aer- 1sht fer- fer- hich ols~ rafa htie uff- hva, cher des naen Now ouse rl is, 10n8- den . ihn aman Ich's load breef beiza daets mous town, Har- prin- s of a was )f the vision These have thletie 7ill be rter is ‘entral in and school caster wv fleld r f rain ock on Eliza- rapidly, short e inun- washed muddy at Lan- ing the rwards. )GETIELD N J From photo i o PAGE SEVEN = Atlantic City, Cape May | Wildwood, Ocean City Anglesea | SATURDAY Avalon Sea Isle City | 16-DAYS TRIPS| Stone Harbor : July 31, August 14 and 28, and September 4 EXCURSION TICKETS GOOD ON ALL REGULAR TRAINS TO SEASHORE DES- | TINATION ON DATE OF EXCURSION. $4.55 ROUND TRIP $4.30 ROUND TRIP VIA DELAWARE RIVER BRIDGE VIA MARKET ST. WHARF From Mt, Joy STOP-OVER ALLOWED AT PHILADELPHIA ATLANTIC CITY SUNDAY ONE-DAY EXCURSIONE August 1, 15 and 29 ROUND $2.75 TRIP BY SPECIAL THROUGH TRAIN Leaving Mt. Joy, 6:51 AL M. Returning, leaves Atlantic City (80. Carolina Ave. Sta, 7:05 p. m. Tickets Good Only on Special Train OCEAN GROVE EXCURSION, AUGUST 26 For full information consult handbiils or nearest Ticket Agent, Pennsylvania Railroad ) Are You Undecided where to buy your bill of Luamber? If so, all you have to do is to look at the prices we are quoting for ‘HIGH GRADE LUMBER as well as everything that is ineluded in building, for interior or exterior work, from the Timber i m your . | foundation to the Shingles om your roof. B S. MOORE Dealer in Coal, Lumber, Grain FEED, HAY, STRAW, SLATE, SALT, CEMENT AND FERTILIZER A'large stock of Feed constantly on hand. Highest cash price paid for grain Estimates of Lumber and Mill Work a Specialty FLORIN, PENNA. OOOOO0COO0O000000000OOODDLONINANNRANNNNAAANRANAINAN To Our Subscribers HERE have been many changes made in RURAL DELIVERY ROUTES, July 1. send in their new address, and also the old address. effective We would kindly ask our patrons to We will be unable to know what individual changes have been made owing to the complicated rearrange- ments of various routes over entire Northern Lan- A , caster County BOOOOOOOOOOOO0000000000OOO00000O0000000000000DD0000 When You Put up Jell simply pour a coating of melted Parowax (pure, refined paraf- fine) over the contents of each glass. This does away with old-fashioned tying and cover- ing with tin lids. Four big cakes of Parowax, 10 cents, everywhere. The Atlantic Refining Company & sjeofeefesfecfocfoctociesforerterforocforfesects Automobile Men Listen i We have opened a firstclass Garage and Repair Shop in the M. B. Hiestand Builfing on Marietia Street, Mount Joy, where we are prepared to do All Kinds of Repair Work Rebuilding, Repainting, Remodeling " Ete. All work must be satisfactory and you will find our charges very reasanable, WE CARRY A COMPLETE LINE OF FORD PARTS. \ AGENTS FOR THE WELL KNOWN FIRESTONE TIRES : We will be pleased to have you give us a trial SNYDER & METZIL ER MARIETTA ST, MOUNT JOY, PA. wfoeforteeforfectodrfedednirdroldib ode didi Pdi tt tt ddddd . da “3 HICHESTER SPILLS | ET) aliet Ack ro apgeti 2 Pils in d and Gold ny . LE spepsia Tablets |. boxes, sealed with Blue Rishon. Take no other. Bay gelieve Your Indigestion \W. GARBER + Bugis. Ask for OIL0 tl TER S D1 AOND RAND PILLS, for 25 yearsknown as Best, Safest; Always Reliable + SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE Read the Bulletin (+ Mammoth Auditorium THE BULLETIN, MT. JOY, PA. and yearly donations from generous friends. Its summer schools and read- ing courses are also furnished at actual low cost figures. Twenty thousand “friendly folks” tauqua. They come from all the states of the Union. They come from China and Japan, from South America and from Europe, where Chautaugua, IN. Y., has the reputation of an ‘American Mecca.” Chautauqua Life Is “Different.” One can be as quiet at Chautauqua as one chooses or as busy all day long. The long program of lectures by really great men, the diversity of the musical program and the platform entertain- ments by world celebrated artists will BISHOP JOHN H. VINCENT. The venerable founder of big summer as- sembly at Chautauqua, N. Y., whose fore- sight, humanity and energy developed an idea which has molded the national life. satisfy the desires of every type of mind. The daily offering of outdoor sports, such as golf and tennis and roque, bathing and boating of all kinds, track events, tramping and riding and driving, give free play for those in- clined to the athletic. The work of the summer 8chools occupies 2,400 adult students and runs the gamut from bas- i ketry to music through 300 separate eourses under the best available teach- ars. find many worth while conferences and lecture courses. America’s Greatest Forum. Chautauquans—and there are mil- Hons of them—have a purpose in life. The ideal, which John H. Vincent, the founder, so sturdily cultivated in his people, was the balanced life, a strong body with a strong mind and a spir- known Rctrasn Edith Ww ynne Matthison, will give « series of recitals from his written plays, “The Servant In the House,” “The Terrible Meek,” etc. Special addresses will also be given by Thomas Mott Osborne, warden of Sing Sing penitentiary, noted for his advanced prison methods; Hamilton Wright Mabie, literary editor of Out- look Magazine; Harold J. Howland, associate e of Independent Maga- 11701 zine; Rabbi Stephen S. Wise of New York, Amos P. Wilder, Dr. Katharine B. Davis, New York’s commissioner of correction, and Superintendent William M. Davidson of the Pittsburgh public schools. The Chautauqua Players, under the lead of M. Benedict Papot, “the lead- ing amateur actor in America,” will | present a series of well known plays, i one each week. Music will be repre- | sented by the Chautauqua chorus of | 500, under Mr. Hallam, and by the fa-| mous Russian Symphony Orchestra, | with William Wade Hinshaw of the Metropolitan Opera Company and | 3 Ernest Hutcheson, noted pianist, as so- loists. The Religious Features. will be in the hands of Dean Shafler Mathews, president of the Federal Council of Churches and head of the Chicago Theological School at the Uni-! versity of Chicago. He has just re- turned from a special mission to Japan in the interests of international peace. Such figures as Dr. Frank W. Gunsau- lus, president of Armour Institute; Bishop Charles D. Williams, Protestant | Episcopal bishop of Michigan; Bishop John H. Vincent, chancellor of Chau- | Those with the religious bent will The religious features of the program | This auditorium seats Six presidents of the United States have spoken on this platform. The leaders in American life and thoughg /. have here found their most responsive audiences. commodate 7,500. Its open air sides afford perfect ventilation and comfort during the hottest days. 5,300 people comfortably and will fil. Chautauqua Inshiion. World Famous For make an average population at Chau | Popular Resort Combines Fishing and Philosophy, Recreation | and Religion, Outdoor | Forty Years Sports and Inspiration. | ALL ROUND PROGRAM FOR 20,000 “FRIENDLY FOLKS.” itual consciousness of life and its pur- | Doses which would give direction to | each individual. Nowhere in the world can so many | great minds be met with in the same | short space of time as at Chautauqua during the huge sixty-day program, | which occupies the summer season | | through July and August. Without exception the greatest statesmen, the best known autho.s, the wisest educa- | tors, the foremost politicians, the most | famous travelers and the most active propagandists have all found a place | there and a friendly welcome to Chau- tauqua’s platform. The great ami hitheater, which seats 5,300 people cot.ifortably and can ac- | commodate 7,500, has been the scene | of many an important address dealing | with the greatest issues of the day. Six presidents of the United States | have graced this platform and praised | the institution as the great world’s fo- | rum that it is. | The acoustics of this huge outdoor amphitheater are well known to speak- ers of every nationality. The open: sides give perfect ventilation and oe! fort during even the hottest days of the year. Five years ago a magnifl- | cent Massey organ, the gift of the manufacturer and worth at least $30,- 000, was installed. To have been a member of this Chautauqua audience is to have en- Joyed a tremendous privilege. To have been a speaker on this greatest of the world’s public forums is a distinction | which thousands covet and but a com- parative few enjoy. Expensive “Talent.” More money is spent on “talent” for Chautauqua’s eight week program than would be suspected by the 50,000 peo- ple who get its full benefits for the | small gate fee of $8 per season. The budget runs into the tens of thousands. | But the very best is thereby obtained— statesmen fresh from their duties at Washington or the various state capi- tals, authorities on social and profes- sional lines from the big universities, ! musicians just off tour, preachers whose names are household words and entertainers of the highest grade. Very often there are forty events or more scheduled daily. And at least 120 lectures and 200 popular concerts are given during the period, so that every type of mind and individual taste may find something of information, educa- tion or inspiration to carry home for the, coming year. Chautauqua life brings speakers and audience close together with its air of comfort and informality. WORLD'S on \EATEST PUBLIC PORU--SHAUTAUGA, N.Y. Sixty Day Assembly Will Have Big Speakers and Mammoth Pregram. The leaders in American life and thought have always found the Chau- tauqua platform hospitably open to them, and there have been very few of the nation's great statesmen, au- thors, educators, travelers and propa- gandists who have not appeared before Chautauqua assembly at some time during the last forty years. This coming season a noted and va- ried array of such talent is offered: Mary Antin, world famous as a young Jewish author and champion of the immigrant, will lecture. KE. J. Ward, Wisconsin's state adviser on | eivic development, will direct a week's work on “Community Service.” Henry Turner Bailey, America’s greatest ex- ponent of art in every day life, just returned from his task of awarding | prizes at the Panama-Pacific Exposi- tion, will "spend the summe:. at Chau | | tauqua. Mrs. Percy §. Pennybacker, presi- | { dent of the General Federation of Women’s Clubs, will give general ad- | dresses and also conduct special ex- ! ereises for her constituency. Charles Rann Kennedy and his wife, the well , Power In the Present Military Crisis?” | Dr. Frank Gunsaulus, Dr. OR over forty years Chautauqua | Institution on the Lake, at Chautauqua, N. Y., has been | world famous as a summer re | sort, both for its educational features, | which have been the pattern for all! the home reading clubs, correspondence | schools and the summer schools now connected with every great university, and for its general all round summer | life. | Nowhere in the world can so extensive a program of lectures and concerts,’ dramatic entertainments, conferences of nation wide importance and plat- | form entertainment be obtained, along with the equal of its bathing beaches, | the twenty mile lake for boating, the golf course, fast roque and tennis courts, ball ground and a score of other athletic games and outdoor sports. Not a Commercial Enterprise. But Chautauqua Institution is not a commercial enterprise, as many sup pose. It is incorporated as an educa- tional and philanthropic project. The | income is figured on actual cost and is! | supplemented by endowment funds tauqua; Bishop Francis J. McConnell of Denver and Dr. Samuel B. MeCor- ' mick, University of Pittsburgh, will also be on the program for a series of talks. Special weeks this summer will be devoted to particularly live topies. | | Justice and the courts will be an open | question for some 500 lawyers to wran- gle over, under the leadership of Jus- tice William IL. Ransom of New York City’s city court. George W. Alger will be featured with his series of lectures, based on matter recently published in the World’s Work Magazine. And Dr. Katharine Bement Davis, New York | city commissioner of correction, will | gpeak on ‘Prison Reform.” Temperance week will bring a " tive | discussion of the national prohibition campaign. Ex-Governor Malcolm R. | Patterson of Tennessee will tell “Why I Changed Front on the Liquor Ques- tion,” and Hon. J. Denny O'Neil of Pittsburgh will speak on “Prohibition ! From the Business Man’s Point of View.” Many other prohibition and temperance speakers will attend, and Willlam Jennings Bryan has indicated his desire to be present. Week of the Great War. A week devoted to a study of the “War of Eleven Nations In Europe” will find several speakers of authority who are just back from the front. Dr. Lincoln Wirt, special representative for the World Peace Foundation and the Boston Herald, will ret to make his first public report a iutauqua Norman Angell, whose ks showing the logical fallacy of w ‘ern ideas as to its ne vy, will ex pound his widely quoted views. Dr Herbert Adams Gibb ons, speci er for the New York Heral thor of two recent books « “Changes In Europe,” w summer classes and lecture ject. Director Arthur Bestor scribe Europe's war lords from cent intimate studies of their person alities, and Sanford Griffith, who has just returned from Belgium, where he | served as “special field investigator,” | will describe the horrors of war and life at the front as he saw it Community affairs will be discussed | in every possible connection during a | week in which sessions will be led by Mr. BE. J. Ward, Wisconsin's state ad- viser on civic improvements and the like. Social centers in the city and public school centers in the country will be particularly featured. Inter- nationalism and Christianity will be the. final week, and the theme will be “What Is the Duty of Christianity asa upset moa es tl writ wit! ‘onduct the sub will de his re Charles RE, Jefferson, ' Bishop James W. Bashford, Dr. Lemuel C. Bapnes, Hon. Amos P. Wilder and Hon. John Lind, who was President Wilson's personal represen- tative in Mexico, will be among the speakers. SHUI AANA pe AAEEA EEE EERIE Ll hb] AR LINENS in N are troubled with heartburn, gases and | a distressed feeling after eating takea | before and after each meal and-you will obtain prompt relief. Sold only by us,250 | Wednesday, August 18, 1915. NAAN ee eae NER WHERE CAR STOPAND TH CPD SHOP EY Shrewd Housewives Will Hurry to Secure Their Wants From This August BlanKet Sale { Commencing Saturday, Aug. 21 For One Week Only Many women have asked us if they could save any money by purchasing their winter blankets early. Our new blankets had not then arrived, but now they are here, and a finer lot of blankets would be hard to find. For this one week, we have marked special prices on several lots of blankets. These re- ductions will mean great savings to those women who anticipate their winter needs during this sale. Hotel and Boarding House Keepers would do lect from these offerings. $1.00 Cotton blankets, 85¢ pr. In double bed size, tan col- or only. Bound with neat mohair binding, $1.25 Cotton Bed Blankets, 98c pr. Full size. a neat mohair binding, $1.50 Cotton Blankets at $1.25 pr. In grey, tan or white. $250 Fancy Plaid Blankets, $1.89 pr. Large size. In grey and white, blue and white, pink and white and tan and white plaids. At $2.00 we offer blankets that we consider the greatest value ever offered. They are full size and weigh 43% lbs, In either grey or white, with colored horgers. Mohair binding, same color as the borders. = V1 } At $2.50—Blankets of part wool, in grey colored borders. Double bed size. At $3.00—Blankets of half wool, weighing 53 bs. _Full size in grey only. En At $350—White Wool Blankets, that are Amo all-wool, and worth at least a dollar more. Have blue and pink bor ders, bound with pretty mohair binding. At$5 and $10 we are showing the finest display of the bet- ter grade Blankets in part wool and all wool, that we have ev- er shown. They are here in white, greys and fancy plaids. MONEY-SAVING PRICES ON BED SPREADS At $1.00 we offer the finest Bed Spread that we have ever offered at this price, You must see it to appreciate this fact. $2.50 Satin Marseilles Bed Spreads at $1.98 each. Hand- some patterns and of a most desirable weight, A splendid -’ spread at this little price. $4.50 Satin Marseilles Bed Spreads see these spreads at this reduced price, Colored Bed Spreads, in navy, brown, light blue and pink " $1.00, $1.50 and $2.00 q or ~ 10c Bleached Shaker Flannel at 8c yr, 32 inches wide and J extra heavy at this price. : Bleached Shaker Flannel, 5¢ yd. 27 limited. Ready-MadeSheets, Filiow Cases and Bolster Cases Bleached Sheets at 29¢, 55¢, 59¢, 62ic, 75¢ and 80c Bleached Pillow Cases at 10c, 123c, 15¢c, 17¢c and 20c — Bleached Bolster Pillows at 22¢, 30c and 33c. Hemstitched at 43c, 48¢c and 50c Bleached Hemstitched Pillow Cases at 17c, 22c and 25¢ Bleached Sheeting, full width at 23¢, 25¢, 28¢ and 83¢ Pillow case Muslin at 11c, 13¢, 15¢ and 18c yd. - well to se- Bound with Large enough for any bed. and white, with ‘at $3.00. Don’t fail to inches wide. Quantity RURINRINRINANINNN ART If You | Dycoopsia | °F = Drag Semi-Ty & Tablet Our Ads Bring Results—Try i. Our Ads Bring Results—Try ££ E. W. Garber. Our Ads Bring Results—Try fit. Subscribe for tne Mt. Joy Bulletin.’ Wasn't From Missouri It wasn’t a Missouri editor but a| printer's devi] who was geing taru his first experience on “making up” forms. The paper wag late and the boy got the galleys mixed. The first part of the pecunious citizen in the forms and of type came off a galley describing a recent fire. It read like this: “The pall bearers lowered the body to the grave and ag it was consigned to the flames there were few if any regrets for the old an eyesore to the town for years. Of course there wag individual loss, but obituary notice ef a had been dumped | the néxt handful! wreck had been! that wag fully covered by in- {surance.” The widow thinks the | editor wrote the obituary that way because the lamented partner of her |joys and sorrows owed him five | years subscription, re ee AD CI ee Believe in Good Roads, Too The anrual report of Hom. A. S. Kreider, president of the Mt. Gretna Campmeeting Association, was pre- sented at a meeting of the Associa- tion on Monday. The report shows that over $10,000 was handled by the Assoeiation in the past year and that $1,000 was expended to better roadways and water courses. ——— | Picnic a Big Success | The combined Sunday schools of | Maytown held a picnic at Chickies | Park last Wednesday, It was the { largest outing held this season and { amusements were provided for every-| body. Automobilas, hay ladder wag- oms and other conveyances were used to bring tka people from ¥ay- town: to Marietta, where special cars were taken for the park. | = —— ER —— who are proud of good calculators. "Not all women theig figures are J is to announce that B.S. NEWCOMER MOUNT JOY. PENNA. 2. > wiil supply motor car = ~ 14x €r1s$ Of tls Communit “1 + A w SBT A YD ( ii & WD LN 8% Automobile and Motorcycle Tires, Tubes and Accessories lemand for An ever grow Ng ¢ Sry su Firestones in this locality and every locality where quality 1s appreciated has made it necessary to establish headquarters here. Last year the Tirests! —already the largest e plant in the world—was still furtl enlarged. Output increased 78% meet the demand. And the factory and the demand are still growing. 10 Firestone Net Prices te Car Owners Case | Round Tread | Non-Skid | 1 $1055 Grey __ ube Case 39.80 51,50 6.75 | 38x5%% | 46.00 Call at Firestone Headquarters Above for Biggest Tire Value Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. “America’s Largest Exclusive Tire and Rim Makers” Akron, Ohio—Branches and Dealers Everywhere
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers