WEDNESDAY, AME DSR co 0 RE SLSR SON MAY 18, 1927 8 records for speed, power, acceleration, hill-climbigge ‘and intercity reliability runs, during a nation ““Demonstra- tion Week’, the Hudson Super-8% contributed these brilliant new marks in the local ¥¢na of motor supremacy: Continuing a Second Wee 5 of Demonstrations Se | The man who thought a buggy was good enough IN THE old days, a solid, conservative citizen might sniff and tell you he didn’t read advertising. He didn’t think so much of the horseless carriage, either. The telephone was newfangled, and an insult to the United States mails. As for radio, aeroplanes, wireless photography—if they had been born then, he probably would have thought them a bit immoral. But he’s changed. He’s been educated. His point of view has been made broader and more modern. He has been civilized—by the automobile, the telephone, radio, advertising. Every single one has opened up new paths for him, taught him new things. Advertising, especially. Advertising tells him the new- est things to wear, the best things to eat. Advertising tells his wife how to make a home up to date and attractive. Advertising tells him the prices to pay for things he buys, saves him from the old-fashioned ways of doing business—helps him live well, keeps him modern. Advertising can help you. The advertisements in this paper are here to tell you many things that make life more comfortable, more interesting, happier. Read them faithfully. They’ll keep you abreast of the times. They’ll prevent you from becoming the type of old fogy—who—sniff—doesn’t read advertising. [Mount Joy Bulletin Advertising is the key to modernity ©00© @ L We supply Cla and The Chambers Also Rex Water Heal eous and Storage. DONEGAL GAS COMPA MOUNT JOY, PENNA. LL SL ) Fs @ (On With Laughter) 4 young far- Last week one of our | } imers from Milton Grove came to [town and told me he plowed their | Charleston field yesterday. I asked [him what he meant by their Charleston field and he replied: “Hay, hay!” | Bill thought his gas was getting i low; He struck a match; the tank let B0— | Bill sailed three miles right in the air, | Three miles on a pint is pretty fair. | Well, Pm glad that’s off my | mind, but, I sure do feel poetic so | here goes for another. [ € | Mary had a little lamb, | Youve heard it oft before— And then she passed her plate again, And had a little more. Save your antique matoes, I'll quit. eggs and to- If at shoot, Advice to the Local Wives: |first you don’t succeed, | shoot again. | A few days ago when a “certain wan’ returned from a trip his wife asked him: “Did you bring home a | remembrance of the trip?” He said: “Yes, I brought home a towel la bath rug, a thermos bottle, a rocker, and a twin bed.” His wife replied: “Evidently you took a room at a hotel.” And he answer- ed, “No, I tried it, but I couldn't get away with it. | | | [ { | | | closest friends is One Scotch. of my There is only one thing better {than presence of mind in an acci- { dent; and that one thing is absence of body. AL Re A stranger went into “Lees” and after partaking of a meal asked, “How much is my bill?” Lee said, “What did you have?” And the stranger replied, “I don’t know.” Lee told him hash was a quarter. When it was time to retire the first night of his trip the porter ask “Joe’’ Hershey how he would like to sleep, head first or feet first. !Joe looked puzzled and then re- plied: “If it’s all the same to you, | I'll sleep all at the same time.’ feel another poetic streak com- I Hold everything. ing. aunt in Africa, aunt in Spain, aunt in Jersey, And I got an aunt in Maine; I got ’enmi here, I got 'em there, I got ’em thick as hives, An’ this is all I'm thankful for— They ain’t my wives. got an got an I 3 I got an “Spook” Snyder came into the office and said he found a position that he would like, “Hoddy” Mum- ma asked him what it was and Spook replied: “I'd like to be stable {boy on a merry-go-round.” i I refuse to argue. There is no ' doubt about it. A groundhog is a | sausage. | We have a farmer out at the Back Run that is so absent minded that the other morning he hitched {his wife to a plow and kissed his ho rse good-bye. A salesman entered the office a few days ago and ask our clerk if i she files her nails, She said, “No, after cuting them, I throw them away.” Have you heard the Four Wheel Brake song? No, Here it is, “For We'll Break the News to Mother.” One of our school teachers said tc pupil,” Use ‘discomforture in a entence.” The pupil, “Discomfor- ure am like a blanket.” a |S Lt “Dick” A chap asked Heisey if ihe knew “Felix.” | Dick asked: “Felix who,” ¥" The chap answered, “Felix Cited.” i sn Someone ask ‘“Charley” Roth what it was a sign of, when your nose itches. Charley said it was a sign that you were to have com pany. Mr. Someone asked w it was a sign of when your head it and Charley replied, “Your company has arrived.” 1€8 “Don’t raise a racket” said the burglar as he held up the tennis players. I was talking to Paul Hershe: who is a member of the graduating class this year, and I asked him what college he would like to go t¢ after he finishes school, “Oh,” he said, “I’d like to go to a barber col- lege,” I asked him why, and he re- plied: “Because then I could cut all my classes. While driving through the country week I came upon a young ar- Finting a picture of a running RUPTURE SHIELD EXPERT HERE E. J. Meinhardi, of Chicago, the well known expert will personally be at the Brunswick Hotel, Lancas- ter, Pa. on Monday and Tuesday May 23rd and 24th, from 10:00 A M. to 5:00 P. M. daily. Mr. Mein- hardi says: “The will not perfectly opening in 10 Vacuum Shield” only retain the Rupture but contracts the days on tre average case— usually giving instantaneous relief with- standing all strain regardless of the size or location of the Rupture. CAUTION-—Do not expose your- self to the danger of wearing old- style trusses with understraps These trusses usually place the pad on the lump and not on the rupture opening. This often causes strang ulation which usually necessitates an immediate surgical operation or results in sudden death. “The Vacuum Shield” understraps. It also sanitary and practically tible and should be worn bathing. Only has no perfectly indestruc- while invited tc special visit for women gentlemen are call at this time as a will be made here later and children. NOTICE: and ask to be is impossible. ture as every not write mail as this send out no litera- case must be seen personally; therefore, I visit this section every year—giving demon- strations without charge, or will be pleased to fit you if desired. Please note the above dates and hours carefully and always insist on see- ing me personally. —E. J. MEIN- HARDI, HOME OFFICE, 1551 N. CRAWFORD AVE, CHICAGO. P. S. FRAUD WARNING. ware of imposters who imitate my notices and claim to represent me. I have no representatives and send no literature. Please do fitted by I < Be- May EARLY GRASS COSTLY FEED, EXPERTS SAY it may seem, the ra- tion that most dairymen figure costs them nothing is likely to prove the most expensive feed they could buy for their cows. Experts point to this fact in warning owners against turning their cows out on pasture too early in the season. There are two reasons. Early grazing more often than not causes heavy damage to the pasture itself, and it is sure to result in a serious loss of milk unless a regular grain ration is continued along with grass. It is natural that dairymen should seldom think about pasture as an item of expense. It is a time- honored practice to turn cows out 18-1t-pd as Strange early in the season and keep them out late. Early spring grass looks tempting, palatable and plentiful, and surely it is not economy to let free food lie idle. But the truth is, pastures in early spring have not attained a growth that will stand constant grazing. The young grass shoots are tender; close cropping, and the trampling of hoofs crushes and Kkilis the roots. It is estimated that dairymen who permit cattle to graze on new spring grass may lose at least one- third of the value of the pasture for the entire year. Yet, as experts point out, loss of milk is even more important. Cows enter the pasture season after a winter on a liberal ration of grain. The change from that to pasture grass, which, though bulky, is from one-half to three-quarters water, is not going to keep up the milk flow beyond a very short period. The real object of summer feed- ing is to build and maintain health and condition so that cows can enter the fall season in the best possible condition, and maintain maximum milk flow in the winter months when milk prices are highest. Upon the way cows are fed in the summer depends their condition in fall and winter, Spring and early is literally a tonic, ulate milk yield for a brief time, but which can’t take the place of body-building feeds. Early grass is largely water, and a cow cannot eat enough of it to keep up both con- dition and milk flow. The best dairy authorities urge feeders to keep their cows in the barn, on a full grain ration, at least a month longer than is customary. The slight extra investment for, grain will be more than repaid in fall and winter milk checks, cnet A Ieee ~~ For Sale in Florin A fine home with all convenienc- summer grass which may stim- p on the Iron Mountains of cours that country, While talking to I met in the a0 0 artist few same hat jokes of a I his pictures. of a lace handkerchief hanging on a clothes-line. I ask him the title of that one and he said, “After the Bawl is Over.” ch ENR SS 3 SM Ea | l 4 »s, such as light, heat and bath. Property is in excellent condition nd nicely located. Possession April 1st. This is a corner pro- perty on Mt. Joy twp. side. Price, $5,550.00. Call or phone Jno. EF. Schroll, _41R2, Mt. Joy tf Improve Dairy Barn Now i the season to look over | he : stable and see what im- provements or changes can be made | that will lessen labor or increase the comfort of the cows. Less labor decreases costs and greater | comf increases yields and | IS cow, and a man in pursuit of her I asked him what the title of the picture wag and he replied,” Vanish g Cream.” into Hauer’s store last while waiting for a! ny order I overheard a Joe Moore where steel Pr OT 1 sot and | Joe refused to was beaten so he an- | get steel wool off asked him to see some | He showed me one | Peachey Gets a Promotion By H. IRVING KING NT pyright.) | EACHEY WALTON had officiated behind the gilded wire of the cash- in Roberts & Her Ei (Co Lestau- “front they her re- Co.'s real but of she ier's desk rant for name” was called her Peachey because peachblow complexion, which tained unimpaired in spite of the fact that she had seen twenty-five years which she acknowledged—and two | more which she ignored in the reckon- ing. Peachey was a wonder at fig- | ures; you could swear to all her ac | counts without them up— except her account age. She was efficient and well aware of her efficiency; good looking and well aware of her good looks; popular with the customers and proud of her popularity. She could give correct change for a two-dollar bill, exchange repartee with an old customer and sit on a young man inclined to “get fresh” at one and the same time. Her wages were fair; she supported her widowed mother and made her indolent younger brother work—the latter no small job. Roberts had long ago died out of the firm of Roberts & Co.; and “Co.” —whose other name was Perkins—was sole proprietor of the establishment, which boasted of giving the best cup of coffee for five cents that could be purchased for that modest sum on Manhattan island—to say nothing of Staten Island. Long Island and the Bronx. Mr. Perkins was getting along in years, but none of his employees ever thought of his ever retiring. Rob: erts & Co. without Perkins was sim- ply a thing impossible to imagine. Then one day a great, big bomb fell into the establishment and blew up all ancient traditions. Mr. Perkins an- nounced that he had sold out to a man named Thomas Carlingford. The employees were all in a flutter. The restaurant of Roberts & Co. was an institution and a conservative one; and those who patronized it regarded any change in it as little short of sac rilege. They were all sure they were going to hate the new proprietor, who would probably be brimming over with innovations. Thomas Carlingford appeared. was a man in his late thirtles. They had expected an older man. The changes he made were few and un- important. Things jogged along us usual. In a month the regular cus. tomers were calling the new proprie- tor Tom. The cashier's department was the only one over which Tom ex- ercised a painstaking and even nag- ging supervision. He was constantly hovering around Peachey’s gilded cage and made her stay behind every after- noon, when the night cashier came on, and go over her accounts with him. He never called her Peachey, as the others did, but Miss Walton, and treated her with a formality some- what marked. Peachey thought he might be “splendid” if he only were not so fussy. She wondered whether he suspected her of dishonesty that he was always keeping an eye on her. Then one day when Tom and Peachey were in the proprietor’s little five years. Mary len; checking of her He for something they cou prevent chicks’ bowel trg have it. Half a centur; experience with poultry remedies made Pratts White Diarrhea Tab! possible. All drink the chicks directions. Withor Tablets chicks deadly disease. White Diarrhea Diarrhea Tablets To Our White rhea Tablets unconditionaily. We 5 guara that they prevent this disease or your § mo d. old and Guaranteed by H. E. HAUER Mt. Joy, Pa. RENT ELECTRIC ly beautify ALL wood, linoleum, tile o It matters not how the; whether with varnish, paint. It takes only g +here is no stooping pails. It doesn’t even 2 JHE minutes— essy rags and 1 your hands! labor-saver bur- to a brilliant lustre far and easy to clean. ies wax on fi Ten times fas [¥ and better than hand nethods. R just guideit. #hone and Serve a Johnson Electric ia . 7 for any day you wish. @ ta ewcemer & Son MOUNT JOY office going over the accounts, he took what Peachey considered an unpar- donable liberty. “Miss Walton,” said ! he, “I must request that you will cease | chatting with the young men patrons | of this establishment when they go to | pay their bills.” | “My,” said Peachey in surprise and | not a little resentment, “I don’t chat with them. They are regular custom- | ers—were here long before you ap- ! peared on the scene—and we just ex- | change a few pleasantries with each other. I don’t see where the harm is.” “well,” replied Tom, frowning, “I | don’t like it. Let us go on with the | accounts.” Peachey felt like telling Tom he could keep his old job—she have no more of it. 3ut there the mother to be considered brother Bob was out of a job again. There were tears in Peachey’s eyes the she reached her own by time that | would | was i and | door—and then a smile broke over the | face of Peachey. “Oh golly,” she said | half aloud; “I wonder if I've hit it! I have—oh, And she went into the house, mother by breaking into song. The more she thought of the mat- ter the surer she was that she was right in her surmises, and entered the restaurant in an extremely cheerful state of mind the next morning. 3ut her faith in her own prescience was badly shaken when Tom, a solemn f joy!” astonishing her in manner, called her into his office, and, after fidgeting a little, said: “Miss Walton, T have decided to get a new cashier.” Peachey to be what's He 1 him hard. embarrassed with looked at terril matter 1v seemed “Why, asked. not the me?" | she “Oh Tom another hing.” stammered ee—that is, IT have ind for you.” "hat vo “only, position “Rea is the pay? What is it? Tom, “there | but- Haven't u to t he said is 11 See’ the pay.” attaches “As to but —0! can't y« I want ¥¢ erstood? my) ife.” “And the about 1 such a reason vou rai talking hec my » youna row omers was use use 1 Tom sheepishly “I guessed ht, then,” cried and to But 1 ht her in his nien cust “Peca renlied was jealous, I guess. laugh. Sina began Tom smothered i her laughter wi eee etl GA eee Want a Nice account of ill he 1 now have the fine brick confectionery co store of the on East Main sale. House has and will give any time. Call, phone or E. Schroll, Mt. Joy, Pa. UG Business h th o £ On the owner, property, and tobac E. Klugh. Joy f veniences and late Harr; | St., Mount all con. possession write J tf Tr The Bulletin is always prompt in A WISE OWL the delivery of all printing. JEWELER | \ | | | hg Machines ing Elec- Repairing chines at ind Need] all All styles, trics, Oil, and parts for LANCASTER, PENN Ind. Phone 116Y Chicks for sale as follows: ead] Phares E. | Bell 140R6 AT GIFT SHOP ; | Parke iain Pens ; Mt. Joy," Don. W. Gores WE SPECIALIZE in all styles of 3 LADIES Milady Shoppe