A TT ISAs r——— ————— | {THE WAR 13 ON a ———————————— PAGE FIVE We Won't Sell You a ail Insurance Policy wn the Hartford Fire Insurance Co, after your tobacco is ruined. Ch * FATA ! FOR PERSONAL HYGIENE | Dissolved in water for douches stops i pelvic catarrh, ulceration and inflame imation. Recommended by Lvdia E. J Pinkham Med. Co, ror ten ears "A healing wonder for nas.l cararrh. jore Hirout ond sore ayes. Economical. as extraordinary cleansing and germicidal le_Free. d 0 5 mai rie te Fos (Tavs, Ss Henry G. Carpenter Read the Mount Joy Bulletin. OPP. POST OFFICE MT. JOY, PA [Subscribe for the Mt. Joy Bulletin after SER 01100 While the Boys are fighting in Mexico, why not start some- thing here. Merch- ants, this is the time for you to advertise and boom your busi- ness. Iry an ad In the Mount Joy gULLETIN Greatest Tire Investigate Agents Wanted Is What Tells BLACK BOB TIRES kept 5000 Miles Guarantee in repair until wom out— FREE OF CHARGE, o McCreary Tire Co., 1316 Callowhall St., Phila. 5 Both Phones—Filbert 30 46, Race 3579. Service and Mileage SE RT 0 1 11 1 O11 1 LL Notice to Farmers CALL CONESTOGA GLUE WORKS Automobile Truck to Have Your Dead Animals Removed Promptly 000 0 OT | PAY FROM $1.00 TO $3.00 PER HEAD ACCORDING TO SIZE AND CONDITIONS Lorenz Lamparter PROPRIETOR nso. LANCASTER, PA ind. Phone No. 847 UE Farniture I wili continue the furniture business on the second floor of the Engle Building, wiik a com plete and uptodate line of all BOOOOOOO00 Wert Main MOUNT A D. H. ENGLE, &very Woman Wants A aE Ta; Advertise in the Mount Joy Bulletin |ecvening at his ul i 5 g 8 made her s a u 4 g . n 8 . E) s ’ 8 n ; Grove, at o | Death wag due to acute dilatation 5 TET TO LO THE BULLETIN, MT. JOY, Mortuary —— (Continued from page 1) ee Mountville, wag struck and in- stantly killed by a train in that place Thursday morning. The boy's parents formerly resided in this place. Daniel Marks Daniel Marks, a farmer well- known Columbian, died Sunday home Pa., from a complication of diseases a month's illness. He was about sixty-seven years of age and is survived by his wife anu one daughter, Mrs. Barbara 8. Moore Mrs. Barbara S. Moore, widow of Michael H. Moore, died at Lancas- ter, Monday from heart trouble. For many yearg shelived in West Hemp- field township. Two children survive Mrs. J. F. Trexler, with whom she home, and Phares 8. Moore, The funeral services will be held on Thursday mogping at 9 o'clock at her late hdBe and at 10:30 o'clock in the Landisville meeting house. Interment will be made in the adjoining cemetery. Mrs. John H. Hewitt Mrs. John H. Hewitt died at her home on Front street, Marietta, = | Monday from a complication of dis- eases. She was born in Marietta and lived there all her life. She was an estimable Christian woman, and a member of St. John’s Episcopal church. She ig survived by her hus- band, one son Ernest, and two daughters, Mrs. Vernon Diets and Miss Theresa Hewitt of Marietta. There are also five grandchildren. John Clark is a brother. Mrs. Mary Keener Mrs. Mary Keener, widow of the in bed at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Harvey Young, near Milton o'clock ths morning. of the heart. Mrs. Keener retired in her usual good health last night. She was sixty-eight and leaves the following children: Mrs. Samuel Shelly of Chiques Hill; Mrs. Harvey young of near Milton Grove and Clayton Keener of near Milton Grove. One sister, Mrs. Isaac vongenecker, of this place, also survives. The funeral will be held on Saturday morning from her late home at 8:45 and at 10 o'clock in in. Ckiques Hill Church. Intermeat in the adjoining casmetery. | Recordings ,, one daughter, Mrs. Mary A. Busch, pari, Happenings late Jacob Keener, was found dead | years of age | PA. German Reformed Church at County, prior Personal Deceased is survived Happenings of the | Sheafferstown, Lebanon ‘to moving here. ‘of 2320 North 12th |phia, and a son, Uriah Stohler Philadel- of (Continued from page 1) | Myerstown, Pa. The funeral will be daughter Muriel, and son John spent | held from her late home on West Sunday with Mr. Quinton Ams. | Donegal street on Friday morning at Packer and family. ten o'clock. Rev, I. B. Johmson of the Misses Grace and Ruth Penny- | Evangelical Church will officiate. Im-|P3CK€r re spending some yme at | terment will be made ip the Mount Mount Gretna. Miss Kathryn Shire !Joy Cemetery. {will join them next week. Mrs. Susan Kapp and two grand- children of Mechanicsburg, are! | spending a few days here with her | {daughter Mrs, H. J. Williams, | © Mrs. S.J. Owens and daughter | Mrs, J.A. Rankin and son Donald of | In the Village . [Baise were week-end guests | of Florin =» the family of A. K. Manning. street, i Mrs H. W. Caley left today for SE———— ker home in Newport News, Va. (Continued from puge 1) after spending several weeks here ' friends. with Mr. and Mrs. Elwood Millard. | Mr. and Mrs, Phares Hoffman of Mrs. Rev. N. A. Barr of Tremont, {Green Tree spent Sunday here With | ame here by auto with a party of] |Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Gantz. friends and was the guest of Mr. and Mr. Albert Fike and family spent M 1 rs. Hom B S and Mon- | Saturday at Manheim, Omer Yah Snfey w93 Mow Irvin Ishler and | Hummelstown, | Pr g | 4a¥- 24 S08 ; oe ~ | The families of Dr. O, G. Longes- Te ° unday! ocxer and P. Frank Schock left last guests of George Shires and wife. {week by auto for the mountains in the J.B. Bonham of Taston, Pa. spent vicinity of Lewistown on 8 ten daw ! Sunday in town. outing 2 | Mr, B. L. Hoffman i | vwas in town Monday. Miss Lucy N. Taylor of Lancas- Mr. Oscar Frial of ter and friend Mr. Smith Sherk of of Marietta, | Raston, Md., spent Sunday here with friends. Shunt tony Vere Setune a | Mr. Mills McKinley spent Son. | S0NIRY guesis of Mr. and Mrs. P. day at ...zabethtown, Mr. W. S. Shigelmyer of Lancas- ter, was seen here Tuesday. ¢ | Messrs. Gantz and Rentzel made | repairs on the Chas. Bennett farm. | Saturday, July 29, the Middletown | |team will cross bats with the Florin team, This is a strong team and a good game can be expected, Gents, i15¢. Ladies free. Game called at 8 o'clock. In the evening a grand (festival and park {llumination will be held in the Florin Park, for the benefit of the Florin base ball club. Ice jcream, cake, chicken corn and {clam soup, and all other delicacies | of the season will be served. A good band will be in attendance. Comme years and has the. honor and dis out and give the boys a lift. g ? tinction of schooling such men as - Mt. Pleasant, Jim Thorpe and Market Report others, Mr. Weber, when a resident Wednesday market attracted the (Of this town twenty-six years ago, usual crowd. The following prices |¥ae employed with the Star Steam prevailed: Butter, 35¢ Ib.; Eggs, 24c Heater Company here. He I¥ now doz; Onions per bunch fe; Rhu-|Pjoying a month's vacation aad barb per bunch Be; Cabbage per left last evening for Langhorn, Pa. head 4 and 6c; Potatoes % pk. 15c, Hig daughter Miss Cathryn is spend- per bushel 65¢; Ham per 1b. 30c; ing two weeks here the guest of Plumg 4 for 5c; Tomatoes 15¢c box; [Miss Sylvia Hershey. Mr. and Mrs. Elwood Millard, Mrs. Mary Imler and grandson Ivan and Mrs. H. W. Caley spent a few days at Mount Gretna, the guests of Mr. Chas. Imler, Mrs. M. M. Aller and daughter | Miss Aller have returned to their home at Glen Loch after spending some time here with the former's daughter Mrs. M, M. Leib on West Donegal street. Mr. Harry F, Weber, of Carlisle, a former resident of thig town, with his wife, spent from Sunday to yes- terday here with Mr. and Mrs. Frank E. Hershey, Mr. Weber is chief engineer of the Carlisle Indian School for the past twenty-three Potato chips 5c per bag. Tr. Ge BACK RUN nm — IA Is. i . Mr. Henry Brenéman was home HE EARNED W168 SALARY. on Sunday. Mr. Clayton Hossler ~alied on the Hiram B. Foltz Hiram B. Folt of Beloit, Wis, a former resident of Kast Petersburg, | died om Sunday, July 9, of heart trou- | ble, aged fifty-three years. Mr. Folts | left Hast Petersburg thirty years ago. | His wife, whose maiden name was El- | len Miler, of York, Pa., preceded him | in death a number of years ago. He is! survived by four children, as follows: | Mrs, Grant and Miss Hazel Foltz of | Chicago, Ill.; Kenyard and Elmer Foltz of Beloit, Wis. He is also sur-| vived by his father, Jacob Foltz of East Petersburg, and two sisters, Mrs. W. D. Lupold of East Petersburg and | Mrs. F. L. Eshleman of Refton, this! | county. | | Mary D. Stoner Mary D. Stomer, widow of the late Silas Stoner, died at her home om Ma- | rietta street, at 9:45 Friday evening, | after an illness of nine weeks, two | weeks of which time she was bedfast. | Death was due to liver trouble. She] was aged 70 years ,8 .months and 22 days. She was a member of the Men-| nonite Church. She has been a resi-| dent of this place for a number of | years. Deceased is survived by one! | son, Silas, at home, and the following brothers and sisters: Mrs. Charlotte | Shoop of Middletown; Mr. Henry Kolp {of Comowingo; Mr. Samuel Kolp and (Mrs. Chas. Flory of Golcbrook. The funeral was held from her late home on Tuesday morming at 10 o'clock. Im- terment was made in the Eberle ceme- tery. John Franklin Kinsey John Franklin Kinsey, Sr., a na- | tive of Bainbridge, died at his home | {in York, on Sunday, after a linger- | ing illness of a year from a compli-| caation of diseases. He wa$ in his | fifty-ninth year. He was a member of the Patriotic Order Sons of Amer- ica and a member of the Lutheran | Church at York. He is survived by his widow, four sons, Walter, John F. Raymond, York; HoraceG., Nor- | ristown and two daughters, Mrs. Al- len Goodling York; Mrs, Clifford Kipple, Harrisburg; Mrs. Harry Coover, Bainbridge, and one brother, Horace Kinsey, Bainbridge. Funeral services were held at his home Tuesday evening at 7:30 o’clock, Rev. Dr. Feidman officiating. This morning the body was taken to ' Bainbridge for burial in the Bain- bridge cemetery. Mrs. Mary Stohler Mrs. Mary Stohler, widow of Heary |K. Stohler, died at her home om West Donegal street Monday evening, after ‘a brief illness, death resulting from in | frmities incident to old age. She was {Her husband died eight years age. | Mrs. Stohler has beem a resideat of this place for mamy years. It — come over town | daily, for a per She was a member | write, and to make matters worse Be |p onoman and sons, John and Nor-| ! friend—pleasure in which we do not The Man On the Job Understood M8® | \icssrs Rettew on Sunday. Business Right Thoroughly. Misses Elsle and Lillian Brene- At a time when the public We¥® |;,; visited Miss Mary Brubaker on Dearing a great deal of new “indus- Sunday morning. trial combinations™ one of the newly | prices Mabel Young and Elsie arrived captains of industry found |... 7Tillian Breneman visited in the himself in a Western city In extrema |; ,,o of Mr on Saturday evening need of communicating with the New Mr. Christian Brenneman and Miss York end of his enterprise. |Della Breneman attended Sunday He had almost completed a® &® |gchool and church at Mount Joy on rangement for the consolidation of a | Sunday morning. mumber of Western enterprises, but | Misses Mabel White and Messrs. | tn order to obtain final authority he |pyarry ang Herman Hossler visited | needed from New York it became |; the home of Mr. and Mrs. L necessary to explain, by wire to his praneman ang family on Sunday | partners, all he had done in the West. |, on ino The situation permitted of no de | np. ,ng3 Mrs. John Hossler and | lay, such as would ensue should he |.,, samuel, Mr. and Mrs. Isaac| bad no cipher code. For some time |. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Zug and financier racked his brains 0, (ora White attended churchat | evolve some method whereby he qo, iin. fill on Sunday morning. | might communicate his {information | to his associates in New York, but | in such manner that it would be Smoke Waste. meaningless to any one else. He A competent: authority calouiates | could, however, think of no such |the direct physical loss to this coun | method, and at last was forced to |try through the emission of smut | the conclusion that he must take the | smoke from chimneys at $600,000,000 chance of sending the message in a year. If so, we must regard thai | plain English. According he draw |ss ome of the greatest wastes of afl | up the message and gave it to his | our resources. Of course, thers ia eonfldential man to send. in addition, an incaloulable but ap About half an hour later, when the | pallingly great indirect loss of a still | confidential man came in, he was more serious kind, in the “uncleasi} asked whether lie had forwarded the | ness, poverty, wreichedness, disease | wire, | and death” whiv: are caused by the | “Yes, sir,” said the man; "but not | lay, slovenly and wasteful practice. | exactly in the way you proposed. I eee | rewrote it, the first word on one com- | It has been estimated that the aw | pany’s blank, the second word on an- erage length of a man’s siride Is 8 | other company’s blank, and so on. | 33 inches, and that the distance an | In that way I sen? half the message | average traveler can cover at this | { h any, neither half, of |rate is 7,158 yards an hour, or 119 | by eac company. | The num? : | course, meaning anything to one not | yards a minute. In the secret. Then I sent a second | strides would be 7,500 an hour or 136 > length of the stride | wire by one company reading: a minute. The | “‘Read messages together, alter |in the various armies is as follows: pating words.”” | United States, 30 inches; German, Not long afterward the confidential 31 1-2 inches; Austria, 29 1-2 inches; man was receiving a larger salary. | Italian, 29 1-2 inches; French, $9 #48 i inches, and British, 30 inches. sm tt ANT vont ne The smallest bird is a spectes of | 1» Mississippi all the State prison. humming bird common in Mexico and | ®® are employed on four farms own Central America. It is not as large | ® DY the State. One contains 13,000 as a blue-bottle fy. acres. The prisoners clear and tm prove the land and grow crops. Cob ton is the chief product All the white prisoners are on one farm of acres, It is the splendid absorption in lifs that makes one forget the flight of time. This is why God is never weary; He is so interested in His work. § An electrical dredge on the Yukoa river has a capacity of 1,000,000 cuble yards of earth a day. Matches have not yet displaced the tinder box in certain rural distriets of Spain and Italy, My friend is dear, but my ememy is also useful; the friend shows me | what I can do. the enemy shows me what I ought to do.—Schiller. Two things operate to rid us of a re -— A Good Festival Although the weather was threaten. ing the Citizens Band held a success- bi he BE Maseass | ful festival in the park here on Sat- While In a nha ornian Ras | yrqay evening. In the evening the| invented a spring wire headrest, to | 2 walg around town {band had be h on one end of the tub. | ung en ” |there-by attracting quite a crowd to! the park. Was Killed need them, and trouble in which we | do need them.—Petit-Senn, Instantly | — Eee Samuel Allison, of Columbia, was | Jitneys or Walk, Now instantly killed at York Salurday by| About 200 employes of the Harris a barrel of chains aighin pound (allin on hig D1 pl bos The Peoples Hardware Store Machine Shop 4 Garage We Handle The ARCO SEALIT For Building or Repairing Roofs Also a Lot of Heavy Lumber Prices Right, Give Mega Call. Levi W. Mummau, Jr., Propr. Bell Phone 125-13, FLORIN, PH. “This is the Brooder that Requires | So Little Coal” (“about 25¢c a week”) says W. V. Lancaster, of Lyons, N.Y. “lhaveno trouble to keep my ‘Blue Hen’’ Brooder at the right temperature. Ihave over 200 chicks in it now, some four weeks and the others twelve days’ old. A pier, more con you never saw.” “Blue Hen” Hot Air Colony ¢ 4.4.50 Brooders Are Better at $ 14 ; than most $30 brooders. The grates can’t clinker up or smother fir® Their area is 2} times greater than others; the regulator is automatic and certain. Study the diagram. ems PB Ar le Agents for “Blue Hen" Brooders (Hot-sie Hot- water), Round Tray A s Gall ai Sec aT umes Lacs p- wi el Gataleg * ASK THESE BLUE HEN AGENTS H. M. BAER & SON, SALUNGA. JOHN E. LONGENECKER, MT. JOY P. E. WOLGEMUTH, MOUNT JOY. Everybody’s Car-The Ford, I have the agency in this section for the universal car—The Ford. I can make prompt deliveries in Roadsters, Touring, Se- dans, Deliveries, or whatever your needs may be. Also have the agencv for SAXONS Ang the well known and popular priced MAXWELIL CARS See me before yom make a deal for a car this Spring M. B. HIESTAND BELL PHONE MOUNT JOY, PA. WE ARE PREPARED TO DO ALL KINDS OF Repairing, Overhauling, Painting, Remodeling at Right Prices. Give Us a Trial ALSO A COMPLETE LINE OF AUTO ACCESSORIES Hiestand and Metzler MOUNT JOY, PH. Be Sure You Get EASTMAN FILNS AT W. B. BENDER'S, East Main St. They are the Dependable King My stock is carefully kept, Gecod and and Fresh ALBERT STRICKLER SUCCESSOR TO A. B. SLING