PAGE SIX Ee. i b be . ® w Automobile Buyers! Here Is a Splendid Collection of Cars For You to Select From Reo, R. C. Hupp, Premier, Firestone $ Columbus, Velie, Oakland. county. upward. it to be good. EEE ETRE RE We are also in position to quote you on delivery trucks and carry a variety of second-hand cars. Also carry the largest stock of auto supplies in this end of the Do not fail to look them over We have just closed a contract for oll which enables us to sell you oil at wholesale prices in quanities of five gallons and We have been using this oil for four years and know Your patronage solicit 1 Landis Bros., Rheems. CODD Reserved Seal Tickets i FOR Lancaster Horse and Automobile Show On Sale At “Music Hall” Kirk Johnson & Co. 16 and 18 West King St., GOOD FU Rockers Picture Frames In fact anything 1n the Furniture Line Undertaking and Embalming Mirrors NITURE is the only kind I sell—Furniture that is Furniture Ladies’ Desks Extension & Other Tables, Davenport China Closets, Kitchen Cabinets | the standing committee on LANCASTER, PA. Hall Racks HE PAPAS PPA NINN SNS LESSEN LOSSES BY FRICTION Two Methods, One American and One English, That Are Expected to Accomplish Much, Two methods recently developed to ng effect of jour vh In these MHius glish method lean In the lat rollers of rela overcome the retard are sh trations, being an Kr and the other Ame ter, n series of short large diameter take the place nal Irietion one tively American Railroad Truck Running en Roller Bearings. of the ordinary ball bearings, These rollers are adapted to the existing type of truck without much difficulty It is claimed that the results show a FILLING Tz FIREBOX NOT A SNAP FOR STURDIEST OF HARD-MUSCLED YOUTHS. | Increasingly Hard to Find Men Able and Willing to Take the Position and Automatic Stoker Is Contemplated. If prophecies are fulfilled the next great evolution in railroad operation will be the gen- eral introduction of automatic stokers to re lieve locomotive firemen of a task that has grown beyond the pow- ers of human muscles. For three consecutive years stokers that has been appointed by the Ameri- can Railway Master Mechanics’ asso- | clation has predicted the advent of the automatic, or mechanical, stoker; and according to popular belief, “three times is the charm.” Not every one knows what firing a locomotive means. To the country boy who sees the fireman lolling on his cushioned seat box while his train stands on the siding waiting for the limited, it means a life of indolent ease at good pay with abundant op- portunities for long range flirtations with the girls along a stretch of a hun- dred and fifty miles of steel highway. Consequently he loses no time in ap plying at the nearest division head- quarters for a job. He is received with dissembled, but none the less sin- cere, joy; for the demand for firemen is great and the best ones are farm bred. But the “cornfield sailor” who has the strength of mind, character and muscle to struggle through all the pre- liminaries required to reach the left side of the cab imediately discovers that in addition to anticipating the coming of the pay car and throwing kisses to the prettiest girls along the road he is also expected to shovel from fourteen to twenty tons, or even more, of coal a day; and that this coal shoveling occupies his attention so fully that by the time he gets to the end of his run he doesn’t care a hang if he never sees a paymaster or a rural coquette for the rest of his natural life. To a husky young man, shoveling twenty tons of coal a day may not sound like a terrific undertaking; but that is because he fails to appreciate the difference between shoveling that quantity in the course of a ten-hour day, standing on a steady footing and pausing for a moment whenever he feels like it to gaze at the scenery or light a cigarette, and trying to keep his balance on a jolting, jerking, plunging steel deck which tries cease- lessly to pitch him head first into the side of the cab, while with legs spread wide apart he humps over a scoop shovel, working with frantic energy to get coal into the firebox fast enough to keep steam up. While the engine BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, ANANSI NSN NNN NING NANI NINS . WA 25 nor nt. vo-thirds In ower of over | saving in { d of at least t A saving lubricating oll The English nts of device Re | | English Car Equipped With Anti-Frie tion Wheels anti-friction roller or wheel, mounted as shown It is claimed that at per cent of the Iriction de the ordinary axle-box Is with, anti-friction mounted In separate the euds of the axles ish wvallroad company over 1.000 of its cars device actual service red with thin met least H0 veloped In done away wheels being journals over One great Eng has equipped with this | the wheels are cov | al shield to | it the dust | Popular Mecha ALL LOYAL MEN, AND GOOD Rallroad Employes Put the Service First, as Authentic Records Abundantly Can Prove. With railroad men the pride in thelr work 1s as a religion. No matter if it Is cleaning an engine “it will be a pleasant memory to look back to know that you made something bet. ter” . . . "Only 0 as youre told and do it the best you know how, and mo kicking.” “A traveling auditor once said to me, ‘I never heard you complain; why 1s it? | promptly told him | was getting all I earned and I had no complaints to make. | gave my best in service and am now reaping the reward. Phil osophy walks In the language of a train despatecher: “What improves the character of work, as well as of the man who performs it, is pride in the same.” This one 1s more explicit. His spirit is the same “It perhaps does not appear to the layman, or he who is unfamiliar with the internal econo- my of the motive power department of a great railroad, what it means to keep the wheels going round; what skill and care, brawn and brains are needed to produce and keep on sche dule time any one of the magnificent solid vestibule passenger trains.” And again, “There may be as much (it any) glory that anyone could notice, at least, in a man being able to keep engines In good working order with the help of a buneh of green though ever so willing hands; but any rail road man knows that it means some- thing more than courage, which most every red-blooded man has anyway. No, it requires just plain, common downright grit.” Dennis Hennessy self and Steven Regan pumped water in the water house, piled wood in the wood house and unloaded lumber out of the cars.” When the time came of which he says: “Those piers will never give out. We had made a noble job of those plers.” His farewell is: “I never drank a quart of whisky in my lifetime, so I am living yet in good health, thank God.” It was the study of this man that his boss never had a chance to boss him. “I would never wait until the foreman would one jump I would be at it, and I could hear the general superintendent come up and say to some of the other of- ficers who were with him, ‘Oh, it is all right. George is there.’ Well, that would make me feel good. That sounded just as if I was working for a father who had confidence im my work.”"—Exchange. HIGHEST TYPES IN DEMAND Modern Locomotives Cost Twice as Much as Did Those of Twenty or Twenty-five Years Ago. President Alba B. Johnson, presi dent of the Baldwin Locomotive works of Philadelphia, one of the largest in the world, says: “Twenty to 25 years ago the stand- ard fast passenger locomotive of the Pennsylvania railroad was a locomo- had felt the same pride when “my- | Hennessy worked the Sterling bridge | call me to go and fix this, but with | Beotestertuoesteotestestertuotortertestectestecterterlortertorteiteiteiteitede dd A 2 8 5 5 5 2 2 5 0 0.8.5.8 50 THE DONOVAN COMPANY THE FAMOUS Important Clothing News We Have Purchased The Manufacturer’s Entire Stock of Do You Wonder That We Are Doing More Clothing Business Than Any THREE STGRES IN LANCASTER COMBINED See Lancaster Papers of Thursday and Friday For Details THE DONOVAN COMPANY “STYLE” Which Go On Sale SATURDAY, JUNE I5th At About 1-2 Usual Price “Style” Clothes are one of America’s standard lines of Men’s Clothing and are known in every state in the country; being worn today by half a million prominent Americans. This Is The Greatest Clothing Event Ever Inaugerated In This County Wednesday, June 12, 1912, CLOTHES Great “Opportuni TTT TTP Tree rrr rere SeeTeoleoTecTeoteoBesecocto cto te tooo terete te tects Bel 2. BB. 0 6 2 4.0 5 0.0 0 8.8.0 00 0.80 Another Day of Prices on Seasonable Me every department of Tuesday will contain a large of others, too numerou tise. Each Item Presents A traordinary Opportunity Money. Next Wednesday--Another Extremely Low Evening’'s Lancaster Papers list of special items but there are hundreds ty Day” rchandise in the store. the adver- s to Really EBEx- for Saving Don’t Miss Our June Bride Furniture and Carpet Sale A sale that Married Folks; also, to the Do you know many dollars on the furnishings of a home, during this sale? The Prices Astonish You. appeals to Young Married Folks to be older married Folks. it’s possible to save are so Low, They’ll SPECIAL same thing? FooReocRecToctootectucBootootecBeoRoctoctocte ote ote Beate Pe 8. 8. 0. 3. 8 9 3 9 59 TE TERT TTRNTY NOTICE —During this June Bride Sale many newly nrarried couples ing themselves of the opportunity to furnish their homes on Our Club Plan—why don’t you do the Not necessary to pay full cash payments on the furnishings of your new home. are avall- 2 Becloioatele ce BeBoBedoch BBB BB TTT TTTTTTTITTTeTY 32 to 38 East King Street, Lancaster, Penna. RESULTS TELL There Can Be No Doubt About the Results in Mount Joy | Results tell the tale. | All doubt is removed. The testimony of a Mount Joy | citizen. Can be easily investigated. What better proof can be had? | Mrs. H. E. Greenawalt, Donegal | St., Mt. Joy, Pa., says: | “For some time I was in poor | health and I finally came to the con- clusion that my kidneys were dis- ordered. My back ached constantly and I was subject to chills and dizzy spells. The least work tired me and | had but little ambition. Hearing GARPETS GLEANED Best Work PROMPTLY Best Service IS A WONDERFUL EGG PRODUCER-IT MAKES THEM / Dont go without eggs this Fall and early Winter. It's easy to get them it youn do your part (feed the Park & Pollard Dry-Mash) the hens will do the rest. Order a bag today. back ifit does not make good. Your money BRANDT & STEHMAN Mount Joy Pa. Ask the man that feeds it. H.C. BRUNNER MOUNT JOY. PENNA is running the fireman must be strad- { , : : 8 tive of the eight-wheeled or American |©f Doan’s Kidney Pills, I decided to! dled out on the deck working continu- : g type, having two pairs of driving |8ive them a trial and procured a box | ally to the limit of his strength, for y ordinarily he will have to get from | Wheels of about 68 inches diameter (at Garber’s Drug Store. They acted | I | | For Sale by | | Novelty Rug Co.,| M you are hungry for Buekwheat as represented. two and a half to three tons of coal into the firebox every hour. Three and weighing in working order not more than 60 tons, The cost of such a locomotive was approximately from just received | prompt relief and my condition im- | Cakes, the kind mother used to bake, we stiif have Buekwheat flour J. XY. KLINE and a half tons is generally regarded as the limit of a fireman's capacity, but this has been greatly exceeded on the fastest trains from New York to {proved in every way.” (Statement | 135-137 Beaver St., I= hand. | given October 26, 1907.) | $10,000 to $12,000. ‘LANCASTER, PENNA. “Both the New York Central and the Pennsylvania railroad are now EXECUTORS' NOTIOB Estate of Martin L. Grelder, late | Re-Endorsement | ! When Mrs. Greenawalt was inter- | All Kinds Concrete Work BUILDING BLOCKS All Styles and Colors Porches, Columns and Banigters Door and Window Sills and Lintles, Chimneys, Etc. Retailer of the Best Grades of Cement FI.ORIN. DAINTY SUMMER SHOES for dainty people and neat, stylish and durable ones for more sturdy wear. In either case our footwear will always give perfect satisfac- tion, because it is faultless in shape, style and finish, comfortable and enduring in its wearing qualities. New styles for Spring ready for Yeu, 3 REENERE W. Main St, Mount Joy, Pa. Chicago. Railroad “Graft” in Russia. “Coming across Siberia on the rail- road about the only diversion is playing cards,” said a traveler. “Four of us were having a game of whist when we stopped at a station. A big bearded man in uniform entered and came up to us. He said there was a tax of 50 kopeks on playing cards in that town, and we would have to shell out. We did. “At the next station the perform- ance was repeated, and then at the next and so on, the tax varying ac- cording to the size of the place, from ten kopeks to two rubles. After two days it began to get tiresome. Final- ly one of the party said there ought to be some way to provide against this systematic holdup, and we ap- proached the conductor of the train and presented him three rubles and pointed at the cards. Thereafter, at no matter what station we stopped, we were never molested by one of the local officials looking for ‘hisu’” service the Pacific type of locomotive, weighing in working order about 135 tons. These locomotives have three pairs of driving wheels of about T9 inches diameter, and a trailing truck, in addition to the usual four-wheeled leading truck. The approximate val- “The rate per pound of engine and tender in working erder would not be higher now than 25 years ago.” aincinle EA Makes a Costly Terminal. Montreal way terminal. A subsidiary line of the Canadian Northern has completed plans for effecting an entrance into the heart of the city of Montreal by building a three-mile tunnel under Mount Royal. The total cost of the tunnel and termina’ together will be $25,000,000. Cheap Fares in India. In India third-class fares on all rail. roads are at the rate of less than one half cent per mile. . $100 Reward, $100 The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitutional treat- ment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken in- ternally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, there- by destroying the foundation of the dis- | case, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative pow- ers that they offer One Hundred Dollars | Send for any case that it fails to cure. for list of testimonials, Address F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, Ohio. Sold by; all its, 75¢. A Fool and His Money A West Donegal man who had in- |herited $130 came to town last | week, got on flve or six big drunks, was arrested five times, and went 'home on Saturday with half his in- |heritance gone to the dogs, most of lit spent in saloons where ‘persons visibly affected by drink” are not | allowed to buy of course. Rte i —— Some people get so used to living [in the past that they hate to get up Drug; . s Fansily Pills for constipation. % the morning. using for their heavy fast passenger | ue of such locomotives is $25,000 each. | is to have a costly rail- i i viewed on January 29, 1910, she. added to the above: “I gladly con- | firm the statement I gave two years! [ago in recommending Doan’s Kidney | Pills. My health haz been excellent | since then.” | For sale by all dealers. Foster-Milburn Co., New| | cents. agents for the United | York, sole | States. | Remember the and take no other. —— eee name—Doan’s— ' | The most surprising feature bout the delegate claims published I by the fighting Republican organiza- /tions is that both so cordially agree on “LaFollette 36, Cummins 10.” rt | | In light of the result in Ohio, | Woody Wilson doesn’t know wheth- ier to direct attention to or to sup- press the fact that Virginia is the! ‘real mother of presidents. | A —————— hb | In contemplating certain more or less riotous conditions, Uncle Joe Cannon probably reflects that this is . what people get for not standing pat. | eet @ Qe : There is only one person living! from whom Dr. Wiley will stand all; sorts of nonsense, and that person] ‘was born quite recently. | The sermon that don’t hurt is the sermon that don’t hit. Price 50 § Electric | oN x] ae 0m ee % =m raitters a7} wa 1 QA Sg? Wa Mado & Row Wan Qf Him. “I was puffering from pain in my sto ), head and back,” writes H. 1, Raleigh, N. C,, “and my 1 kidneys did not work right, but four bottles of Electric Bitters made me feel like a new man.” PRICE 50 CTS. AT ALL DRUG STORES. ETRE TT MAKES EATING A PLEASURE GEST AIDS DIGEST ION (25) “After four in our family had died of consumption I was taken with a frightful cough and lung trouble, but my life was saved and I gained 87 pounds through using DR. KING'S NEW DISCOVERY} W. R. Patterson, Wellington, Tex. PRICE 60c and $1.00 AT ALL DRUGGISTS. of Mount Joy Borough, Pa., de- | ceased. Letters of administration on sald (estate having been granted to the lundersigned, all persons indebted thereto are requested to make im- | mediate payment, and those having jclaims and demands against the same will present them without de- lay for settlement to the under signed. SAMUEL S. GREIDER, Mount Joy, Pa., R. D. No. 4 | CHRISTIAN S. GREIDER, | P- O. Box 264, Harrisburg, Pa. | Administrators [Cleon N. Berntheizel, Attorney. | may 29-6t.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers