The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, September 14, 1921, Image 6

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(@ Feel the Quality |
of a Dayton Tube

 





smooth, {
smooth “feel
life, quality.
Hold a highly inflated Dayton Tube
under a powerful magnifying glass.
You will find it free from the impuri-
ties and foreign substances that cause
ordinary tubes to leak—go down


ms sirength, long } §
 
 









quickly.
Dayton Tubes are scientifically built up layer
upon layes of special process cleaned pure gum
rubber. You can feel their thickness, ruggeds
ness, resiliency, flexibilily and strength.

insure greater
help bear the
hey hold air


Dayton Tubes—vec
mileage for the casing
burden and shock of service. I
longer—require less pumping.
Let us show you these qualities, —ihe differ-
ence they will make in your lire bills—what
they will save you in money, lime and annoy.
ance.
The ideal combination far any car is Dayton
Tubes in Dayton Tires

 

 

 

















tr tesla, ia uat-prost. waer ool.
MN rand you got oat fee on
YOUNG'S TIRE SHOP |
Mount Joy, Pa.

 
 
DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE
WAS NOT SIGNED ON JULY 4, 1776
 
 














This is only one of many little known
facts developed by the research which
preceded the publication of the series
of articles on Our Government, now being
distributed without charge to the friends and
patrons of this Institution.
If you will call we shall be glad te add your
name to our mailing list to receive the entire
series. You incur no obligation.
First National Bank
Mount Joy, Pa.








 





THE GIANT AMONG AGRICULTURAL FAIRS!
Four Days of Sport, Entertainment and Fun
Machinery Shows Horse Shows Fancy Work Shows Agricultural Shows
Poultry Shows Cattle Shows Merchandise Shows Swize Shows
THE BIG MIDWAY BRIGHTER THAN EVER BEFORE
Great Free Fast Racing Daily
Attractions Daily $7700 Purses

 

 
 
 
Train Service
to Grounds
 



















COAL
S OF COAL ON HAND FOR IM-
i ARE NOT USED ANY MORE.
F. H. BAKER
'SUCRENE DAIRY FEED FOR MORE MILK.
{E DRY MASH FOR CHICKENS FOR MORE EGG!
IBER and GOAL
JOY, PENNA.




 
 
 


 

Arch of Bridge Which Must Have Been
Built Centuries Ago Just |
Brought to Life.
|
FIND RELIC OF OLD iis

A very Interesting relic of old Lon- |
don has come to light, according to |
the London Times, an arch of old Lon- |
don bridge, which was demolished dur |
ing the construction of the new Lon-
don bridge, which began in 1823. The
arch now discovered is the second from
the north side of the old bridge, and
is close to St, Magnus’ church. It was
disclosed during some building opera- |
tions now in progress, t
The first
Thames
bridge wus
stone bridge over the |
built in 1178, but the
constantly repaired and |
restored, so that there Is no evidence
of the exact date of this particular |
arch. It was apparently medieval, and
{8 built of Reigate stone with a very
flat trajectory. At the beginning of the
Eighteenth century, however, three flat
wrought-stone supporting ribs were |
put in, and the middie one of these is
dated 1703. The arch is not yet en-
tirely uncovered, but a springer at each |
side Is just belng disclosed, and the |
gpan is est!mated to be about 30 foot. |
The under surface of the arch Is con- |
siderably waterworn between the add- |
ed ribs. It is one of the arches close |
to which the m®l wheel stood for the |
raising of water inte the watertower
that stood alongside the bridge. This
arch stood in the river, and is, there
fore, an evidence of the limits which,
as time has gone on, have been Iim-
posed on the Thames, the river belng
now much narrower than it was In
medieval times. It is understood that
this relic of old London is to be care
fully preserved.
CROWDING THE SEA SERPENT
Old Friend of the Ocean Summer
Resorts Makes Way for Pirate
Ship From Russia.
was

We believe but one sea serpent has
been sighted so far this season. Per-
haps it Is still a little early, but the
weather has heen hot enough to bring
our old friend to the surface, and no
doubt the frightened and delighted
visitors at shore resorts and those
who go out to sea In boats for a
short distance will soon be rewarded
with a sight of his ugly head or fasci-
nated by- the water churned up by
the swishing of his angry tall. How-
ever, It is possible, that the sight more
calculated to thrill will ‘he the pirate
ship from Russia that {8 moving In
such a mysterious way its wonders to
perform. If this 1s so, we are certain
that for every view of the sea ser-
pent that is recorded on the part of
credible witnesses there will be 20
equally credible witnesses who caught
a glimpse of the new terror of the
deep, long, low and dark, either just
before it submerged or at the moment
it came to the surface to cast its eye
about for a new ship to capture and
sink or to drag away the crew In irons
to Bolshevik Russia. To the elderly

Yoior LANCASTER
SODA TANK LEAPS |
OVER BUILDING
Carbonic Gas Receptacle Does |
Queer Antics When Driver
Treats It Rough.
New York.—Policeman Fred Finger |
saw a man drive up to the soda water
parlor joining the station house and
start unloading a carbonic gas tank.

“Where you goin’ with that?” he
asked the driver, |
“Inside,” was the answer. |
“Well, have a care,” warned Finger, |
“You never can tell—" |
x 3 |
At precisely that moment Policeman |
Finger's words were drowned in an |




Twisting, Whirling and 8hooting Up-
wards.

explosion which shook the station
house, the soda parlor and the whole
district. Finger felt something heavy
strike him on the leg, which he later
discovered to be a piece of the carbonic
tank. He also saw the remainder of
the tank go twisting, whirling Yand
shooting upwards.
Inside the station Policeman Frank
Hilbert, who was writing at a desk.
was hurled backward from his chair;
John Daugherty, detective, was
knocked from his comfort on a stoop
nearby, and Lieutenant L.enahan was
awakened from a deep sleep.
When the policemen and detectives
picked themselves up after the blast
they found the driver in the road in a |
dazed condition. They started in search |

skeptic who inquired where such a
craft secured Its necessary fuel the
less critical young woman answered
that it probably operated by electric- |
What could be more probable?— |
ity.
Hartford Courant.
Flower Worth Small Fortune.
of the missing carbonic tank, They
found it had traveled seven stories
up, knocked a 20-pound ball from a
fiagpole and, circling over the build-
| ing in which the station house is sit-
uated, had landed three flights down |
on a rear fire escape.
Ten thousand dollars is an extraor- |
dinary price for a single plant; yet It
was paid by English
for an orchid raised in America, the
Catteleya gigas alba.
This Catteleya was flowere«
and exhibited at an orchid si
United S rs, where it we
a gold The plant wa
1909 in a lot of other
Catteley 18, It was onl























that tl ant was not
lar or The only re:
after st of its comps
disposed
that w
Was S¢
_ :
>, Finally all th
> potted.
at surprise «
, next spring
‘as with pure
t was sold
the highest figure
er brought.

 

that an

Apology Needs an Apology.
“Gentlemen”—it came from the lips
of an attorney pleading a case recent-
ly before the Supreme court of the
state of Idaho. In front of him sat
the judges clothed with their judicial
dignity, listening intently to the case.
The attorney had erred. Judges
should be addressed as “Your honors.”
“Gentlemen"—repeated the lawyer,
and the tiniest hint of a smile flitted
across the features of the men in front
of him.
Suddenly he stopped,
blunder.
“1 apologize for calling you ‘gentle-
men,’ he blurted out.
Laughter in a courtroom {is not
deemed exactly proper, but a joke is 1
joke and Chief Justice Rice replied
simply, “I hope you made no mistake.’
—TIdaho Statesman.


realizing his
British Museum Overcrowded.
The British museum, London
writer in the New YX Post, has

Says a
 


reached the end of its r far as
space is concerned. law of
1830 every English whethe
domiciled at home or i 1inions
is obliged to place t of his
books with the museum, which in tur
suarantees to keep them in good con-
fitlon and make them acces » to the

reading public. The same applies t«
newspapers. Space for the latter was |
exhausted some time ago and a spe-
cial barracks was built to store them
the
It is now feared that same plan
will nave to be ted for the hooks


Mee, **Cold in the Head"
is _ad™mcute attack of Nasal Catarrh
Those sisjget to frequent “colds in the
head” will fi that the use of HALLS
3 2 will build up the
System, cleanse od and render
them less liable to Repeated at-
may lead to
Chronic Catarrh. y a
HALL'S CATARRH M
taken internally and acts
Blood on the Mucous Surfaces
tem, thus reducing the inflam
restoring normal conditions.
ts... Circulars free.









ru
1 _F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio.



a
horticulturists |
FINDS SNAKE IN BATHROOM
| Reptile Discovered by Seven-year-old
Child Had Climbed Tree and
Crawled Through Window.


ginia Funk, seven
f Oscar A. Funk
ke five feet nine
her
leading
ieading,









droppec
 

n crawled in the
ed the bathroom and
Oscar A.
Canada for




 
Phila-
delphian, v
}
entered the bathroom.

“Stolen” Gems Found Under Mattress.
Wilkes-Barre, Pa.—Mrs. Thomas
Lewis, has found the jewels upon the
| quest of which she had set officers of
three cities. Mrs. Lewis left the
| gems under a mattress in a Philadel-
| phia hotel and forgot all about them
until she had returned home. Then
she didn’t remember
at the hotel, and decided she had been
| robbed.

Surgeons Close Safety Pin in Stomach.
Uncas, Okla.—An open safety pin
swallowed by the eight-month-old son
of Mr. and Mrs George Jacquires, was



removed from the y's stomach
vithout an operatic Physicians
the use of instru-
pin by the
lifted it out through




Farmer Showered With
Burning Whisky Dies
Wilkes-Barre, Pa.—The ex-



 






plosion « ate still in his
cellar result the death of
| Joseph A. Fryer Parsons,
near here, who was showered
| with tl irning whisky, it be-
came re today through
1 physician's report.
i JE—————————

Here's a Bargain
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 barn, tobacco shed and |
| cellar, an abundance of fruit, a good
linvestment for any one. Good lo-
‘on
oses. Convenient to industries,
| 40a oy etc. Has boro water, light,
.« Act quick if interested. Jno.
. wchroll, Realtor, Mt. Joy, Pa. uf
having left them |
for warehouse or building
Wednesday, September 14th, 1921





Shorter hours on the farm
--The Fordson saves from thirty to fifty per cent of
the farmer's time.
Fewer horses on the farm
--The Fordson does the work of ‘from four to six
horses.
Less farm help
--One man with a Fordson can do more work easier
and with less expense than two men with horses.
ll More money for the farmer
--A farmer with a Fordson can raise more crops
easier and with less expense, He therefore makes
more profit.
GARBER’S
South Market Street
833--845 Bell Phone 77
GARAGE
ELIZABETHTOWN. PA.
Ind. Phone 605A.
















OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO0OOOOOO0


Ford
THE UNIVERSAL CAR

\
The Ford Sedan with electric starting and lighting system, with demountable
rims with 34-inch tires all around, is a family car of class and comfort, both in
summer and in winter. For touring it is a most comfortable car. The large
plate glass windows make it an open car when desired, while in case of rain and
all inclement weather, it can be made a most delight.
ful closed car in a few minutes. Rain-proof, dust- |
proof, fine upholstering, broad, roomy seats. Simple
in operation. Anybody can safely drive it. While
it has all the distinctive and economical merits of
the Ford cat in operation and maintenance. Won't
you come in and look it over?
GARBFRY GARAGE
833.845 South Market Street
ELIZABETHTOWN, PA.















A ATS








SOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOOOOCOOOOIOOOOOOT
Buy It By Mail
From Donovans!
Don’t bother running in to Lancaster for every little thing you desire, simply
enter this great store thru the Mail Box at your Door and you will receive the
same excellent service,
An experienced shopper makes your purchases for you, looking out for your
interests and taking advantages of any special opportunities. You have no bother
nor worry.
Use our Mail Order Service Once and you will use it always, just as hundreds
of people are doing today. They find that it PAYS. .There is No Extra Charge
whatever ,except when parcels are sent C. O. D. But most everyone finds it best to
remit by Mail Order or Check or stamps and coin in small amounts.
DONOVANS
LANCASTER, PENNSYLVANIA
The Modern Department Store

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