The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, August 26, 1914, Image 3

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THE BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA. Weds

esday August 26, 1914.

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IN GOLD FILLED CASES,

 
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Guaranteed for Twety Years. 8
x s
x ® i
u ——— a
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= Cases in different designs, 5
E engine turned, plain polish and F
engraved. Monogram Or in- §
itials engraved free. :
hs
on W. GOITECH
un
(Near Bowman's Store) 8
: MOUNT JOY, PAB
u
5 a
Krall Meat Mar.et

1 always have on hand anythirin
the line of Smoked Meats, am,
Bologna, Dried Beef, Lard, Etc
Also Fresh Beef, Veal Poral
Mutton, Prices always right.
H H. KRALL
West Main Street, Opp. Banl
MOUNT =~ PA
Bell Telephone. r oo
Tew og PREAM PARLS
I have opened & fine ice gs par.
lor fat my home om Fairview 4
T pk ream of
Drinks.

vY, PA.
DME


REAL ESTATE SALE BILLS
Bulletin Office. Mount Joy, Is the
Right Place to Get Them
E
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At this time it may not be out of
to give those contemplating
1g real estate sales a little ad-
so here goes.
\Remember the first and foremost
ial in getting a good price for

property is to thoroughly ad-
Get a good, neat and a |
sale bill printed, telling of
rantages of your property. In

manner vou will get many com-
ive bidders and good bidders
good sales.
In order to get these bidders you
must advertise your property quite
extensively.
First, by an attractive and well
written sale bill.
Second, by an advertisement in a
hundreds and
weekly in the
your prop-
circuldes
paprs
surrounding
paper that
hundreds of
sors ly
erty.
Now that’s just where we shine.
We can print you a poster second to
none because we have the equip-
|ment and as to the advertising, we
insert a free notice in our register
weekly, (provided we print the sale
bills). Doesn't that listen interest-
ing?
Our best evidence that we can
“deliver the goods” is the good sales
in the past, the bills for which were
printed at this office.
te et ee eG
The Pennsylvania Farm Laborer
Washington, D. C. Aug—The farm
laborers of Pennsylvania work on an
average of 9 hours and 45 minutes
per day, according to a report which
has just been issued by the United
States Department of Agriculture.
There are 143,000 laborers employed
on the farms of this State and the
average monthly compensation is
$20.60 with} board and $32.00 it the
laborer boafds himself. These figures
relate to t year 1913. The average
wage for ffirm labor in Continental
United States $13.85 per month
with board {and $19.97 without board.
em reel emne

is
Mt. Joy's Best Paper—Bulletin.
Mt. Joy’s' Best Paper—Bulletin.
IRATLANTIC
CITY
ONE-DAY
RSIONS




| sometimes
| cheeks at noon,
! late,
| night before.
|
| Everybody
! the fountain,
| different;

CO00P0COIVHNPO0C0000CEPOPOOO0SS
@
All BOSTWIGK'S LUKGHES
By GRIFFIN BARRY.
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000000000600000000000000
(Copyright.)
When Ann Bostwick’s funds fell to
a certain very low level, she could
see Giant Despair
in the corner of
her patch of a
hall bedroom. She
tried to cover him
up by hanging
certain ‘“‘honora-
ble mentions” in
that corner, and
later she was able
ing with a blue
ribbon on its
but when she opened her flat

edge;
purse he was inside that, as grim as
ever.
To make it worse, a career was not
all she would leave behind when she
had spent all her money—all of it,
that is, except the price of a ticket
to her home in a certain New Eng-
land village. Even to herself she
would not admit it, but there would
be another wrench w! en she sow the
last of a certain wearer of corduroy
breeches, who, for all the air of him,
might never have worn anything near-
er creased trousers in his life. He
was a Westerner, and the critics said
that he painted “freer and bolder”
than any student in the big school.
to add one draw- |

SELECTING A MODEL
By F. A. USSING.
00000000000 |
e0oeo00COOE
The novelist sat at his desk writing
when his wife suddenly laid her hand
on his shoulder. He looked up at her.
“What is the matter, dear?”
“Oh, it is my family again. Uncle
Hans Peter's feelings have been hurt
by your last short story.”
“His feelings have been hurt? I do
not quite understand.”
“Well, you remember that the name
of the villain in it is Hans Peter.”
“And then?”
“That has been enough to hurt him
dreadfully.”
“I don't quite understand yet. Is
Uncle Hans Peter then such a disgust-
ing person as the type I describe?”
“No, not at all. But recently you
wrote another story in which one of
the persons was a certain merchant
whom you called Theobald Olarson,
though you knew that Cousin Theo-
bald—"
“Good Lord, I had quite forgotten
! that you had a cousin Theobald. I
Tom Graham and she had a paint- |
ing-room acquaintance which extend- |
ed to lunch-time, when they usually
nodded shortly to each other from op- |
posite ends of the same soda-fountain.
He lunched on egg concoctions, with |
hot chocolate and crackers to boot;
she, on malted milk.
There had been a time when Ann
used to have a sustaining egg put in
her thin drink; but that was in the |
days of her father’s remittances—
prodigal days, when she spent as
much as twenty cents in carfare, on
a Sunday, to fill her lungs with God's
fresh air as it
son. When the remittances ceased,
instead of eggs and car rides,
blew across the Hud- |
never thought of it when I wrote the
story, but my merchant was a hypo-
crite and a swindler and not the least
bit like your cousin.”
“Of course not, but one incident
chains itself to another. You remem-
ber the story you wrote about the ille-
gitimate child? Agnes thought that
was a slap in her face.”
“Once more I don’t follow you.”
“You cannot have forgotten that her
first baby was born eight months after
her wedding.”
“Now you must forgive me, dear. I
never for a moment thought of count-
ing the months. I took the baby’s
birth as a most natural event.”
The novelist’s wife kissed him ten-
derly.
“You will promise me never to use
my relatives as models?”
“Models, darling. 1 never use mod-
els. People think so in their own silly
minds. But I promise I shall be very
careful not to hurt the feelings of
| either Uncle Hans or Cousin Theobald
she |
bought baked beans and fresh paint- |
tubes.
food outlay, nickel by nickel,
she weakly wondered if
after all courage doesn’t depend on
In fact, she kept reducing her |
until |
diet. She ought to have been told
that a tumbler of malted milk isn't |
enough to keep the blood in your
when your breakfast
has been tfwo cold squares of choco-
folio
Then something strange happened.
noticed that Ann perked
up—especially the “mixologist” before
who had often slipped
a little more than a fair ten-cents’
worth into hjer tumbler. But this was
for now an egg appeared
daily, and rometimes two, while the
check she paid was the same.
Ann hate¢ taking charity, even while
he swallowed it. She hated it only
wing a 15-cent dinner the!
or Sister Agnes. 1 hope there are nc
usurers in your family.”
“No.”
“Good. Besides these three, my nov-
el tells of a certain paper manufactur-
er, who is a most disgusting hypocrite,
who is in love with the usurer’'s beau-
tiful daughter and whom the usurer
favors because of his wealth. Then
comes the conflict-and the young man
wins.”
The novelist wrote his famous book,
“The Usurer's Daughter,” which cre-
ated such a sensation in the literary
world. The magazine rights were sold
to the “Copenhagen Magazine.”
When he received his check from
the editor of the magazine he present-
ed his wife with a diamond ring and
took her to the Royal theater in the
evening.
Two months later the book came
out, and the next day a distant relative
of the author's wife called to see her.
he received him ver dluanb od


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0H A JH
TED TER
THE LAST WEEK
of the August Sale of
FURNITUR
Many New Shipments Just to Hand
Make Our Stocks Now as Complete
as in the Beginning of the Sale
Don’t Overlook This Oppcrtunity
ROBABLY not for many years will it be possible to sell this high standard
Furniture at such extraordinary low prices. The war in Europe isalready






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forcing up prices on everything. Today we could not duplicate this furniture at 10
per cent of an increase and moreover we are facing a rising market.

If you have a furniture need or if you anticipate
purchasing anything in the furniture line inside of six
months, invest your money in it this week for
JO

Next Monday August Prices Cease




Then everything goes back to our normal prices.
And should your purchases not be needed immediately,
we will hold them until they are needed, storing and in-
suring them free of charge.


Here 1s how you save from 10 to 25
per cent. on our usual low prices and from
25 to 50 per cent on those asked elsewhere
a

PR —
Furpiture for 3 Rooms | Furniture for 3 Rooms
- Actual Specified Value $227.50-
worth
cker. |

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