SRSR SNSITEERTEe
ee aes. BS ete itestetoctoctoatectocoatectostocteooctecdootoaectocteefecfoelii
PPP PR rr rrr rere
: Is of the same Donovan High Standard that has made
: The Donovan Clothing Store famous throughout Lancaster §&
: County. :
o p
t THE PATTERNS:
» ° 1
Are all smart and new. A goodly assortment to suit the 4
b
young fellows as well as the more conservative dressers.
E only wish we had more or could get more
of these Suits to offer at these unheard of
prices. There were only several hundred
Suits in the lot and at the rate they are now selling,
there will not ke any to survive the weeks business.
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Don’t delay. Here is a remarkable opportunity to %
buy a High Grade Stylish Summer Suit at a substan- 3
tial saving. Below are the real genuine values and ;
the sale prices. But you must see the suits to fully ;
appreciate the enormity and magnitude of this sale. ;
er 4 | . 9
$12.60 and | $16 and $18 :
$15 Valus
$3.90
$20.00 pd
$22.50 Values
Values
12.50
$25 and $30
Values
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$0 2 0 0 2 0 0 8 a. 2 oa og
BOLT RTETTTN

cron Rooms Tur Can That On ALL Pusciasts Or $10.9]
On Mone. Ir Costs You Nothin. ASK RIT.
THE
ONOVAN
COMPANY
32--38 East King St., Lancaster, Pa
Aeogengenenfe ooo ene ee ae Ee ORR ERTS PR A STE


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Impromptu, Raff, Elizabeth John-
son; In June, McDowgall, Dorothy
Zell and Misg Grove; Picking Pos-
ies, op. 28 No. 1, Orth, In the Gar-
den, op. 140 No. 3, Gurlitt, Dorothy
Zell; March, op 21 No. 4, Harker,
Mary Ney; The Harlequin, op. 14,
No. 3, Lynes, Novelette, op. 70 No.
2, Grinaldi, Anna Hoover; Mazur-
ka, op, 14 No. 2 Lynes, Minuet, op.
138 No. 5, Schafer, Hazel Shireman;
Nocturne in A Major, op. 118 No, 1,
Shrelezki, Gavotte in E., Major,
from J. S. Bach’s Sixth Sonata for
the violin, Pierette, op. 14, Chamin-
ade, Susannah White; Overture to
Rosamunde, Schubert, Miss Grove
No. 3, Mendelssohn, Valse Petite,
op 34, Virgil, Anna Haines; Gavotte,
Borowski, Blizabeth Johnson; Tar- and Elizabeth Johnson. Dorothy Zell
antelle, op. 85, No. 2, Susannah and Mary Ney made their first ap-
White: The Hunter's Song, op. 14, pearance in recital that evening.

.