The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, July 16, 1924, Image 8

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PAGE EIGHT
Men's Straw
59¢ Women’s
Black, Brown
Colors.
Special 3 pairs $1
Athletic
Suits 69¢c.
OPEN
EVERY
EVENING
Classified Column
material China Braids}. “Fancy
Straws and “Helen” Straws, no
seconds, reduced
25 Per Cent



98¢ Nainsook
Union
Hats very fine

 
a
"%
 

%
Silk Hose in
and Fancy
250 Pairs Sandals
Boys’ Crash
Pants 59c. Shirts 49c.

weeks I will give some one a bargain
Al lconveniences and immediate pos-
session. If interested call or phone

FOR SALE—A Peninsular Steel
Range, with Polished top, water-back
Price very reason-
Apnly Dr A. F. Snyder, Mar-
july 9-3t
in A-1 condition.
able,
ietta St., mu. Joy.

WANTED—Men to work in stone
Apply N. S. Newcomer, R.
goa.
. D. No. 2, Mount Joy, Pa.
july 9-2t-pd

 


e r this! Unless
FOOT ends
night, bring it
money back.
Company.
d get
Ww. D.
FAIRY
bunion pain over
your
dler &
Bell 41R2 or Ind 860, Mount Joy.
feb. 20-tf

STORE ROOM FOR RENT —1I
have a very fine Store Room 15x20
feet in the center of the business dis-
trict on Main street, Mount Joy, for
rent. Will rent as is or put in an.
mt. For particulars see JNO. E.
SCHROLL, Bulletin Office, Mount
Joy, Pa. Both Phones. tf.

FOR SALE—A 2% story 8-room
frame house, log to the square, half
of roof is corrugated iron, balance
shingle. Building to be removed.
Quite a lot of good flooring and
heavy timber in building. J. E.


HELP WANTED—Firm opening
up wants two office assistants, one
some stenographic and book-| 1
k )g experience, one as helper to| SALE located on
send advertising matter. Male| and fronting 50 feet on Donegal
or female. "Wyzite E. Garlock, Roland
Park, in own hand
Mae WTiting giving referehiees, experience |
 



dependents, and sala¥y. desired | Mount Jov. 23-it
| on OF may 23.
The reas gontinde to. sellY LOTS FOR SALE—I have several
FAIRYFOOT; is
mers say “It is the
surest remedy to end buni
W. D. Chandler & Company.
FLORIDA, S. 40—2





to 6
apartments, private baths,
“fa
Sect ran cold water. Ap-
ply Harry G. S A
2501 Pacific Ave., Atlan

FOR RENT—Two Rooms, with
kitchen and bath. Also spacious side
porch. Electric lights, steam heat,
ete. Will rent furnished or unfur-
sished. Apply to Jno. E. Schroll. E.
Main St., Mt. Joy.
— ere
IRS




g
ings, Etc will be sold.
at 7 o'clock. july

J rr RENT-—A garage for one
/ car. ocated. Rent reason- |
{ able. Apply Mr Nissley, Mt.
TOW ne, Jog 16-2t | 3 new house. Call, phone of write
I Te > g bunion J. E. Schroll, Realtor, Mt. Joy. tf
Jt will ends
Be pain almost W. Bx
dler & Company. ie
neelless. We gua
nk
FOR SALE CHEAP—A full set
of broom ines and fixtures.
206 East Main St., Mt. Joy,
july 16-1t-pd


se our custo™
jns™
room
ly: N. |
july 2:3t
apr. 30-tf
T COMMUNITY AUCTION
ill be held Saturday, July











"claims or demands against the same
_| the undersigned for settlement.
| SCHROLL, Mt. Joy, Pa. apr. 23-tf
| CHOICE BUILDING LOT FOR
the north
Springs street, Mount Joy. Splendid
| ocation and beautiful dwellings on
gither side. Call Jno. E. Schroll,

very desirable building lots at a good
location in Florin. Will sell one or
all. One has a good frame building
| thereon. The price is right. Call or
| phone J. E. SCHROLL, Realtor, Mt.
Joy, Pa. apr.15-tf.

WANTED—Everybody in this sec-
tion to use our ‘wanted, for sale,
ots.” column more frequently. It is
tound to pay. Just try it. 17 4
ha,



gas connections, 6 rooms,
pantry. On trolley Hne.
H. H. Engle, 340 W.
Mount Joy, Pa.

If there is anyone looking for a
nice home in Florin, 8 rooms and
bath with heat, electric lights, frame
stable, 2 chicken houses, ete, at a
splendid location, I can accomodate
you. Price is way below the cost of
ADMINISTRATOR’S NOTICE
Estate of Sophia Dowhower, late of
Mount Joy, Lancaster County, Pa.,
deceased.
Letters of administration on
said estate having been granted to]
the undersigned, all persons indebt-
ed thereto are requested to make im-
mediate payment,, and those having

will present them without delay to
$1.45 Men's Work
ers of Good Sturdy Material
that will Wear and Wash ‘at
$1.00 “vy
69c. Athletic
side |
mer Dresses
Ginghams,
~ Special
Sn Sizes 8
One lot of Children’s Sum-
Checks
Stripes. Values up to $2.00.
shopper, and what you see advertised you will get.
sale and don’t be mislead that you will be mislead. You will find everything ar-
in Washable
and § ©.
Soles
$1.00
to 14.
$2.00 Men's Leather
House Slippers in Brown
with Sewed and
Goodyear Stitched Leather
$1.00
 
THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA.
Women and Children
5
i,
he
a,
$1.88---$2.88--$3.88---$4.88

Men’s Rubber
Belts at 15c.
In Patent, Grey, Brown and Blue, $3.00 and,
$4.00 values.
All to be sold
Bathing Suits for Men, Boys, Women
and Children . . . . 48C and up | Pants $1.98.
LASKEWIT
at
, w. Men’s good Big Yank and
Men's Dress Heavy Work Wide Awake
Shirts. 69c. Work Shirts 83c
MOUNT JOY, PENNA.
Remarkable Echo
If the famous Mena suspension
bridge i= taken down, as is possible
to be replaced by something more sub-
stantial, not only will a bridge be de-
stroyed, but also a famous echo. The
sound of a hammer is repeated from
each supporting crossheam in the
bridge, and finally from the opposite
pler 576 feet away.—London Mall,
BIH
Census of Sheep
The sheep census gives us about
87,000,000, compared with 79,000,000
for the Australasian district, and a
figure slightly In excess of our own
for Argentina, says Nature Magazine.
The world total is estimated at about
573,000,000 and the annual production
of wool averages about 3,000,000,000
pounds.
ree A rare
Turn Out Many Marbles
tn Saxony for shipment to the United
States, India and China, a mill pro-
ducing an average of 3,500 of the
boys’ delights a day.

GRAYBILL SWIMMING POOL
Near Elizabethtown College
Is Open Afternoon and
Evening
All Pure Spring Water


COWS Cows
WLYCOMING AND COLUMBIA CO.
COWS
ple
PRIVATE SALE

COMMENCING
WEDNESDAY, JULY 16th,
At Noon Until Sold
1924

JOSEPH WEBER,
Mount Joy, Pa.
Administra
tor.
Wm. M. Hollowbush, Atty.


Marbles of stone are made in mills |
Our Union Picnic
Thursday, July 24
SUNDAY SCHOOLS OF MOUNT
JOY, FLORIN AND COMMUN-
ITY WILL OBSERVE A
GENERAL HOLIDAY

The annual union picnic of Mt.
Joy, Florin and the surrounding
community will be held at Rocky
| Springs Park, at Lancaster, on
Thursday, July 24. This will be a
general holiday around here.
Messrs. William Tyndall and Thos. |
!J. Brown Jr will have charge of the |
| amusements for the day.
| Trolleys will leave Florin at 7, 8, |
|8:30 and 9 a. m. The basket car |
| will leave there at 8:30 o’clock.


| Trolleys will leave Mount Joy at |
| 6:15, 7.15, 7:45, 8:15, 8:45, 9:15, |
9:45, 10:15, a. m. The basket cars |
{will leave here at 9:45 a. m. 3
| Returning the first car will leave |
{Rock Springs at 5:55 P. M. and |
every thirty minutes thereafter until
110.55 which is the last car.
Tickets will be sold at Garber’s |
| Drug Store and Chandler's Drug |
| Store here and at D. Roy Moose’s |
store at Florin
The fare for the round trip is as|
follows: Mount Joy, 55 cents.
i Florin, 60 cents. All children under |
5 years free. |
|
Mr. Samuel F. Eshleman will have |
charge of the baskets and tags. Bas-!
kets are to be at the Evanglical |
church and school house in good |
time. In the evening all baskets
will be returned to the school house. |
Mr. William Ellis, Chairman, has |
arranged a number of athletic con-
tests as follows. A 75-yard dash for |
boys 14 years and under, 75-yard |
dash for girls 14 years and under, |
50-yard dash for girls 10 years and
under, 100-yard dash open to all, |
wheelbarrow race open to all, 3-|
legged race open to all, 3-legged race
for boys 10 years and under, balloon
blowing contest for ladies, shoe |
scrambling contest for boys 14 years |
and under, fat men’s race, and a |
peanut scramble for children 6 years |
and under. These athletic events will |
start at 1.30.
{
Everybody in the community is |


Holsteins, Guernseys, Jerseys. Also
Some Stock Bulls. A Good Lot
J. B. KELLER & BRO.

Telephone subscribers in China-
town, San Francisco, do not ask for
numbers—they call each Chinese
curb-stone in New York travels to
A woman who sells pencils on the


| and from York by taxi.
urgently requested to join the picnie.

Rev. C. D. Rishel, pastor of the
Rev. Rishel was a forme Bethel
pastor here. \
 

. ranged for quick selling and don’t forget, come early while the stock is complete.
LADIES’ DRESSES
Ladies’ Figured Voile
Dresses, regular $8.00 and
$10.00 values, at
$2.98
. Hundred of Pairs ‘of Oxfords and Shoes for Men, Boys,
In Every Leather. All the Latest Styles, With Sewed and Welted Leather Soles, Rubber
Heels, High, Low, Spanish, Baby Louis and, Flat Heels. Men’s Sizes 6 to 11. Women’s
Sizes 23 to 8. Boys’ Sizes 1 to 6.
‘Fourth Is Gone But Our Bargains Are Not
R E A D Every item carefully for there are many Bargains for the thrifty
There is plenty of goods on
Blouses,
colors.

98¢c to $1.98 Pair





MAKING VACUUM TUBES| p 1 We Must All
Pumping out the gas to make
vacuum tubes in the Western
Electric Company Laboratories.
The comrlicated® apparatus is
needed to help prepare the tubes
that make practicable long dis-
tance telephone and radio com-
munication.
Splicing Telephone Cable
The Bell Telephone Company
of Pennsylvania cable splicers
working near Bridgeport, Pa., on
the Pittsburgh-Washiwgton, Pa.,
new telephone cable.
The aerial platform is clamped
to the steel wire and makes the
man working as comfortable as
the one on the ground.
rt enn,
Some soils hold water longer than

Church of God at Columbia, spent [others because of the smaller soil
last Friday in town calling on friends. | Particles.
AEN Ams
A goose egg that weighs 14 ounces
and is 10 inches was exhibited re-
It pays to advertise in the Bulletin |sently on an Indian farm.

|
Gilbert, of Hallam and Mrs.

1Mrs. Mary Livingood
Travel Sometime
(From page One.)
prior to that was a resident of Lan-
caster. He was a member of the Odd
Fellows and the Foresters of Ameri-
ca. His wife survives and two child-
ren, Paul and Mary. Also his mother,
and a sister,
Ruth, of Myerstown. Funeral services
were held Saturday afternoon at
Myerstown and burial was made at
the same place.


Mrs. Malinda Peck
Malinda Peck, widow

{ Mrs. of
{Nicholas L. Peck, one of the oldest
residents of this section, died at her
home Monday evening, from a com-
plication of diseases, after a linger-
ing illness, in her seventy-sixth year.
She was a member of St.
Lutheran Church and is survived by
the following children: Anna L.
Williams, Ventnor, N. J; Mrs. George
L. Shillow, Columbia; Mrs. H. P.

Frank, Maytown; N. L. Peck, Colum-
bia; and Miss Verna Peck, Maytown.
Five grandchildren, four great grand-
children, and two sisters, Mrs. Anna
Mary
Gilbert, of York.
The funeral was held from her
late home on Thursday afternoon at
2 o'clock, with services in charge of
Rev. Charles Baker, D: D; of the
Maytown Lutheran Church. Burial
was made in the family plot in the
Maytown Union cemetery.


|

Mrs. Annie E. Wright
Mrs. Annie E. Wright 59 years
old, died at the home of her daughter,
Mrs. Joseph O’Connor, Bainbridge,
Sunday evening from a complication
of diseases. Mrs. Wright was born
“King Brand”
guaranteed not to rip
$1.98

$1.39 Women’s Silk Hose
Black, Brown and all Fancy
$1.


John’s |
bit oy
co dfs nine apn


WEDNESDAY, JULY 16th,
BB
Overalls and
00 pair

Men’s Hose, 3
Pairs for 35c.
OPEN
EVERY
EVENING
5)
B

12.25 P. M. yesterday of a complica~
tion of diseases, aged 56 years. She
was a member of the Epworth Metho-
dist church, of Harrisburg, and is
survived by her husband, her aged
mother, Mrs. Catherine Morton, of
Columbia, and the following brothers
and sisters: Harry, of this place;
Mrs. Samuel Seifert, of Columbia;
Walter, of Millersburg; Mrs. Harry
Shoemaker, of Florin; Ephraim, of
Columbia; and Mrs. Ammond Fry,
of Palmyra. Funeral services will be
held Friday afternoon at 2.00 o’clock
in the Evangelical church in this
place. Rev. Homar Knox will offici.
ate. Interment will be made in the
Henry Eberle cemetery.
Friends and relatives will consider
this their notice to attend the
funeral.
A —
Her Own Hair
George’s wife found a blonde hair on

the lapel of his coat. In a fit of
i Jealousy she demanded explanations.
i “You see, my dear, that is last year’s
i coat,” said George, “and if you remem-
ber correctly your halr was blonde
i then instead of brown. I didn’t change
! the color of your hair, did I?” Wifey
was so taken back she forgot George
had worn that same coat four times
since her curls resumed their natural
shade.—Better Busses.
re CR
Queer Villages
Tucked away in odd corners of Great
Britain are some villages with peculiar
names. In Kent we find Painter's For-
stal, Dripping Gore, and Old Wives
Lees. The last place derived its
strange name from the fact that old
women of the district used to run an
annual race there for prizes offered by
the local lord of the manor. Dripping
Gore was so called because the Danes
and Saxons are believed to have fought
a battle at this spot,

OUR SALE REGISTER
Following is a list of public sales

at Morgansville West Virginia. She
lived in West Virginia all her life
until three months ago when she
came to Bainbridge. She is survived
by her husband, in Ridgeway, West
Virginia; a brother, Owen S. Clagepp
of Baltimore, Md., and Mrs. Joseph
O'Connor, her daughter, with whom
she was living at the time of her
death. Funeral services were held
Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock from
the home of her daughter in Bain-
bridge and this afternoon at 2 o’clock
at Winchester, Va, Interment will be
made in the Mt. Hebron Cemetery at
Winchester.

Mrs. H. C. Shelly
Annie Morton Shelly, wife of
Harry Shelly, died at her home, 411
South 19th Street, Harrisburg, at
or which posters were printed at
his office or said sale is advertised
in the Bulletin.
Friday, July 25—At 7.15 P. M.
at their stock yards near Mount Joy,
cows, bulls, ete. by C. S. Frank &
Bro.
Saturday, July 26—At che Florin
Hall, home cured meats, general line
of merchandise, household goods and
farm implements, also hogs, cows,
etc. by Community Sales Co. Sale
starts at 12.30 P. M. G. S. Vogle,
Auct.
— Eee
103 Ballots Required
John W. Davis, of West Virginia,
was nominated for the presidency on
Wednesday, by the Democrats, break-
ing up its history-making deadlock,

on the 103rd ballot.
1924
 




 

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