1 Fool Troubles Have Comfort Shoes for those burning soles— Shoes for your Corn of all, The Great Pedonick Shoes for weak ause you to feel tired all over, All of these and more styles fitted with S. B. Bernhart & Co. East Main Street, Mount Joy DAINTY SUMMER SHOES or dainty people and neat, stylish and durable ones for more sturdy In either case our footwear tion, because it is faultless in shape, comfortable and wearing qualities. J. G. KEENER WwW. Main St, Mount joy, Pa. ofprforterforfofosfecioodenoriocforfofodorfosfocfesfinords | Wnopofeofosfeiorfecfonfoofsoforforf HIGHEST CASH PRICES PAID FOR DEAD ANIMALS WHICH WE REMOVE PROMPTLY BY AUTOMOBILE TRUCK, George Lamparter’s Sons LANCASTER, siesforforfocorfeforfocforfosforfosforfesfonfooforfosforfosforionfeniooiy eh eee J A TY 0 TH HAVE YOU TRIED MAGIC KLEENER If not will you try thetrial size BE 3 Ne. = 11 1 left at yotir house today ? There is nothing to equal it FOR CLEANING CLOTHING of Grease or Tar Spots, Cleaning Colors a wn on ] a - wa LJ - @ "uN ou - = “ on Men's or Ladies’ Coats It is soon time for house cledning and if you want to clean the wdodwork or brighten up the furniture Use a =| ron, but will not help the poor neigh- little of the trial size I left yoii so that you wiill be convinced that there is nothing better, For House Cleaning We can sell any quantity you want at a very reasonable figure. Give It a Trial 1 J 6 JT | 1s afraid of a IN East Main Street, Mount Joy, Pa. 11101 THE BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA. Climbing for Cats, A boy in northern Michigan was out hunting and saw two cats up a tree The family needed a pussy about, and 80 he laid down his gun and took a clumb, What he didn't know until too late was that the anima were wild cats, Before he could lay hold of the cats they id hold of him, and the doctor wl \ nded his hurts count ed up 41 bites and scratches ing for cats areful that get the wrong b In hunt- you don’t eed A Beggar's Luggage. When Bridget Flanigan, who de- scribed herself as “a poor lone Irish widow woman,” was arrested for beg- ging at Wells she had the following articles distributed about her person: Tea, sugar, fresh cut beefsteak, piece of bacon, two bloaters, bread and cheese, four buns, bag of biscuits, cooked fagot, two apples, onions, two clay pipes, tobacco, cigarettes and snuff.—London Evening Standard. The Man That Counts. “Remember each of you that the chance for herolc endeavor of a rath- er spectacular kind does not often count; that the man who really counts in this life fs not the man who thinks how well he could do some bit of heroism if the chance arose, but the man who actually does the humdrum, workaday, every-day duties as those duties arise.”—Theodore Roosevelt. Browning Temporarily Forgotten. Professor Underdon (at the Boston Browning Club)—No, my hearers, we can not linger too lovingly on the grand words and refining thoughts of our great master of—" Child of the House (entering suddenly)—"John L.'s goin’ by, 'if yer wan’ ter see him.” (Club suddenly adjourns to the win- dow.)—Puck. Local Pride. “Why do you insist on investing your money away from your home town?’ “Well,” replied Farmer Corn- tossel, “I've got a good deal of local pride, I have, and I regard the people in this here township as bein’ so smart that none of em is goin’ to let any real bargains git away from him.” Editor's Mean Revenge. An editor who was courting a wom- an of uncertain age, but positive bank account, was cut out by a gentleman from a neighboring town, who married | her and took her home. Whereupon the editor sought a mean revenge by head- ing account of her wedding: “Another Old Resident Gone.” Turn to Wooden Flooring. The use ef wooden flooring is on the increase in Italy, taking the place of the former extensive demand for mar ble, tiling and cement. Oak, larch and pitch pine are mostly adopted, and but little, if any maple, birch or beech hag been brought to the market. Not to Speak Of. “Has anything ever been discovered on Venus?” the student of as- tronomy No,” replied the old pro. | fessor, whose mind had slipped a cog and transported him into mythological fields; “net if the pictures of her arg authentic.”—Chicago News. asked The Man of the Hour. The country is filled with reformers, But where i? the man to be found that will stand for the things pro posed by anoti faction aside from his own bec it is everlastingly right?—Des Moines Capital. Where Tea Is Eaten. The tea grown in Burmah is almost entirely made into letpet (pickled tea) and eaten as a condiment, It therefore does not affect the world’s supply of tea for drinking. What Was in Her Heart. “Tell me,” he sighed—'tell me, | beautiful maiden, what is in your | heart?’ The girl gave him a look of icy disdain, and then vouchsafed the | monosyllable, “Blood!” Early at the lvories. nr gtp ey CASUALTIES Cii LI THIRTY PER CENT, OF FATALM TIES ARE OF EMPLOYES. Despite Pest Equipment the Grue some Record Diminisnes Little Figures That Seem Appaliing to the Average Reader. About thirty per cent. of railroad fatalities are suffered by employes Furthermore, most of the fa talities to em- ployes, as well as to passengers, are not aue, as Is as serted, to defects of the physical equipment of rail ways: nor is a large proportion of them due to collisions and derail ments. The total number of employes killed in 1911 was 3,608. Of Wess $08 were killed while coupling and um coupling cars, In spite of the fact that 99.3 per cent. of the locomotives and cars in service have been at heavy expense equipped with automatie couplers. One thousand, four hundred and twenty-nine were killed by being struck or run over by engines or cars, ¥hich, of course, were being operated by their fellow-employes It is impos- sible to see how can attrib- ute these fatalities to defective equip- ment; the best car or lo omotive can anybody kill an employe who gets in its way quite as easily as the poorest One hundred and ninety-seven were killed while getting on or off cars or engines. Three hundred and ninetv-one were killed by falling from trains, locomo- tives, or cars Part of these deaths were due to defective equipment, alk though probably most of them were not. Seventy-eight emploves were killed by coming in co while rid- ing on cars with bridges. tunnels, sig- nal apparatus, or some other fixed structures above or at the side of the track. Most of these deaths were due to the fact that, owing to the increased size of equipment and to other causes, overhead and lateral clearances be tween ca:is and structures have become too small. Thig is a de‘ect in railway plants f vhich the railway manage- ments are responsible and which they alone can remedy The deaths of 430 were due to “industrial accidents,” re gulting from handling of tools, ma chinery, s lies, etc., getting on or off locomotives or cars while at rest, and from other causes not connected with the movement of trains, and therefore no more chargeable to haz ards of transportation than an aceci- a farm or in a mill. It is admitted that some of the rail ways of the United States have been and are excessively canitalized; but owing to the conservative policy that has prevailed on most roads for many years, making extensive improve- from 5s and to other tid with more truth that the railways of the T dent happening on of ments causes It may 'nited States, as a whole, are undercapitalized than that they are overcapitalized It is well known that within recent years large incre: have taken piace in the value I real estate It is also well k that have made extensive reductions ades and rectificati of curvature, have built expensive tions terminals, bal lasted and tie-plate tracks, laid heavier rails and bette: ties, con structed stronger nd more durahle bridges, installel interlocking and sig naling systems [ weed wooden structures by struct made of ceme=n masoniy 1 el, etc Be- gides all thi du e ten years fron 1899 t« 0 th \ of fre‘ght per 1,000 mile increased 27 8 per cent., the Y sen ger cars 12 per cent her of locomotives 24 per ‘ther- more, the eq ¢ ed and that with which « nent wa re- piaced, was of much gre "capacity and much n exnensive that superseded Meantime tl nileage of additional main ind sidings per 100 miles inc 36 per cent The density of passenger tr per mile increase 64 per cent, and the density of freight trafliz 45 per cent. The assessors evinced the belief that there was a large increase in the | value of railway property by advaneing taxes per mile from $245 to $401, or 64 per cent Yet between 1899 and James E. Zitek, three months old, | has four teeth and is expected to be able to play the piano when two years old.—Chicago Evening Post. More Than That in Life. It would be a bad day for humanity if a man’s debt to his fellow-men | should come to be calculated and paid solely in rates and taxes. English Snobbery. Many will open their purses to a so- | ciety which has a countess for a pat- ' door.—London Mail. bor next Choice Reading. There {8 no doubt that a good de tective story is better than a bum love story or a president’s message. | Atchison Globe. Endless Chain. | A mouse is afraid of a man, a man woman, a woman {8 | afraid of a mouse—and there you are. —Chicago News. He Would Better Keep Still. A man who smokes and belongs to clubs never has any chance in an ar gument with his wife about expenses. — From the way was squelched appears that Women’s Clubs and a steam woman suffrage in San Francisco, it the Federation of has an old guard roller. * . . . Whom do you suppose the third | party will nominate when it con- venes in the Coliseum? » . » Shoes for dress at Getz Brog. $5.00 to $4.50. I creased only 1909 the railway stocks and bonds out- standing in the hands of the public in- from $47,438 $59,259 per mile, or but 25 per cent. —Railway Age Gazette to ( Uncle Sam Owns Railroad. The United States is about to be- some a railroad operator. Within the next few days trains will be running over a federal road twenty-one miles in length and extending from PBRoise to Arrow Rock, Idaho. The road was built to carry lshor- ers and supplies for work during the next four or five years on what is to be the highest dam in the world, the | uuditnaun dt iB BAT BT I AT ET EE A Arrow Rock dam, which will tower 351 feet into the air. The flood and | excess waters of the Boise river, which the dam will hold back, will be used in irrigating 250,000 acres of land on the government irrigation project near Boise. In Training. Father—-Well, my son, you have now got your commission and are pre- pared to join your regiment and fight for the glory of our country. De you think you have the necessary qualitt- cations? Young Officer—Well, I should thing 1 am the champion long-distance -Tit-Bits. TI I I I TI ITT PY sO runner of our club Many “Holy Lands.” Christians use the term Holy Land to designate Palestine, as being the scene of the birth, ministry and | death of Christ, but, interestingly enough, other religious sects employ the same term for places sacred o | them from association. Thus the Mo- hammedans speak of Mecca as the Holy Land, it being the birthplace of Mohammed. The Chinese Buddhists call India the Holy Land, because the | founder of their religion was | born | there, while the Greeks bestow this | same title on Elis, where was situated hafbmple of Olympian Zeus. — {rn a m—- ) / AIRS J ‘ ” OMEN FOLLOW THE HOUNDS “Dad. ’ "Cad" and “daddy” were well known . In No Country Is the Sport So Well In this country in the sixteenth cen. ’ Friday Beloved by Women as It Is tury papa” did not come in, borrow. Penryn Park, In Ireland ed from abroad, until the sevententh the century wa well advanced Florio, churches in Hunting absorbs keen sportswomen @! TN nd of the former century, de ill hold In Ireland, and it is seldom that a frost fined the Italian “pappa” as “the first resort drives the Irish followe to hounds Word that children are ta to call i HOW ¥ 4 i 2 ured nN \ from the countryside. Irish women are their father, as ours say ‘dad, ‘dad. “Ve rom enowned for their fearless prowess die’ or ‘bab Dad” seems to be the and frony in the hunting field, where the terrible Commoner to mankind of the two, special, which obstacles to be negotiated call for Nausica in the "Odyssey" calls her tation at nerves of steel, and it is neck or noth father pappa phil dear Papa; but wed ing in the distressful country, says the Greek has “tata” also, and Welsh has loc) London Daily Graphic “ta,” and Irish “daid.’ . 3 mT V lete th he fearsome stone walls, some- - i ae times overgrown with turf and mask- on Tuesday h ‘ ; Ing a brook, appal all but the stout. I New York Ysey Mus Wace: nly E. Church, n 1€¢ whole worl ere are o est hearts, and even the most hard- bout 1.500.000 ) A } t a. m. trolley i out § ( wople / 1c ened sportswoman is known to quail avy road pavh « RB pch 0 nect with at the commencement of the hunt Fain on our watershed normally would Ing season, experiencing the sensa- give two gallons of water for every tion of the heart In the mouth when man, woman and child on the surface 1 called upon to face the stiff going, Of the earth. Put it another way: If lose to She finds her nerve returning, how every man, woman and child on the registered § . i ever, after a day or so in the saddle face of the earth should walk up to bureau in The ST PORS p rb to the lakes, reservoirs, etc., which 35 many he late empress of Austria used hold N y a to hunt regularly in Ireland, where a . ol ork a . a - ining building and each pour in two gallons of wa > ; her reckless and brilliant horseman- ee I 08 Ber, ihe first of ship is still spoken of. With the It WOuld not be enough to last that late Bay Middleton to give her a lead, city ten days she was always in the first fight and stuck at nothing. The famous happy- go-lucky hospitality that marks the Guide Fred have had Infant Mortality. mortality is the most known and Infant sensi- Irish temperament is exemplified In give index we possess of “social wel. BPD matters sporting, and open house 18 4, of sanitary administration, espe- here from kept by those having accommoda- giallv under urban conditions. A heavy of the Mississippi, tion In a good hunting district. infant mortality implies a heavier Missouri The Irish colleen will dance &ll gaath rate up to five years of age: night at a hunt ball and turn up at a distant meet as fresh as paint with- out going to bed at all, full of life and spirit, with wit and repartee bub- and right up to adult life the districts suffering from a heavy child mortality have higher death rates than the dis- is Notice tricts whose infant mortality is low.— | . ling like a font. The Irfsh country Neusholme in the National Food Maga Yegilat briugs out all the dare devil Irish 4ine. Cemetery nature, and there is little searching at the office of for gaps or gates when the blood of -—ddd— First National Irish horse and rider is up. Sheer Waste. M a Ireland is not overrepresented in “The coal supply of the earth 18 on, ondas the matter of hunting, and Irish limited,” said the cientist. “No one © ©!O¢ ; A packs are not by any means numer can say how long it will last.” “Great ©€I's Ol the ous, and may be reckoned to number Scott!” exclaimed a man in the back will be held a couple of dozen. Some only possess row; “and here we've gone and wast- o'clock for quite a restricted number of couples, ed more'n a bushel of it heatin’ the candidates and but few hunt four or five days a hall for thi lecture.”—Washington ‘ : qs week, though an occasional by day Star. iN] Secretary may bring the total up. The Meath sociation for hunts flve days a week and is one of ee the famous hunts of the United King- Ideal Temperature of Room. dom, and the County Galway, the An ideal room temperature for the will Blazers, has four days a week. sedentary is that between 66 and 70 The eer ——— degrees. Below these temperatures the ull. to heat regulating apparatus of > he ome Dickens’ Care for His Guests. ro it Yale ti to 05, OF ue oy on a two If Dickens was particular regarding peripheral vessels more or less, in- man, Walter the equipment of his own bedroom he ternal congestion slowly begins and Long #corge was equally careful for the comfort the conditions for a cold are secured. Walter of his guests. Charles Dolby, in — arene “Charles Dickens as I Knew Him,” ap SE Crarence says of the bedrooms at Gad’s Hill: Reluctant Criticism, herger, Mdwin “Bach of these rooms contained the “Augustus, dear,” said the girl, ten- man, Thomas most comfortable of beds, a sofa, an derly, pushing him from her as the pghleman easy chair, cane-bottomed chairs—in moonlight flooded the bay window a which Mr. Dickens himself had a great Where they were standing. “I think belief, always preferring to use one that you had better try some other Elizabethtown himself—a large-sized writing table, balr dye; your mustache tastes like N profusely supplied with paper and en- turpentine.” on : wh velopes of every conceivable size and rrr lagt Saturday, description, and an almost daily Going Over the Books. Bam. teams change of new quill pens. There was Hie 3 : Elizabethtown : T'his item in your campaign ex- a miniature library of books in each i daly . : A Junio 9 pense account mystifies me,” said the room, a comfortable fire in winter, : ’ 2 : Woatad auditor. I don’t understand what defeated with a shining copper kettle in each : 3 . sa you mean by ‘raw material.’ ”’ “That's Saturda ¢ fireplace; and, on a side table, cups, > a an error on the part of the stenogra- saucers, tea caddy, teapot, sugar and * : ‘ x “« Ik.” ¥ pher,” replied Senator Sorg It milk : J : should read, “hurrah materi I A peculiarity of the household, adds - PE Mr. Dolby, was the fact that, except Chinese Chorus Girls. E per at table, no servant was ever seen In some Chinese theaters the stage lard, per about mana has an economical custom potatoe I a ————— of employing dummy figures cut out \wvpheat me Wonderful Human Voice. of cardboard and the like, to swell Corn. : : Toe n, per In producing the tones or inflec- the ranks of the chorus witl t at the ; g : rt 1 Sy Oa tions of the human voice 44 muscles same swelling the se list. ! are brought into play Obviou such a device wot ver = ne do in country, for a cardboard chorus would hardly satisfy the Unlike undame | Error 3 : i Fundamental E rror. x matrimonial requi ents o ; ; ha suf 1 1 fre t r It 3 ot ! I 2 from the oq youth. In China it is mos thea meat eing ex the end for ¢ women to appear on the ! hi the feminine roles are taken Wednesday, July Methodist Day at Penryn Epworth League societies of the Special indications the arrangements State Capitol Visitors and probably without estimates made at the office of Ch season every State eas been seen on the plaza as well. Notice meeting the Treasurer, at the of Mount Joy, the same place at 8 EE Hike to Mount Gretna following Mount Pennet Brubaker, Balls and Strikes Holland Elizabethtown settles Our Home Markets. TPP Y Eye Tyr PTR e Te PROP ROTO e ROI PRORIEINS How About CALENDARS = Please bear in mind that we have the finest assortment of calendars ever shown In this town, We have anything from the cheapest to the best. Among them are novelties from some of the foremost manufac- turers in this and foreign countries. If interested drop us a card and we will call with samples. Our prices are way bslowothers, , . . . . I III NLS 3 THE BULLETIN East Main Street, Mount Joy OBAMA bh MADAMA bb