The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, December 09, 1914, Image 6

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Corinth, Miss. — “I am a city tax ang most succ
collector and seventy-four years of age. |jcal show ever seen
1 was in a weak, run-down condition 0 |e one planned for next January |
that I became exhausted by every little | will be much wider
certion. My druggist told me about oye; more colossal in the variety







 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
 




Miss.
As one grows old their organs act
more slowly and less effectually than in! But this demoralization in our
Te blood trade with Europe may prove to be!
thin, the appetite poor and diges- 'a blessing in disguise. Europe's €x-
. Y1no 4 tremity Is America’s opportunity. |
and iron tonic, is the ideal strengthener | The United States can 1OW make
itself independent of the rest of the






tion weak. Vinol, our delicious cod liver




and body builder for old folks because
jt creates a good healthy appetite, |world in its manufactures.




 
 
 




AX COLLECTOR


«Made in U. S. A” will be the own resources; and
Mer-| ;

Madison Square Garden, New York,
Expected to Resign on Account j.yuary 1523, 1915, under
of Feebleness — Gained auspices of the Drug and Chemical
| gxposition Co., Inc, and the As-|
Strength and Twenty-four (ciacea Clubs of Domestic Science.
Pounds by Taking Vinol. Last January the same company
lat the same place gave the largest |
essful drug and chem-
in America, and
yl, and I decided to take it. In a
: 1 noticed considerable improves
- I continued its use and now I
and extent of its exhibits.

of merchandise.
th, circulation is poor, t
engthens digestion, enriches the
improves circulation and in this
Bl manner builds up, strengthens
Bi vigorates feeble, run-down, nerv-
hd aged people, and if it does notdo thousands who
8c say, we will pay back your |
W. D. CHANDLER & CO.


West Main Street, Opp. Bank,
Bell Telephone.
and decreased maintenance cost.
Repairing of all kinds done on im-
ner Tubes and Casings at reasom- same
aule prices. At their
which will be attended by at
country. Other pharmaceutical

arge convention hall.
ill be theatrical, musical and
  

HH H. KR ALL to suit every legitimate desire
taste.
Goddard, a Western business
ful manager, is the largest and
comprehensive co-operative organiza-
Steam Vulcanizing tion in America, having 20,000 mem-
By . Experienced Hands bers, a plant covering more than ten
acres of floor space at Long Island genial friend and
SPEED VULCANIZING COMPANY City, New York; flourishing branch- Boggs of Elizabethtown
es in several of the large cities of ;
NORTH WEST CORNER the country, doing a business of five
million jollars a vear an aving
ORANGE AND PRINCE STREETS fn ‘doilary a» Yom and Lovins
1Ssets and esources exceeding three
Lancaster, Pa. million dollars. Since its organiza-
tion it has paid its »kholders
All Work Guara ; lon 1 aid | stockholders
nteed. Quick Services jividends exceeding one million
y sending your work to us you lars
ill notice the difference in mileage The Associated Clubs of Domestic
nce and Pure Food Congress
S


Madison

veek of this Exposition.
MOUNT _Jo¥
/GO THROUGH HARDEST ROCK
No Substance on Earth Can Resist the
Action of Prepared Steel
THE BULLETIN,
A COLOSSAL “MADE IN U. S. A.” they passed the following resolu-
MERCHANDISE, FOOD, DRUG
| AND CHEMICAL EXPOSITION
1 YEARS OLD predominating note of the 1
y | chandise, Food, Drug and Chemical’
h
Exposition which will be held at
«Whereas, on account of the great
Buropean war, most of our impo
| America is thrown largely upon her
| Btone {s still sawn by hand, even
in great cities where the latest appli-
| ances of the mechanical art are to be
| found. Yet the mechanical sawing of
rock is at least sixteen centuries old,
| and in recent years has reached &
| stage of perfection.
| The idea of using a metal cord and
a mixture of sand and water for saw-
ing stone was patented by Hugene
Chevallier in France in 1854. His ap-
paratus, with scarcely any change,
was used last year in cutting a trench
through the Pont Neuf in Paris.
The principle upon which the me-
chanical stone-saw works is described
by Victor Raynourd in La Science et
la Vie as follows:
An endless rope composed of three
steel wires twisted together 1s get In
movement and draws with it a grind-
ing granular substance, pressing this
hard upon the stone that is to be
sawn. The mordant substance is grit
mixed with water. The stream of wa
ter renders the movement easy and
prevents the heating of the cable. The
ends of the cable are joined by splic-
spending vast sums
from abroad our


that is necessary for our own needs
and comfort; i
crisis an opportunity for America to
demonstrate the
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAANANNAANNANS
' ARABIAN BLOOD IN HORSES
Claimed Greatest Perfection In And
male Cannot Be Attained Unless
Conditions Are Favorable.
in its scope and the members

support to the
American-made pro-
recognizing in
Science, do give our
The cataclysm in Europe has prov-,
rained twenty pounds in weight, fed disastrous to the trade of the|
and feel much stronger. I consider | whole world, and America has suffer-|
Vinol a fine tonic to create strength for |ed by being cut off from foreign
old people.”’—J. A. PRICE, Corinth | markets which heretofore have sup- |
3 Pp 2 ’ : : :
plied us with many important lines
of the struggling nations |
all their own
By WL WRC "ts claimed
that the hardiness of Arabian horses
| may be attributed to the fact that they
were bred and reared for thousands of
| years under the most adverse con-
| ditions. Other writers claim, and
that only the best environ-
the best qualities
“Resolved: That
Clubs of Domestic |
Science pledge
ment can bring out
in man and beast—that the greatest
| perfection in animals cannot be at-
| tained unless conditions are favorable.
How then can Wwe
Square Garden,
manufacturers
advantage of this
ill opportunity
| This comprehensive exhibition of | Exposition as an
| American manufactured products w
open the eyes of the hundreds of}
will visit it to the
real and the potential resources of |our capacity for taking
ey. the United States for supplying |
the wants of the American people.
During the week of the exposition | Member
7 American Druggists Syndicate, a co-
operative association of 17,000 retail
‘ i AA - , druggists and 3,000 physicians, manu-
Krall Meat Market facturing the A. D. S. line of house-
hold remedies, toilet preparations,
pharmaceuticals, etc, will hold
annual stockholders’ convention,
accredit the |
gun-parched plains of
| Arabia, to be the home of the beauti-
ful Arabian horse?
resourcefulness,


THREE THOUSAND YEARS OLD |
Excavations Have Revealed Ancient
Structure on Site of Prehis-
Masonic Home News
6.000 members from all parts of the!|in developing

Excavations recently carried out by
the German Archaeological institute
on the site of prehistoric Tiryns have
revealed the existence of a still more
ancient palace lying beneath the re-
mains of the palace laid bare by Schlie- |
mann and Dropfeld some thirty years
the understanding and |

sociations and organizations of manu-
I always have on hand anything In facturers and retailers will
the line of Smoked Meats, Ham, | meetings during the week in the | turn
Bologna, Dried Beef, Lard, Etec.
Algo Fresh Beef, Veal Pork and
Mutton, Prices always right.

In addition to the exposition there is js a nice place and London a big Typical Arablan Horse.
town, yet there are many
point toward the grassy slopes and
S| the foothills of the Caucasus moun-
| tains, where physical conditions are
' go similar to those we have along the
| foothills of the Rockies, where a dry
| climate and moderate rainfall mah
| good pasture but without the tendency
| to make a soft spongy hoof.
| Commenting upon
that the Arab blood used so long ago,
trace in our present
| breeds in this country, an authority
“And though it can scarce be
doubted that, in the very commence
i ment of turf-breeding there must have
been some mixture of the best old
Enghsh blood, probably in great part
i of Spanish by descent, with the true
Arab or Barb race, the impure ad-
mixture is so exceedingly remote, not
within fourteen or fifteen generations,
horse of Englatd
ing picture entertainments, sO there
will be instruction and amusement |
now discovered is a large circular
building about fourteen meters in di-
ameter, which may be recognized as
the most ancient palace of the dynasty
of Tiryns. This structure, which was
built before 1500 B. C, differs com-
pletely in design from the later build-
The places of sepuicher of the
local princes were long sought in vain,
but a bee hive tomb in excellent pres-
ervation has been discovered and ex-
cavated. More than two thousand
years ago it was robbed of its treas-
ures, and in the time of the Roman
emperors it was converted into an oil
The American Druggists Syndicate, | vision, and
MOUNT Joy, PA founded only nine years ago by C.H.
and ever since its able and resource-
the statement
Elizabethtown Y
that the present rac
lso hold their convention at the
p Garden during the

one-sixteen-thousandth part
other blood than that of the desert.”
It is a long time since the horses Ea : Tr is
The Peruvians are a proud, imperial
race, living amid the grandest scenery |
last New York meeting





 
 

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LooTook
20S
M. T. GARVIN & COMPANY
Lancaster’s Store of Xmas Service
The Garvin Store:
Lancaster’s Most Helpful Store For
Economy in Holiday Shopping
2 0 0 Bautoslestoctoetoo oo Toots toc osteo ssloe to olsole
TR BRITT IR PINS NS




Xmas Gifts A-plenty in the Drug
Sundries Sections:
Dinner Gongs, $1.00 Salt and Pepper Shakers,
Smoking Trays, 25¢, 50c and Silver-plated Candleabra, 25¢
59¢. and 59c¢
Silver-plated Salt and Pep- Fine Playing Cards, in leath-
per Casters, 25¢, 29c and 59c er cases, 50e¢, 59¢ and 89%¢
Glass inlaid with silver Vas- Glass Hair Receivers and
es, 50c and 59c Powder Jar, with silver-plat-
Bowls ind Cream ed metal top 25¢c each.
Pit 59¢ a set 25¢ each

A

A Pretty Hand Bag Makes an
Ideal Gift



yur Leather Goods Store (now ready for Xmas) is store
{istinguished for the completeness of its stocks; the fresh-
ness Of Its nd the reasonableness of its prices
AT $1.00 AT $1.50
Hand Bag Z ine 0 Ve brown
er L: c C silk 1 : :
: ) k lin ete.; silk
Bitad ‘
= x ed; frames;
( ha ; n ta
or eathe oOVv« frame
AT $1.50 AND $1.98 AT $3.50 AND $3.75
Fine seal lea hand bags; senuine pin seal leather;
purse and silk lined: with purse and
shape mirror: silver or gilt frames.


Our Basement Now Radiantly
. .®
Reflects the Xmas Spirit
The Toys, Dolls, Games, etc. are here—so is the real
fat. red-cheeked Santa Claus, Bring the tots; let them
shake this jolly old fellow’s hand and tell their Christ-
mas desires.
Some things Santa brought with him:

Bashew, Spark, Selina,
i ught, Traveler and Ethan
Allen lived, yet our best stock traces
m. Without Justin Morgan
there would be no Morgan horse. Jus-
| tin Morgan was rich in Arab blood.
Vessenger and Diomed were of like
| parentage. The beautiful coach horses
Hackney trace their
| lineage to the Arabian breed. At Fort
| Collins, Colo., where the department
| of agriculture is now trying to perfect
a new type of carriage horse there is
at the head of that stud Carmon, who
carries in his veins the blood of the
| Arab. The grace and beauty of the
Jowerful and massive Percheron are
| due to the Arab lineage which has re-
| moved that coarsenesse which prevails
| with many breeds of draft horses
CULLING UNPROFITAB
Cost of Plgs Determined by Size of
Litter—Very Prolific Animal
May Raise Ten.
 

tained the guests of the Homes in a
their English,
its wonders of nature which
are disclosed in its many interesting
. 9. 9 9s Ye Te TeatesteoTeoVeoTeoTe oles teoTestoodoo esto ote ste ode ode oo
WY FOOL DLO Re NLR NL NA PN CNTR TATA -



conversational
If a sow raises but three pigs, says
Professor Smith of Purdue university,
it means that they are costing five
If instead of three she
| raises five, the initial cost is reduced
| to three dollars per head.
very prolific sow she may raise ten,
h case the debt represented by
each pig is only $1.50.
When the breeder heartlessly culls
that produce stock that
A Scottish laddie, delivering milk,
stopped the other day on his

asked him if his employers put any-


 
Ww

at PAO TRS RR
I to the block the sow
with small litters;
of his herd the peey

sh hogs and the
®
RRR
. 9
relative advantage

of the cross bred
RATION FOR THE BROOD SOW

oedeste
ae
with the question:
“Now, W
in the milk?”
“Why,” said the
. oo
Re
Cooked Potatoes, Middlings and Skim
Milk Are Excellent Just Before
Farrowing Time.
time he tak's ¢
toes, middling:
and states that a neighbor
| advised him not to feed skim milk to
sows before the:
This is a good ration for a brood
The protein In the skim milk
will balance up the starch in the po-
tatoes and the middlings being a well
anced feed no trouble need be an-

0 A TAS STC
«0 long } : : y
quently delivered some of the cattle tion =o long as the sow has plenty of
of the purchasers

panied by a certificate of health and | |
tuberculin test chart as required |
the Pennsylvania
held in $300 bail NT
for appearance at the January term
of Court in West Chester.
Six New Game Preserves
forestry officials

the six new game preserves which
Licenses Will
are to be established on State for-
Commission officials
believe that the number of hunters’
licenses Issued make a dozen such spots for game
to breed and live without interrup-
all counties |,
| showed increases, the exceptions be- |
ing agrienltura] counties like Lancas-
[——
ta Best paper ‘nn town —Bulletin

Upright Pianos, 25c, 59c, 50c and $1
$1 and up to $4.79 Combination Banks, 25¢
Baby Grand Pianos, $1 and 50c
and up to $4.98 Toy Houses and Barns,
Tool Chests, 25¢, 50e, $1 25¢, 50c, $1 and to $3.25
and up to $5.48 Trinity Chimes, $1.00
Velocipedes, $1.89, $1.98 Table Archery, 50c and
and $225 $1
Rubber Tired ones at Large Engines, self-wind-
$3.48, $3.98 and $4.48 ing, $1.00 each
Trimmed Doll Beds, 50c, Roller Skates. 48c, 98¢c
$1 and $1.50 ‘ and $1.39
Iron Toy Rarfees, 25¢, Rubber Toys, 10c to 29¢

sess pS 8 Releelenfe
eer TEE

tl en
We print all the mews fit to print
rint all the news fit to print.
r the Mt. Joy Bulletin.



Wires.

The hardest rocks, such as porphyry, |
are now sawn more easily than the |
softer, such as marble, but not so rap
Marble is sawn at the rate of
nearly nine inches an hour, granite at
from six to seven inches an hour.


toric Tiryns.

The whole elevation on which the
fortress-palace stands was thickly in- |
habited at least as far back as 2000 |
Among the early inhabitants
Other tombs have been found which |
it is hoped may prove intact. They |
will be excavated.

Proud, Imperial Race.
of the western hemisphere, and hold-
ine high ideals of what is best in edt
cation and the unbought grace of life.

great country estates there is |
much of the fine tradition and chival- |
sentiment that came from the
best people of Castile and Aragon. |
The Indians of the high plateaux are |
a unique reminder of a civilization
that bourgeoned centuries before the
face of the white man had blossomed
like a flower in the western forests.
The immemorial records of a civiliza-
tion that vanished in the midst of |
man’s earliest recollections are faintly
suggested in splendid ruins of the
brilliant scenes. The name and fame
of the brilliant men who built the
walls and temples of Cuzco are lost,
and all we know of the wonder and
the charm of that forgotten culture in
the Andes is found in the pathetic
ruins of cities that are half as old as
ed time.—"“The Empire Children
of the Sun,” Peter MacQueen, in Na-
tional Magazine.

Of Course He Did.
by two police officers, who
know much about the tariff, but Ido
know thi} much; when we buy goods
abroad wp get the goods and the
foreigner (gets the money; when we
buy goodi made at home, we get Be 55 S
both the goods and the money. Rete 2 ONS
Those who get the “lion’s share” y :
of Mount Joy business are advertisers Take Notice!
in the Bulletin.




 

Wednesday, Decem



LL.
NT J¢ MEE HANTS
J ADVEL 1\SE I THE
| BULLEWN
“Abe” Lincoln Said
Abrahgm Lincoln sald: “I do not
 




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Public that They are Prepared to de


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aye!” was the innocent an

officers, thinking they



clear case of adulteration, ©
1 ixpence if he would
s put in it.
“Ah” said the bov a grin, “ve
the saxpence though I |
, we will,” said the officers.
then!” said the little fel-
pence was duly handed over,

t does your employer put

yoy, with a cunning


“he put measure in every


Far From Barracks.
A minister one day got into conver-
gation with an Irish soldier who hap-
to be stationed in Liverpool,
and of whom he asked several ques-
tions as to what regiment he was in,
and so forth. Ultimately Pat thought
{t was his time to ask a few questions.
“Now,’ said he, “I'd like to know
| what you are?” “I'm a soldier, too,”
said the minister. “And what regl-
| ment are you in, and where is it sta-
tioned?” The minister, pointing to-
| ward the sky, said: “My regiment is
Heaven.” “Oh, man,” replied Pat,
‘shure ve're a long way from the bar-
| racks.”
KINDERHOOK
The Sunday school of the Kinder-
hook U. B. church on Sunday elected
officers as follows:
Superintendent, Charles M. Lichty;
assistant, H. M. Eisenberger; secre-
tary, John J, Gable; assistant, John
. Lichty, jr.; treasurer, Samuel} C.
pianist, Bertha Lew as-




sistant, Martha Kline; J ians,
William Nissley and Ir ner;
Home De John iser;

Cradle § tarri











G. S. VOGLE %
er NA Practical Horse Shoeing )
. . . )
Prompt attention given to calling At Jno. Bombach’s Stand, Mt. Joy 2
| all kinds of real estate and personal Special attention given to all work #
| property sales. Satisfaction guar: All diseases of the feet promptly at -
| anteed or no charges. Give me a tended to. Your Work Solicited 0
| trial. Drop me a card. oct. 14-1yT. > -
: So BOMBACH & SHANK 8
Our Ads Bring Results—Try it. General Blacksmiths and Horse-Shoers 2 :
We print all the news fit to print. MOUNT JOY. PENNA. A
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