The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, March 24, 1920, Image 2

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NEWS FLASHES |
|
he Nation Wide Happenings Briefly Told
a I...

atch
A newspaper di

g en cotwon grov in









pointed
Penns;

Conklin

ed a me

ply Com
The Norwegian frei
) of fuel at sea
ceeded Phi
burning her wocdwork.

ran

in reaching
Animal Rescue
intends to
Other
The
~t¢lphia,
ceraetery
est:
there
1.iiled by the collapse of
George Heckman, 19,
Mre.
Herbert
For the first time in
cree of divorce has
the name of the King
court at Flume,

The retail shoe dealer
upon a maximum profit

Three masked
Yuildings in Philadelphie
$ and escaped with $410,

v eek at Philadelphia .
Secretary of
announces that the
farm products exceeded
ars last year.

held on December 31,
ly three billion dollars
amount ever previously
Fire did thirty-five t
ars damage to the mill o
Manufacturing
downe, Pa.
Michael Peterson, hale
ner’s lamp
ageto a garage and
Mt. Carmel, Pa.
of Mr. Earl
Brownsville,
and Mrs.
sprouted in t
en Sharp at
on.




LAZO.
1y iators made
ne
1 1
r¢ ¥ t § 7
t nitd 1
Commissioner of

Frank MeGarry, father

a gas plant in Philadelphia last w
Leedmon, of
been
offices in the Weightme
Agriculture
total
Company of
At Collingswood, N. J.,
Bucks county,
drowned when ice on a pond of
tbe was crossing gave way.
says t

Geor

k in the De Are river
¢ to ferryboats between
*hiladelp and Camden
I't American 1 h been
urged to adopt the Shirley p
its emorial flower.
tta Clementon P 1a
led 1 0 Cf 1i¢
I Ire a ler 3
1 1
ed q t
ch i 1
Ning t O I
} titl ) b
} n New Y {cit
Tr 1h ¥ ¢ 3
Y yO
7 T r I 1
1 I
A ley i
' ia < n a
1 r he fur r'( ( ere



+ homb attac
n Ir io
The ic
in fif
r hief res-

lad
League of Phiia-
iblish a dog
animals will
~~ be permitted to be buried there.
Ya pernu
of eight, wag
‘Whizzer’ a

1

an orphan,re
paid the kindness of his benefactress
Church-
ville, Pa., by robbing and beating her.
He was sentenced to ten years
history a de-
given in
of Italy by a
Possibility of a shortage in the gas
supply threatens New Y
ork city.
s have agreed
of seven per
cent on the volume of business.
bandits raided the
in and Baker
» on March 12
000 in bonds.
This week is “Save Money on Meat”
Meredith
output of
25 billiondol-
The national banks of the country
1919, resources
of $22,711,375,000, exceeding by near-
the greatest
reported.
housand doll
fthe Burmont
Lans-
on March 13,
and healthy,
celebrated his ninety-third birthday.
Fire caused by a spark from a mi-
in the hands of
Troyan did six thousand dollars dam-
auto
Joseph
trucks at
Six-year-old Leola Adams, daughter
S. Adams of
Pa., was
rater
he nose of3-
femoved by physicians duf-
Sunbury, Pa.
pturns calling for pay-
ndred million dollars
the thirty thousand
ed by the Game
for restocking
ave arrived at
liberated as
ons permit.
highlands of





ditions are
Lhe middle














: 1 But it is quite dif-
with' beds of flowering and foli-
age plants.
ferent
Here we depend upon the
plants themselves for pleasing effects,
harmonious
ana nabit.
While there must necessarily be more
and these are secured by
combinations of color
or less formality in all beds of this
there is none of that primness
class,
and stiffness which characterizes the
usual attempts at carpet bedding. If
the reader of this article will give
the matter a little thought, she will
readily understand why it is a waste
of time and labor to give much atten-
tion to the mere shape of her flower
beds.
Nowadays beds of plants having
luxuriant foliage are very popular.
“Tropical effects” are mueh sought
after in the home garden, because we
have become familiar with them in
public places.
HOW TO USE PIECES OF YARN
discard even the smallest
piece of yarn, even if it is only a few
inches in length it can be used for
the center of a flower on a hat or
for dress trimmings.
If the pieces are several yards in
length and of bright colored yarn they
can be used to form a pretty edging
Never
for a collar and cuff set i
Use the yarn like a couching cord
and stitch it to the edge with em-
broidery silk or cotton. Or instead of
using the couching stitch, use blanket
or buttonhole stitch and work along
the materfal and over the yarn.

Our Bird
Neighbors

About this time each year the farm-
er erects strange unlifelike fig-
ures which donot scare the crows in
and
the least He mutters dire threats
when he hears the cawing in the
pines, vows that “there are more of
them pesky things every‘year, seems
like!”
The crow is not nearly so black as
he is painted. Although they eat some
=x investigation by the Department
of Agricnlture has demonstrated that
they pay for the grain to which they
help themselves a hundred times over,
in the destruction of harmful insects.
The erow eats many of the large bee-
tles that are too much of a mouthful,
protected as they are by a hard armor

for the smaller birds. Blackbirds.

Confessions of a
Hold Up













man





which does consideral
fruit.
Most farmers who keep bees take a
shot whenever they can get it, at
any king bird that comes about th
hives, having the impression that it
destroys untold numbers Sf the
honey-makers As a matter of f
examination of hundreds of stomachs
of king birds has shown that they
do not eat the worker bees, but are
engaged in the commendable slaughter
flies
themselves destroy more bees
of robber and
than the king bird does in a
Of all flying
bawks and owls are the most
things,
drones,
however,
which
in a day
year.
the
reviled
and several States and many counties
their
Pennsylvania alone, in two ve:
out $100,000 and ow
pay bounties for
in hawk
destruction
rs, paid
1 bount-
ies. Yet examination of the stomachs
cf many hawks
and owls of all kinds
have proven conclusively that 95 per
cent of their food consists
mice, which do enormous
grasshoppers, crickets, etc.
of the many kinds of hawks a
ever devour poultry
of field
damage,
Only five
nd owls
== 0—0—0—0—0~—0——0—0——0—0-—0—
| THE AEROKOLUM
*
By Reno
| creme Ore ree Qe Qe Qe Oem Ome Ome mee Ore Oe |
I'm the guy who borrows
of you and forgets to return t
Is there any reason why I sh
Answer me that!
things
hem .
ouldn’t?
There is no need for hurrying to re-
turn them and, besides, I may
use them again.
You should not be put ou
them—you'll get them back
some day.
And I consider it a person:
if vou think I'll damage them
extent.
Neither can you fool me by
silent—I can
thinking about.
Don’t be peeved
missing when you want to us
guess
if you find
wish to
t about
again
11 insult
to any
keeping
what you are
them
e them.
You can get them any time you wish
to call for them.
That's for you to worry about, not
me.
Yes,
that’s just the
about it!
way
I feel
I'm a useful citizen, all right!

Robinson Crusoe, please
forward!
Philadelphia, has the gur YOU
when you were with your

“Friday.”
 
atep
Mr. Louis H. Schmidt ot
np used
beloved


UNITED KINGDOM NOT LIKELY
TO IMPORT AMERICAN ANIMALS
Embracing comment on live stock,
meat and dairy products and the trend


















!
I never went to hold up a an | agricultural progress in the United
{ in my life, but I felt fully ast Kingdom, a condensed Ie port of its
| 3 : i [ two foreign representatives is made
| scared and id as my victim possibly
: public by the United States Depart-
could have In the first place 1 was| $a
ree | ment of Agriculture ar
Additional tax lation to provid i ito the business. 1 had a | George A. Bell, of the Bureau of Ani-
v 1¢ equal } the government I ( | mal Industry, vr
11 lose as a 11t t dec n of 1 l I'| the Bureau of
< Court that divi- | in Pittsburgh 71 in Burope studying «
i ( ned b I had left, an untries.
g ! Weight of Live Stock Below Normal
1o Kin Herds and flocks have been main-
I : ) svinz ordi I tained much better than pected
here until I had | considering conditions
} nd for t-th :
If 1 d onl t {6CToas
ASILY ADE Q pl n Y 1 pre-y
burg 1 ight i
with whom the me
ugh t ( ed an 1
I 1 IX Is Adequat
! 1 be
wit} ( Th I jeht 1 1 but
th wbout 120.000 Y ho used 1
¥ : vt re I itish ilitar Ce 3 t )
{ ne i ney v turned to the United Kingdor IT
3 4 lv disc OHS. of Ww
{ 1 t neq t bl oth Inti
’ } h as fast I . 5 }
t fell in nch of 1 in i
( \ } related : | 1 here ti troop 1 1
ached n ti The horses purchased
} ¢ i V 1d t} I id: 1 I % c fOr Ye i
me t t 1 ATT ¢ tiaf T
‘ Ve t yohin i ; tisinsm { I haran
} i I th tow 1 toned ver. a
¢ r.ar ‘ ing do r | Y 4 lit nif th + «
Cos, aid ft] | 1 Tt in !
Iress, ( old tensively ti n t} )
: i The H : Cattle Imports Improbable
; D orn, | that God we'll Iq neland } t
ut all ! I 1 n 1
x Ll { t ( CL}
[4 \ peri- | Ui : J Rover 3d oving feed si
ited ; che 1 i k tock ile
W
t y r I : ;
( will | an had soake lairy cattle 1 th 1
ref t t of Vv 1bout thirteen cent t 1g rmitted t tl
1 be ing like that, I 1 i inited Rinado On tl han
4 i : ; t ro | honest all my 1 A : re expectin lar 3
i 1 ) tO how IL was and Kept tie trade in breedin t )
1 1 It is f 1 fit of | Pistol ling them 1 would | mals already ha been mbled
) 1 f ter 0 arden 1zain id. 1 ( | I ind
that this paper has 1 repared. | held up a working man |g
I nt to say ht here hat the t his montt
hape of a bed is not a matter of very | bunch, 1 d to the ne i ) ]
t yortanc whi flowering ith, a ve, a square meal, and Kingdo lecreas
lan ind plan i strik et for Pittsburg! I joined 1 ng the war, but the
ng foliag e depended ‘Pat- | Wife and family, but 1 J med | ine tock vailable
ern” o1 carpet bh very | crook I went out several nig of stock rapi
little to do with flo plants, | Pittsburgh with that old gun it] of feed pe 1
d. in order to bring out any design | €nough to keep us in comfort f duction
learly, it ean employ only such plant ral months. Ne my wife did n 1 ilable feed
is are of low, close, com habit, | pect me-—she never kne it I number of sheep has been d
and will stand any amount of clipping. the game eight years ago, whe for several vear due partly
Where these plants are used the| Police got m I 3 n TS 101 to plowing up grass lands and partly
hai f the beds you put them in will jail I'm out I'm ir it is said y reduce mutton consump
of course up for careful con-| be killed my wif nd n. No material increase is expected
sideration quite as much de-| Eid ared. Tt t pay t f sheep
pends on the formal 1s | he 1ption Below Normal
cn he /plan the 1e Before the war the estimated total
“shape,” the “design,” meadow € neat consumption of Great Britain
these are really the important facto cat birds 160,000 tons a month The peo-
case where solid color-effects | good th nle have been accustomed to a re-
lered of more consequence | sheep's clothing is stricted meat diet, and even with the

ibout 130,-
sup-
removal of all regulations
000 tons a month are expected to
October. An
that
ply all de until
opinion was expressed English
show a tendency to turn to

instead of feeding cattle
When
able,
avail-
United
stated,
shipping is
beef by the
made, it is
adequate
imports of
Kingdom will be
largely from Australasia, Argentina
and Brazil, where it can be produced
ai a lower price than in the United
States.
Pork and pork products very likely
will continue to be in considerable de-
mand in the United Kingdom, but in-
smaller quantities than during the
Yar. .
Dairy Products Situation
Observations by the department
men and the opinions of persons in-
terviewed lead to the belief that the
supply of dairy products, especially
milk, is unequal to the demand. it
was the general opinion that much
condensed milk would be imported
next winter. Although the United
Kingdom normally imports dairy pro-
ducts, the increase in those of con-
densed milk last year is’ noteworthy,
being about 100,000,000 pounds greater
than for previous years. The increase
was about 80 per cent, most of which
came from the United States.
£236,240,114 DUE U. S.
ON ALLIES’ INTEREST
Washington—Unpaid interest on
loans to foreign governments accruing
vp to November last totaled $236,240,-
114, while the estimated interest for
the next year is $463,215,613, Secre-
tary Houston informed the Senate,
answering a resolution of inquiry.
Belgium owed $8,370,381; France,
$65,858,101; Great Britain, $105,503,
126; Italy, $39,228,203, and Russia,
$15,051,977 of the unpaid interest, he
said, while the interest falling due in
1920 included: Great Britain, $211,
$28,890; France, $139,094,272; Italy.
£79,595,565; Belgium, 216,822,0
Russia, $9,399,365, and Czecho-Slova-
kia, $2,515,004.
HOUSE PLANS NEW TAX
Washington—Additional
lation to provide revenues equal to
those the government will lose as =a
result of the decision of the Suprems«
Court that stock dividends are not tax-

tax legis-
able is planned by Congress. Chai:
aan Fordney, of the House Ways and
Maans Committee, announced tha

hearings w..1q pegin, and that treas
ury officials Wyn1g pe calle¢ upon fo
suggestions as
to new taxes.
PROPOSED LAW
shington—Legislation designed

to give the summer purchasers of coal
+ reduction of 30 percent below winter
rices and to keep mines and coal cars
throughout the summer was pro-
Fre-
Jersey, chairman of
posed in the Senate by Joseph S.
n, New
ial coal
e on inter
ub-committee of the
state commerce
sen proposes to

for an advance by
15 percent in
» months and a de-
 




e during the sum-
f the opinion that it would re-
I i l d coal purchasing
ti ummer, keeping the mines
id!
1 Freli en bill, drawn after
n 1 f the coal pro-
nel 1 di buting prob ns, h
1 1 b } TY
merce ( sion. E who
iq « v. of tl ( ha
esti ed tl ) cal idle
t nd in great d










fo ce ound Cargo
\ te limral t t
% §
i Mog 1 1%
( 1 {
Telli 1, M off tl
nrin r for Phi Inhia ice
1 ind I} r 1 hit t}
> : T Harn
oll i ireent nneal
Plhiladelp? Representative Th
( } ( rman
of iouse naval affairs: committee
requested i! Nav Department |
1 aid to the ice vessels
Ordinary Wool Higher inLondon
London—There were 10,764 bales of
fered at the wool sales recently. Fine
merinos were unchanged, but ordinary
anced 5 percent. Fine and
breds gained 5
showed no

WET CARAVAN PASSES LAW’S
SCRUTINY IN PHILADELPHIA
Seven Trucks Laden With 1000 Cases
ld Up, But Show Clean Bill

 
Seven tortrucks, containing 1000
( 3s of whiskey, were held up in
Philadelphia last week while en routs
from Baltimore w York. The
trac in « of E. Charles
Gla ‘e president of the Gladd-
ing ss Company, of 106 Dov
street, Baltimore
Although detained here night,
the truck
over
train was permitted to con-
tinue on its journey the next morning.
Following an investigation by the fede-
ral authorities, Leon Cressen, federal
prohibition enforcing
nounce that Gladding


officer, an-
’s permits for the
transportation of the
stock were valid.
With him Gladding had a permit
for the removal of the liquor from the
Pikesville Distilling Company, of Ros-
yn, Md. He that his transpor-
tation permit was on file in Baltimore
That fact was verified by communica-
tion with the Baltimore authorities.
The trucks were held up at Fifty-
eighth street and Woodland avenue by
Policeman Simpson, of the Sixty-fifth
street and Woodland avenue station.
They were later brought in town and
parked on Ninth street in front of the
Federal Building, under guard.
Upon learning that the trucks con-
tained “wet” goods a large crowd im-
mediately gathered, manifesting con
siderable excitement.
remceval and
said

THE SIZE OF SOUND WAVES
attached to one or the
Government bureaus at Washington,
while discussing our ability to tell
the direction from which sound pro-
ceeds, calls attention to an interest-
mg difference between the eyes and
the ears with regard to the size of
the waves that strike them.
The average wave-length of light
is about one ten-thousandth of the
diameter of the pupil of the eye. On
the other hand, the waves of sound
issuing from a man’s mouth are about
eight feet long, whereas the diameter
A scientist

of the passage of the ear is quite
small and could not well have been
made a large multiple of eight feet.
One consequence of the minuteness of
light-waves in comparison with the
size of the eyes is that the lenses of
the eye are able to concentrate rays
of light upon the retina with great
efficiency.
And talking about sound, the new-
est invention in connection with it,
is the telephonograph. This is 2 com
bination of the phonograph wi‘h thes
telephone, intended to record 2 tele-
phonic message on a wax cylinder at
the receiving end of the tel=aphone
line, an invention that promises zreat
things. The record is made by a
stvlug actuated by the undulations
produced by sound-waves. From the
impressed cylinder the message can
be retransformed into spoken words





TO KEEP MINES BUSY
DURING THE SUMMER
WILL
COAL BUYERS TO SAVE 30 PERCENT
|
|
|
|
ENABLE SUMMER!
by the ordinary method of phono-
graph.
instrument
that by its
The usefulness of the
iepends
upon the fact

  
means a message can be sent w
the intended recipient is absent. Upon
his return the latter can set the
phonograph app tus going and listen
to the message at his leisure
HAPPINESS DEFINED

 
 
if peace
within
Be pleased, but po 1
1 the whole heart, Aet |
¢ ntrol
y :
10 3
Lieerf ¢ wet
|
Vy 1 1
i r counten fling and
|
peac i
easure (in ur eyes |
1 ft ch fu ¢ |
ntl In |
Have \n erect ITm 5
nie
be ly to burst int 1
Ha h for the unfortunate,
read y extend a helping hand
court us to the aged, gentle and |
kind to children 1 animals.
Fo h th 17 being show raj
i } fee] tl ling up of joy in
+ nl or t} plation of the
beautiful within
Worth Knowina
A rubhbe rden i t
( ni (
f tir wh
: |
] 1t i
1 in
tal 1 1 fvine ol |
2 |
to € f 1 t |
D I |
3} Y hh |
1 r 1 ’ bh is |
fa than sl! ho co +
an usually a i (
is angry he opens his |
his eyes |


REX SEAL PRODUCTS
The Rex ‘Seal Products Company of
Vil-
itam J. Ryan Company a large bottling
Delaware has acquired from the
29Q




plant and a tract of 328 acres at
Lrown’s-Mills-in-the-Pines, New Jersey
| and is preparing to install additional
automatic machinery of sufficient ca
{ pacity to enable it to meet the ex
tremely heavy demand for high grade
soft drinks
The plant is of
k constructions, the main building
comprising three floors, a number of
outbuildings for storage purpos
were
nodern concrete and
Lric


ind
residences for employes 11so
taken over.
the principal factors certain
valuable assistance in plac


ks r h
1 ks yi





upplying practically an
u I né 1 I
A bv “ch eta to}
pu T! ter requ
icn he natural, spa 1alitie
of this spring water will ot )
mbodied in all Rex Seal drinks, a
factor heretofor sadly lacking in the
domestic product








¢ x
n ma
vt 1
Not on
1 1 will 1 el | ol
it be n mn Mal
to} ft $1 ¢ cl « ft
van ent th buttonhol
Yom Th +¥ joe with t} in
hin
mach
FROM THE CHESTNUT TREE
“rh railroad uperintendent 1
there was a washout on the line M«
Toa
“Mh at? wat th Inv. tov 4
That's jus lay for it
TTH ’
“Mondav’s wash dav.”


SRE REAR SA Rn BR Rt ea ARIE DRONA Re TCS
TAFFETA
TRICOTINE
to Consumer
Re P
Save


ranteed as

u How to 20 to
10W
resent

At the
Her Money Will Purchase the
SATIN
sented
High Cost of Material
Best to
ORGANDIE
VOILE
Why Pay Middlemans
or Money Refunded
25 Percent on Each
Every Woman
be Had at a
Profit ?
Purchase


Great Saving
For Samples and Full Information
! Address,
Dept. “A”
ADELPHIA MANUFACTURING CO.
2306 South 23d St.,
MAIL ORDERS FI
PHILADELPHIA,
LLED PROMPTLY
PA


ODD
Lots | Lhe

To you who live In
towns and
Main
Locust 5182-3-4-5-6.

are interested in
I 3 wn ais
nvestment or Speculative Securities
we are prepared to offer the advantages of a
that will meet your requirements and conditions.
We do a general commission business in both
listed and unlisted stocks and bonds.
Write to our department “A.”
It will be worth your while.
A postal card is sufficient.
WINSLOW TAYLOR & CO.
130 SOUTH 15TH STREET,
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
Stock Market
1d
the small cities a
service
Office
‘“ 2»
Depty
Race 5196-7-8.
Should Buy Where




Millions Made
$100 invested in Chero-Cola
in Soft Drinks
a few.years ago paid 3000 per
cent in dividends, sold as high as $1000 a share.
$100 invested in Coca-Cola
paid dividends of $4200 in 1914.
Stock valued at $25,000 per share.
$100 invested in
worth $2500 per share.
Red
Rock
Ginger Ale, stock reputed
We offer you what we firmly believe to be a like opportun-
ity to participate in the initial o{
stock at $10 per share of the
fering of a limited amount of
REX SEAL PRODUCTS COMPANY
Manufacturers of a high quali!
parilla and other soft drinks.
assured. Modern plant located at
Prospectus and further
y ginger ale, root beer, sarsa-
Market for products already
Brown’s Mills-in-the-Pines, N. J.
information on request.
KsecoritisCo.
Members Consolidated
728 WIDENER BUILD!
TELEPHONES—Walnut 47634-5
55 Broadway, New York Direct
Stock Exchange of New York
NG, PHILADELPHIA, PA
Race 3381-2
Private Wires Connecting Offices
 
 
 
 
 































































 
 
 


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