The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, May 15, 1912, Image 3

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BACKACHE
|
FOIL SAFE CRACKERS
NOT A DISEASE ecco rumen rirrv reer vo
Buta Svsmptolt a Danger Sig-
nal Which Every Woma.
Should Heed.
Backache is a
weakness or derangement,
backache don’t neglect it. To ge
symptom of
of the trouble,
all’s experience,
organic
If you have
t per-
manent relief you must reach the root |
Read about Mrs. Wood-
Morton's Gap, Kentucky. — “‘I suffered
two y¢
ars with female
| backache w hich Wi
not stand on mv feet
-
to
1 1 1 vening and
dur 1
age
d the m
nt expect to provide refresh-
ment for man thousands
In int of servi ind in
of flavor bev y
Foul will establis
ard There has never
thing like it in this section before.
The entire arrangement will be
under the personal direction of one
of the most expert soda dispensers
for merly in charge of a similar
department for a world—famous
chocolate concern.
Everything will be clean and san-
itary and only the finest quality of
fruits and syrups will be supplied, in
the most alluring and palate-appeal-
ing forms conceivable.
Popular prices will be maintained,
and an effort made to provide some-
thing new every day.
It will pay you to go to the Talbot
Stores it for nothing else than to
gpend a nickel for a delightful drink
at this beautiful Crystal Soda Foun-
tain.
SAVE
varie ty
been any
OLD CARPETS
FLUFF RUGS
OUT OF THEM~~ANY SIZE
No matter how old
‘Anything Goes
Send for Circular M
Novelty Rug Co.,
135-137 Beaver St.,
LANCASTER, PENNA.
~~"THE
PARK Q POLLARD |
COMPANY
/ DRY-MASH
IS A WONDERFUL EGG /
PRODUCER-IT MAKES TH RY
LAY OR 3%
UST TA ny
Wo \
as ———" |
|
Don t go wis eggs this Fall and |
yao ys ur part (teed the Park & 1
Pollard Dry- Mash) the hens will
do the rest
Order a “bag today r money
back if it does not make good.
For Sale by
BRANDT & STEHMAN
Mount. Joy Pa.
Aglk the man that feeds it.
If you are hungry for Buckwheat
Cakes, the kind mother used to
bake, we still have Buckwheat flour
om hand.
Ice Ice
I wish to imform the public that I
have one of the largest orops of
Pure Orystal Spring Water lee that I
have had since I am in the business,
which I am now ceady to werve the
public. Wagon thru Mt. Joy aad
Movin dally. See me before placiag
your order for the seasom. Prices
reasonable.
C. S. Frank
MT. JOY, PA.
Advertise in the Mt. Joy Bulletia.
en | he Pr, pi
simply awful, could
disorders my
the Talbot |
a new stand- |
ROB RICH VAULT,
Police Informed Too Late to Capture
Gang in Unfinished Drift, but Scare
Them Away Before They
Finish the Job.
Oakland, Cal.—Safe crackers after
tunneling 60 feet, have been foiled In
an attempt to rob ¢ Bank of Com
merce vaults, Seventeenth street and
san Pablo avenue. For several days
after the discovery of the excavation
poiice inspectors armed with shot guns
lay in wait for the yeggmen, but they
were fri ed off, leaving behind
many evidence of their attempt to
break into the bank
Sheltered by the foundation walls of
the Chi an Adventists’ missions in
Seventeenth street, east of San Pablo
avenue, the gang xcavated a tunnel
directed at the bank vault Nearly
60 feet mained to be traversed be
fore e operators would have reached
a point beneath the vault
Tunnel Made Small.
The 1 1 o by
thre ¢ «
Sg Vv ¢ g
¢ 2
ofl t l
and in k
dio
1 he S 1
tec 1h 0
y ‘
of a ) t
tunnel I l
Wi
0 6
as
| rails a d
| for the strong box
steel several 1 }
| strong inner « I 1 I 1
the way, and the use of dynan
other explosive would have destroyed
| the tunnel
Discovery Accidental.
The discovery of » operations was
made by F. Harlow, a sheet metal
worker who was hunting beneath the
mission for kindling wood. Harlow
reported the matter to George Stutt,
manager of the United Transfer com-
pany, who at the same time received
information from a man who was al-
lowed to sleep in the mission that
some one was at work beneath it
nights. Stutt, with A. H. Hawley,
cashier of the bank, investigated and
reported to Peterson, who detailed in-
spectors on the case.
The gang was well organized and
well equipped. A wooden box, three
feet long, two feet wide and five inches
deep, mounted on furniture casters,
was operated on a pulley to remove the
dirt. The dirt was carefully spread
over the surface of the ground. Three
shovels, a heavy crowbar, a demijohn
with drinking water, a bottle of coffee,
candies, soda crackers and other pro
visions were found about the mouth of
the tube.
MAID’S HEART GAME'S STAKE
Ernest Legler's Dice Throw Wins and
Pretty Lizzie Shorton Becomes
His Bride.
Fresno, Cal.—A game of dice was
played here the other night in which
the heart of a fair maid of the Rus
sian section was the stake. The game
was between Peter Dermer and E rne st
Legler for the hand of Lizzie Shorton,
eighteen years old. Legler won and
later took out a marriage license.
Dermer had also taken out a mar-
riage license and, had not Legler re-
turned from a long absence Dermer,
in all probability, would have married
the girl. The bride to be had first
been won by Legler. He went away
and for more than three months failed
to correspond with Miss Shorton. Be
lieving that she had been forgotten,
the girl considered Legler no longer
and was wooed and won by Dermer
Just after the marriage license had
i been issued to Dermer, however, Leg-
ler appeared and immediately put in a
claim for his promised wife. The
game of dice was then decided upom
| as a means of Setiins the controversy
|
Chance Bluff Catches Man,
St. Louis, Mo.—Georze Reno, an
engineer for the Union Electric Light
and Power company, was passing a
barber shop at No. 408 North Tenth
street early the other morning when
he saw a man standing in front of one
of the large mirrors
Although unarmed, Reno shouted:
“Hold up yeur hands!”
The man obeyed him. Patrolman
Lake of the Carr street statien ap-
peared jnst then. The prisoner gave
his name as Mike Cavanaugh An in-
formation was issued yesterday
against him ebarging burglary and
larceny
Smokes as Surgeon Works,
Chester, Pa..—While responding to
an alarm of fire, Louis H. Moore, driy-
er of the Felton fire company’s truck
was seriously injured when the appar-
atus crashed into am awning at Third
and Kerlin streets, crushing him be-
tween the seat of the truck and the
building. When removed from the de-
bris Moere insisted upon remounting
the apparatus, but had no. driven a
block before he collapsed amd was
taken to the engine house, where he
revived and_sat smoking a pipe while
Dr. H. C. Denohoo dressed the deep
gashes in his leg.
Helps a Judge in Bad Fix
Justice Mi Cherry, of Gillis
Mills, Tenn., was plainly worried. A
bad sore on his leg had hafed sev-
era! doctors and long resisted all
remedies. “I thought it was a cam-
cer,”” he wrote. “At last I used
Bucklen’s Arniea Salve, and was
completely eured.” Cures burns,
boils, ulcers, cuts, bruises and piles. |
35 cemis at S. B. Bernhart & Co.
ree etl Qe
Anether Circus
The Hagenbeck-Wallace show will
be in Lancaster June 1st.
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kta
(
RIGHTEOUS KICK
=
JAN WITH
Undersized Chap Who Had Been Im.
posed Upon by Big, Beefy Cuss,
Airs His Grouch.
‘ ' ‘ ded qd
P i into ) t
t k ? ) a 1y
l « end I
1 \
: ! i
four 1 t
) 3:1 t
t 0]
I d
hal
a ni
does nf eV la
till !
he i
bi y
1 {
( r-
ru ind
V( I 1 5
tac Ww 1ent;
t Fri of ti in room
The Celestial Way.
In China when a subscriber rings up
the exchange the operator may be ex-
pected to ask:
“What number does the honorable
gon of the moon and stars desire?”
“Hohi, two-three.”
Silence. Then the exchange re
sumes:
“Will the honorable person gracious-
ly forgive the inadequacies of the
insignificant service and permit this
humble slave of the wire to inform
him that the never-to-be-sufficiently-
censured line is busy ?’—Wasp.
NO CAUSES FOR COMPLAINT.
De Roads (with
old, pal,
bout our perfession is just worked t’
death.
De Barns—Well, don’t ycuse keer
go long as ’tain’t us wot’'s bein’ work-
ed t' death,
Their Agreement,
newspaper) —Say,
“Funny that both the prosecuting at |
terney and the lawyer for the defense
in that case both wanted the judge to |
do the same thing.”
“What was that?”
“The prosecuting attorney wanted
the prisener hung, ard his own law-
yer wanted a suspended sentence.”
Every-Day Life.
Mrs. D'Avnoo, at front window—Of-
ficer!
Polieeman—Yes,
wrong, ma'am?
Mrs. D'Avnoo—Nothing wrong; but
I wish you'd step inte the kitchen and
tell the cook net te burn the meat,
as phe did last night. I'm afraid to.
Closed Season.
“Yeur proposal comes too late.”
“Then you have engaged yourself |
to another?” |
“No.”
“Then why net be engaged to me?”
“The silly season is over new.”
na'am. What's
In Ancient Reme.
First Roman Matron—What a funny
looking costume on that woman! Did
you notice it, teo?
Beecond Ditto—Yes. It comes from
come little barbarian hamlet out In
Gaul that they call Paris.—Puck.
Backing Up.
“The rain was coming dewn in
sheets.”
“I neticed it was bad in the bed of
the street.”
Long Felt Want.
Knicker—Is Jones 2 mechanical |
genius? |
Bocker—Yes; he is trying to invent |
# furnace that will heat the janitor |
last.”
There is more Catarrh in this section of
the country than all other diseases put
together, and until the last few years
was supposed to be incurable. For a great
many years doctors pronounced it a local
diseame and prescribed local remedies, and |
by constantly failing to eure with local |
treatment, pronounced it incurable. Sci- |
ence has proven Catarrh to be a consti- |
tutional disease, and therefore requires
constitutienal treatment. Hall's Catarrh |
Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & |
Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only Constitu- |
tional cure on the market. It is taken in- |
ternally in doses from 10 drops to a tea-
spoonful. It acts directly on the blood |
and mucous surfaces of the system. They |
offer one Hundred dollars for any ease it | |
fails te cure. Semd for circulars and tes- |
timonials.
Address: ¥. J. CABNEY & CO., Toledo, O. |
Sold by Druggists, 75c. |
Take Hall's Family Pills for eenstipation.
A
it strikes me dese jokes er |
THE BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA.
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aE ERR PRORATED OER R ROOT RERUN RRR vv AUO Err RHW WIG
We Thank You tor the
Big Royal Welcome
TQ
Wednesday, May 156, 1912,
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JR weeks past the people ot this s community
. 1 Lie Wiidi | | he 1 bot
oh hb To +3. bas 133, ™. 7 y Frag 3, ea :
Ores” would pe lke. INOW vou know —and
er ——_ ET ——
nthusiasm of the
«
re
ra
ing by the unbounded
py throngs who have surged in and out—
1 morning until midnig cht—
oo
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oe
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HAVE WON INSTANT SUCCESS
You have almost taken us off our feet, but, even so, you will find
every employee on the alert to do your bidding, every f
capacity and the entire organization
serve and please you.
facility at maximum
keyed up to a high pitch—all to
Nearly everybody in the city has paid us a visit—but
EEE ARE
Hil
oifter
All our present attractions are permanent, and we shall new E
features as fast as they can be secured. Here, briefly, are some of the =
reasons why this 1s the most unusual store in Pennsylvania— 7 |
Sanitary, Cheerful Store Throughout =
Playground for Your Children =
Rest Parlors for Ladies Free Checking Room gE
Venetian Garden Waiting Rooms =
Music Gallery with Performances B
Seda Fountain
Demonstration Booth for Cooking
Moving Picture Show
and a Bonitless stock of high-quality merchandise.
At 5c, 10c, 25¢, 50c and $1.00
Almost Bverythingeaior Home or Person =
: se
Do Your Shopping—spend your spare time—bring your
friends—to the Talbot Stores.
B. T. Babbitt Trademarks as Good as Cash Here
On Your way to Ye Colonial Shop (Babbitt Premium Department) if you see something you
as cash. Bring trademarks in lots
Fo
pn
Sa
——
Tp
Jee
—
rt
ie]
i
want, your trademarks from Babbitt’s products will be just as good
of ten.
4
7 / 2 ~ v./ / p~
[l 7AACNAVARS equal 5¢—
4 -
In the Talbot Stores ro Habbitt
7. ” — y y
20 Babbitt {Trademarks equal roc
THE TALBOT STORES
154-158 N. Queen St. Lancaster, Penna.
= Additional Talbet{Steres Will Seen Be Open In York, Reading, Hanover, Easton And Other Preminent Cities:
EEE EEE EEE EE ETP ETRE TRE EEE EMT r=
and So on.
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