The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, December 08, 1915, Image 8

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    


























 





WL
La
| Take Notice!
ACOOSOONODGOOOOODLILOIIG
IRIIOIOOOOLLOLOOLOO00
Do You
eed These?
you often have toothache
fp package of Chandler's
»
3
OOOO
Lhd
fe gum or drops on
all you need to re-
dyspepsia is a box
s and Dyspepsia tab-
PES Blk to Chandler, the
Druggist about it. Relief will
come to you in two minutes
by the clock.

Stop that cough before it
becomes chronic. Drop into
Chandlers Pharmacy and geta
bottle of his celebrated cough
syrup or a box of Dr. Agnew’s
cold and la gripp tablets. They
are fine.
RA IOO000000Y
Go to Chandler's for Bliss
Native Herbs Also Porter's
Pain King Liniment.
CHANDLER'S
DRUG STOR™=
MOUNT JOY, PA.
020000C00000000OO00OOOOOOCAOOOOOOOOOOOOO0OOODOOO0O0O0
LIOULOOOOO00 ES
The Undersignea Wish to inform the
Public that They are Prepared to de
Practical Horse Shoeing
At Jno. Bombach’s Stand, Mt. Joy
Special attention given to all work
24 diseases of the feet promptly at
Jnded to. Your Work Solicited
BOMBACH & SHANK
eneral Blacksmiths and Horse-Shoers
MOUNT JOY. PENNA
RRIN INNING IONS
MGENTRAL
it
Top.













J. B®
Choice Wines & Liquors
At The Bar.
Aso Choice Oysters
Ham, Sweitzer
ans merger SAI0WICHES
MOURT JOY -:- PENNA.
NN NNN NNN NN www




0000000000000
We are Always Prepared to serve
OO
©)
s
: Pure
Spring
Water
DEN
ICE:
IN ANY QUANTITY at ery
Moderate Charges.
MOO@@E
)
3
®
©
©
3 : or
Don’t fail to see us hefore ac- =
© ing your order this year. &



@
Mount Joy, Penna. ,
©0000
WEAK, SORE LUNGS
Restored To Health By Vinol
Camden, N.J.—““I had a deep seated
eough, was run-down, and my lungs were
weak and sore. I had tried everything
suggested without help. One eve-
ping I read about Vinol and decided
to try it. Soon I noticed an improve-
ment. I kepton taking it and today I
am a well man. The soreness is all
gone from my lungs, I do not have any
cough and have gained fifteen pounds.
= FRANK HILLMAN. .
We guarantee Vinol for chronic
eoughs, colds and bronchitis and for all
weak, run-down conditions.
W. D. CHANDLER & CO.
DRUGGIST
MOUNT JOY, PENNA.
Q J HN. Stauffer & Bro.
©
RALPH F. ESHLEMAN
Show Card Writer
Paasche Air Brush Used
Prices Reasonablg
West Donegal St. MOUNT JOY, PA |
“] Don’t Feel Good”
That is what a lot of people tell us.
Usually theirbowels only need cleansing.
Rexall Grdenlien.
will do the trick and make you feel fine.
We know this positively. Take one
tonight. Sold only by us, 10 cents.
E. W. Garber.
HICHESTER S PILLS
+ your Druggist for
= hl Diamond It











X her. Buy of
fly Vrugeist. Ask for CHICHESTER 8
DIAMOND BRAND PIL
years known as Best, Safest, A

 




OOOO OO OCH NNNNN
nounc
the profanity.
ing from
ing lea
the tradesunion.
 


/


THE BULLETIN, MT. JOY, PA.
aE
yoo

 
ARE WELL
oD ‘ON CATS".

Wednesday, December 8, 1915.
 










T AM AN EXPERT IX



LING THEM ! I HA





GE WI
H#




 








COPYRIGHT IIE. NATIONAL CARTOON SERVICE COP





{NOT
| [HE RE ARE YOUR OLD PESKY \[~
| lMUTS, YOU BETTER TRAIN THEM J x
TO GO AFTER py PoC
AYFUL KITTY.


 

 




 


ODD BITS OF NEWS
Facts Taken From Our Many Ex-
changes Since Last Week
San Francisco, Cal.—Thomas
Thornton, a carpenter, nailed his
feet to the floor in church in an ef-
fort at self crucifixion. Thornton
doesn’t feel any pain because, he .
says, he has the faith. Physicians
say he is a religious fanatic, and his
diseased brain makeg him immune
from pain
Clinton, Mo.—Delmar Gentry and
wife have the smallest baby ever|
born in Missouri, At birth it weighed |
16 ounces, and was placed in a
quart cup. At two weeks old, it
measured 12 inches in height. An
ordinary band ring will slip over
the hand of the baby and up to its
shoulder. It is healthy and thriving.
Hammond, Ind.—Two minutes be-
fore Riley Lane died, a noise was
heard at the door, and when opened
Dobbins, Lane's old horse, walked
into the room and stocd at the bed-
side until hig master died.
New York, N. Y—Fred Kattmerer
will be plain Fred Barton after this
week. He explained to the court,
when appealing for a change of
name, that he was in business in
China, and that the Chinese char-
acter
spelling his name were pro-
da-me., He objected to

London, Eng—Lord Cha rlemont,
eighth viscount of the Irish noble

fami of his name, is to join the
Tinplaters’ union. He has been
working in a munition factory earn.


a week, and, hav-
trade, wants to join
en A —— ee
Nation-Wide Preaching Mission
No, we have not forgotten it!
Dates and plans will be published in
season. Meanwhile, as it is a Gos-
pel Mission purely for the quicken-
ing of the religious lives of Chris-
tian people and the conversion of
those who have not taken a stand—
all Christian persons, whether of
the Episcopal persuasion or other-
wise, are asked and urged to pray
for the coming of the Kingdom of
God.
el A
We Furnish Them
We have arranged with one of the
largest manfacturers in the United
States to supply any thing in the
line of lead, slate, copying pencils,
with or without erasers. also many
designs in pen holders, with any
thing printed therson you wish, at
prices that will astonish you. They
are a crackerjack sdverising nov
|elty and we wil be pleased to show
| samples and quote prices to any one
interested
re A A
Visited Schouclg
Last Monday morning, State High
ector, C. D. Koch, visited
the Marietta school, and in the af-
ternoon he
Central High school. At both places
| he was well pleased with the work-
ings an general condition of the
schools.

ted the Maytown
———
President Wilson’s plan to enlist!
a volunteer army to defend the na-
tion is just another way to make
the nation fit for service which 1t
should require in return for the
privileges of citizenship.
/
ters.” This, he
i!
THE FARMER AND HIS AUTO
This Article Taken From an Ex-
change Bears Reproduction
An automobile salesman finds that |
the gurest recorder of the financial]
ation in the country is the brisk-|vaij
ness of the sale of automobiles. He
old in the vicinity of Quincy, Ill, ' fac

one hundred cars of a $750 make
and just half of them went to farm-

“bumper crops” are
turer of automobiles
rous
 

But for that matter the prosy
farmer makeg all kinds of manufac-


tories hum. He is a great consumer
of necessaries at all times and of
luxuries when he can afford them.
When he ig flush he buys more and *
better clothes, more pianog and car-
pets, pictures to adorn his home,
smokes more and better cigars and
chews the best tobacco, he travels
more, buys more fertilizers and
finer equipages, purchases better
farm stock of all kinds, enlarges his
buildings, and in so doing buys
plenty of steel and cement, and,
finally, becomes an owner of an au-
tomobile for both pleasure and
business. Turn which way you may,
to the railroad, the wholesale dealer
in everything and the manufacturer, |
and they will all tel] you that their
prosperity is simply a matter de-
pending upon the success and sur-
plus cash of the farmer.
But to come back to the automo-
bile. There never was a time when
the farmer did not take a pride in (that is to say, the money which the
his means of locomotion and trans-|{farmer receives for his year’s work
portation. He liked to drive a good | after the interest on his investment
deducted—was only $240, |
while on farms of over 160 acres the
average was $1,575.
other figures which convey the same
horse in his carriage or ride one.|has been
At church he tried to exhibit the
finest looking vehicle and on the
road he sought to own a team that
could pull the biggest load and
never prove ‘false.” So now it is
no wonder he is taking kindly to
the new motive power, the automo-
bile, and his ownership of one is
more common than among agricul
turists the world over. He is not as
scientific a tiller of the soil as the
European, but he hag per capita
more acres and does business on a
large scale, and so is richer.
When the American farmer be-
comes a scientific agriculturist there
are not many luxuries in the market
he will not be able to buy and pay
spot cash for. Hence the basis of
our great wealth and why we are
envied and hated.
rossi
Men’s Meeting
The Men’s Christian Federation
will resume their monthly meetings
beginning with Dec, 12, at 2:30.
This meeting will be held in the
resbyterian Church. Prof. H. M. J.
1e, of Franklin & Marshal] col-
lege, has been engaged for this, the
beginning of the winter meetings.
To those who have been so fortun-
ate as to hear the speaker no word
of encouragement to be present is
necessary. To those who have nev-
had the privilege we remark it
ill be your loss if you fail to be
present.
Sunday afternoon, Dee. 182, at 2:30
in the Presbyterian Church.
a ——



A long sentence doesn’t worry a
reader as much as it does a criminal
es ———-——
The Pessimist believes that the
imilk in the cocanut is watered.
PROFIT IN LARGE FARMS

Indicates That Incomes Usu-
ally Vary Directly With the
Sizes of Farms


number of acres farmed, accord-
, gives an idea of |in
in the course of a survey which has
recently been made by the U. S. De-
partment of Agriculture of a portion
of Chester county,
In the territory surveyed, farms of |
worth of ma-|
chinery on an average, as compared |
with less than $9 worth on farms of
acres and over.
farms needed one horse for every 9
with one horse
for more than 17 acres on the larger
In gpite of this increased
The small-sized
well equipped
labor-saving machinery.
Less Profit on Small
ssofefongeoieorieofoofseionioofeorfoofeerfonfosfoerieofofotent

From these and

farm, carrying on al

under a fixed
herent in itg size. |
This relation of the size of the]
farm to the opportunity for profit is |
declareq in the bulletin glready men-
vital interest,
cause of the notion which so widely |
ideal of American |

prevails that the
schemes are hased on thig idea.
farms are difficult to make success-
exceptional man who is equal to the
They must always be devoted
to the most intensive types of farm-
products of most
of intensive farming fluctuate great-
price, so that the
very insecure,
ger ig greatly magnified if
from market,
products do not
transportation charges
vicinity of the better markets these |
only in local-| gs,
ities where they have disinet advan-
tages for the particular type of farm-
they follow.”
re mee all A rennin

fashioned foot ball player who used
to have Paderewski hair?
I ———— ———

Anyway doctors keep lots of pec-|
ple from having money to lose on a
fofendeofesfoniong- Fosonfoofoefrfoofeferionde]
i
op
FORD HAS A PEACE PLAN
Has Sailed With Party for Europe
to Stop the War
Henry Ford, the auto manufactur-
pPré- er of Detroit has chartered the
the average American farm, |
Scandinavian-American liner Oscar
IT for $32,000 and sailed with a big
party for Europe to stop the war, He
says: ‘“The time has come to say,
‘Cease firing’? “We are going to
try to get them out of their trenches
and back to their homes by Christ-
mas Day. I intend to try to erush
militarism. I am eager to go and I
would go even if I knew that the
vessel might be torpedoed outside
the Hook. I do not consider danger.
{I don’t think I have ever been
{afraid.”
length in a bul-|
| vited to accompany the party of
| pacifists but he declined.
Governor Brumbaugh had been in-
pp.
There’s many a low trick pulled
off on the high seas.
a
Constantine must be Greek or Hen
Pecked.
NEW LICENSES
IN DEMAND

Large Number Have Already Been
Granted by the
Department
Highway Department,
issuing the 1916
tags, is receiving
+ the new licenses.
The department will enforce the law |
carrying of new li-
censes, starting with the first day
arrests will be
Commissioner
Cunningham if the law is violated.
to facilitate the distribu-
tags, thousands
are being sent out to the notaries of
4,003 notaries
public have applied for tags and to
each hag been sent 125.
Brumbaugh has been
given the first tag again while num-
ber four ig allotted to Highway Com-
missioner Cunningham. Former Gov-
ernor Tener got No. 10. Frank Bell,
of Harrisburg,
{the twelfth tag.
ee ee eee A eee
again awarded
Advertise in the Mt. Joy Bulletin.



Sedgorieefeoforfesferforfecdosfefesienfesfonortofosfosforfurfecfosfestofonfesgortecfonfoesfosfetorforfesfocfofosfoogesfootsofunfonfocfonfecfects
Christmas Gifts at

Chandlers


Valuable suggestions and a delightful assortment of gifts at
wonderfully reasonable prices, Suitable gifts for Mother or Maid.
Suitable presents for men and boys.
friends and appropriate presents for the
Remembrances for your




Je ogass ode
ET



’




address on the
o'clock om
store before 8 o'clock P. M., with name
package. Name of winners will be given
Christmas Day. Start now. be Coupons given with every cash
purchase for anything we have to sell,

Chandler's Drug [Store
West Main Street,
ofestoofestocfosiooforforoofocfusforfosforforforfete
Mount By

one.” Make



ARR A SANTA TES PI NN RI CR A RR fe ve vie rie vie npenienienla viento niente necks




ORPHAN’S COURT SALE OF REAL
ESTATE
ON SATURDAY, DECEMBER 11,
1915, by virtue of an order of the
vurphans’ Court of Lancaster County,
the undersigned administrator of the
estate of Frederick Shultz, late of
the Borough of Mount Joy, County
of Lancaster, Pa., deceased, will ex-
pose to public sale on the premises
the following described real estate:
All that certain lot or piece of land
|situated on the south side of the
| Marietta Turnpike Road in the
{Borough of Mount Joy, containing im
(front on said turnpike 223 feet, more
or less, and extending southwardly
lalong its western line 144 feet;
thence extending eastwardly 2883
feet; thence extending northwardly
along its eastern boundary line 308
feet to the place of beginning. Ade
joining property of John Evans and
the Estate of Henry Garber ou. thg
east, of Gabriel Moyer on the south,
and property of Lizzie Shultz on the
west, on which said premises is
erected a FRAME STABLE AND
CHICKEN HOUSE.
This property will positively be
sold to close out the settlement of
the estate.
Sale to be held on the premises in
Mount Joy Borough on Saturday,
December 11, 1915, at 3 o'clock P.
M., when terms and conditions will
be made known by the undersigned.
JOHN B, SHULTZ,
Administrator of the estate of
Frederick Shultz, deceased.
C. S. Frank, Auct.
B. Frank Kready, Atty.

On the same date, December 11,
1915, at one o’clock P. M., on the
premises above mentioned, there
will be sold the ollowing personal
property belonging to the said es-
tate:
Gasoline engine, (1% Horse
Power); bone cutter, grind stone,
belting, pulleys, spraying machine,
lathe, 20 feet hose, carpenter ybench,
fine lot of carpenter tools, lot of
boards, brooder, cultivator, corm
|sheller, tobacco lath, egg crates,
loose lumber, horse collar, harness,

Mt. Joy Township, Lancaster (
ty, Pa, deceased.
estate having been granted
undersigned, all persong fi
(thereto are requested to makd
| diate payment, ang thos
{claims or demands agains
will present them withouf
| settlement to the undersj
ing in Mount Joy, Peps
W. M. Hollowbush
ol nl selections now. Goods reserved delivery if you % traces and sundry other articles.
* desire. * JOHN B. SHULTZ,
= Administrator of the estate of
b CANDIES PERFUMES % | Frederick Shultz, deceased.
SOAPS POCKET BOOKS 4 |S. B. Kiefer, Clerk.
* THERMOS BOTTLES BOX PAPER 3 EXECUTOR’'S NOTICE
3 HOT WATER BOTTLES HAIR BRUSHES | Estate of Martin S. Bowman late
. % of Mount Joy Borough, Lancaster
. FOUNTAIN PENS 3% |County, Penna., deceased.
. CIGARS SAFETY RAZORS & | Letters Testamentary on said es-
A % [tate having been granted to the
. POST CARDS % |undersigned, al] persons indebted
BIBLES TALCUM POWDER os | thereto are requested to male inn
x % mediate payment, and those having
4 HAIR BRUSHES & claims or demands against the same
A MANICURE SETS o (will present them without delay for
* % |settlement to the undersigned, re-
¥ & siding in Mount Joy.
5 . a ANNA G. BOWMAN,
ge o% Executrix.
2 r™~ = % | B. Frank Kready, Atty. dec 1-6t
* No extra cost to you. A 10-b, box of Choice candies to the ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE
% one collecting the greatest number of Coupons 2nd a $1.00 box to %| Estate of Frederick Shultz, late of
% the second highest. The second box contains a silver spcor. % | Mount Joy Borough, Lancaster Co.,
% ; : 2% : Letters of Administration on said
oo We give a coupor with every 5c cash purchase at oar store 3 estate having been granted to the
% between now and Christmas. | undersigned, all persons indebted
% 3 | thereto are requested to make im-
KS Double Coupons—We will give two every bc | nielliate payment; and those having
+ purchase our Candy and Tollet eounter. Don’t forget this. % | claims or demands against the same
% Pp at our Candy and Bot % will present them without delay for
x KEEP THIS AD.—Place it in your package. It will be count- °% |Settlement to the undersigned.
* ed as 100 Coupons. Only one circular or ad allowed in a pack- * JOHN B. SHULTZ, Administrator,
* age. Come and gel vous friends. to. cum closes Dec + 320 N. Franklin St., Lancaster, Pa,
% age ome a & your 8 come, > B. FRANK KREADY, Attorney.
+ 24. Make a package of your coupons them to our
ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE
Eetate of Clara C. Swords, late
Letters of Administration o
DR. JOHN J. }








:

Poe, £
aR
"re

B


BOO 3
| 3













BOON OOODODDOOOODODOC