Bank Reports UNION NATIONAL BANK Report of condition of the nion National Mount Joy Bank, at ount Joy, in the state of Pennsyl- hnia_ at the close of business Oct. , 1914. RESOURCES sang and DisCoUD {Ss .$511,005.03 Overdrafts, secured bY secured oe 90.98 U. S. Bonds to secure culation Other Bonds to secure Pos- tal Savings Bonds, Securities, etc Stocks in Federal Reserve Bank $2,500; all other stocks, $1,070 ........e- Banking house, furniture, fixtures Other real estate owned. . Due from National Banks (not reserve agents) 293.20 Due from approved reserve agents in Central Reserve i Cities $14,407.88 in other Reserve Cities 30,489.40. 44,897.28 ecks an other Oa 2,535.66 Notes of other National Banks ....c.aeencrrnans Fractional paper currency, nickels and cents Lawful Money Reserve Bank viz Specie $27,824.40 Legal-tender notes 2.000.00 Redemption fund with U. S. Treasurer (5 per cent of circulation) Rah REET oh | Be daateins eh 100,000.00 1,000.00 186,787.00 3,570.00 30,000.00 2,750.00 580.00 391.48 29,824.40 5,000.00 Total $918,725.03 | LIABILITIES Capital stock paid in Surplus fund Undivided profits, - penses and taxes paid... Reserved for taxes and Jnterost i... icine, National Bank notes out- standing $100,000.00 150,000.00 26,056.69 4,431.66 99,200.00 Due to Trust Companies and Saving Banks....... Dividends unpaid Individual deposits to check .........0:..- Demand certificates posits Time certificates of deposit payable within 30 days.. Time deposit payable after 30 days or after notice of 30 dave or longer... 33 Certified Checks Cashier's checks Notes and bills rediscount- 3,554.51 186.00 : subject . 170,741.56 ”Q9 (80 9,706.03 rr 397.77 40.40 outstand- 127.00 292.500.00 Total... vsvronnss $918,725.03 State of Penna, County of Lancas- ter, ss: 1. HN above named afirm that the true to the best of and belief. Nissly, Cashier bank, do SO above statement is my knowledge of the lemnly N. NISSLY, Cashier. Subscribed and affirmed before me this 6th day of Nov. 1914. : M. N. BRUBAKER, Notary Public. ect Attest: Corr J B T.ONGENECKER J. W. ESHLEMAN JOHN S. SNYDER Directors. FIRST NATIONAL BANK of the condition of the ort Ber 1 Bank of Mount Joy, at First Nationa . Mt. Joy, Penna., at the close of busi- ness October 31, 1914. RESOURCES Loans and Discounts Overdrafts, secured unsecured ..ecceccccs oe U. S. Bonds to secure cir culation U. S. Bonds S. Deposits 100,000.00 1,000.00 | i. RELIGIOUS NEWS / " | News! From Our Many Local Houses | of Worship the | to- | The Missionary Society of Presbyterian Church will meet morrow (Thursday) afternoon at 3] o'clock in the Sunday School room. { | | Lutheran Rev. |. H. Kern, Pastor School 9:30 a. m. Junior Leagne 6:00 p. m Morning service 10:30. | ; : PR | Evening service 7 o'clock. | | Methodist Episcopal C. B. Johnston, Pastor | Sunday School 9:30 A. M, Public worship with sermon 10:30 | A. M. and 7:30 P. M. Prayer meeting Wednesday, 7:30 P. M. | Sunday Trinity United Evangelical Rev. N. A, Barr, Pastor Sunday School 9:30 A. M. Public worship with sermon at 10:30 A. M. and 7 P. M. Song Service 6:45 P, M. services will continue | every evening next week. { Evangelistic United Brethren D. E. Long, Pastor Sunday School, 9 A. M. 30:15. A.M. Endeavor, 6 P. M. 6:00 P. M. P.M. Evangelistic every even- ing this week except’ Saturday. | cr cent Bequest to a Church | Under the will of the late John G. Nissley, late of Rapho township, | | which has been admitted to probate, the sum of $2,000,is placed in trust] | with the deacon of the York River | Brethren eongregation of Lancaster | county, the interest to be used for | the poor and infirm members of the | Preaching Christian Senior Endeavor | Evangelistic services 7 services | congregation, | eet eee | Read the Bulletin Our Ads Bring Results—Try it. Subscribe for the Mt. Joy Bulletin | Wanied, For Sn, For Reni at once. Mt. Joy. 2t.| | | | | Wanted—A housekeeper Apply to Frank H. Baker, U. S. Government uses Richmond Extinguishers that Kill Auto and factory siz- Managers make 500 Auto free. Rich- Desk 1114, Chemical gasoline fires. District per cent, profit, {mond Chemical Wheeling, W. Va. €S. Co., Pressing, Cleaning, Tailorng, Etc.— Mike B. Rock has opened a tailor | in the end. Ladies’ and | Gent's Tailoring, Pressing, Clean- | ing, right fittings and alterations a | All work guaranteed. 1 {shop east specialty. = Everybody is invited to come to! see the fine chrysanthemums and | many other kinds of plants at M. BE.| & R. Hoffer’s Greenhouse, 2t Lost—A fine chain on Main street. | Reward for its return to this office. | out into oil. THE BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA. | WHALING A LIVE INDUSTRY | CITY MAN Statistics Show That It Has Not Died, and Has Every Prospect of a Long Life. Whaling today in the extreme south- ern waters is centered to a great ex- tent in the Falkland islands, due to the fact that a license is required by the British authorities of those isl ands for the privilege of operating in the South sea current, with the South Shetland islands and Grahamlsnd as bases. Magellanes, a Chilean company, is the only whaling concern in this terri- tory. Organized in 1905, it operates administrative offices in Punta Arenas, a trying-out station on the island of San Isidro in the Strait of Magellan, | and a base of operations in the South | sea current, licensed from the Falk- land authorities. The company opens its annual whaling season in the Strait of Magellan in October, with base at San Isidro, where it operates | until December, in which month its | floating station and three | boats steam to the South sea current, | to remain until the season closes in whaling March or April. The catch for the last year in the Southern seas was valued at about $245,000. Only occa- | gional right and sperm whales are caught in the extreme southern wa- ters, the usual classes taken being blue, humpback, fin, and sey whales. | The whales when killed are brought alongside the floating station and there cut up and the sections tried However, one of the Norwegian companies (Solvesen’s) is erecting a base on Deception Island adequate for trying out the whole | whale. STUDENT WAS TOO PREVIOUS Intended Joke on Professor Came Back With a Rebound That Must Have Been Felt. A good story is told at the expense of an undergraduate at a certain unis versity. He was attending the chemi cal lectures of a distinguished, if not popular, professor, who had announc- ed for his next lecture some experi: ments with laughing-gas. The stu- | dent, who knew that persons under | the infiuence of laughing-gas were not | responsible for their words or actions, | saw an opportunity of telling the pro- fessor some home truths with im- punity. On the afternoon of the lecture the professor called for a volunteer for the experiments to be made, and our un- dergraduate promptly came to his as- sistance, to the amusement of the class, which had been taken into his confidence. The bag containing the hilarious gas was duly affixed to the student's mouth, and he commenced to inhale vigorously. The effect was magical. The student began to abuse the pro fessor in terms which are unknown in polite circles. The professor lent a patient ear to | this testimony to his character, and | then, turning to the class, said, with the suspicion of a twinkle in his eye: “You see, gentlemen, how powerful this gas is, when even the anticipation of it produces such effects. I will now proceed to turn on the gas.” Fortune in a Coin. Somewhere in the world there is a fortune in a coin. Among the caqins Napoleon had minted were some mil- lions of five-franc pieces, and he de- | termined to popularize these in an ex- traordinary way. In one of the coins, folded to a tiny size, was enclosed a The Compania Ballenera de. \ S IDEA OF FARMS Intended Witticisms Will Be Amusing to Those Who Live in the Agri- cultural Dlstricts. Farms may be roughly divided into two kinds—the gentleman's or nom- paying farm and the common or gar den farm. enough money to keep you in your old age buy a farm. Besides getting rid of your money death will come as a welcome relief—thus you will ac- complish a double purpose. The aban- gdornod farm is a form of entertainment indulged in by many to whom faro, | horse racing and Wall street are not exciting enough. Besides, just as in human beings, no matter how low an abandoned farm may have sunk there is always some good in it. To rehabilitate an abandoned farm and put it on its feet is a great pleas- ure. a belt line of shower baths; after this has been finished will be time enough for you to imagine where the water- works are. You will usually find them pleasantly situated at the other side of the county seat. local political gang and carrying one or two elections you will eventually get a stream of water running into your pipes which will excite the envy of every one within reach of your megaphone.—Life. PLAYED TRICK ON PARTNER Neat Way in Which Silver Spoons Which His Com- panion Had Purloined. Two gentlemen of the light-fingered | fraternity, who were in the habit of | visiting dinner parties in hopes of picking up something, were one even- ing just in time to see the tables cleared; but Ikey, the smarter of the two, succeeded in purloining five sil- ver forks, which he immediately pock- | eted, to the envy of Moses, his pal, | who asked him to share. “No, my boy. You should be smart,” was the answer. During the evening Moses was ask: | ed fo sing, but refused, saying he wad no singer; but if they cared for a lit» | tle conjuring trick he would entertain them for a few minutes. The company was delighted, and Moses asked for five silver forks, which were soon brought. He then placed them in his inside breast pock- et, and, gently tapping them three times, he exclaimed: ‘Presto! Fly! Change! Gone! Now, if someone will kindly look into my friend 1key’s inside breast pocket he will find them there.” A gentleman obliged, and Ikey, Xs tremely flustered, produced the forks, to the great delight of the company— and Moses. Unification of Time. The International Conference on the Unification of Time, to secure its reg: ular daily transmission to ships af sea and to a number of meteorolog: ical stations on land, held an impor tant meeting at the Paris observatory recently. It was decided to create an international association, the statutes of which were drawn up. The asso ciation will be formed of delegated from all the participating goverms ments, which at the present moment are 15 in number. The headquarters of the international time bureau are to be In Paris, and the expenses are to be borne by the various govern- ments, those of countries of less than 5,000,000 inhabitants will subscribe When you have saved up | First, remove all the plumbing, ! replacing it with gold-plated pipes and | By going to the! lkey Secured Wednesd dN oW n \ MERCHANTS fortis te oforforfocfosfeeferfeofocforiorjongeoeoih ozesiosi Ty IN ThE 3 yl D. B. KIEFFER &CO’S. PUBLIC SALE estern Horses an¥ Colts’ n Friday, November 13th, 1914 [AT 1930 P.M. at the Farmers Inn Hotel, Mr Stumpf, Proprietor At Mount Joy We Will Sell One Carload of Extra Good, Big, Rugy 3 _ ged and All Parposes Horses and \Colts They will consist of the Good, Big, Rugged F ders, Farm Chunks, Carriage and All Purpose Horses and Colts, few of these Colts are Mare Colts, and the kind that will matufe into real good Brood Mares and will weigh from 1250 to 1500 Ibs, ach when matured. Also several closely Mated Teams in Greys, Bays and Blacks. The kind that will make Good, Big, Draft Teams. Also a few Well Bred Driving Colts. Mr. Grove adwises Us that he is shipping an extra load of Colts, the kind that have the color, size, shape and bone to themselves. These Colts range in age from 2 to 4 years and weigh from 11 to 13 hundred pounds each, \ If in need of a Horse or Colt for your Spring Sales, gr to feeq out for the Spring Trade, or for your own use, dcn’t mn this chance, as you all know how the W. M. Grove Coits X out, and make money for any person looking for an jnvestm of this kind, \ Notes for 30, 60 or 90 days will be taken with goo and paying discount. 3 WHY MOUNT JOY pat SHOULD ADVERTISE BULLETIN Let's See, What Was His Name? In 1908 we experienced a very lively contest for the Presidency and Vice Presidency. | No great discovery or catastrophe received more space in the public print than did the utterances, the goings and the comings of the four candidates representing the two ' great parties. | It would seem forget i Vy impossible for any one to the names of these | men. Can you name the | the Vice Presidency with Mr. Bryan? Oblivion is the price of silence. Mr. Bryan's name has been kept His running mate candidate for on the ticket | before the public. is forgotten. | Don’t let the public forget you. Use the Bulletin. er GB miinn. SALE REGISTER | A FREE notice of your sale is in- |serted here for any length of time, | provided we print your sale bills. {This is excellent advertising because it is read by so many people and a |notice such as the following will i surely bring the buyers: Friday, Nov. 13—At the Farmers’ Inn, Mount Joy, a carload of extra good, big rugged horses and colts by D. B. Kieffer & Co. Zeller, auct. Saturday, Nov. 28—At Witmer’s Cross Keys Hotel, Marietta, 2 lots of ground in Marietta, each with 2- story frame dwellings by Mr. George Schoen, executor of the estate of Christopher Schoen and Margaret Ol- phin. McElroy, Auct. ! et tei WHY MOUNT JOY MERCHANTS | SHOULD ADVERTISE IN THE BULLETIN ofecfooorfeofoofecfecorfecfenfesforfecforforore { securiy D. B. Kieffer & Co. 13, 1914 at 1:30 P. M. at Mt, Joy, Pa. ele Zeller, Auct. Zeller, Clerk Sale Friday, Nov. ncern Preaching vs. Practice pe pt | If one of your competitors were to| “spring” an innovation in the way of! a sale, a new matter of displaying merchandise—anything at all— | a ’ You would do the same thing just && ARIATOM- ag soon as you could, if you con-| Br ICALLY sidered it of value to your business. Bet Br CORRECT To Whom It May Co i a y ond hi: ode , ’ ANE Bl ES THE BEST The SMIT ESULT DE HSOM: bods a Bb MARK. LIGHT Why copy them in the small things | and not in the big things? The greatest business men are the warmest advotates of advertising. The fact that they practice what | they preach is the factor which made them the greatest business | "men. | Money spent in the Bulletin will | §& be of far more benefit to you than ¢ Bn, | Be a thousand times the same amount § ’ in the bank. — Ce Our Ads Bring Results—Try it. | Subscribe for the Mt. Joy Bulletin. | { | | | | | Steam Vulcanizing By Experienced Hands SPEED VULCANIZING COMPANY | We have succeeded in obtaining the Sole Age of NORTH WEST CORNER | |Pa., for the SMITHSONIAN TRUSS and sell e D . ORANGE AND PRINCE STREETS Tgp, 08 6 30 DAYS; QUARAN ACROBATI XERCISE RT No28. Other bonds fo . | [ i 1,000.00 | —— ; te signed by Napoleon, and 1 an annual sum of $160, those between All Work Guaranteed. Quick Service | Postal Savings .:::- ted: —Me cell trees. Tos no 8 y D , and promis- | ; RVing 15, Wante an to se S, es, | ing the sum of 5,000,000 francs—about 5,000,000 and 10,000,000 are to sub By sending your work to us you | hited Bonds, (other 87,327.00 c than Stocks) .... Shrubs, berry bushes. Permanent. | £200,000—to the finder of that partic. scribe a sum of $240, and those whose population is above 20,000,000 are to w=: Chandler's Drug Kg will notice the difference in mileage | SF Johu Stock in Federal Reserve Brown Bros. Nurseries, Rochester, | lar coin EE | ; i SH i and decreased maintenance cost. | \ 3 Bank $1750; all other 5 New York. Naturally, everybody who changed subscribe an annual sum of $400, .| ” 3 N : N. Het stocks, $30,759.82 ...... 32.509.82 | & large pitne demanded the new five The signals are to be sent out af Repairing of all kinds done on in-| es ain Slay oun Florin, | Banking House, Furniture, : For Sale—A 20 h. Dp. stationery go..." ing in exchange, and as a rule stated hours by wireless telegraphy, ner Tubes and Casings at reasonm-' : \ vith and bisiutes ey 43,500.00 Springfield Gas Engine, cheap. Al probed and dug and sounded the metal and all other useful information re- | able prices. Sunday hours 8 to 9 A. M. and 6 to 7 P. M. Othe Joe oy oe: PP so an Automobile Truck, 1300 to 1| in eager search for the hidden note. grog fs bites the Weather Hove = - , - of , o i acity Jal Ezra N. Mus-| But the years went d tt 2 earthquaes, are aio ’ p> = : = 5 ps serve Agents in Central ton capacity. Call on Ezra J ent on and yet the o..\;inicated from the bureau. '® OR=A0 © % to) © 0% OR=A0 e © ©) from sc Cities $16,887.52; in ser, Mt. Joy, Pa. nov.11-4t | note did not appear. p plighted word is a sacred trust to the Napoleon's | ———— epg t the h other Reserve Cities 4 ( $13,739,348 ..evicirenens 30,626.86) FOR SALE—A good rubber tire| prench nation, and today the govern- Japanese Female Costumes. ® ° 6 CAD, $0 Checks and currey: also ‘a good runabout. Apply | ment stands ready to pay the debt, A Japanese woman of fashion is by ific expl 4 ERE Ry 1,182.40 + this office. nov. 4-3t. | which, with interest, 18 now worth DO means & drain on her husband’s gid | £1,475,000—upon demand. finances. The cost of her wearing ap- 4 \ Notes of Banks Fractional Paper Currency, Nickles and Cents Specie $18,903.50 Redemption fund with S. Treasurer 750.00 18,903.50 5,000.00 $690,146.59 LIABILITIES $100,000.00 Capita] stock paid in .... ,000. Surplus Fund 75,000.00 Undivided Profits, less EX penses and Taxes paid. National Bank Notes out- standing Due to Banks Due to State and Private Banks and Bankers Due to Trust Companies and Savings Banks ... Individual deposits subject to check Demand certificates of de- posit Time certificates of depos- it payable within 30 days Cashier's checks outstand- ing U. S. deposits Postal Savings deposits 26,555.78 99,450.00 other National 394.83 40.00 6,251.05 147,410.70 158.48 168,892.45 601.87 1,000.00 7.14 on Poplar street, Mt. etc; built Wil] sell on B P tric lights, years ago. able, Call Joy. Roberts, Mt. nov.4-4t Notice:—Al]l accounts due me can be paid to Mr. Christian Walters at Clarence Schock’s office, as I have empowered him to collect same. 3t Dr. F. L. Richards FOR SALE—A nearly new $350 piano will be sold for only $200. Have no use for same. Apply at this office. tf. OYSTERS, OYSTERS—I have em- barked in the oyster business and have for sale at all times and in any quantity, choice prime and cull oysters at very reasonable prices. Orders delivered any time. J. R. Baughman, New street, Mt. Joy, Pa. oct. 14-4t Joy, steam | heat, bath, hot and cold water, elec- | only a few | covered in New Guinea a fish which very reason- | | eggs of this fish has an envelope For Sale—A fine 8-room dwelling | One of Nature's Wonders. | The explorer Lorentz recently dis- bas been named Kurtus. Hach of the | which is formed of a delicate fllament coiled round and round. When the eggs are laid the filgments uncoil au- tomatically and intertwine to form a | short, string-like band, so that the | eggs are all tied together 11 a bunch. At the breeding season the male fish | developes on the top of the back of | his head a tiny hook of bone, growing | forward and downward, like a bent | first finger. Into the “eye” arrange- | ment thus formed—of which the fe- | male shows no trace—he somehow or | other inserts the band that unites all | the filaments of all the eggs, and swims off with the living burden on his head. | | | Deaths by Flying. July, August and September, a good time of year for aviation, proved this | year to be a specially fatal period for aviators. Nearly eighty persons were parel is very small indeed when com- pared to her sister of the Occident. | She wears $13.80 worth of clothing un- der her kimono, the latter costing | about $25. The obi costs another $25. | Numerous tying paraphernalia sum up to $17.25, and amounts to about $9. Combs and hair- pins, ornamented with gems, $245; a shawl, $7.60; a diamond neck clasp, $150; a total of a little more | than $900 for a season. This is a very | modest outlay when compared to the enormous cost of apparel for the wo- | man of fashion in New York or Paris. Scientific Bridge Building. Calgary Alberta, has recently solved a problem of bridge construction in | The town lies om ! a novel manner. each side of the Bow river, that por- tion on the north bank being built on | the high bluffs which border the river. To bridge the river on an incline to the top of the bluff would have been to neglect the portion of the city lying | at the foot of the bluff. To make a deep cutting would have spoiled much a set of footwear cost | was hurr DOES YOUR AUTOMOBILE NEED REPAIRING? DOES YOUR MOTOR BALK OCCASIONALLY? Ew DO YOU HOP ALONG ON “TWO AND THREE” EVERY NOW AND THEN. IF SO YOUR CAR NEEDS THE ATTENTION OF A FIRST-CLASS MECHANIC. NOW THAT'S WHERE | CAN HELP YOU. General Repair Work | HAVE IN MY EMPLOY MR. JOHN KESSELRING, A MAN WITH EIGHT Yi EXPERIENCE ON AUTOMOBILE WORK. HE CAN REPAIR ANY MAKE CAR K TRADE AND DO IT RIGHT. DOESN'T THAT INTEREST YOU? Rebuilding and Painting | WILL ERECT AN ADDITION TO MY GARAGE AND WILL BE PREPARED KINDS OF REBUILDING AND PAINTING AT VERY MODERATE CHARGES. LET M OUT OF THAT OLD CAR OF YOURS. Meeting onary Sunday bf God this b.ogram foll a Blessing , Are You I Malinda G with T Mrs. le to be D. C.”R o You? fering; ing, Ben me S¢ PRACTICAL TO THE < x Studebakers and For py 25. | ALWAYS HAVE ON HAND ALL KINDS OF FORD CARS—I HAVE ALSO TAKE ENCY FOR THE WELL KNOWN STUDEBAKER CARS. ANY PERSON IN THE MARKE Notes and bills rediscount | “For Rent—A good house with barn, killed in various parts of the world of the property. The problem was : esr dos naln nen 64,384.29 | garden, plenty of fruit and a pleasant in accidents due to the navigation of ®olved by comstructing a level bridge NIW CAR SHOULD NOT BUY BEFORE FIRST GETTING A DEMONSTRATION IN A ST rts prom place to live. Call on or address the alr. Some of the deaths were 8cross the river, and then gaining the = THE EQUIPMENT ON THESE CARS IS EQUAL TO THOSE OF THE HIGH PRICED AUT natch wil : 11 sports $690,146.59 State of Penna., Co. of Lancaster, ss 1, R. Fellenbaum, Cashier of the above-named bank, do solemnly gwear that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. : BR. FELLENBAUM, Cashier sworn to before Total Subscribed and Wm. Crist, R. F. D. 3, Manheim, Pa. Sept. 30-tf. auto be- Reward Lost—Top cover to an tween here and Rheems. for its return to this office. For Sale—Poultry houses and poul- try wire. Inquire of J. L. Brunner. tf. spectacular, as, for instance, those of the four persons in a crowd in Ger- heights above by an inclined tunnel bored through the cliffs. many who were killed by the propeller | | of an aeroplane passing over their | heads, and the drowning of fifteen in ' the wreck at sea of the Zeppelin, L-1, { and the fall of Lieutenant Schmidt 5,000 feet to his death. Flying is still the most dangerous Commendable Brevity. The Hon. Brand Whitlock, who says that if he had the job of writing a city charter he would do it “on a small sheet of paper in a large hand,” has evidently left far behind him his days when he worked om “space.”—Phils- | Automobile Aeeessories CONGRESS rprise elebrated and rece kerchiefs Mt. Joy, ] | ALWAYS CARRY A FULL AND COMPLETE LINE OF PULLMAN AND AND ALL AUTO ACCESSORIES. WHEN IN TROUBLE, OR WHENEVER YOU NEED A FIRST-CLASS AUTO MAN, CALL and me this 5th day of Nov. 1914. HAR ; of occupations; to attain safety is still [ < W. M. HOLLOWBUSH, I have a first-class equipment and the chief object to be sought. delphia Inquirer. . 4 IN pita Notary Public |, prepared to doallkinds of wood ir esi re ! the surp Correct—Attest: | d : yy through tl MS. BOWMAN |sawing such as cord wood, railroad WHY MOUNT JOY MERCHANTS Two of Same Namé : friends. fo r S John F. Smith of Elizabethtown | and John F. Smith of Columbia ties, etc. Prices very reasonable. Call on or address Martin M. Weft- SHOULD ADVERTISE BULLETIN ¢. N. NEWCOMER IN THE | B. 0. MUSSER Ld — Peter S. Directors. | man, Box 83, Salunga, Pa. 91-2mo.| Abraham Lincoln sald: “I do mot| both went to Ogden, Utah, in 1876. : know much about the tariff, but 1do| The latter died there Oct. 12th, th ING. BTC R:—IF YOU'RE IN| Private Sale—A desirable building | The latter die ere Oct. , the yo KIND RzADE know this much; when we buy goods other died there Oct, 27th. They Bell Phore 147-11 ned ak OWN. 1L.& BUSINESS YOU SHOULD HAVE AN AD IN THIS SPACE. REMEM BER, HUNDREDS BESIDE YOUR SELF READ THIS SPACE WEEK LY. lot on New St., Mt. Joy, 54 ft. front and 180 ft. deep. Call on Wm. phy. | 2brosd we get the goods and the were of the same age and resided linger, Mt. Joy. may 27.¢¢. | foreigner gets the money; whem We o; the same street. {buy goods made at home, we yet | NOTICE—I am prepared to do all both the goods and the money.” kinds of hauling, plowing lots, and| Those who get the “ lion's share” | The report work of that kind. Charges Very fof Mount Joy business are adverts. D7 of th reasonable. Jacob Brown, Mt. Joy. tf. erg in the Bulletin. where in ing, CI eratio ped. Olso Auto k cement ER of the First place, app! ue, ational a— 4 Subscribe for the Mt. Joy Bulletin i
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