1) 4 EC OR 1 ooShatbeaoateanS \ PAGE FIVE Charter Notice Notice is hereby given that on July 7th, 1914 at 12 o'clock noon an ap- plication will be made ernor of Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Incorporation April 29th, 1874, P. L. 73, and its supplements, by Albert Strickler, Landis Charles, Amog S. Weidman, Monroe B. Forney, - Abner M. Her- shey, S. G. Myers and H. G. Hagen- berger for a Charter for an intended corporation to be called The Mt. Joy Market House Company, the charac- ter and object whereof is the buying of ground and securing or building a Market House for the sale of meat, vegetables, victuals and provisions. The building to be for said purposes and similar and correlated purposes, and for these purposes to have pos- sess and enjoy all the rights, benefits and privileges conferred by said Act of Assembly and the Supplements thereto. under the Act of ISAAC R HERR, june 10-3t. Solicitor. eee WHY MOUNT JOY MERCHANTS SHOULD ADVERTISE IN THE BULLETIN Abraham Lincoln said: “I do not know much about the tariff, but Ido know this much; when we buy goods abroad we get the goods and the foreigner gets the money; when we buy goods made at home, we get both the goods and the money.” Those who get the “ lion’s share” of Mount Joy business are advertis- ers in the Bulletin. Subscribe for the Mt. Joy Bulletin. [in the Bulletin. Stop! Look! to the Gov- Weittemores Shoe Polishes FINEST QUALITY WHITE MAKES DIRTY | f CREE (ETL Real Jilly “GILT EDGE,” the only ladies’ shoe dressing that positively contains Oil, Blacks, Polishes and Pre- serves ladies’ and children’s shoes, shines without rubbing, 25¢. “FRENCH GLOSS,” 10c. “STAR” combination for cleaning and polishing all kindsof russet or tan shoes, 10c. "DANDY" size, 25¢. "QUICK WHITE" (in liquid form with sponge) quick. lycleans and whitens dirty canvas shoes. 10c. & 25c. “ALBO" cleans and whitens BUCK, NUBUCK, SUEDE, and CANVAS SHOES, In round white cakes packed in zinc boxes, with sponge, 10¢. In hand- some, large aluminum boxes, with sponge, 25¢. If your dealer does not keep the kind you want, send us the price in stamps tor full size package, charges paid. WHITTEMORE BROS. & CO., 2029 any Street, Cambridge, Macs. The Qldest and Largest Manufacturers o, Ehoe Polishes in the World, 7 WHY MOUNT JOY MERCHANTS SHOULD ADVERTISE IN THE BULLETIN “Abe” Lincoln Said ee i Abraham Lincoln said: “I do not! know much about the tariff, but Ido | know this much; when we buy goods | abroad we get the goods and the! foreigner gets the money; when we | buy goods made at home, we get | both the goods and the money. Those who get the “lion’s share” | of Mount Joy business are advertisers | em I LTA sommE— Consider! I have taken the agemncy for three of the leading makes of tires, namely | FEDERAL, 5,000 Mile Guarantee PENNSYLVANIA, Oil DIXIE, 3,500 Mile Guarantee Get my prices and be convinced that good buy as they represent service in every detail. Lhubricating Oils I have a full line of the best line of Proof, 4,500 Mile Guarantee any of the above would be a | lubricating oils on the market and will cheerfully give you trial samples Free if you will eall. Cars stored and cared for while in town free of charge. | | {and Mrs. Estella Bucher are attend- ing the Westminster “®Bible Confer- ence at Chestnut Level this week. Mr. M. A. Metzler. is representing Otsego Tribe No. 59, Imp. 0. R. M. lat Great Council at Philadelphia this week. About twenty five members of the Tribe will go down to-day to BARR'S GARAGE NEW HAVEN ST. MOUNT JOY, | | M. T. GARVIN & CO. ? 1-37 Fget Hing Stireet, Lancasier exery whim of Fashion. aster. markable. and $1.48. on sale. Boole oe ale Bealonale te ote fe fb 8.0.8.0 .8.0. 6.0 .8.0.08.8 PETTITT A TTT TITITPDTTDTDTeTY ing Fashions: 3abies’ Coach at 98¢ Covers of hams and similar materials; izes 6 to 14 years, very Coat is A Remarkable Sale of Tub Dress- es For Women, Misses, Juniors and Girls Now Going On A rather large cash purchase from L. Harris & Co. Dress manufacturers makes this Sale The GREATEST IN LANCASTER possible. There are several thousand Dresses in this Grand Array and the Values are better than we thought it possible to offer, even a month later. ‘newest charming effects are shown---fulfilling kad that description is impossible. ntion the prices at which these Dresses were de to sell--because there are so many statements made daily concerning comparative prices which are misleading and incorrect. lieve this to be the biggest assortment of Smart New Dresses-- as well as the Biggest Values in all Lanc- You may know they are new--since the Cele- 3 brated “Salamander” Dresses are among them-- and at about 1-3 less than ever offerd before. ] The Greatest Number of these Dresses are | marked at from $1 to $7.50 but, the greatest as- sortments and biggest values of Women’s Dresses | are at $1.95, 3.95 and $5.95---these are truly re- 3 The Junior Colored Dresses sizes 13 to | 19 years are marked at $1, $1.50 and $1.95..and | the Girls’ Dresses sizes 6 to 14 years have no com- | petition either in assortments or values at 48, 98 In fairness to Yourself and for Our Mutual Advantage we ask you to see these Dresses now You can Dress better and save a conside- able portion of your Vacation Money. Parents Who Are Particluar About their Children’s Apparel Will Find A Visist Here Most Profitable Our Children’s Week Sale Theré’s Every kind of Apparel for the little Tots that will be needed for Summer----in Tempest- Pique A Big variety of Caps at 25¢, 39¢ and 48¢ Jabies’ dainty little White Dresses at only 59¢ Babies’ White Pique Coats at 98¢ instead of $1.39 15 Girls’ Summer Apparel Dainty Frocks, Coats, etc.--so reasonably priced that Mother will be more that pleased. ] GIRLS’ $2 AND $250 DRESSES AT 98¢ 1 Beautiful little Tub Dresses—made of fine American Ging- b various stytes; : 3 4 r F KR o L » Re RLS’ W HITE DRESSES $1.50 TO $4.25 ally remarkable values in pretty White Dresses for and up to 14 years. IBA S’ TOP COATS H8¢ TO $3.98 years; -also Coals for the Girls of 6 and up And, the The assortment is so We won’t But, we firmly be- BeeTocteeTococtecTocloolecloctorPocteotente Ponte rts Ba Pe te 0. 0. LF. EE ST BIT TL IT EE EP RD TTP Pieter During and Lawns—very special | daintily trimmed; | from 50c to $3 legs than you ' daughters { Williams of Lancaster, spent Sunday | the | member of the chapter, | corder of wills of Berks county and (Mr. and Mrs. Jno. Smith, county de- | tective, also Friday here ag I Mrs. | Mr. and Mrs. H, S. | Mary foi vfosToefocfesfocforectocfecforfosonisiootooooodh ofecfecfosfoofonesfusfosfonecectests , censure must serve a year as an in- { and hens are fond | been found to equal them. i are eagerly | than ever, cent years.) THE BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA. Personal Mention | (Continued from: page 1) i street property yesterday. The Misses Verna C, and Miriam Chandler are visiting their grand- | parents at Chestnut Level. Mrs, Charles Redsecker left today for Lititz, where she will visit Mr. | Redsecker’s mother, who is very ill. i Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Ebersole, Mr, Bernard Ebersole and Mr. and Mrs. David Wagner spent Saturday at Manheim, Mrs. Mary A. Eberle and Miss Irene Eberle left Monday for Mount Gretna, where they will occupy their cottage for some time, Mrs. David Vogel and daughter Sarah Margaret returned to Enola Sunday after spending several days with Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Cramer. Mr. and Mrs. John Williams Misses and Ella and Emma here with Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Miller. Mr. Edgar Hagenberger returned to Atlantic City yesterday after spending several days in town with his parents, Mr, and Mrs. H. G. Hag- enberger. Mr. and Mrs, Schuyler Wiley, Elsie Norris and Will Owen of Spring City, Chester County, visited W. D. Chandler and family Sunday. They came by auto, Rev. C. D. Rishel will deliver lecture, “The School of Cigarette Smokers and Its Graduates,” in the United Brethren Church at Ironville Thursday evening, June 18th. Miss Fannie Boyce is attending meeting of Donegal Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolu- tion, at the home of Miss Hertz at Ephrata today. Miss Boyce is a his Mr. and Mrs. William Newman, re- of that guests A. H. Stumpf. Rev. Frank G. Bossert and mother, Newcomer, Miss Detwiler, Mrs. John M. Brandt county, spent of Mr. and witness the big parade this evening. Miss Elizabeth R. Herr, Miss Anna | E. Shelley, Mrs. Amanda Gish, Mrs. Annie "H. Nissley, Mr. H. J. Gish, Mr. Henry Stehman and daughter, Misses Annie ang Tillie Erisman of York, at- tended a funeral here last Thursday. The following® left for Philadelphia the Red parade in that city this even- Messrs. Emanuel Hendrix, L. G. this morning to witness Men's ing: Dillinger, John Hendrix, Jr, Elmer Brosey, W. Gibbons, A. L. Haines, Joe Haines and wife, Samuel Mateer, Buller, Ed Rhoads, J. D. Pen- E. M. Webb, William Cunning- Haman Greenawalt, Allen Chas. Cunningham, | Chas. Funk, Jates, ‘ham, Geo. Haines, Bates, Roy . P. Heilig EE a at MUST HAVE HOSPITAL TRAINING State Lays Down Rules to Hospitals About Internes Hospitals of the state have been given notice by the State Bureau of Medical Education and Ligowsure | that they must be prepared to com- ply with the requirements of the medical education act of 1913 rela- tive to internes for the year begin- ning May 31, 1915. Under the act every medical graduate desiring to take the state examinations for Ili- terne in an approved hospital. For a hospital to obtain approval it must have 25 beds to each interne, department and anesthesia, adequate clinical and pathological laboratory and arrangement for obstetrical ser- vice. It is provided that special hos- pitals may establish co-operation with a general hospital wherein the interne may receive credit for limit- ed service on the general term. Ow- ing to the time required for hospit- als to be prepared the bureau will approve all of the hospitals this year as in the past. The bureau an- nounces examinations in Philadel- phia and Pittsburg for drugless ther- aphy and chiropody June 29 and 30. ULE Seventeen Year Locusts The plague of seventeen-year lo- | custs, which has fallen on parts of | West Virginia, Ohio and western | Pennsylvania, has turned out to be a blessing for farmers and fishermen. Until the present time the locusts which coming out of the ground have been unable damage because of the backwardness of crops and fruits. But they have proved a boon to the turkey-raising farmers. . Young turkeys as well as roosters of the pests, and as a fattening food nothing ever has A flock of thousands of turkeys, which sought in the big mar- kets, are this year fatter and better which, according to poul- the seventeen- they have de- are in great numbers, to do any will devour the squab turkeys them, and is due to which try raisers, locusts voured. Along the Ohio, Kanawha and Big Sandy rivers the insects are being | used as bait by fishermen, who are reporting the biggest catchers of re- vear | } | gloves.’ ; lady,” says I, ‘is good enough for me, | been eaten by the birds. | grates and gas stoves. MAN'S LOVE FOR THE noa Strong Spirit of Affection That Binds Them Together Has Long Been a Matter of Note, The day before I reached Chitna I ' met a trapper carrying five little pup- ples on his back. He had the mother dog with him in good condition. He had been three days (two of them without any food) making 12 miles | rather than sacrifice these dogs ana he had frozen his feet and hands so ' badly as a result that I am afraid he was bound to lose some of his fingers and toes. } I like to think that I finished my 1,000-mile trip in *21 days with the same five dogs with which I started, and that not one of them had even a | sore foot during the entire journey. In fact, before I started Psyriak had cut his left hind foot, which made it necessary to mucklock it, but when I finished my journey he was in better condition than at first, Not once during the whole way did I sit on the sled; I pushed it for at least 500 miles and ran beside it for another 300. Running became such a habit that when I got to Cordova and started to go down the street 1 found myself unconsciously running. | I really had to learn to walk from the beginning all over again. I hated to part with my dogs, but as our country is too hot for them I decided to give them away. I broke up the team and separated them, so | that they would not work together again. I had several chances to sell them, but I could not think of do- ing so. When I boarded the boat at Valdez, where I left two of my dogs, my lead- er, Psyriak, tried to get up the gang- plank after me, but when they would pot let him he stood there until the boat pulled out, whining, as much as to say, “How can you desert me now?"— Lieut. George F. Waugh in World's Work. . | NEW IDEA NOT Cabman Tried It, and It Worked, but | He Still Prefers the Old Way. IMPRESSIVE | “] was in a county court the other day,” said the seedy-looking cabman, “and I heard one of those solicitor | chaps say, ‘People don’t seem to under- stand that the only thing necessary | to keep a horse from kicking when he is down is to get hold of his ear and | keep his nose up in the air. A horse ! cannot kick when hig nose is in the air. I have seen a lady keep a horse quiet that way without soiling her | ‘What's good enough for a and I tried it experimental-like, instead | of sittin’ on his ’ead.’ “Well,” remarked the attentive list. ener, “did the horse kick?” “Not a bit! He seemed so tickled with the idea that he couldn't stir for laffin!’ But I think I shall sit on his ‘ead next time, all the same.”—London | Answers. OOOO OOOO OOOOOOOOO® Not in the Orders. Jim’s boss sent him up on the roof to paint it. That was early in the morning. Toward nightfall the boss clambered up the ladder to see wheth- er his workman had flown away or There was Jim sitting on the edge of the house, singing. “Jim, you lazy piece, what you been doing?” “Nuffin’.” “Didn’t I send you up here to paint the roof?” : “Yassir.” “Well, did you do it?” “Yassir.” “What else did you do? “lI went to sleep.” “Why didn’t you come down if you had finished?” “’Deed, boss, you jes’ gaid paint de roof. You neveh said nuffin’ ’bout comin’ down.” Old Sunday School. There is many an old collier, agri cultural laborer and factory opera. tive still living who owes knowledge of reading, writing and arithmetic to | attendance at Sunday school, for | down to quite modern times secular | as well as religious instruction was given, relates the London Chronicle. | The change came with the enactment of compulsory education in 1870; and an aunt, still happily vigorous, and alert, has told me her embarrassment when, as a young girl who had just left Miss Pinkerton’s academy, she found among the class allotted to her in the Sunday school the gray-haired old coal dealer of the village, who wished to learn arithmetic. For many years also: Sunday school teachers were regularly paid. Robert Raikes, for instance, gave his assistants 1s 6d per Sunday. Timely Admonition. The death of a child as a result of | its clothing catching fire from an open grate has moved Coroner Jamison ta admonish parents that the safetly of their loved one is imperiled by the tolerance in homes of unscreened Year after year the advent of cold weather has marked the beginning of a long list of fire fatalities, probably the most | agonizing form of death, and yet, in | spite of such warnings, the unscreen- ed grate is the exception and not the rule. In the months of January and February of the present year no less than 22 children were burned to death as a result of the use of open coal and gas grates, and during the year many women have met a similar fate. —Pittsburgh Chronicle Telegraph. — A Mere BOND NOTICE is hereby given to persons holding School Bonds numbers 71, 10, 50, 58, 75, 4, 72, 74, 5, 59, 48, 30, Is- sued 1904 at 33, per cent. to present for payment August 1st, 1914 at First National Bank Mount Jay, Pa. cease on these Notice same Interest will Bonds after the above date. june 3-tf. By Order of Board. Se Inn Advertise in the Mt. Joy Bulletin. : ap : {i HELLO HELLO § : Some Specials at Hauer's 3 ’ Wednesday, June 0000000000000000C000C000E000C0000000E WRARRARAANAANNAINNIOOOOOOOOOOODOOOCOOOOCOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOONOE MR. MAN You; certainly have my sympathy when you have 0OPOOOOROOOOE @@ © tire trouble. I know exactly what that means, © as I had my share of it. But now it’s No More Tire Trouble For mine. My practical experience-nearly 6,000 miles over the roads of Lancaster, Lebanon, Dauph- in, Franklin, and Juniata Counties with a heavy . touring car and never stopped a second for! tire trouble. I Use Bettern-Air This is a filler placed in a tire instead of inner Doesn’t that listen good? tubes, It rides easier, makes blowouts and punec- tures impossible and makes your tires wear lon- If interested, write, phone or call on John E. Schroll East Main Street, Mount Jov. Pa. AGENTS WANTED ger, OeeREEEEEEPOO® DOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOOOOOO OOOO OOOO OOOO CEeeEOPOOOCLOO® ©© 0000R0RRPRRRPOVRCOVPRPRORPEOOPOOOOOO ead The Bulletin 00 6% 0% 6%0-0%0-0%6 42-62 626% 4% 6% 620 6%-626 6% 6% 4%6-6%0-6%0-6%4%-6% 0% 0% 6% os <¥s (02 10s 6. 6. 6. 6. 6 070630430 430-030-030-030 03003040430 450030 050030 630 00 030 03050 FOS GIO 30 050030 0504! CERAXE XEN a { Os 0, $000 004 * oo Good Bargains in Ladies’ Waists 3 and Skirts % 3 2 Ladies’ 50c Waists for... ....... = 39c & & Ladies’ $1.00 Waistsfor.... ise 69c 3 3 Ladies’ $1.25 Waastsfor.......... ..... 89c¢ & 3 Ladies’ $1.00 Skirts for................. 69c 3 > Ladies’ 31.258kirts for................... 8O¢c 2 3 Ladies’ $2.00 Skirts for................... $1.25 % k Ge Come and Look Them Over We Also Have Good Bargains In White Shoes and Oxfords H. E. HAUER Opposite Post Office 00 oF. 00043 90 ot 45 9, * 9, * Sa. ¥s oe KZ > COR) 9, $000 9% % 050090, 9. + 0%, 9, 9. 9. $00 + ®, ho? 9, > 9, 9. o* %' (a) * oo Mount Joy, Penna. 9. + 9, 09, Bo 0%.4% 6% 620.6% 6%-6%0.4%.6%.4%0.3%0- 420.420 4242062 4% 420.4% 4% 25.420. 620.6% 42.4% 0.0 0s Oa 00 18. sede ade fo ade afefeeadeaoadeefeefeadeoafe fede edo afnedeafr oan led RAEN XG Ka XE XIX EXE oe
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers