MT JOY BULLETIN wy. ITTLE JULIUS SNEEZER rr —p— WNT QF THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER COUNTY, ZENnsLvANIA Ps A MAN-I WOULD IKE TO SEE WOU DONT You KNOW ROVGHT UP TOBE TO BE ! YES T ALONE THAN A GREAT MAN! orTeN 5 | IN BAD company! THOUGHT OF BEING A | GARBAGE MAN! THAT ITS BETTER ee DONT RUNAWAY! WHEN 1 WAS A YOUNG MAN, T WAS KNOWN AS THE WORST PRUNKARD IN MUCKLE RAT- SO1 Hap TO LEAVE TOWN! BUT SINCE I HAVE COME BACK, T DONT SEE HALF THE PEOPLE THAT L USE TO! "OUNTY, p vam hp | BY SARER YoU HAVENT | QUIT DRINKIN* £ HAVE YOU ? Now is the time to knock out the 10 pe el war ta sporting goods and Save Our Sports. The Amateur Atl: Union, The Pacific Coast smen, the Play- grounds Association of New Orleans, the United S Lawn Tennis As- sociation, the United States Golf As:ociatic Amateur Base ball Federation of the United States, and eve ry ation worth while has i gone on record as opposing a continuance tax because it defeats every purpose of making the United States a nation of well developed persons. It prevents the play of the boy. When this is done we stop progress. Every boy should be allowed to play, in fact he must be allowed Senator and any to do his, or and or them, play. So get busy and write your Conoressman one else you know in Washington and ask him. their, best to have this tax repealed. Do it now. mmm BASE BALL! «... ."™ D Shields, If....... 0.0 2 0 0 Campbell, 3b....... g 0 2 31 1 | Pennell, e..........0 0 5 1 0 Giants Lost Two IR. Shiels 1b...... 1 1130 1 Our Colored Giants lost both Bowe rs, ».........0 1 G¢ 0 0 games here on the Fourth to the Kihler, ef.......... 0 0 1 0 0 ‘Keystone Giants of Steelton. The Boyles, ss. .........0.0 0 5 2 morning game by a score of 13 to 11 ' Douglas, 2b... 0 0 TT 3 '1 -and the afternoon game by a 16 to Mec Mullen, p 9:0 0.2 0 “7 score. ! Totals I 22412 5 Marietta Defeated Brown’s Athletic Club had little; Mount Joy....... 201 033 00x— 9 «difficulty in defeating the Derry Marietta ........ 100 000 000— 1 “Silk team of Marietta here on Sun- | Struck Out by Simons 6, McMul- «day 9 to 1. The score: len 4. Wild Pitches, Simons 1. Me. Mount Joy Mullen 1, Umpire, Yost and Henry. r h o a e¢ . Bishop, rf..........2 1 1 0 0 - Base Hits Hahn, 2b...........1 1 1 2 0, Elizabethtown defeated Maytown Showalter, ef.......3 3 2 0 0;on Saturday 13 to 11. Bennett, 1b........ 9 1315 0 0 Landisville defeated Rohrerstown Simons, p...........1 3'0 3 0ina good game Saturday 3 to 1. Bigler, 1¥.......... 0 1 1 0 0 It took the Steel Products team of Pennell, ¢.......... 11 6 2 0| Lancaster, ten innings to defeat Lan- Bilis, 8b............0 2 1 1 0ldisville at Landisville Monday morn- gank, ss... ...... I 1 0 3 0} ing 4 to 3. In the afternoon Landis- —_—— {ville evened things by winning 4 to otals ...........9 14 27 11 01. rs. Wilson ° w ith Her Successor | Work was advancing. Duy ( alm intervals I replenished my fire | someiimes without leaving the ues | tor fire and woodpile were so nea; | this could easily be done—or busied { myself with my notebook, watch ny | the gestures of the trees in taking the { Snow, examining Separate erysials | | under a lens, and learning the methods | of their deposition as an enduring | fountain for the streams Several | { times when the storm ceased for a | few minutes, a Douglass squirrel came | STATESMAN KNEW, ALL RIGHT | | Pidn’t Need Lawyer te Toll Him That | . | ! the Motto of the State Was | | in Latin, { - J ! - i A Chica lay a man of reat] { ability and ! learning, visited, | I 1 rip to the | | ) 0 st whe as]. Vi 1 a ex] ) ve tate he ho 1 tt IY in 1 i} vere te to honor t t H ZOVe 1 h s i 1 ten: 2 the el ! i AS the Y the vad alread bi laid hesi tive plates These cards were yr 1 { They cost $25 each, and they bore af i thei heads the state coat of arms, upon which was engraved a motlo in Latin As the lawyer sat down he took up this ecard and, looking at the motto, said to t man at his left, “V good, indeed very appropriate.” “What's good?’ asked the lieu | tenant governor. | “I refer to these words,” said the | lawyer, as he pointed to the moft | Yes,” replied tlie leutenant gov- erno ith a Kr look, “them | Wol | MiaTOIIET { WATCHED How G t ra after Ly sto p Vv oo wo i Vere rit S V QO ug these frisking from the foot of s ciump of dwarf pines, moving in sudden tnter- rupted spurts over the £(08Ssy snow; then without any apparent guidance he would dig rapidly into the drift where he buried some grains of bar- | ley that the had left. The Douglass does not strictly belong to! these upper woods, and I was sur- prised to find him out in such weather, | =—John Muir, horses eee ent Eei-Like Water Dog. The hellbender is a large, ugly look- ing but harmless salamander, found in Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee and southward. The hellbender is known as an alligator and water dog. Two species inhabit the central parts of the United States, of which the more common and widespread is the Nec- turus maculatus, It reaches the length of one foot to twenty inches, is smooth, slimy and brown blotched, with the tufted gills dark red. These creatures remain mostly among weeds or rocks at the bottom of the water during the daytime, but at night, they move about, often with quick ell-like motions, in search of crawfish, worms, insects, frogs and it readily takes the bait off the fisherman's hook. It is tenacious of life and can live for hours out of water. They spawn during the months of April and May. The spawn much resembles that of frogs, but is lighter in color. —— ig Land Words at Sea. Cat is not an animal; it is a tackle used to hoist the anchor. Chains are not chains, but plates of iron bolted through a ship's side, to which the rigging supporting the masts is fas- tened. Dog watches are nut periods of time consumed in watching dogs, but they are half watches of two hours each from 4 to 6 and 8 to 8 pm. Draught is not a drink of water, hut the depth of water in which a vessel Is required to float. Duck is not a thing that swims and quacks, but a light canvas used for small sails. Eye is not an organ of sight ; it is a circular part of a shroud or stay | WON FAME AS PROPHETESS Tell Us Little of Real Life of Remarkable Woman, In the four centuries and more | since Mother Shipton’s birth, her pre- dictions have from time to time been | called, especially as some new in- on or historical development has j seemed to bear out her prophecies. | According to the Encyclopedia Britan { nica, Mother Shipton was horn near Yorkshire a good many years before Columbus discovered America, though the exact date is in doubt. The leg- end concerning her states that she was begotten. like the Wizard Merlin of King Arthur's Round Table, of a union of a phantom of Apollo or { Some other aerial demon in that guise, and a beautiful young orphan girl of Yorkshire named Agatha Southill. The baby was chrisiened Ursula Southill by the abbot of Beverly. From early childhood the prophetess displayed her weird powers, which developed in | Seope as she grew older. She mar- | “ried a carpenter named Shipton, ac- { cording to the legend, and died at { the age of seventy-three years. Con- {trary to the custom of those times, { Mother Ship on, de spite her suspect- I ed connection with the devil and the [ powers of darkness, escaped hanging As a witch, due largely to the fact hai she iad never been known to | I'm Hei ey i eve” was toward any person, but ¢ rted power in piercing 1 vel ( i uture. | WILLING TO SHARE HUSBAND Curiou ‘ustom That Came Under the bservation of Traveler in Persia. One of the most extraordinary cus- | + toms in the world is that observed by certain Persian tribes. When a native woman wishes to display her affection for a friend of her own sex, she proposes that the | latter shall become her husband's wife | on equal terms with herself. “This is the greatest compliment | she can bestow,” wrote the late Dr. | Elizabeth Macbean Ross, who spent | some years as a doctor among the | tribes of North Persia. She had the | hand of many Persian husbands of- | fered to her in this way. “I must say it is somewhat embar- rassing,” she said, in her scences, according to London Tit-Bits, “when the gentleman himself happens to be present, and I have sometimes wondered what the effect on the wife would be if her generous offer were accepted. “When I told them it appeared to me a curious thing that one wife should select another, I was Informed that it presented many advantages. ‘It is much better for us to choose our husband's wife; then we get some- one we like and with whom we can agree.” If a husband dies his wives are divided among his brothers, the eldest having first choice and taking all or as many of the women as he fancies. Nature's Fireless Cooker. Western towns have lately been pre- paring and 1maintaining camping grounds, equipped with water and lights, for the convenience of automo- bile tourists. There is at least one spot where natural fireless cookers are among the gratuitous provisions for the comfort of the touring public. This unique inducement is found at Hot Springs, Nev., where boiling water has been spouting up from the unknown depths of the sun-baked earth. Near this remarkable hot spring there are several ‘cooking holes,” ‘excavations about three feet in depth, whose sides are lined with sheet iron. At the bot- tom the boiling water gurgles. Into these holes visitors lower the vessels containing their food or drink. Be- cause of the boiling temperature and the heat of the surrounding steam which fills the cavity, the process of cooking is rapid. Dream Lore, Kill—To dream you kill some one signifies that you will inherit a small fortune by the death of an old friend. To kill a friend denotes sickness. To kill a relative foretells failure in your undertaking. To dream you are killed signifies great loss to him who kills you. To kill wild beasts denotes do- mestic happiness. But to kill tame or that is looped over Business. a mast.—Nation’s | —————————— Not Seen, A tight-fisted old gentleman, who | recently recovered from a severe at- tack of fever, called up his physician | on the phone and made complaint with | eference to the total of the bill ren- en by him on this occasion. | “See here!” shouted the old gentle. | man, “you have me charged for five weeks’ calls, I will pay for four weeks only.” “But, my dear sir,” exposiulated the | doctor, “1 visited you each day for | five weeks.” J “Perhaps you did. I don't know,” etorted the tight one, “but for ono | week I was delirious, and I didn't see you come in.” ree etl Ieee Advertise in the Mt. Joy Bulletin. | tons is useful animals, great family troubles. Buttons—To dream of bright but- always good; if rusty, it por- tends misfortune; if covered, happi- ness; if he has lost his buttons, it is a sign he will not live long.—Chicago American. Prehistoric Creature. The remains of what is described as the largest and most mysterious land animal that ever walked the earth have been found in Baluchistan. The creature was probably more like a rhinoceros than like of today, but it had gests that of the giraffe, Two of the compared with similar hones of the largest previously known land animals, make them look small, and nothing but dynamite or a stump puller could have drawn one of its teeth.—Youth’s Companion, any other a neck that sug- neck bones, L.egends Coticerning “Mother Shipton | remini- | animal } |W. M.ain St. ) | Ancoma, in Mexico, Surely Has Site 'g Such as No Other Place on Earth Can Boast. To live on top of a mushroom | would be a peculiar sensation. It the mushroom were of gigantic pro portions and were planted so as to overhang the sea, the experience { would be very similar to that of living in the town of Ancoma, which is three miles south of the Mesa Escantada in Mexico, says the Christian Sci- ence Monitor. The strange room-like rock on which the town | stands is a splendid specimen of | fantastic erosion, having overhanging | sides nearly 400 feet high, The top of the rock is comparatively level, and is about 70 acres in extent. It is notched with dizzy chasms. The | greater portion of it overhangs the seq like an immense mushroom, and the oddest thing is that it should have a town at the top. Now, this town pertains to a past | clvilization. It is one of the most perfect specimens of the pre-his- toric Pueblan architecture, With in- conceivable labor this town in the air was built and fortified for the | safety of its inhabitants. It | reached by a mere trail of toe holes | up the of the mushroom. The age of town is nof known, but it was already old in 1540, when the first explorers visited it. stem the ese G EE eeeeem ee r It pays to advertise in the Bulletin | Subscribe for the Mt. Joy Bulletin. Advertise in the Mt. Joy Bull etin, TOWN ITD UK PEOPLE OF Ot | | Gus Hangdog, Nobody's Friend, got Fined for Selling Short-Weights, and {he is going to Ask the Editor not to Mention it in the Paper. Gus always knocks the Editor and the Paper, nev- er spends any Jack for Ads, and has his Envelopes printed out of Town. Gus will get a column on the Front | Pose Ache? When you're suffering from headache, backacke, toothache, neuralgia, or pain from any othér cause, try Dr. Miles Anti-Pain Pills One or two and the pain stops Contain no habit- -forming drugs Have you tried Dr. Miles’ Nervine? Ask your Druggist THIS MAN HAS THE BLOOD OF INDIAN CHIEFS IN HIS VEINS! Travel With Him to the Land of the Painted Desert He Knows It He Loves It He Lives In It It’s Home to Him No wonder his books breathe the spirit of it. His word pictures grip with the fire of youth, Read his st and you'll know the real great spirit of the West. ZANE GREY Greatest of Wa sterin Story For sale at CHANDLER'S DRUG STORE was = = OT mush- | Mt. Joy, Pa. | mi WHEN 1 OE E11 will satisfy next year? barn is full builders will be time an Ontario. RB ow. Donegal St. SO0O00000 Milk Chocola Milk Chocola Your Tobacco an your old drill . G, 11510 0 OO WEDNESDAY, ; ) YOUR BA proses) Will Need Attention Cultivators the most exacting farmer. Are you going to put up as It is Cheaper You can Select From Let us give you an estimate The Ontario Drill needed. Now is and if found NISSLY'S te te The Chocolate for 5¢c Each Manufactured by FLORIN, PENNA, U. S. A. CLARENCE SCHOCK MOUNT JOY, PA. PYROX Still Leads as a Spray For Potatoes Dust Your Tobacco When small and worms will hot bother you later Liggets Champion & Giant Dusters Are perfect machines to do this. We sell them Jno. Deere and International Are strongly built and conveniently arranged and Hay Track and Carrier To enable you too handle your hay and wheat easier Have this work done NOW while the Londen or Myers Equipment Don’t suffer with the heat while Baking, Cooking or Ironing, Get a New Perfection Oil Stove and make your kitchea comfertable. OUR PRICES ARE LOW On oils, paints, glass and hardware. Is the best drill on the market ard in a very short = the time to look over unfit, place your order for The sa tisfaction you get from its use will please you and our ur price, 1 will interest you. MOYER MOUNT Joy, 2 10 1 1 ALMOND BARS WITH THAT LINGER LONGER TAST At NEARLY every Candy Store Nissly Swiss Chocolate Co., In. Y 6th 1 TE N IS FULL d Potatoes 1 i 11000 O00 EL LS 11 0 i LOLOLOOLLLOOLBVOOO0O0O0OOOOODOOOOOOOOOOOOOD 11100 1 209 West Main PRES Ty 000 RO wm wl CIGAR SCRAPS FOR SMOKING, 1] Manufacturer of Manufacturer of Street [1m 3 111100 1 JW. CROGG CIGARS and TOBACCO CIGAR CUTTINGS FOR CHEWING CIGAR MADE ™ SUIT YOUR TASTE. MOUNT JOY, PA. 111 1921 hb 2 ¥ Jor I ——
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers