wi PAGE RIGHT JAAAAAAAAAAAANL JARARAARAMAAARL SAAAARAAAANAL PNA ANAA, TR AO . AERC IPI | 1% em lcci en ¢ A a Sa Ld $ or 2 ot A Ns: ar hd \ HE \ “a 2 LE -) Ff als o ’ Sali 0 2? \ 1 ¢ { wide dnd (Hh Ree ik AREER GivenIn All Departments Every Wednesday and Satur- day Until Futher Notice. Ty Store Open Every Evening Until 8 O'clock Saturday Until 11 O’cloek ! m 0 1 Ry gv Tor children. EE ————————————— EXTRA SPECIALS NZ Cc All summer foot Great r A button hook eductions in Men's and Boys’ Clothing. which closes like a penknife given FREE with every pair of shoes. i = 5 Fg Cnt © < a m ba a = k: ve : * : alate re 18 Sf SRT Se) I TIT = = = =p |S {| SE Sens <> C=» =p Cpl Ee CED a o dd i i i= SS Df tt’ r greatly reduced for men, women and ioe pr | {dd Da ce And do i remember how spotless the home was--how sweet and snow white the children looked ? Her boys and girls were taught that cleanliness of home and person was second only” to clean living. And as practical evidence of her good old-fashioned doctrine, Grandma’s soap-chest was never without 6 . ’ 2» Babbitt’s. That was 40, 50, 60 or more years ago---but the same feeling of reliance holds good to-day---and the name Babbitt has lost none of its ue” ™ imme 08s power as a representative of good in ,,, SNEWS? mo soarmakeR the home. Tear rely ant Vd Say th G use S B. T. BABBITT . N _ Soaps and Cleansing Products Best Soap For every known household or personal require- 1776 Soap Powder ment. Brighten, Clean, Sweeten. Bring the sun- Pure Lye or Potash shine of Cleanliness where dirt shadows lurked Naptha So ap before. Nothing harmful, injurious, or destroying White Floati S. in Babbitt’s Soap. How could there be when it ite loating 30ap 1,5 endured in public favor for over three-quarters Babbitt’s Cleanser of a century? Save Babbitt Trademarks---Originators of Premiums B. T. Babbitt was the pioneer in coupling “good-will ”’ premiums with soap of 100% quality. To-day users of Babbitt’s products can exchange Bab- bitt’s Trademarks and secure one of thousands of articles. Simply cut the Trademark f rom the wrapper, or, if you do not know how, bring the wrappers. elematis or wrappers should be put in packages of 10. As little as 10 trademarks now secures a Babbitt Trademarks good as Cash at ZN ~ a, 2 1[1{ 1 [STORES Ny : No need to mail Trademarks to Babbitt Factory. Take them to nearest Talbot Store, and get not only valuable premiums in the original “Babbitt Premium Dept.,” but your choice of any merchandise, or soda, ice cream, cigars, etc.; in the store. / Cot F A » you. w. Main st. M B. T. BABBITT, Inc, NEW YORK, U. S. A. Established 1836 Agencies Everywhere THE TALBOT STORES IN LANCASTER Are Located At 154-158 North Queen gtreet | . ¥ Yi { speak 4 | particularly is a Tomring In wr ames Mount ows Pa. 3 ’ FTW SE THE BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA. A NT ye A fM: £ W 1 ih: EU vB Ea) p A EI 5 Nl | Ul " Wednesday, July 3, 1912 { High School Wins The local High School base ball team went to Manheim on Monday, Educational Day, and defeated the High School team there, The feat. | ure of the game was the pitching of | Bennett, for the locals. Also the! running of Shatz and Frey base The score MOUNT JOY RH O A BRB Missemer, ss . : a 9 9 Greenawalt, Keller, cf 2 0 0 0 Bowman, 1b Garber, 2b ...... 1 1 y- 9 1 Schock, ¢ lennett, p 9 "na 0 Germer, 3b 0 § 2 1 0 Shatz, If . 1 2 1 0 0 Total 9 1297 5 3 MANHEIM RH O ARB Brumnord, cf 0 1 0 0 0 thr 0 0 } 0 © Vo 11 ) 1 0 0 0 Hahn, 2b 1 1 2 2 0 Ed d 0 0 0 0 1h 1 1 191 I 0 1 0 ) 0 I a 1 Y 0 1 p lo 0 2 4 0 otal { 6 27 7 1 tolen Base Schocl 2, Misse- go Yodnad 1, Shatz 3, Bowman 1, Edwords fo Rata Frey, 3 Becker 2 2 Base Hits = Brandt , Shatz Sacrific Hits fe “ls gd us” Greenawalt Benn 2 Double Hoo aig . la Plays—Bennett to Bowman, to Ger- | VS mer, Hoffman te Hah Hit Bats- <£ SW men Missemer, Garber, Frey, SQ Becker Struck out by Bennett 14, by Hoffman 9. Base on balls off Bennett off Hoffme ( an 1. + + yz ski meee Be a a . I ( 1 Ss 114 » S De > NEWTOWN I of 1 2 er i Mr. John Rhoa irned home ny 1 A 1 n 1 Mi he 1 ) children yo = I Y I mi and 5 v \ VE 1 1 1 1 : nd i fr ha "i I is h- o { 1 1 ? > ) ‘ > I t ( I eter re) C ill € = 1 : ; e I i fe o slid 1 Tr eH ishurg I e after a pect t visit 1 nt MT nd Paris) wo = ad Mrs. Ru Hint in ye M : } T : n RI} 1 Pamit vf n ( I Colin 1 M ( ™ ' ( ) 1 isit t 181 obs tl 0 ( M I € Moore V( har 1 € Mr. Pr: oll ymily and g v 0 Walt and wi of Wont}: ! H 1 i ay n S$ 3 te er ) 7 a ; » ¢ A D T t d Y a I 0 ) y X 9 . o nto the conventional ecstasies 1 and communion ser- : i ; Foo + ; re vices held on Sunday mornin 1S s a tis 1 er by the pastor Preact 1gain on 3 t the Sunday, July 14, in the evening Sa roe ; res. | One has ( ¢ —— eet Ieee ern o nso das ee ou A hout ( clea M3 t abid- | novice Altered the Case. ne 1 ; dazzlins rilliant | bad or Mrs. de Move Go gracious! | 4. “of 5 ascent, skis in | has affected the Ie This is the ncisiest neighborhood 1 hand, from the village to untrodden | tle, has certain] ever got into. Just hear those children and silent slopes, a wall so warming ers. The rink screech!” Maid—"They’re your own that the destination reached, I was together, treacl 18, childers, mum.” Mrs, de Mover—"Are | g1,4 to rest and lunch in the shade. full of he It is below ce they? How the Ii larling are ery" ro.a]] the quaint and mysterious of the good skater, and too a wesome —Tit-Bits. ere year’s novices who are not Joying themselves!” footprints—afterwards identified as a for the tyro. Th are few of this deer’'s—found near the lunch tree and lazily pondered over. I glow at the bound to confess that they never went on the A Backsliding Santa Claus. Mrs. Peavish says that before they remembrance of a slope, five hundred Ice and never saw ice-hockey or curl- A 4 € 5 says the beic D oui ie % we a »d Mr. P avi A . oo to a5 yards long, virgin snow to the skier. ing. On the other hand, they have pore JRErried Tr - eatish used 19 SAY had been only three days a ski-er, gained more knowledge than they her Santa his life to slid- | that if she would let hi: | Claus he would devote | ing up and down the chimney for | her. And now it makes him mad to have to take up ashes from the grate, n be wanted of indoor amusements, or, rather, of the lack of them. Iadoor life is replete with every comfort, but it is fortunate that the warmth of the hotel makes one too lazy to notice that there is nothing whatever to do. When the cause of your staying in- doors is the weather, at least you have society; but when it is because and a successful ascent was still be- yond my dreams. I fell, and with re- lief and surprise noted that I did not fulfil the prophecy of breaking my toes. I stood on the brow of the slope and pushed myself off with the baton, after the uncouth style of the novice. For the briefest fraction of a second I feared that my pose was Young Offender. A woman left her baby riage at the door of a in its car- department store. A policeman found it there, ap- ill-balanced and that I was fated to of an accident, you simply feel tie a rs as given up to the | marooned ¢ ly abandoned. As he passed fall. The next, I was g Ts Mnloned. fr bri joy of swift motion, of the sweeping And what about the Alps all this Le a So "| career through the air and sunlight, ' time? Truly the disregard of tha | “What's the kid done?”—Collier’s. ati] 1 lew out of the sur Into shadow and suddenly grew cool and blind. In New York. I suppose everybody's introduction New York now has all-night banks, to skiing is very much the same. | all-night saloons, and all-night restau. | Everyone has to get over the inclina- rants. We are informed that the tion to lift his feet and turn out his | churches continue to close early.— | toes; most people have to fight down | | Ohicagoe Record-Herald. | the awful feeling of terror which at- | | tacks them, not on their debut, but of things. Indeed, he would rat her | on their second attempt; and not a | not see the mountains, for it ig a sign few, T hope, have the sense (and the | of bad weather. On the first day of knowledge of French) to be able to his visit he conscientiously identifies | beauties and grandeur of the scenery I 1s one of the strongest features of the winter sportsman. As long as the luge track is like ice and the snow is not too soft or too hard or too sticky for ski-ing, as long as the sun is bright and the wind not strong, the old stager recks nothing of the beauty | i Called. “I asked the audience to lend me | their ears,” said the verbose speaker, | take in good part the grave com- | the various peaks by means of a | “But in three-quarters of an hour they | ments of the village children. These | guide-book; but once he is the pos- { were dozing.” “I see,” replied the | ten-year-old boys, to whom beautiful | sessor of skis and a luge, he never | financier. “They called the loan.” ski-ing seems second nature. can gives them another thought Ladies teach one much, although ski-ing is | not of the soil, but a recent importa- | tion from Norway. By the way, fail ing a native. the best tutor is an English schoolboy, who, having no re gard for his own neck or yours, does not fluster or fuss you, but rather im- pels you to the most unheard-of | feats As soon as one has attained the smallest degree of comfort and grace | are no better, unless they have a taste for sketching. It is pitiful that the first thing that strikes one about the Alps in winter is their resemblance to the common colored picture post-card. Their shapes and colors are crude ang hard. The pines, if they are not bow ed down with snow, are exactly that almost acid green; the sky is a vivid ang un. real blue, and the mountains China's Long Waterway. China has the longest canal in the world—the Grand. It is the longest | certified waterway, and goes from Tungtu to Hangchoo, a distance of 600 | miles. Open to Suspicion. them- The man who opposes the revival of | on gkis, one despises the lugeing | selves are just as strangely white and the knee breeches idea will be subject hich has hitherto seemed good | glittering. The colors of the gorgeous to suspicion, no matter how imper enough fun for anyone Truth to tell, | sunset are reflected on the peaks in sonal his motives.—Atlanta Journal. lugeing is all done on a track, to | exquisite but not delicate or tendap which one is tied. while at ski-ing one hues, and there is one partienlar Sow can at least pretend to be traveling. A of light magenta that {sg purely dre Fear Well Founded. Again and again vou take the fifteen Work. One beauty, which catches the “I fear,” sadly said the postage. minutes’ walk up the track, dragging eve at once, Is the bold contrast of stamp, when it found itself fastened to... juee behind vou like a child with the sky and snow with the ig a love letter, “that I am not sticking its toy. in ord er that you may whizz | leaves still elinging tHe bosch to facts.” down in a twentieth part of the time. The effect is to make the leaves The absurdity of this Proceeding be- : glow. almost like flame. A Misanthrope. Ds There 18 no use wasting sympathy Rr on a man who can’t be happy with fi PARK & POLLARD ) good health, good meals and good {0 — SS . DRY-MASH: weather, - MAKES THEM _ —S — . LAY OR BUST 46 CANAL & 139 FRIEND ST @ Morally speaking, the person usual ly alluded to as the man higher up is } —————————————————— ¢ Morally Speaking. ) in reality the one lower down.—Washe if BOSTON.MASS. ington Star. ASK THE MAN WHO FEEDS IT er A fresh lot of George $. Baker, Salunga, and in three sizes Martha D. Montgomery, of Lancas- ter, were granted a marriage license. Direct from the manufacturer. Ask for prices Beef Meal ~ Beef Serap - Poultry Bone A Mount Joy, Pa. | ) BRANDT & STEHMAN : RE , Bi TH ot a Ks Pe pe MS A ed TH ad rr oh a aha ES i ah ia