The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, July 17, 1912, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    anid
best
p*
g
£
3
aa
TREES T eS TE eTTTTTPrTTTTITTT rete
FTA A
Sedad 22
Sooleotesfooteotsofoots Boceete Beale cde de ts it 9. 2.
SR ENR TTP TT's
oaks ole ole ole ok
SR RRER Pp
TERR BITTTTrrY
,
eee pie
PYPAGE THREE
gl
=
—
pe
gE
=
F-
=
Sold fo
Just see
can be bought
( ]
nt
toys, hat
And remember
in cash.
are The Talk Of The
AA NRE
4
IEEE TERIOR RRRRTT EERO THERIOT RTT
Summer Necessities
The ALE
154-158 North Queen Street, Lancaster, Pa.
this new, up-to-date Dons rtmen
ur 1
All kinds of e
nickelwar
Dry goods, men
All these and hundreds of other articles
Babbitt Trademarks are Exchanged
for Anything in Our Store
No matter what the price is you can buy the article
for Babbitt Trademarks as follows—
10 Babbitt Trademarks Equal 5¢
20 Babbitt Trademarks Equal 10c
If you have not saved up enough Babbitt Trademarks you can pay the balance
Save your Trademarks from all Babbitt Products.
We also have a full line of higher priced goods of every kind, at values that
THE BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, JPA.
=
“10¢
r Only -
[Tore
HHI ETT THE
(NEXT TO WHEATLAND HOTEL)
1 * ]
a WO lertul
lot of summer necessities
for 1 Cc + (or 20 L
Babbitt Trade marks) a
a
it otore.
curtain cords.
vare, hardware, china,
)
e, st t ironware.
s athletic shirts, boys’
Rerore
caps, needlework, sun bonnets,
-all of the highest quality.
for cash or
and so on
Town. Come and see.
=
..ww vurkers and “the West.”
If we lived in New York we could
easily settle the question which is said
to be disturbing the minds of the
western governors—as to what is the
dividing line between the east and the
west. Everybody in New York knows
that it is the Hudson river.—~Wheeling
Register.
Her Own Hat the Obstruction.
A woman in a Vienna theater came
out after the first act and asked to
have the price of the ticket refunded, i
on the ground that having complied
with the request to remove her hat
she had held it on her knees and thuve
entirely obstructed her own» —.s5 of
the stage
AR A Ant
Advertise in the Mt. Joy Bulletin.
compressed Flour.
Experiments in compressing flour | 3 =
show that its keeping qualities are pro- | (@F== ) =e
longed almost indefinitely by the proe- |
ess. Its bulk decreases by one-third.
Aiter You Are Through
Experimenting with The
Just-as-Good-Kind
|
Minding One’s Own Business.
“The reason why men who mind |
their own business succeed is because |
they have so little competition.”—Sys- |
tem. i
Result of Too Much Beef. BUICK
Some doctors say a regular diet of |
beef makes people ill-tempered and | LGCOMOBILE
Cross.
AUTOCAR AND
Dreams Worth Holding. BUICK TRUCKS
“Hold fast to your most indefinite
| waking dresus.
Sold strictly on their merits.
Buchanan
115-117 N. Queen St.,
”—Thoreau. |
|
& Young
| New 1912 Cars Now Here
Lancaster, Pa. | is
Good Thi
AR July
Clearance Sale
We Mention Only a Few of the
Come and See the Rest
Lancaster Automobile Co.
GARAGE NEVER CLOSED
230-238 W. King St.,
PENNA.
So oBe oZe ale eToeocTortonTe ote ote ate ote fe fe fe Be B.S 8 8.
BE I PR PPP
| LANCASTER - we
The largest and only strictly first
|class fireproof garage and repair
|shop in Lancaster City of County.
ngs Here
EMBROIDERIES AND
TIONS
ings and Insertions;
signs on good materials
-3¢
SWISS AND CAMBRIC EM"
BROIDERY
broidery Edgings and
from; value 15c¢ a yard ..
-10¢
18 INCH EMBROIDERY
Flouncing and Corset
Embroiderieg with
ing 18 inches
26c
wide,
12 1-2¢
27 INCH FLOUNCING
Fine Swiss Embroidry Flounc-
ing, good patterns, value
39c 22¢
;
.
»
.
»
.
.
.
»
3
5
.
A
A 45 INCH FLOUNCINGS
b Dress Embroidery Flouncings
.
.
>
°
»
:
fo
o
:
.
.
‘“
full 45 inches wide, value $1.50
FLOUNCINGS WORTH $2.00
Fine White Swiss Flouncing 45
ery and strong edge
$3.00 BATISTE FLOUNCING
fects;
terns
INSER- |
5c, 6¢ and Tec Embroidery BEdg-|
good de-|
EMBROIDERIES AND INSER-|
TIONS
10c and 12%c Embroidery Edg-|
ings and Insertions; Cambric in
narrow, medium and wide
widths .............. 0.
|
Fine Cambric and Swiss Em- |
Insertions |
—a large handsome line to select]
Cover |
ribbon bead- |
worth |
79¢
|
inches wide, with deep embroid-|
45 inch White Batiste Flounc-
ing Embroidery in Raby Irish ef-|
a few splendid dress pat-
$1.29 Damask
LEBANON VALLEY FARMS
FOR SALE & EX (E/MNCE
|
| Any Size, Location or Description
»
123¢c DRESS LAWNS 4
Fine Dress Lawns, White, with ¢
colored dots and figures ... -5¢
| 25¢ WASH GOODS
| Dress Voiles and Dimities,
white grounds with colored dots
figures, stripes and checks
12 1-2¢
123ic BEST PERCALES z
| Manchester Percales 36 inches &
Lancaster County people who
© bought farms through me last Fall
» were offered profits of $1,000 to
$1,500 before they had their deeds.
The easiest sales are made to the
best judges of land, and those who
have a good gneral knowledse of
| wide; light and dark grounds,
| dots, stripes and figures 91 2¢
values.
123ic DRESS GINGHAMS .
| One of my recent sales was a 140-
Dress Ginghams, a big variety
| of styles in standard makes -8¢ acre farm at a price of $9000 to a
a graduate of an
School,
Chicago man,
15c DRESS GINGHAMS Acicaitureal
Illinois who
32 inch wide Dress Ginghams, By. traveled xtensively all over the
a fine quality plaids and plain world
|
colors alias aialie wien ni eee elie 10¢ | If you want to buy a farm for
farming, speculation, or investment,
write to me.
I can give you the best references
25¢ WASH GOODS
Imported Voiles, Flaxons and
Egyptian Tissues—Ilight anddark
round tripes laids and §|Poth In Lebanon and Lancaster
grounds, stripes, p counties and can easily show you
Sart 15¢ that you can deal safely and profi-
tably.
$2.00 LINEN TABLE CLOTHS
Bleached Damask
$1.29
$2.00 LINEN NAPKINS
Pure Linen Bleached Damask
| Table Napkins, sizes 20x20
| $1.29
Many of the farms will increase
50 per cent. in the next few years.
The best bargains will go to early
buyers.
Write at once for
an appointment to see the farms
while the crops are growing.
J. L. RUTTER
Real Estate and Insurance
Pure Linen
checks
| Cloths, good patterns,
| 29c Bleached Mercerized Table
Damask, 22¢
| 85c Bleached Mercerized Table
Damask“... .....0 00d ven
| 29¢ Farmers’ Trust Bldg. Lebanon, Pa.
75c Pure Linen Bleached Table
PEE 49¢ Subscribe for the Mt. Joy Bulletin.
Advertise in the Mt. Joy Bulletin.
list and make
Climbing for Cats.
A boy In northern Michigan was out
hunting and saw two cats up a tree.
The family needed a pussy about, and
80 he laid down his gun and took a
clumb, What he didn't know until too
late was that the animals were wild
cats, Before he could lay hold of the
cats they laid hold of him, and the
doctor who attended his hurts count-
ed up 41 bites and scratches. In hunt.
ing for cats be careful that you don't
got the wrong breed.
A Beggar's Luggage.
When Bridget Flanigan, who de-
scribed herself as “a poor lone Irish
widow woman,” was arrested for beg-
ging at Wells she had the following
articles distributed about her person:
Tea, sugar, [resh cut beefsteak, plece
of bacon, two bloaters, bread and
cheese, four buns, bag of biscuits,
cooked fagot, two apples, onions, two
clay pipes, tobacco, cigarettes and
snuff.—~London Evening Standard.
The Man That Counts.
“Remember each of you that the
chance for heroic endeavor of a rath-
er speetacular kind does not often
count; that the man who really counts
ife is not the man who thinks
11 he could do some bit of
sm if the chance arose, but the
who actually does the humdrum,
duties as the y
man
workaday, every-day
duties
arise.”—Theodore Roosevelt.
Browning Temporarily Forgotten.
Professor Underdon (at the Boston
Browning Club)—No, my hearers, we
can not linger too lovingly on the
grand words and refining thoughts of
our great master of—" Child of the
House (entering suddeniy)—"John
L.'s goin’ by, ’if yer wan’ ter see him.”
(Club suddenly adjourns to the win
dow.)—Puck.
Local Pride.
“Why do you insist on
your money away from
town?’ “Well,” replied Farmer Corn-
tossel, “I've got a good deal of local |
pride, I have, and I regard the people
in this here township as bein’ so
smart that none of ‘em is goin’ to let
any real bargains git away from him.”
Editor's Mean Revenge.
An editor who was courting a wom-
an of uncertain age, but positive bank
account, was cut out by a gentleman
from a neighboring town, who married
her and took her home. Whereupon the
editor sought a mean revenge by head-
ing account of her wedding: “Another
Old Resident Gone.”
Turn to Wooden Flooring.
The use of wooden flooring is on the
increase in Italy, taking the place of
the former extensive demand for mar-
ble, tiling and cement. Oak, larch and
pitch pine are mostly adopted, and but
little, if any maple, birch or beech has
been brought to the market.
Not to Speak Of.
“Has anything ever been discovered
on Venus?” asked the student of as-
tronomy. “No,” replied the old pro-
fessor, whose mind had slipped a cog
and transported him into mythological
fields; “not if the pictures of her arg
authentic.”—Chicago News.
The Man of the Hour.
The country is filled with reformers.
But where is the man to be found
that will stand for the things pro
posed by another faction aside from
his own because it is everlastingly
right?—Des Moines Capital.
Where Tea Is Eaten.
The tea grown in Burmah is almost
entirely made into letpet (pickled tea)
and eaten as a condiment, It therefore
does not affect the world’s supply of
tea for drinking.
What Was In Her Heart.
“Tell me,” he sighed—"tell me,
beautiful maiden, what is in your
heart?’ The girl gave him a look of
icy disdain, and then vouchsafed the |
monosyllable, “Blood!”
Early at the Ivories.
James E. Zitek, three months old,
has four teeth and is expected to be
able to play the piano when two years
old.—Chicago Evening Post.
More Than That in Life.
It would be a bad day for humanity |
if a man’s debt to his fellow-men
should come to be calculated and paid
solely in rates and taxes.
English Snobbery.
Many will open their purses to a so-
ciety which has a countess for a pat-
ron, but will not help the poor neigh: |
bor next door.—London Mail.
Choice Reading.
There 18 no doubt that a good de
tective story is better than a bum love |
story or a president's message.
Atchison Globe.
Endless Chain.
f
A mouse is afraid of a man, a man
is afraid of a woman, a woman is
afraid of a mouse—and there you are. |
—Chicago News.
He Would Better Keep Still.
A man who smokes and belongs to
clubs never has any chance in an ar-
gument with his wife about expenses. |
+ ee ell Gee
For Save
Several good Building Lots front-
ing 95 feet on South Barbara Street,
that width 154 feet.
|
"stable on these lots that could very |
Mount Joy and extending in depth of
There is a good
converted into a double
For further
apply to Lewis Seeman, Mount Joy.
easily be
dwelling. particulars
|
investing |
your home |
PUULIKI
POULTRY HOUSE FOR FARMER
Expensive and “Elaborate Structure le
Not Necessary, but Dry, Well
Ventilated One ls.
(By J. W. GRIFFIN.)
The size of our home poultry-build-
ing is 16x40 feet, 6 feet at the front
eave, and 7 at the rear eave, and 8
feet at the comb, The floor should
be the natural earth if the house is
located on a well drained place. If
not, there should, of course, be a plank
floor,
For the convenlen
the building should
e of the keeper,
be divided into
three rooms in the front part: the
hallway at the rear should run the
entire length of y building The
hallway is 4 feet wide: this will leave
he three 1 12x
The | itions 1 coms
wuld « nd «
half feet 1 | rest of the partie
tion can be of poultry-wire net
The upper part of the partition be-
tween the hallway and the room
made of wire netting. In the hallway
we keep the sug of food for the
poultry, and a few barrels of road-
dust that we gather up during a dry
time in the summer. This is for the
the winter, when
be out on the
dust-boxes during
the hens should not
cold ground.
The watering and feeding troughs
| are set along the slatted partition,
| just inside the hallway; the chickens
| reach through between the slats for
| their food and water.
The nests are placed on a platform
just above the slatted part of the par-
| tion, and the dropping-board is
Hallway In Poultry House.
and the
perches on the dropping-boards.
placed on the nest-boxes,
for the nests, the
and the perches are
The platform
dropping-boards,
put in In divisions,
all of the interior
removed at housgecleaning-time, which
is twice a year—spring and fall.
manure saved by
hens pays
value of the manure, but in keeping |
the house cleanly. The boxes are |
each one complete within itself.
dows are covered with poultry netting.
The house is made perfectly tight
except the curtalned windows. There
for summer ventilation.
The floors of the pens
covered with cut straw,
dry leaves gathered in the fall
stored away to be used through the
winter,
The grain food when scattered in
these keaves or straw gives the fowls
Poultry House.
| the much needed exercise. The dry
| mash-feeds and meat-scraps, etc., are
| fed in the troughs.
|
should be
| The interior
| sprayed with lime-and-sulphur
thoroughly
solu-
tion. Use equal parts of lime and sul-
phur in making the whitewash and
| you will not be troubled with lice,
{ chiggers or mites that trouble the
| poultry.
{
| Corrective for Overeating.
Chaircoal is an excellent corrective
| of the evils of injudicious overfeed-
| ing, and is also a good remedy in
bowel disorders in poultry.
| 1y for gases, only a small quanity
| should be put into the feed hoppers
at a time on account of its absorptive
nature.
| It should be kept in a thoroughly
| dry vessel with a close-fitting cover,
so as to exclude the air. If charcoal
| is heated well before given to the
poulty, it will have a tendency to
drive off the impurities which may
have become absorbed, and it will be
equal to fresh charcoal.
Keep Off the Grass.
Little chickens should be kept off
the grass as much as possible, when |
it is wet with dew. The hen should |
i be well fed and watered, so that she
may rest content im the coop; then if
the little ones rasge far enough on
their own account % get damp, they
| have & dry mother to return to and
will take no hurt.
——— i ac
Our Home Markets.
Butter, per ID, sevivcevionvene 28
Bogs, per 80%. vv .cliivsaansa 18
iliard, per ID. (ccna 11%
Potatoes, per bu., .cc.vvun.. $1.25
Wheat, per Dl, .covvevesens $1.10
Corn, Por BY:, «civencvinsvinne 90
Oats, Per M., vo ccavinioni vv 60
etl Eee
Subscribe for the Mt. Joy Bulletin.
Advertise in the Mt. Joy Bulletin.
Subscribe for the Mt. Joy Bulletin
three of 13 feet |
each. This facilitates the cleaning as |
arrangements are |
This is the general cleaning time; |
the pens are cleaned each week, and |
the dropping-boards each day. The |
cleaning the drop |
ping-boards each day from a hundred |
s handsomely, not only in the |
The openings of the curtalned win- |
is a ventilator in each end at the gable i
should be |
or better still, |
and |
Having |
wonderful absorbent powers, especial- |
[world of zood,”
Wednesday,
TROLLEY SCHEDULE |
Lmncaster, Rohrersiu Landisville |
Salunga, Mt. Joy and Klizabeth-
town Street Rallway Co
WESTWARD
leave Lancaster—a m. 430, 616, 61
8, 8.16 I. 10.16, 11.16; p. m 1
fF 8.16, 4.16, 6.16, 6.16, 7.16, 8.15, 9.16
{L185
1ouve Rohwrerstown—a m, 4.60,
86, 8.85, 9.36, 10.35, 11.35, 1
55, 3.396, 435, 65.36, 6.35 . 11
leave Landisville—~A m, 512, 667, 6
1
1
8
1.18
b
b
£7, 8.67, 9.67, 10.67, 11.57 6
67. 367, 4.67, 6.67, 6.67, 7.67, 857, 9.67, 11.6
Leave Salungn—~A m, 6.15, 6.00, 7.00, 8 00
0, 10.00, 11,00, 1200. P m, 1.00, 2.00, 83.00 |
0, 6.00, 600, 7.00, 8.00, 9.00, 10.00, 12
eave Mount Joy—-A m, 6.30, 6.15 5.
th, 9.16, 10.16, 11.15. Pm, 1215, 1.16, 2.1%
h. 4.16, 5.16, 6.16, 7.15, 8.15, 9.16, 16,
A m, 12.15,
Arrive at Elizabethtown—A m, 6.46,
S46, 9.46, 10.45, 11.45. Pm, 12.46, 1.45,
45 4.45, 5.45, 6.46, 7.46, 8.45, 9.46, 10.46
12.30.
EASTWARD
Klizabethtown-A m, 6.46
1 11.46 Pm, 13.46 1.45 2
5, 6.45, 7.45, 8.46, 9.45, 10.46,
ive Mount Joy—-A m, 6.30x, 7.15,
v, 10.16, 11.16 Pm, 1216 1.15, 2.15,
b16. 6.16, 7.16, 8.16, 9.16
CLEANER
Send
THE DOMESTIC VACUUM
Works like
card for elreular and
Price $10 and $16
an ordinary carpet sweeper
demonstration,
or anything in the Barber Lin
17, 1912,
W.B.
Kast Main St,
1) Lew
LEND
Mount Joy,
FOR A
GOOD SL AVE
STYLISH HAROUT
REFRESHING SHAMPOO
TAKE A Lox’
IT WILL ADD TO THE VACATION
FUN OF ALL THE FAMI.X
Any he can take good pictures
1 Brownie Camera.
Brownies, $1.00 to $12.00
The two best sellers are the $3.00
and $7.00,
I also carry as a side line
Camera and Photo Supplies
Agent for Standard Steam Laundry.
CUE TE J JOO TR HB
- EAT .
bunzenhauser's ;
TIP-TOP :
B. F. PEFFER®
[ Agent
MOUNT JOY, PENNA.
|
| 60 YEARS’
fs EXPERIENCE
|
lo i.
| 4 diia) %
Anyone send
quickly as
A Trae MARKS
DESIGNS
COPYRIGHTS &cC.
ng a sketch and description mn
, in the
c fimerican.
iti irnal, Ter
our me th Sold by all news ers,
[clear ice in any quantity.
=3
BREA
——————
'
You are Invited to visit our a
clean, modern, bakery at »
Prince and Clay Streets, Lsn- =
aster. =
® M. C. BILLETT, Agt. *
$n Delivery—Monday, Wednesday :
a 3
w and Saturday £
rT 11 1 OO
1C
Our large Ice plant is now in op-
eration continuously and we are
[prepared to furnish good clean and
Will run
a wagon through town daily. Don’t
place your order for ice until yva
first get our prices.
| 53 i Co: soit. ‘New Yor Br
BTanch Office
Pennsylvania Railroad
Personally-Conducted Excursions |
TO
Magar Falls | |
$9. 3 Mount Jy Pa,,
TRAIN of pullmi Parlor (
and Day Coache
SPECIAL
Dinning Car,
Picturesque Susquehanna Valley Route
Pickets goo
y running via the
1 going on Special Train and connect-
ing trains, and good returning on stilay trains
within FIFTEEN DAY Stop-off within limit
lowed at Buffalo returning.
Iustrated Booklet and full information may be
obtained from Ticket Agents
Fours to Thousand Islands. July 18, August 15
and 29: Maritime Provinces, July 24, Montreal,
July 31: Adirondacks, July 31: Muskoka Lakes,
August 7: Yellowstone
t Lakes, September 12,
August 1: Qu
August 10, ; Grea
3 . ORR?
TRADE-MARKS and copyrig d or no
fee. Send model, sketches or ph nd brief
fo id report on
OXLEY,
1 of Yo nt infor 1
PACES 11 and 12 before applying
for READ F Write to-da
D. SWIFT 2 C0.
PATENT LAWYERS, i
8 303 Seventh St., Washington, D. C., 3
What Makes a Woman
One hundred and twenty pounds
more or less, of bone and muscle
don’t make a woman. Its a good
foundation. Put into it health and
strength and she may rule a king-
dom. But that’s just what Electric
Bitters give her. Thousands bless
them for overcoming fainting and
dizzy spells and for dispelling weak- §#
nervousness, backache and
listless, worn out feeling.
Bitters have done me a
writes Eliza Pool,
Depew, Okla., ‘and I thank you with
all my heart, for making such a good
medicine.”” Only 50 e¢. Guaranteed
by S. B. Bernhart & Co.
ness,
tired,,
“Electric
Sound Ti From|| 7
Park, |
|
Also ample room for
Gold Storage
t. BROOKS & C0
Haven St., Mount Joy.
ed
PARK &:POLLARD
“9 COMPANY
i-MASH
{AKES THEM
© BUST
a
vig
| :
| ey must
| 1 lay at leas t three
1 .
i ; k ey eat The
Park ord Dry ; Mash,
For Sale by
NDT & STEHMAM
Mount Joy. Pa.
the man who feeds it
are hungry for Buckwheat
Cakes, the kind mother used te
bake, we still have Buckwheat flour
{on hand.
=. oc tric
A RRR RINGS
2
3 KE, "Writes H.
i R s N. Cs — my
¥ J sdidn ot work right,
r bo ttles of Electric Bitters
16 feel Hike a Dew man."
PILES mm
J ‘1 can say
Dr. 8. M. Devore,
give universal satis.
Tenn., writes:
n PY Samples Free. Sold
by Druggists. mamTinN RUDY, LANCASTER, PA,
Sold io) Mi. Joy by E. W. Garber and W. D. Chandler :
Call for free sample. ©