The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, June 02, 1915, Image 6

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THE BULLETIN, MT. JOY, PA.

Paesday, June

| NO FEEDERS AT PRESENT
|







































en are Learn-
ause
State Refuses to Raise Ban on the
Feeders and Breeders
ffer, not knowing ——————
: Fy The state of Pennsylvania has de-
Yiche, dizziness, ner-

 
clared a quarantine for foot and
jul b passages, weak- mouth disease against the state of |
ne ar — Kentucky and no cattle will be re-
Ea%h a torture of itself. ceived from that state under any
Together hint at weakened Kid- .;.... ances,
Strike at the root—got to the It had been planned to admit cat- |
cause. tle for breeding and feeding purpos- |
Quickly help the ay es. but for present they will be |
need it. ; y admitted for immediate slaughter,
No other remedy more highly en: only except frog Rentueky. ‘which iv
dorsed than Doan's Kidney Pills.
under quarantine as far as this state


Here's convincing testimony from
tug locality. is concerned.
Mrs. Laura Hess. N. Poplar St, The area in the state which will
Eiizahetitows, Pa, says: “1 was an remain under quarantine includes
noyed by kidney trouble and I had a
parts of five counties. Part of Phila-
dull, nagging backache and pains
across my loins. I was also distress- delphia is quarantined, together with
ed by headaches Wo Sian? spells. certain premises in Schuylkill, War-
an’'s Kidney Pills benefited me in yt i A
Doan’s Ki vy. P HO d ren, Erie and Allegheny. about which
every way. I haven't had any trouble
from my back or kidneys since using been drawn.
a three-mile limit has
ar remeron atl and
oat, exhibitions to show
if it does not
come from quarantined territory.
———e A.
Read the Bulletin
Our Ads Bring Results—Try fit
agricultural
live stock this
Mt. Joy's Best Paper—Bulletin. yourl,
Read the Bulletin
Qur Ads Bring Results—Try it.
srBest paper in town—Bulletin,
Mt. Joy’s Best Paper—Bulletin.



ny .
ne Net Pri



Comfort,
 
.
2:57 an Saving
34x4 | 19.90] 22.30 3.90 4.40 RR OR
Safety is built into every Fire-
stone Tire through skilled and
careful construction; comfort
through quantity and character
of fine, resilent rubber; economy
through the mileage and service that
such materials and “know-how” mean.
And saving in the price—no more than
is asked for the ordinary kind of tire.
Let us equip your car with these tires of
Most Miles per Dollar
Firestone Line Includes Tires, Tubes and Accessories for Automobiles and Motorcysies
H. S. Newcomer
Penna.


34x41%| 27.30] 30.55] 4.80) 5.40
32.15) 5.00/ 5.65

30.80 5.95( 6.70

Mount Joy,




YOU WILL GET TEN CELEBRATED
's. & H. Trading Stamps
 
Aa
. baker's
Coal and
LUMBER YRRDS


oy
Mount Joy, Penna,

Sole agent for Comgo Roofing. No. 1 Cedar Shingles always on hand
Also Siding, Flooring, Sash, Doors, Blinds, Mouldings, Laths, Etc.
Agent for Lehigh Portland Ceme .t, Roofing Slate and Sheet Iron.
Estimates quickly and cheerfully made on BUILDING MATERIAL and al
kinds of CONCRETING WORK. Both phones






L—————— —— wn RI
BOOOOOOOO000COCOO000000000COO0ODO00OOOOIDOIDOOOOOO
Furniture
continue the furniture busi-
floor of the
Engle Building, with a complete and
up-to-date line of all kinds of furni-
very
furniture call and



[ will
ness on the secong

ture. Prices are reasonable.
When in need of
see me,
Repairing and Painting a Specialty
Attention Given to REMODLING ANTIQUE FURNITURE

Special
West Main St.,
D. H. ENGLE, ‘MOUNT JOY, Pa.
EN OOOO NID OONEIDON INN INN NNN INIIDOOINININ



ELUNE _-— I —————

POOOOOO000O00O00O0O0000O00000000O0OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO0
Refrigerator Time!
WE CARRY A FULL LINE OF REFRIGERATORS, INCLUDING
ALL THE DIFFERENT MAKES OF THE CELEBRATED GUR-
NEY LINE
These Refrigerators are not meie boxes, nicely varnished and
with shining hardwood. They are real ice-saving Refrigerator ma-
chines, made of hardwood cases, heavily insulated with best ma-
terials, and thoroughly scientific in principle. This insures great
ice saving and perfect safety in pre erving foods.
SPRING SUGGESTIONS—Crex Metting Rugs, Fibre Rugs, Win-
dow Sereens, Porch Screens, Porch and Lawn Furniture, Swings,
Shades, Awnings and Awning re-hanging.
CARPET CLEANING—We have the largest carpet cleaning es-
tablishment in the city. Carpets caled for, cleaned and returned
at short notice.
: Westernberger, Vlaley & Myers
§ 128489 Enact og Street LANCASTER, PENNA.

them.” The rest of the state is free, per-
Price 50c, at all dealers. Don’t mits being required for shipments |
giunly A Re Ci from other states or restricted terri-
D&E S a 3 5 3 = i. uy
Mrs. Hess had. Foster-Milburn Co., 'OTY-
Props., Buffalo, N. Y. The board will permit county fairs

(hundred head of
{ raised shoats and a few brood sows.




PAPER MONEY
INSTEAD OF G01
{ Change Shocks Old Timers of Cale
|
ifornia, But Otherwise Will
Work no Trouble.
One of the interesting results of the
establishment of the new Federal re-
serve banks is the gradual disappear-
ance from ordinary circulation in the
far west of gold coin. The Pacific
Coast has been the only part of the
United States in which gold coin in
| the pockets and hands of the people
has been the regular medium of ex-
change. In other sections the gold has
been in the banks and treasury and
has been represented in the pockets
of the people by various forms of
| paper money.
! The custom of using gold in Califor-
| nia was inherited from the early gold
mining days, when private mintage
and even gold in an unrefined form
was in common use.
practical advantages, western people
have taken pride in maintaining a cus-
tom that distinguished their section
| from the rest of the country. Even
| during the Civil War and the years
{ immediately following it, when the
rest of the nation was on a depreciated
| paper standard, California remained
| on a gold standard and boasted of be-
ing the only place in the United States
where either gold or silver was in gen-
eral circulation.
Notes and commercial obligations {n
California have always been payable in
| gold coin, the fact having been speci-
| fled on legal papers of all kinds calling
| for the payment of money. The con-
stant use of gold for large transactions
and the absence of pennies have been
characteristic of California.
Since the start of the European war
| and the establishment of the Federal
reserve banks, there has been a tend-
ency on the part of the financial insti-
| tutions to encourage the use of paper
money and there is more of this in
circulation in the west than ever be-
| fore. The new system being intro-
duced merely enforces on the Pacific
Coast the customs of the rest of the
country and will do no harm, except
to shock the sentiments of the old |
Californian who will look back with
regret to the days when “hard money”
was the scle medium of exchange in
the golden West.

TOWEL
| Device Tried Out at Washington Does
Work in 30 Seconds.
building at
“ELECTRIC” IS LATEST
The new municipal
Washington, D.
“electro-towels,” devised by its super-
intendent, J. M. Ward. The electro-
towel is simply an electric hand-dryer.
It looks like a rectangular box with the
front face knocked out and set on a
pedestal which brings it about waist
high. The box is large enough to ae-
commodate an ordinary pair of hands.
There is an electric heating device in |
the. stand and a blower which forces
the air throu
tep, wh the hands are held while
drying. A lever operated by the foot
turns the current of hot air
and sets the blower at work.
Superintendent Ward contends that
as the lever is operated by the foot
and the hands are merely extended in-
to the box through the open front they
come into contact with no part of the
ere


device, and so the cperation is perfect- |
ly sanitary It takes thirty seconds
to dry hands in this way.
FIND ANCIENT COIN IN KANSAS
Bears Bust of Osirus, Pharaoh of
Egypt, 250 B. C.
An Egyptian coin in use about 250
years before the birth of Christ is in
the possession of Rev. G. L. Rarick, of
Scottsville, Kan. It is a brass coin [will be the question for statesmen to
Shout Bs Sune as an American half |golye, otherwise, as science conquers
C ar. e Vv se 8 i : : ‘
olla Th ob erse side of the coin | the diseases which kil] the weak-
bears the bust of Osirus, Pharaoh of |,. s : Ja ;
Egypt, who reigned 250 B. C., and {lings in time if peace. the physical
<5) ’ i 28 - “ . 9 : rap
was one of Egypt's most beloved rul- |strugele of the strong in wars for
ers. |bread and elbow room will reduce
The reverse side bears a figure of (humanity to a population of weak-
the Sphinx, with the sun rising behind {Angs and the ‘upward struggle will
| a row of pyramids in the background. {again begin at the bottom.
Both sides bear various characters | eres eames :
a sy 01S. 1
; and ymbol OLD LINE
It was found about five years ago by | CE ei ais
Clarence Warmer while digging near Lovefeast at Fairview last week
Lucas, Kan., and presented by him to | "Vas well attended.
Mr. Rarick. The coin is in good condi- | Ice cream at Mr. E. H. Hoffer’s
tion and was pronounced a genuine { Saturday evening,
Egyptian coin of ancient date by Dr. | jr. Danie] Wolgemuth is putting
Nie ~ f Phils is - = .
Don Nichols of Philadelphia, an author a new roof on his barn.
ity on Egyptian curios.
BIG ANCIENT STATUE IS FOUND

Alexander the Great in Sculpture Un-
earthed in African Town.
Libya, in Africa, again has given an
ancient piece of sculpture to the world.
| At Cyrene, once the principal city of
ancient Cyrenaica, a clossal statue of
Alexander the Great, lacking only a
part of the right forearm, has been
excavated. It is a magnificent marble
copy of the celebrated bronze of Alex-
ander by Lysippus, which is known
only by the copies of it on coins, the
original having been destroyed.
The statue probably was made fifty
or sixty years after the original, in the
third or fourth century before Christ.
It is larger than life and represents
Alexander, entirely nude, standing,
| looking upward, with his right arm
outstretched and his left holding a
| spear, on which he is leaning.


A combination of mirror, comb and
identification card to be carried in a
person's hat has been patented.
a a ——
C S. Frank's Next Sale
On Friday, June 4, at M. A, Spick-
ler’'s Washington House stableg is
{the time and place Mr. C. S. Frank
{will hold his
when he will offer a carload. of extra
fine cows, a few stock bulls, one
extra fine home-
{If in need of stock don’t forget the
date of this sale, Friday, June 4th. 2t

Aside from its |
C., is equipped with |
gh ducts into the box on |
into it |
next live stock sale
Home Health Club
| WEEKLY ARTICLES WRITTEN EX-
| PRESSLY FOR THE MT. JOY
BULLETIN BY DR. DAVID H.
| REEDER OF CHICAGO, ILL,

Disease or Bullets: It has been es-
before the war in
Europe ig over, 30,000,000 men will
be lined up with the most deadly
weapons they can devise for the pur-
{pose and object of Killing one an-
lother, These men are the best
| physical specimens to be found in
countries, It ig al-
and yet it is a
timated that

{their respective
{most unbelievable
fact. these men are killing one an-
|other and the men who can show
[that he is the most daring and ef-
[ficient in killing his fellow man is
|decorated with badges of honor. It
lis said to cost, however, nearly
[$4.000 to kill a man with the wea-
‘pons used. The weaker men, the
| women and children and the crip-
|pled and exhausted men who return
{from the war must pay the $4,000
lin the form of war taxes) and yet
[there are but few, if any, of them
[that personally would be willing to
{pay even $4.00 to have one of the
[citizens of the opposing countries
killed,
In most of the large cities we have
| what we cal] Gunmen, who will kill
la homeless stranger for a few dol-
Now. if we could transport all
|of these to the front, we would not
{be particular which “side” of the
| front. Thirty millions of men seems
[like an almost incomprehensible
{number and we speak of this war as
{lars.
the world’s greatest calamity, and
{vet the number that will be killed
|is small compared to the deaths
|annually by some of the preventable
| diseases that afflict humanity. Just
think of this for a moment. The
| population of the whole earth is
{slightly over 1,900,000,000 which is
lan increase of 140,000,000 over the
| population of 4 years ago. Now, if
| there were some means of killing all
lof the men engaged in the European
{ war. all of them at one stroke, the
population of the earth would still
be 110,000,000 more than it was four
years ago.
The best efforts of the brainiest
men of the world are directed toward
stamping out and overcoming disease
and increasing the longevity of man.
| Laws are in force everywhere that
lare designed to encourage procrea-
tion and make criminals of those
who seek to prevent it,
the present rate of increase of popu-
ilation. standing room for fighting
will ultimately be at a premium and
wars such as the pregent will be
{looked upon by our decendants as a
back yard scrap.
{mere
If man life continued to multiply.
{and it will, animal life must ulti-
mately disappear to make more room
{for man and his machines. As ani-
imal life becomes more rare disease
also wil] become more rare. In time
| we will recognize the fact that only
mentally and morally
the privilege
that privi-
| the physically,
| fit should
of parenthood
be granted
and even
lege will be limited.
deadly than bul-
and but surely
conquering many diseases that were
| thought to be incurable. Disease kills
the and the aged, bullets
(kill the young and strong. In spite
of all and in spite of all
disease the population of the earth
continues and will continue to in-
In time. quality not quantity
Disease is more
lets, we are slowly
weaklings.
the wars
crease.
A number of our neighbors attend- !
ed lovefeast at Chiques on Tuesday.
The funeral of the infant child of
John Sauble at Fairview on Sunday
was fairly wel] attended.
Mr. Parig Koser traded horseg with
|[Mr. Aaron Becker, jr., of Back Run, |
| last week, i
| Mr. Phares Strickler put lightning
[rods on the barn of Mr. Abram Wol-
| zemuth last week,
| Mrs. Allen Hoffer, sr. and son
Samuel. left on Wednesday to spend
the rest of the week in the family of
Mr. Jonas Snavely of L.ebanon county.
Mr. Daniel Wolgemuth and family
entertained on Sunday: Mr. Eli Gib-
ble and family, Ms. and Mrs. Henry
Gibble and wife and Mr. Harry
Shenk and family of Sporting Hill;
Mr. Jacob Henny and family. of
Naumanstown. and Mr. John. Wolge-
muth and family of Union Square.
i
k Ralph Ig an Artist
Mr, Ralph F. Eshleman hag just
completed a course in sign painting
and card writing under Mr, C. H.
Tucker, the well known sign man
of Lancaster. He will be pleased to’
do work of that kind.
— el Ae
TAX NOTICE
The duplicate for the 1915 person-
al and county taxes are in my hands.
| An abatement of 5 per cent will he
| allowed if paid on or before June 1st
| 1915. Nothing off after that date. |
At T M. BRENEMAN, Col. !
A A ti i
Advertise In the Mt. Joy Bulletin
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ADVERTISE

“Nothing Succeeds Like
Sueeess” and a neat and
truthful advertisement in
a paper that reaches the
people is the key that un-
locks the door. Nuf said.
Try the
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BULLE]
MOUNT J0F
|
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