LITTLE JULIUS SNEEZER ‘THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA, U. 8. A. BY BAKER %0' DONE TOOTIN' DAT AM SOME POG OF MINE! HE AM AN a DOG! ™ <i WHERE'D YA GAT THAT] EDUCATED STUFF AT? a fy WHY- WHEN T SAYS THREE AND THREE, HE ig g S AND DE ODAH DAY, WHEN I DONE THREW HIM A BONE, T SAID, FOAH AND FOAH! WHAT 0 YO! TINK [HE ATE, D DATS | ry Davidson Prices Reduced Price reductions on Harley-Davidson Motorcycles and side cars for the 1922 §eason are now effective. No halfway reductions have been made, but final rock bottom cuts to the very “lowest prices possible. These unusually lew prices and Harley-Davidson superior high quality, offer unequalled motorcycle and side car values. Old Price New Reduced 74 Cu. in. Electric Twith..............3520 $390 $130 74 Cu. in. Magneto Twin. Hp ........... 485 B60 125 61 Cu. in. Electric Twin. . 4%. ......... 485 365 120 61 Cu. in. Magneto Twin... . N........ 450 335 115 Sport Electric Twin... .. NESTE SAA 445 340 105 Sport Magneto Twin. .......... ..-.. 415 310 105 Tourist Side Car................ %.....145 105 40 Roadster Side Car, .............i, he. 160 115 45 Two-Passenger Side Car. ..........." h: - 185 135 50 Above prices f. o. b. Milwaukee plus federal tax 1922 Models now ready for delivery Send for Catalogue E. S. FREY 15 West High St., Elizabethtown Bi, 1 DAY THURSDAY SEASHORE EXCURSION August 25 Asbury Park Ocean Grove Camp Meeting $7.14 _** from Mount Joy Tickets good going on regular trains August'25 and returning on all regular trains, except limited trains, until September 9, inclus- ive. Stop-off allowed at Philadelphia in both directions. Pennsylvania System DOOOO000000O00COOOOOOOOCOO00000000COOOOOOOOOOO00000 U ED C RS 25 ig 10s NE S A LA HL N IN OUR CHD} « HES 'NEWS PERTAINING TO ALL THE FOR SALE 1917 WQverland Big Four BORO AND THE ENTIRE 1917 Chevrolet Touring ay am 1917 Studebaker 6 cy Touring a Shek 1916 Ford Touring oy 11920 Ford Coupe Sy en Li Ford Sedan Bhan PD, Franck Schock | Rev. C. A. Snavely, Pastor Agent For Communion 9:4 Sunday School 9:00 A. M. Morning Worship 10:15 and even- ing worship 7:30. Pos ayer meeting Wednesday 7:30 ibis Brothers Motor Cars| 2 = | Mount Joy, Pa | nesday 8:30 P. M. , Pa. | Association Wed- Methodist Episcopal Church | : | Rev. Michael Farry Davis, Pastor ‘Marietta Street “i; "5, Se 10:30 Preaching Service, Sermon, Cash Grocery | Blessed be God.” | | 7:30 Preaching | o 1921 | Orders Delivered FREE | { Service, Sermon, tira in Egypt.’ Wednesday evening 7:30, Aug. 24, potent man at Bethesda. T. U. Evangelical Church Rev. G. R. Mergenthaler, Pastor Prayer service and bible study | Wednesday evening 7:30. Sunday School Sunday 2 | Preaching Sunday morning 10:30. Young People’s Meeting Sunday | { | | We Solicit Your Trade | OPEN EVENINGS BELL PHONE 155R2 BN h. LERPHEY, Prop. | { member of the board is requested to | { be present. evening 6:30. Preaching Sunday evening 7:30. School Sunday board business PB errr ‘nd Phone 831.A1 FLORIN, PA. | {JUST ONE HUNDRED \ |USED & ANTIQUE FURNITURE YEARS AGO AND NOW BOUGHT AND SOLD | A caravan of about ;100 persons | who left Brooklyn, N. X., last week, | If you have anything you want to |for Idaho, where they purchased | sell, phone or drop me a card. If | farms, have about reached their | you do not care to make sale, I will | destination. | buy Joar entire equipment. 1 buy They travel in autos and carry | for cash \ { their supplies in auto trucks, where I they cook with “gas,” and at night i | they sleep in portable canvas houses. | \ Our forefathers who went west |some 50 or 100 years ago had a dif- | ferent method of travel. They also {made the trip on wheels, but in a 's P Let Us Print | differe kind of a vehicle. 1 ras ¢ pro Sale Bilge a Las § | better when they reached their wos ; ” ™ journey’s end. They had no shelter Lins A but the old “Conestogas” until they { were able to erect a log cabin. AFTER MONTHS and months MY WIF E persuaded me. TO HAVE it done. £ sn $0 1 went around. * * TO THE photo grapher. . YND GOT mugged. * * WHEN THE pictures came. | showeD thom to a gang. OF ANATEUR art critics AND PROFESSIONAL crabs. DISGUISED A AS friends. WHO FAVORED me. WITH SUCH) Yem: rks as. “DOESN'T HE Ini: natural?” “HAS IT got a tailk! “A GREAT Jesemblanbe.” \ AND THAT last one. \ MADE mE * SO WHEN friend wife. * ACDCD HER howl. in» | TRIED again. - - - aC € | THIS TIME they were great, LiceerT & MyERs Toracct Co. Suppose one of those pioneers, | with prophetic vision, had said to his [ neighbors: “I see a caravan traveling {west in 1921. Its wagons run with- j out animals hitched to them. In {ramp at night, they bring out a {wooden box that talks and sings.” Such a seer would have been taken [to a doctor—and later to the lunatic | asylum, if he persisted in his | prophecies. The contract, then with now, | shows you how a century has | changed the mode of living in our | country. Can your imagination picture the | changes that another century will | bring? eee ies / +5 i04€ Ine FOR HERE'S what happened. THE PHOTOGRAPHER said. “LOOK THis way, please.” AND HELD up : something. Mock Trials at Landisville { Harry Fry, of Rohrerstown, who { took the part of “Farmer Corntassel”’ in a mock trial at the Landisville AS HE phshs :d the button. AND NO one could help. * * campmeeting on Saturday nicht, got BUT LOOK pleasant. [the worst of the bargain. The jury * x» | found that “Moses Jones” was not guilty of stealing the farmer's | chickens. H. Frank Eshleman acted as judge, Stanley R. Still and J. P. | Warfel were attorneys for the de- i fendant and Ira K. Gibble and R. F. THAT SATISFY, Stauffer prosecuted the case. A di- vorce case was brought up at the {same time, in which Messrs. Still land Warfel represented the plaintiff FOR WHAT. he held up. I WAS A nice full pack. OF THE cigarettes. $x w and Stauffer and Gibble the de- fendant. jioET up a Chesterfield and ————- —— sense the goodness of those B fine Turkish and Domestic to- ere’s = Bargam I have just listed a very desirable truck farm on Longenecker road. Mt. Joy, that will be sold quick. About six acres of excellent land. large | frame house harn, tobacco shed and | |eellar, an abundance of fruit, a good | investment for any one. Good lo- | n for warehouse or building | ses. Convenient to industries. | . ete. Has boro water, light. | Act quick if interested. Jno. | :hroll. Realtor, Mt. Joy, Pa. tf SD h Who Wants 8 arm I have for sale an 88 acre farm in | West Donegal township, that is. be- vond a debut. the heat farm of its | size I have ever offered. Limestone | ., land excellent producer, good build- | . ings, excellent location. Must be seen to be appreciated. ¥ FE. Schroll, Mt. | re ct reer. | Read the Bulletin baccos in that wonderful Ches- terfield blend. Taste the it flavo ! Sniff that aroma! ter “They Satisfy.” help it. Y ou pron Did you know about the Chesterfield package of 10? Advertise in the Mt. Joy Bulletin. Prayer meeting, Subject, Im-| morning , Pa.; Song, Evelyn Heiserman; { meeting after prayer service every Returned \ Come and bring your friends to ! J D. Easton | these services. ! Diffenderfer, | Howard Kaylor, | John Sillers, Mr. and | neth, Mrs. Cyrus Foreman, Miss Sue | EE aT Amc —— a MISSIONARY y SOCIETY MEETS SEPT. 1415 ad dad aoe TWENTY-SIXTH ANNUAL MEET- ING WILL. BE HELD AT LANDISVILLE—THREE SESSIONS DAILY The twenty-sixth annual meeting if the East Pennsylvania Woman's M » Soci v will be held at on Wednesday and Sept. 14 and 15 with afternoon and evening { meetings daily. An excellent and in- teresting program has been prepared and will be rendered as follows: sion Landisv i€ Thursday, | morning, 9:30 Devonian: 1, by the ig f Miss L . Forney, Harrisburg, Pa. 3 | ¥idrene. 3 Welcome, Mrs. Jonas! Martin; Response, Mrs. A. P. Stover, | Camp Hill, Pa.; 10:15 The Value of | Missionary Information, Rev. A, A. aessler, Smithville, Pa.; 10:45 Mis- cellaneous Business; 11:30 Adjourn- ment. Wednesday Afternoon 1:30 Devotional, Mrs. S. N. Good, | | Penbrook, Pa.; 1:45 Customs and] | Habits of the People in our Bengal | | Mission Field, Mrs. Viola G. Cover, Returned Missionary; 2:15 Christ’s Unprayed Missionary Prayer, Rev. E. | 'F. Asper, Bowmansdale, Pa.; 2:45 | Our Present Missionary Organiza- | tion, Rev. W. N. Yates, D.D., Harris- | burg, Pa.; 3:30 Business Offering; | | Announcements; 4:30 Adjournment. | Wednesday Evening 7:30 Song Service; 7:45 Devotion- jal, Mrs. W. C. Burtnett, Altoona, Exer- {cise, Class of Girls; Song, Two Girls; Anthem, Choir; 8:15 Address, | Mrs. A. E. Myers, Returned Mission- | ary; Music, Male Chorus, Harris- | { burg, Pa.; Recitation, Marian Wea-| "ver; 8:45 Address, Rev. A. E. Myers, Missionary; Music, Male | Chorus, Harrisburg, Pa.; Announce- | ments; Adjournment. | Thursday Morning | 9:30 Devotional, Mrs. E. A. Fack-| ler, Elizabethtown, Pa.; 9:45 Report | of Treasurer; Report of Treasurer of | Special Funds; Election of Officers; | : | Reports of Superintendents; 1.| Young People’s Work, Mrs. H. F.| Hoover, Enhaut, Pa.; 2. Children’s | Work, Mrs. 0. M. Kraybill, Middle- | town, Pa.; 3 Sunday School Work, { Mrs. A. P. Stover, Camp Hill, Pa.; Question Box; Offering; 11:30 ne | journment. Thursday Afternoon 1:30 Devotional, Mrs. C. H. Grove, | Harrisbusg, Pa.; 1:45 The Master's | Call, Miss Minnie Lehman, Out-go- | ing Missionary, Middletown, Pa. Reading, Mrs. Geo. Staines, L: ancas- | ter, Pa.; 2:30 The First Great Mis- | sionary Campaign, Rev. G. W. Getz, | Carlisle, Pa.; 3:00 The Qualifications | of a Missionary, Rev. O. M. Kraybill, | Midtieravn, Pa.; Reading, Mrs. Geo. Staines; 3:45 Methods of Missionary Ingtbaction in the Local Church, Rev. | F. W. McGuire, 1:15 Offering, journment. Thursday Evening 7:30 Song Service; al, Miss L. A. Forney; Anthem; Vo- cal Solo, Miss Ruth Kendig, Lancas- ter, Pa.; 8:15 Our Greatest Need in | India, Mrs. Viola G. Cover, Bogra, | India; 8:35 An Enlarged Vision, Rev. | H. W. Cover, A.M., Bogra, India; | 9:15 Offering; Adjournment, | 7:45 Devotion- | Committee The committee in charge consists of Mrs. F. W. McGuire, Miss Beulah | Danner and Rev. Jonas Martin. There will be an opportunity to see curios both days from 5:30 to 7 p. m. Rice and Curry Dinner Wednes- | day. | eres tl Meee | Nedra Was Eleven | On Wednesday evening, Miss Sue | Cunningham gave a birthday p: arty | in honor of her daughter Nedra M: Ay. She was pleasantly surprised with | many beautiful gifts. Those present | were the Misses Nedra, Hazel, Ruth | and Dorothy Kaylor, Anna Coover, | Elsie Dillinger, Marie Garber, Bertha, | Royer, Verna Cunningham, Na- | omi Cunningham and Nedra Mae , Messrs. Lester and | Benjamin Dillinger, | Mrs. Harry | Leibe and children James and Ken-! Cunningham, Mr. Harry Rat and | | Mrs. George Rahm, Mr. Edwin Wal- | ters and Mr. Chas. Dillinger. They | | all spent.a very pleasant evening. |, Refreshments were served, after | which they adjourned. ———— lI Ge Who Wants This? Is there a tenant farmer around | here that wants to make as much | money with less work than he is do- ing now? Here you are. farm 1% mile from Manheim, best of | gravel land, good buildings, an | abundance of fruit, fine water, This would make a dandy truck farm as| it is close to markets. Don’t delay; act auick as IT am going to turn this | farm—Call, phone or write i. Ei Schroll, Mt. Joy. | | | 1 | Reductions on\House Dresses and Childrens Gingham Dresses for 3¢hool, reduced 25 to 40 per cent. GIRLS’ MIDDY BLOUSES This popular garmert is worn by more and more school girls every year." They can be bad in plain white, plain blue, blue and, white, all sizes can be had from 6 years to 20 and théy are moderately priced at $1.39 to $2.50. a Boys’ Knee Pants at 98 cents. — SIT Granite ware One Half Price. Aluminum ware One Chird Off. F. A. FARMER Phone 111 MOUNT JOY, PA. OOOOO0OO0OOOOO0OOOOOOOOOOOOOO0OO0LOCOOOOI0O0OOOODOOOO0 Wednesday Morning | - 0 Rohrerstown, Pa.;| Announcements; ver} sre JOD Wor k tf —— | °F Sut Servic |, Means fh i ii ‘Soin mething Dome i i pp | | 0:8 A a ll yi oo 0 i ) i J, iy an a ! i dl 7 De J os, a OY R service to you started when we picked out Dayton Tires. We were selecting the best pos- sible tires for your car. When we bring them out and put them on your car we are giving you tires that will run farther, look better, give less trouble and cost you less per mile of service than any other tires made. But our service doesn’t stop then, because we back Dayton Tires with our promise that they will give you—must give you—the maximum of mile- age and satisfaction. Dayton | | Tires Fabrics Ri know Tires. We know that only the best of materials and workmanship go into them,—pure, live, new rubber, strong, tough, long-staple cotton—expert manufactur. ing, including the best machine work and the best hand work. That's why we can back them up with a service that abso- u dutely insures miles on your car. Come in and hear the whole story of Dayton Tires and Dayton Service as we give it to you, Dayton Tubes are the smoothest, toughest, thickest and longest lasting tubes we've ever seen—and they do bold air! Ask us to let “a you feel one. YOUNG'S TIRE SHOP Mount Joy, Pa. | LLLLLLLOLLLLOOOOOOOOOOODVOOOOOOOCO0OOOCOOOOOOOCODOOOC NISSLY’S ALMONI and CAKES The Chocolate WITH THAT LINGER LONGER TASTE At NEARLY every Candy Store \- for 5¢ Each Manufactured by Nissly Swiss Chocolate Co., Ing FLORIN, PENNA, U. S. A. Milk Chocolate Milk Chocolate Yes, We Do 1 8 £ i 3 iferchants RG &ave ris & in caper will give you best values for OUT MAST Y. RELL WR SA A] js this . 3 You wil! find our prices satisfactory Come in >
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers