a WEDNESDAY, JUNE 23rd, 1920 THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA, U. S. A. : : : | : : g \ This Is The Last Week \_ Of Groff & Wolf 20. Per Cent. Off Sale \ On Saturday night, June 26, it will be a month to % “the day since Groff & Wolf Co. sent a sensation sweeping over Lancaster city and county with the first, great reduction sale since the beginning of the war. We embarked on the unprecedented campaign hy primarily for one purpose; That was to clear our racks and shelves of a stock that was altogether too heavy for that time of the year. The good weather. that followed almost immedi- ately upon our announgement of the TWENTY PER CENT. OFF sale, coupled with the force of the has carried this sweeping reductions themselves, " surplus stock out like a whirlwind. To-day we are fast nearing “that point which we would call normal as far as goods" is concerned. And that is why we are calling the sale to a close. In point of profits we have lost heavily; in point “trom a Collar Button to a Suit of Clothes” of clearing out burensome stocks we have'gained. The public also knows that by this time GROFF & WOLF CO. is a good loser at any time and ablé. to turn defeat into victory by putting the punch into its Palm Beach Suits: Get Big Line Of Shirts A Fifth Off In Shirts particularly we business policy. Our advice to you NOW is to buy THIS WEEK— Yours Now Saturday will be the last day for the 20 per cent. off —and it doesn’t matter what you buy, from a Collar Button to a Suit of Clothes. Groff & Wolf Co. 26--30 North Queen Lancasters Fastest Growing Store Nothing more timely has in this Sale Palm Beach and Mohair Suits at 20 per cent. off. Suits ‘that ordinarily were $18 cost you $14.40; those that were $20 cost you $16; those that wera $22.50 $18; that were $25 cost you $20. call your attention to a still been: offered splendidly large stock, es- pecially in the regular $2.50, than the $3 and $3.50 lines, which at 20 per cent. off cost you $2, $2.40 and $2.80 respectively. SILK SHIRTS from $6.50 to $15 regularly have been ONE-THIRD reduced to cost you those clear. COOCCCOOCOOOOOOOCOOCOOOOOOOOCOOOCOOO000 OOOO OOO000OO000COO000000 Fe LOCCOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOCOO00COOOO000O00 QOCOOOOOOOOCOOOOOOOOO0 oC COCOOOOOOOOOCOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOOOOIOOOOOOOOOCOO TN 4 MAIL. AA a FET J ORS TR SN Ce ~ Good Old Paroid, “Good Old Paroid” —that’s what they call the best roll roofing ever made. For more than 20 years Neponset Paroid has solved the problem of roofs roofing for bungalows and camps. Colors=—slate-red, slate-green, and gray. Come in and let us tell yau why you should build NOW and why we back Neponset Roofs—Neponset\ Twin Shingles or Neponset Paroid—to the limit." Remember, there’s a copy. of for new and old buildings. It wears, wears, wears. Impregnated with as- phalt. Surfaced with slate or tale. It. has made good on farm buildings, de- “Repairing and Building’’ waiting fer pots and manufactories, It’s the ideal you at our store. \ BIRD & SON, luc, (Established 17% 1 East Walpole, Mass, 3 H. S. NEWCOMER, Mount Joy, Pa, 7 KZ Le teats eh te ibegte sh 0. 190.0% 0% 0% 0% % 0% o% 6% o% o% 2% o% 0 0. 0. 0. 0 00 0% 0% o% a 0% PESOS III III Ge Ge Graf aleae fof dfe fe ofe ae sfe fe fesfe faired oe i 3 / . XaXa) 0. 0 ($000 000,00. 9, \/ > 9, * ®. 9, 9, aa aXe 0g 9 + 9, > Grafo 0. 0. 0 (00% 0%, . 0 4% 0% a’ * 9, 7 00% * liking. We have been chosen the local representative for Columbia Grafonolas and Records for this dis- trict and have. just received our first shipment of nolas and Records. You now have t portunity to hear the Brunswick, Grafonola and Victrola side by side and select the one to your Our stock of Columbia Records c of over 2,000 selections, including many of the re- ligious numbers you have been looking for. Come in and hear them in our sound proof*demonstrating booths. eofeaiesde Fogo so ogeede deed * 9, * ea 0% %% 9, ho % he op- J +* 9% o>, 0 2" % 8 onsists Oo 0, o® 2% % CR) 888 > % % I. A. SHIFFER % 3 39 S. Market Street ELIZABETHTOWN, PA. 3 90 > 2 o & % *é & 0 % (3 & ia % o. 0 000 0 Xa) > : Christ.” |cise, The World Wide Garden; Reci- 9° 5 906%. 49. 09. .0..0. 0 0 0 0 0.0 0 0 OOo 6 O&O 00, 0 0 0 0 0.0 0 0.0 0 0 0.0 0.0.0 0 { GaP P00 0.000 Uo? Opt ot ad 4b 4 0? 0 aaa Xa Xd %® 0? Vet 4, oe? 2 Go? Oe? %¥ ot 4, ho? Ou Sob 0000 ® oe Ot 4 aaa Xa Xd re—— —— sm es—— | ( ie | Y Morrow 1k ‘The [J ; Recitation, “A Chil- DONEGAL REUNION { h T H | yught,” Howard Mus- ad : , ’ } ew | n; Recitation, “That’s Al,” 1d de-| Flowers; I tion, “A Child’s 1 v v “ry ‘Uri, vio s ’ ro WEI L ATTENDE ih mand « wttent ” Paul Baker; ng by Choir; V Eals aS Rass lve I 1 , Dorothj cer, Clara Wit- | EE I ) i Ou Anna Hamilt uth Baker; So- | : 4 . 1 race Hamilton: Recitat The | (Continued from page 1) 3 0 1 ‘ , Gra Ham It mj Recitation, The can authorities whose data was ac iurch belol th 1 of lea airest Blossom, Anna Hamilton; cepted by Darwin. He also said that I'h churel h s too long | Recitation, He Is Here, Carl Easton; Dr. Haldeman recorded the fact that We mu rally round the [I> , Our Gang, L. Vogle, John regularly the bald eagle nested on hip of Christ, with a devotion | Ke r; H. : mith, J. K ener, J. Ol Chickies Roel to His cau uch as was manifested {ewiler, James Rutherford, Daniel nicK S v . | : | Prof. Beck also related interesting “© God and country by the Donegal | Henry, Harry Reheard, Chas. Kray- ( ek alse late erestin . J : S . { thio = dione V. J. Liphari. th , bioneers who met beneath the Wit-|bill, Recitation, An : Agreement, Rob- foam i” os } an Hoss : bird aa a ness T The church today needs ert Keener; Recitation, Grace Hamil- Port Felli 1 furthe r limit s are | nstructive and co-operative evan-|ton; Address, Pastor; Recitation, 1 HE cp < 2 I are mm 3 > o 1 K+ yg Ba a ny op { bot} Rupp’s i i Momb ih I gelism I'he church stands for ser-|Charles Kraybill; Offering, Primary ir 3 Bt M¢ rts his- : : + ; | wile oi 1 DS te CTLs RIS- vice and sacrifice. She needs no |Song; Exercise, H. Musselman, M. ) *S # as "CC . 1 . ‘1 . 1 * 107 | : In hi i troduction, Prof. Beck 2Pology or defense, She has suf-|Musselman; Anna Buller, Alverta ntroduction rof. Bec : : | 4 . 3 ; i te 5 d upon th hist ry of old fered because of an under-emphasis Buller, Ruth Baker, Maude Buller; | ‘ne D 1¢ Stor . - 1 - » 3 3 Yo . .. Ov { ou 1 - n it wond rial prir of essentials found in the gospel of |Recitation, Esther Dellinger; Exer- | onege 1 S ndaeriu spring. The speaker imitated the calls of | various birds. Speaking of the birds’ | homing instinct, he told how his | grandfather, John Beck, had ex- perimented with a purple martin | wi h birds go from this section to | B | each winter season—by plac- ng a mark upon a certain one. The B tical bird returned to its haunt | in Lancaster county the following | ve | Prof. Beck related that the log of { C: tain John Smith, the Jamestown { er and settler, told of a great | abr ndance of birds he had found at | Havre-de-Grace. The speaker said | t many of I original species | seen in these part Now very He l r 1 on y \ st one having died s ral ears ago | rardens. | 1 of the bird has i ec explained Prof. i Bec tellir how his great grand- | father, B. Adam Grube, related that | the beauty of an Easter sunrise | church wirvice he attended was eclipsed by the flocks of countless V pigeon The speaker also told how his father, Abram Beck, in the northern part of Lancaster county, and Dr. M. Raub, below Quarryville, had simultaneously observed great flights of passenger pigeons in 1846, when at 11 o’clock in the morning, the entire sky as far as the eye could see from zenith to the limits of the horizon was covered by these flying pigeons. Prof. Beck stated that he had his first glimpse of the sky lark in Sax- ony, Germany, in 1904, at “Hern- hoot,” the estate of Count Zinzen- dorf, whose life was so closely linked with the early history of Lancaster county. The speaker touched in a general way upon the representative birds of the Donegal Valley, compar- ing them briefly with Old World species. He spoke of the Carolina paroket, a bird now extinct, that in earlier days found its way into this section because the Carolina zone of bird life extends into the Susque- hanna Valley. Prof. Howard B. Grose, Jr., of Franklin and Marshall, presented a fine interpretation of the spirit that animated the Pilgrim Fathers, the ter-centenary of whose landing in New England will be observed in| elaborate manner at Plymouth next! fall. : The popular meeting in the even-' ing was featured with addresses by Rev. Frank GG. Bossert, of Rex- { borough, Pa. (who was pastor of i Donegal church nearly a decade), and Rev. Francis J. S. Morrow, pas- tor of the Methodist church at Mari- etta. Materialism Now Rampant | Rev. Bossert spoke on “The Church in the Present Crisis.” He said in part: “The great war has] closed, yet the world is still in tur-! moil. The world is undergoing a | change, and America also. Idealism | was paramount when we went into! ing its place. valued in terms of dollars and cents. The world is passing through a crisis. But after all, the church retains a great hold on the people; and a great obligation that rests with the institu- tion today is to train the young in religious truths, for they are not now getting the instruction they should along these lines. It may be neces- sary to go back to the old academies of colonial days, supported by the churches. Ministers must be teachers as well as preachers. We must re- fuse to yield to the materialistic j Spirit and stand for selfsacrifice.” Need of Evangelism { Dorothy the war, but now materialism is tak- | Everything is being |@ The music of the reunion was par- larly enjoyed Harrisburg; and Samuel B. Walter | Clyde | Master W. Shissler yi d Smith, both incaster, rendered fine solos. Ihe quartet selections by Messrs. 3} 1 ith, Meister and Kendig I Iso highly pleasing. - ily ear i a Ld Mrs. J. Y. Kline calle relative wt Lancaster, on Saturday. M1 ssley Gingrich spent eral > days at Philade ¢ Miss Myra Booth has gone to Mt. Gretna, to spend the summer months. Mr. and Mrs. Levi Mummau an- nounce the arrival of a son on Mor day. Mr. Amos Garber and family of Rheems, spent Monday with Mr. and Mrs. Albert Fike. | Mr. Jacob Boyer purchased the J S. Carmany property adjoining the Florin Hall at private sale. | Mrs. Charles Stiner, of Elizabeth- | town, was a Sunday visitor to her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Emlin Buller, Sr | Sr. | The State Department | has West Main torn up and Highway street graded and will soon be ready for the formed Mennonite church concreters. ! Mr. John Weidman and force are | painting the properties of Miss Mary Zeager and Mrs. Bruckhart, at | Mount Joy. ! Miss Elizabeth Herr has returned | home after spending several weeks with the Christian Fry family in Central Manor. | Mr. and Mrs. George Geyer and Mr. Leo Cobb and family spent Sun- day at Paoli, the guests of Mr. Ed. Steigerwald and family. | Mr. Christian Malehorn and family | attended the Strickler family re-! union at the home of Mr. Jacob | Strickler in Maytown on Sunday. | The following from Mount Joy and | Florin accompanied the Gypsy Mo- | toreyele tour on Sunday to Harris- burg, Carlisle and Boiling Springs: Messrs. John Kline, Wiser Young, Jacob Landvater, Harry Grosh, Mar- tin Metzler, Alpheus Rye and Misses Anna Arndt and Myrtle Hendrix. The Children’s Day exercises held in the United Brethren Church here on Sunday evening were largely at- tended. The program was one of the most pleasing ever held in the church: The following program was rendered: Song, choir; Seripture Reading; Recitation, “Welcome,” Henry; Exercise, “Wel- come,” Clair Dunk, Dorothy Henry, Naomi Dellinger, Lester Miler; Reci- tation, Ruth Heisey; Recitation, “A Little Tot,” Fern Stehman; Recita- | tion, “The Maiden,” Victor Brooks; | Exercise, Naomi Dellinger, Dorothy Smith, Ruth Smith, Clair Dunk, Anna Hamilton, Dorothy Henry, ”» | New Store Drop In At CHAS. A. West Main Street Formerly Rickrode's BO WI DOOO000000 With a Fine Line of Groceries, Nations, Etc. tation, The Polite Little Boy, Russel Miller; Play, God’s Flowerland. ret) Cer ee NY ININTIC FTO R 1 ICIONS N WS 1 NYT ‘al iD ("HE { U 1h LELUILELE PERTAINING TO ALL THE NEWS CHURCHES IN MOUNT JOY Al THE ENTIRE SURROUNDING COM- MUNITY The churches have taken the fol- lowing action regarding Chautauqua and Prayer services. Presbyterian Services discontinued Methodist Services postponed to Friday evening. Evangelical Services will be held on Wednesday evening but will be- - 'gin earlier 7 p. m. and close at 7:50. will be 7:15 and United Brethren Services held Wednesday evening se early. Trinity Lutheran Church Rev. Geo. A Kercher, Pastor Sunday School 9:30 A. M. Morning Service 10:45 A. Evening Service 7 P. M M Reformed Church Rev. Christ S. Nolt, Pastor There will be services in the Re- on West Main street next Sunday morning at 9:45. Florin U. B. Church Rev. M. H Miller, Pastor Sunday School 9:30 Communion 10:30. Junior C. E. 5:15. Senior C. E. 6:15. Sermon 7:15. Church of God Rev. I. A. MacDannald, D. D., Pastor Sabbath School 9:30 A. M. Preaching 10:30. Junior Endeavor 6:15 P. M. Senior Endeavor 7 P. M. Preaching 8 P. M. Methodist Episcopal Church Rev. Michael Farry Davis, Pastor 9:15 Sunday School. 10:30 Preaching Service. “Give ye them to eat.” 6:30 Epworth League, Topic. The results of our words and deeds. Gal.6:7-10. Leader, E. W. Garber. 7:30 Preaching Service, Sermon, “I am the door.” Sermon, T. U. Evangelical Church Rev. G. R. Mergenthaler, Pastor Prayer service Wednesday evening 7:30. S. S. Sunday morning 9:30. Preaching Sunday morning 10:30 Prayer service Sunday evening 6:45. Preaching Sunday evening at 7:30. Choir Practice Friday evening at 8:00. Come to these welcome. services you are Now Open Any Fim: WEALAND MOUNT JOY, PA. DOOOO0O0S00000000000OOO0