THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA, U. S. A. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29th 1921 FT \ \ Fags | | - Diamond EO ) HA Goodyear} Miller New Chevrolet Prices Effective May 7th, 1921 “Four-Ninety” Models Touring Car......$645 Roadster........ $635 Sedan.... . $1195 Coupe «++... Light Delivery Wagon $645 All prices f. o. b;, Flint, Mich. GABRIEL SNUBBERS 1 have your size in stock at a special price for Rohrer Agent for HUDSON CHEVROLET ESSEX SAMSON TRUCKS & TRACTORS Mount Joy, Penna. gL MoMA an mama anna OOO00000000000000L000OLLVIIN This Saturday andjall week until next Saturday, one full size cake of the new Klenzo Toilet Soap FREE with each purchase of a new, large family-size, 50 cent tube of Klenzo Dental Creme. KLENZO TOILET SOAP is pure, cleansing and the skin. Gives a thick, creamy lather and leaves the aromatic, deep-woods scent of pines. KLENZO DENTAL CREME makes the teeth white and shin- ing, the mouth clean, and léaves that Cool, Clean, Klenzo Feel- ing. Giant, new, 50 cent tube contains enough Klenzo to brush your teeth twice a day for nearly four months. soothing to Most families use dental creme'and soap fast. Why not save by getting several tubes and cakes now? You'll have to get them soon enough. Remember the date. SATURDAY, JULY 2nd up to and including Saturday, July 9th.. Orders reserved by It’s a very big economy, and people buy Better make sure of yours. phone, if you wish. shrewdly these days. E. W. GARBER MOUNT JOY, PA. 0 x, £Y “ oO * *. D 2H oO 0 7 0 *, 0 0 7 *, 0 7 0) 0 LJ *. * *, LJ 0 0 * *, O oO 0 *, 0 0 0 0 0 O QO + 0 *, 0 *, Ls * + 0 7 Ls + £ 7 7 7 0 £y 2 JO OOOO ; u Local and Long Distance TRUCK. HAULING OF ALL KINDS APPLY TO CHAS. Z. DERR 216 South Barbara St., MOUNT JOY, PA. Bell Phone 11 R 4 TOE) 000 0 0 0 OT EET 0 LD LTT LO EL \ THE QUESTION OF FURNITURE OUALITY FOUND ANGLING GOOD SPORT) Many Notables H Have Been Devotees of Sport Immortalized By Sir Izaak Walton. When President Harding prepared himself for the responsibilities of his) great office by spending a few weeks fishing in Florida he added one more | to the long list of notables who have | been devotees of that sport. It Is re- corded that Noah was not only a good | boatman, but a skillful angler as well, Long before the flood, and far away in the mists of time, there is a Baby- | lonian legend that Belus, son of Nim- | rod, discovered fishing. | The first au- | thentic record of angling appears when | the Lord asks Job: out a fish with a hook?’ The Homer “Iliad” and stating that godlike men, when pinched for dinner “Odyssey,” “Can't thou teks | great | immortalizes the art in the fished with crooked hooks, and even | dived for oysters. It was Plato, the | Greek philosopher, who once sald: “There is nothing In angling that is | noble, or daring, Charlemagne, or requiring skill.” | who dominated west- | ern Europe in the eighth century, ad- | vised his subjects to take up the art of angling in order to be content. “Be- cause,” sald he, “I have never yet known an angler who was melan- choly.” But the greatest fisherman and phil- | osopher of modern times is undoubted- ly Sir Izaak Walton. In his “Com- | pleat Angler” he indicates the prog- ress of fishing, particularly on lur ing trout. He had a different color- ed fly for every month in the year. His books are a source of informa- tion for all, and it has been said that in them a child may wade and the tallest giant swim. “Angling,” Izaak, “ is like mathematics, in that it can never be fully learned, at least not so fully but that there will always be room for experiment by some suc- ceeding angler.”—Detroit News. THAT'S THE STORY HE TELLS But It Certainty Was Unfortunate that the “Tonic” Should Explode When It Did. An Indiana manufacturer recently enjoyed a restful Sunday in the quiet of his own home, a steady downpour of rain giving every assurance of his not being disturbed. Early in the eve- ning, however, he concluded a little walk would be beneficial, and remem- bering his wife having mentioned she was In need of another bottle of her favorite springtime remedy, he donned a raincoat and braved the elements. Pocketing his purchase, and home- ward bound, he thought to have a look in on the evening service at the church of which he was a devoted and valued member. Standing in the rear of the church, as there was an unusually large congregation, he became much interested in the sermon, when to his | horror there came a terrific bang, fol- lowed by a deluge of foam flying in every direction; all eyes were his way and the sermon temporarily discontinued while the treat anid the laughter of the entire congregation, having no opportunity to explain that he was carrying home 2 harmless bottle of “tonic” for his wife. Gold Found In Ireland. The recent discovery of gold in the streams of County Westmeath, Ire- land, calls attention to the fact that the ancient tribesmen of that coun- try must have been expert metallur- gists. Although not noted as a gold producing country, Ireland Is one of the greatest storehouses of antiqui- ties in the world. It Is a literal mine of personal ornaments, implements, rings, torques and other Celtic an- tiquities. Kemble observed that, “with the sole exception of the mu- seums of Scandinavia, there is scarce- ly one European collection which shows anything like so great a wealth of personal ornaments made of the precious metal as Ireland.” It is almost certain that the gold orna- ments found in such abundance were made from the precious metal found in Irish streams. Elevated Rallroad for Cuba. Why anyone in Cuba wants an ele- vated railroad thrusting Its steel props through the palm fronds and making the tropic night hideous with shrieking and rumbling is a puzzle te an inhabitant of a northern city, but one thing is clear from an item in a Havana newspaper. Controversy has begun long before the first riveter has put the lustiest tom-tom beaters of the island to shame, The question now under discussion is: Shall state, prov- ince and municipality share the ex- pense of construction with the trac- tion company? Strikes, legislative inquiries and franchise suits may follow. He Needed Help. “All kinds of communications are received in a newspaper office. For instance, an old subscriber asks us to Ther wo few things that quality effects so vitally as furni- personal wear and for home ted to last a long time, but this connot be en you buy furniture you are buying nder you long service. It will if you s think of quality first. All the furni- ‘ said about furniture. something you expect buy it here, because here ture we buy must measure make as to the manner of wo long run, well-made furniture is buy. We invite comparison, look rices and then come here and see ur up to requirements which we ip. And, after all, in the cheapest sort of furniture to d, compare qualities and assortment. Westenberger, Maley & : Wives 31 East King Street LANCASTER, PA. Your Camera Supplies at W. B. BENDER tell him how to get rid of a trouble- some guest who came to stay a ‘few days’ and has been there a month.” “We haven't time to answer a fool- ish question like that. Just pigeon- hole it.” “No, I'm going te answer it some- how. The writer states in a post- script that if we don’t give him some advice he's going to set fire to his house.”— Birmingham Age-Herald. Tendency. “Our best politica: life, whatever the howlers may say, is tending to- ward equality, beauty and holiness.” -—Vachel Lindsay. Who Wants a Farm - I have for sale an 86 acre farm West Donegal township, that is, be- yond a dobut, the best farm of its size I have ever offered. Limestone land excellent producer, good build- ings, excellent location. Must be seen a be appreciated. J. E. Schroll, Mt. rr lA Aen It Will Pay You. The large circulation of the Bul- letin makes it the best advertising medium in this section of Lancaster county. Give it a trial and be con- 122 E. Main St, MOUNT JOY, Ra \yinead. said | FRENCH PLAYHOUSE ON BOAT | 3p BBD DDH DDB SDPDESDSSDPOD HOE DDOODDP Actors in Remarkable Theatre Are Said to Find Their Occupa- tion a Pleasant One. built on a Tours to France has a playhouse, barge, which travels from Strasbourg. It is & gorgeous affair | | | | { painted in white and silver and called | the “bateau-theatre,” It wanders along the canals and wherever it stops the French, who have few ments, crowd into the Fulminant to see a dramatic agreeable life to move leisurely by canal and river, to stop where one | pleases, to play to a crowded house in | ready, to | community | which is always to a whole The room where a salle, give pleasure and profit to oneself, the performances take place is spac- | hundred | holds five one of the faut- fous enough. It persons, and every eunils covered in red velvet in this | blue and gold decorated hall is oc- cupied whenever the floating theatre casts anchor in an out-of-the-way town. The actors are their own mariners. There is much work to be done on board any kind of hoat, as all who have ever helped to sail a yacht will They all lend a hand. They decks and they make the preparations which are constantly called for. What do they not do? They go out shopping—and is there anything so delightful as to shop al ways in strange towns? They pre pare their play bills and announce their advent. The mere business of acting is only an incident in this va- scrub the ried life. LINKED WITH GLORIOUS PAST | Town of Steinamanger Within Terri- tory Once Important Part of the Old Roman Empire. Perhaps it was not without deep sen- timental reasons that former Emperor Charles of Austria-Hungry chose the town of Steinamanger—to the Hun- garians, Szombathely—as a place from which he hoped to receive the acclaim of his former subjects as thelr returned ruler, says a bulletin from the Wash- ington headquarters of the National Geographic society. It has been the “cherished policy of the Hapsburg rulers of Austria-Hun- gary to rejuvenate the old “Holy Roman Empire,” the Frankish and lat- er the German union which claimed to be the heir to the power and over- lordship of Rome. The affiliations of what was Austro-Hungarian territory before the World war, with the old Roman empire, were perhaps closer through Steinamanger than through any other town. The present town is in the site of the Roman Sabria, which was the capital of one of the chief divisions of Pannonia—the name given by the Romans to the province which turned | erstwhile de- | vout church member beat his hasty re- | covered the heart of modern Austria- Hungary. A “Sand-Bow.” The unusual optical phenomenon of | a rainbow produced by the sun shin- ing not on rain-drops, but on particles of sand suspended in the air by wind, was witnessed over a part of the Great there was a secondary bow visible, width of an ordinary rainbow. a segment of it was seen. The sand was colitie, ing between the limits of No. 8 and No. 10 shot, exhibit a pearly luster. It is pointed out that the production of the bow must have been due to reflection from the outer surfaces of the spherules, and cannot be explained on the rule of refraction and total reflection, gener- ally applied in the explanation of the rainbow. Selenium a Rare Element Selenium is a rare and little-used element described by the United States Geological survey, Department of the Interior, as having its greatest use in giving a red color to glass, such as that used in railroads for signal lights, and in coloring enameled ware red. It Is also used to overcome the natural green color of ordinary glass. Selenium is peculiar in being a very poor conductor of electricity in the dark and a fairly good conductor in the light and is used in several electric devices whose utility depends on this peculiarity. It has been used in telephoning along a ray of light and in transmitting sounds and photo- graphs from one place to another over a wire, China to Have Large Mint. One of the largest mints in the world, with a possible daily output of 800,000 silver dollars, is to be erected at Shanghai, China, at a cost of about $2,000,000, under the direction of an American expert. When completed, in about two years, it will absorb some 14 tons of silver a day in its task of establishing a standardized currency in China, where the present unit of value, the Mexican dollar, competes with as many varieties of coin as there are provinces. The Chinese tael, now used for reckoning, is not a coin at all, but a measured slug of silver, the value of which varies in different parts of the country—Popular Mechanics Magazine. Disappointed Hopes. “Hiram,” sald Mrs. Corntossel, “our boy Josh has learned to play a regular tune on his new violin.” “That boy won't do nothin’ but waste time. What does he want with f regular tune? I was educatin’ him for leader of a jazz orchestra.” ~~ Colarth Can Be Cured Catarrh is a local discase greatly influ- by constitutional conditions. It requires constitutional treat- 'S CATARRH MEDICINE he foundation of jent strength by h and assists the disease, gives the p improving the general healt! nature in doing its work. All Druggists. Circulars frée.. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ofile, An advertisement in these columns is read by many hundreds of people each week. en why shouldn’t tf | newspaper advertising pay? tf entertain- | representation. It is | which are polished and | RR = | Salt Lake by some surveying parties. | The colors were very brilliant, and | The main bow was fully double the | Only | consisting of calcareous ! spherules of fairly uniform size, rang- | \/ 00% % 9, PS %*% $0 0 * 0% 9, 9, a8 0, 0 5. 0 0 (0000 he! 9. 9, Dow oe & Ledeen dediddedd vod “No OUR PATRONS On July 1 basis. we will put our business on a cash We do this in order to elintigate a lot of clerical work and This is no\reflection on your credit. expense. This change will enable us to give you ser- vice and merchandise at a “Saying. ¥ : Ny GARBERS’ GARAGE ELIZABETHTOWN, PENNA. Srefpadraoideedrdradaoifoadrdrdpifeafrdrdrdoifedrdrdriedrdr odode Pe. o%0- 0% o% 2 B0.o%. 2% o%00%-6%0-0% e%- e204 bode adeodeadeadecdeadeadeedeaddeadradeadradodededsidnfedfeifrfoededsiirfodeds rr PERE TCE LE TT Nl PN A nH Ec A TITY TI TE I TT Te Te TT TE SS $625 f. o. b. Detroit he EAE The Fordson saves from thirty to fifty per cent of the farmer's time. | ; The Fordson plows, harrows, drills as much ground || in the same time as from four to six horses. Manay far- § mers say it'does the work of eight horses. | The Fodson does for the farmer just what machine power does for for the manufacturer--it enables him to manufacture hisproductatlesscost. And that is whatthe fii!’ farmer wants; grow hiscrops more cheaply and make his ~~ {i; magin of profitgreater. And the Fordsonwillhelphimdoit. §i: I SRE Let us prove this to you by demonstration on your ls own farm. Just phone us or drop us a card. Id A I » li GARBERS' GARAGE | 833-845 South Market Street ELIZABETHTOWN, PA. i Bell Phone 77 Ind. Phone 605A. is i I, THE UNIVERSAL CAR == Here is the Ford Runabout, a perfect whirlwind of utility. Fits into the daily life of everybody, anywhere, everywhere, and all the | time. For town and country, it is all that its name implies—a Run- about. Low in cost of operation; low in cost of maintenance, © with all the sturdy strength, dependability and reliability for which Ford cars are noted. We'd be pleased to have your order for one or more. We have about everything in motor car accessories, and always have a full line of genuine Ford Parts. We'd like to have you i customer. Remember if you want your Ford to give continuous service you must keep it in good condition. We. | « will do it for you. \ Garbers’ Garage ¢ 833-845 South Market ‘Street A ELIZABETHTOWN, BA.