Y SAL FAL KNO HE USED oR WNDU. 1 CUTS | IN HIS ADS | Furnished by THIS NEWSPAPER THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CO., PA. ¥ i? fhe Fellow an Awful Liar or He'd Have Staked Him for of Least Two-Bits! BY HITT "ARD LUCK ‘AS LAD EA AND UPON ME SHOULDER ~ THINIC OF \T: TES See SAR - ONAL CARTOON CO. NY. wh Lost mE FIRST AND NOW She +E PRESENT WAFE ts) EE ° Baa. ll il WELL Nou WANT THE UNDERTAKER. — TwO DOORS uP seer Florin It’s Sold in Large Steins Cold at All Times AUNT SALLY'S KITCHEN onile For pyorrhea For prevention against gum infec- tions, use Zonite, the new powerful antiseptic. Also guards against colds, coughs and more serious dis- eases of nose and throat. A-B-C. TOPREPARE ADS H you use Our WNU. Cul & Coby Service EL per : / SNC. AAAI 5557 | NS CQuTs FOR HENRY G.CARPENTER INSURANCE ~ MOUNT JOY PA. | Mund of Insurance except life anywhere in Pennsylvania. MENS VE4R/ LADIES yar EVERY LINE of Bladder | If functional | your sleep. or causes Burn- ng or Itching Sensation, ins, or muscular aches, mak- | She ng you feel tired, depressed, WATERMAN IDEAL FOUNTAIN PENS DON W. GORRECHT JEWELER iiscouraged, why not try the Cystex 18 Hour Test? Cystex today. See for yourself | works and what it does. Money back | f it doesn’t bring quick i Don’t give up. | Try Cystex today. 1 | D. Chandler, W. Main St., ALL COLORS 401 N. Queen St. il [Li | L \NDISVILLE A001 HOUSE PAINTS ROOF COATING Asbestos Liquid Cement Drums .......... $ .45 Gal. Five Gal. Cans .. .55 Gal. THE COLDREN Red Roof Paint ROOFING LANCASTER, PA. 11 sm ON \[. DIAMONDS | NINE TAKES FROM THE M-—LANDIS- took a lays from aturday’s ancaster H. Stolen Base on Muehleisen 10, by pitcher—By and Miller. Time of game— Sunday’s Game ry ‘h o a ¢ 0 1 3 0 0 1 4 3.5 1 g 0 4 31 1 } 1 6 2 0 9 1 5 2 1 0 1 6 2 0 0 1 0 0 } 1 4. 1 2 0 3 2 U 0 8 1527-5 2 000 111 000-3 101 001 203—8 Witch. Anderson. ‘balls—Ofr H. Smith, 1; 3 Struck out—By H. . Meckley, 10, ~~ LANDISVILLE WALLOPS EPHRATA CUBS, 15 TO 8 A. A. pounded the ninth. inning Ephrata Cubs by a on the Murrell afternoon. h oo =n e 1 3 2 2 ¢ 0 1 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 3 4.2 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 3.8.2 90 3 1 31 ¢ 81327 9 '2 Yr ho a e wt 2470 9 4°36 0 0 2 1 0 2:3 Jd 27.09 0 423 0.0 +38 4-040 ik EY 0 cd 98.2 1 1 0 0 0 } 0 2 0:0 on | 18 1 f 001 021 047 —15 010 000 0520—S8 Shenk, 2; W, 1; Herr, 1; B. base hits—Reich alls—of: Martin 1, k out, by Morten by pitcher, by Winning pitcher pitcher Martin. | and Diffenderfer. — ————— OLD TIMERS WIN IN NINTH, 7 TO 6 the ninth inning 2 —) hits— bases— 1, Wagner I | | { enabled the Timers to Whippets by the latters field, | Rheems ‘Floyd s s | | | | | | es—W, | ! the close score Snyder 2 b {Ruhl 1 b ¢ 3 b Kready p Myers ¢ f R Snyder r f Totals 8th Ward iMyers 2 b .. tRuhl 1 £. ......... Wagner 1 b Styer p ; Bransby c i Poole s s Vv ogt r f Yeager c¢ f lilley 3 b yder z ‘otals —Qut by F DTIMERS A FEMS . «©, Ruhl, me—1:45, lle 13 to 6 but | Landisville bunched the 6th inning and scored 4 runs, “Chick” Derr, hitting and et, was the high- of the game. These two teams will play Friday | evening at 6 o’clock on the Recrea- winning the ont tion Grounds. Shoe Factory i Hipple, If ..... Alwine, ef .... | Showalter, ¢ Derr, p Ruhl, 1b ..... Anderson, Pennell, ss Kraybill, 3b Shetter, rf .... Xx Smith Totals ...... Landisville Dyer, ss ....... Hoffman, e¢ ... Shenk, 3b: .... Strobel, 1b ... Shultz, 2b .... Herr, cf ...... Minnich, If ... Poff, vf ...... Trayer, p ..... Total 8S. F Lan’e x—Batted —Weaver to r Kready 4; —Chapman Wagner. The Shoe Factory played a came at Landisville ing. The locals outhit their team Eighth Ward Old the Rheems a score of 7 to 6 on Sunday afternoon. r ho 2 40 0-0 3 0 1 90 3 0 0 5 1 0 0 0 0 2 3 3 0 1 0 1 0 r h o a e 2 2 1 1 1 2.11 40 § 0 1 8 O06 0 0 11 2 3 gg 1:14 10 E22 0:1. .0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0:0 mem wm wm — | the establishment of the ‘bolting habit’ at all of the three meals. And it is fairly safe to say that 7.1026 5 4) bunting thisd strike. 100 100 203—7 021 100 110—6 ‘wo-base hits—Poole, R. Myers, Miller. Double Snyder; Styer etl Qe eee. YSHOE F! TORY TEAM LOSES AT LANDISVILLE well scattered. their hits in 1 1 12 1 0 1 1 2:0 0 1 2 3.0 0 1 04 0 0 1 1 0.40 no — I + 9 31 0 2 1 2 0 1 1:1 5 0 @ 0:1 4 0.0 11 0.0 g 1 '0. 0 0 0. 0 0-0. 1 a 0 31 2 0 5.6.21 4 3 210000 1—4 010004 x—> 1 Kraybill 7th. Two base hits—Showalter, Shetter, and Shenk. Three base hits—Strobel. ) Base on balls—Trayer 2. Struck out by—Derr 1, Trayer 6. Kinderhook Wins Kinderhook won a corking good game from Rohrerstown Sunday by 1 Rohrerstown | ¢ f Snavely 2 b E. Starr 1. £ ... os Beach p Davis 1 b M’M’len s s.. M’ling r f C. Starr ¢ xR. Starr Totals Kinderhook R. Bmer 1b Helfrich ec Zeamer 3 1 | Witmer If Ma’gler ¢ Thum’r 2 b Gibson s s P B’mer p Conrad r f Scott r Totals KINDERHOOK _. ROHRERSTOWN Three base run—P. Broomer. McMullen to Rudisill to Snavely. Struck out—By —Off Beach Beach 10, pit fF 5 to 4. r h o a e 0 0-1 10 ¢ 1:2 2 90 T 0. 2:00 2:3 2.1.0 0-0 6.0.0 0-06 1 50 } 0 1 6 0 0: 112 1 0 9 0 0 06. 0 oC . 5 8 0: 014 0 0 1-3 8 1.0 9:0 1 1°40 T0109 0:1 0 0 0 1 2+ 1 4 0 9.0.0 2% 2 8.2 2. 0 0:0. 0 10 0 0 0 0 0 5 89711 1 200 000 120—>5 020 000 002—14 | hits—Beach. Home Double plays— Snavely to Davis, Base on balls 6. Winning Losing pitcher Beach. Umpire—Weidle. Time of game—2:30. eet eee Diamond Dust Marietta handed Jainbridge a good lacing Saturday 11 to 1. Bainbridge from Middl a good game sunday 5 to 1. et Qe We won't | lively baseballs they don’t give idea of a more to speed up the war game. ( object to the more and golf balls if militarists the lively cannon ball a 5 0 0 I 4 0 0 1 3 0 0 imp {ing provender at the midday meal 1 ( 91-0 0 ( | es extreme old age, which indeed is a very significant and sorrowful Struck out | nutritional field is one of the pre- Styer, 12. Um- |sent-day boasts; and quite rightly and Sheaf ffer. team and Lan- very interesting Monday even-| through the more or less general {custom of hasty eating. |attention to food and feeding | with perhaps the exception of | Bruce Dunlap, agriculturist of the “oil” Twenty miles of guard fence {was erected during the past month. HEALTH TALK BY DR. THEODORE B. APPEL, SECRETARY OF HEALTH “The term ‘seven minute eater’ is becoming more and more famil- iar. It represents that ever-growing | class of mnoon-day restaurant and | lunch counter patrons who have permitted the hurly-burly of life to | se upon their digestive appar- atus. Apparently not satisfied with forcing their automobiles up to the limit, they insist upon forcing down their food to the limit. And | in both cases, as a frequent result, a smash occurs,” said Doctor Theo- | dore B. Appel, Secretary of Health. “While the rapidity of consum- elf can shorten life, if it is 1sistently indulged in, the great- est objection to the practice lies in the persistent bolter scarcely reach- fact. “The marked progress in the SO. Instead of the extenuated course dinners which daily challen- ged the stomach’s capacity, the shorter meal with salad and lighter foods is now socially accepted and consequently popular. However, much of the ground that has been gained by the establishment of a more rational menu is being lost “Many parents, for example, who are quite interested regarding the nutritional requirements of their youngsters, apparently forget that the same fundamental laws apply to themselves as well. Their methods is limited to the children, wailing about excess fat and the application of misdirected attempts to remove it. the crimes against 18 it organs are many. And as a result thousands of per- sons acquire a premature old age and other disorders which quite ffectively clip off years of life. And of all the offenses against the | stomach, that of bolting food is exceedingly and painfully high on the list. ! “It should not be forgotten that | self-restraint and discipline are just as essential in the art of liv- ing as they are in business and {social activities. To permit the imagined demands of present-day existance to make a ‘bolter’ of one is to become a victim rather than a conqueror. Allow nature and her rules alone to dictate the affairs of the stomach. There will be no bolt- ing then, But there will be longer life.” er DIVIDE STATE FOR | MILK LAW CONTROL | Syne | Ralph E. Irwin, chief of the bureau of milk control, announced | that nine milk districts have now | been established in Pennsylvania | for the purpose of adopting proper | control methods in conformity with | the milk law passed at the last | General Assembly. These | with a resident inspector are as | | follows: Harrisburg, Norristown, | Forty-fort, Pittsburg, Ebensburg, | Lewisburg, Towanda, Meadville, | and Indiana. In addition, there are three supervising inspectors work- | ing from the central office in Harrisburg. | “The object of these resident in- | spectors,” Irwin said is to assure | clean, safe milk to Pennsylvania's population. These men will assist! the milk distributors in complying with the law by handling applica- tions, making surveys and holding examinations for approved inspec- tors.” | Girma: | i STATE-OWNED COWS LEAD AS PRODUCERS | The dairy herds of five State in- | stitutions average more than 1000 pounds of milk per cow, which is cited as an unusual record, by R. State Department of Welfare, in a | report to Mrs. E. S. H. McCauley, | State Secretary of Welfare. The institutions with their aver- age productions per cow ha Allentown State Hospital, 1202 pounds; Danville State Hospital, | 1131 pounds; Muncy State Indus- trial Home For Women, 1137 pounds; Polk State School, 1300 pounds; Rockview Penitentiary, 1262 pounds, -_—t-———— Push Road Work Maintenance forces of the Penn- Ivania Department of Highways completed more than ten tiles of new highway surfacing. Surface treatment of existing macadam roads was completed on 155.16 miles of roadway, utilizing 449,216 gallons of bituminous material, commonly known as OUR SERVICE Like all commercial institutions, this one to succeed well must SERVE well. The better its service, the great- er its success. 1his is just as true of a bank or trust company as it is of a bootblack or a railroad. This organization was formed and its business is conducted with that truth always in view. We give to all alike the best we have First National Bank & Trust Company OF MOUNT JOY |g ADVERTISING Advertising and not competition is now the life of trade, according to the advertising experts who me? to attend the International Adver- tising Association convention. The delegates at this meeting heard a number of interesting things. Among these was the statement by Charles Stelzle, New York ex- pert, to the effect that if churches do not advertise their “ware”’— spiritual upbuilding and moral betterment for both the individual and humanity—they cannot hope to arouse interest among the mass- es and fulfill the obligations plac- ed upon them as parties to the general spiritual movement. Another speaker declared that “advertising is greater than any single moral force we know of to- day. Advertising brings about changes for the betterment of life itself, changes which fuse into the social and political life of the na- ion.” . It is now generally admitted by economic forces everywhere that advertising is the most important development of modern business. And it is also coming to be realiz- ed that newspaper advertising is the best kind of paid publicity. In the convention just mentioned the delegates who were advertising ex- perts, agreed that newspaper ad- vertising affords the best publicity medium for the churches and all church activities. Advertising is no longer a theory. It is a science. And it pays. » id no —- WEDNESDAY, JULY 80, Bring us your car to be drained and refilled at the Special Low Price of 20c per Quart for the highest grade Lubricants of Penna. Crude. This offer is for the months of August and September. Why not get the Best at the Least Cost? Enterline’s Garage RHEEMS, PENNA.