PAGE FOUR THE BULLETIN MOUNT JOY, PA, J. EB. SOHROLL, Editor & Prop'r. EE ' SUBSCRIPTION ONLY 50c A YEAR Six Months. ...... 25 Cents Single Coples. . . . .. 2 Cents Sample Coples. ..... FREE EE Entered at the post office at Mount Joy as second-class mall matter. All correspondents must have their communications reach this office not later than Monday. Telephone news of importance between that time and 12 o'locck noon Wednesday. Chan- ges for advertisements must posi- tively reach this office not later than Monday night. New advertisements inserted if copy reaches us Tuesday night. Advertising rates on appli- cation. ——— EDITORIAL There can be no doubt that it isa mistake to eat more than once a day. It is fearfully expensive. . ® R ¥ ¥ The Chinese issued bank nearly five thousand years ago. Most of them are probably outlawed by this time. LE BE of King Leopard of Belgium. LB Spain seems while fighting yellow jackets. EE ES Maxim device muflling also. EE Ex next change his mind. LE that they are not needed there. x % x %¥ a pessimistic. will not likely arrive at it. EEE stores vou know of them. valuable information. * % % Xx » reads. s~hemes can be maintained. Anybody can - predict began. lies to any and every panic. * x Xx kx * % x 2 % stores. fit-making business. the advertising is. — Circulation Counts The wise advertiser turns. The paper that lies about how many subscribers it has, does not appeal to advertisers. It’s the pa- per that spends money by improving and bettering its publication and giving people the news, thereby gett- ing many new subscribers, that inter- ests the man who has money to spend for publicity. There is no fake or bluff about the paper that makes an honest effort and is not afraid to share its success with the public. Circulation counts. rn et Beware of Ointment for Catarrah that Con- tain Mercury as mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and completely derange the whole system when eutering it through the mucous surfaces. Such articles should never be used except on prescrip tions from reputable Jryslcians, as the damage they will do 1s ten fold to the good you can possibly derive from them. Hall’s Catarrh Cure # maeufactured by F.J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O, contain no fe:euty, and is taken internally, act, ing directly upon the blood and mucuos surfaces of the system. In buying Hall’s Catarrah Cure be sure you get the genuine. It is taken inter- nally and made 1n Toledo, Ohio, by ¥. J. Cheney & Co. Testimenials free. Sold by all Dru; ts, 75¢. per bottle, e Hall's Family Pills fer constipation, 10: Diseased cattle often transmit their disease to human beings. Protect yourself and family, as well as your live stock by the regular feeding of Fairfield’s Blood Tonic and Milk Pro- ducer for Cattle Only. It prevents and cures disease and increases pro- ductiveness by purifying the blood. For sale by F. H. Baker, Mount Joy; H. C. Greider, Landisville, and D. B. Ebersole, Elizabethtown. Don’t let the baby suffer from ec- zema, seres or any itching of the skin. Doan’s Ointment gives instant relief, cures quickly. Perfectly safe for children. All druggists sell it. . ec genet. : : For Sale Three varieties of choice graded | wheat. Imquire of J. M. Brandt, 7-21-10t pays more for eggs the than a notes Colonel Roosevelt is a brave man but when he went hunting in Africa he kept well away from the preserves to be in about the same predicament as the boy who has to contend with green-apple cramps The cannon used at the German army arc to be fitted with the new to stop their noise. Our own Cannon would stand some “The religion of the future’ is be- : ing outlined to a great extent by men who know as much about what it will be as a scientist knows when he will The fact that a man was placed under arrest at Patterson, N. J., and ordered to leave the city for selling Bibles, is being taken as evidence It is better to be an optimistic than A proper mental atti- tude is a necessary equipment to suc- cess in any undertaking in life. Un- less a man’s mind first sees a goal he If you are a regular reader of the advertisements in the BULLETIN you know just what is going on in the If there's bargains offered If you are not an ad. reader you are losing a lot of A person is influenced by what he The trusts know this and en- deavor to control the news that is given the people thru the great dail- ies. These in turn, sometimes de- ceive the people so that the grafting prosperity. One need not have any superhuman powers to do it. As a matter of fact the return of prosperity was ab- solutely certain the day the panic The same observation app- An advertisement-reader never los- es an advantageous offer made by the This keeping in touch with the store world and the special bar- gains that are always going, is a pro- Buyers are coming to recognize this more and more every day, and this is but an- ether fact as showing how import- ant a part of successful store-keeping spends his money where he is assured full re- PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD ELEVEN-DAY EXCURSION Ocean Grove Camp Meeting Asbury Park or Long Branch Friday, August 27, 1909 Round $4.25 Trip From Mount Joy Tickets good going only on train leaving 1236 p m. (Good returning on ‘all regular trains Covers Closing Sunday and Monday of Camp Meeting Consult nearest Ticket Agent J. R. WOOD, GEO. W. BOYD. Passenger Traffic Manager. General Passenger Agent, PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD Personally-Conducted Kxcursions NIAGARA FALLS August 25, September 8, 22, & October 6, 1909 i Round-Trip Rate $9.30 From Mt. Joy Tickets good going on train leaving 10.39 a. m., connecting with SPECIAL TRAIN of Pull- man Parlor Cars, Dining Car, and Day Coaches running via the FPicturesgue Suscuchanna Valley Frtoute Tickets good returning on regular trains with FIFTEEN DAYS, including date of excursion. Stop-off within limit allowed at Buffalo returning. 1lustrated Booklet and full information may be obtained from Ticket Agents, J. RK. WOOD, GEO. W. BOYD, Passenger Traflic Manager General Passenger Agent, Ff I Dine at Sheaffer’s Sheaffer's Restaurant and Confectionery Sein’ Lon ALL KINDS PIES AND SANDWICHES, BAKED BEANS, CORNBELYPF, CONFECTIONERY, TOBACCO & CIGARS, KEYSTONE DAISIES. BEST ICE CREAM IN ANY QUANTITY MANHEIM STREET Mount Joy —— o— wa Trolley Schedule | = A TRIUMPH...... Lancaster, Rohrerstown, Landisville, Salun~ | In choke coil construction. Our ga, Mount Joy and Elizabethtown Street Railway Company ver ever WESTW ARD process in winding we save you at Leave Lancaster—a m, 430,515,615,715,815 | 1an0« . 916, 1015, 11 121, 115, 3 15, 315.4 15, | 16st ten per cent. more than other constructed. 4 57,5 57,6 27,6 57,757, 8 57, 957, 11 657 tare light until you write for our de- Leave Salunga—A m, 5 15, 6 00, 700, 800, 900.) aprintiv NC BE innit Vers Yel ortaries 10 00, 11 00, 12 00. Pm, 1 00, 2 00, 360, £00, 5 00 | seriptive coil circular. We guaran- 600, 6 50, 7 00, 5 00, 900, 10 00, 1200. | tee to save you dollars. Our low Leave Mount Joy—A m, 5 30, 615, 7 15. ice wi ITT RO. 915,10 15, 11 15. Pm, 1215, 115, 215, 315 price will surprise you. 515,615, 6 45,7 15,815,915, 1015 Am, 121 plete, $20.00. Arrive at Elizabethtown—A m, 645, 945, 1045, 11 45. Pm, 12 45, 145, 24 3 4 545, 6 45,7 45, 8 45, 945,10 45. Am, 12 39, IEASTWARD Leave Elizabethtown— A m, 6 45,7 45, 8 1045, 1145. Pm, 1245, 1 45, 245, 345, 4 AEE mb 23 645,7 45,845,945, 1045. A m, 12 30. JLgave Mount Joy—Am, 530x, 715, 815, 9 i | TT Zz y 1015,1115. Pm, 1215,115, 215, 315, 4 15, 515 $55 645,715,815, 9 15, 10 15, 11 15. Am HAS. : w ELLER 45. S81 Price com- D 3 15 1 PEOPLES’ ELECTRIC SUPPLY CO. 7-12-4t Mount Joy, Pa. v Leave Salunga— Am, 5 45x, 730, 8 30, 9 30 Real Estate and 1030, 11 30. Pm, 12 30, 1 80, 2 30, 3 30, 4 30 utd 5 30, & 30, 730, 7 39, 830, 930, 10 30, 1130 Insurance Office Am, 100. Leave Landisville—A m, 5 48x, 733, 8 33, 933 | E. MAIN STREET, MOUNT JOY 1033,1133. Pm,1233,133, 233,333, 433, §33 . - 633, 703, 733, 3:3 033,10 33, 1133, Am, 103 Calling and Cuerking Leave Rohrerstown—A wm, 610x, 755, 855, bite Si 9 55,10 55,11 65. Pm, 12 55, 155, 255, 3 55 : of Pubic Sates 4 65, 555 6565, 725 755. 855, 955, 10 55 | Settlement ofostates, collection of rents, surveyingand 11585. Am 125, couveyancing, ° Arrive at Lancaster—A m, 630x, 815, 915 1015, 1115. Pm, 1215, 1 15,215,315, 415, —— r——— erm 515,815, 715, 7 45, 815, 9 15, 10 15, 1115 Am,12 15, 1 45. : STOP AT THE WE Saturdays 2 Sap wil leave Lancaster at 5p m; Leave Elizabethtown 11 45 p. m. S 1 I | | ] | On Saturdays an i special occasions cars will orre 3 orse ote be run between Lancaster and Mount Joy every half hour from 6 16am to 8 15 p m. Sundays, first car leaves Lancaster at 8 15a m Leave Elizabethtown at 7 45 am. Car marked (x) connects with News Express at Lancaster. West Kine St., JANcasTER The annex now complete with the SORRELL HORSE, makes a frontage of 49, 52, 538 and 5 West King Street. Dinner 25 cents. Best accommodations in every respect. A share of your patronage solicited, A. B. ADAMS. Pro. Harrisburg Academy HARRISBURG, PA. : NOTARY PUBLIC. WwW. M. HOLLOWRBUSHE ATTORNEY-AL-LAW, 48 West Main Street, COLLEGE PREPARATORY SCHOOL FOR BOYS Board of Trustees Mount Joy, Penna, Vance C. McCormick, President Hugh Hamilton, Secretary John P. Melick, Treasurer Levi B. Alricks Edward Z. Gross Charles A. Kunkle George Kunkle Henry McCormick jr. Ehrman B. Mitchell Days at Lancaster, Monday and Friday at No 52 North Duke Street Photo Supplies I have always on hand the most —_— staple Photo Supplies that can be had Boarding and Day College Prepar-|such as Seeds’ D. Plates, Seeds’ De- atory school for young men and boys. | velopers, Developing Papers, Kodak Its record of success is equal to|Films, Brownie Films, Trays, Tripods that of the best preparatory schools. | Toning Solutions, Intensifiers, Velox Some Academy pupils as young as| Liquid Developer, Emerald Acid fourteen years of age have just passed | Cleaning and HardeningSolution, Ko- their preliminary examinations for|dak Tank Developers, Passe-Partout Princeton. The percentage of suc-| Binding, Flash Powders, Printing cess attained by the nine candidates Frames, Stereographic Views, 50c a from the Harrisburg Academy was] Set; Tray Thermometers. Academy will take the Yale exami- nations; ten to fifteen the Prince- WwW. B. BENDER Shaving Hair Cutting ton examinations in June 1910. New Shampooing 29 buildings and athletic grounds worth mitory; healthful location; mountain E. Main St., Mount Joy water; gymnasium; athletic coach; music instructors; ideal home school. Day Students, $150 per year, Dormitory Students, $375 per year. Send for circular. Box 617, Har- risburg, Penna. : : | coil is the most remarkable money sa- | | By a new | 515, 545, 6 15, 7 15, 815, 9 15, 11 15, makes. We sell only direct to user, | Leave Rohrerstown—a m, 4 50, 535, 635, 7356! x anvi ’ a SAGE AY . 885, 9 85,1035, 11 35. Pm, 1235 135, 235, 335 | thus saving you all unnecessary pro- 4 35,535, 6 05, 6 35,7 35,835, 9 35 fits. One price to all. Don’t buy Leave Landisville—A m, 51 a, 101g o ‘0 coi ree izor for v y 857, 967, 10 57, 11 Pam 1257 57, ann | 2 choke coil or economizer for your THE WERKLY BULLETIN Love andthe Locksmith. By Edward Caring. Copyrighted, 1008, by Associated Literary Press, “Jimmie!” Little Mrs, Barron's voice rose shrill and anguished. “I don't care,” insisted Jimmy Bar- ron. “I sald ‘darn that lock,’ and you ought to be glad that I sald no more!” “It 1s the first time you ever darned anything I wanted you to do,” re- proached Mrg. Barron. “You don't love me any more, Jimmy.” “Great heavens!” cried the exasper- ated Barron. “Of course I love you, Nettie, but when you ask me to stop and fix this lock when I nave an ap- pointment with Chilvers at the office at 10. Anyhow, it's the janitor’s busi- ness to keep the locks in repair.” Nettie turned away with a little, hurt cry. This was worse than the remark which had started the trouble. To leave her to the tender mercies of the janitor was rubbing salt in the “I HAVE GONE TO MOTHEK'S.” wounds, and as Barron gave his wife a8 hasty kiss and hurried down the stairs he told himself that he would send a locksmith around to attend to the matter at once. | Of course the janitor was there to make repairs for the tenants, but he was a surly fellow whose breath smelled strongly of drink, and Nettie Barron was afraid to admit him to the cozy little apartment they called home. For more than a week they had been having trouble with the lock that Bar- ron had added to the fastenings pro- vided by the landlord. There was a burglar scare in the city, and apart- ment houses were the favorite points of attack. Jimmie felt that, baving spent the better part of Sunday afternoon put- ting the lock on, Nettie could not very well expect him to keep it in repair. { Thus had started the first quarrel { they had had since thelr marriage, and | Barron took the car downtown feeling anything but at ease with all the world. { The Chilvers interview was satisfac- | tory in the extreme. It was late in the afternoon when the details were con- cluded, and Jimmie had entered upon | a contract which meant the successful | outcome of the business venture in | which he had engaged. | To cap the climax it bad been ar- ranged that Chilvers, who was an out | of town man, should spend the evening | at the club with Jimmie, so it was past | midnight when Barron reached home. The elevator stopped running at 12 | o'clock, and Jimmie toiled up the three ! flights of stairs to his apartment. Pinne§. to the door was a sheet of pa- | per a on it the words, “I have gone to mother’s.” Jimmie felt the cold perspiration be- dew his forehead. It had come, then. He always had thought that “going to mother’s” was merely a creation of the { newspaper humorist, but it was true. Nettie had probably grieved over his refusal to fix the lock and had ended by going home to her mother. Mechanically he turned and descend ed the stairs. He did not want to en ter the deserted apartment. It was home no longer with Nettie gone. Ht did not know just where he wanted to go or what he wanted to do. but he wanted to get away from the place where they had been so happy togeth- er; he wanted to walk in the cool night air and to realize what it all meant to him. He was passionately attached to Nettle, and he had not dreamed that they ever could be separated. He thought dumbly of the dark, si- lent apartment and shuddered. He would have to move from there and go to a hotel to live. He never could en ter the deserted home again. It would be like violating the tomb of their dead happiness. He did mot blame Nettie, but he bit terly reproached himself. He knew how timid Nettie was. She had feared the surly looking janitor, and she could not even speak of burglars with out a little shudder, and her husband had brutally told her that he would be darned if he would fix the door and had flung away, leaving her with only the insecure protection of the flimsy lock provided by the landlord. And this was a lock that even a child could open with the blade of a knife when the Yale lock would not work. Perhaps the burglars had come. He rather hoped they had. He hoped that they had taken everything. It would be horrible to have to give directions Talk Is Cheap When you can get a telephone in your house for $12.00 a year. Call up the Columbia Telephone Company and they will tell you all about it. - Constipation causes headache, nau- sea, dizziness, languor, heart palpi- tation. Drastic physics, gripe, sick- en, weakens the bowels and don’t cure. Doan’s Regulets act gently and cure constipation; 25 cents. Ask for the storage of the furniture which they had selected with such loving care, There was a sentiment attached to every chair, and tears started In his tired eyes as he remembered the little footstool Nettie had insisted upon buy ing, though she would not tell him what she wished it so particularly for. It had become her favorite seat when he came In tired from the office, and she cuddled down against his side, the golden head resting comfortably on his shoulder while he told her the story of his day. He changed his mind about the burglars. He did not want them to carry off the little font. stool. As he pondered the situation Jim- mie trudged onward and gave no heed to his direction. It was almost with a shock that he found himself turning fn at a gate and realized that mechan- fcally he had walked all the way to Nettie’'s mother's, three long miles, There was a light In the window of the room that had been Nettle's In thelr courtship days. He recalled the nights when he had passed the house just to see the light in the window and to know that all was well with her. Now there was the light, but noth- ing was well. For an Instant a wo- man’s form was silhouetted against the shade, and Barron came to a sud- den decision. There was an all night drug store on the corner. He would call her up and sue for pardon. It seemed hours before there was an answer to his ringing, but at last it came, and it was Nettie's sweetly se- rious volce that replied. “It's Jimmie,” he sald brokenly. “I got your note.” “It served you right,” said Nettie severely. “] know {it does,” admitted Barron “I really meant to send a man around but the Chilvers matter drove the thought from my head and I forgot all about it.” “You have only yourself to blame,” she reminded. “I asked you hundreds of times to fix the lock.” “Only about eight,” corrected Bar- ron, “but I was a brute not to do it the first time you asked. After this you won’t have to ask me to do a thing a second time, dear.” Barron regarded himself in the mir- rored wall contentedly. It was an in. gpiration to treat the matter as though there had been no separation. “Did the burglars get In?” asked Nettie interestedly. “I don’t think so,” was the eager re- sponse, ‘But look here, Nettie. If I promised that I will always do the thing you ask me to will you—be friends again, dear? When I came home and found that you had left me I broke down. I walked out here from our place and never realized that IT had walked so far until I found myself turning in at your gate.” There was a choking sound over the wire, and Jimmie looked hopeful. If she was erying it was a sign that she might relent. “Where are you now?” asked the volce. “Down at the corner,” was the prompt reply. “Won't you let me come over and see you, dear?” “You may come,” assented Nettie, and Jimmie tore out of the place without even stopping to hang up the receiver. He sped up the street, and a few moments later he was on the steps and Nettle was standing in the doorway to welcome him. As the door closed behind them a pair of soft arms were thrown about his neck and soft lips pressed his cheek. “Jimmie, you're the absurdest boy,” declared the little wife lovingly. “You didn’t even try to get in the flat, did you?” “What was the use when yon were not there, sweetheart?’ he asked fondly. “You would have found out why 1 came to mother's,” she explained. “Your horrid lock worked when 1 went out, but when I came home not even the janitor could make it un- lock, and it was too late to find a locksmith, so I came on to mother's and left that note for you.” “And you were not angry? You didn’t leave me?’ demanded Jimmie. “How could I?’ she asked simply. “You were a bad boy, Jimmie, but I love you, dear.” Jimmie took her im his arms. “I want you always to love me,” he said, “and I'm going to buy you a dozen Jocks in the morning. What is that quotation about love and the lock- smith?” Up a Starfish Ladder. Fishermen say that starfishes are gregarious; that you might find on the bottom an acre covered so thick with them that you couldn’t walk without stepping on them, but not find another starfish for hundreds of acres around. This characteristic gregariousness the starfishes in captivity at the aquarium sometimes show, as when they assem- ble, as they may, all in one corner of the tank in the angle, tightly holding on there, one above another irregular- ly, but still close together from the bottom of the tank to the top. And when they have assembled thus you may see another curious thing there—namely, green crabs climbing from the bottom to the top of the tank up this starfish ladder. The green crab is not one of the swim- ming crabs. When # goes anywhere it has to walk or climb, and so on the bottom it walks along, to climb when it comes to rocks or other obstructions. It cannot, however, climb up a verti- cal wall like that of a tank. But here the starfishes, one above another in the corner, make with their bodies and projecting arms convenient ridges that the green crabs can hold on by, and so they climb there up this star- fish ladder, finding in this, it may be, some diversion, while as for the star- fishes, they don’t seem tg mind it.— New York Sun. Young hens begin laying much ear- lier when you give them Fairfield’s Blood Tonic and Egg Producer for Poultry Only twice a day in their reg- ular feed. It hastens the develop- ment of the egg producing organs, strengthens the entire body and pre- vents disease For sale by F. H. Baker, Mount Joy; H. C. Greider, Landisville, and D. B. Ebersole, Elizabethtown. Advertise in the Bulletin. $100,000; strong faculty; new dor- It pays | Agency for Standard Steam Laundry § your druggist. Read the Bulletin Wednesday, August 26th, 1909 SEPP ESURCIZIRINORTIRRISISRIPAY 1] 0 : READ TRIS! & . 3 i & i Lo Lo] io $F A oF According to the reports of the United States Govern- 3 . ment experts on pure food, we make a perfect baking pow 5 We guarantee that it does not contain any particle of 4 der. x tartaric acid, alum or any other impurities and we challenge ® y gs any other baking powder firm to prove that their powder 2 : : vod . W # contains as much cream of tartar as the White Mountain. Fo) Lr Ko oF & $B $ o £ 2% LC] LO 2% wil oy CLT CE NI TB AT Maths We give you a full pound for 50c¢ and then give you your choice of any of the following articles as a premium, SUGGS SVJ HGBOSSLBGBHEOOS 5-Quart Dresden White Lined Preserve Kettles 14-Quart Titan Grey Rinsing Pan Motteled Enamelware and many other articles which will be in a little later. - Tod oTeTelolelotofelateloliotelolototetototat opiate lotelolo L Jeodetetotetotototeotetototototototote ols: 0H OHH OH OH 08 Don’t Throw Your Money Away When you can buy Porch Furniture Refrigerators and Go-Carts at 25 PER CENT DISCOUNT and don’t take advantage of it, you certainly are throwing money away. You will put your money in bank and get 3 and 4 per cent. filloresy and are satisfied. Why not invest some of your money in PORCH FURNI- and make 333 per cent. interest on your money. Hoffmeier Bros.. 40-42 East King St. hancaster, Pa. Save Money fi D ! Si | S. EH. MILLER Up-to-Date and Reliable Jeweler and Optician EAST MAIN STREET, MOUNT JOY, PA. You Ought to Look Into This BIG SHOE SALE WERE HAVING You really can’t afford to pass up this chance to buy enough good shoes to last you for a long tiem to come. Never so far as we know, has such a sale takeu place in this city. Our windows are ablaze with It’s built in toem. \ bargains, you can see the values in the shoes, ei ee SEHAUB & CO.- BOOTS, SHOES, RUBBERS and HOSIERY 18 North Queen Street, LANCASTER, PENNA, n— Fish and Game Laws for 1909 The FISH and GAME Laws for 1909 have just been issued in neat form by PIROSH & S8IMMONS. copy FREE. A full line of all kinds of GUNS and SHELLS, at Lowest Prices, Pirosh &{& Simmons JEWELER AND OPTICIANS Next Door to Shaub & Co’s.Shoe Store 20 N. QUEEN ST., LANCASTER Please call at our store and get a Try a Bulletin Ad TURE, A REFRIGERATOR, or a GO-CAR'T at 25 PER CENT DISCOUNT & & SHHBVHBURSVBBDBVHLRBOBBOBHIVON SLVR BLVLBOVLVSBSHVV RB V HB BOVBBLB LB DOOD ORO DD OOOH IEE ELH 55 3055 350, Ak. ote AA. A. AAS AR bie ike. ln a ctor msn HE bt an 0. AUB he he oe hl the he th A uh A ik id. id ab bb a 3 a a
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers