THE WEEKLY BULLETIN Wednesday, November 17, 1909 , Ulothing at Half Price 00000000000000000 oa I am selling out my entire line of clothing. The weather is get- ting cooler and you'll surely want Winter clothing. More seasonable Suits, Over- coats, Etc. can be found no where, but the prices on these goods are the whole show. Neat, well made, up-to-the-hour designs, at only half their actual value. Think that over then come and look them over; | know you'll buy. 0-0-0000 Continued Specials Not my entire stock but such goods as you will need daily are greatly reduced. These specials are changed weekly and it will be to your advantage to call and get your share of them. Ghecks Given and Received 0-00000000000000000 WOLF YOFFE W. Main Street, Mount Joy, Penna. EE Your i Watch business and social life. A perfect timekeeper is a vital necessity in business. You will FOR RENT Building (and Ma 2-Story Frame chinery, on Columbia Ave Mount Joy. We will reserve the use of the of- fice for the transaction of the busi- ness of the Blkhorn Steam Laundry. nue, washer, dry room, and boiler, tubs, power ¢ ngine tractor, stationary et The ily washes he can get. used for running any machin- may be ery he may install. There is water | and eas in the building. The second | floor could be used for a workshop. | Address: SHEAFFER & Pa. R. H. 00, Middletown, Private Sale situate 3 mile south of | Moant the Mount Joy and Marietta turnpike, containing 12 ac- res of land in a high state of cultiva- and conveniently located. The are a 23 story frame barn, tobacco shed, and For particulars call on STRICKLER, Mount Joy, Pa. A Farm Joy, on tion improvements house, frame outbuildings. ALBERT novi-4t. C. S. MU SSE R, THE BAKER Bread and Cakes Delivered through town daily Fresh Doughnuts, Crullers and Dewey Wednesday & Thursday. Funerals, Weddings and Suppers given prompt attention Store & Bakery, West Main Mount Joy, Pa. Branch Store at E. Ream’s. Fresh Buns every Street MOUNT Joy HALL StarCourse vider, Nov, 19th, 1909 Martha Alexander Company Thursday, Dec. 9th, 1909 Dr. Roland D. Grant Friday, Feb. 18th, 1910 Sidney Landon Tuesday, March 1st. 1910 Lyceum Ladies’ Quartette Monday, March, 14, 1910 Chicago Ladies’ Orchestra be prompt in attending your so- cial engagements if your watch is right. Let us sell you a watch that is reliable. YOU ARE PROUD OF YOUR WIFE AND CHILD- Here is the place to buy your Jewelry because I have the lar- gest selection and it is all new and up-to-date. It will cost Is a very important feature of REN. WHY DON'T YOU BRING THEM TO US TO BE PHOTOGRAPHED? vou nothing to come and see my WE WILL GIVE YOU A stock and learn prices which are PICTURE THAT WILL as low as any jeweler can sell MAKE YOU PROUDER because my expenses are low. STILL. I Engrave all goods free of charge and do all kinds of re- pairing watches, clocks and jew YOU NEED NOT WAIT FOR A CLEAR DAY. WE CAN TAKE JUST AS GOOD PHOTOS ON A CLOUDY elry. Prices reasonable. DAY. R. V. FECLEY TEWELER Ricker Photo Gallery W. Maia St., Mt. Joy. ——C) Photographs Finished Amateurs. E. Main St., Moant Joy, Pa. for Photo Supplies —— 1 | I have always on hand the most staple Photo Supplies that can be had such as Seeds’ D. Plates, Seeds’ De- velopers, Developing Papers, Kodak Films, Brownie Films, Trays, Tripods, Toning Solutions, Intensifiers, Velox Liquid Developer, Emerald Acid, Cleaning and HardeningSolution, Ko- dak Tank Developers, Passe-Partout Binding, Flash Powders, Printing Frames, Stereographic Views, 50c a Set; Tray Thermometers. FEHR FHI HH RiAcE YOUR ORDER + EARLY * W.B. BENDER Shaving Hair Cutting Shampooing E. Main St., Agency for Standard Steam Laundry nd from which to prices ‘or good ma-— TFELTER MOUNT Joy Mount Joy ; : i : : 4 emenmepan CHICHESTER SPILLS LADIES! Ack your Pruggist for CITI-CHES-TER'S DIAMOND BRAND PILLS in Rep and Gorp metallic boxes, sealed with Biu 4 Ribbon. TAKE NO OTHER. Buy of your Drugeist end ask for CHI-CHES. TERS hs D BRAND PILLS, for twenty-five ed as Best, Safest, Always Reliable. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS Course Tiekets.................5$1.00 General Admission, _......... 30 os Reserved Seats,....... Chart at Garbers. Both Phones J. W. KOONS AUCTIONEER MOUNT JOY PENNA. Give Me a Call Exchange Hotel Terms Reasonable —WHY., work for $10 per week ® kk %k % When you can double your Salary through a course with the Harrisburg Automobile School. For Terms and Prospects write ® ok kx % % HARRISBURG AUTO. SCHOOL 3rd and Hamilton Streets. Did You Say Trees? Why yes; the best place to] buy trees is at the Mt. Joy Nurseries All Kinds of Trees | California i | | Privet That Nice Hedging For Ar- ound Your Yard, Very Cheap. | W. S. Krady 80¢ yr. TIME EVERYWHERE 32: TRIED Bell Phone. MOUNT JOY, PA. The plant is equipped with an 8-horse | ex-| renter may do all the fam-| The engine | | woney from me.’ HORRORS OF THE ARCTIC. Terrible Experience of the Crew of wre Hl Fated Jeannette. When Ross In 1818 touched at Etah the Esks thought they were being vis- |Hed by ghosts. With her white salls appearing on the horizon, where the | sky melts into an abyss of ocean, what else could the ship be but some great white winged ghost, and what those strange creatures on her decks but lost souls? They thought she, a | great bird, had flown from the moon, they saw her close, her wooden belly and her masts, they whispered, “How | much wood there is in the moon—how very much!” Wood is like gold to the Esks. One of the unhappy crew of the Jeannette writes: “1 put some mercury to freeze and beat it out on the anvil. Our frozen brandy looked like black topaz. We divided meat, ofl and bread with a hatchet. Joshua forgot to put on his right glove; in a moment his hand was frozen. The poor devil wish- ed to thaw his lifeless hand in warm water. It was immediasely covered with pleces of ice. The doctor was forced to cut the unlucky mate’s hand off, and he died next day. Toward the middle of January a caravan of Esks came to ask us for some dried fish and brandy. We added a little tobacco to these presents, which they received with tears of joy. The chief, a feeble old man, told us that the week before he had eaten his wife and two sons.” Cold more terrible than the white wolf and bear seizes its victims un- awares, instantaneously, fatally. The cold purifies the blood, sharpens appe- tite, favors digestion and stomach. It | soothes to sleep by bringing death in the midst of beautiful dreams. This intense cold, so dry, so pure, stops pu- trefaction, sweetens the air by greatly increasing its density and purifies wa- ter. Cold takes the place of cooking, for it makes raw meat, raw fish and tallow eatable. A Roman nosed people could not hold their own in the arctic. A.Roman nose would be too often frozen off. The Esk flat nose is less exposed. The name Eskimo, or raw food eaters, is a nickname given by the Labrador In- dians. Their true name in their own tongue is Inoit and means “man.” If patriotism be a virtue the Esks have it surpassingly. Never was a land of verdant groves, golden harvests and willows mirrored in the streamlets and silvery waves better beloved than their snow fields and ice hills and gloomy, stinking tents and igloos.—New York Press. THE CENTURY PLANT. It Blooms, Says a Florist, Every Twen- ty-five to Forty Years. “The regular century plant,” said an expert in floriculture, “is not a cactus. It belongs to a family by itself. It has a large, broad leaf, sometimes two or three feet long and several inches thick where they branch from the cen- ter. There are two varieties, one the variegated and the other green. ‘The only difference is that the variegated has a white stripe along the outer edge of the leaf. Both bloom every twenty- five to forty years. A stock perhaps eight or ten inches in diameter shoots up from the center to a height of fif- teen or twenty feet, and around this stock cluster small blossoms. ‘They are neither pretty nor fragrant. They were formerly supposed to bloom once in a hundred years. “The nearest thing to a century plant is a night blooming cereus. It is a cactus and blooms once in about every twenty-five years or so. I'he flower is large, very beautiful and has a delightful odor. One plant may have only one night. “There is no such plant as a ‘century cactus.’ The cactuses that many have mistaken for ‘century cactuses’' will bloom in four or five years if kept un- der glass or about seven years if not in a hothouse. Because they are so long in blooming, I suppose, they have been called ‘century cactuses,’ and the name has been handed down until! it is considered the proper term for them. They bloom yearly after the first blos- soms appear. They are just an ordi- nary cactus, but they have a pretty, fragrant flower.” —Seattle Times. The Canny Scot. In the differences that would some- times arise between members of his tenantry the Duke of Argyll was often ¥ invited to arbitrate upon the matter in dispute, and he used to tell a charac- teristically Scottish story of one of the occasions. Two tenants having waited upon him and asked him to decide the question at issue, the duke put what he always regarded as a very necessary preliminary question, “Will you abide by my award?” “Well, your grace,” was the reply of one of the hard headed old disputants, “1'd like to ken first what it is.”’—Lon- don Chronicle. The Other Way With Him. “Remember, sir, that you owe some- thing to your constituents,” said one member of a town council to another. «Humph!” said the other. “If you owe anything to your constituents all | I've got to say is that you're lucky. | Why, there are not half a dozen voters fn my ward that have not borrowed '—Stray Stories. Pitfalls of Slang. Host (in India)—Do you see that fa natic over there? He has sat on that and in that posture without corner | moving for six months. Traveler (from America) — Gee, that’s going some!—Chicago Tribune. Little minds are tamed and subdued | by misfortune. but great minds rise | above it.—Irving. —— — Dairyvmen in this section attribute their increased profits this year to | their regular use of Fairfield’s Blood | Tonic and Milk Producer for Cattle Only. They have proven that it saves feed, increases and enriches the milk supply and keeps cattle healthy. For sale by F. H. Baker, Mount Joy; H. C. Greider, Landisville, and D. B. Ebersole, Elizabethtown. 10: A large line of ladies,’ misses’ and children’s coats at I. D. Beneman’s. where wood was abundant, and when | several blossoms, but each flower lasts Don’t Be the Wrong Mr. Wright Holiday Advertising Is the Aeroplane That Gives Business a Lift. GET ABOARD! TAKE A FLYER! el ne TL ly ar and successful practice ful results. heads, It is surprising how quickly and easily pimples and black-heads can be cured with the following pres- cription, which was made known to the public a short time ago by a cel- specialist on skin diseases, who used it in a long with wonder- To use his ewn words: vet rated yw retired, There is nothing discovered that can compare with it for prompt- removing pimples, eczema, black- blotches, red face and noses, 1d in fact any disease of the skin; A Wonderful Mscovery for Pimples germ that causes it also destroys the the disease and makes the cure | Following is the | which can be prepared drug store at a one half ounce, Alcohol, manent.” seription, relaible Clearola, any cost, ther one ounce, Mix, seven oO Ces, e for can letting it remain on the fac fifteen minutes then it wiped off. Do not a little oat mezal cloth bag. or use tied any sc use up cheese small shake well and apply the parts affected night and morning in a er- re- at E- un- to ten be ap, CHO CLOT OS) HING Like you would a friend—use a little care and it will pay you in the Jong run. & GetPAway from thef common places and dress with distiction, you can at stnall expense by buying of us. BY We have now in stock the largest and most up-to-date line of Mens’ Young Men’s and Boys’ Suits and Overcoats in town. We also have an extra fine assortment of MEN'S, LADIES’ and CHILDREN’S SHOES. All we ask is a chance to prove what we claim. I. D. BENEMAN Reliable Merchant EAST MAIN STREET, Mount Joy, Penna. f Ladies $15 and $16.50 Suits $9.98 From two of New York’s leading tailors, we picked out nearly 100 of their most stvlish suits—taking them at a deep price concession because of the mild Fall. Probably an equal number are included from our own stocks the ones and twos that remain from the preferre. styles and on which we’ve made as heavy a reduction. £o that when you from. come on Saturday you may choose Nearly 200 Suits; at Savings of $2.50, $5.00 or $7.50 All are this season's styles—every desirable fabric in the color you have in mind. #15 oo and 9 98 $16.50 Suits, ° £27.50 Suits, With Thanksgiving next week, tempting an opportunity as this. Brussels Carpets at 69c¢c., 79c, 89c. Over a hundred patterns you will see only at Foster & Cochran’s— floral and neat small figures so much wanted. 69¢c and 79¢c Brus- sets, 59c. A Dozen Patterns. FOSTER: ax» GOCE 32 to 38 BE. King Si, We . Ladies’ sizes 34, 36, 35, 40 ani Misses’ 14, 16 and 18 at each price. $20.00 and $22.50 Suits, $17.50 $19.98 scores of women will not miss as WARM FOOTWEAR for COLDER DAYS Lined Shoes, £1.00 to $2. I.adies’ Warm beaver and wool lined, Ladies’ splendid warm beavet shoes for every day—§$1.50. Rubbers, etc., lowest prices Men's lined and beaver shoes and beaver boots, $2.50. Men’s leather boots, $2.50 to $4.00. Men's cloth rabbers, artics, ete. Lancaster, Pa. | ? Don’t you think we can save you time ana money? A trial and we’ll readily convince you. We are prepared We ] : Lo N 2 A LITTLE RUBBER TIRE TALK x 2 a & ! © Why send your oF wheelsaway and ##+ wait a week or %. more? We put “< them on while $4 you wait Qo $5 or Just a few words in reference to rubber tires for Spring. 0% to put on rubber tires on very short notice and at very reasonable prices. #} buy our rubber direct from the manufacturer and can adjust a set while you oF wait. Let your wagon here while you go to the store, bank, or transact othe i+ minor business and when you return we will have a set of good rubber tires on {+ your wheels. We use only the best rubber-—the famous Kelly-Springfield tire, #% one of the best on thd market. all times. We carry a big line of this rubber in stoek at Give us a chance or your next job. Remember we can save you the middle man’s profit,and that s quite an item. Y OUNG BROS. FLORIN PENNA A030 230 000 408 100 450 00 00 £00 200 000 £00 400 08 50 400 £00 £00 400 0 50 £00 5 /The 1 Ninth Anaiveisary | On’ Saturday evening the ninth an- niversary of the founding of Eliza- bethtown College was celebrated. Lagt week nine years ago the college was formally opened and from its ine ception the institution has prospered in a material, as well as in an influ- ential way. The exercises were held in the College Chapel, p——— SALE REGISTER Please remember if we print your bills we will insert a notice of your sale in our register from now until the day of sale, FREE. Our large circulation will thoroughly advertise your sale, so send us your date at once for insertion in this list. Saturday, Nov. 20-—At the Farme- ers’ Inn, Mount Joy, Pa., horses, wag~ ons, two pianos, tumbler pigeons, rabbits, chickens, furniture, egg and parlor stoves, ete. by Wm. H. Gantz Vogle, auct. Friday, November 26-——At the Was hington Mount lot of ground on West Main street, Mount with a steyq_ property and dwelling combined. Also a lot of ground on East Main street with a large 2}-story frame house large enough to accommodate three fami- at 7. p. m. John G. administrator of Annie Dier- Zeller, auct. Markets! Following are Lancaster City’s markets of this morning : House, Joy, Pa., a Joy, lies. Sale by Keener, olf, deseased. C. H. Wheat per bushel................. $ 1.08 Bran per ton........ .. 26.00 Shorts per ton....... 27.00 Middlings per ton... . 30.00 Potatoes per bushel... 98 Corn per bushel..................... .75 Oats per bushel .................... .60 Today H. E. Ebersole pays: Butter per pound........... --$ 36 Lard per pound .... 13 Tallow per pound. 05 Eggs per dozen........ 208 Potatoes per bushel............... .75 EXECUTOR'S NOTICE Estate of Christian N. Gerber, late of the Borough of Mount Joy, Lancas ter County, Pa., Deceased. Letters testamentary on said es~ tate having been granted to the un- dersigned, all persons indebted there- to are requested to make immediate payment and those having claims or demands against the same will pre- sent them without delay for settle- ment to the undersigned, residing in said Borough of Mount Joy. MARY S&S. GERBER, Executrix Chas. a. Baker, Atty. 11- -10- Gt EXECUTOR'S NOTICE Estate of John L. Long, late of Mt. Joy Borough, Lancaster Co., Pa., dee. Letters testamentary on said estate having been granted to the undersign ed, all persons indebted thereto are requested to make immediate pay- ment, and those having claims or de- mands against the same will press them without delay for settlement te the undersigned, residing at Landis ville, Lancaster County, Pa. DAVID N. LONG, Executor. John B. Graybill, Atty. 11-10-6¢ ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE Estate of Annie Dierolf, late of Mt. Joy, Lancaster Co., Pa., deceased. Letters of administration on said estate having been granted to the undersigned, all persons indebted thereto are requested to make imme- diate payment, and those having claims or demands against the same will present them without delay for settlement to the undersigned, resid- ing in Mount Joy, Pa. JOHN G. KEENER, Administrator. Harnish & Harnish. attys. 10-6-6€ Save Your FRUIT TREES By Spraying Them With Scalecide We have scalecide for sale will \C axa Will in any quantity or we spray all your fruit with our new Sprayer v. ry reasonable price. guarantee good results. M. L. Greider & Co. MOUNT JOY, PENNA. Shire’s Vieat Wiarket Rear of Nissley*s Tobacco Warehouse FLORIIN - PEIN .A. W. v. SHIRE, Duos. EA ATS ERS ER rs RR SN ERR TNE TE SEER HE SURES os Ro wt fu BE mate Ded om Tn aE ati - dN O DD oe of tp SII # pro sio an ha tro of Nis in. abo Arr of mei WoC pen it ¢ for cha Joy. al A of 1 afte o’cle
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers