PAGE SIX By Charles Sughroe © Western Newspaper Union THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY. LANCASTER CO., PAs 5 2 19 WEDNESDAY, JULY 15th, * Just Plain Foolishness a MICKIE, THE PRINTER [2 YAY TOR GRAGOUS | HAVE MOU BEEN ENGAGING IN "VULGAR FISTICUFFS 2 \ GW HOW YERRIBLE YOU “P| DONT KNOW HOW YOU EH TY 5.52 REGRET Nou | J GRIEVE ME, REALLY You DONT = \'M SO SORRY “© FIND You \ THIS CONDITION 4 = B23 fo fy x \ Tn Se > (50 AM \ | SORRM YA UA + ig | FOUND ME HERES POOR ME, GOING HOME FROM THE FIGHT OF MY LIFE, AND HERE COMES THE TOWN PESY, FULL OF CURIOSITY, | MINDIN' OTHER PEOPLES \ BUSINESS, AS LSUAL © PARDON THIS VAGRANT “EAR, BUT \ DO SO COMOITION | ath FINDING Ties ) 7 | THE NM v2 eI 2 Zh A i | Wingert & Haas Hat Store 2° “gi ——— \ FORGWE YoU | Largest Line of SUMMER HATS Caps and Gloves In the City PLAIN HATS A SPECIALTY JNO. A. HAAS, Propr. 144 N. Queen Lancaster, Pa. | PENNSYLVANIA WEEKLY INDUSTRIAL REVIEW shway | Q Ug makes a | i bos | ] = P a d “A good local paper | H = LO BY I N | Pla 18 yaise good local community, say the | spokane Spokesmen s Review, The : emt well-edited paper is a distinct ad- 3 i vantage to its community and (From Page 1 + a joint picnic of the Auto Club | River Road Association with » families, to be held in Duffy’s| i i editor, serves a need that will always ex- ist. It prints the current news of the community and, with a capable it becomes a real factor in LAG eras ) 9 on the second the upbuilding of the Community; LO SHUT OF ON Of CE Doms A elter county treas-|1t can and does accomplish muc WHEN WINTER LOOSED HIS CHILLY GLOOMS the club, stated ior the community. It dan gne i does. accompl.sh much for the com- mgn wealth. It refiects the character county commissioners have Base Ball Notes During the Week NINE PLAYED MAN- HEIM COUNTY LEAGUE OUTFIT AT MANHEIM WEDNESDAY EVE- NING LOCAL Mount Joy could not cope with the smooth-working Manheim team Manhe.m in a twilight game at : jast Wednesday evening and the County League nine won a flashy i-2 Mount Joy batters were helpless betore the masterful pitching of Reigel, they accumulating oniy two hits and being unable to score un- tit the inal inning when both their tallies registered. Four stickers were accorded free tickets to first but nine hit nothing more substan- tial than the zone, Blantz was the only player to 1 3 0-0 pay 3 1e : v : BUT NOW YOU OUGHT TO HEAR THEM BOAST { d to go any n ti os ing ie of the community itself. It aids BECAUSE EACH ROOM IS WARM J oa or Ce Wash- | materially in the direction and as- AS TOAST in i. i B rat h I ' of | sistance of all community develop- He one oc be borne by Colum.]ment, both industrial and cduca- We Borough, and the | tional. It could not survive one oi hip I+ | year if no need ex sted or it failed tha | to fill the wants. ; Pittsen—Pittson Hospital to have : $500,000 addition. : I broken at 7 of Pennsyivania for an- awmical laboratory to cost $1,300,- 000. Honesdale—Cont let for con-| truc two new schools at $75,-| 5 pic. HEN you slow down your heater the Heat Sth nde ae Folks again show their worth. They keep place to State line will be paved | ointly by state and county. pace with your requirements. Here is twelve-cylind- Gettysbury—Work started on v . . new $5 { sewage reatme ! er coal—vyou can slow down to one degree an hour new $50,000 sewa treatment | and never stall vour fire. And the Heat Folks have (32 fe moan oy Easton—First section of new From a standing start trey | Hig hway Dey stadium at Lafayette College being plenty of pick-up, too. th $323,000 for erection of new hotel at Fifth Avenue and Strawberry Street. Herminie—Plans under tion as to the condition of the | between Middletown and Was} { ton Borough, ich should be s {ed by ] along WEAY FORE For Good, Clean Coal way for $100,000 school here. the residents the road. He sug at the jiconstraciing SAL see, I 70nd 1 roid Ith Irwin—Work on Norwin athletic $ Yond he divided into zomes with field progressing rapidly 1 emut | committee named from each zone |! DPYQEressing rapidly, 1 anl ) bv il rest Eta nok Coa tT Manor—Construction of Manor- ® | by the president, to 150k over the Hor City road bos weak spots, then meet with the ar n ity road begun. FLORIN, PENNA. Irwin—Ice company board of governors of the associa- : “a 1] with $30,000 capital. Phone 151R4 Mt. Joy Exchange l tion and m: rr to bo la 8 Do Ch an Bom L320 be laid Latrobe—Natural gas struck at » ITE orate & ~ 3 . & ® | ment. On moti YO 7,428 feet in world’s deepest well. President Kuntzolman + AE aero Scranton—Boulevard lighting sys = nt was MY - . . r sy mmm | 0red to name the committees and | LEM being installed on Wyoming, S———— - zone the road as he belie vn the Pennsylvania and Franklin Avenues. / 1 i < as 2 De oS ( > 1 . 5 re Philadelphia—New lamps placed oO dvantage The pre ent an- ST. amps ple id age. he pre nt an- LE oe | nounced that he would name the i Hoosevely Boulevard. i ee ‘oveme NEW IDEAS IN HOME Woks» or ek 0 ST a a davs, being made t ] 3 ¥ The association voted Mr. She nk lor Ob fire compitny’s houses, COMFOR I FOR SUMMER the sum of $25 t5 cov 3 New Cumberland—City to spend cover the person- al expense he incurred in the construction of the new f-between Chickies and Watts, ee $3,000 for construction of sewers. Conneaut Lake—Wells to be a- bandoned and water supply taken from lake. New Wilmington—Improvements being made at Methodist Episcopal securing Summer is the one time of the year when home enjoyment : oy depends upon the furnishings. Here are new ideas for making Oo your home more comfortable for the warm days. | JUST WHAT HAPPENS WHEN ADVERTISING CEASES Church. : : Kennett Sjuare—New lighting The spasmodic advertiser will system being installed. greatly profit by the experience of Stowe—Brick mfg. concern buys | both the following business hous-| new machinery and turns out 12,- | es. Here's exactly what happens| 000 bricks a day, | when advertising ceases: Souderton—New passenger and A generation ago “St Jacob’s Oil” freight station to be constructed i was one of the most widely adver-| here. . \ IT, FH tised products in America. It was Landsdale—Ground broken for x EEL a patent medicine enjoy.ng enor- erecting first unit of Domex Floor mous sales. When Charles Vogel- er, the head of this business, died, an “expert” went over the balance and Wall Tile Company’s new fac- tory. Morrisville—Paving under way sheets and saw the enormous adv-f{on South Pennsylvania Avenue ; vertiging appropriatign. from Bridge Street to Van Zant Nl | This “expert” trimmed the ad-| Avenue and Philadelphia Avenue NEATLY DESIGNED FOR EVERY ROOM IN vertising expenditure to little or|from Pennsylvania Avenue to the THE HOME @ nothing, reasoning that St. Jacob’s|new road. DRAPES Fix up the dining room for | Oil was so well known hat it was Pittsburgh—Pennsylvania Rail- s : : = the warm weather. Food will unnecessary to spend money any|road starts extensive improvement Especially interesting will taste better, and appetites longer to advertise it. Orders program in this city. J be found this showing of new will be tempted by new fur- dwindled as advertising contracts Irwin—The viaduet being con- summer-weight drapes. nishings. {ran out; business departed, never|structed across the Ligonier Creek Lo SES RE le return and it is safe to specu-|at Long Bridge nears completion. late that hardly one in 50 who| Kittanning—Methodist = Protest- BR | N ER reads this articie rememseis or ev-lant Church building new structure ° ® er heard of St. Jacob's Oil, one of | on corner Union and Woodward the ‘best known products on the Avenues. West Main Street, MOUNT JOY, PENNA. gontment 3 years 820. Blackwood—Blackwood - Wood- | James ; a YL i to Co Completed a1 90% of | pany which used a $500,000 adver- | tising fund as far back as 1904 | and was one of the best known pro- [ous in the entire world. The ad | fund was “lopped off”; the busi- | ness went dead. It tried unsuec- | cessfully to make a come-back in | 1914, and sold its plant for junk to Kittanning—Contract let at $20,- 072.91 for erection of steel and concrete br'dge over Plum Creek on Kittanning-Indiana road. Lykens—City streets being paired. Point re- Marion—Bids CLARENCE SCHO MOUNT JOY,PA. ; requested for paving three streets here. | a large soap manufacturer. Killing Scranton—$5,000 filline station { off the ad appropriation wrecked being erected on Hickory Street. | both of these prosperous and it would do the same thing to | almost any great advertising con- PUREBRED LIVESTOCK cern today. BRINGS BETTER RETURNS —— Oe. | | DATES SET FOR THE : In every important point of com- ANNUAL CAMPMEETING parison. purebred animals show su- periority over grades and especially over scrubs, according to-reports from farmers received by the Bu- reau of Animal Industry, United States Department of Agriculture. | The thirty-fourth annual session of the Mt. Gretna United Brethren Campmeeting and Bible Conference | will be held from August 4 to 13. built at cost of $200,000. | and Reigel each drove the ball for three bases. The score: Manhe'm rh o a ¢ > of =... 0 0-0. 0 0 Pierce, ¢ .......: 2 1 9 90 0 G enauer, ss 1. 1 3 2 6 ‘BR. Frey, 1b ....... 0.1 4-0 3 Patton, 1b ...... 0 0 2 0 0 Peer, 3b 2 0-1 1 0 | {Reigel, p 1 1:0 2.0 3 ig anv cole wit he minimum of Yon Lon Hazelton—$350,000 theater un- | Shiffer, If ....... i 1 0.0 0 will outdistance any cold with the minimum : pon or der construction on Broad Street. |Blantz. wr oo. 0 2 10, fuel. - i if ou es State Highway Department re-|H. Frey, 2b ...... 0 1 1 10 : spoke of the many | Ports all stone roads in state oiled. _— = — — Call the ne tho’ i Senate McKeesport—Contract let at! Totals ........ 7.831 6 2 Mount Joy rho a e Schneider, ss 00.0 0. Habecker, rf 0 0 2 0 0 Showalter, cf 00 1 0-0 (Weaver, 3b ...... 1. i.0 2 2 Myers, 1b: 0 0.9 1 2 Bhs, 2b ........ 1.0 3 2 90 (Dery, Ps 0-1 0 60 Pennell, e 0 0 2x0 0 | Hendricks, ss Gg 0 1-0 3 | Hipple, 2% g 0-0 0 0 | A foo Mataly oo, 5.000 2.218 11 1 Mt. Joy... 0000002—2 I Manheim 004300x—7 | Two base hit—Derr. Three base hit—Gochenauer, Reigel. Double | The committee has prepared a pro- gram for this year, having secured | the following speakers: The Rev. Dr. David Hughes, of Baltimore, Md.; Dr. J. B. Showers, of Payton, In the experience of stock owners who are in a position to make com- parisons, purebred animals produce better meat, develop more rapidly, are more uniform in quality and ap- Ohio; Professor A. T. Robertson, | of Louisville, Ky.; Bishop W. M. Bell, of Harrisburg, and the Rev. P. B. Gibble, of Palmyra. Dr. Rob- pearance, sell better on dull markets, and bring better prices. The fol- lowing typical comments illustrage | the success which many breeders NOOOC | Cs | Pen Lim : ertson will speak on the Book of have had in disposing of purebred Romans. The anniversary of the Stock as meat animals: Community Men’s Bible “Class of “I always find that purebreds are = ready for market in far less time than serubs and grades.” . “Our bull veals at 2 weeks old are as large as scrub calves at six weel-g ” ; “I find I can get around 2 cents a pound more, live weight, for pure- breds. as they are more uniform.” “With hogs, purebred litters are more uniform in sizc, develop more evenly, and put on fat more quickly.” ———————— Mt. Gretna, will be held August 9, Professor B. W. Fisher, of Lancas. ter. will deliver the address. The Mt. Lebanon Campmeeting will be held July 21 to 29. Edu-a- | tional Day will be observed July 24, | when the sermon will be preached e, Stone and Cement Co. 35 oie en ' | Valley College, On Sunday fore- Rheems, Penna. noon. July 25, Bishop Bell will . { Delivered to Mount Joy | $ preach. : The Stoverdale Campmeeting ‘will two hits, although Gochenauer LS, get play—Reigel to Gochenauer to R. Frey. Left on bases—Manheim 8, { Mount Joy 2. Bases on balls—off Reigel 4, off Derr 2. Struck out— by Reigel 9, by Derr 1. Umpires —Gallagher and Rouds. Time— 1:15, — ew TB INDEMNITY MONEY TO BE WIDELY DISTRIBUTED The $2,099,000 bovine losis fund approved by Governor Pinchot for paying indemnities during the two year fiscal period beginning June 1, 1925, and the $200,000 Federal allotment for the year July 1, 1925 to July 1, 1926 have been allocated so that Shery county in the State will ben- efit. Of the total state fund, $99,000 will be held in reserve to pay glanders indemnity claims. The $2,000,000 will then be distributed in accordance with the following plan: A total of $1,600,000 will ve used to pay indemnity claims in connection with area testing and $400,000 for the individual herd! testing. During the past two years test- ing on the area plan has been com- pleted for all cattle in Mercer, Crawford, Jefferson, and Lawrence ! counties and in 63 townships of 12 | other counties. This plan holds | great promise for effectively erad- icating tuberculosis from the herds of the State and it is expected that many additional townships in num- erous counties throughout the State will be tested during the next two years, Up to June 15, the herd owners \in 265 townships in 36! counties. had signed agreements and | were awaiting for the test under the modified area plan. The $400,000 for individual ac- credited herd testing will be allo- tubercu- lead And Penetrates between the fibres without filtering out the pigments, thus insuring a solid anchorage Because of a higher percentage of pure linseed oil, extra fine grinding of materials and Lucas’superior methods of combining all ingredients into one perfectly finished product, you are assured greater covering qualities, better hiding properties and effective penetration. A gallon of Lucas Tinted Gloss Paint will cover 400 or more square feet, two coats, where ordinary paint will cover only 250 to 300 uare feet, two coats. Thorough penetration insures firm anchorage of the paint film and protec- tion of the surface. IT COVERS : more square feet per gallon and more thoroughly hides the surface, due is finer grinding of materials, a higher percentage of pure linseed oil, an LUCAS superior methods of combining all ingredients into one perfectly, finished product. IT BEAUTIFIES and its beauty lasts because of its high gloss and clear, perfect shades, ‘made with pure tinting colors of Lucas’ own manufacture, possessing maximum permanency. IT LASTS : | longer because it is made of highest grade materials, carefully selected, scien : tifically combined by skilled workers of long experience. IT PROTECTS iti i is resi ther. Its elas- ositively because its smooth, glossy surface is resistant to weal 5 en checking or cracking during temperature changes, yonsequenily preventing moisture, the cause of decay, from getting to the underlying surface, IT IS ECONOMICAL 4 Its GREATER COVERIN@ CAPACITY reduces the cost of application. Its GREATER LASTING QUALITY decreases the cost per year of pro= tection. : Its GREATER PROTECTION saves costly repairs. Its GREATER BEAUTY increases the value of your property, prosperity and radiates happiness. You can give your property this unusual protection through convenient time payments. Let us tell you how. Mount Joy, Fa. > reflects H. S. NEXCOMER & SON ONE DAY EXCURSION ATLANTIC CITY WEDNESDAY, JULY 29 SPECIAL TRAIN via DELAWARE RIVER BRIDGE ALL-RAIL ROUTE TO THE SEASHORE cated to the various counties ac- cording to cattle population. Ap- | proximately $100,000 is The present fixed policy for tub- erculn testing herds under both the Individual Accredited Plan and the Area Plan will be continued in the order in which herds are sign- ed up and qualify for the test, ac- cording to Dr. T. E. Munce, State Veterinarian and Director, Bureau of Animal Industry, Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture. —_— TWO BABY QUAIL ARE ADOPTED BY TURKEY HEN | When two “baby” partridges lost their mother hen on the Geo. Schropp farm, three miles southeast of Quarryville, a week or so ago, the orphans joined a flock of eight small turkeys belonging to Schropp. The turkey hen adopted the wild newcomers without any fuss and visitors to Schropp’s farm say the nartridges are adopting turkey traits and taking orders from the turkey hen just as though they actually be- | begin July 31st for ten days. If you want to succeed—Advertise 'onged to her family. carried in | Eastern Excursion Standard Time bE Florin: . © vi ivi vives 7.01 A. M. . Mount doy... uc coin 7.05 A. M. $3.75 Landisville . 00 ich. ins 7.14 A. M. 3.75 Laneasier i... .. ccd. ies ens 735 AM. 3.75 Atlantic CHyY . ... 5... oc... 00 Arrive 10.25 A. M. Returning, leave Atlantic City (S. Carolina Ave.) 6:20 P. M. the first allocation. The Federal | : il d ? allotment of $200,000 for the com- | & Pen nsylvania Rai roa / ing year will be paid out in indem- | nities at the maximum rate of | 8 THE STANDARD RAILRQAD OF THE WORLD | 50 for reds 7.25! for purebreds and $7.25 Furniture ARE YOU BUYING SATISFACTION WITH YOUR FURNI- TURE AND CARPETS? QUALITY AND SERVICE MAKE FOR SATISFACTION. WE ASSURE YOU OF ALL THREE WE ARE DEPENDABLE WESTENBERGER, MALEY #¥ MYERS 125.131 E. King St. Lancaster, Pa. 6 O'Clock Closing Saturda;