The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, June 19, 1912, Image 6

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    IB SIX
Automobile Buyers!
Here Is a Splendid Collection of Cars For You to Select From
Reo, R. C. Hupp, Premier, Firestone
Columbus, Velie, Oakland.
A.
te you on delivery trucks and
Do not fail to look them over
in this ¢nd of
We are also In position to que
carry a variety of second-hand
Also carry the largest stock of auto
county.
We have just closed a contract
gell you cil at wholesale prices ir
hpward. We have been using thi
t to be good. Your patronage
andis Bros., Rheems.
supplies the
for oil which enables us to
juanities of gallons and
gs oil for four years and know
solicit
five
V1 ee
FEES EEEERESN
¥
Bas
RE RRR RR
Uy
4 0
5
L( 1 "SC PF %]
* B
& LN a A
and Aut
ran 4
Se FN
a 1 20
NO,
Lom, go
a
&
Lo yO
“Music Hall”
A SI BEE RA TR SAFEST
Kirk Johnson & Co.,
16 and 18 West King St., LANCASTER, PA.
is the only kind I sell—Furniture that is Furniture
Rockers
Picture Frames
Mirrors
Ladies’ Desks
China Closets, Kitchen Cabinets
In fact anything 1n the Furniture Line
Undertaking and Embalming
MOUNT JOY. PENNA
served Seat Tickets
FOR
ancaster Horse
eri oisepofpooipsfodecodeiorfoode dusfecfeoie ode
ER
+
i
I
3
1
t
3
3
3
%
od
+
+
efoofocfoeiocfesofocfocfscfocfoofoofoefetoeirod forded
Hall Racks
Extension & Other Tables, Davenport
H.C. BRUNN ER
J. Y. KLINE
BUILDING BLOCKS
All Styles and Colors
Porches, Columns and
Banisters
Lintles, Chimneys,
Ete.
Grades of Cement
All Xinds Concrete Work
Retailer of the Bess |
PENNA
DAINTY
SUMMER SHOES
fer dainty people and neat, stylish
amd durable ones for more sturdy
wear. In either case our footwear
will always give perfect satisfac-
tien, because it is faultless in shape,
style and finish, comfortable and
‘enduring fn its wearing qualities.
] styles for Spring ready for
| PENNSYLVANIA DUTCH,
Bumblesock Has
This Week,
What Shwilkey
Say
Bar-
1de
Jeck
unser
ebbes om
d 3 ich, be-ch
waisht der
Du
is
Well,
i dt ummy Sendapetzer
nnonner ettled
vohr
brooder,
1 Barrie) are
hen
Es wore en
far giles-
maucha,
Der oldt
gons
der
rarghta
tzer hut en
blaud harged g'hot gae
cowl
hoy, shtrow, rrume-
un so fardt
black-shmidt
oldt Sam-
booch, hut
hicked far
sime
hop ¢ ttled un we der
It sime
Jeck grawd g's
Squire Law-
my
“Teh
t
( d en oldter
iu olla » socha
isht, lusht der
( na room
kartza wardta os du en
It : sht. Ich hob g
ed du misht ga-watched
( ich der ’squire hare
1
vet er Samm “sell
n bakentniss in der bar-
Ww la-meedich os ich
bin. Es wore net so shlim we ich es
Snncliod
“Dor husht anvhow ga-luga,”
sawgt der Jeck “Bring der ’squire. |
Are hut ene schwara lussa un se
hen settled according tsu law
Der Jeck hut mere mnoachderhond
g’sawt are het em oldta Sammy
ga-drowed, wile
are en hoon-
un
shunt long nimmy
80 en reicher mon we
ert-vord ga-bade maucha kent
I'HE
| unknown
BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY,
| TAKES RIGHTFUL PLACE
| JAPANESE MERCH RAISED IN
Heretofore Only the Soldier Has Beer
Looked Upon as Following a
Worthy Calling—~Emperor Has
Changed This Idea.
Japanese business methods have
| been widely criticised, especially in
| the last few years, as lacking those
| standards of commercial honor which
prevall among Occidental nations A
| writer in the Atlantic says that the
| question most frequently put to him
| since his return from the Orient has
been:
“Why is it that the Japanese are so
| dishonest that they cannot even trust
themselves, and have to employ China-
| men at the head of all thelr great
business concerns?”
| He explains this almost universal
impression by saying tl the average
{ tourist usually has busine relatior
only with the branches of the
great banks established in the t
ports. When he cashes hi etter «
credit he observes the i [|
that the money ndled by a
Chinaman instead of by a native
is belng ha
“The simple truth,” says the writer,
“4s that these three all of
them, by the way, foreign concerns
| are the only business houses in the
entire empire so conducted When
Japan was opened and these foreign
corporations in China sent their
branches into the
their Ching
“Yes, while
and should be
simple just
niable that
commercial
adopte i
are not what the il in
and there
denta
new field, they sent
} Con lores with them,
all this can be said,
sald, in
it is nevertheless
ideals
methods
of
Cu
business
the west,
this. The fact that in the o 1 da
in J n the n t
the he n of the social
soldier tha + y §¥
world !
“But even though ‘cake of cus-
tom’ is the
er of Ir
realm.
tho who by the
rom the
been calle Rothschilds of the
east; but while the f of the lat-
ter has gone abroad the world
the Mitsuis have remained practic
except to a few
merchants who have had
dealings with the Orient.
exter
The I
| pean family owes its great renown to
{ daid usht ae dawler es yohr esu em |
porra gevvt ware awenich tsu geit-
sich far gons arlich si.
Un sawg, der Jeck is ken doom-
kup, far ich glawb selver net os
der deifel en mon feel room feered
| oony are gebt eme ga-lagenheit.
IE EE
The Week in Grain
|
|
| “ompiled for the Mount Joy Bulle-
|
tin, at Mount Joy, Pa., by Wm. lL.
Bear & Co., Pennsylvaniz Building,
| Philadelphia, Pa., by D. B. Lehman,
| y
| Manager, Woolworth
‘aster, Penna
Phila, Pa., June 19, 1912.
The week has witnessed the most
extensive price change, since the
extreme advance of April. The up-
ward movement that culminated
with sharp on the heels of
the Government report early in the
has been followed by a severe
Building, Lan-
gains,
weel
| decline.
a condition for winter wheat much
the percentage popularly ex-
and the trade accepted it as
bullish document. The
below
pected,
an essentially
spring wheat outlook it reported at-
tracted less attention, until heavy
rainfall over the areas suffering
from extreme drouth, put an end to
bullish activity, With that develop-
ment the spring wheat outlook com-
manded attention, as did the pro-
{gress of harvest over the southwest,
{the actual movement of new wheat,
improved weather in
land most important of all,
| approach of the maturity
contracts. In a speculative
the close
of July
way
large of the buying
| with a portion
| you think of this:
| sermon,
The crop report announced {
all directions, |
the fact that for a century there has
been no slightest stain upon its com-
mercial honor.
“But its career, it should be remem-
bered, has been passed in a world
where business itseif has been held in
honor; while the Mitsuis, engaged in
a pursuit utterly contemned by pub-
lic sentiment, for three centuries, in
spite of the demoralizing influence of
the social ban, have been trusted by
government and people alike, and
have kept the honor of their name un-
stained. Now, thanks to the new
spirit animating the nation, they no
longer stand so conspicuously alone.”
| million-dollar hotel
Model Sermon.
A correspondent, a churchman,
somewhat moved by a paragraph re-
garding sleeping in church, wrote that
he has no particular objection to the
congregation going to sleep, when fit
has an excuse for doing so. “But,”
he writes, “I want to ask you what
I attend a church
where the assistant sleeps during the
and a few Sundays ago he
had the ‘nerve’ to tell the rector it
was the finest sermon he had ever
heard him (the rector) preach, when
he had been sleeping through it!” |
This is certainly very shocking. We |
submit, however, that if the assistant
slept calmly through the sermon he
could do no less than compliment it.
Wise Woman.
“Now for $2,” announced the star
gazer. “I will furnish you with a
philter which will make your husband |
love you to the exclusion of all othe
ers.”
“I don’t think I'll invest” decided
the practical housewife. “But if you
have a philter which will make him
| bring home some of his salary on pay-
Door and Window Sills and | this last feature was important, for |!
| of wheat futures based upon the as- |
| sumption that the
| make inroads upon the
{crop promise of the northwest, it
| naturally sought distant deliveries,
| while leaving the July delivery to
| bear the brunt of
{and selling pressure. Trade senti-
ment has also been influenced by a |
belief that the leading elevator in-
terests would relish a good decline
on which to fill their houses from
the new crop.
It is a very active trader’s affair
however, and a situation where
prices shift quickly as new influen-
ces develop. The decline should add
materially to the invest \ent de-
mand. ’ :
—
Shipped Fine Steers i
J. L. Minnich of Landisville, on |
Thursday shipped two carloads
fat steers to Philadelphia, fed by
Tobias H. Hershey and Bachman
Rohrer, of East Petersburg, which
are claimed to be the finest shipped
from Lancaster county this season.
summer would |
abundant
both liquidation |
-
day I'll allow you a percentage on all
sums realized.”—Louisville Courler- |
Journal.
As to Hubby.
Inquiring Friend—I should like to
know your husband’s attitude on the |
question of woman suffrage. I sup-
pose, though, when it comes to that,
he’s up in the air, as the saying is. |
Mrs. Leeder—One foot is, anyway; |
he's a kic-er.
In the Cause of Freedom.
“T told the lawyer I wanted an abso-
lute divorce,” sald Mrs. Flimgilt.
“And what did he say?”
“He told me he was an old friend of |
r husband and as a favor to him he
anid take the case.”
——————— A Ieee
Two Accidents
i Samuel Koser, of Mt. Joy town- |
| ship, was kicked in the face by a
Me Mt. (Joy Bulletin. ' mules and
{ horse with such force as to break
| his nose and otherwise injure him
of | very severely, to such an extent that
it will probably cost him his life. i
Hosler Weidman, the oldest son |
of Amos Weidman, residing on the |
Benjamin L. Garber farm, near
Donegal Springs, was run over by a
{ fleld roller drawn by two runawsy
erely injured.
PA.
THE DONOVAN COMPANY
THE DONOVAN COMPANY
Wednesday, June 19, 1912
| A Mammoth Millinery
| Clearance Sale
Begins Saturday, June 22; 7:30 A. M.
o2es!
eofeotefesforfocfecferfoctorfofonjorfoty mieoefosfortesfooecfocfortecte
3 Everything in Our Big Department
i Cut Down To A Low
Figure
Hats of all kinds; Flowers, Plumes, Aigrettes, ete.
Come Early—See Lancaster Papers on Friday
TET TTT T TTY
3
3
de
% i
+ Don’t Forget the Big Sal
ole
+ of the Surplus Stock of
i 171% {tI rn
: UTI 1K
Ui LI i
J A R Ail Pear
oJosfeedes
Prices Near
—
3
wd
ting better and more pop- _
Pric ed
ofp ofeodeofoeferferenfacfonfocfororiocfectesfonfocfocte wfscfucfosforforfecforforfontectsctecfocfonesosfeste
Jooleelecteslestestoctoetestectecioctoctoniotectoadocodonion cio Radeon ul ab ul lB bl ae
TES
TTT TTT MY
~~ © ~~ ‘
A 5 0 Qe
SRA $k 4 a REA
A DIZ Dail
Qed
nt tho 3 MIS [weet fie
Of UIIC Iamous dweet, vrr
3 57 eo n
sfeefeofocfeefesforgerfeoforoofosfoeesfortort
stock ata very low price.
ere 1S an unusal
tumity. dee Lancaster
Pavers on Friday
Fapers on rriday.
F fofrooaffodoroadefeoofertedrofordosde sfedforduefocfooodiode
His Dreams Come True.
A number of interesting stories are
F. Nicola, Pittsburg’s most
told of F.
dazzling operator, by Isaac F. Marcos-
son in his article, “The Millionaire
Yield of Pittsburg,” in Munsey. One
of them deals with the erection of his
famous hostelry, says the writer.
“About 12 years ago Nicola built a
in an out-of-the-
way corn-field. People thought he was
insane. Now he has reared about it
a whole civic center, which includes a
memorial hall, an armory, and fine
clubs, and will in time embrace the
new University of Pittsburg. It was
Mr. Nicola who vivified a string of de-
crepit railroad properties, and sold!
them to George J. Gould as the nu- |
cleus of the Pittsburg division of the |
Wabash system,
indomitable will, and he has seen
some of his big dreams come true.”
How Life Appears,
To Pessimists.
Keep out.
Dangerous.
No smoking.
No admission.
Beware of the dog.
Keep off the grass.
Elevator not running.
Don't feed the animals.
Trespassers will be prosecuted.
Not responsible for hats and coats.
! To Optimists,
Come in.
Take one.
No collection.
Admission free.
You are invited.
Strangers welcome,
Ask for free sample.
No trouble to show goods.
Money back if not satisfied.
Nowadays.
Lawyer—I've just landed that big
| corporation law-case for my son.
Friend—Certainly, but he'll be ready
for it by the time I've finished the
preliminary work of getting a jury.—
Puck.
Impossible.
Bronson—I understand that he paint-
ed cobwebs on the ceiling so perfectly
| that the housemaid wore herself out
trying to sweep them down.
Johnson—There ma have
an artist, but there
housemaid.
Co.
MADAME DEAN : PILLS.
A Sayx, Oxzrary Rruxe for SUPPRESSED MENSTRUATION.
Safe! Sure! Speedy! Satis-
NEVER ER KNOWN T¢ T0 FAIL. ro
"% per box. Witt a them on trial, to be paid for
when relieved. Samples Free. If or your druggist does not
have them send your orders to the
UNITED MEDICAL CO., BOX 74, LANCASTER, PA.
been such
<r was such a
Sold in Mi. Joy by E. W. Garber
and W. DB. Chandler & Ca.
Read the Mt. Joy Bulletin.
CARPETS
CLEANED
Best Work
Best Service!
He is a dreamer of |
Novelty Rug Co.,
135-137 Beaver St.,
PENNA,
LANCASTER,
Ig
il
iN
;
a —_——
i
ir bottles of Electric Bitters
me feel like a new man.”
50 CTS. AT ALL DRUG STORES.
|
{
MAKES EATING A PLEASURE
SEST
(09 AIDS DIGEST ION (5)
LUNG DISEASE
“After four in our family had died
of consumption I was taken with
a frightful cough and lung trouble,
Bus my life was saved and I gained
87 pounds through using
DR. KING'S
NEW
DISCOVERY
W. R. Patterson, Wellington, Tex.
PROMPTLY)
RECOMMEND
AND SELL,
i Th Qe
JARS &POTLARD
OMPANY
| CDR) ~-MASH
MAKES THEM
x Neng
| , m
! o£ nd 4
| jr ¢ mmr
[1 > must |
| iii i
oF f
| st three
i pi
yp eek 2 they eat Tle
& Pollard Dry Mash.
|
| For Sale by
| BRANDT & STEHMAM |
| Mount Joy. FPa- {
Ask the man who feeds it J
If you are hungry for Buckwheat
Cakes, the kind mother used to
bake, we still have Buekwheat flour
on hand.
EXECUTORS’ NOTICE
Estate of Martin L. Greider, late
{of Mount Joy Borough, Pa., de-
: | ceased.
Letters of administration on said
estate having been granted to the
{undersignéd, all persons indebted
|thereto are requested to make ime~
mediate payment, and those having
claims and demands against the
| ; pa §icame will present them without de-
{ Y id ba k writes H. Jay for settlement to the under
p, od igh, N. C, “and my § signed.
(idne a not work right, #1 gn
SAMUEL S. GREIDER,
Mount Joy, Pa., R. D. No. 4
CERISTYAN S. GREIDER,
P. O. Box 264, Harrisburg, Pa.
Administrators.
N. Berntheisel, Attorney.
may 29-6¢.
Cleon
ce Ice
which ! am now ready to serve the
public. Wagon Raw 2s. To and
Florin dafly. Bos in balore Way
your order for the seasom. Prices
reasomble.
rt C. S. Fr /
rank
PRICE 650c and $1.00 AT ALL DRUGG!STS.
Tr. 201, PS