| Costs You Noi When Idle— | Almost Nothing When It Runs Wi N ar 1 1 ( engine 18 at work, it 1s | 8 gues ap de pendabdie power you when not working it costs i you nothing. It will work just as hard at the if close of the day as at the start—will work ll overtime or all n ust as readily. It is i ready to work whenever you need it; always 1 le and satisfactory. You can use an fl rel if : s | 11 an as gine | | fil i to pump water, to run the wood saw, cream fil separator, churn, grindstone, ws ashing machine, ih feed grinder, corn husker and shredder, en- I | silage cutter, or any other farm machine to i | which power can be applied. th I H C oil and gas engines are constructed of I f the best materials; built by men who know i what a good engine must do; thoroughly tested i | before leaving the factory. | ! They are made in all sizes from 1 to 50-horse i power; in all styles — vertical and horizontal, j air and water cooled, portable, stationary and Hi mounted on skids, to operate on gas, gaso- fi line, naphtha, kerosene, distillate or alcohol. i Kerosene- gasoline tractors, 12 to 45-horse | power, Ask the THC local dealer to show you an | I HC engine and explain each part, or write fi for catalogue and full information. | International Harvester Company of America (Incorporated Harrisburg I HC Service Bureau The purpose of this Bureau is to furnish sx of charge to all, the best information ol 1 : on better farming. If you have any worth : yi 7 in tions concerning soils, crops, land drainage i 24 Pa gation, fertilizers, etc make vourinquirie S and send them to TH C S Building, Chicago, US :| 0 Uv )) ~ ~ oS oD ® = 2 0Q 0 eviesfesfrofosfocde foci ons iy No! W . 2. cause, perhaps, you cannot play, and have to wait until 3 " g. 4 ne es to play for yo > i : . 11 #* Now ve a silent piano in yom ome when wt will . ladly Ze no you now i Famous Hardman Autotone » Thtn, when you want music an netertainment, you don’t have to wait, you simply place a rol of m on the piano and tread, and you have the finest music in the world right in your own home Just to think how nice it would be to hear that song you heard years ago, “Silver Threads Among the Gold,” and to know you are playing it yourself is a pleasure you never know until you have played the Bo cleodocioctestoeloctonine toate dhoale sto te foals fa te 8. ot BE REET IT RRP TY Hardman Autotone Our tasy payment plan will enable vou to purchase a Hard- man on strictly confidential terms, and have the World's Best Pi: ayer in your home So cleads conte Sectoctoatoatet PPT RTTRTTY Kirk Johnson & Co., 16 and 18 West King St. LANCASTER, PA. + Wedoodoopdoposiecfodoeordedsefonfolesfooeriosonfrieioolonfosoootodoorfoofoooafntesforio foe . OVER LABOR DAY The Seashore SPECIAL 15-DAY EXCURSION Atlantic City Cape May > Wildwood, Ocean City, Anglesea, Sea Isle City, Holly Beach, Avalon, Stone Harbor NEW JERSEY Friday: August 30, 1912 $3.70 Round Trip $3.45 Round Trip yh From Mount Joy : ’ { Tickets good got n niar train cep { : i Stop-Over Alloy A i 1 | For full infor tion ‘ i PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD | A high grade gasoline that never goes back on you. Most motorists know that inferior gasoline gives more auto trouble than any other one thing. Waverly Gasolines FREE~200 Page Book—tells all about oils. # paper voung fowls and pred i he Bouncing ND Ball A ANT NRICHSEN (Copyright, 1044, by Associated Literary Press.) w Mildred Grant came from the store wi Il In he wand It was a 8 ' rd rubbe ball she was lox ng at it so intently that as she stepped to the street e almost col. Hded with a man who was ng “What your treasure, Miss Mil dred ! ted 1 y Mildre 3 droi 1 to the ball and the color flamed over her face. ball, he said, as positively (nowledge on ‘a rubber ball.” \V t are you going to do with it?” "] ght It De 1 because I war It you often y balls for the plea e of carryl them about with ye “] no M1 well,” Her tone infor 1 the young man that further que i 1 the 1 1 would be al "yy h 1, hurrying to safer conversational fields, “contains thi 1 especi vitriolic attack on the Water company bill.” The bill w introduced in the jhouse everal da ago and referred to a committee of which you are a member The Moon is doing every- thing possible to defeat it.” “The belief is current in the gen- mbly that the reason for the ypposition is the fact that Mr. Zane, the proprietor, is a heavy stock- holder In one of the water companies which this bill will affect. You are eral as ¢ one of the Moon staff.” “l am only an assistant, a picker up of scraps of news for the men who chronicle the legislative affairs. I hope and expect that some day—" “That some day you will rise to a high place on the staff?” “I intend to.” “It is a great metropolitan paper It has here at the capital a staff of trained journalists and also several good lobbyists. It fs fighting the Water company bill, It will grant advancement to any of its staff who can influence legislation against this y i a “You Bel This?” t vi It il th opposed by certain pow interests The Moon, the largest paper in the state, was leading the fight against it. I'he measure had been introduced in the house and referred to the committee on corporations. It was believed that if the committee allowed the bill to leave its hands and return to the house to be voted on it would be passed. It was so popular with the people that few slators would dare vote a it. enemies deter mined hat it should be smothered beyond resuscitation in the commit. tee. It was the day on which final acs tion on the bill was to be taken by the committee. On his way to the meeting, Harold Powell passed John Zane, owner of the Moon, and Mildred Grant. They were standing in the rotunda of the state house. As he passed them Powell caught the words Zane was speaking. While he waited for the elevator Mildred joined him. “What are you going to do with the bill today?” she asked. “Send it back to the house for the | vote, I hope,” he said gravely. “The members are about evenly divided for and against it. Albert Catlin is the uncertain member. His vote will de- cide the matter.” “You are in favor of the bill. Change vour mind, oppos it and make Mr. Catlin oppose » spoke laughingly, but Powell's face clouded Sha you, rect conviction up vou Wi 76°, — Special — Motor vs will be 40 cents id 2 1 nkseivin Time Power without carbon. Quick ignition—never fails, Waverly gasolines insure instanwmneous, powerful, clean een Oe ee explosion. Your dealer has them. , If not, write us. Do not fail to. ses the hroows at WAVERLY OIL WORKS CO., Independent Refiners $B Horohalt & Co's. They ore PITTSBURG, PA. : H 5 0 not ashamed to show you this lo #lso makers of Waverly Special Auto Off Ho I ( : th lot Exira heavy es THE BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, Albert Catlin, the man who held the balance of power, sat near an open window Through the window came a small rubber ball, It came lowly, as if Hghtly tossed It dropped on Cats In's desk. He picked it up, but Pow. ell's hand caught it from him Both men had seen the letter and figures on the ball Ten minutes late the « mittee adjourned In th 1 Powell met Mildred ( vit Ine a sald harshly “1 want to talk to you," In the deserted committee room he closed the door. Here is something that belongs to you.” He held the ball toward her. “You have failed in your attempt to bribe Albert Cat. lin A C~—J, B5.~$10,000 You threw the ball in to him at a criti cal moment to show him what he would receive for hig vote to kill the bill. I took the ball from him, and with the proof of atte: ed bribery In my possession he dared not vote as Zane wished him tc I Ww you 1 this ball You told me franks ly 1 would do ar ing for the I md your dvanc I he 1 Zan A You \re clever ( h fc | You will succeed in this. 1 evidence against you is conclusive The one point I do not understand is the meat S.” on the ball The other letters mean Albert Catlin —ten thousand dollars to kill the bill.” “You believe this? Did I, the wo- man you professed to love, attempt an act of bribery?” For a moment he looked into her face, Then his hands came down on her shoulders. “You did not,” he ex- claimed, joyously. “You did not.” “You had the proof of my guilt. ‘What proof have you of my inno- cence?” “Your face—your true, gentle, wo manly face. No greater proof could any man ask.” The door was pushed open and the little daughter of the state house jan- itor came in. “Have you seen my ball?” she asked. “Oh, that's it. Miss Mildred gave it to me. She said that when she was a little girl she lloved hard rubber balls that bounced ‘high, and that she never saw one without wishing she was a little girl again and could play with one, and so she often buys them and gives them to little girls. I was playing with this one and it bounced in here. A. iC. is for me—Alice Cawse. J. 8. is for Jimmy Smith, a little boy I'm engaged to; $10,000 is the fortune he says he must make to marry me when we grow up. He wrote those letters this morning, so I'd remember I'm ’gaged to him.” “If I marry you, Harold,” Mildred was saying a few minutes later, “I shall have to give up the splendid position Mr, Zane offered me this morning I was to be editor of the ‘Woman's Section.’ I am willing to do anything—anything honorable— for my paper and myself. You asked me to marry had assu in my you just after Mr. Zane me that I should succeed ition and IT wanted to ear 1 before 1 worl But man who in a woman after ha has ade up his mind e is & ilty person is- [ rust worth more 1 nytl € and | v goi 1 the Excessive Comforts of the Present Day Have All Been Duplicated in the Past. There has been an outery of late against the luxuriocu steamships crossii finger of scorn been pointed at golf li courts, perfumed baths, rose bushes, ete., provided for the Atlantic. The ks qu the pampered p engers. And there sigh for the good old days when a flannel shirt without a re- Heving touch of starched linen was the correct thing at dinner; when women were as grubs until land was are me w ) p sighted, ai 1 they appeared on dack as butt vhen a forenight at sea was all too short a time; when a ship was expected to be uncomfort- able; when business was necessarily left behind on the pier and no mes- sage could come through the air; when the bath was a jet from a hose held by a g sailor on a wet deck, Sumptuously furnished vessels were known centuries before the Sirius or the pride of the Collins line. The ship that Archimedes designed for Hiero II., king of Syracuse, not only was wonderfully decorated—the story of the Illiad was told in marquetry—but there were flower beds on the prom- enade deck, a gymnasium, staterooms with three beds, a library, bathroom with hot and cold water, stables and horses, fish ponds and many fair rooms paved with agate and precious stones. And this vessel was designed as a earrier of wheat. It was first named the Syracusan, but afterward the Alex- andrian. Arehimelus wrote a poem in its honor, and Hiero, in gratitude and appreciation, sent him a thousand measures of cheese and thoughtfully prepaid the expense. Moschion gives 1iled description of this ship. 1en there was the Egyptian vessel the joy of Ptolemy Philopator, yromenades, a temple of , a drinki hall, e sides of yrated with precious I'iile r stat stones nts gold Plain Words. ’ to make your t rid?” reason?” because you can't pos- tal a it’s Considerably Less ipervisors of West Hemp- field township have received the of $280.51 from the State of for road improve- amount is fifty per road taxes collected in In July, 1911, the ed the sum of 437.09 for two years’ rebate on Advertise in the Mt. Joy Bulletin 3 appointments of * PA odvofosfoslooorfoeds sjaelosfoni foie sfoofe lovfon singe feof ojo ofore Seeded 2 TT ee ee le he Tred I'l | 1d #( i 0 nd G [De reme + + V ( of fe nd ho - let no Lancaste ( V + w 1 ( ne like ) V ’ og sep te section for 1 + ow Knormou purcha + oe bled to 1 rk «( ildre of of gk + ————— - * Children’s Shoes o> eofeorteforts aslo Children's Shoes in vici kid, patent colt and gun metal to $1.75 At Lancaster’s For Children’s Clothing Come To Donovan's | Boys’ Wash Suits One Half Price ton and blucher cuts desirable lasts for growing feet: tips or : Girls’ Dresses plain toes, absolutely solid—98¢ School Supplies Are : Ready-A Great or Wednesday, August 21, 1918, feelesiosfojosiosfocforioforteaiosiodoodoaeededordedoddodrds dfedoddosioddvsioeioriodorfododeafedfoojonjoderiodedsdeivoioifoede Buy School Clothes Leading Children’s Store re busy getting them ready and the little folks We have pro- harge of experienced buyers ldren There is unlimited va Children's wear plenty of Men and Women's; but a large excellent buying facilities have en- es and Save Money ——— ES ———— w— str igh neck: long sleeves O8c¢, Girls $2 Gingham Dresses, new | fall models beautifully trim- ed, with 1 bands and but- tons: 1 1 ¢: long sleeves. $1.49, Girls’ $4 serge Dresses all wool n navy: trimmed with buttons and Soutache braid; sal- lor collar: contrasting collar and cuffs $2.98, Girls’ $3 Gingham Dresses; all | new fall stvles neatly made of Anderson Ginghams beautifully trimmed: high neck and long sleeves, $1.9¢, Girls’ $5 Norfolk Dresses; made of striped and check ging- hams: nicely trimmed, with large sailor collar; a very special value $2.49 A LS WA SAI. Special Prices eloofeodecfecfedforionfordecforfocforioofecfsfocfoctoodefortecfestecfocfestonforfocforfectesoctorte sforfeocfecfech 3 i Po PASSED AN UNQUIET NIGHT Traveler, Lost in the Bush, Was Glad to Do Without the Blessings of Slumber, But I had never given a thought to the course I had taken in my gallop across the veldt. 1 kept on and on, and before long it grew dark and some- what cold. So I dismounted, and aft- er thinking it over, I knee-haltered the horse and let him go, crept head first » ant-bear hole for a night's made myself as comfort- 1 into a lodging, ¢ able ible under the circum- gtances, using the blesbok hide for a 1 et. The night was dark as I 1 € 1S out o Ju€ J i ha 1 ] 1tirac ( € res, but 01 z it real if 1 1 down i LV ( d ed Ww ommu= y ) \ 1 )» b dalid rircle » taking I 18 ( I a number of drawi » and nearer, j the ( B I soon di isliked the n that if 1 dreaded nce. During the « spells I knew that something chewing I ct- 1S « 1e n Most Popular Character. Dicken once received an invitation to a “Walter Scott” party, each guest being expected to attend in the character of one or another of Scott’s heroes. On the eventful night, however, greatly to the astonishment of the assembled Rob Roys and Wa- verleys, Dickens turned up in ordinary evening dress and apparently quite unconcerned. At length the host, who was feeling uneasy, came up to the novelist and inquired: “Pray, Mr. Dickens, what character of Scott's can yow possibly be sup- posed to represent?” “Character!” sadd Dickens. “Why, sir, a character yem will find In every one of Scott's novels. 1,” he went on, smilingly, “am the ‘gentle reader.” Terrible Ordeal. “It was perfectly frightful,” said Chubbleigh. “There we ran at top speed around the eerner, and the first thing I knew we dashed plumb into that grocer’s wi I guess it must have held a hundred dozen eggs.” Oh, well, that bad, was vt “Oh, it wasn’t that,” with a sh *B y ‘mn 3 Vy UL. ~—Harpe y Already Accomplished. ader asked the sag rr advice, ens to sue me ior promise. Can you advise me how extricate self from 1 diffi- culty 2” The reply of the sage was short. It ran: “My dear reader, if I may say so, you seem to have extra-kated your self already!” re ft ertise in the Mt. Joy Bulledin Read the Mt. Joy Bulletin Subscribe for the Mt. Joy Bulletin. OYSTERS and CLAMS in : MotCG-innis, PROPRIETOR chrefesforfoefeoferiasiorieofeorlirgevosie derfoojorfosforforiod Sooke do seodoconte Toilet Waters & 5 : + oe * * ok i +4 w ci soofasfeoferfocfoofredoofocieoto oie ofoconfe ode cfosforforfotes Deafness Cannot Be Cured - (of Common Pleas Ils Family Bill 18 for constipation, nas. BH Z REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE Settleinent of Estates. and Conveyancing DOES UPHOLSTERING S. MUSSELMAN, ere is a good | Lewis Seeman, Mount Joy. HOLIOWBUSH NOTARY PUBLIC Attorney-At-Law , Monday and ¥ri 0. 62 North Duke Street 32 to 38 East King Street, Lancaster, Penna. sielrorivaiedeiieefecdedoriodeoob drive dededbdrbdribdidr dr driibdidbinidp HOTEL Y-GiaNn undersigned having remodel- ed the old Mooney Hotel, number of sleeping rooms, i prepared to entertain trans ient and regular guests. RESTAURANT American Plan Rat Moderate { | | «" Exchange Hotel Mount Joy, Pa. J. M. Backenstoe, Pro. Ha D rem ed th it € col I g uch Bat! nd ( te an i i ht, Et ‘able is Supplied With the Best Harket Affords. . . » . » Also Lunch Counter Vhere Souq sandwiches, (heese : I'rij Oy: 1 \ S tC bite ALE I've ® sw BAR IS STOCKED WITH THE BEST BRANDS OF BEER, WINES, LIQUORS & CIGARS Good Stabling Sesumods ton * 7 Local and Long Distance Tel COURY PROCLAMATION nt and Hon. Aaron B. Has- ate, Judges of the Court n and for the Coun Lancaster, and nt Justi- Courts of Oyer and Termi- General Jail Delivery and Sessions of the Peace in and sler, Associ¢ t | for the County of Lancaster, have is- Y | sued their precept, to me directed, | requiring me, among other things, to make public proclamation thru- {out my bailiwick, that a Court of Qy- cr and Terminer and a General Jail | Delivery, also a Court of the General Quarter Sessions of the Peace and Jail Delivery, will commence in the Court House in the City of Lancas- ter, in the Commonwealth of Penn- sylvania, ON THE SECOND MONDAY IN SEPTEMBER, (THE 9th,) 1912, In pursuance of which precept Pub- lic Notice is hereby given to the May- or and Alderman of the City of Lan- ailing and Clerking of Public Sales | aster, in the said county, and all the | Justices of the Peace, the Coroner {and Constables of said City and Coun- [ ty of Lancaster, that they be thea {and there in their own proper per- | sons with their rolls, records and ex- faminations, and inquisitions, and their other rememberances, to do {those things which to their offices appertain in their behalf to be done, {and also those who will prosecute having upholstering to| do. such as sofas, lounges, beds, or! placing window shades or anything in general repair work, will favor and save money by calling Prices are right. against the prisoners who are or then shall be in the jail of the said county of Lancaster, are to be then {and there to prosecu against them as shall be just. Dated at Lancaster the 14th day of August, A. D. 1912. MILTON EBY, Sheriff, pega N jab) iy ¢ a ~t _— AS — pt ~ cv ~~ ave on hand anything Smoked Meats, Ham, ways in the line | Bologna, Dried Beef, Lard, Etec. Also Fresh Beef, Veal, Pork and | Mutten. Prices always right. H H. KRALL | West Main Street, Opp. Bank, MOUNT JOY, JA. sell Telephone.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers