WEDNESDAY, NOV. 14th, — } U Su wensitiors) — a j Do You rade re # Believe tiser and a good s busin j= { In Signs usiuess man. Ju dicious advertising Always Pays : @ ro op hy reo Nn +" WN] and especially when you advertise in a paper that is read by everybody i in its territory. | VIN 1923 AN IDEAL GIFT 158 soy OR GIRL & ither sitting or stand- ng. Ono size forall ages 6 to 14 years. "FREE | & i SAUJLEK] Coupons. write for CO. St. Louis, Mo. 4 nov. 14-6t ADVANCE MFG. 82 Dock Street ) Tis sewpaper reaches the eye . Tis seuspepe who might be a 3 { poi buyer in this section. — TEES res BULLETIN ADS PAY BULLETIN ADS PAY The Rulletin contains more loca! and up-to-the-minute newr than any weekly in this section. Compare it and convince vourself. IL costs only $1.50 a year. Read the Bulletin | Advertise in the Mt. Joy Bulletin | If you want to succeed —Advertis ae ale Y Ye § IY LE HT [ITI JT RR I TT Help Yourself Club | of the Lancaster New Era has the Greatest Prize Lisi $35,000.00 | Ever Offered By a Lancaster Newspaper THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA, U. S. A, COURT PROCLAMATION Whereas, the Hon. Charles I. Landis, Presi: fjent, and Hon. Aaron B. Hassler, Associate Law Judge of the Court of Common Pleas in and for the county of Lancaster and Assist and Justices of the Courts of Oyer and Ter niner and Genera: Jall Delivery and Quarter Hesniong of the Peace in and for the County of Laucaster, have issued their precept *o me directed, requiring me, among other things, te jake public proclamation throughout my balli- vick, that a Court of Oyer and Terminer and jencral Jall Delivery, also a Court of General Juarter Sessions of the Peace and Jail De ivery, will commence in the Court House, in the City of Lancuster, in the Commonwefith of cennsylvania, ON THE THIRD MONDAY IN NOVEMBER (the 19th,) 1923 in persusuce of which precept public notice is nereby given to the Mayor and Alderman of the City of Lancaster, in sald county, and al ithe Justices of the Peace, the Coroner and (Jonstables of the said City and County of Lan. aster, that they be then and there, in their own proper persons, with their rolls, records und examinations, and inquisitions, and thelr to do those things which to their offices appertain in their behalf to be done aud to all those who will prosecute against the prisoners who are or then aball be tn the 1ail of the sald County of Lancaster, wre to be then and there to prosecute against them as shall be just, sther remembrances, Dated at Lancaster, Pa., the 18th} day of October, A. D. 19238. C. F. HOMSHER, Sheriff. Read the Bulletin. Ir you want to succecd—Advertise The Prize List HOME (Lot 70x400 Feet) - - A Hiemenz-Built Home. PACKARD SINGLE EIGHT - - rl Sold and Displayed by Motor Company of Lancaster. | PEERLESS, 7-Passenger to Sold and Disslayed by G. S B. F. Kauffman, Prop. HUDSON COACH, Super Six - Sold and Displayed os D. Wilbur Ranck, 308 E. King St. BUICK, 4-Wheel Brake, 5-Passenger Sold and Displayed by Chambers Motor Co., Prince and Ororize Sts. JEWETT, 5-Passenger, 6-Cylinder - $ 1,195.00 Sold and Displayed by Paige Motor Car Co. CLEVELAND, 5-Pass., 6-Cyl., Tour. Sold and displayed iy Penn Automobile Co., 105-7 North Prince Street. STUDEBAKER LIGHT 6, 5-Passenger $ 1,130.00 Sold and Displayed by H. M. Vondersmith, 38 So. Queen st, MAXWELL SPORT MODEL - - Sold and Displayed by G. S. Burkholder, 701 Columbia Ave. OAKLAND, 4-W. Brake, Disc Wheels $ 1,050.00 Sold and Displayed by Buckwalter-Sweigart, Inc., Lemon & Mary Sts. OVERLAND TOURING CAR - - Sold and Displayed by Johnson-Brinkman Motor Co., 104-6-8 N. Prince St. OVERLAND TOURING CAR - - Sold and Displayed by Johnson-Brinkman Motor Co., 104-6-8 N. Prince St. CHEVROLET TOURING - - i Sold and Displayed by J. F. Longenecker, Cor. Duke & King Sts. CHEVROLET TOURING - - Sold and Displayed by J. F. Longenecker, Cor. Duke & King Sts. STAR TOURINGCAR - - - Sold and Displayed by Colonial Motor Co., 32 E. Chestnut St. 3—Victor Victrolas valued at $150 Each $ 450.00 Sold by Kirk Johnson & Co. 1—Brunswick Phonograph valued at Sold by Reifsnyder & Sons. 1-—Victor Victrola valued at - - Sold by H. B. Herr & Co. 1—Victor, model 9, valued at - - Sold by H. B. Herr & Co. 4—Portable Victor Victrolas, $50 Each $§ 200.00 Sold by Kirl: Johnson & Co. For full details and without obligating yourself in any way, send in the attached coupon Now Tear off Here. - FW | Manager Help Yourself Club | NEW Wi Reip Youelt Go | Without obligating myself in any way please send me full details of | { your $35,000.00 Help Yourself Chub. | | { te > ] Name BEB PII PIPES IED See rE eee piss SOURED. » 8» 2 NAVY i” wv, D. No. ESE 9 eT 0 5S SEP SIN GOT DY FRE WPT SE el, . Burkholder, 701 Columbia Poe FRANKLIN, 5-Passenger, Touring - $ 2,075.00 Sold and Divlaved by De Pugh Motor Co., 324 N. Gros St. JORDAN, 6-Cylinder, 5-Passenger - Sold and Diplaved by Jordan Sales & Service Co., 250 N. Prince St. of Lancaster. PETE 0 TIVE VFI ENON Fr eve sds $12,000.00 $ 3,895.00 $ 2,950.00 $ 1,850.00 $ 1,490.00 $ 1,415.00 $ 1,145.00 $ 1,060.00 $ 565.00 = = = BE FS - = = $ 565.00 $ 565.95 $ 565.95 JE $ 512.60 $ 115.00 $ 115.00 $ 75.00 Tae 3 : AN ORDERLY HOUSE ; EHH ERORORCBORBORACA BE (© by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) CARA RLRLARRARLARR RRR ARE. By MARGUERITE BUFFUM NNE Trevor was tired. She had scrubbed and cleaned her little house until it shone with a new splen- dor. Two freshly baked apple pies were on the pantry shelf, and beside them was Bob's favorite spice cake with its thick white frosting. Upstairs the rooms were spotless and inviting with their crisp, white curtains and beautiful linen. Anne loved the cleanness of her house, yet she resented being tired. “Bob is so peevish lately, too,” she whispered to herself, She glanced at the clock, and, not- ing that it was nearly time for him to be home, moved slowly to the stove and started taking the dinner up. She carried the baked ham that she had prepared so carefully to the dining room and placed it before his place. “I'll bet he won't even say it's nice,” she said, then paused to stare blankly at Bob as he stood in the doorway. “Am I as bad as that, Anne?” Anne, overtired and nervous, denly burst into tears. “If you wouldn't slave 80, Anne, and go out more—" “You don't understand, Bob. You always said you liked a well-ordered house, and when I have it orderly you find fault.” Finally came the day when Bob had brutally told her she was losing her good looks. After he left, Anne hur- ried to the mirror. The reflection there assured her that she was still pretty. But it was true that her face was losing its bloom. It hurt so much to have Bob say a thing like that. Anne thought of the time when he used to say, “My pretty little wife,” as held her close. She wondered, vaguely, if he would ever say it again, What had made him change so? The work of the house had to be done. sud- he street | automobiles. The | scarf caught her attention. er was June Evans, and she was earn- estly talking to the man beside her Suddenly he turned and looked to- | ward the house. It was Bob! Ordi- | i narily Anne might have been curious, | but not jealous. jut somehow, to her tortured mind, June's gay scarf seemed | to wave defiance at her; and her vivid | coloring, untouched, Anne knew, , any makeup, recalled Bob's stinging | remark of the morning. | | sire to tell somebody her | somebody who might help her straight- . en out the tangled threads. She | | thought of Mary Brene. Mary was | six years Anne's senlor and had al- | ways been a close friend. It was to | Mary that she had first confided her great love for Bob. * * * * “ - * “And how can we ever be happy?” i finished Anne, as she sat before | Brene's open fire. “Anne,” said Mary, | your house to absorb you. member the day I called, ago? When I got vou stopped to straighten it before you came with me to the door, You didn’t think I saw you. I was dying to tear that set, immaculate room to pieces. “You've taken a broom and dustpan | and mop and driven comfort and hap- piness right out of your home. denied Bob the companionship he’s en titled to, and then wondered at his be | Ing silent and irritable. He's disap | pointed, Anne, and disillusioned. And,” Mary's voice became more gentle, “you've heen to blame.” | Anne hurried home, | she had been losing sight of the great- | er things of life in pursuit two weeks of things | less worth while. | her, yet she felt no resentment | heart. She had been taught a much- | needed lesson—a lesson she knew | | would help her many times in the fu- | ture, Job greeted her as she opened the door. “I had to come home early Anne,” he said. “I kept remembering | your face when I said what I did this | moraing. Will you forgive me? | thought perhaps I might persuade | from working so hard.” “You don't need to persuade me any | more, Bob. I'm beginning to | that I've been the one at fault. I'm | going to do differently—-that is, if you | don’t mind having things elab orate.” 30b looked at her wonderingly. He i did not quite understand her sudden | change of attitude, to ask questions. A wave of gladness thrilled him. “Of course I don’t mind, dear, will only bring me back a happy, tented Anne.” He pointed to a large package upon the table. “There's a surprise for you. June Evans helped me select it.” Anne unfolded the wrappings and lifted out an evening wrap of soft gray with a wide fur collar. “It's lovely, Bob! Why, it must have cost—" Then stopped as he held up a forbidding hand. She softly stroked the lining of the shimmering coral satin, Bob drew her toward him and looked into the happy, flushed face, “My pretty little wife,” said Bob. as he held her close, vou less if it con- His Dilemma. Jall Visitor—Didn't you have money enough to pay the fine? Motorist—Yes, but I couldn't sparn itt. The car needs new tires and re varnishing. BM ————— Marietta has its first woman offic- ial. Mrs. McCloskey was elected a school director last week. FOR SALE—A 1918 Cadillac Touring Car in good condition and re cently painted. E. L. Nissly & Sons, Florin, Pa. uly 25-tf LEARN SHORT STORY- WRIT- ING BY MAIL—Complete training by famous author for persons with an ordinary education. Any age. Write G. Cook, 945 Pa. Ave, Washington, O: Free circular. sept. 1 Anne's troubled gaze turned to the and the fast-moving stream of | flash of an orange ! The wear- | by | There suddenly came to her the de- | troubles, | Mary | “you've allowed | Do you re- | up from my chair | You've | convinced that | Mary had not spared | in her | | 1 realize | but he didn’t stop | na 000 HORROR SORRY ROHR, GOING TOO FAR ARR RBRRRRARALRRLR RRR. By ELEANOR K. BACON CHR Sb HCE CEB DBE RC CHORE (@, lbs, by McClure Nywspaper Syndicate.) HE Geoffrey Wintons stood on the deck of a channel steamer and watched the white clits of Dover west into the sky line. Mis. Winston threw back her fur cape impatiently, and at the same mo- ment Geoffrey turned up his coat collar and shivered. “Oh, there it goes!” cried Mrs, Win- ton suddenly. She made a frantle clutch at Geoffrey's hat as, dislodged by a puff of wind, it skidded past her. With her usual efficiency she recap- tured it with a well-timed movement. “Goodness, Geoffrey! I believe you would lose your head If it were not fastened on,” she declared. And, in- deed, Geoffrey's chief characteristic, with the exception of his absent-mind- edness, seemed to be his talent for dropping his belongings. “It isn’t a bit rough today,” she said presently. “We are going to have a fine crossing.” The floor heaved under them, Geoffrey turned a shade paler. “I think I'll sit down, Martha,” he sald a trifie uncertainly. He steered a divided course toward his steamer chair. A copy of Birrell's “Obita Dicta” fell from his pocket, and Mrs. Winton mechanically put it into his hands, tucked him up In his steamer rug, and handed him an apple from a capacious bag on her arm. “I brought this because you always lke an apple between meals,” she re- marked solicitously. “I'll go down now and see where Helen 1s. You feel all right, don’t you, Googoo?" Geoffrey wished his wife would not call him, Googoo, even in strictest pri- vacy. He had begged her earnestly and affectionately to drop it, but with and the directness that distinguished all her | words and acts she told him it was a | tribute to the imperishable infant in | Mim, and she could not give it up. “You are an infant in so many ways, Geoffrey,” she used to say, with a sigh. “Rey at times you seem fitted for | nothing more advanced than bibs and | | a perambulator., And If you don't try | | to overcome your overwhelming absent- | | mindedness I'm truly afraid that some | ily, | day you will go too far. Why, you are | { as irresponsible as the proverbial new- { born babe. I don't know what you | would do without me to look after | youl” When she disappeared he sighed and | was about to open his book when, drift- Ing across his vision, came his daugh- | ter Helen and “That Young Idiot.” The young man so classified In Geof- frey’'s mind, to an impartial eye, could {| and did give pleasure, He was rather | | short and slight, with blue eyes at | | present brimming with devotion, and a | { smile that could charm an all-day | | sucker away from the greediest child. Geoffrey would have been the first to | { yield to it if he had not so fiercely re- | | sented its effect on his cherished and | | only child. The two | absorbed young persons | stopped directly in front of Geoffrey. | On the face of Helen's lover four let- | ters shone as if emblazoned in celes- | tial light. | “Young idiot!" i | ploded, returning Impaired interest Half an hour slipped away. He fin- ished the chapter, “Cambridge and the Poets,” and, looking down, became | aware of the ragged apple core in his | hand. { i sr a moment or two of inertia, his legs beg: agitate the steamer rug, | | | | | | | Geoffrey silently ex- to his book with an gan to at first ineffectually, on and more violently. Struggling heroically, he at last dis- entangled himself, and rose unsteadily to his feet. He was very, very dizzy, | with a sort of Ducky-Daddles fee | that the sky was about to fall at his more feet. He gazed wistfully toward Hel- en's unfilial back No thought of a | seasick parent disturbed her mind as | she inclined an exquisitely modeled lit- | tle ear to her lover's litany. Geoffrey leaned over his chair and iimself with mysterious little | Jerkings of the steamer rug. Very care- fully he put the apple core in his empty | seat. He changed its position several | tines, each time becoming more dis D sutisfied with the result, Finally he | threw the rug over it, only half con- | cealing it, and began an unstudied toe dance toward the rail. away from when | | His zigzag route led him his daughter's vicinity, so that he leaned on the rail he was still un- | | observed. | | A moment’s pause, then, with almost { unbelievable grace and dexterity, Geof- | | frey hurled himself over the rail, - » * * * * -. Twenty minutes later Geoffrey and “That Young Idiot” were lying on deck, wrapped in blankets and solici- tude. Geoffrey opened his eyes. Mar- tha's face, white and strained from suppressed emotion, bent over him. Helen was tucking the rug around his feet. Geoffrey turned his head and his eyes met the blue, friendly gaze of his life preserver, whose persuasive smile instantly shone upon him. Geoffrey's face twitched. Then he smiled warmly back, and two shining and beautiful words took form in his mind. “My son.” Dog Finds Treasure Chest. A dog digging on a plantation near QOourtlagd, Ala., uncovered an old chest containing a large number of gold and silver coins dating from 1700 to 1860. The discovery ends a long search for treasure which a local legend says was buried In the neigh- borhood by a faithful slave during the Civil war. —Capper's Weekly. net GR — MOUNT JOY MARKETS The following prices are paid to- day by our local merchants: TZEs ova viens .61-68¢ Butter ....... ovis vs vie von 400 Bardo... Jou ia Se i ves . 13¢ Wheat ...:v..uivvn . .. $1.05 COM... so iumcvansvivnaa $1:10 Just what you need for this kind of weather. A’ pair of Army Gloves for 35¢ and 48c at Lasketwitz's. WANTED 20 MEN and 20 GIRLS STEADY EMPLOYMENT PLEASANT TIONS. APPLY Nissly Swiss Choc. Co. Inc. FLORIN, PA. WORKING CONDI- Meat Krall's AND I always have on hand the line of SMOKED MEATS, oct. 24-tf Read the Bulletin. If vou want to succeed—Advertise West Main St, HAM, BEEF, BOLOGNA, LARD, ETC. Also Fresh Beef, Veal, Pork, Muttom H. H. KRALL MOUNT JOY. $685 F. O. B. Detroit This car can be obtained through the Ford Weekly Purchase Plan, Four-Door Sedan Interior Features A cozy, attractive interior has been achievedintheFord Four-DoorSedan, Broadclc upholstery, soft brown with a slightly darker stripe, harmon- izes with the lighter shade in the head lining. Ornamental interior fittings are finished in nickel. Doors are made of one solid sheet of heavy aluminum,verylight and strong 1 wn anything im DRIED H. S. NEWCOMER, Authorized Agent Mount Joy, Penna. I have just recently added to my large stock, a complete line which I will sell at astonishingly The line comprises many things in wearing apparel, and just what the hunter or working man can use at this season of ARMY and NAVY GOODS, low prices. Army and Navy Goods of the year at very low prices. Men’s O. D. Trousers. Leggings, per pair Army Gloves Army Raincoats H. East Main Street, LASKEWITZ Open Evenings ..$2.48 .39¢ .35 and 48c . $3.75 Mount Joy, Pa. Faas OOOO O00000 REWARD A REWARD OF $100.00 Will be paid for information leading to the ar- rest and conviction of the person or persons who feloniously broke into St. Luke’s Church, be- tween four and seven o'clock P. M., Sunday, November 11th, and ‘destroyed property with the evident intention of stealing. DOOOOO00OC DOOOOOOO0D00 Chiropractic Is Not Ki-ro-quack-tic As some so-called educated people would have you believe, but it is the most sensible health science known, excepting none. I can prove it to you as I have proven it to those who had been skeptical before taking chiropractic spinal adjustment. HOURS) High 1t 000000¢ \ nd Mount Joy Streets Yours for Health, J. S. KUHN. D. C. 7:00 TO 9:00 P. M. AND BY Bell Telephone Ne. 76R2 THOS. J. BROWN