HE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, l MOUNT JOY WON FROM | Morturary THE RIVAL COLUMBIA FIVE | Recordings You've got to hand it to our own | | B ull Moose Benny Groff, when it | - | comes to winning real games in the | Mary, widow of Joseph Schlegel-|cage. A year ago he made Tommy | mileh, died at Columbia | Ebersole and his pride five of Eliza —— bethtown, “hunt their holes” on this | Miss Rose Murphy, aged 86 years, |same floor and on Wednesday even- | lied at Columbia Thursday. ing he done the same thing to the | - | mighty Quinn and his followers from | rr, a Civil War veteran, | Columbia. Jacob B died at Columbia aged 82 years. The issue between the members of re [the Mount Joy and Columbia bor- Paul Rutherford ough’s all-town teams was definitely Paul Rutherford died Wednesday | settled when we beat the Columbia morning at the County Hospital, |five on a neutral floor in the Central aged twenty-six years. Death was| Hall, Marietta by a score of 41 to caused by gastritis and it was sudden. | 38. Both of these teams had won on Undertaker Miller, of iti respective floors, and this took charge of the body. match at Marietta was played to de- : meee | cide who was the better, as there was Mrs. Anna E. Calhoon keen speculation among the basket Mrs. Anna E. Calhoon died on | ball fans of the western section of Tuesday at the home of her daugh- | Lancaster county regarding the mat- ter, Mrs. C. F. Shade in Royersford, [ter of the Mt. Joy-Columbia teams. Pa., in her 89th year. Funeral services| The clash throughout was nip and were held Friday afternoon Mus. | tuck, the score being tied 13 times Calhoon is well known here as she | during the game, seven times in the ant the Summer annually in this|first half and six times during the » { 2 | BL. 1 n y place for many years. latter period. The first point to be Heroic Women of Fra n Ce : : rs [scored the Coa ans was made Mrs. Charles Simmers on a foul, while the first to be re- 1ains of Mrs. Charles Sim-|corded by a Mount Joy player was My words are not powerful enough to do even scanty justice to the s, for many years a resident of | made on a field goal. During the lat- most heroic figure in the modern world, and of ages past—the woman of | Elizabe thtown, who died at her home | ter part of the second half the Mount France. Of the healthy men who are engaged in the military service in n Philadelphia, were brought to | Joy players managed to run away France, practically all are engaged either in transportation or in the Elizabethtown on Tuesday evening {from their opponents. ’ o r taken direct to Mt. Tunnel ceme- A large audience was present to manufacture of munitions, leaving the agriculture absolut to the wom- en. Not only this, but they have stepped into the place of k anim ere they were interred in the witne ss the game. The people came you can go into any section of France to-day \ f plot. Rev. Croman, pastor of [from C olumbia, Marietta and Mount cent, noble womanhood hitched to the plough a ult ng th Lutheran church, officiated at | Joy, and the other neighboring towns. All of the agriculture rest upon their shoulders. The home, alwaj : ZTave Her husband died several | The neutral Mariettians seemed to tremely efficient home, maintains a few old men, the wounded, vears ago, but several children sur-|favor their neighbors, the Mount Joy tubercular. Uncomplaining, with high devotion, v an attitude that | vive. team. Miller of the winning team, amounts almost to religious exaltation, the woman of France bears the r—— made two sensational shots from burden. Mrs. Emma Evans (field. After throwing one of them Now, conditions being as they are, does it lie within the heart of the 0m Mrs. En ma Ei ans, wife of Joseph | Millex futned 3 complete Grele Inthe A : Evans, died at midnight Tuesday vir and managed to land on his feet. American people to preserve and hold to every conveni yur life at 10me- in hrerstown, after an |[F or the winners, Miller was the in the expense of adding an additional burden to the This is the exact a that is involved in ou cereals in place of wheat. ridual star in the goal shooting, as secured seven field goals. On the e time the next highest scorer R. Bennett, who made six field als. F. Garvey, of the same team, two weeks of heart | She was in her 0 11, 1868 in ans has been »wn her entire | rale of the Rohr The women of France must be er k ecides the French soldier until next Spring. morale of the soldier in the iving t her husband [was also among the stellar players, them the great possible of th 1 the {1 wing ildren: Arthur|as he secured 11 points, having made wheat is the chief factor. C., Columbia Bertha May, Cath-|a field goal and nine out of 21 foul L., John P., Martin V. and|goal shots. : 1 at home, and Emma J., Quinn of the losers, was the strong SE Sid iE iE i | wife of Edward Drace, Landisville. {man for his side, as he made exactly -— | thirty of Columbia’s 38 points. He . E mmanuel Sahm i winded three field goals and 24 out of Emmanue ah a prominent citi-|32 foul throws. Kitch and Goodwin, CLARENCE ScHoCH Eo died e arly Thurs- of the same team, made the other e f his son, Henry, at | eight points, as they both secured effects of a para- | four field goals. The score: MOUNT JOY, PA. t The deceased was a well [Mount Joy Columbia nt of that part of the |C. Bennett. ....forward...... Kitch 1 A > been director of the |[R. Bennett... .forward..... Marley Keystone National Bank for many|F. Garvey.....,centre...... Quinn lirector of the Lit- er Coe coognard LLL. Musser Fire Insurance |Mil a faare, ..... Goodwin ember of the F ield goals: C. Bennett, R. Bennett He is sur-|6, F. Garvey, Miller 7, Kitch 2, Quinn Henry, with | 3, Goo lwin 2. Foul goals, C. Ben- funeral will [nett 2 out of 3; Quinn 24 out of 32 morning at 9 Referee, Jones, F. and M. Timer, Services will} Schrite, Mount Joy. Scorer, Villee. a ( church near Time of halves, 20 minutes. t y'clock., Interment | 0 ..————.~.. the adjoining ceme - | GAVE A BANQUET FOR THE EMPLOYEES Mrs : Benj: amin Gochenaur | —-— 1 Gochenaur died at| Covers were laid for sixteen per- yn David, at May- | sons at the Exchange Hotel, Henry rs, from a compli- ingle, Proprietor on Thursday even- from which shelling for the employees of the Eisen number of years. |lohr Warchouse in this place. Mg two sons avidgdoseph Ch: ; mn # Wednesday, March 27, 1918. 4 Every Pound Is Peffect FRIEDMAN'S J 4 OAK G OLEOMARGARINE Federal Food Administrgtor Hoover urges Ameri- e the nation’s tood supply OVE is a condensed Estate I have for sale. i of these properties, call, + 9, Florin, 9 > 9 >, * * hinted + 2 * ° >, A large brick house, good | ® > + We again welcome you to our pléice of business for a Spring and Summer Planting Supply such as ALL SPRING VEGETABLE PLANTS We are preparing for an unusually large demand and you arranging for your plants early. Rambright Hoy 50—A row of six newly built | brick houses on Hazel St. «5 A large frame house in | Florin, the S. S. Stacks property. oo 0, * * Poirier Sree 0, + stand on West Main | the John Keener property. very beautiful modern. brick dwelling on West Main | , Mount Joy, up to the minute in i H. E. Ebersole | &s 0, + + a a 0, $0, 6-0.00, will do well by 2S * We will also supply you on short order with All Kinds of ry + Fruit Trees at a very reasonable price. 9 ad + * No. 64—A lot of ground fronting 27 ft. on West Main St., next to Brunner’s Furniture Ware | with a frame house. 205 ft. deep and price low. No. ai The property of John H | West Donegal 9, * STRAWBERRY PLANTS, ASPARAGUS ROOTS, CALIFOR- NTA PRIVET AND ORNAMENTAL SHRUBBERY. PRICES ON APPLICATION. WH * 9 * 0, ® sguare in Florin con- | 0 Codd Pdr dr Steir