ANC rene en PAGR EIX ~~ Benen ecnesncanecnenennenll | MADE BUSINESS OF MURDER WOMAN COULD NOT WORK Made Strong and Well by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg- etable Cor“»und SQ 75 Minn, — ‘Ae: L- Lydia E. St. Paul, Pinkham’s Vegetable CoMgpund for a | tired, w&n-out feel- | ing and painful peri- ods. I used to getup with a pain in my head and pains in my lowerparts and back. Often I was not able to do my work. I read in your little book about Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound and ‘11 have taken it. I = —dfeel so well and strong and can do every bit of my work and not a pain in my back now. I rec- ommend your medicine and you can use this letter as a testimonial.”’ — Mrs. PHIL. MASER, 801 Winslow St., St. Paul, Minn, Just another case where a woman found relief by taking Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound. Many times these tired, worn-out feelings and pains about the body are from troubles only women have. The Vegetable Com- pound is especially adapted for just this condition. The good results are noted by the disagreeable symptoms passing away—one after another. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound is a Woman’s Medicine for Wo- men’s Ailments. Always reliable. College Hill Dairy Ice Cream Co. i. We solicit your trade cf Ice Cream and Pasturizee Milk. Look for the wagon Jac. Ichler, deliverer. Call numbers 27R3, 2R5 or 111R16 Bell phone E’town Chapped hands and faces needn't soothes and heals chaps and chilblains quickly and ently THE OLDEST HAT STORE IN LANCASTER THE Wingert & Haas Hat Store Largest Ling of STRAW HATS in The City Plain Hats a Specialty 144 N. Queen St. Lancaster, Pa. JOHN A. HAAS, Propr. Ache? When you're suffering from headache, backacke, toothache, | neuralgia, ar pain from any other 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 TONSGRIAL PARL } Agent for the Manhattan Laun Goods called for Monday East Main Street, Mount Joy If you hae a news item at any ’ tilieypr@usedot us have it. We want the news and so do our readers. Advertise in the Mt. joy Bulletin t to succeed—Advertise If you William Burke, Infamous Irishman, Also Instrumental in Adding Significant Verb to Language. | | | ——— | Burke and Hare were two notorious | body-snatchers, or resurrectionists, their infamous trade in’ Edinburgh. William Burke was born in Ireland in 1792, and went to | Scotland as a laborer about 1817. In | 1827 he was living in a cheap lodging | house kept by another Irish laborer | named William Have. About the end of 1827 one of Hare's lodgers, an army pensioner, died, and Burke and Hare who carried on sold the body to Dr. Robert Knox, an Edinburgh anatomist, Hare there- upon suggested bedy-snatching as a | business and Burke agreed. The two | men then started im to entice poor | travelers to Hare's or some other | cheap lodging house. The victims ! were plied with liguor and then suf- | focated under mattresses, without Doctor Knox took up to £14 ($60) marks of violence. the bodies and paid for them. At least 15 people had been murdered in this way before Burke and Hare were arrested. Hare turned king's evidence, and Burke was found guilty and hanged in Edin- burgh on January 28, 1829. Hare found Scotland too hot for him and went to England, where he is believed to have died under an assumed name. The verb “to burke,” meaning to suf- to suppress, or to had its doing | focate, to strangle, put out of the secretly, origin in Burke's method of away with his victims, way WHERE GREAT EXPLORER LIES South Georgia Island, Tomb of Shackleton, Lonely Spot in the Great Antarctic Region. An interesting picture of life in South Georgia island, the “Gateway of the Antarctic,” where Shackleton | was buried, was given by an explorer | who made a research expedition there a few years ago. At that time there | was only one woman on the island, | and she was the domestic in the house- hold of Capt. C. A. Larsen, a former Antarctic explorer who had settled down as head of a Norwegian whaling station on the island. “Below my soli- tary tent’ the correspondent writes, “the grassy bank sloped sharply to a milk-colored glacial stream entering an inlet of the sea only 50 yards away. A quarter of a mile across the inlet stood the perpendicular front of a | beautiful valley glacier, coming down between peaked hills from the lifeless, silent interior. Penguins bobbed out | of the sea below the glacier and were | my most interesting callers for their curiosity could not resist a human be- ing. Sea elephants crawled uncon- cernedly up the stream below me and went to sleep among the hummucks on the beach. Above the tent. on the plateau of the little promontory, seven pairs of albatrosses carried on their courtship and nesting, along with giant petrels, skuas. kelp gulls and the pretty little antarctic titlarks, the only land bird of the Far South, whose cheerful song was almost the sole homelike sound.” Details Needed. A woman, blessed with a masterful disposition and considerable property. dled, leaving behind her a will in which her’ husband was cut off with a dollar, on the ground that he had deserted her a year before. The lawyer finally located the man and broke the news gently by telling | him that he had received only a small bequest. “How much?’ carelessly asked the man. “One dollar.” With the same carelessness, the man turned toward the door. Just as he | reached it, however, a sudden thought struck him. “Say,” he called back anxiously. “Did she specify what 1 was to do with this dollar?” Sarcasm From the Grave. The will of Alexander Louis Teix- eira de Mattos, the English transla- tor of Fabre, Maeterlinck, Couperus, Zola and many other continental | writers, contains one bequest that will | interest a good many booklovers who have loaned their favorite volumes not wisely but too well—at any rate, says the Living Age. Mr. de Mattas was not large, its value amounting to less than £3.000 ($15,000), and many of his bequests take the form of books, He leaves hooks to many of his friends. One volume In particular is left to a certain friend and is de- scribed as one “which he borrowed many years ago and has not returned.” too generously The estate of Loss Increased Tractor Power. A new attachment designed to give the small tractor greater bearing area and Increased pulling power, re- places the round wheels with two large sprockets, according to an illus- | Popular Mechanics | each trated article in Magazine. Outside of I arm which projects for- sprocket | is a cast-stee ward and downward, carrying at its front end a smaller idler wheel, A track tread passes around the sprock- | i . J 1 et and idler heed, increased bearing area. giving the tractor Lightest of Liquids. Many experiments here and abroad have shown that liquid hydrogen is| far the lightest of all known | qn Its density is one-fourteenth that of water, and, curiously enough, this happens to be the same ratio of that hydrogen In the gaseous te hears to air. For long the light- t liquid known was liquified marsh s. which possesses about two-fifths of water.—Washington lensity sta the density west) Ci asam———— Who Wants a Farm I have for sale an 86 acre farm in West Donegal township, that is, be- yond a dobut, the best farm of ita size 1 have ever offered. Limestone land excellent producer, good build- | ings, excellent location. Must be seen |eVery respect, J. BE. Sehroil, | electric {placement cost today, $20,000. | take $7,500 and give possession any | phone or write. Now don’t think too long but |Realtor, to be appreciated. eet: The large circulation of the Bul In | bedside Makes Over Same Hat 12 Times in 5 Years Seattle, Wash. — This city boasts the most economical woman in the country. Mrs. Hannah Bunday has made over the same hat twelve times a year for five years. Each time she produces a mew millin- ery surprise and is the envy of her admiring friends, who hustle to imitate her inventive genius. By the time many have copied her creation, Mrs. Bundy knocks them all cold with a newer and more startling conception, Mrs. Bundy uses an assort- ment of ribbon, plush, plumes, flowers, cloth and colored yarns The framework consists of a wide brim Filipino straw braid, which may be folded, plaited, bent, wet and turned inside out. She possesses a secret of mak- ing a dye that may be washed from the straw when another tint is desired. SS RE eG GR $30 0 En $m. - — i RAISED AS GIRL, BOY RUNS AWAY Mother Wanted a Girl and Con- cealed Sex From “Vera” for Twenty-One Years. Ocracoke, N. C.—Charles Williams of Ocracoke, who lived the first twen- | ty-one years of his life as a girl on isolated Ocracoke island and then fled from his first contact with the cruel, cold world, has disappeared again. It is thought he may have become a sailor and gone on a foreign cruise. When Charles was born his mother | was so disappointed that he was not a girl she decided to bring him up as one. So under the name of Vera he grew up in the little community of He Had Sweethearts. fishermen which constitutes Oeracoke island. He was a popular “girl.” He learned { the domestic arts; he even had sweet- hearts, for he is pretty. Then about a year ago, shortly after his twenty-first birthday, it was made known that he was a man. He wrote to a young man in New York, a for- mer resident of Ocracoke, to whom he was almost engaged, that he could not continue their correspondence because it wasn't “manly.” The next step was to provide himself with man’s attire and go out into the world. In Baltimore he got a job, but soom he became homesick and in a few months went home, He followed the only occupation possible on Ocracoke and became a fisherman, but in many other ways his home island was changed. His friends, who had so long regarded him as a girl, could not treat him as they had before, and Williams became restless. He recently told friends he would like to become a sailor and see the world, and they believe he has done so Jut they say they liked him and wan him to come home again, FARMER HIDES $60,000 GOLD Revealed Buried Treasure a Few Hours Before Death—Surprise for Family. Kan.—J. H. Brack, here, who died about weeks ago, left a substantia! fortune to his heirs in the form of a large number of fine farms in Rus) county, and in addition another foi tune which came as a surprise to the members of the family in the way of Bend, near Great farmer three $60,000 in gold, which was secreted under the house in which he lived. Unknown to the members of the family, Brack had been hoarding gotd pieces of all denominations, and it was not until a few hours hefore his death that he called his family to his had a his heme and told them that he store of gold hidden under Flapper Ghost Is the Latest, Poughkeepsie, N. Y.—A haired, pretty “spook” in her teens is alarming the county of Dutchess in the neighborhood of Millerton. The “flap per ghost” is said to haunt the home of Theron Snyder and to float agains the second-story windows and pee) through. bobbed A Wonderful Bargain in-law, Refuses to Get Up, Now Paralyzed and Can't. to Town, Autos Appear and Phones Are Installed, but She Hasn't Seen Them. Tipton, Jowa.—Thirty-eight ago Mrs. Alexander Wickham of Tip- ton “got mad” and went to bed. “I'm never, never, never going to get up again,” she declared. ago she changed her mind and at- tempted to get out of bed and walk. But she found she was paralyzed from her waist down. Mrs. Wickham was a young wife when she went to bed. She is a white-haired woman now. She Is rich, but she gets little enjoyment from her money. How Mrs. Wickham retired to her bed to remain the rest of her life is an odd story. One morning she was cutting bacon for her breakfast. She and her father-in-law were quarreling. Old Man Wickham made some remark she resented. She laid down her butcher knife and started for the door. “Where are you going?” her husband asked. “I'm going to bed, and I'm never, never, never going to get up again,” answered the wife as she walked into her room and slammed the door. She stayed in bed all that day. Her husband thinking to humor her, brought her meals. The next morning she refused to get up. Again the hus- band brought her meals. The third day was a repetition of the first and second. So were the fourth and the fifth and the sixth. “She'll get over it,” said the neigh- bors when they heard of what was going on over at the Wickham farm. Years of Reading. Mrs. Wickham spent her time read- ing books and writing poetry. thirty-eight years of such reading she is undoubtedly the best read In all Iowa. Also she probably has in Towa. . Neighbors came to see her after she bed. But she refused to Gradually these visits to her them, took see The Husband Brought Her Meals. ceased and she was left severely alone Her husband called a doctor. “There's nothing the matter with her,” said the physician. “She can get up whenever she wants to.” 3ut she didn’t want to. Specialists from Moines were brought in. They could find nothing wrong with the woman. The village into a town. A railroad was built through the place. Mrs. Wickham could hear the whistle of the locomotives as they Des grew good-sized passed near her house. Never Saw Telephone. When the telephone exchange was set up in Tipton the Wickhams had a telephone installed. Mrs. wver saw it, It was in another room Styles in clothes did not interest her, she didn't wear any clothes, ex cept her unightdresses, Tipton grew until it almost inclose the Wickham farm. The farm became viiluable. When the father-in-law husband became very died, her of the place. But he gave up farmin Im to raising collie dogs sq sole owner and went he could be at home all the time and cauld look after his wife. Two years ago the hasband, wor out with thirty-six years of constan raiting on his died. Mrs. Wid ham went to the funeral. But she had to be carcied. She could ne she does not express a single regret over her wasted life. Wife’s Love Worth Six Cents, Hackensack, N. J.- cents for the alienation of his wife's affections were awarded to John H Stein by the jury trying his $50,000 alienation suit, brought against Edgm iH. Kane. Five women were on th jury. Damages of o Let Me List It Undoubtedly the best bargain I new heating piant, | garage. Re- | will | lights, bath, ime. etin makes it the best advertising act. Call or phone Jno. E. Schroll, medium in this section of Lancaster Mount Joy, Pa. county. Give it a trial and be con- | = vinced, of Br eH .-o’nno Advertise 1n the Mt. Joy Bulletin. The fall season will soon be here have had in several years. A double (2nd any person having real estate to lot, corner, good residential section, dispose of should notify me by phone with 3-story brick house, modern in | or card. I will list it free, advertise same and if not sold this work costs you nothing. Wha could be fairer? No matter where you're located, call Jno. E. Schroll, Joy. tf ID Ce Read the Bulletin. Subscribe for the Mt. Joy Bulletin If you want to succeed—Advertise Mt. QUARREL RUINS LIFE During Idle Years Railroad Has Come years A little while 9. 9 ho? ¥% 9. 9 Saale’ 9, THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA, U. 8. A “GOT MAD,” STAYS! IN BED 38 YEARS! “Retires” After Row With Father- You Can't Drive a Nail With an Apple q Poor printing on poor paper never paid anybody. Get work that 1s good enough to bring you good results, { Use aneconom- ical paper such as MMERY] 9 BOND ye and come to an eco- nomical printer. That’s us. Quickserv- ice and good work at reasonable prices. Use Rore Printed Salesmanship — Ask Us | Cows at Private Sale Commencing Monday, July 3 and | until sold J. B. Keller & Bro. will | | have a carload of cows and a few! stock bulls at private sale. If you | are too busy to come during the day, | they will be pleased to have you call! in_the evening. tf! DDB a, 0 Xa Xd \/ ho? % \/ SaaS / + 9, * After | woman | Oo. 0. 0 * ¢ 0 written more poetry than any woman @, 0% Jeeleededd 9, > oo eo 9 9, oO. o OE 000000 000 000020420 420 020420 626% 6% 4% 420 6% 4% 4% 4% 620.6% 6% 4% 6% 6% 6%. ¢%0 «206% 420-020-650 4% 4 S030 030505 00H OI AGI AIAG AG SH HG 500003 50 03050 43050 Ge ag0 0a foie dr edn fe efe Se edo ado ede fe de WEDNESDAY, JULY 5TH, 1922 i | 1900%-6% 6% 4% o% 0 00 00 0. 0. 0. 0 0 0 200 004 900% 09% 9% 0, 9, 0. 0. 0 0 0 0. 0. 0 be 09000 0S ELH AHO 1 UP SI III ISIE SSIS 300 ho? 06? 058 First National THE LONG ARM OF THE NATION The strength of every nation is meas~ ured by its sea power. In war the navy is the deciding factor. In peaceitis the most powerful insurance against future war, Little-known facts of intense interest concern- ing our navy are told in one of the series of stories about Our Government which we are sending out each month. To receive with our compliments this story and all those issued before, merely send us your name and address. Bank Mount Joy, Pa. Sao | QOOROOOOOOO00 OOOOOOO0O0OOO0O0 SOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOOOOOOO0 Wickham | OOO OOOOOO farthest. = 3 PINK SALMON Cut to Anterican Stores customers are saving dollars. 3 CRMC 1] now paying elsewhere, 9c FRANCO-AMERICAN TOMATO SOUP Regular Size Can gest JES IES of te Best phic 45 certs a hundred Fourty-five cent price effective at oace. 1060 tons of clear thick spring water ice stored in Mount Joy and-Florin. Mount Joy Ice Company HALLGREN & HEILIG, Proprietors. Ice for sale at all times on Columbia Avenue 9, 0 e*%* aaa 00 0% 0% a% % o%% a? Cat Cat 0p 049 009049, J ®, 0 0, bree feafraded o, 9, 0, 9 X ob 2% '¥ 20-0204 0 e% * ee oo You'll Save More in an American Store Check ‘every item in this advertiseme consideratioh—with the prices you are why we say it pays to deal in the American Stores, nt and compare our goods and prices—giving quality full and we know you’ll realize at once where quality counts and your money goes the Are you. MOUNT JOY, PENNA. REGULAR 12c CAN BEST |{ 5c CAKES and CANDIES \ N. B. C. Iced Unity Jumbles 19¢ N. B. C. Oreo Sandwiches 30c} Jordan Almonds Ib 49¢ Assorted Chocolates 1b box 49¢ “Asco’” Cream Mints Ib ..25¢ Delicious Lemon Drops lb 25¢ Jelly Drops ib .......... 25¢ Pure Candy Pops 5 for ..5c. Luden’s Marshmallows, bag 10c | Regular 1213¢ Can California SOUSED HERRING Cut to Cooked, ready to serve. petizing. Very tasty and ap- A bargain you should not miss. SUMMER DESSERTS “Asco’” Jelly Powder pkg ..9c Mrs. Morrisons Puddings pg 10c Blue Rose Rice 1b pkg....9¢c “Asco' Corn Starch pkg ....7c Minute Tapioca pkg Fruit Puddine pkg Instantaneous Tapioca pg llc EVER HAD A CUP? -20¢ “ASCO” COFFEE . know \ Pound N You will never how goed coffee can really be un- til yQu have drank a cup of the ‘““Asco” Blend—the blend without a fault. 5 5 delicidys N GOLD § 10c¢ A 12 Bony TLOUR \ Ny ph" N\ ICED TEA TIME \ N\ * To have your iced tea Just right you must use good tea. We have the quality and blends to suit every taste. We par- ticularly recommend our 45c. The very choicdst pink salmon packed. Thi Makes a very tasty and economical meat ser- This brand needs no comment. Your op: vice. iY portunity to save more money. A \ open FRUITS and VEGETABLES “Asco’’ Sifted Peas can ..17c¢ ‘“Asco’” Maine Corn can ..15¢ Tender Shoe Peg Corn can. .12¢ New Pack Garden Spinach 19¢ New Pk Tender Peas cn 121;¢ Tender Sugar Beets can ..14c Sue: Potatoes can ...... 15¢ awaiian Sliced Pineapple 25 Calif. Sliced Peaches can .29¢ 55¢ \ Gold Seal Brand is the best for all purposes delicious cakes, light bring and mouth-melting rolls. pastry, wholesome King Wheat pkg BREAKFAST CEREALS Gold Seal Oats pkg. uaker Puffed Rice pkg. .15¢ “Asko” Asco, Orange Pekoe, India Cey.:l Corn Fishes phe 16s lon, Old Country Style Ib pkg. Shredded Wheat phe. % He - Quak pA “e000 Cc A trial package conyinces. Ratston Shan pans Rk 22 X ceptional merit. “ASCO” OLEOMARGARINE Pound 22 C A pure high grade butter substitute of ex- SOAPS AND CLEANERS Young’s Borax Soap bar 615¢ Young's Soap Chips pkg ..9¢ Fels Naptha Soap bar ..5lc¢ Sunbrite Cleanser can ....4%¢ Star Naptha Powder pkg ..5¢ Octagon Soap bar....... 6l5¢ Ivory Soap 3 bars for .. SWEET SUGAR CORN Cut & \ 9¢ Treat the folks to some nice dorn fritters. \ They'll enjoy them. QUALITY and QUANTITY VICTOR BREAD Big Loaf 6¢c Made of the purest ingredi- ents and baked with the same care that you would use in your own kitchen. : \ % READY TO SERVE "FOODS Red Alaska Shue \ Calif. Tuna For oan 2 «eX 15 Best Wet Shrimp can ' Nise “Asco”’ Pork & Beans can 9¢ Domestic Sardines big can 13c Libby’s Corned Beef ¢ | - an .23 Heinz Kidney Beans can 15¢ COOOOCOCOOOCOOOOOOCOO0CO00O00O0 1 STORES CO{] QOOOOOOOOO0O EA RE ,Y of FR 1 | | NC C—O,