| . FINNEY OF THE FORCE — ph 3 : PN Fw. i 3 > M4 Si —— } / 2 2 > \ x PAGE SIX THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA. WEDNESDAY, JULY 13TH, 19 Drumming Up Business t . = 3 AH - SURE - ove ~O THIRST FER THE AN CMON FINNEY BuY A DRINK A $s \ Lemonade / STUFF = ITS NOT oN & WRA WENUF RA THE SHADE BY 81 AEN) YIT BYES ~~~ A NUTTY OL lb™ STREET By F. O. Alexander SN NA Wa iP Xe AQ YE WHEW ln WHERE- ARE THM BANDITS GEE FINNEY» REE I GUESS THEY AWAY 17 un. MUSTA PLUMB GGT BETTER HAVE ANOTHER ONE, FINNEY ITS SURE THE OLDEST HAT STORE'IN § \ LAKCASTER | § Wingert & H Hat Store Largest Assortment of | f Straw & PanamaHals | in the City. A PLAIN HATS A SPECIA Y JNO. A. HAAS, Progr. 144 N. Queen Lancaster, Pa. PLUMBING, hk AND TIN When in need of anything in our ling serve you. Brown West Main Street ' The importance of correct furnit Fe and furnishing in the modern home cannot be d¥er emphasized, if you wish to entertain your frienfl§ in a manner that will do credit. The best way to insure proper furnit ire is to come cE yourself and your here to make your selections. i H. C. BRUNNER West Main Street, MOUNT JOY, PENNA. reg COA Truittsburg—Anderson Oil & Gas { Co.’s gas well produced 29,000,000 | feet of gas during recent day. | Altoona—New passenger station [ to’ be built by Pennsylvania R. R. | Co. on site of Logan House which |is to be razed. | Pottsville— Structures | $3,000,000 now under |in this city. | West Chester—$200,000 will be expended on improvements to Na- tional Bank of Chester County | here. { Road Kennett Square to be rebuilt. Lansdale—Franklin Pottery plant valued at between Longwood and [No. 2 recently destroyed by fire, rebuilt. Several industrial buildings and homes under construction in this | city. . Fayette City— Hardsurfacing of Main Street progressing rapidly. Uniontown— Contract for con- struction of an annex to the court- house awarded at $471,300. Development of Cook Forest in Clarion, Jefferson and Forest coun- ties planned. Irwin—Streets of be oiled. Conneaut Lake — First National Bank installs new vault Elizabethtown— $36,000 awarded for construction story Science building at here. Homer City—Widening bridge Yellow Creek here planning. Road from Roads school- house to Autman will be completed. Carbondale—Sidewalk to built on Brooklyn Street. Pittston—$400,000 to be constructed by this city. Shenandoah—First National to enlarge its quarters here. Monongahela Improvements to be made to upper Chess Street, Monongahela Railroad loaded 944 cars of coal and 94 cars of coke on recent day. Pennsylvania R. R. Co. making repairs to principal grade crossings along Monongahela division. this place to contract of 2 colleg er Cross be building Bank of bank Dime Bank structing tuberculosis Delaware County. Beaver Meadows—New Seagraves fire engine received in this borough recently, Beavertown — State capitalization of $50,000 here, State Medical Department making hospital in bank with organized out state, Coatesville—Contract awarded at $10,274 for construction of laundry at hospital here. Streets of this place cently, New fire hydrant installed corner Fourth and Lincoln Highway. Scranton — Cornerstone laid for oiled re- 3 MOUNT JOY, PENNA. DRICH TIRES CLARENCE SCHOCK MOUNT JOY, PA. $250,000 new Temple Israel. Manoa—Work resumed on con- of new Boyd building cor- | ner West Chester pike and Eagle Road. | Haverford—Building permits to- taling $119,990 issued in this town- | ship during recent week, | Pittshurgh—$250,000 worth of repairs to be made to city streets { here, Ar ro Bide versio : Ardmore—Bids receiving for con- { structing sanitary sewers in Branch, Indian Creek District. Johnsonburg — $103,000 fire- re- West sistant school building to be con- structed here, Cochranton— State to build two stretches of road in vicinity of Cochranton and Conneautville, Carlton—Contract to be awarded for construction of 24-foot bridee on Lakes-to-Sea Highway near here. Lycoming County given $131,298 special allotment for improve- ment of state highways in county. Harleton—New modern hotel op- ened here recently. Mifflinburg — Various streets of as this borough to be repaired and improved. Twin Ridges—Road in this seec- tion recently improved. Pottsville—Air service connecting this place with Philadelphia planned Sayre—$250,000 to be raised for erection of chemical building at Ro- bert Packer Hospital here. . Wellshoro—5 tons Solvey eal- ciuth chloride to be used on streets of this place. New ornamental lighting system construction | equipment. | ov- | Media—Plans under way for con- | test of drinking water supply thru- CREATORE'’S BIG BAND Industrial Review | COMING TO HERSHEY vis : : .{ The hand of “Father Time” has The United States is the home of ! certainly laid itself upon the head opportunity above all other coun- | of Maostro Creatore, the famous | tries. The Road to the Top is All; 4 aster, For a quarter of a Yay Open. The workingrman of century this great musician has | Today 3 is the Employer of To-, been touring this country and Can- | { ada with his wonderful band, and | Conshohocken— Ruth Glass Com-| year he continues to grow in | pany will build $20,000 plant addi- | popularity and attract large aud- | tion. ! | iences as the period of age’s mile Ambridge—Eleventh Street being | stones go past. Creatore knows | paved. { nothing of age. Time to him is | Building permits for recent week just a period of something to do | reached $70,000. jane do it well. Plans making for public library Creatore will appear in the Her- to be erected at Merchant and 10th! shey Park Convention Hall for a Street. | week’s engagement beginning on Monday afternoon, July 18th, end- jing on Sunday, evening, July 24th, with two concerts every day, after- noon and evening. Prices for after- noon, 25¢, evening, 50c. Creatore has always kept abreast with the times, and although he still clings to the works of the old mas- | ters as the base for the artistic suc cess of his programs, he has, in no the es- | i way, neglected the works of younger set of composers, and { pecially those of American birth. In the twenty-five years the great band master has been in this coun- {try he has seen many changes in musical affairs, He has seen the | “Cake-Walk” come and go, the | fox-trot pass to the musical great | beyond, and now he is waiting with | interest the passing of the craze of | jazz, distorted so-called ‘musie,” to go to its last resting place. Creatore has always given music | lovers throughout the country a musical program worth twice the | price marked on the tickets but he wants to give still more and when he appears in Hershey he will add as an extra attraction, a celebrated young soprano, Miss Pauline Talma, who hails from San Francisco. Miss Talma is eredited by music critics as possessing one of the finest lyric | soprano voices in the country, and would grace the list of any grand opera organization in the land. Miss Talma was the soloist with | Creatofe when he played at Hersh- i ey Park two years ago, and she im- | pressed the large audiences with the purity and sweetness of her voice. In bringing such a widely adver- extra attraction as Miss Tal- ma, certainly Maestro Creatore is giving music patrons, who have i known him for years, more than | they bargained for. Miss Talma is an American soprano. She was ed- i tised | ucated in America and she sings ! with all the perfection, ease and grace of any Italian singer on the , stage. Monday, July 18th, will be child- !ren’s day. Creatore has prepared a special program and all children up to 15 years of age will be ad- mitted free to the matinee. Among the most nomadic people jof the world are the Bakhtiyari tribes of Persia, where the main rand about the only source of in- ,come is herding. Nature doesn’t al- [low the Bakhtiyari to settle per- manently; to escape withering heat |and then to avoid the cold they are constantly journeying from the Persian Gulf lowlands to the pla- teau highlands and back again. Their neighbors count them among the worst of the plundering hordes of the world. el GR With the largest world telescope, on Mt. Wilson, California, man looks trillions of miles into space. He is able to see stars separated from him by the distance light could travel in 72,000 years, on the the basis that in one year light will travel 5,800,000,000,000 miles. He sees that the ‘dust’ in the Milky Way consists of millions of suns, each with its family of planets ro- tating around it. ee J Soft-shelled adlay, which grows in tropical climates, is mentioned as a substitute for wheat in case the world’s population increases to such proportion as to necessitate increased production of food-stuffs. A hard-shelled species of adlay is cultivated for its seeds, which are made into ornamental beads. tion of addition to courthouse un- der way, Soudertown—New swimming pool to be constructed here. Middletown — Contract awarded for general improvement work on Wood Street school building. Middletown — Contract awarded for new lighting system for this borough, 3 Monogahela — Pennsylvania Rail- road Gompany making repairs to principal grade crossings along Mo- nongahela division. Old Forge—Scranton Railway Company laying new trucks on N. Main Street. Ambridge—Plans making for public library to be erected at Merchant and 10th Streets. proposed for Main Street from Charles Street to East Avenue, Norristown-—Plans for econstrue- CTE Educating The Motoring Public VALUABLE INFORMATION FOR MOTORISTS FURNISHED THE BULLETIN BY LANCASTER AUTOMOBILE CLUB More than fifty per cent of the automobile drivers, when turning onto a street or highway from a parking place along the side, fail to note whether a car is approach- ing from the rear or to give a sig- nal with their extended arm, accord ing to official of the Lancaster Au- tomobile Club. “The number of accidents that occur because of the failure of drivers to signal their intentions properly is amazing,” says S. Edward Gable, president of the Automobile Club. “Many of the drivers who do sig- nal,” says Mr. Gable, “do so in a half-hearted manner, When signal- ling with the extended arm it should be a real, 100 percent effort. And at no time should the driver or any other of the occupants of a car have their arms extended outside the vehicle, except when signalling. The mere pointing to an object with your outstretched arm may mislead the drivers of cars that are following, as also may the ex- tending of an arm to snuff the ash- es from a cigar. “With the multitude of the highways today it is becoming more and more necessary that sig- nals be given by drivers. Many vio- late the law daily in their failure to give proper signals, and also in making short turns at street inter- section. Statistics in Pennsylvania show that nearly one-half the driv- ers of motor cars, in making a left turn, cut the corner short while the law states specifically that the car must pass to the right of the cen- tre of the intersection in making a left turn. “Laws on the statute books, to be really effective, must be observ- ed to the letter and every driver of a car should ask himself daily whether or not he is violating any of these laws.” > cars on IF YOU WANT TO BE IMMUNE FROM COLD, GROW A BEARD Food at last. A remedy for colds and all throat afflictions. The cure is simple—merely grow a beard. Of course this is a remedy for only, as ladies may have some diffi- culty in meeting the requirements. Sam’]l. Hamaker, septuagenarian, of Manheim, is a firm believer in the beard as a ‘cold preventive.” Hamaker is the proud possessor of one of the finest beards in the state. It measures six feet plus in fength and it receives the treatment from its owner. Each day the ancient hirsute is carefully combed out and then tucked be- neath Hamaker’s shirt. When the weather is cold, he wraps it around his chest and neck to keep out the chilly blasts. How- ever, according to Hamaker, his beard “isn’t what it once was,” in respect to fullness and color. Not so many years ago it was quite red. Now it has turned to gray. But Hamaker hasn't the slightest in- tention of parting with it. “I’ve had it all these years, and I'm going to keep it with me al- ways.” And then in the winter he needs it to ward off colds and other throat ills. tt AO AY AR in Harrow the Soybeans t Where rains have packed dow the soil over soybeans so that a crust has formed, loosen the soil with a spike-tooth harrow to let the beans through, If weeds are troublesome after the beans come up, go through the field with a spike-tooth harrow or weeder, This should be done about the middle of the day when the young beans are slightly wilted so they will not break. A es Give Porkers Shade If the pigs do not have permanent shade, such as that provided by trees, put up a temporary structure. This is especially important for heavy hogs and sows farrowing in the fall. Also provide plenty of fresh, clean drinking water in re- ceptacles in which the pigs cannot wallow. ED en When Alfred McGee, a wealthy farmer near Glenville, Alabama, died he made the request that his grave be made near the highway and that the farmers hauling their cotton crop to market would call out to him in a loud voice the orice of cotton for that day. This has been done for forty-five years. re A eres Keep Up Milk Flow To maintain a good milk flow during the fall months, extra feed- ing of green feed or grain, or both, should begin now or as soon as men | best | 233 South Market Street ELMER STRICKLER frien = body, MONG the eight Chevrolet passenger car models ‘there is one particularly suited for every driving preference—a Chevrolet for everybody, everywhere, The development of this complete line of low-priced modern guality cars is a notable achievement in fine car buildihz. It represents thé result of 14 years’ con- sistent im@rovement and endless testing on the world’s greatest proving ground. It touches every cross section of ir life. 2 The family seeking an all-purpose automobile—those women and mefy. who require personal cars of un- questioned smartnass—the business man who demands combined econom¥, utility and fine appearance— owners of high-priced automobiles who wish to enjoy the advantages of additional transportation without sacrifice of quality or préstige— : —all find in Chevrolet exactly the car that meets their needs, at a price whose lowness reflects the economies of gigantic production! —at these Low Prices The $505 The 4Door $695 The Imperial $780 Coach =» - ane. > iw - k $525. $715 dunia, 8 : 1-Ton Truck 5 The 3625 They . $745 $ less All prices f.o.b. Flint, Michigan, Check Chevrolet Delivered Prices They include the lowest handling and financing chiirges availables Reinoehl Chevrolet Co. ELIZABETHTOWN, PA. Marietta JOHN LIBHART Maytown Mt. Joy P. FRANCK SCHOCK Q UU AL 1TVY AT 1L OW Specials af Darrenkamps Cinco Londres, "Havana Ribbon Londres, Bolds Perfecto, Rocky Ford, Henriettas Juniors, Summans, Wenesta, Shissler’s Merchant, Pure Stock, «x Home Comforts, Wm. Penn, Square Deal, Noble Knight, Lew Morris, 6 for 25. Any of these, 50 in box for $2.00. 5 All 2 for 15¢ Cigars, 4 for 25c; all 10c Cigars, 3 for 25. Special price on box lots. 5 ' YE Camels, Piedmonts, Chesterfiglds and Lucky Strikes, two 15¢ packs for 25c. LY We have a fine assortment of Pipes, Ask to see them. i All 10¢ Tobaccos, 3 packs for 25c. BAIl 15¢ Tobaccos, such as Red Man, Red Horse, Bag Pipe, Bee¢thnut, ete., 2 packs 25c. pastures begin to get short. J Prince Albert, 2 cans 25c. J 1 All Fruits in Season. 2 We also carry a complete line of penny Camdy. i All flavors of Chiques Rock Soft Drinks on i@e, Sc. 2 H. A. DARRENKA i 3 Doors East of Post Office MOUNT JOY,%PA. WRN ® P 6 6 ® 9 ertise in the “Bulletin EE 3 ; Buy Peruna Feeds for Your Chic a this firm’s complete line. a ' x 1 Also Certified Seed Potatoes, Lime, : Wood, Ete. C % 1 C Harry Leedom : Phone at Yards 5R5 Residence 149R15 Mount Joy, Penna. |