THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA, U. 8. a WEDNESDAY, APRIL 19TH, 1922 BULLETIN NT JOY, PA. DLL, Editor & Pro'r. ion Price $1.50 a Year Bample Copies. ..... FREE Single Copies. .... [hree Months... ..40 Cents Siz Months. ..... 75 Cents Entered at the post office at Mount Joy as second-class mail matter. The date of the expiration of your subscrip- tion follows your name on the label. We do mot send receipts for subscription money re- solved. Whenever you remit, see that you are given proper credit. We credit all subscription ea the first of each month. The subscription lists of the Landisville Vigil, the Florin News and the Mount Joy Star and News, were merged with that of the Mount Soy Bulletin, which makes this paper's ordinary RHEEMS Good Friday was observed by quite a number in this vicinity. Miss Susan Dougherty spent Easter Sunday at Elizabethtown. Mr. and Mrs. Amos B. Hess of this place spent last Sunday as guests of hig brother John near town. Charles Ricedorf delivered a num ber of valuable Holstein cows to the Keller Brothers at Mount Joy. Mrs. Anna R. Eby of Mount Joy spent one day last week as Lebanon, spent Easter with h ents, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Mason and family. Milton B. Shank son of Postmaster B. F. Shank is filling a vacancy at Mountville as P. R. R. ticket and freight clerk. Mrs. John L. Garber who was stricken with a slight attack of apop- lexy recently is again on a fair way for recovery. Mrs. John A. Smith and daughter Ruth, Mrs. B. H. Greider and daugh- ter Elizabeth and Elida did their East- er shopping at Lancaster last week. John Walmer has erected a garage on the rear of his lot with ssfficient room for three cars. When completed it will enhance the surroundings very much. Mr. and Mrs. H. K. Landis, daugh- ters Anna and Lena, Mr. and Mrs. John C. Smith attended a large Sun- day School convention during the Easter Holidays. Clarence R. Kraybill a time keeper for the state highway department near Williamsport, spent the Easter vacation with his parents Mr. and Mrs. S. S. Kraybill. Peter R. Kraybill service man who par- Alti Sanitarium has been discharge with permission to resume his duties as farm agent with headquarters at Williamsport. He claims his condition to be 100 per cent. Allen Ober is making arrange- ments for eight hundred chicks in his new chicken house. He has enclosed the plot of ground known Rheems base ball diamond with a six to do extensive poultry business. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Gainor of near the Masonic home site Elizabethtown Spent last Sabbath as guests of her parents Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Murphy. daughter enjoyed a motorcycle ride to Lancaster and Columbia last Sun- day. Albert Smith the Donegal thresher sterilized thirty one hundred square feet of tobacco beds for A. S. Bard last week which space is sown with choice seed l This tions d covered with cloth. is divided into nine which there is always a sec- space for great demand about June 1st Mr. Abram Lutz a prominent East and manager of the Donegal farmer eight large C gal consisting dred acres spent phia where he underwent examination by a specialist one day at Philadel a thorough attacks. : Mr. Norman E .Garber tenant far mer, successor to Amos B. Hess, on the large C. L. Nissly farm near this place left home Monday _inity of twenty Williamsport where he con purchasing a carload of I miles Joy and Miss Susan R. Garber the highly esteemed daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Amos E. Garber of this place, were married Sunday morning at 8 o'clock in the Mount Joy Mennonite church by the Bishop Noah Risser of near Elizabethtown. Witnessed by the immediate family. The wedding- ers left on an extensive trip to the South. HERE AT HOME and nfidently Recommend Déan’s Kidney Pills It is testimony like the following that has stipes Doan’s Kidney Pills go far above dompetitors. When peo- ple right here} at home raise their voice in praise ‘there is no room left for doubt. Read the public state- ment of a Mount Joy citizen: ¥ Metzlef, mechanic, 49 Ww. Main street says: “I wasn’t feeling any too good and the trouble was all with my kidneys.. In the first place, they were put out of order by a cold. My kidneys were ‘not only sore, but the kidney secretions passing too seldom. At times® when I did any stooping, a sharp, gutting pain ran through my back. A short use of ’s Kidney Pills brought results. Doane Food the kidney action, strengthened me and, fixed up my k i easing way. : Se Pall Foster-Mil- burn Co., Mfgrs., Buffalp, N. Y. creel AA. Two Good Farms to have two exceptionally good or farms ir East Donegal that ¥ ean sell right. They contain 81 and 80 acres. The largest can be bought for only $150 per acre Three fourths of the money can remain on mortgare. Both these farms are close to markets and are money makers her sister Mrs. S. S. Krayb family. Mr. and Mrs. William Grimm of day spent about ten months at the Mt. | as the | foot netting fence where he expects | | week with brother J. E. wife ar Pheo Mr. and Mrs. George Murphy and | ' € near Rheems, {Steamed Ed nounced his ailment due to rheumatic for the vie-| Mrs. Amos N. Musser East ofMount'!-€e, at Mount Jéy Citizens Gladly Testify | were sluggish, too; which resulted in |; — ; SPORTING HILL Miss Mary Nissley returned home after spending several weeks at Lan- caster. | Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Leisey were visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Her- shey on Sunday. | Mr. and Mrs. Henry D. Hershey spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Clay- ton Brenneman, The United Zion's Children held their regular church services on Sun- day evening last. Mr. and Mrs. M. O. Gochenauer, of Reading, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Derr on Sunday. Mrs. Benjamin Kauffman spent Fri- day at Lancaster in the home of her sister, Mrs. Arthur Coolidge. Mr. and Mrs. Peicer and son, Don- of Mount Joy, spent Sunday in the home of Benjamin Horst. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Shank and fam *d Mr Shank’s mother at er Junction on Sunday. ald, Wenger and Miss Emma r, f Elizabethtown, were f Mr. and Mrs. Amos Sump- man, on Sunday Mrs. Elizabeth Reppert, Miss Sarah Lehman and William Miller, of Mount Hope ere gues of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Kauffman on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Gorman and laughter, Margaret, Misses Edith and Helen Boyer, spent Sun- of Mr. and Mus. Amos Nissley at Union Square. Mr. and Mrs. Guy Ackerman enter tained the following on Sunday: Mr. and Mrs. Ray Ackerman and family, of Annville; Miss Jennie Ackerman, of Columbia; and Mrs. Gober, of Le- banon, Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Degler enter- tained the following guests on Sun- day. Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Miller, Mrs. Rice and Mr. Shipman of Philadel bhia, and Roy Brubaker . 5 i iam, of lacvaste iin bi Mr. and Mrs. D. Mm. Nissley and daughter, Betty, visited Mr. and Mrs Daniel Brandt, near Centerville of Sunday. Mr. Nissley and My. Brandt paid a visit to the former's mother Mrs. Susan Nisley at the Oren jl, {Mennonite Home. Mr, and Mrs. Martin Zimmerman | entertained the folowing guests over the week-end; Mr. and Mrs. Amos Myers and son, Frank, of Lancaster: Mr. and Mrs. Phares Strickler and amily, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Sumpman dr. and Mrs. A. H. Digler and f i Mr. and Mrs, Ar. and Mrs. Wayne, ROCK POINT | | Wheat look. Spring | glory. Manure hauling and plowing pre- { dominate around our rural home. Andrew Reed of Lawn, purchased | two caves fr Tord. : jo 2 ives from E. R. Neideigh, last | eK. Rock Point {on Thursday [the pumpkin. ‘e enjoyed a several d im the home f amily, H. H. Miller and family, Edward Grube and son, —— has a Very promising out- 1S certainly here ip all its School closed its doors until the frost gets on | ays visit last Williams and Daniel Derr of near the Iron Bridge % near d ge; A Neideigh's and George Hinkle’s tobacco beds last week Forty acres will be the amount of tobacco farmed on the Duffy farm \tenanted by E. R. Neideigh this your | - The Robin Beadle i Th Robin Redbreasts are chirping tout their melodi melodies up a : 1 81 a- mone the anrl. ong the apple lossoms in tl or- chard. } Ve hs : I N gh sisters, Mary and nuth, tool 1 pelli | ooh in the spe ling bee, that ll off at Kinderhook on “a1 iv or E. R. Neideio} h and George Hinkle yiown, who sold their tobacco to Long & Taylor of Landijsy ille d their goo Is on NT d Landis, who is « ly n the chicken by at ne: , had the S £ 1 1 ( i eps through ome prowling 3 Su ’ School vices were held af = th ’ } St \y a 3rethren’s Chu A invoice of schol atttendance which speaks Appomatox, on April 9, 1860. “Butch” Stine and James Shireman of Marietta, are the battery that Geo. {Hinkle has employed to sling the goods among the corn stalks on the Pay fam preparatory to tobacco Rosey cheek Alice is all richt—now as far as domestic help is required. She has installed a buxom young wid- ow from Bainbridge, to assume the duties of chief cook and bottle- washer. S. H. Tressler and wife, Reuben Myers and wife, were down at Lan- caster last week attending the { school directors’ meeting in reference | to the selection of a County Suner.} intendent. A quartet of men took the advan- tage of the first day fishing on Sat- urday, and went up the Cumberland Valley to fish for trout, in such streams as Big Spring, Bonnie Brook, and the famous Letort, near Carlisle. et est ‘Found Seven Rats Dead in Bin Next Morning” Robert Woodruff says: ‘(My prem- 1ses were infected with rats. I tried RAT-SNAP on friend’s recommenda- lon. Next morning found seven dead rats in bin, two near feed box, three in stall. Found large number since. No smell from dead rats—RAT-SNAP drys them us. Best thing I have ever used.” Three sizes, 35e, 65¢, $1.25. Sold and guaranteed by H. S. New- comer, Dr. W. D. Chandler, Brown | Bros.,, and Dr. E. W. Garber, Mount | Joy. to may-1 a — Who Wants This Chance? I have a 1l4-gere farm near | Sunnyside, 10 acres of meadow, sand and, 2 frame houses, big barn, tobae- '0 shed and cellar. Price $118 60 | er acre. “Act quick if you can use| t. Call’ phone or write Jno E. | . E. Schroll. Mt. Joy lchroll, Realtor, Mt. Joy. tf. j urvey of the forest land of the st i nd the devasted forest land is pur- | orests, SALUNGA Mrs. Oscar Newcomer last week. Samuel Hershey visited his sister, Jonas Waltz was on the sick list but is better again. David Phillips was on the sick list | but is about again. M. A. Erisenhauer has purchased a concrete mixing machine. Mr. Charles Kepperling of Phila- delphia, was in town on good Friday. | Edward G. Myers and sons have | drilled a well for Elias Hornberge, Jr. { Miss Annie Erisman visited her old | home last week near Erismans church. Lewis Geibe and family spent East- | er Sunday with friends on Gravel | Hill. Heistand & Co. have purchased a truck for use at the mill and coal yard. Mrs. Harry Grube visited her sis- | ter, Mrs. Norman Miller on Wednes- | day afternoon. | Charles Bender moved to his new | home on the pike on Wed- | Manheim nesday forenoon. Walter H. Eshleman and wife spent Sunday in Columbia with her parents. | Mr. Harold Hoover of Lancaster, | ent Easter in the home of Milton Miller and family. | Mrs. Charles Hamilton of near] Bacon's Mill paid a short visit in town | on Saturday evening. Mrs. Elsie Grove and Mt. Joy, visited her soster, ward Peiffer on Sunday. Andrew Weidman and wife Amelia Weidman spent Easter Mr. and Mrs. Elias Strickler. Easter services were held in the M. E. church Sunday forenoon fol- lowed by a sermon by the pastor Rev. Sampson. Between three and five o’clock on Sunday afternoon, there were five- hundred and five automobiles passed through town. Stephen Wolf and wife and two children, of Steelton, spent Easter Sunday with this brother Nicholas Wolf and family. Mrs. M. M. Wile took her son Geo. to the hospital last week to have an operation performed. He is getting along very nicely. I. M. Newcomer while painting in he Camp grounds had a fall when the ladder he was on broke. He escaped injury but not the kettle of paint. Wilson Detwiler’s two-horse team ran away last week, while hitched in a wagon with plow and harrow on it They ran into an elertric light pole broke the tongue and were stopped. No one was hurt and the horse es- caped injury. Mrs. Espenshade teacher of the Maple Grove School, was suprised on Friday the last day of school by the pupils and some of the patrons with a nice setout at noon. The teacher was called to the telephone and chil- dren prepared the setout until she came back to the school house again. Faster children of Mrs. Ho-| and with etl eee: {OW STATE OWNS FORESTS AGGREGATING 1,126,000 ACRES Pennsylvania in 1920 and 1921 pur- hased 77,564 acres of forest land and placed it vnder the administra- | 2 ! Sn | ion of the Department of Foresry, | according to the biennial report of | he department just published. The | eport shows that the total area 1, | | 26,236 acres. That land had a | purchase value of $2,546,400 or $2. | Much of the land now is worth many times that price. The nt in 1921 made a | 26 an acre. depart | vailable for acquisition by the com- monwealth, and the department re-| ceived written offers for 489.353 acres. Verbal offers were made to he department covering more than 250,000 additional acres. The state however , was not in purchase the land. a position to | A $25,000,000 bond issue is pro posed for the purchase of 5,000,000 | acres of waste land in Pennsylvania. | The studies of the department show | if the money is made availalbe | hased, the amount will be re- and interest, within a able time by the growth of the | entire aid, prineij a —— pt I eee | Holstein Cows. Mr. Garber is a g 1) appreciated work. | | uate of State College, has I, oe : ain Childs G. A. R. Post PEOPLE OF OUR TOWN quite a number of years as County|0f Marietta held a smoker at their {club room on Monday last t Sos | pmm—— = m—r— i agent. 1 4 londa; 1 o com-| [F | Mr. Amos Musser son of Mr and Memorate the surrender of General | E NOW, BILL, YOU KNOW ID LiKE © GO WW LODGE “TONIGHY vee Z BUY NOU KIIOW HOW \Y (Sw The Helpless Hubby is trying tc nick out of Something he Hates to Jo by Dragging his Wife into it. ITe 18es her us an Alibi for Everything rom his Failure to Make a Million, 0 Dodging unpleasant Duties, and rhus acquires an Undeserved Reputa- tion for being Henpecked. This Shifty Guy is a Direct Descendant of Adam. \ How's This ? We offer $100.00 for any case of catarrh that canmot be cured by HALL'S CATARRH DICINE. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE. is tak- en internally ar “ig through the Blood on the Mucou acds, of the System. Sold by drug o%eg forty years. Price 75¢. Te 15 refs, F. J. Cher y, Og, The fellow who gets bad in Pitts- burgh will regret it. The police have been equipped with riot guns and told to shoot to kill. | curacy, is | phone Food, | lookout stations. MEN OF GENIUS NOT “SMART” English Professor Declares They Are, In Fact, Extremely Slow to Grasp a Point, Defining “smartness” as the capact- ty to adjust oneself rapidly to the immediate circumstances, Prof. T. EH. Pear, University of Manchester, sald at the Educational association’s annual | conference at University college, that “a genius is usually anything but smart, and he distinguishes himself from the merely smart man, who lives up to the external demands, by refus- | Ing to accept the surroundings, by set- ting about them Instead of allowing them to set about him. “I belleve that some geniuses might not achieve the topmost ranks in a good many mental tests, especlally In those requiring rapid solution of prob- lems. A genius never sees any com- plex problem in the same light as an ordinary person and in a mental test may appear to be stupid. “Some brilliant scientists would make woefully bad hospital orderlies district visitors or managers of a household. The reason is not that they cannot attune themselves to the situa- tion.” Professor Pear two classes, the introverts. The and won extroverts extrovert the DADDPPIDBPDPDDIDSDOBDPPPPOPDDPPDDhSdddods | 4 { HYDRO-ELECTRICITY THE | 0. 40, * POWER OF TODA according to the Smithsonian Insti- 9 * : “The potential water-power of the nation, tution, is 200,000,000 horse-power. We ar reminded by the New York World that the doubling of the cost of coal within recent years has made it necessary to develop cheaper power, and that ’the problems of ejectric transmission for distances under three hundred miles largely have been solved, which means that power can be carried 0. 9. 0 $0000 9 * : : + to the industry, instead of industry to the power, as in the past. The o% Minneapolis Tribune observe that "water power does not go on strike; it is the cheap- oo est source of power, and for that reason wi] solve many industrial problems’ other- & 3 wise impossible of solution by leck of coal within reasonable hauling distance. Wat- . er-power development, predicts the New York Times, will bring about ‘the building up of new communities, the development of new industries, the creation of new property values, add employment for labor and increased markets for agricultural products.’ ” We are reminded by the Montgomery Advertiser that “some day our coal and oil resources will grow slender. The coal strike should have taught us a useful lesson, 9. 0 $000 9%, >, _& 0% % & divided people Into | the | V. C. The first class airplane fighter | Is a specimen of the healthy extrovert, but the mathematician who calculates the plane's stability is an healthy introvert.—London Daily Mail WILL FIGHT FOR BARGAINS British Journal’s Lament Shows That Women Are Women Though the Ocean May Divide, A Joke that blooms each January und July In the funny papers is the changed disposition of women In sale thoes. A good deal of it, of course, Is just Joke, and nothing else, but there Is a certain layer of truth at the roots of it. One never does actually see shoppers hitting each other with umbrellas or stamping on the assist- ants, though on the opening day of the sales recently there were women with firm fingers jerking blouses away from limp, tentative fingers and el- bowing through crowds In a manner that even a conductor would regret to see In a street car. Rich silk pet- ticoats spilled off the counters on the dusty floor, and women tramped over them just as though they were clumps of buttercups. Little frail bits of lingerie were lugged at the seams In a way that was simply asking for trouble; flimsy blouses were tossed Into crumpled heaps. It seemed scarce ly possible that any of the goods dis: played could survive the tumult and battle of this, the first day.—Manches- | ter Guardian Weekly. Sarcastic. The first step in learning whether your child is properly nourished, we read, Is to “Weigh the child In kilo grams.” The kilograms are very light, we understand, but if absolute ac- required. you may weigh the child in them first, and then later take 'em off and weigh ‘em separately. On second thoiighit, we advise the sep- arate weight in all especially where the kilograms are winter weight, Reading further, you multiply result by ten, and then “divide result by the child’s sitting height in centimeters”—just everyday centime- ters will do—"and take the cube root of the result, and you wiN have a fig are that will tell you whether your child Is properly nourished.” Most any architect or engineer in the tele will root for Cases, the book find the cube City Star, Telephones Aid Forest Rangers. the | 7 Po? equally | | ers a chance for profit in competition with coal that aforetime did not exist. If that * %* be true then we may expect a distribution of industries over the country such as has » o}¢ not been dreamed of by many. Plants will go where power is cheapest.” oe 5 From the Philadelphia Public Ledger of December 29, 1921, we quote as follows o 000% i | | | be glad to call and | you.—Kansas | The rangers who police our national | now are phones as a result tlons and adaptations of this method of communication requirements, forests using portable tele- | of special perfec- | to timber country | Each ranger carries a portable tele | phone as part of his equipment. service is maintalned between headquarters camp, the Wire | deld points and Instead of the overhead telephone | ilnes, the forest telephone wires hang loosely from trees 10 to 12 feet above the ground so that In case a tree falls | take up | on the line It merely will some of the slack and not break the wire.—Atlantic City (N. J.) Gazette. Shoot Cable Over River, Telephone and press communication with Portland and points as far north as Montana, cut off recently by the overflowing of the Santlam river, in central Oregon, was restored by shoot- Ing across the river a weight to which was attached a light wire, A projectile gun was used, accord- Ing to the Pacific Telephone and Tele- graph company. After ten attempts the wire was landed across a 400-foot gap and an emergency cable pulled across. Too Much Cut Out. “Your show can play in Plunkville If you cut out the objectionable feat- ures.” “Won't pay me.” “Nonsense. You can continue to charge $2 per seat.” “Not for a ten-minute show.”— Louisville Courler-Journal, Radium In Brazil, A rich find of radium has been re- ported In the state of Minas Geraes in Brazil, according to a traveler whe has just returned from South America The radium is In the form of uraniun. oxide. A Good Truck Farm. I have a 4%-acre truck farm close o markets, best limestone land, 9- oom brick house with bath, slate oof; frame barn with slate roof, to- bacco shed, ice house, chicken house and hog pen, fruit wonderful garden,. Property is located on a pike. sell for less than it would cost to build a house like the one on the premises. J. E. Schroll, Mount Joy. Will Act quick if you want it. tf eee: If you want to succeed—Advertise 0 X25 ho? ¥% 0, ho®% : : : 5 : oe o& viz., that American industry and American homes ought not to be dependent for life oe 4 and comfort upon the good nature of coal-mjiers.” “France and Italy,” this paper adds 3 t “even in the midst of a terrible and costly war, did not neglect their water-power de- %* * velopment projects, and we should open up American streams for the use of all peo- %* 2 ple.” Water-power will “do anything, from running a train to turning a grindstone,” <3 kt the Nashville Banner notes, “and as long as rivers run to the sea an abundance of this o% ower is to be had,” and the St. Joseph (Mo.) News-Press calls our attention to the 8 %* : 1 . : > : : : ; we & fact that, in water-power matters, “we lag far behind Canada and Scandinavia, in $ proportion to population and industry.” “If there is any great developmnet of water-power it will be because it now off- 9, ho 0 0, 0 0% Chippewa-Queenston Development of Canadian Hydro-Electric System Finished Niagara Falls, Ont., Dec. 28—E. C. Drury, Premier of Ontario, threw in the switch that set in action the first of the generating units of the Canadian Hydro-Elec- tric Commission’s Chippewa-Queenston de-velopment at 1.55 o'clock this afternoon Distinguished men in public life in Canada and the United States attended the cere- mony. Completion of the Chippewa-Queen-ston Channel brings water-power develop- ment at Niagara Falls to the threshold of 1,000,000 horse-power equivalent in steam generated electricity to a coal consumption of more than 10,000,000 tons a year. The Mighty cataract, long one of the wonder sights of the world, has become the world’s greatest centre of hydro-electrical power. Dredges which have been cutting through earth and rock north from Chippewa and south from Queenston for three and a half years in a wide swing above the falls, have taken out 13,200,000 cubic yards ofearth and 4,182,000 cubic yads of rock, a total slightly more than the French had removed from Culebra Cut at the time the Panama route was taken over by the United States. The output of the super-power plant will be 650,000 horse-power. There are now three plants operating on the Canadiauside of the river with a total output of 450,000 horse-power. Existing and projected development on the American side has a poetical pro- duction of 420,000 horse-power from upper river diversion. Power development on the Canadian side has been under Government control, while on the American side it has been largely in the hands of one corporation. Canada’s power has been scattered over a wide field, serving many municipalities within a radius of 250 miles, with current for light, heat and power. The policy on the American side has been to concentrate users of power at or near Niagara Falls. Buffalo and cities as far east as Syracuse get sufficient power from Niagara Falls to run street cars and for a few industries, but the bulk of power is used a short distance from the generating plants. The Chappewa-Queenston development cost $88,000,000. Water-power plants as an investment have many advantages over other enter- prises, the chief ones being: low cost of operation, large and continuous revenues; they are not affected by strikes, owing to the fact that it takes few employes to op- erate them, and they defy competition in their own particular line. They are not manufacturing a commodity which must be taken upon the open market and meet competition, but they save to the users of power from 30 to 50 per cent. over other methods of generation. ELECTRICITY—Carrier of Light and Power; Devourer of Time and Space; Bearer of Human Speech Over Land and Sea; Greatest Server of Man--Itself Unknown. THE HYDRO.-ELECTRIC COMPANY WOOLWORTH BUILDING LANCASTER, PENNA. 9. (0.00, 9 aaa’ * 9 * OR) (000,00 9, o%% 9. 0. 0 0 00% 00 90%, 9 * 00 0% o% o%% 0 0. 0, Po? Yo? 00P 0.0 000000, 0. 0 (000.0% 9.6% 0. 0. 0. 0 0 0 0% a? 9% 000 10,0-0,0 00-050, 9, 50% @. 0, 0% % 9, ho ®¥% Sr odrro deal afodosdeiipaloddoolr aloo alr Qradeedol ite doadoatafoaduadaiede ido aded e®®, » 120-620 020620620 620 420-620 420 620-620-4245 650 620-620.420-6%0-6% 6% 6% 6% 6%. 620.6% .6%.¢%.6% e% a. <4 Oa Ou ibs 6. 6. 6. 0. 6. OSLO Pr Se rf fr Ge Bera ade ale fail dodde adele ale odraledoods dade od deat atedds io odads Sood oe wy Tey — College Hill Dairy $1.00 Ica Cream Go., Wingert & Haas Harrisburg I Hat Store The State Capital Lid (| i ' I THE OLDEST HAT STORE IN LANCASTER AND RETURN Sunday, Apr. 30 The largest line of | The Magnificent Capital | a Building will be open on this | S ri date. See the Beautiful ! I NL 1g Hats and Caps Mural Paintings, by Violet | IN THE CITY Oakley, Illustrating Penn’s Life, and the Barnard Statu- ary. SPECIAL TRAIN LEAVES Eastern Standard Time Mount Joy ......848 A. M Returning Leaves Harrisburg '....6.15 P. M. Pennsylvania System The Route of Broadway Ltd. Why Not Use The Best | Plain Hats a Specialty 144 N. Queen St. Lancaster, Pa. JOHN A. HAAS, Propr. We solicit your trade of | Fine for Lumbazo Ice Cream and Pasturizec | g | Musterole drives pain away and Milk. Look for the wagon brings in its place delicious, soothing Jac. Ichler, deliverer. comfort. Just rub it in gently, It is a clean, white ointment, made with oil of mustard. Get Musterole today at your drug store. 35c and 65¢ in jars and tubes; hospital size, $3.00. BETTER THAN A MUSTARD PLASTER Call numbers 27R3, 2R5 or 111R16 Bell phone E’town Pine! Pipell Pinel! ———— Martins Sanitary Dairy West Donegal St. MOUNT JOY, PA. Highest Cash PALACE BARBER SHOP We have all sizes pipe, beams, rails, angle and channel rods, ete., for sale ‘cheap. ISSAC MILLER SON Prince and Hazel Sts. H. J. WILLIAMS, MT. JOY, PA. Successor to Allen Way Electric or Hand Clippers Used Fresh Roasted Peanuts Prices Paid LANCASTER, = PENNA, City Shoe Repairing Company FOR J. Howard Hersh OLD SHOES MADE TO LOOK LIKE NEW ONES Hides, Tallow and Furs The Keasby & Mattison Co. Asbestos Century Shingles, Asbestos Bullding Lumber and Asbestos Corrugated Sheathing Estimates for materials or appli- cation cheerfully furnished." Bell Phone. Ind. Phone. 47 Stiegel Street 50-52 S. Queen St. Lancaster Pa. PIANOS AND PLAYER PIANOS TUNED AND REGULATED All Work Guaranteed CHAS. 0. GARBER PIANO EXPERT Yorth Barbara St., Mount Joy. 1-11-1 yr, Phone or Write Walter F. Rochow COLUMBIA, PA. MANHEIM, PA. mar. 15-tf fi |