ge NN FR ENN SAIN PRRES THE MODERN MOTOR CAR IS THE GREATEST ACHIEVE. MENT OF MODERN SCIENCE. TO THOSE INTENDING TO BUY ONE, THE TWO GREATEST THOUGHTS THAT SHOULD DECIDE YOUR CHOICE ARE: Performance Endurance ‘fHE MINIMUM MAINTENANCE OF THE CHEVROLET HAS EXCITED PUBLIC COMMENT TIME AND TIME AGAIN. YOU ARE ASSURED OF ECONOMY, FOR ECONOMY HAS BEEN BUILT INTO THE CAR. THIS CONSIDERATION HAS BEEN UPPERMOST IN THE MINDS OF THE BUILDERS. YOU WILL FIND MORE VALUE “VISIBLE AND INVISIBLE” IN THE CHEVROLET FOUR NINETY THAN INJANY OTHER CAR AT ITS PRICE IN AMERICA. 5 NEW PRICES $ 550.00 $ 535.00 $ 625.00 $ 800.00 $ 800.00 CHEVROLET EIGHT TOURING. ....... $1385.00 CHER bsTer or. | PASSENGER $1385.00 ALL PRICES F. 0. B. FLINT MICHIGAN. E. B. ROHBER| FOUR NINETY TOURING............. FOUR NINETY ROADSTER | nina FOUR NINETY ENCLOSED............ BABY GRAND TOURING............. ROYAL MAIL ROADSTER....... A GENT Mount Joy, Pa. ofeofeefeofocectacfesfonfeciorfoforfestecfonortuocford Bell Phone 18-R4 Ind. Phone 808-A Selpelredpedoerofecforiecfrofiofocfecs YOU GANT BEAT IT HERE! friteYour Own \Money-Back” uarante On the greatest, most practical coal-burning brooder ever made. Self.feeding, self-regulating, everlasting. Broods 100 to 1000 chicks at a guar- z anteed cost of less than 6 cents a day y Used by over 10,000 big and little i breeders. The STANDARD COLONY BROODER PATENTED : ids Will 4 hing any other brooder will do regardless of price, and do it rg oo thy Ke a good brooder ought to be and do. Just put that on paper and we will signit and give you the brooder on thirty days’ tri If it doesn’t come up to every claim we make, you get your money back without argument. 4 ’ ] i ree Mo VN SPECIFICATIONS To LJ Solid cast iron stove. 52-inch galvanized hover. Two double-disc thermostats, tandem hitched : § Rocker furnace grates, self-cleaning § and anti-clog. Gas proof—fire proof—fool proof. Guaranteed to burn more 24 hours in any temper ature in one coaling. I Y a HS. NEWCOMER MOUNT JOY, PENNA WINGERT & HAAS HATTERS 144 North Queen Street NOTICE is hereby given that the hat, cap and gloves business earried on at No. 144 N. Queen St., for the last thirty-four years by Wingert & Haas will be continued by me, as I have purchased the in- _ terest of my deceased partner, John Newton Wingert. I will conduct the under the trade name of Wingert & Haas and solicit a continu- f the : ‘extended to my deceased partner and myself. A. HAAS. i a, @F Jom WORKMEN FIND DOCUMENTS STOLEN FROM SAFE RECENTLY A tin box containing checks, re- ceipts and other papers, the property of the Pennsylvania railroad, was found on Monday afternoon, by workmen engaged in razing the old shed at the Muth warehouse on Bainbridge street, Elizabethtown. Station Agent, C. J. McLaughlin was notified and upon investigating it was found to be a portion of the company’s property stolen from the | depot safe which was blown up some time ago. A An Mrs. A. L. Kauffman Mrs. Agnes G. Kauffman, wife of ‘A. L. Kauffman, died at her home in Silver Spring, Thursday, after a [lingering illness. The deceased is survived by her husband and the fol- lowing children: Lillian, wife of W. F. Mayer, of Lancaster, and Daniel and Maurice both at home; also by | the following brothers and sisters: , Frank McCune, of Ironville; Webster McCune, of Downingtown; Miss An- nie McCune, of Lancaster, and Mary, | wife of H. B. Nissley, of Oyster Point. The funeral took place on | Sunday afternoon, with services in {the United Brethren Church at Sil- "ver Spring; interment being made in ! the cemetery nearby. Read the Bulletin. er Advertise in the Mt. Joy Bulletin ‘Wanted, Sale, Rent, &c. | | | Last notice to Delinquents—All 11916 Borough Taxes must positively | be paid on or before Mar. 25. 1917. | T. M. BRENEMAN, Col | mar. 6-3t. FOR RENT—Two houses in Flor- Apply to E. L. Nissly, Florin, j in. P 28-2t. | Pa. feb. | Pullets and three cockerels. Ad- | dress P. 0. Box 159, Mount Joy. | mar. 7-2t. | SPRAYING—On March 1st I wil | begin to do all kinds of Spraying of | van | fruit and ornamental trees. | Shellenberger, Mt. Joy. feb.21-4t Day Old Chicks For Sale at 10c each. Also custom hatching at 4ca chick. Newpher Smeltzer, Mt. Joy. feb. 21-3mo. WANTED—Local "agent for Mt. Joy and vicinity. A good proposi- tion to the right party. Call or ad- dress, Grand Union Tea Co., Colum- bia, Pa. feb. 21-4t A Memorial—In memory of my mother, who died five years ago Sunday March 4th, 1912. Whene’er I think of her so dear I feel her angel spirit near. A voice comes floating in the air Reminding me of mother’s prayer. (Signed) Daughter, Frances Wil- liard Childs. mar. 7-1t. ADMINISTRATRIX’S NOTICE Estate of Dr. H. H. Bear, late of Mount Joy Borough, L t Pa., Deceased. Letters of Administ estate having been undersigned, all thereto are requegfed to make im- mediate paymer and those having claims or demands against the same will present them without delay for settlement to the undersigned, re- siding at 26 West Main St., Mount Joy, Pa. ELLA S. BEAR, Administratrix mar. 7-6t indebted | Frank S. Groff, Atty. ADMINISTRATOR’S NOTICE Estate of Joseph F. Charles, late of Mount Joy Borough, Lancaster ‘County, Pa., Deceased. Letters of administr. estate having been anted to the undersigned, all pefsons indebted thereto are requestéd to make im- / mediate or entghds. those having lon on said claims or demgnds against the same will prese them without de- lay for settlement to the under- signed, residing at R. D. No. 1, Mt. Joy Pa. HARRY R. CHARLES, ; Administrator. Harnish & Harnish, Attys. mar. 7-6t ADMINISTRATRIX’S NOTICE Estate of Jacob U. Haldeman late of Mount Joy township, Lane county, Penna., deceased. Letters of Administratiop”on said estate having been grantéd to the undersigned, all persons indebtec thereto are requested/to make im mediate payment, awd those having lelaims or Sonds/againg the same will present then without delay for {settlement to the undersigned. HARRIET S. HALDEMAN, Mt. Joy, R. D. 3. Administratrix | Wm. M. Hollowbush, Atty. jan. 31-6t | EXECUTOR’S NOTICE { Estate of Elizap@th Ann Shelley |late of Mount JOy Borough, Lan caster County,/Pa., Deceased. Letters tesfAmentary on said estat: having been/ granted to the under signed, all persons indebted theret: are reqnegted to make immediat: payment, /and those having claims c: demands” against the same wil present them without delay for set tlement to the undersigned, residix; in Mount Joy, Pa. WM. M. HOLLOWBUSH, feb. 7-6t. Executo: ADMINISTRATOR’S NOTICE Estate of Christian N. Musser late of West deceased. 2 Letters of Administration on sai estate having been granted to the undersigned, all persons indebted thereto are requested to make im- mediate payment, and those having claims or demands against the same will present them without ‘delay for to the undersigned, re- East Donegal township, ia, R. D. No. 1 or to Henry rpenter, Mount Joy, Pa. DANIEL S. MUSSER, Administrator. B. Frank Kready, Atty. feb. 21-6t Le EXECUTRIX’S NOTICE state of Christian Schatz, late of | East Donegal Township, Lancaster | County, Pa., deceased. : | = Letters testamentary on said estate having been granted to the under- signed, all persons indebted thereto {are requested to make immediate | payment, and those having claims or demands against the same will present them without delay for set- tlement to the undersigned residing in Mount Joy, Pa. CAROLINE SCHATZ, Executrix Hollowbush, Attorney. fe.21-6t Hed THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA. | _ FOR SALE—45 White Wyandotte "| ville this evening. The Chubby-Henny- Hempfield township, | BASKET BALL A TEAM OF FAIR ONES WILL PLAY AT COLUMBIA, : SATURDAY 2 Y Lititz Gets a Beating (THE STORE Ben Groff’s team sure gave Lititz IF | |, THAT PAYS ne f ® if EVERITHING. i a trouncing in Mount Joy Hall last Hf i car Fare (ILE, hy ; N Jit EVERYBODY. ki ge Es as Sia Zul } Mi, 2 A $2 A i 4 0a. = Thursday evening. At no time dur- x ing the game did the Pretzelites SaA———— have a lookin. Every man on the local team with the exception of hn. ——— Se Klugh, who played an excellent guarding game, aided in the scoring. Ellis led his team-mates with eight two-pointers while R. Brown was a close second with seven, the latter getting all of his in the last half. Mellinger and Grissinger were tied { We Par Your Rounp Trip CAR FARE On ALL PURCHASES MoRE. IT Costs You NOTHING. Ask For IT. 0r$10.%| +] NO CAR FARE REFUNDED ON PURCHASES OF VICTOR OR COLUMBIA PRODUCTS. with six apiece. The lineup: Or Mt. Joy Positions Lititz Mellinger ....forward..... Sturgis Bhis ........ forward... .. Zerphy Grissinger .centre...... Houck Brown ....:.:. guard a Pai Kiogn, guard... ‘Sines not bu in position: Field Goals—Mellinger 6, Ellis 8, oy they will be less keenly affected, for |f in Mount Joy Township, on Grissinger 6, Brown 7, Bennett 4, ’ arm 1n ] : PRAISES T ANLAC Sturgis 2, Zerphy2, Houck 2, Putt 1. ow Will 5¢ a have ia te ease the road Josding “From JSlzabeth Fouls—Mellinger, 5 out of 7; Ellis, [ov [5 080et CB opt il or pro-|town to Colebrook, abo mil 2 out of 8: Sturgis, 8 out of 18. longed periods. They will not have from the former place and 4 miles Score 60 to 24 eferee, Ellis known the pangs imparted by the from the latter place, 2 miles south- : * % kriowieyse at some day death will | west of Lawn, the following person- Maytown Defeats Elizabethtown compel them to leave their epileptic al property: smrss—— Maytown defeated the E'town in the care of strangers, in the's HEAD OF HORSES AND MULES RETIRED BUSINESS MAN FEELS - Collegiate five in a very fast game, care of an unsympathetic world;|No. 1—Bay horse, 8 years old, broke JT A DUTY TO MAKE FACTS KNOWN on the Maytown floor by the figures of 80 to 25. The stars of the game end of the country to were Ellis for Maytown and H. vain search or Hershey for E’town. The score: accept recovery from Maytown E’town Collegiate Five a matter of course without Pe Bilis ........ forward... Ebersole experienced the heartaches of those!single and double, Houseal ..... forward. .H. Hershey who now care for epileptics. Good ....... Centre... 0... Groff only by such Fletcher ..:..: guard... ..-. Engle suplenie importance of present da 'H, Itz... guard. ...J. Hershey achievement along epilepsy researc Substitutes, H. Lutz for Houseal; D. Lutz for H. Lutz; Withers for J. Hershey. Field Goals—Ellis 6, Good 5, Fletcher, H. Lutz, H. Hershey, Groff 4, Engle, J. Hershey 2, Withers. Fouls—Houseal, 1 ont of- 3; H. | Lutz, 1 out of 3; Good, 2 out of 3; Ebersole, 7 out of 12. Referee, Ellis. i Lost at Rothsville The Second team of the Mount to several weekly free from attacks for Joy High School team went 10 vegans following the serum treatment, bred heifers. 20 SHOATS—Weigh- — «yy : tottsl | i i y . My h ng | Rothsville on Frida and, was easy while others have been enabled to ing 40 to 60 lbs. About 50 CRickens. pe he Ta hecome fred and | picking for that Ye: pent 3 lzave the asylum and return to FARMING IMPLEMENTS .0qt unbearable, and there were | getting fhe furs end ons to normal and useful occupations, that Seven wagons, 4-ton wagon in pogring noises also. 1 had 2 ThoSt OR: | score. The lineup: R they have regained their normal good condition, Columbia/make; 3- pleasant taste in my mouth and | Rothsville Mt. Joy Walters faculties and that none of the serum ton wagon, good as ney with boX goarcely any appetite. Martin ...... formar). rd on ters Latients has received an atom of Reber make; S-ton low-down wagon ~My’ condition was so distressing {Reist ....... forwar aghewily suppressive drugs, you may wonder used but a few years, Swab make; t}at | had almost determined to j Stauffer sore centre. .... b a why, when there are 175,000 1 heavy bob sled, trolldy wagon, 2- yisit a dry, salt climate to gain re- | Risser shires va guard saan dy epileptics in this country, why horse wagon, tobacco Wagon, Spring jief. I watched the introduction of | Huber trai he uard. cone DeLong thousands of these epileptics do not wagon, used a few [years, Miller jpaplac carefully and I finally de- | Field goals Martin, 6; Reist, 9 rush in to avail themselves of the make; buggy, carriag¢ pole, 3 sets .ided, if so many men and women | Stauffer, 4; Risser, 2; Walters, 2; treatment which has in every hay ladders, from 18 fo 22 ft. long: of evidently sound sense used the | Laskewitz, 2; Zellers, 2. Foul goals pegpect proven capable to accom- 3 sets manure planks, 2 binders, medicine and said they were bene- —Risser, 2 out of 10; Martin, 9 out pligh more good than any other McCormick 7 ft. cut] used 4 years fied, it would be worth my while to | 17; Laskewitz, 6 out of 16. Referee, Hackman. Time of halves, 20 for this is that we have always some Bonnie binder, s mowers, in in" it at the time. | minutes. people who delight in throwing good condition, ston and Os “J was surprised, however. FOULS stumbling blocks into the road of borne, make; hay loader, hay rake, gan to improve 2 As the season is nearing its end Progress. True the efforts of all Johnston hay tedder, good as new; Tanlac treatment. { interest seems to be on the wane. | adversaries to a real meritorious grain cradle, 10-hoe Missouri grain jg now right, the innovation cannot but for a while gress. tory you invariably Last week was the first time this winter that the High School team had a vacation. Manager Brown of the High School will take his team to Quarry- y by antagonism of the contemporaries, but win and I guess its about right. ter generally accepted. The first real basket ball mishap of the winter occurred in the game with Lititz last Thursday night when Klugh of the local team had a rib fractured. The Hasset Club of Lancaster, the team that defeated Mount Joy here recently in a cracker jack game by the close score of 34 to 30, will be the attraction in Mount Joy Hall on Thursday evening, March 8. Mount Joy will make an effort to cop this An Organ Recital March 16th, 1917 in the Church. Prof. mar. 5-2t. held immediately after the game. The girls High School team will! play its first game on foreign soil | oq. at Columbia on Saturday afternoon, : where they will play the girl’s High | School team of that borough. Miss! Park, the coach, with the aid of! Professor Mylin is rounding out a | ‘The peorle’s poper candidates. If the ladies can uphold | rest assured that there'll be nothing | 5 to it but Mount Joy, and that the deol ios class horses, very much in evidence, while the | lis; and the eoming generation will outfit. The undersigned will sell on the JACOB J. SWANK great boon placed at its command;|farm known as the John G. Stauffe they will not have travelled from one [to perfection, extra good leader and relief; they will all knows how to drive a horse can drive can in a measure be realized. When you are told that a serum |old, has been discovered that will effect | leader, weighs 2,610 lbs. Nos. 7 and “y epilepsy more beneficially than any|8, pair Black mules, Zine form of Jreatmont and hat 5a 2 heh 750 ere are now former patients who|be worked by any one,” weighs 2, which was poorly, I evidently sw: 2 and after lbs. 20 HEAD OF HOLSTEIN CAT- j ued Re Ding of as way having had from many attacks daily | TLE—Consisting of 15 good strong invariably awakened in and monthly, | cows, some fresh and some fall cows, choked and nauseated. after years of affliction that such patients have actually been method thus far known. they impede pro- 3 ] G In scanning the pages of his- planter with discs, in ; - meet instances tion; Bemis tobacco planter in good where every new discovery was met which were la- cultivators, 1 a EE Organ Recital will be given cultivators, 17heyse scorer, Iron Age ,.. by Prof. Rebert, on Friday evening, corn plow leader of the Choral Society and also shreder, conducted the Recital last year. rr A Gree Charles W. Mountz, 50, of Carlisle, has estab- hing gears, 2 sets Yankee harness lished a record for minute penman- gnring wagon harness, team saddle. Corns ber bu., ship which he says cannot be equall- ) : one and from the record of the Hasset Club, the locals will sure| Ry wie 8 oe have to extend themselves. ~The common postcard regular weekly ‘‘dawnce” will be : eee ent Eee: && Subscribe for the Bulletin. good squad from a large number of o S. HOLLINGER’S PUBLIC SALE their end of the cage game as well | Of Live Stock, Implements, Etc, as their male class-mates you can| ON THURSDAY, MARCH 15th, 1917 school colors, red and white, vill be | head of hogs and the entire farming realize the the other in|a safe family horse, any one that epilepsy as him, weighing about 1,200 lbs. No. 2—Bay horse 8 years old, broke gown Pa, said recently: a single line “I'am a conservative It ir leader, weighing about 1,275 Ibs. have especially been years old, well broke and an extra of any character, 5 and 6, pair B well broke, one single some extra heavy milkers, 2 ell 1 judge that months and bred stock bulls, 1 fat bull, 2/well way rey. y The reason and is in good only two seasons; double row corn good condi- tor my sleep is condition; 2 sets tobacco ladders, 1 Lotter avary, doy set 20 s Jeng Po dng any other symptoms. 1 disc harrow spring har- gone me. 2 seasons; gq discoverers’ a double tachment; 3 plows, good as new; 4-horse row, roller harrow used spike harrow, land roller, 2 “Lan mill, grind stone, manure hook, hook, forks, rakes and letters on a givth chain; horse gears in good shape, 4 sets front gears, 2 sets team whip, 3 sets check lines, 4 Oats, per bu, and 6-horse team lines, plow lines, flynets in good condition, halters, jockey sticks, milk cans, ladders, garden hose, potato digger, wheelbarrow, 2 stoves, and many articles not mentioned. Sale to the Ratt made known by C. S. HOLLINGER. and mules, F. B. Aldinger, Auct. heifers, 20 S. B. Keifer & M. S. Brandt, Clks. No public dinner served. blue, to complete the national colors, | so popular after inauguration, will! be exhibited on the faces of the! Columbia team and its supporters. A Ir HOME HEALTH CLUB By Dr. David H. Reeder, Chicago, Ill. | Facts Concerning Epilepsy: (B Dr. Wm. Held, 7th A I is natural that such results should | have given rise to the fond hope of | | being able to use the same serumin | the treatment of epileptics, but we | { were soon face to face with the | | fact that the serum when used in the’ { human subject, proved locally and | | systematically so irritating that its, | employment became impractical. It, | was necessary to weaken, attenuate | |or do something that would render! | the serum not only beneficial but | {also absolutely harmless. It was! | tedious labor, injecting one animal | after another, changing concentra- | | tions of solutions, drawing spinal fluid from patients and making | | various combinations and naturally! | was very discouraging when the | finally produced serum, in the absence of all irritating characteris- | | tic, was found to have no curative i value. The description of manipulations | which followed this state of affairs | | appeals only to the trained mind of | i the laboratory physician for which reason it is ommitted. The funda- | i mental principle which led to suc-| | cess was the fact that the specific | | and responsible forment was ex-| { tracted from the serum. The anti- | epileptic serum so produced com- | bines absolute harmlessness with | roven efficiency to supplant the ob- | jectionable bromides and other | drugs, so long and so disastrously | used by epileptics. Under the serum | treatment the mental faculties of | epileptics cleared with noticeable | promptness as one of the first | symptoms of the treatment; it] seemed as if a cloud which former- | ly enveloped the patient, had been lifted. | The steadily inereasing evidence | of the serum emeciency is a heart | cheering m_ssage. He who now speaks of the prognosis of epilepsy | can no longer pronounce the horrible | disesfse incurable with the same ring | of { positiveness which formerly | aracterized his announcement. The | esent generation witnesses the | roduction of a specific anti-epilep- ic, the long looked for remedy ising from the laboratory of resent day workers. Epileptics of he present generation will able Ko recéive treatment with the same chance of sucg as is now obtained ~ bent of Syphi- aly Cc. E. HOLLENBAUGH TY FOR EVERY FARM ‘ DELCO-LIGHT ON THE FARM DELCO-LIGHT MAKES ELecTrICITY UNIVERSAL For the first time electric light and power are available to anyone—anywhere. Heretofore, the benefits of electricity have been confined to those who live in the larger towns and cities. Now Delco-Light makes electric current universally available. It is lighting rural railway stations and construction camps. It is hghting the camps of United States troops on the Mexican border and it is disclosing hereto- fore undreamed-of beauties in the depths of Mammoth Cave, Ken- tucky. Altogether, over 15,000 Delco-Light plants are in operation, and Delco- Light offices are to be found in al- most every part of the world. Delco-Light is today furnishing thousands of farm-houses with brillant, convenient, safe and eco- nomical light. It is furnishing power to operate pumps, washing machines, churns, cream separators, milking” ma- chines, vacuum cleaners, etc. It is lighung country churches, stores and public halls. It is furnishing light and power to summer homes and camps, to houseboats and yachts, etc. Delco-Light is a complete electric plant—the engine and dy- namo in one compact unit combined with a set of spe- cially built and wonderfully efficient batteries for the storing of current. The plant is so simple a child can care for it, and so economical that it actually pays for itself in time and labor saved. It operates on either kero- sene, gasoline or natural gas. SALESMAN MAYTOWN. PA. Jacob J. Swank, a retired business man, of 6256 Napoleon St., Johns k man, aud ] skeptical re comparison that the | Nos. 3 and 4 pair Black mules 14 garding endorsements of De ire : although I have good leader, weight 2,450 Ibs. NOB. ysed many of them in attempts to ack mules, 7 years ghtain real relief from catarrh of the line head and throat and stomach trouble. believe I had used almost 9 years old, everything imaginable before I took leaders, extra good ones, can Tanjac. At night, when I slept, the mo That is the my stomach be- ondjtion, Johnston yy jt although I really had no faith I be- rapidly under the My Shoe system § Ts accumulations in prevail for ever, drill with fertilizer attachment, used ny nose and throat have disappeared, my hearing has improved, I eat bet- restful and I feel I now consider myself physically able to throw off “] am a well man and I propose to tell others of the good Tanlac has I feel it is my duty to do single "Tanlac, the Master Medicine that : = __vhen everything else fails, Presbyterian ' thrashi ased one Sasson) Ben is 30m mere by Dr. W. D. Chandler, 8 PTE rashing machines wi separator; i : od Rebert was the 60 ft. canvas belting, 1 fodder where 1 can ROW De ns be Ted platform scales, fanning H. E. Hauer Pays: scythe, corn sheller, bag wagon, hay Lard, per lb............. shovels, all Potatoes, per bu......... kinds of chains, single, double and Butter, per 1b........... triple trees; 3 spreaders, one with Eggs, per G02. iii Brandt & Stehman Pay: Wheat, per bu........... Brandt & Stehman Sell: ifting Bran, per 100 Ibs,,....... ....$2.00 Sitting Shipstuff, per 100 Tha, 1 0 2.08 1 ixed Feed, per Beye ! a Xan€ Middlings, per 100 Ibs.,. .. 2 commence at 1 o’clock Glutten, per 100 1bs.,. eos when terms and conditions ill be Coton Seed Meal........ ie § condiiions wi ? Linseed Mead, per 100 lbs.,... Beef scrap & fish scrap... Corn Distillers Grains... . Calf Meal, per 100 lbs,,.. Timothy Hay, per 100 lbs.,.... 2.10 ¢ 8 z x