The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, July 31, 1912, Image 8

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    Wednesday, July 31, 191%,
THE BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA.
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To Have And To Hold
ls Not Our Motto
WE'VE GOT IT BUT DONT W
00 YOU?
Saturday August The 3rd
Will Be The Last Day Of This Special Sale And We Are Going To Put a Whirlwind Finish To It.
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For the last few days of this Sale we are going to give you even greater Bargains then you got the former days
There are plenty of Suits for Men and Boys left yet togive youagood Selection. These clothes must besoldand will beat
Mr. Man to stay away from this Sale is just like throwing dollars away. Come assoonas
Every article inthe store is reduced and you get bargains in all of
Every piece of goodsis marked
the prices we will push them.
you can for its the early bird that catches the worm.
the departmentsof the store during this Sale. Ladies goodsare reducedas well as men’s.
in plain figures. Come before the Bargains flood gates close, for you may never have another opportunity like it again
—]
A Ae att AA aa ada at Saal dad as al rs
———
Opposite Union Naticnal Bank
Mount Joy,
Penna.
eae ae aaa Sam a a Saad oe
appropriation to News that the Cammorists’ trial The most encouraging featu
mowing the grass
walk
Is there any
American heroes in
that from
leads to the [about the
be
finally came to an end,
cover the cost of
world
that is growing over the front
of the White House?
ee etl Ce
conclusion that the must Olympic games is
doing likewise.
they Poles or j
Chicagoans
Gi erie are Hungarians,
Taft is our
circumferential-
Mr.
President
season for bull Then
greatest
This is the open again
and the hunt for
——l I een
moose, them is
diligent. y asi ; : ‘
ly. While making the moving pictt
Mr.
of making
ee el ee { :
shows safe, cannot
rr al pe
Reductions in Men's Soft aml gyeoest some way th
Getz Bros.
Woodrow Wilson got the nomina-
tion without a wilting collar. also?
Stiff Hats. cool,
Underwear Underwear
We have gathered from the largest Manufacturers, the cream of this se:son's
production and are offering to the trade values not to be found elsewhere, as to priced
R10
gnality and particularly as to fit.
As a perfect fitting dress is imposible over poorly fitted undergarments,
The Imperial Union suit has
Ladies’ ‘‘Setsnug’’ Union Suits
at $1.00
Ladies’
at 50c¢
Ladies’ Union Suits at 25¢
Ladies’ “Cumfy”’ Vests,—
can’t slip off shoulders, at 12%
and 15¢
Ladies’ Strap or
at 10 and 123c
Ladies’ fine gauze,
short sleeve vests, 25¢
Children’s Union Suits, 25¢
Children’s Union Suits of fine
combed yarns, all taped, at
50c
Children’s Vest and Pants,
high neck, long or short sleeves,
10c to 25¢
Children’s fine gauze
strapped, at 10c¢
Infants Wrappers at 10c
Infants Wrappers at 5¢
Men's
‘Underwear
difficult problem is
come to stay. The most perfect
“Cumfy’” Union Suits
| fitting garment on the market.
Short sleeve, 3-4 length, drop-
seat. We show two qualities,
The most
| to secure a garment to retail at
25c on account of the high price
| of cotton We
the best to be had in either long
or short sleeves, full size, draw-
x $1°00 and $1.50 per suit.
wing vests,
Athletic underwear,
believe we have >
long or |
up better each
fine cloth, clinging as
All
in two qualities, 25 and
Not as
ers reinforced seat, and no pe balbriggan and cooler.
seconds.
sizes,
the Williams | 50c.
Egyptian yarn,
At 50c we offer
| Bros. make fine
shirts Underwear,
Boys’ Balbriggan
shirts, knee length
vests, long or short sleeve,
short sleeve
TY OOTY
drawers reinforced seat and ex-
tension band at waist line. drawers, at 25¢ a garment.
Opposite Post Office
= 9 MOUNT JOY, PENNA.
H. E. EBERSOLE
.
names we're in doubt as to whether.
Ericsson
ASA 10101 A 0100 LLL
showing 2
season, made of
J OO old steam roller.
urchin's Line of Fun With Man Whe
Needs Must Pry Into Other
People’s Business.
res
the
their
The small urchin climbed up the |
gar steps and wormed himself into |
& seat beside the Busybody. The bas- |
ket he was carrying the youngster |
| fixed carefully between his feet, with |
- several anxious glances in the pro-
Ire ' cess,
“What have you in that basket, my |
boy?” asked his neighbor, bending!
over confidentially. “I noticed how |
i careful you were of it. It must be |
something quite valuable. Isn't it?” |
“Ye're hep, old sport. It's some- |
thin’ that’s worth a whole heap.”
“Well, won't you tell me what it ig?" |
“Not on yer life! Thing I want to |
| get pinched?” |
This was too much for the Busy: |
| body. His curiosity, heretofore mere: |
' ly casual, grew suddenly pointed, and |
he bit.
| “Well, sonny, I've a notion that if |
I gave you a nickel you'd tell me what!
you had in that basket.”
“Make it a dime, and I'll do it!”
i Whispered the boy. “Only ye've got to
-! promise not to give me away to de
cop.”
= “Why, of course I'll promise.”
| The boy pocketed the coin. “Well,
sport, dey’s a baby in dere. I hooked
‘im, an’ put ’ilm inside when dey
| wasn’t nobody lookin’. Now I'll get a
| reward for returnin’ 'im.”
“Why, you young villain! Do you
| mean to say you have a baby in that
basket? Lying in that thing will kill
it. Where did you get it?”
| “Oh, I picked it up in front o’ one
| 0’ dem big stores. It was all alone,
“80 I jus’ took it. I guess it won’t be
missed, an’ I wanted one, any way.”
{ “Not be missed! See here, you
| young blackguard! Do you mean to
say that its mother had deserted it?”
“Sure! Its mudder wasn't nowhere
| round.”
“How old is it?”
“Oh, a few months, I guess. Big
enough to squeal—so I tied a rag
g | round its mouf.”
ust
em
115 ERE
hii ll
=| “Well, lift up the cover and let me
| see how it looks.”
“Hol’ on, ol’ top. You promised not
to give me away.”
“Yes, but I didn’t expect—" and he
| lifted the cover and glanced at what
" was underneath. Curled up on an old
cloth, and sleeping comfortably, was
in insignificant looking yellow puppy.
The boy jumped up and grinned,
“Well, here's where I get off. Thanks
for de dime. An’ say, I'll tell ye one
ten times as good as that for a quar-
ter. Come an’ see me some time at
we sallong on Fift’ Avenoo! So long!”
1
A
It ig denied that an
. chine was sent to the President.
= will save to worry along with
infernal ma-
He
the
Altered the Case.
Mover—"Good gracious!
Mrs, de
| This is the noisiest neighberhcod | |
|
|
Ray-Killed Bacteria.
A method for sterilizing milk with-
ever got into. Just hear those children out heating or adding preservatives is
screech!”
Maid—"They're your own | claimed to have been effectively dem-
childers. mum.” Mrs. de Mover—"Are | ODStrated recently in Hollard. An ap-
they? How the little darling are en |
joying themselves!" —Tit-Bits.
A Backsliding Santa Claus.
Mrs. Peavish says that before they
were married Mr. Peavish used to say
that if she would let him oe her Santa
Claus he would devote his life to slid-
ing up and down the chimney for
her. And now it makes him mad to
have to take up ashes from the grate,
Young Offender.
A woman left her baby in its can
riage at the dcoer of a department
store. A policeman found it there, ap-
parently abandoned. As he passed
down the street, a gamin yelled:
“What's the kid done?”"—Collier’s.
In New York.
New York now has all-night banks,
all-night saloons, and all-night restau:
rants. We are informed that the,
churches continue to close early.—
Chicago Record-Herald.
| tition his flesh is sometimes, if not
| always,
Called.
“I asked the audience to lend me
their ears,” said the verbose speaker.
“But in three-quarters of an hour they
were dozing.” “I see,” replied the!
financier. “They called the loan.” |
|
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.
The man who opposes the revival of
the knee breeches idea will be subject
to suspicion, no matter how impen
sonal his motives.—Atlanta Journal.
Fear Well Founded.
“] fear,” sadly said the postage
stamp, when it found itself fastened to
a love letter, “that I am not sticking
to facts.” '
A Misanthrope.
There is no use wasting sympathy
on a man who can't be happy with
good health, good meals and good
weather.
rt Gp
Contrary to the law of gravita-
tion every time somebody para-
chutes out of Tedyd’s dirigible it
: goes down instead of up.
paratus has been constructed, it is
explained, whereby the milk flows in
a thin stream along an electric light,
the ultra-viclet beams working on the’
bacteria. The result is attributed to
the quality of the ozone formed under
the influence of the light.—The Argo-
naut.
Scotch Alarm Clock.
A tourist in rural Scotland took refs
uge for the night in the cottage of an
old lady. He asked her to wake him
up early in the morning, warning her
that he was quite deaf. Upon awak-
ening much later than the appointed
hour he found that the old lady, with
strict regard for the proprieties, had
slipped under the door a slip of paper
upon which was written: “Sir, it's
half past eight.”
Prize Steers Not Good Meat.
The meat of more than one prize
steer has proved disappointing in the |
eating, though fine to look at. In the
development of the animal for compe:
seamed with small veins of
fat which are dilated by cooking into
tough strings. Hence, the range-fed |
steer, not nursed into prominence, af- |
fords the better steak or roast. |
Must Have Been Her Lucky Day.
In a lot of old papers and magazines
that Mrs. T. G. Payson gave to the Sal
vation army of Jersey City the other |
day was an envelope containing $325 |
in bills that Mrs .Payson had overlook:
2d. After 20 men had searched for |
hours in the army’s waste paper pile, |
Mrs. Payson looking on, the money wag !
found and restored to her.
Love Must Be Present. |
A crowd is not company. Faces are |
but a gallery of pictures, where there
Is no love, and talk is but a tinkling !
cymbal.—Francis Bacon. J
Easily Explained. {
“On what footing is college hazing
now?” “It isn’t on any footing at alk
while they are making fellows stand
on their heads.” '
Makes a Difference. !
Needlework is a soothing and com
fortable occupation for those who haw |
ue need to do it
——— E—
i
Boys’ Suits at big reductions.
Come and the price. Getz]
Bros. |
J
learn
give otherwise
Christian and Missionary Allian
The
tion of the Christian and Mission
will at R
Park, Augu
This encampment compr
York, 1
Maryland and
The
very
seventeenth annual con
Alliance be held
Springs Lancaster,
to 18
all of Pennsylvania, New
Jersey, Delaware, t
Rock
well
District of Columbia.
convention is
throughout the
of rich blessing and spiritual profit.
Many
Springs
known east as one
eminent speakers, mission-
aries from the various fields, evan-
gelists and Christian workers will be
present as well as leaders for young
people’s and children’s services.
The more than one hundred tents
with the commodious
mitory and rooms in homes near the
together dor-
park-—for those who do not wish to
stay on the grounds—ensure ample
accomodation for all. If you" have
been to Alliance Conven-
attend and you will wonder
why you have missed such a treat
for so long.
Information concerning renting
of tents, cots, rooms in dormitory or
never an
tion,
| accomodation as well as any matters
| relative to the encampment
|
may be
had by writing to Rev. E. B. Dunbar,
2 West Chestnut street, Lancas-
ter, the local superintendent, or to
the District Superintendent, Rev. E.
J. Richards, 27 Roosevelt Avenue,
Binghamton, N, Y.
etl A Cs
am
od
—
Since the people of
been discovered in
personal property valued at $657.-
000,000 they may be regarded
tolerably well to do.
eet Aree
Chicago have
possession of
as
Since the telegrams from folks
back home had so much influence
with the democratic convention, per-
haps they can do
Congress.
something with
——-
The Pennsylvania railways de-
cision to serve no more bottled bev-
erages is in line with the present
tendency to regard railway travel
as a necessity and not a luxury.
—— Ee
Another excuse for national po-
litical conventions is the chance they
insignificant people
to be snapshotted.
EE ——
Poros Knit Union Suits for Boys,
50c. Getz Bros.