The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, May 31, 1917, Image 3

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THIRD "INSTALLMENT.
“I am showing them how we do this
in the artillery, sir.”
And this is a part of the story where
all the legends agree; that the commo-
dore said:
“I see you do, and I thank you, sir;
and I shall never forget this day, sir,
and you never shall, sir.”
And after the whole thing was over,
and he had the Englishman's sword,
in the midst of the state and ceremony
of the quarterdeck, he said:
“Where is Mr, Nolan? Ask Mr. No-
lan to come here.”
And when Nolan came, the captain
said:
“Mr. Nolan, we are all very grateful
to you today ; you are one of us today;
you will be named in the dispatches.”
And then the old man took off his
own sword of ceremony, and gave it to
Nolan, and made him put it on. The
man told me this who saw it. Nolan
cried like a baby, and well he might.
He had not worn a sword since that
infernal day at Fort Adams. But al-
ways afterward, on occasions of cere-
mony, he wore that quaint old French
sword of the commodore’s.
The captain did mention him in the
dispatches. It was always said he
asked that he might be pardoned. He
wrote a special letter to the secretary
of war. But nothing ever came of it.
As I sald, that was about the time
when they began to ignore the whole
transaction at Washington, and when
Nolan's imprisonment began to carry
itself on because there was nobody to
stop it without any new orders from
home,
I have heard it said that he was with
Porter when he took possession of the
Nukahiwa islands. Not this Porter,
you know, but old Porter, his father,
Essex Porter, that is, the old Essex
Porter, not this Essex. As an artil-
lery officer, who had seen service in
the West, Nolan knew more about for-
tifications, embrasures, ravelines,
stockades, and all that, than any of
them did; and he worked with a right
good will in fixing that battery all
right. I have always thought it was
a pity Porter did not leave him In
command there with Gamble. That
would have settled all the question
about his punishment. We should
have kept the islands, and at this mo-
ment we should have one station in
the Pacific ocean. Our French friends,
too, when they wanted this little wa-
tering place, would have found it was
pre-occupied. But Madison and the
Virginians, of course, flung all that
away.
All that was near fifty years ago.
If Nolan was thirty then, he must
have been near eighty when he died.
He looked sixty when he was forty.
But he never seemed to me to change
a hair afterward. As I imagine his
life, from what I have seen and heard
of it, he must have been in every sea,
and yet almost never on land. He
must have known in a formal way,
more officers in our service than any
man living knows. He told me once,
with a grave smile, that no man in the
world lived so methodical a life as he.
“¥ou know the boys say I am the
Iron Mask, and you know how busy
he was.” He said it did not do for
anyone to try to read all the time, more
than to do anything else all the time;
but that he read just five hours a day.
“Then,” he said, “I keep up my note-
books, writing in them at such and
such hours from what I have been
reading; and I include in them my
scrapbooks.” These were very curious
indeed. He had six or eight, of differ-
ent subjects. There was one of his-
tory, one of natural science, one which
he called “Odds and Ends.” But they
were not merely books of extracts
from newspapers. They had bits of
plants and ribbons, shells tied on, and
carved scraps of bone and wood, which
he had taught the men to cut for him,
and they were beautifully illustrated.
He drew admirably. He had some of
the funniest drawings there, and some
of the most pathetic, that I have ever
geen in my life. I wonder who will
have Nolan's scrapbooks.
Well, he said his reading and his
notes were his profession, and that
they took five hours and two hours
respectively of each day. “Then,”
said he, “every man should have a di-
version as well as a profession. My
natural history is my diversion.” That
took two hours a day more. The men
used to bring him birds and fish, but
on a long cruise he had to satisfy him-
self with centipedes and cockroaches
and such small game. He was the only
naturalist I ever met who knew any-
thing about the habits of the house fly
and the mosquito. All those people
can tell you whether they are Lepi-
doptera or Steptopotera; but as for
telling how you can get rid of them,
or how they get away from you when
you strike them, why, Linnaeus knew
as little of that as John Foy, the idiot,
gid. These nine hours made Nolan's
regular daily “occupation.” The rest
@e Man Without
© A Country &
6 Edward Everett Hale

of the time he talked or walked. Till
he grew very old, he went aloft a great
deal. Ile always kept up his exercise
and I never heard that he was ill. If |
any other man was ill, he was the kind-
est nurse in the world; and he knew
more than half the surgeons do. Then
if anybody was sick or died, or if the
captain wanted him to on any other
occasion, he was always ready to read
| would be

prayers. I have remarked that hq
read besutifully.
My own acquaintance with Philip |
Nolan began six or eight years after |
the war, on my first voyage after 1|
was appointed a midshipman. It was |
in the first days after our slave trade |
treaty, while the reigning house, |
which was stilt the house of Virginia, |
had still a sort of sentimentalism |
about the suppression of the horrors |
of the middle passage, and something |
: ‘ We
Y1ivT 2
¢
| poor “Nolan's





was sometimes done that way. We
were in the South Atlantic on that
business. From the time I joined, I
believe I thought Nolan was a sort of
lay chaplain—a chaplain with a blue
coat. I never asked about him. Ev-
erything in the ship was strange to
me. I knew it was green to ask ques-
tions, and I suppose I thought there
was a “Plain-Buttons” on every ship.
We had him to dine in our mess once
a week, and the caution was given that
on that day nothing was to be sald
about home. But if they had told us
not to say anything about the planet
Mars or the book of Deuteronomy, I
should not have asked why ; there were
a great many things which seemed to
me to have as little reason. I first
came to understand anything about
“the man without a country” one day
when we overhauled a dirty little
schooner which had slaves on board.
An officer was sent to take charge of
her, and after a few minutes he sent
back his boat to ask that someone
might be sent him who could speak
Portuguese. We were all looking ovet
the rail when the message came, and
we all wished we could interpret, when
the captain asked who spoke Por-
tuguese. But none of the officers did;
and just as the captain was sending
forward to ask if any of the people
could, Nolan stepped out and said he
should be glad to interpret, if the cap-
tain wished, as he understood the lan-
guage. The captain thanked him, fit-
ted out another boat with him, and in
this boat it was my luck to go.
When we got there, it was such a
scene as you seldom see, and never
want to. Nastiness beyond account,
and chaos run loose in the midst of the
nastiness. There were not a great
many of the negroes; but by way
of making what there were understand
that they were free, Vaughan had had
their handcuffs and anklecuffs knocked
off, and, for convenience’ sake, was
putting them upon the rascals of the
schooner’s crew. The negroes were,
most of them, out of the hold, and
swarming all round the dirty deck,
with a central throng surrounding
Vaughan and addressing him in every
dialect and patois of a dialect, from
the Zulu click up to the Parisian of
Beledeljereed.
As we came on deck, Vaughan
looked down from a hogshead, on
which he had mounted in desperation,
and said:
“For God’s love, is there anybody
who can make these wretches under-
stand something? The men gave them
rum, and that did not quiet them. I



 

\
d %
Hushed the Men Down.
+
knocked that big fellow down twice,
and that did not soothe him. And then
I talked Choctaw to all of them to-
gether; and I'll be hanged if they un-
derstood that as well as they under-
stood the English.”
Nolan said he could speak Por-
tuguese, and one or two fine-looking
Kroomen were dragged out, who, as it
had been found already, had worked
for the Portuguese on the coast at
Fernando Po.
“Tell them they are free,” said
Vaughan; “and tell them that these
rascals are to be hanged as soon as
we can get rope enough.”
Nolan explained it in such Portu-
guese as the Kroomen could under-
stand, and they in turn to such of the
negroes as could understand them.
Then there was such a yell of delight,
clinching of fists, leaping and dancing,
kissing of Nolan's feet, and a general
rush made to the hogshead by way of
spontaneous worship of Vaughan as
the deus ex machina of the occasion.
“Tell them,” said Vaughan, well
pleased, “that I will take them all to
Cape Palmas.”
This did not answer so well. Cape
Palmas was practically as far from
the homes of most of them as New Or-
Jeans or Rio Janeiro was; that is, they
eternally separated from
heme there. And their interpreters, as
we could understand, instantly said,
“Ah, non Palmas,” and began to pro-
pose infinite other expedients in most
voluble language. Vaughan was rath-
er disappointed at this result of his
liberality, and asked Nolan eagerly
what they said.
white
hushed the men down, and said:
“He says, ‘Not Palmas.’ He says,

The drops stood on |
forehead as he]
and that these devils caught him in
the bay just in sight of home, and
that he has never seen anybody from
home since then, And this one says,"
choked out Nolan, “that he has not
heard a word from his home in six
months, while he has been locked ug
in an infernal barracoon.”
Vaughan always sald he grew gray
himself while Nolan struggled through
this interpretation. I, who did not un
derstand anything of the passion in
volved in it, saw that the very ele
ments were melting with fervent heat,
and that something was to pay some:
where. Even the negroes themselves
stopped howling as they saw Nofan's
agony, and Vaughan's almost equal
agony of sympathy. As quick as he
could get words, he said:
“Tell them yes, yes; tell them they
shall go to the Mountains of the Moon
if they will. If I sail the schooner
through the Great White Desert, they
shall go home!”
And after some fashion Nolan said
so. And then they all fell to kissing
him again and wanted to rub his nose
with theirs.
But he could not stand it long; and
getting Vaughan to say he might gc
back, he beckoned me down into our
boat. As we lay back in the stern
sheets and the men gave way, he sald
to me: “Youngster, let that show you
what it is to be without a family, with-
out a home, and without a country.
And if you are ever tempted to say a
word or to do a thing that shall put
a bar between you and your family,
your home, and your country, pray
God in his mercy to take you that in-
stant home to his own heaven. Stick
by your family, boy; forget you have
a self, while you do everything for
them. Think of your home, boy; write
and send, and talk about it. Let it
be nearer and nearer to your thought,
the farther you have to travel from it;
and rush to it, when you are free, a?
that poor black slave is doing now.
And for your country, boy,” and the
words rattled in his throat, “and for
that flag,” and he pointed to the ship,
“never dream a dream but of serving
her as she bids you, though the serv-
ice carry you through a thousand hells.
No matter what happens to you, no
matter who flatters you or who abuses
you, never look at another flag, never
let a night pass but you pray God to
bless that flag. Remember, boy, that
behind all these men you have to do
with, behind officers, and government,
and people even, there is the country
herself, your country, and that you
belong to her as you belong to your
own mother. Stand by her, boy, as
you would stand by your mother, if
those devils there had got hold of her
today!”
I was frightened to death by his
calm, hard passion; but I blundered
out that I would, by all that was holy,
and that I had never thought of doing
anything else. He hardly seemed to
hear me; but he did, almost in a
whisper, say: “Oh, if anybody had
said so to me when I was of your age!”
I think it was this half-confidence of |
his, which I never abused, for I never
told this story till now, which after-
ward made us great friends. He was
very kind to me. Often he sat up, or
even got up, at night to walk the deck
with me when it was my watch. He
explained to me a great deal of my
mathematics. He lent me books, and
helped me about my reading. He nev-
er alluded so directly to his story
again; bnt from one and another offi-
cer I have learned, in thirty years,
what I am telling. When we parted
from him in St. Thomas harbor, at the |
end of our cruise, I was more Sorry
than I can tell. I was very glad to
meet him again in 1830; and later in
life, when I thought I had some in-
fluence in Washington, I moved heav-
en and earth to have him discharged.
But it was like getting a ghost out of
prison. They pretended there was ng
such man, and never was such a man.
They will say so at the department
now! Perhaps they do not know. It
will not be the first thing in the serv-
ice of which the department appears
to know nothing!
(TO BE CONTINUED.)
FARMER BEHIND THE TIMES
His Wife Tells How She Has Lived
for Many Years Without Modern
Conveniences.
In the American Magazine a farm- |
er’'s wife tells of some of her experi- |
ences. She says: f
“My husband does not, or will not,
realize that the world has moved, and
that what were luxuries a generation
ago are necessities now. One of my
children died of typhoid fever, the
germs of which were, no doubt, brought
by flies from the house down the road
where they had the disease; for we
haven't a screen door in the house, and
only a few cheap adjustable screens.
“We sleep on feather beds, because
mattresses cost money, and the feather
beds were in the house—a part of the
furnishings that I married, when I took
my husband for better or for worse. We
have chairs with rounds missing, worn
carpets, nicked dishes and cooking
utensils that have long since outlived
their usefulness.
“The house is inconvenient, and for
that reason alone housework is much
harder than it ouglbt to be, and house
work is hard enough in all conscience |
on a farm. We have no water in the |
house. For 25 years I have fetched
and carried water. There are two
steps between the kitchen and the din-
ing room, which, by the way, was for
merly a bedroom and has no place for
a stove. The ‘parlor’ is across a halt
from the main part of the house and is
only opened on special occasions.”
| were
South’s Farm Production.
The Manufacturers’ Record says®
that the total value of the South's ag-
ricultural products, including animal
products, in 1916 was more than $4.
650,000,000, or only 8 per cent less than
the total for the United States in 1900. |
The total value of the Routh’s crops,
omitting live stock, in 1918 was $3,658,
232.000, or $1,072,280,000 over 1915. To |
| this cotton contributed $1,079,598,000,
‘Take us home, take us to our coun- |
try, take us te our own house, take
us to our own pickaninnies and our
own women.” He says he has an old
father and mother, who will die, if
they do not see him. And this
one |
says he left his people ali sick, and | could not make sense oat of.—Cincip-
grain $1,283,369,000, and hay, tobacco |
and potatoes $440,494,000.
mS OT |
Dollars and Sense. !
A poet has been known to make dol-
lars out of lines that ordinary mortals
paddied down to eomie ung hLpip them, i pati Times-Star.
 

THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT
THE RED CROSS
STARTS CAMPAIGN
No Less Than $10,000,600 Will
Meet War Needs.

APPEAL TO THE NATION
Entire Country To Be Canvassed.
Member Of British Parliament
Describes Suffering In
France.

Washington. — The greatest cam-
paign the Red Cross ever has waged,
designed to raise $100,000,000 to care
for American soldiers who fight
democracy’s battle on European fields
and to lend a helping hand to thou-
sands in the districts already devas-
tated by the war, was launched here
at a meeting of representatives of the
larger cities of the country.
Forty Cities Represented.
More than 100 men and women were
present from 40 cities and the meet-
ing was enthusiastic to a degree that
indicated a strong belief in the will
ingness of Americans to contribute to
the cause of mercy.
Henry P. Davison, chairman of the
Red Cross War Council, announcing
the amount to be raised, said it was
certain $100,000,000 would be required
“even to approach compliance with
the most pressing needs.”
Must Handle Big Task.
“If each individual American con-
tributes his ‘bit’ there can be no fail
ure,” he continued. “America will,
we feel sure, again demonstrate her
ability to handle a big task in a big
way. That we may be able to per-
form this great task we shall appeal
to the generosity and for the hearty
co-operation, of the whole American
people.”
Mr. Divison did not go into details
of the plan for raising the money, but
an intensive campaign will be under-
taken under the leadership of some of
the most prominent and active men
and women in each community. Ef-
forts will be made to secure the co-
operation and assistance of recognized
leaders who will devote their entire
attention for a time to the work.
War Conditions Described.
Many of the speeches describing the
suffering in France and Belgium under
German rule brought tears to the eyes
of the audience. Ian Malcom, member
of Parliament and of the visiting War
Commission, pictured the vast machin-
ery that is behind the fighting lines to
| care for the wounded, and the desola-
tion that reigns in the once thriving
and populous communities where Ger-
many has brought ruin. He said he
to raise the money needed.
LONDON SEES MUCH U. S. KHAKI.

1,000 Persons Of American
Army In Britain.
Over
London.—The engineers from the
American Army who have arrived in
England made a call on Ambassador
Page and later separated for a series
of conferences with War Office offi-
ties. They were entertained at lunch-
eon by the Earl of Derby, Secretary
for War.
American khaki was very much in
evidence in London. A number of ad-
ditional officers and hospital units
their blue uniforms with white arm
bands labeled with the insignia of the
come a familiar sight to the London
public.
More than 1,000 persons belonging

| Waite
| nual convention of the National
to the American Army are
Great Britain.
DR. WAITE PUT TO DEATH.
|
| Young Dentist Goes Calmly To the
Electric Chair.
N. Y.—Dr. Arthur Warren
Sing Sing
Ossining,
was executed at
did not doubt the success of the effort |
cials in regard to their various special- |
American Red Cross, already have be- |


{
|

have arrived and nurses, especially of |
the Cleveland and Harvard units, in |



NEW YORK-—Wheat, spot nominal
Corn, No. 2 yellow, $1.76, ¢. 1. f. New
York.
Hay—Steady, No. 1, $1.20.
Butter—Creamery, higher than ex-
tras, 40@40%c; creamery extras (93
score), 39%c; firsts, 38@39¢c; seconds,
86@37%ec.
Eggs—Fresh gathered extras, 37%
@38c.; fresh gathered storage packed
firsts, 36% @37c; fresh gathered firsts,
85@35%c; State, “enna. and nearby
Western hennery whites, fine to fancy,
871% @38c; State, Pennsylvania and
nearby hennery browns, 37% @38c.
Cheese—State fresh specials, 27c;
do, average run, 26% @263c.
Dressed Poultry — Chickens, 24@
30c; fowls, 20@20%¢c; turkeys, 18@
35¢.
PHILADELPHIA. — Wheat—There
were no spot offerings and the market
was entirely nominal. Quotations are
omitted.
Rye—No. 2 Western, in export ele-
vator, $2.40@2.45 per bushel; small |
lots of nearby rye in bags, quoted at |
$1.70@1.80, as to quality.
Corn-—Carlots, for local trade, as to
location, Western, No. 3 yellow, $1.78
@1.79; do, No. 2 yellow, $1.76@1.77;
do do, No. 3 yellow, $1.74@1.75.
Oats—No. 2 white, 80@81c; stand-
ard white, 79@80; No. 3 white, 78@
79; No. 4 white, 77T@78.
Butter — Western, solid - packed |
creamery, fancy, specials, 42c¢; extras, |
40@41; extra firsts, 39; firsts, 38; sec- |
onds, 37%; nearby prints, fancy, 43; |
do, average extra, 41@42; do, firsts, |
39@40; do, seconds, 38@381%; special |
brands of prints were jobbing at 4€¢
@49.
Eggs — Nearby firsts,
standard case; nearby
ceipts, $10.50 per case; Western
firsts, $10.80 per case; do, firsts,
$10.50 per case; fancy selected, care
fully candled eggs were jobbing at
40@41c per dozen.
Cheese — New York, full cream
fancy, new, 2714@27%c; specials |
higher; do, fair to good, new, 26% @
27; part skims, 14@22.
Live Poultry—Fowls, as to quality,
24@24%ec; roosters, 16@18; spring
chickens, not leghorns, plump, vel |
low-skinned, weighing 3; @13; pounds |
apiece, 33@36; white leghorns, weigh |
ing 3,@1% pounds apiece, 30@33;
ducks, Peking, 20@21; do, Indian run
ner, 17@18; pigeons, old, per pair, 2?
@28; do do, young, per pair, 20@22.


$10.80 per |
current re

BALTIMORE—Wheat—Steamer No,
2 red, spot, $2.82 and steamer No. 2
red Western, $2.84.
Corn — Contract
$1.74% nominal.
Oats—Standard white,
No. 3 white, 77c asked.
Rye—No. 2 rye Western, $2.20,
sales; bag lots, as to quality and con
dition, $2@2.20.
Hay—No. 1 timothy, $20; No. 2 do,
$18.50@19; No. 3 do, $16@18; light]
clover mixed, $18@18.50; No. 1 clover
mixed, $17.50@18; No. 2 do, $13@15;
No. 1 clover, $16.50@17.50; No. 2 do, |
$14@16; No. 3 do, $8@10. {
Straw—No. 1 straight rye, $15.50@ |
16; No. 2 do, $14.50@15; No. 1 tan-|
gled rye, $12@13; No. 2 do, $10.50@ |
11.50; No. 1 wheat, $9@9.50; No. |
do, $8@8.50; No. 1 oat, $10@11; No. |
2 do, $9@9.50.
Butter—Creamery, fancy, 30@40¢; |
creamery, choice, 37@38; creamery,
spot and May,
T5%c asked;

good, 35@36¢c; creamery prints, 40@ | e
41; creamery blocks, 39@40; Mary |
land and Pennsylvania rolls, 31@32; |
Ohio rolls, 30@31; West Virginia rolls, |
30@31; storepacked, 29; Md., Va. and |
Pa. dairy prints, 31@32.
Eggs—Maryland, Pennsylvania and
nearby firsts, 32% @33c; Western |
firsts, 32% @33; West Virginia firsts, |
| 821, @33; Southern firsts, 31% @32.
|
now in |
‘er, 218,
prison for the murder of his father-in- |
law, John E. Peck, of Grand Rapids, |
Mich.
The young dentist walked
and with a firm step from his cell to
chamber, accompanied by
the Rev. A. N. Peterson, Protestant
chaplain of the prison. He faltered,
he neared the
chair, but recovered quickly and
nodded to the group of physicians,
prison officials and others who had as-
the death
however, as
sembled as witnesses.
Waite submitted quietly to the or-
calmly {
electric |
| calves, $10@14.75.
deal of being strapped into the chair |
and went to his death without a word
of protest or good-by.
administered within
four min-
utes.

FIRE LOSSES INCREASED.

Were $44,000,000 Greater Last Year
Than Year Before.
New York.—The fire losses of the
country last year totaled $214,530,995,
as compared with $170,033,200 for the
vear previous, an increase of
than $44,000,000, according to a report
read at the opening session of the an-
Board
re. The los
5 a result fro
of Fire Underwrit
 

ITALIAN MISSION DINED.

Other Notables They Are the
Guests Of President Wilson.
The Prince of Uc
Washington.—Th
the Ital
of
With

 


 

1 other members of


the

sue

ntance of the Amer
whom they will negotiat
inc the coming month,


Three shocks |
$11@15.75; veal calves, $13.50@14.
medium, $16.25@16.35;
more |
{ 13
Chickens—OIld hens, 4 lbs. and over, |
23c; do, small to medium, 23; do, |
White Leghorn, 22; old roosters, 13@ |
14; spring, 1 Ibs. to 11% lbs., 42@44; |
do, 1 1b. to 114 ‘lbs, 38@40; winter, 1|
Ibs. and under, 35@38; young, large |
emooth, fat, 26@28; poor, rough and |
staggy, 22@23. Ducks — Young Pe |
kings, 3 lbs. and over, 18c; do puddle, | §
do 17; do, muscovy, do, 17; do, small |
Pigeons — Young, per pair, |
5c; do, old, do, 25. Guinea fowl—As |
to size, each, 40@50c.

Live Stock



CHICAGO — Hogs — Bulk, $15.80Q
16.25; light, $15.10@16.25; mixed,
15.60@16.35; heavy, $15.60@16.40;
rough, $15.60@15.75; pigs, $10.50@
14.50.
Cattle—Native beef rattle, $9.60@
3.70; stockers and feeders, $7.60@
10.40; cows and heifers, $6.65@11.60;
Sheep — Wethers, $12.75@15.75;
ewes, $12.25@15.85; lambs, $15.60Q
20.25.
PITTSBURGH — Cattle — Choice,
$11.50@12; prime, $12.25@12.75. ,
. |
Sheep — Prime wethers, $11.75@
12.25; cull and common, $5@8; lambs,
Hogs—Prime heavy, $16.40@16.45;
heavy Yorkers,
Yorkers, $14@15;
rough, $15@15.25.
> @
$16@16.25; light
pigs, $13@13.25;

KANSAS CITY—Hogs—Bulk, $15.45
  


@16.20; heavy, $1¢ @16.40; packers
and butel ? 90@16.30; light,
$15.60@16.05; S5@15.
Sheep—Lambs, $§15@29; yearlings,
$14@17; wethers, $13@15.50; ewes, |
$12@15. |
Cat Prime fed steers, $12.50@ |


rs, $10@12.25;







Southern [J ? |
y 11.25; 1 5; stocke d
feeders @10.75; bulls, $8@10.50; |
calves, $3@13.50. |

+
Veal, choice,
do, 13; do,
BALTIMORE—Calves
per 1b, @14c;
rough
good





ry, per
Sheep
; old bucks,

t, 45 to 55 lbs, 16@17;
t fair to me
ium grade \ambs, 15.
| P4000
Nooovssssoessrroversosrsreoes
!
nd condition, 6% @7%; spring lambs
West P
CLARENCE SCH
MOUNT JOY: PA.









 





















































 
 
WE
ASK
nll
LUMBER -COAL
EERE ———— ——————


Get a Kodak without letting
your pocket know it.
Ask for a Kodak Bank and
see how easy it is to get a real
camera with spare dimes.
Ww. B. BENDER
Mount Joy, Pa.





Tried and True’
I have taken the agency for the Maxwell Automébfles, which 1s one of the
best equipped and easiest riding cheap cars ow the market It is no

satisfactory. Any one in the market for such a car will readily be oon-
vinced of its merits after a demonstration which will be cheerfully given.
I not only sell cars, but I am prepared to fake care of the people to whom
I sell, which should not be overlooked by persons buying cars. I am at your
service Sundays or night time as well 4s during the day. None but ‘com-
petent mechanics employed. ¥ your car needs attention, give this garage
a trial. I also handle the
i
t
Studebaker
One of the Best Cars of That Class




r 5
BRUBAKERS’ GARAGE,
Bell Phone Marietta St. 4
Mount Joy, Pa.



 

ALBERT STRICKLER
Bell Phone at Residence and Yards
 













 

] y |
A NL 2
1 NP
hl ppeeet 4 1



Wa Are Always Prepared to Serve
Pure Spring Water
ICE
IN ANY QUANTITY
At very Moderate Charges.
Don't fail to see us before
placing your order this year.
J. N. Stauffer & Bro.
“MOUNT JOY, PA.
GARDEN THEATRE
--FOR-
Clean
Entertainment C
1 always have on hand
the line







 







, BOLOGNA
DRIED BEEF AARD, ETC.
Also Fresh Beef Veal, Pork, Mutton
H. KRALL
West x an St, Mount Joy,

Bell Telephone,
PLUMBING
Tinning and Spouting
THAT'S MY BUSHESS
Nemanrten WD
A SHARE OB/YOUR BUSI
OLICITED.





Le &

 
 


Charles S.Frank
AUCTIONEER
MOUNT JOY, PA.
Prompt.aftention given to the Calling
of Real Estate and Personal Property
Salés. Terms Moderate. Bell Phone |
The Sevcik School for Violff |
SEMI-TONE_SYSTEM
a
IRAC. EBY
ll
negal St., Mourt Joy, Pa.