AGE TWO MT. JOY BULLETIN MOUNT JOY, PA. J. E. SCHROLL, Editor & Pro’r. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $1 A YEAR Six Months. .....50 Cents Three Months. ...25 Cents Single Copies. .... 2 Cents Sample Copies Entered at the post office at Mount Joy as second-class mail matter. All correspondents must have their eommunications reach this office not later than Monday. Telephone news of importance between that time and 12 o'clock noon Wednesday. Chan- ges for advertisments must positively peach this office not later than Mon- day night. New advertisments in- serted if copy reaches us Tuesday might. Advertising rates on applica- tion. EDITORIALS O'Leary and O’Roosevelt are run-| ming a close race and true to form. * & 8% Oklahoma is now reported in- | gested by train robbers from the wilds of Detroit. Ss In Mr. Vance for the President. ss ee The career of Mr. Hughes as a can- didate ended November 7th but the Colonel will run right along. $$ 88" From present prospects Romania's ruler will be lucky if he partakes of his Christmas dinner at home. «es 8 ® Not even the fervent support of Norman Hapgood can shake the President’s confidence in victory. ess In an Ngedingly crusty editorial the “Worn vf New York complains that the pri 2 of pie has gone up. ee ss Cleveland dental students having organized a strike, it erowning success if they all pull to- gether. 838 In claiming that France has re- gained her prestige, Premier Brian doubtless will concede that Verdun helped. * % % % of getting would be to make together Another way the boll weevil Bim over into ith the cotton. es ® 8 ® explosives The German druggist who married 8 princess probably will compromise | by recommending something to his customers that is just as good. $$ 88 About this time of the year one gearcely blames the early settlers for feeling that Indian summer was entirely too good for an Indian. te Our idea of the worst henpecked wsband that ever lived is the Spring- field man who “took advantage” of his wife’s absence to hang himself. eS se And the chastised Roumanians haven't even that inestimable con- | golation of knowing that it hurts the enemy as much as it does them. LB The denial of Colliers “that Hughes is a Wall Street candidate” may be true. Wall Street is merely for “anything to beat Wilson.” S80 McCormick’s opin- | fon this it no time to stop praying | should prove a | rid of MILTON GROVE Tramps scent the sauer kraut in the morning air from afar. The frost is on the hobble and the chair warmers on a twattle. Five of the school term have passed into history. Walter Fry, of Elizabethtown, was a Sunday visitor under his parental weeks roof. Mr. and Mrs. I. Bricker, of Oak- vale, spent Sunday with John Rasp and family. Open season for the charlotte russes. A man’s best friend in hie morning guleps. Mrs. Amos Werner of Pheasant | View, guested with Mrs. Anna Grosh THE BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PENNA. HAYTONN Mr. Al Risser is able to be about town with the aid of a cane. Mrs. C. E. Landis and children of Lancaster, visited her parents over Sunday. Work is being and rebuilding the aged and consumed rushed repairing properties dam- by the recent fire. Two prize babies arrived in town over Sunday-—a daughter at Rev. J. D. Krout’s home, and a son at Geo. Glattacker’s. Mr. C. C. Keiser is making a rapid recovery from the broken leg he sus- tained recently through being kicked by a cow. Saturday afternoon. Mrs. Anna Doutrich and Miss] Painter, of near Bellaire, were Sun- | day guests with friends in town. | The Evangelical revival meetings | | which were inaugurated last Friday | evening continues with unabated in- { | terest. | The medical edict that tobacco | | causes indigestion may have been | { founded on the theory that all tobac- | co is cabbage. Fish are biting well in Chickies several large | catches are reported down at Horst’s mill dam region. Harvey Wittle has butchering business and is out daily | among farmers slaughtering porkers | for winter consumption. Miss Estella Good, one of town’s | young ladies has returned to her | parental home after a week sojourn to friends in Lebanon county. Rabbits are plentiful and it is an shot or an abnor- unlucky huntsman who empty-handed these season. still creek and resumed the | exceedingly poor mally poor | returns home proemial days of the bunny These are the days to go to the Furnace Hill to see the persimmon trees laden down with the palatable element and the sight will stick to your memory like an unpaid grocery bill. | Harvey T. Kulp, who recently dis- posed of his town property, had sale of part of his personal effects Sat- urday afternoon, will move to Eliza- bethtown in a few weeks to engage in the milk business. A. F. Diffenderfer Moyer’s Church near Bachmanville, Saturday evening, where he promulg- ed a rousing exhortation to saints and sinners. He evolved the essence was called to | of christianity so tenaciously that the in ns wept. The road supervisor board con- vened at their usual retreat, the Mil- | ton Grove diversary, Saturday A. M., ' with a full quorum and transacted business of vital importance relative to the improvement of macadamed roads in their bailwick. Thugs, belonging to the pilfering fraternity broke into M. K. Heis tand’s mill Friday night and stole a quantity of and flour. The loss to Mr. H. is not as yet public. | Observation discloses the stolen goods were removed in two automobiles. Wm. M. Hollowbush, Esq., a pro- duct of Mt. Joy, noted as a brilliant | legal light of the Lancaster bar, put [in his appearance in town the week- end. This congruent and exalted | visitor registered with your scribe for { awhile, with whom hospitality reigned ! supreme. The Mount Joy township school grain : If the price of beef and mutton | girectors held their regular menstrual goes a little higher, the irrational prejudice harbored against ’possum by some men will be abandoned. $8 * e | convention with a full quorum at | their rendezvous in the High School | building Saturday morning. Har- | moniously the able and efficient corps It wasn’t until the terrible fierce- | ,¢ nedagogs, acquired compensation pess of [the U-53’s nature became known that it was fully realized why gverybody loved the Deutschland so. * % 8 A posthomous message from Lord Roberts declares that war is a na- tion’s tonip. Of course, but there is such a thing as its being Teutonic. see If one chuld- be sure that he gould afford the eggs, all misgivings shout the nog next Christmas might be dismissed even in - prohibition State. Nevertheless we might suspect that the average American citizen suf- fers more from the inflated price of stocks than from the inflated cost of wheat. LB J It now begins to appear that the U-53 could have been of vastly more assistance had it preceded the Bre- men instead of following it several months later. ess ® A letter in a Birmingham news- paper says that 40,000 persons have left that city by reason of prohibi- tion. It must be frightful to be sold sober in Birmingham. soe® However, the fact remains that no ome can recall any utterance by Mr. Roosevelt while president in which be referred to the head of the na- tion as a public * The cost of has gone up forty-five since fe wat dealers in pre to | for their services rendered during | the month of October. | For the past month residents in the ! upper tier of the township were an- noyed by petty thieving but the pil- ferers have changed their quarters and are prowling in this locality. Last week about twenty-five chickens | were stolen from the premises of | Archey Emenheiser and the majority | | of our citizens are complaining of | | the disappearance of their fowls] { from the henneries. | DONEGAL SPRINGS Mr. and Mrs. John Barnhart of] this place, are spending a few days at Mount Gretna. | Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Coble and | family of Columbia spent Saturday | at the Frank Watson home. | Mr. Jacob Witmer spent a few days with his sister, Mrs. Jesse] Myers in Tanneytown, Maryland. | Mrs. Edward Reader, son Charles and Mrs. Mary Goodman called on] Mr. and Mrs. Cyrus Schroll on Fri-| day. Misses Esther Ray and Martha Rheam of Lancaster and Mrs. Jacob Warner spent Sunday with Raymond Zook and family . Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Zook and fam- ily attended the wedding reception | | their daughter Irene. Mr. and Mrs. Christian Boll and Mr. Harry Hocker of Elizabethtown, spent Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Watson. Mr. John Barnhart and daughter Mary spent Wednesday and Thurs- day with her grandmother, Mrs. to husk corn. Mr. a | Ellen Barnhart. _ Wanted—M | hear to the {Mont., last Friday. | festival at Abram Sipling’s held in honor of ! Mr. Paxton Wolfe is very seriously ill with typhoid fever, and a near Wednesday, November 15, 1916, neighbor, Mr. Jacob Drace is also ill but promises a rapid recovery. Maytown ahead as usual (until we contrary:) Mr. Daniel | Sipling showed us a celery plant that | weighed five and a half pounds. Mr. S. S. Shepherd, who spent a | month among friends in this vicinity left for his home at Levingston, | He will spend several days at Pittsburgh while en- | route. | The Fire Company will have a on Saturday evening the 11th, to raise funds for a more com- plete equipment of apparatus. This is a worthy cause meriting the pat- ronage of everybody. A goodly number of our High School pupils were at Millersville Normal last Saturday taking part in various contests, all acquiring them- selves in a creditable manner. Mas- ter Henry Engle was a prize win- ner. One of our oldest citizens, John | Fletcher; passed away at 4:30 last Thursday morning in his eighty-third | year. He is survived by two sons, and a daughter, Abram and Frank, | of town and Mrs. Israel Yingst, of Royersford. He was a member of | St. John’s Lutheran church. The funeral was held at 1:30 on Sunday A fitting floral offering consisting of eighty-two beautiful chrysanthemums was given by loved afternoon. ones. sso oncom cali En = — ELSTONVILLE Miss Maybelle Gibble is a student of Lancaster P. B. C. Mr. E. S. Ruhl attended the sale at Shellsvilleon Saturday. | Mr. John Pfautz walked out from | Manheim and helped to husk corn on the farm. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kline and | children spent Sunday among rela- | tives at Cornwall. Mr. and Mrs. F. Y. Keath and children spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Weber at Lititz. Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Balmer visited Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Hum- mer, at Mount Hope on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Sharbone | and Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Ober spent | Sunday with Mr. John Shonk and | family near Mount Joy. Mr. and Mrs. Phares Kready at- | tended the meeting of the United | Zion Children at Sporting Hill and | at Shearer’s Church, near Mount | Hope on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Shearer, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Keller and son Ken- neth of Manheim and Mrs. Thomas Edwards and son Sidney spent Sun- | day at Hessdale and Camarga. i Mr. and Mrs. Henry Gibble, May- | belle, Rolandus and David Gibble, | Mr. and Mrs. Harry Royer and chil- dren, Israel and Miriam, Dr. and | Mrs. Martin, Mr. and Mrs. J. S. | Wilhelm and daughters, Stella and | Beatrice, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Wil- | helm and Kathryn Wilhelm spent | Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Elias | Gibble. | ROWENNA Mrs. John Albright of Harrisburg, spent Monday morning here. Mr. Irvin Glatfelter of Philadel- phia, spent Sunday with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Cassel and Mr. and Mrs. Christian Nissley spent Satur- day at D. M. Eyers’. Mrs. Eli Stoner visited her brother, Albert Sweigart at St. Joseph’s Hos- pital last Saturday. Mrs. James A. Lane spent a re- cent Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Abbotts at Holtwood. Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Shank cele- brated their twenty-seventh wedding anniversary on Sunday, Nov. bth. Miss Caroline Zink, a trained nurse of New York City, spent the past week at Messr. Eli and Norman Stoners. Misses Virginia Garver, Grace Charles, Helen M. Fager of Lancas- ter and Miss Gertrude E. Brown of Rohrerstown, spent the week-end with Mary and Martha Shank. Beau- tiful solos were rendered by Miss Fager. mr eet GAG se. Printer Can’t Eat Eggs A new high record for the price of Pennsylvania eggs was made when a contract was closed for delivery in New York at $1 a dozen. The con- tract was reported to the State De- partment of Agriculture. This is twenty-five cents a dozen higher than the best pfevious price known $21.50 “Suits. $18.50 Suits $17.00 Suits. $15.00 Suits $12.50 Suits. 60c 5) We ‘a Cord-o-van Tan Work Shirts.... c Dress Shirts 4 Green Stamps SATURDAY, NOV. 16th Double Stamps With Every Purchase JAN Now is Your Chance to Fill Your Stamp Book Saturday will be your last day to secure the following at these reduced Prices. Suits and Overcoats are here in a large variety of JA IHN JAN Models and Patterns. eh $18.50 . $16.00 Ses $1500 Shem $13.00 $10.00 $20.00 Overcoats...... $18.50 Overcoats........ $16.50 $16.50 Overcoats........ $15.00 $15.00 Cvercoats........ $13.00 $12.00 Overcoats. ....... $10.00 Don’t Miss These 50c $1.00 Freeland Overalls .. 85¢ 85¢ Freeland Overalls... 75¢ $4, $4.50, $5.00. mm know that we can sell you SHOES at from 50c to $1.25 cheaper than you can buy anywhere. We have the stock Gun Metal $2.50, Don’t Forget the Double S. & H. Stamps Saturday, November 18th. The Home of Hart Sch P. E GETZ, Mount Joy, Pa. affner & Marx Clothes Green Stamps on hand $3, $3.50, $5. Fine For Chaps and Wrinkles Chandler's Peroxid Cream, Sooth- ine. Antiseptic healing. Apply at bed- time and before facing the cold. Large opal jar. ...cccceceee 2 5 c Torpid Liver Invites Colds And those who have biliousness and torpid liver are usually the vie- tims of deep-seated colds. Fig Lax (laxative) reaches the seat of the trouble. Large Box ........ g 10c Bone and Brawn Withstand Colds Build them up with natural bone- builder. Chandler’s Syrups Hypoph- osphites a splendid tonic that should be in every home. Large bottle Check That Cold Over Night With Chandler’s Laxative Quinine Cold Tablets. Insist on the yellow box. A sure remedy. Box... y 25¢ Live Out of Town “FESR No matter, just address Chandler” Mount Joy, Pa. and we'll mail your wants post paid if inconvenient to call. Chandler's DRUG STORE MOUNT JOY. PENNA. THE FAMOUS ERS CHINCATEAGUE 35 CENTS PER QUART GROCERIES AND CONFECTIONS BRANDT BRON. 3 3. 2 Mt. Joy, Pa. Oct. 4-6m EXECUTOR’S NOTICE East Donegal township, County, Pa., deceased. Letters tate having been granted to undersigned, all thereto are requestd in this state. At Lancaster market 5, Pu Estate of Simon Eshleman late of Lancaster testamentary on said es- mediate papment, and [hose having against same claims or deman will present them without delay for settlement to the undersigned, re siding at Elizabethtown, R. D. No. 8, e Barber Agent for Manhattan Laundry West Main St., Mount Joy, Pa. Krall "Mes Market I always have on hand anything in the line of SMOKED MEATS, HAM, BOLOGNA DRIED BEEF, LARD, ETC. Also Fresh Beef, Veal, Pork, Mutton H. H. KRALL, West Main St. MOUNT JOY, PA. Bell Telephone ROBERT H. HOKE PROFESSIONAL UNDERTAKER and EMBALMER uslin | YOUR NEXT |The Sevcik School for Yiolin| SEMITONE SYSTEM IRA C. EBY West Donegal St., Mount Joy, Pa. Pupil of the late Prof. Carl Thor- bahn. Pupil of R. L. Myers Come to the above school and let me instruct you in the “TRUE PRINCIPLES OF THE ART OF VIOLIN PLAYING” TERMS Single lesson (One hour) 75ec. Series of 25 lessons, $17.50 in ad- | ‘vance. Series of 15 lessons, $11.00 in ad- Arrangements for interview can be | made by letter. Classes now forming. Elizabethtown car. Get off at Shelley’s turnout. I trust that I may secure your patronage. JOHN M. MILLER and HENRY H. KOSER Surveyors & Conmveyancers Wood, Metal o R.F. E J BELL 5 vance. | You can ride to my door on the| The undersigned wish to inform the public that they are prepared to $® HORSE SHOEING AT JOHN BOMBACH’S STAND, MOUNT JOY Special attention given to all Diseases of the feet prmoptly tended to. Your patronage sil HAP BOMBACH * § GENERAL BLACKSMITHS & HORSE SHOERS MOUNT JOY, PENNA, ® - Manufactured by The House of Quality COLUMBIA, PA. HOTEL MCGINNIS MOUNT JOY, Restaurant and Lunch Bar