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Published Eyery Friday M o m i as J. PRANK BUCH. OFFICE—On Broad street, Iittitl, Lancaster County, Pa. TEEMB OF SUBSCRIPTION.—For one year 11.00, if paid in advance, and 81.25 If payment is delayed to the end of year. For six months. 50 cents, and for three months, 26 cents, strictly in advance. 49rA failure to notify a discontinuance at the end of the term subscribed for, will be considered a wish to continue the paper. WAny person sending us five new cash subscribers for one year will be entitled tx> the B E C O K P for one year, for his trouble. Raies of Miertìsing in the Record, 1 week 2 weeks........ 3 weeks 1 month I 2 months....- 5 months 6 months 1 year. 2 ID 3 in. Yt. C. 14 E-U M 90 1 25 9, m 40ft 75 1 !» i «n 3 B5 5 75 1 TO 1 75 A W> 4 ?5 7 50 1 Ü5 a lb 8 on 5 Ä5 a co 9 SR a ab 4 »I 7 50 13 î>5 a bo 4 a,i 6 00 9 75 17 «O 3 bo 6 2b H so 15 00 ?8 00 ò U0 » au IS 75 50 00 'M 00 7 60 10 00 12 m 15 «V 23 0« 31 0Í 54* 96* Y O L . X V I . L I T T T Z , P A . , F R I D A Y M O R N I N G , J U N E 2 3 , 1 8 93 N O . 42. Yearly advertisements to be paid quarterly. Transient advertisements payable in a<fc vanee. Advertii emenfn insure immediate insei «on, must be handed in. at the very latest,M Wednesday evening. Job Worfc of all kinds neatly and promptly executed at short notice. All communication» should be addressed to LUCOOAU O F F I C E . ijiii'tS. i>T>0, GO.. W. H. BUCH'S SPRING e i \ R O . The Spring Season has arrived. So has my superb stock of goods for the young man, the middle aged and the old. Choice Patterns in Piece Goods for elegant Spring and Summer Suits, in all the latest styles, at prices low enough for any one to see at a glance that he is not being overcharged. iy Ready-made Clothing are cheap and well-made—I buy and sell no other. Each article must give satisfaction or money refunded, % Neckwear Department can't be beat. It is made up to my special order from piece silk of my own selection, and each tie and cravat bears my stamp on the inside. The styles are indeed nobby this spring. DON'T go away from home ior the purpose of buying a new Hat when you can save,money by buy ing a stylish one at my store. I have them in all shapes and sizes. You are cordially invited to call and see for yourself. W . H . B U C H , " Record " Building. Broad Street. LITITZ, P C N N A. s PRING HATS. S P R I N G HATS. H . L . B O A S . Spring Styles Now Ready for Your Inspection. 144 NORTH QUEEN S T M T , LANCASTER, PÂ. NEWT. WINGERT, MANAGER. 8 THERE a person living in this village by the name of Bolton, Jeremiah Bolton?" asked the stranger of Hiram Stiggins, who was sitting on the top rail of the fence. " He dosen't live here," said Hiram, a good deal of emphasis on the word. "Oh, it's his address all right enough. We don't call Jerry's exist ence living, you know. He vegetates. And if you want to collect any money from him let me give you a pointer or two that'll save you some trouble. You just go back where you came from and wait till Jerry sends it. You'll get the cash just as quick that way as by bothering him about it. Jerry's the allfiredest loafer in the hull country, and that's saying a good deal, for I know most of the folks in the neighbor-hood. I've lived here myself goin' on twenty-four years. Some of 'em are spleeny enough, and these times a man has to be up and doin' ef he wants to pay his debts, let alone gettin' credit for makin' more. Times ain't what they used to be. I remember nineteen years ago this Spring when " What is Mr. Bolton's business? He is a mechanic, isn't he ?" " Jerry ? He ain't got no business— never had. I tell him he's got no business to live. Beats me what such men are made for in the first place. Natural born loafer, Jerry is. Yes sir. Work ? When you see Jerry Bolton tackle honest work, you look out fer the judgment day the week after. The world will be comin' to an end, sure. Why, last harvest—I own this farm joinin' the village—and men were mighty scarce, I come over to get Jer-ry to help me with the hayin'—offered him good pay—a man can get any-thing he likes ia hayin' nowadays. " Tain't like what it used to be. Seems as ef the more machinery we get on a farm the more work there is to do. Labor savin', they call them. Labor makin' is more like it. I remember sixteen years ago last haryest that we The Best Millinery at the Bon Ton. Millinery side by side with other, and you willeasy see Bon Ton superiority. Is not as good only the best here, but 3 as any in the land. 13 East King St., Lancaster, Fa. JEREMIAH BOLTOE T " Wouldn't Jerry work ?'< "Not by a long chalk. Needed the money, too. His wife was doin' the washin' for the village to keep the children and Jerry alive. As fer the rent, they never thought o' payin' no rent. I own the house he lives ia, and I suppose Jerry thought 1 would take it out in rent ef he came to work. Still, that's flatterin' Jerry. He hain't sense enough to be afraid I'd apply his wages on his rent. He's just good for nuthin'. He's a tinkerer, Jerry is. Alius workin' at some new fangled thing that ain't no good to any livin' creature. Jack of all trades and good at none, I tell him. Trusts Providence and his wife mostly. Jerry would have starved long ago if it wasn't for that woman. She's a sight too good for him. But she's just as big a fool as Jerry, for she believes he'll do some-thin' some day. She's the only one creature on earth that does, but that don't make no difference to her. She's a faded, washed-out creature, and the only time she flares up is when some one tells the truth about Jerry and she hears it. Just like a woman, you know. There's no accountin, for 'em. Many a woman with a good, hard-workin' husband don't appreciate them. There's my wife, for instance " " What does he tinker at principal-ly ?" " Who ? Jerry ? Oh, Lord knows. Some fool thing or 'nuther. Deacon Swipes says it's perpetual motion, but I tell the deacon there's no motion, perpetual or otherwise about Jerry. Perpetual dum foolishness, I call it. Tryin' to get a living by the sweat of somebody else's brow. I tell 'em down in the village that Jerry's a smarter man than any of us 'cause he can live without work and we can't. Time was in this country that a man had to work or starve. Things aint what they used to be with the young folks all wantin' to clerk in the city. I remember twenty-one years ago when "—«—. a word I said, but jest looked past a person as if some one had hit him with a club. He'll go to an insane hospital yet, and be kept at the county's ex-pense— his family, too. Hanged ef I can see the sense of let! in' a man like that have a family. I remember years ago, when—yes, the first house you come to right on the edge of the vil-lage. No, it ain't'much of a house; more of a shanty, as you say, but it's a mighty sight bigger'n any rent I eyer get fer it. Good-by, stranger." " Then how does he manage to live ?'' " I tell you he don't live; he vege-tates, and on my vegetables, too, most-ly, Only the other day Miss Bolton she come to our place with a basket of potatoes. I says to her: ' Miss Bol-ton, you can't borrow nothin'. I'll give you a basket of potatoes, if you go out and dig 'em. But I'm no such dum fool as to lend anythin' to the Bolton family.' Then she up and cries, and my wife she says: 'Well, that's neither here nor there.' Some women don't know when they're well off, and other women can't bear to hear the truth. I went down to Jerry's and gave him a piece of my mind, for my wife's a plain spoken woman, and then a man shouldn't be a tyrant in his own family. Well, Jerry, he jest looks at me an' says nothin'. I believe the 1 man's crazy. He didn't seem to hear TEN YEARS LATER. Hiram holds forth to a crowd of listeners on the veranda of the village tavern. " Know Mr. Bolton ? Well, I should rather say I did. I can remember the time when Jeremiah Bolton didn't haye a second shirt to his back. Job's turkey wasn't in it with Jerry—I al-ius used to call him Jerry, and he used to call me Hiram. There warn't no mister's between us them days. Some of you boys think yourselves smart, but there's no of you could hold a candle to Jeremiah Bolton. No, sir. Last 'lection, when there was talk of running Jerry for Guvnor, I knowed Jerry wouldn't take no nomination. What did he care about being Guvnor? Why, Jerry Bolton could buy the hull State ef he wanted to." Most of the governors have to do that," said a bystander. ' Well, Jerry , ain't that kind of man. Fact is, they don't build men like Mr. Bolton nowadays. Why, I remember eleven years ago, before Jerry took out his patent, an' he was feelin' kind of discouraged, I sáys to him : ' Never you mind, Jarry, your time's a-comin'. You'll be able to buy out the county some of these days.' Why, there wasn't a man in this town believed in Jerry but me. There was old Deacon Swipes, him that's dead and gone. He used to say to me: Hiram, I can't imagine what the devil you see in that wuthless coot, Jerry Bolton.' The deacon used to swear just a little, 'cause he'd been a lumberman once, an' a man has to swear when he's bringin' down a raft, but,he never knew he swore, and no-body liked to tell him, and him a deacon. Why, the preacher he used to " " What did you say to the deacon about Bolton ?" " Oh, I says to him : ' Deacon, you're all right at seein' anything that's right under you nose, but you're no good at dealin' with the future.' " " The preacher attended to futurity, I suppose." " Jess so, jess so. But the Deacon could never see why I took such trouble with Jerry, but I knowed he wasn't no common kind of a man. He had a way of lookin' past you and of not hearin' what a person was say in' to him that" " Lucky man!" " Exactly, He was always a study-in' and a-studyin' in his mind. We used to talk about his patent, and, though he never'd tell us what he was figurín, on, you could tell which way his wind was turned. ' Hiram' he used to say to me, ' great inventions, like the air-brake and the telegraph and the Standard Oil Company, they only thought but once in a lifetime. It takes a big man to invent them sort of things, and I'm only a small man, Hiram.' He was always a modest man, was Jerry." " That was because he was so much in you company." " Well, anyhow he used to say that what he wanted to invent would be some little thing that everybody would want to have and couldn't do without once they had it, and that wouldn't cost much; and wouldn't last long, and yet would pay 50 per cent, to the maker of it. ' Hiram,' he used to say to me,' if soap wasn't invented, that's what I would like to invent and get á patent on.' He never could have lived, ef it hadn't been for me. Lived in a house I owned at that time, and most they got to eat come off my farm. I neyer bothered him about no „rent nor pay, and whtn he was troubled about it I used to slap him on the back and say: " ' You wait till your ship comes " But Jerry was grateful ?" " You bet he was. And he didn't want to hurt my feelings, nuther. His wife she came to my wife. with the papers that Jerry bought up, and she says to my wife: ' Hiram was good to us when we was poor, and so you give him these 'ere papers for a present.' Then Jerry's wife, thinkin' of the hard times, I suppose, she breaks down and cries, and my wife she keeps her com-pany, and them two women had a good cry together." " Over your goodness, Hiram, I sup-pose?" " Well, that's neither here or there. Jerry knows who backed him when it was hard sleddin' for him, and now^ by gum, he's rich enough to buy us all out and never feel it, and has a big house in New York. I alius said that's what he would come to, and ef the deacon was alive, he'd tell you the same thing." Home Notes. No man or woman is quite free, who is not first physically free. " The art of life is to know how to enjoy a little and endure much." A good home toiJc for father, mother or child, is the kindly appre-ciate word. A man or woman in good health has no right to indulge in an un-pleasant mood. How strong is the bondage of habit, few realize until they try to rid them-selves of one formed in youth. Be quick to realize a child's effort to do right. He may not succeed as well as one who tries only half as hard ; but he deserves double credit. Behind the snowy loaf is the mill-whdel; behind the mill is the wheat field ; on the wheat field rests the sun-light; above the sun is God. " Kindness is not a trait which can be summoned at will. It is a heart flower of such delicate nature that un-less it is daily watered and kept con-stantly in the sun, it dies." It is stimulating to know that one child well trained will benefit his fel-low men, and whether he ever becomes conspicuous in history or leads a quiet, peaceful life will spread around him an elevating influence. Current Topics. ' It is a serious matter in Armenia should a maiden attain her 17th year with no prospect of marriage," remarks a European trayeler, " for when the festival of St. Sergius comes round she is obliged to fast three days, and eat salt fish without quenching her thirst unless some kind swain promises to take her." A Montana cowboy is said to have gone to Chicago with a satchelful of bogus dollars that he made himself by working overtime. If he emerges from the speculation with his satchel he will be the first to beat Chicago this sea-son. Lizzie Borden either ought to be hanged or else she should receiye the apology of this State on vellum in let-ters of gold. She will not plead ignor-ance, insanity or lack of moral sense. Before 1845 a letter carried over 500 miles in this country cost twenty-five cents. From 1845 to 1863 it cost ten cents. In 1868 the uniform 3-cent rate was adopted. A few years since the 2-cent rate was adopted, and now the country wants it reduced to one cent. The Connecticut Legislature has passed a bill requiring doctors to write their prescriptions in plain English. Mow in the prohibition cities the pre-scription, "Spiritus vinus. Quant, suff," will read, "A good, big drink of whisky." This story is about Philadelphia twins. The nurse was giving them a bath. Later, hearing the children laughing in bed, she said : " What are you children laughing about ?" " Oh, nothing," replied Edna, " only you have given Edith two baths and haven't given me any." in. " Didn't he pay the mortgage on your farra, Hiram ?" " Well, that's neither here nor there. That's a private matter 'twixt him and me. Besides, it was like this: I put that mortgage on, to get the money for his patents " • " Why, it was in the papers that the man from New York put up the cash." " Now, young man, you keep your shirt on, and don't be too sipart. didn't need to use no money for that, because I brought Jerry the man from New York. 'Twas me introduced 'em The man from New York made a good enough thing out of it, and he can thank me fur it, not that he's ever done it," Knowledge Box. Germany has an aerial navigation society. The idea of the church spire was originated in the twelfth century. The oldest artesian well in Europe is found at Lillers, France. From its mouth water has flowed uninterrupted-ly for 746 years. The custom of men wearing black clothes for evening dress is said to have had its origin in the black military tunic which was worn nearly 300 years ago. The total length of the streets, ave-nues, boulevards, bridges, quays and thoroughfares of Paris generally is set down at about 600 miles, of which nearly 200 are planted with trees. There are 8838 medical students at the various universities in Germany. $30,000,000 worth of ready-made clothing is produced in Paris yearly. The Edinburgh Review says that the commonest form of color blindness is that which thinks green indentical wich red. Fish nets are made from some very strange materials. The Eskimos manufacture them from strips of seal hide and from thin slices of whalebone. By the Fijians they are constructed of human hair. The Social Melon. Very peculiar is the popular estima-tion of a watermelon. Apples, peaches, oranges we may carry in the street without causing people to make re-marks about or to us. Not so with the watermelon. One day Jack Mack, of Kansas, said to his grocer: " People in this town seem distant, unsociable." "You don't understand human nature," said the grocer. " Take home this watermelon in the basket on your arm, and if people on the way don't speak to you, then you needn't pay for the melon." The judge first met a dignified matron, who said with a faint smile. " Ah, luxuries to-day, judge !" At the next crossing a minister ex-claimed : " Am I invited to dine with you to-day?" On Pine street a German said : •' Ish you going to be bolite alreaty, judge, and divide mit me ?" On Elm street a Frenchman bowed gracefully. " Ah, ze meelon !" At the corner of Main and Jackson streets a loud voice called : 'Lor now, judge, doan, ye done drap dat dar melon, hi, ki, ha, ha !" The judge paid for the melon next day. A Live Western Boy. The teacher of a school in a West-ern town had occasion to rebuke one of his pupils, little Tommy Roundup, for laziness and neglecting to learn his lessons. He said to Tommy: 'If you don't learn your lessons better I'll call on your mother and tell her what sort of a boy you are." " I wish you would try it, Professor." " You do ?" " Yes; pa is awfully jealous. He is laying with a shotgun right now for a man who called on ma. I'll tell him what you said about calling to see ma, and I reckon you had better go and buy a lot in the cemetry, for pa is awful on the shoot." Tommy has not yet told his pa, and he says he is not going to say a word about the matter as long as the Pro-fessor lets him do as he pleases in school and gives him a quarter every Saturday afternoon for candy. Valuable A-dvice. . Every oné should know by this time that it is dangerous to ask a doctor's or a lawyer's advice, even in the most casual and public manner, unless one expects to pay him for it. There is a well authenticated story of a man in New York who chanced to remark to a celebrated physician once : " Doctor, have you any sure means of preventing seasickness ?" " Certainly," said the doctor. " What is it ?" " Stay, on shore !" said the physician, and sent thé man his bill. Another gentleman, who was a vale tudinarian, met a doctor of his ac-quaintance on the street one day. " Doctor," said he, " I'm so weak that the least bit of walking on these pavements tires me all out. What do you think I'd better take ?" "A horse car, I guess/' said the doctor, crustily. And he, too, sent in a little memorandum of the amount due for this wise prescription. It Seems to Be a Mystery To the people of Lancaster county how I can sell my Watches so cheap. Yet I have been doing it right along, and will continue it until I have sold one to YOIL If you want to buy a Watch let me give you prices know I can save you money. I JACK STRAUB, Jeweler, No. 6o North Queen Street, Lancaster. Highspire Distillery Burned. The Highspire distillery, in High-spire, Dauphin county, was burned, and with it at least 5,000 barrels of whisky, entailing a loss of $200,000. There were stored in the three ware houses 17,000 barrels of whisky, but the two largest warehouses were saved. Many of the losers are wholesale dealers in Baltimore and other places throughout the country. The fire started in the distillery and is thought to have been of an incendiary origin. Highspire is five miles from Harris-burg, and the distillery is operated by the Wilson company. The fire origin-ated in the dust loft. Operations for the summer shut down about June 1, and the place was closed. The average price of the bonded whisky was $30 a barrel. The store houses, barrel factory and several other buildings were also consumed, but no dwellings were burned. Over the State. In six days, 50,000 boxes of straw-berries were sold in Reading, A co w at Annville tread half a dozen men and badly gored Elias Bomber-ger. Five hundred miners at Enterprise Colliery, Shamokin, struck for more A Judge Who Was Brave When Half Asleep. FARGO, N. D. June 17.—Robbers got on the Northern Pacific train this morning near Wadena and went partly through one of the sleepers. The porter was quite badly clubbed about the head and told to keep still. Three passengers were awakened and robbed of $500 and three gold watches. When Judge Leech, of Minneapolis, was reached, he was awakened from a sound sleep and told to give up his money and watch "pretty dammed quick." Only half awake he replied : I don't want anything to do with you, get out of hesre you dammed rob-ber." The fellow had his gun at the judge's head, but he got up, and the fellow backed down the aisle followed by the judge. Some one pulled the bell rope, and the man jumped off. It is thought there were two or three men in the gang. They were partially masked. Judge Lsech said that if he had been fully awake he would never have dared to do what he did, unless he had been armed. Aphorisms. There remains in the faces of women who are naturally serene and peaceful, and of those rendered so by religion, an after-spring, and later an after-summer, the reflex of their most beau-tiful bloom. Husband—" My dear, our club is going to have all home comforts." Wife—" Is that so ? And when is our home going to have all the club comforts ? The camel is a lucky brute. It never has to hump itself. Every great scientific truth goes through three stages. First, people say it conflicts with the bible. Next they say it had been discovered be-fore; Lastly, they say they always believed it. Revelling in space: A lady's arm in a fashionable sleeve. " I've got it in for you, my friend," soliloquized the mosquito, sinking it a little deeper in the sleeping victim's nose. —ST, E I I O HOTEL, NOS. 317 a n d 319 Arch street, Philadelphia. — Kates re-duced to $1.50 and F 2 per day. The travel-ing public will still find at this hotel the sameliberal provision for their comfort. I t is located in the immediate centre of business, and places of amusement and the different .railroad depots,as well as all parts of the city, is easily accessible by street cars constantly passing the doors. It offers special inducements to those visiting the city for business or pleasure. Tour patronage is respectfully solicited. oc7-Iy GABM & KKAUSE, Prop'rs. A Strange Story. A little boy in Brooklyn saw a pale woman at an upper window. He ran home, saying he had surely seen a ghost. The police investigated, and the result was that Eliphalet Stratton, aged eighty-three years, a very rich man, was arrested tor trying to starve his poor wife to death. Through over-work she had become ill and was no service to her husband, and, it is al-leged, he tried to end her life by star-vation. The detective forced his way into the house, old Stratton objecting. The woman was found in bed on the second floor. She gasped : " I'm star-ving." She was nearly dead. Strat-ton is a stalwart man, over six feet high, and still vigorous. He allowed no one to enter the house. It is his second wife, aged fify-five. The woman was fed and nourished and her husband locked up. People Who Stall a Town. They are: 1. Those who go out of town to do their trading, which could be done in it. 2. Those who oppose improvements. 3. Those who prefer a quiet town to one of push and business. 4. Those who imagine they own the town. 5. Those who think business can be done slyly and without advertising. 6. Those who deride public spirited men. 7. Those who oppose every move-ment that does not originate with them selves. 8. Those who are against every pub-lic improvement which does not ap pear to benefit them. 9. Those who seek to injure the credit or reputation of individuals. 10. Those who pay their taxes grudg-ingly, when abundantly able and have been benefited by living in the town 11. Those who are jealous of their neighbor's progress. 12. Those who think the town is not as good as other places. A horse's age is told by its teeth, a woman's age is told—well, it is not told at all. A country which has no national literature, or a literature too insignifi-cant to force it3 way abroad, must al ways be, to its neighbors at least, in every important spiritual respect, an unknown and unestimated country. While walking in her sleep at Leb-anon. Mrs. George H. Uhler fell down-stairs and was badly hurt. Ex-Governor Powell Clayton, of Arkansas, has been visiting his brother Judge Clayton, at Media. In a Pennsylvania Railroad freight wreck at Huntingdon twenty-one coke and merchandise cars were smashed. Hugh Ross, the Homestead strike leader, has gone to Scotland to claim his mother's large inheritance. Schuylkill county Poor Directors have been called upon by Orwigsburg to battle with the smallpox scourge. Claiming $50,000, Jennings got a verdict at Scranton of $2500 for in-juries received in the Lehigh Valley wreck at Mud Run. Bellmore Colliery, near Mt. Car-mel, and which utilizes 600 hands, will resume work July 1, after two and a half years of idleness. York preachers are fighting Sunday street cars. Myerstown will be linked to Leb-anon with a trolley. A gang of counterfeiters at Connels-ville is being shadowed, Frank Lee, a Bethlehem Chinaman, was beaten almost to death by un-known robbers. Frank Swanger, a Harrisburg boy, was accidently shot by a lad, and will die. Max Meindel, who was struck on the head with a baseball OD Saturday, is dead at Altoona. The State Fish Warden burned or chopped to pieces a score of boats in the Allegheny river used for fishing illegally. To escape the officers, Chauncey Arnold, arrested at Lykens and hand-cuffed, jumped from a running train near Harrisburg and was not caught. Suit has been begun by H. H. Heise, Jonas Holt, I. H. Wilmot and others to recover a tract of land in Columbia borough owned by George Tille. The case involves property worth $100,- 000. The jewelery store of Frank L. Benner, of Hazleton, although under the surveilance of a watchman, was entered and robbed of many valuable articles. Benjamin Johnson, a well-known colored man, died at Norristown from injuries received by driving against a swaying trolley wire. Charles Spay the, who with three companions, robbed the Leechburg sank and killed Councilman Shaffer, was convicted of murder in the second degree at Kittanning. George Gossar, of Delano, was at-tacked by tramps near South Easton, and because he refused to give up his money was shot by one of his assailants m the right temple. His injury is not serious. In opening one of the stands at Penryn park, which had been closed since last summer, a family of a dozen flying squirrels were seen. Eight of the little ones were captured. They were as lively as crickets, and present-erf to a Lebanon party. The squirrels were marvels of nimbleness and speed and they flew from the branches cf one tree to another. The front part of their body is like that of a bat. Jacob D. Peters, an old resident of Slatington, was shaved on Wednesday for the first time in twenty years. The hot weather caused him to part with his silvery beard. Mr. Peters is eighty years old. The Hellertown furnace, which has been idle for some time, is to be placed in order. It is owned by the Thomas Iron company. An angry meeting of members of the Society of Friends was held in West Chester to discuss the question whether to sell a lot of their land for school purposes. Those opposed threatened to withdraw from the meet-ing. John Kearney, 15 years old, son of Telegraph Operator Kearney, of Oil City, was thrown from a road cart to the payement on Saturday afternoon and received injuries from which he died in a few moments.
Object Description
Title | Lititz Record |
Masthead | Lititz Record 1893-06-23 |
Subject | Lititz (Pa.) -- Newspapers;Lancaster County (Pa.)—Newspapers |
Description | Lititz newspapers 1877-1942 |
Publisher | Record Print. Co.; J. F. Buch |
Date | 1893-06-23 |
Location Covered | United States;Pennsylvania;Lancaster County (Pa.);Lititz (Pa.);Warwick (Lancaster County, Pa. : Township) |
Type | Text |
Original Format | Newspapers |
Digital Format | application/pdf |
Identifier | 06_23_1893.pdf |
Language | English |
Rights | Public domain |
Contact | For information on source and images, contact LancasterHistory, Attn: Library Services, 230 N. President Ave., Lancaster, PA, 17603. Phone: 717-392-4633, ext. 126. Email: research@lancasterhistory.org |
Contributing Institution | LancasterHistory |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER Library: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Description
Title | Page 1 |
Subject | Lititz (Pa.) -- Newspapers;Lancaster County (Pa.)—Newspapers |
Description | |
Location Covered | United States;Pennsylvania;Lancaster County (Pa.);Lititz (Pa.);Warwick (Lancaster County, Pa. : Township) |
Type | Text |
Original Format | Newspapers |
Digital Format | application/pdf |
Language | English |
Contact | For information on source and images, contact LancasterHistory, Attn: Library Services, 230 N. President Ave., Lancaster, PA, 17603. Phone: 717-392-4633, ext. 126. Email: research@lancasterhistory.org |
Contributing Institution | LancasterHistory |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER Library: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Full Text |
Published Eyery Friday M o m i as
J. PRANK BUCH.
OFFICE—On Broad street, Iittitl,
Lancaster County, Pa.
TEEMB OF SUBSCRIPTION.—For one year
11.00, if paid in advance, and 81.25 If payment
is delayed to the end of year.
For six months. 50 cents, and for three months, 26 cents, strictly in advance.
49rA failure to notify a discontinuance at
the end of the term subscribed for, will be
considered a wish to continue the paper.
WAny person sending us five new cash
subscribers for one year will be entitled tx>
the B E C O K P for one year, for his trouble.
Raies of Miertìsing in the Record,
1 week
2 weeks........
3 weeks
1 month
I 2 months....-
5 months
6 months
1 year.
2 ID 3 in. Yt. C. 14 E-U
M 90 1 25 9, m 40ft
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Y O L . X V I . L I T T T Z , P A . , F R I D A Y M O R N I N G , J U N E 2 3 , 1 8 93 N O . 42.
Yearly advertisements to be paid quarterly.
Transient advertisements payable in a |
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