The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, July 03, 1912, Image 7

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ME SEVEN
Good, Sound Logs
are the only kind used in the manu-
facture of Lumber for our yard,
LUMBER
of inferior quality is never permit-
form a part of our stock. It
every particular
to
must be perfect in
and thoroughly seasoned Do you
vonder we do 80 much business.
Quality, price and fair dealing tells
the tale
E. S. MOORE
Dealer In
“I AP
Coal, Lumber, Grain
Feed, Hay, Straw, Slate, Salt, Cement
and Fertilizer
- »
A» large stock of Feed constantly on hand. Highest cash price paid
for grain
Estimates >» Lumber and Mill Work a Specialty
FLORIN, PENNA.
a YOU WILL GET TEN CELEBRATED
:S.& H. Trading Stamps
{WITH EVERY DOLLAR'S WORTH OF COAL PUR | oy
¢ CHASED FOR CASH AT el
F.H.Ba
COAL and
LUMBER YARDS
Mount Joy, Penna
Sete agent for Congo Roofing. No. 1 Cedar Shingles always on hand
Also Siding, Flooring, Sash, Door , Blinds, Mouldings, Lath, Etc.
Agents for Alpha Portland Cement. Also Roofing Slate
wstimates Quickly and Cheerfully made on all kinds Building Material
Telephone No. 833. Opposite Old P. R. R. Depot
.
Straws of Every Variety
PANAMAS, BANKOKS, JAVAS, MILANS, MACKINAWS, FEATH-
ER WEIGHT STIFF AND SOFT HATS, CAPS FOR ALL PURPOSES,—
ALL AT BOTTOM PRICES.
44 North Queen St., Lancaster Pa.
’ « ‘ « 3
What's Wrong? Your Eyes? Why? i
Probably you need glasses. Call in and let us examine your eyes. i
[hey may be the cause of your headaches 4
Our optical depastment can supply at very low prices, eyeglasses and 3
specuacles in all cases 3
EXAMINATION BY A GRADUATE OPTICIAN FREE )
i
PIROSH & SIMMONS
=
oi
Jewelers and Opticians 20 North Queen Street, :
Next Door to Shaub & Co. Shoe Store 3
3
2
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Engle’s Furniture Warerooms =
®
MOUNT JOY, PENNA. iw
2 “
2 — DP ome Po x
3 a GOOD HOMEMADE FURNITURE A SPECIALTY ®
= >
3 UPHOLSTERING DONE TO ORDER 3
nu 3
| Poplar Lumber for sale im lots to suii the purchasers o
{
/
Undertaking and Embalming ,
NE 11 LOL 1
——— se ———
THE GRAIN HOUSE OF THE EAST]
ESTABLISHEI 1897
4 WILLIAM L. BEAR & CO.
(Members Chicag o Board of Trade)
BIRO IERS
PENNSYLVANIA BUILDING, Chestnut and 15th Sts., PHILADELPHIA
STOCHS-BONDS— INVESTMENTS
30 SECONDS 2 MINUTES
To Ohicago Board of Trade. To any Grain Market in Americs
Lancaster Branch 220-226 Woolworth Bldg.
¥
| countries are
THE
BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY.
RIO AND [4S BAY
|
I' is between 5 and 6 on a sum
mer morning that the entrance to
Rio bay is most brilliantly fascin
ating. The captain warned us to
be up In time to see the sun rise
over the city, the jewel of Brazil. As
it rose, dispelling the mist, what
wondrous beauties were then unfolded
before our eyes!
The first thing to greet us was
Sugar Loaf mountain, rising abruptly
from the water's edge high into the
alr—its position much as a sentinel’s,
standing guard over the city and bay
As the ship slowly entered the land
locked harbor, with forts to the right
and to the left, the view of the horse-
shoe bay was marvelous. At that
early hour little ferry boats were ply-
ing busily from one end of the bay to
the other
The fort to the right, the larger of
the two, is built upon a which
rises about twenty feet out of the wa
ter. Chambers are hewn out of the
center, and at intervals large guns
project out of the In cases of
great danger these chambers are used
as places of retreat, and at the same
time afford means to keep the enemy
at bay
The mist had entirely lifted from
the city, and the sloping streets, lined
with red-tiled roofs, snuggled in
among the most luxuriantly green ver
dure, could be seen. Rio is built upon
hills, with Corcovado and Tijuca, two
lofty mountains, rising high above the
city.
The ship had now dropped anchor,
and the inspection officers came on
board to examine grips and other
small luggage, trunks and larger lug-
rock
rock
gage having to go through the cus-
tomhouse.
All is excitement! Hotel porters
are boosting for the hostelries, and
boatmen, who have come from the
wharf in swarms, are clambering on
board, bargaining to take us ashore.
These boatmen are the hardest to
bargain with in all South America.
Their prices are always exorbitant,
and it takes some dickering to get
them within reason.
After landing we walked a few short
blocks which lead to the beautiful
Avenida Central. Here surprise and
wonder overcome the traveler. The
most modern automobiles fly by—yes,
fly by, for their is no speed limit in
Rio. On the broad mosaic sidewalks
you see people dressed In the latest
tailored suits, also negroes or negro-
Portuguese wearing the gayest of gay
flesta creations.
The buildings on either side of the
Avenida are fine, substantial, five or
six-story buildings, often expensively
ornamented on the outside with here |
Brazilian |
and there one all in mosaic.
trees line the edge of the sidewalk;
| also at intervals they are found in the
| grass plots, or little Islands, in the
| middle of the street
At one end of the broad Avenida
are the library, art building, and mu-
| nicipal theater; all magnificent build-
ings.
cial comment.
richness throughout
aters in all these
municipal and
pense is spared to make them grand.
They are not only places of instruc-
tion and amusement, but of social
festivities also.
If you are to linger Rio
choose one of the hotels back of the
city at which to stay It may take
time to go and come, but the ride is
worth it. Our hotel was on the road
It shows elegance and
The best the-
Latin-American
long in
to Corcovado, and the cars make many |
twists and turns in climbing to it. At
each turn a new and more beautiful
view of the city and bay below us
could be seen. The scene is especial-
ly charming at night, as the city is
well lighted and the lights glisten
| through the trees
We pass many of the native homes, |
which are plastered on the outside
then tinted a pale pink, blue or bluff.
The salmon pink predominates. They
are mostly of Portuguese architecture
with the four straight sides, and gen-
erally three or four stories high. This
The
this warm country patio ar |
rangement and balconies would be
much better, but then this change
would spoil the charm !
The street scenes of Rio are inter- |
esting. There is a large fountain in
one of the main streets, and all Jay
long men, women and children tramp
back and forth with jugs or pails of
water, always car d on their heads
to be used for household purposes and
for washing the clothes. It is
common sight to see big negro on
ashi hill ‘
lazy 1
I'he na t igs
yn the g as
well. It t na-
CY or coffin I ‘ We
aw men carrying wi looked like
sup-
) they cor >d small pet ani-
i . a saa
Insect Bite Costs Leg
his leg from
two years be-
A Boston man lost
of an
To avert such calamities from
stings and bites of insects use Buck-
len's Salve promptly to kill
the poison and prevent inflamma-
tion, swelling and pain. Heals burns,
+
the bite insect
fore
Arnica
boils, ulcers, piles, eczema, cuts,
bruises. Only 25 cents at S. B.|
Bernhart & Co’s.
rr —— A E—
A tsertise in the Mt. Joy Bulletin.
Lotaloyo, Fro de Janeiro
The theater is worthy of spe-,
style of architecture doesn’t really suit |
mals for sale, but a peep Inside dis
closed cakes of various shapes and
colors, the wire screen being used to
keep out small insects
You must not leave Rio without go-
ing to the summit of both Tijuca and
Corcovado The view you get from
either of these mountains will stay
with you forever. We, with a party
of friends, motored to the top of Ti-
juca. From the base of the mountain
the road zigzags through banana plan-
tations and still more beautiful tropl
cal verdure to the top. Near the top
there i8 quite a settlement with a good
hotel and cafe.—G. W. 8
ALWAYS SOMETHING TO EAT
If the Peach Crop Fails There May Be
“Punkins” and So On—No Need
to Worry.
Every member of the Qakley Aid so-
ciety, with exception, had some
complaint to make about the dry sea-
the blackberries drying up, the
tomatoes rotting from sunburn, the
corn failing to fill out, or the
scarcity of potatoes, says the Graphic.
In fact, a famine might have
inevitable to one who listened to the
gloomy talk. Finally, the president of
the society turned to a small woman
who had been quilting away cheer-
fully but silently through the after-
noon, the one exception to the fault-
finders. “Hasn't the drought hurt your
fruit and garden at all, Mrs. Bennett?”
she was asked.
“Oh, yes, mine is just about
all the rest,” was the calm reply.
“And don't you ever worry over any-
thing?” the president asked, most im-
patiently
Mrs. Bennett stopped quilting, laid
her thimble down, and, looking around
the group of women at the quilt, an-
swered: “I'll tell you what cured me
of worrying. I used to fret over every-
thing, and one spring, when it was
reported that a late frost had killed
all the fruit, I sat down to have a good
cry, for our peach trees had bloomed
beautifully and I had been so proud
of the abundant crop I was sure we
were to have.
“Now it happened that my Aunt
Martha came in just then, and asked
me what the trouble was. 1 told her.
“ ‘Child, what's the use fretting over
it? You'll not starve. I've lived eighty
years and the world's crop of pro-
visions has never failed yet.
don't have peaches we'll have
"king
“I have lived half as many yec.rs
now as Aunt Martha had lived then,
and I've found her philosophy sound.
In spite of all the late frosts and
! droughts, I don’t believe any of us has
ever suffered for food.”
The little woman glanced
one
s50n
sSweel
seemed
like
with a
smile round the circle of plump, well-
| fed women, and then taking up her
thimble went to quilting again. They
all laughed rather sheepishly, and the
president said, thoughtfully:
no ex-!
“I'd never thought of it that way,
but it’s true ‘peaches or punkins I'l
try to remember that.”
His Irresistible Humor.
Ellis Parker Butler says that his
greatest difficulty, now that there is
a demand for his stories, is to find a
competent secretary He confided his
difficulty to a friend, who at once said:
“Why, I know just the man for you.
A good stenographer, temperate hab-
reliable.’
sense of humor?”
its, absolutely
“Fine, but has he
asked Mr. Butler.
“Yes, he has that,” replied the
friend “l fancy he has a very pretty
! wit of his own. ' In facet "ve heard him
| get off one or two rather neat things
of his own.’
“I'm sorry to hear that” replied But-
ler. “He won't do, that's plain.’
“For _eaven’s sake, why not?” asked
the surprised friend
“I'll tell you—just in confidence,”
said Mr. Butler. “1 had one secretary
once with a sense of humor, and it was
| go strong that between us we could
no. do any work because of his laugh-
ing at the things [ dictated. I really
can't afford pay a chap $4 a day
for laughing.”
to
Explaining Flow of Sap.
There i» quite a mystery surround-
ing the solution of the force vhich
start th2 flow of n the tre In
ic al h 1 he
which st S i ot
than, a te f
RNR been 1 €
t v
afluer I Ss beet
eacChe that £ n-(
1 the f
or ex ( i 5
e ung I
ch W 1 3
{ pressur I if
| t ¢ ysmotie
i permeability of the pith-ray cells
EEE EERE ERE
Gov. Harmon is a progressive, de-
clared one of his friends at Balti-
more, which once more brings up
the question, “What is a pro-
gressive?’
* » ® *
‘1 am a better warrior than a
prophet,” says the Colonel; but it
looks like an even break.
= -. - -
An Illinois cyclone carried $131
for 40 miles, but money doesn’t go
that far in the East.
If we |
pun- |
PA.
FIRM FOUNDATION
Can Undermine It in Mount
| Nothing
| Joy
|
| | ometime low to
recog! ‘ orl ind they can
t ’" » many have
\ n the past The
Ireds of Mount Joy
ip 1 through
other sources place
I’ on a firm
oun
M \ rol Mt oy St., Mt
| y
re disordered and
It ( ne badly run down
onstant backache and was
ubie y ¢l and dizzy spells, At
time \ hardly able to stand and
1 nd housework a burden
eeing Doan Kidney Pills adver-
tised, 1 procured a box at Garber’s
Drug tor This remedy did me a
world o z00d and since using it 1
» felt better in every way. I con-
Doa Kidney Pills amost
ellicient preparation for kidney dis-
wile statement given October
un )
The Right Work
In January 29 1910 Mrs. Kroll
idded to the above: *t have had
little or no trouble from my kidneys
nee Doan’s Kidney Pills cured me
two vears ago. It gives me pleasure
te air ndorge this remedy.”
For sale by all dealers. Price 50
New
United
Foster-Milburn Co.,
1 for the
York, sole agents
States
Remember the name—Doan’s—
and take no other.
0 AW
For Peach Tree Borers
Hundreds of growers of peach
trees in this State are now asking
what to do for the peach-tree borer
which is regarded as one of the very
worst pests of these trees A prom-
inent grower in Central Pennsyl-
vania wrote to State Zoologist H.
A. Surface, at Harrisburg, asking
for information as to the best treat-
ment to prevent future atacks of his
trees by the borer He
reply instructing him to prepare the
Hme-sulphur solution boiling
| gether one pound of lime and two
pounds of sulphur with each gallon
of water, and apply it as a spray or
wash around the base of each tree.
The directions were as follows:
“You must apply the lime-sulphur
solution at least
during the middle of each month of
| June, July and August, and possibly
elso September, One treatment is
| not enough. T have tried this and
know about it
received a
by to-
once per month
for certainty
| personal experience.
| plication of lime-sulphur strong, the|
same as for San Jose scale, but with
present, putting it on
with spray pump
Do this about
| some sediment
| with
with the cap nozzle
brushes, or
| moved the earth from around
trunk of the tree with
ing a little ditch or groove
the base of the tree. Just
ag this replace the
mounding it up to one-half
more. I always make
tion one foot or more
ground. The next time leave the
earth mounded, and make it so that
the solution will be pretty sure to
the top of this mound
one quart to a tree is
if the tree is large.
a hoe, mak-
around
as soon
is dry 1
penetrate
One pint to
much
not too
On small trees one-half pint may be tasted
Also, add
arsenate of
enough about one ounce
of gallon
of this material, which is practically
lead for each
three nound to fifty rallol
ele eee
BAGGING GRAPES 0. K.
Surface Says It's All Right If One
Has But Few Vines
A Leanon county grape owner
wrote to Prof. H. A. Surface, and
asked him whether he should spray
The
Surface is as follows;
his grapes or bag them reply
of Prof
“It is possible to spray your
grapes with arsenate of lead and
Bordeaux mixture and have good re-
sults. Use three pounds of blue-
stone and three pounds of lime in
fifty gallons of water to make the
Bordeaux mixture. To this add two
pounds of arsenate of lead Spray-
ine once every two or three weeks,
during the principal part of the
growing season will be sufficient,
and will give you good returns
“Of course, putting them in paper
{ wxcell protection, and
if a person has only few vi I
wonld ecommend then This is
done by pinning a wo-pound bag
around er « rapes short-
1 fie SSOmMs 11 It keeps
IW ( id s rms, and
also i ) 116 nice and
clean Vi n )
treatment is to spray m we and
thoroughly
- on
- iors? iL bat ve
feel sory ous
™ t
and out on a lim! nding
Archie Roosevel he hope
be president some da: He should
understand that Theodore jr., is the
heir apparent
Capt. Kidd may have waded in
ore, but he never personally con-
ducted a political convention,
L.aFollette may be a grea
man but he is a poor mixer
from |
“The way I do is to make the ap-|
|
the middle of June, after having re-|
the |
earth |
foot or|
the applica-|
above the]
Watt & Shand
FET
A
Wednesday, July 8, 1912
A City Directory Gives a
Poor Idea of the
Greatness and Charm of
(\ 1
can only ¢
found here
Also,
this
Bargain Sale.
rive a
Co-dav,
\ r . iy .
Colored Wash Materials and Linens at Reduced Prices
that it will pay you to investi
wonderful
ready-to-Wear Apparel on the Second Floor.
) haca Viatka. ny y or : :
But these lists are only given as a partial illustra
tion of what you may expact to find in this Great July
Every kind of good merchandise, from all depart-
ment of the store, is included, and every bit of which
we are ready to back with our guarantee.
» piblish a list of
an Active, Hustling
City So a List of
the Good Things in
This Great
July Bargain
Sale
1 f ] y - :
iea of the opportunities to he
White and
gate,
distribution of Women’s
Eeolosfoofocfunionieciorionforfueienfosfociorfoctonfortocfosfusionforfonferts Joule funfonfoorforfociorfosfocforfosfocfesosfocfortocfosforonfosferiortecfectenfosfectesfociorfe seeocelesfosiororocieciociecforiordecducfocforfocioiesfoforforededoeds doe
she
fe
ge
Ko
Corner Square and E. King Sts.
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ARE YOU
BUYINC YOUR
rocery Needs
Where You Can Get The Best
Quality at The Lowest Prices?
You can answer this question correctely after you have
amined and compared our prices with what others
the quality of our goods
ex—
ask and
r} ‘hh at - 1
which are guaranteed to give
you entire satisfaction. All goods Delivered,
Seed
v i
f g O° AS = Oh ) )° MN Ae
°® ® i bY ™) - |
J J
BELL PHONE
Mount Joy, Penna.
4000.01 D1 CO 1
5 i
|
* Make Your Porch Comfortable ®
g | able @
a To Make It Cool—Screen it with VUDOR PORCH SHADES. ®
# Their extremely moderate price makes them popular with every HW
® one who can afford a porch at all. ]
2 FOR SOLID COMFORT—Get a Coucl Hammock, for out- n
5 door sleeping or lounging it has no « ] a
“TY n - NTT ATT NTT 8
= SUMMER FURNITURE— A few minutes inspection of our pm
large and varied line will supply many bright ideas and sugges- =
7 well ices obtainable n chairs, rockers, set- =
# ees, tables, s other useful pieces in rattan nu
5 ber rusl d
@
-
East Ki S LANCASTER, PA. :
o
< > » & ™ a ¥ ©
Wi UPHOLD THE HIGH QUALITY
OF OUR ICE CREAM
vill melt in your mouth, it is so
us and try our
1 dainty service. All
dishes, sundaes, with our
flavors. If you cannot
et your wife to come with you—
2 quart to her. Try us once
and then you can say you have real-
ly tasted good ice cream. Order and
time: it will keep for hours, because
it is the right kind.
Lewis Siller
licious, Cal
on
flavors an
the latest
ural fruit