The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, February 02, 1921, Image 9

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    Pr
ye com-
at one
as often
ent circu-
And now
with the
ept rides
hlobiles d\gl#o at their
jury. ANd so they
Of Miss Annie Camp.
old, against Isaac
her a “life” on her
ork. The machine
er auto and Miss
rely bruised. Mr.
1thy business man,
he might pay dam-
the unsympathetic
venturing,
in it, and you'll
a
ne.
by i
lawyéd
bland
rls whd
there's
belmont is going
long, planning it
P rest of her life
jc Mrs. “Ollie,”
| Fifth avenue, in front of the Waldorf
| Hotel, to the point of needing police
interference, it seems like pretty
| childlike city. Out jumped the pup-
| pies; and the crowd that gathered to
| gaze at them and play with them was
so disturbing that poor Joseph Poz-
zari, whose peddling property they
were, had to pay $5 fine.
a
What will happen, I wondef, when
Fred Stone starts out on an uptown
walk some day pretty soon? For Fred
is the proud owner of two Buffalo
calves which he has bought from Cen-
tral Park zoo, and although they are
now safely parked at his Long Island
home, somehow anyone who knows
Fred looks for an interesting parade
along Broadway before long. He says
they are to be broken to harness and
trained to an active career.
Sanford White's one time home at
9 Gramarcy park, has been made into
the home of the International
tute conducted by foreign women of
the Y. W. C. A. The treasure house,
insti:
Business Success |
of Past Gives |
Strength for |
Future
By B. C.FORBES
Amid the depression, turmoil and
pessimism and complaining and fore-
boding so prevalent today, perhaps it
wholesome to a few
moments reflecting upon some of
the America and American
business men have for genuine thanks-
wlil be devote
to
causes
giving.
Peace reigns.
The nation is enjoying
health, the year having been free from
excellent
epidemics of any nature.
The eatrth has produced most boun-
tifully, insuring an abundance of sub-
stances for man and beast.
The threatened coal famine is being
overcome,
Employment at high wages has been

for which he ransacked Europe for
plentiful throughout the greater part
ing more money than previous
time in history.
Capital becoming available in
larger volume for the launching of
new enterprises and the developing of
any
is
existing enterprises.
Interest rates are universally
to after the turn of the
ex-
pected ease
year.
Gold continues to flow into this coun-
try by the million every week.
Our exportations still outbalance our
importations by quite as geenrous a
margin as is desirable.
The upbuilding of the merchant ma-
rine fleet approaching in magnitude
that of great Britain strengthens our
ability to enter and retain a full share
of the world’s markets.
Our land transportation has under-
gone transformation through the pass-
ing of sound legislation to fortify rail-
credit and through the very
notable improvement in efficiency
efficiency since the return of the roads
roads’
to private operation.
Road building is going forward
this country as in no other country on
the face of the earth, a form of pro-
and valuable beyouna
in
desirable
Fathers and
Daughters
There is a certain kind of love
which always charms me when I see
I refer to the love
between a father and a daughter.
an example of it.
Of course mother-love is the most
powerful and the unselfish love
inthe world, but the love between
mother and her little girl is something
that We take it
granted that there is a close bond be-
most
a
for
is expected.
bond between a father and his small
daughter there is—to me at least
pealing about this comradeship.
™" A Sight i {ove to See
daughter.
the father
first hike
fishing excursion together
with a small
said
a toot
has been about
son going off for their
their first
and that, too, is a sight that evokes
tender smole of sympathy and ple
ure in their pleasure. But I like
| Mrs. Catt Deplores
tween them, but when we find a close
something infinitely touching and ap-
I love to see a father walking off on
More
and
or
just
Stand of U. S.
on the League
On the eve of sailing for Europe
Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt had no in
tention of expressing any opinion or
the international situation or Ameri
ca’s duty toward the League of Na
but the
in Geneva
tions, newspaper reports of
induced the
dent of the International Woman Suff-
rage Alliance, who is
events Presi-
going to London
for a meeting of the board of the al-
liance, and
up
to give vent to opinions
pent
within her for several months past
Mrs... Catt
what she said privately
May. At that
leader was almost heart sick at the un-
emotions which have been
has now said publicly
far back as
as
last time the suffrage
delays and eleventh hour
the thirty-sixth State
ratify the suffrage amendment, but sh
to-
gue
expected
failure of to
e
said: “The attention of America
ward its responsibilities to the Le
of Nations h
as caused me greater dis.
Methods of Produc
S
\
\
ing Late-Crop Seed
Potatoes in Cumbef
land County, N.
By WARREN w. OLEY
Cumberland probably
our-fifthg the crop pro
Iuced home-grown Thp
main variety of early potatoes grow}
from this seed ig Cobblers. Als, some!
Mills Pride and 1
from
In County
of potato is
from seed
arly Rose are grown
the late-crop seed, but relatively
Cobblers. An
this year to
See purposes,
growing the second
Crop or late-crop seed differs in el
respects from planting an early crop 3
potatoes, because of the heat
sure follow
the which
producing a
little compared with the
attempt is being made
S8row some Giants for
The process of
and dry
A
neces-
weather
of
mn
below,
to planting.
few points seem
sary Crop are given
The Ast method of is
ue y,
preparation
to land that has been
piece of
ffrage activities | rare tapestries, carving and furniture: fof the year, and even now not more | 8ress as well to see a big man with his wee
r by the cause |the house where La Farge, Sargent, | {han a normal percentage ore out of
) € ; |
s been looking | Saint Gandens, and other artists of the | work.
eyes to Paris | country gathered to talk of their art; The cost of
now that her now filled with the daughters of ling toward more comfortable levels.
uchess of Marl- [those same countries which gave its| The holshevistic spirit has died
ely divorced, it and how to live on $10 | gown and no grave fears are now felt
1 hasten across taken the stage as the
her new problem threshed out
ular there, and
make an excep- — | creasing
oman, regard- It may be just a tremendous effort | The result of
r case. So her {tion has been well received, and con-
1ld not be fidence is felt that the next adminis-
Moreover, it
secretly, that
tration will strive to safeguard and en-
o Jaques Bel-
man and old-
nderbilt fam-
ill have Paris
cain together.
pb matrimonial
r and sister
blla’s brother,
do
seems
illusionment than the delay it
the right
before sailing
left fallow until planting time. How-
ever, our farmers very often follow
cultivated
nips
consumption. daughter trotting by his side, rigged gives in
best, her tiny hand
chattering
giving her
Now
this statement even stronger whe 1 she
dt out in her women to vote a
folded in
only a small child (and never
very
m increasing i v of able-bodied j
The increasing inflow of able lie just she made crop, such onions,
The should
as possible without
turning up subsoil. It is most impor-
well-worked
living is steadily mov- his big one as as tur-
i igrants insures an adequate sup-
immigrants ins é 1 I oF Dene ir i
ply of unskilled labor to aid in tiliing
tha soil, new buildings, run-
ning our industrial plants, developing
our mines, digging our coal, manning
is a mag-
pie, I am sure) could chatter. spoke of “the cowardly manner in| plowed as deeply
idea that
more
which the great question of the League
the
have
erecting
the normal
than
may
an
a
There is
man he
a daughter, and that be
Man's philaprogenitiveness can hardly
furnishings;
has
of Nations has ben treated by tant have
’ she added. “I
uffered more agony of soul than dur- | harrowed and compacted.
all the thirty Thave wit- A hi
nessed the suffrage.” | is needed.
today the
ever
to mellow
thoroughly
son does a
on this score. wants
Labor leaders are beginning to mani-
a week
most
before the famous fireplace.
home. discussed : ) trio country 1 love, seed-bed which has been
our oil properties and improving our .
a willingness to co-operate in in-
productiveness.
the presidential elec-
fest : :
ransportation facilities. ine veara ” : : i:
tre I ‘ 6 ing years rade, quick-acting fertilizer
More is being done today than ever
into
labor’s be satisfied without a son to carry on
in struggle for Best results
“Meeting
usually come
the name. A man with several daugh- :
ters and no son is apt to feel cheated, 15 from the 1000 2000
has
continued.
in Geneva
men that
come together,” Mrs. Catt
there to find ways
assimilate
foreign-born
from
best
most
use of
the
The
in Cumberland County is
e to
fertilizer
favorable time
before to educate and
the national family the
already here and those flocking to our
to attract the tourist or it may be the
general resilience of the
at any rate, hotels and
Yaris are rapidly getting
greatest body of pounds of potato
and, whether he does or not is alws:
pitied by his neighbors. But I think
it is often true that when his family
ist-
the
result of the
French; but
hotel life in
back to normal according to Albert J.
Norton, who has arrived home
from France and from rather close in-
spection of that particular situation.
Mr. Norton, who of the
01d Colony Club of this country, estab- |
lished new quarters of the club in
Paris while he was there, thereby giv-
ing the organization a scope of 6000
west. From San
one of
as
obtainable
shores. “They are and | for planting
Greed for inordinate gain, exhibited
both by profiteers
courage prosperity.
The belief that
| United States will find some way of [all too flagrantly
with other nations to discour- {and by certain classes of workers, is
international
means to end barbarism and build up | the very last of July and the first ten
days of August.
the
is growing the
is growing the ex
pride has been satisfied by
iC is,
daughter in whom he really takes the
civilization. I'here are forty odd na We usually recom-
the tenth
just :
J | ence of a son nevertheless, : :
tions represented and ours is the only from the
August.
mend first to
uniting
war
eligible nation in the world that is left
cannot
It is
has
on the wane. =
The interdependence of employes
fully under-
than
to
: ‘omote
and pron keener pleasure.
out. For this situation you
In preparing for
may be
This
in planting
In the latter case the seed should not
be cut any faster than the planting is
all cut should
used up the day it
As it intended that these
potatoes should and the
early potatoes the

president :
I than one who is
reasonably firm his but ab-
{ solutely spoils a small daughter, who
is v 1V
harmony. I know more man
Europe continues to make progress
and stability,
more blame any particular person. seed
that
President-elect
steadily becoming for surly potatoss tn
stood, and more measures ; : ays :
being instituted
friendly
with sons
ever statesmanship
broken When
Harding does mobolize his own mind
American vance, must not be practical,
toward rehabilitation
"and the spirit manifested at the first
(historic) session of the League of Na-
Tyee
fore are draw ,
before ai down. however, late-crop seed.
both
operative,
i can wind him around her finger.
on CO- |
or has been truly
together a
satisfactory bs
for producing the ne- |
and the luxu-
sed phenome-
sides
“helar :
achelor, 1 Any man who is : : :
about the question it won't make much
difference, will be con-
fronted with many different opinions.”
“I A League of Nations that
patriotic Americans to
the League of Nations,”
ions is full of promise. ifn 4
tions is full of pr wife is sure to be
Falling costs stimulate that
the scarcity of homes will shortly be-
gin to be of su-
preme social, moral and economis im-
miles from east to i i i i
miles frc in live with his
Francisco to Paris,
the club can go into practically any
good sized city and find a hotel which
serves as local quarters of the ciub.
rpose
~ capacity Of y > 3
Our capacity because he carried on, and seed
cessaries, the
life
now, any hopes . : 3 : 3 P
’ I fascinated by this tiny replica of the
charm in her that has him.
{ And the fact that this
| is modified by the addition of some of
romforts p i
com preferably be is
ensnared
rehearsed remedied—a matter ries of has increa j : is not , is n
rehearsed at remedi¢ reincarnation cut. is not
But it will
allv are ocoine
nally. are going mature as
in the
another Hip-
1ink, ever to
large enough
Just hun-
cu
hing.
are in the east!
proper-
on
pensive
hs evidently
scoesque buying
hished the play.
appealed to him
he Pan-American
written in
om
¢ right on
b Yellow Trading Stamp With Every 1c Purchase All Day
ped-
reserva-
and
This means he can have his
tions made, his tickets bought,
every other sort of club service at his
disposal. Plans are to make the club
world-wide in its scope.
“Won't you sit down in this chair,
Willie?” sag ind lady who lived
next dog
11.
to you, ma’am,”
come
a shadow

Es innocent
in a chair with
ya's collar but-
found
and he
“I’m bette fly. as he
tried to break away fre ny: Daman
CI
Sev
HATS TRIMMED FREE OF CHARGE
fellow who had
of
little |
portance.
| Goods and commodities of all kinds
are in abundance, and the power of the
people to obtain them is increasing
| through the lowering of prices.
Despite the drastic declines in
| euritios and the curtailment of busi-
ness, there have been no serious finan-
cial failures and very few commercial
| failures of magnitude.
The financial community
looks for-
ward to good times next year.
Business no longer is being con-
ducted on grossly artificial levels, but
is rapidly approaching solid ground.
[ Our banking withstood
|
| bot™ tha shoe
transition (0 praee
| The American people are now sav-
America’s power and place
world have risen beyond parallel in
history.
Practical, comprehensive steps are
being taken by our financial commun-
financial succor to
crippled nations of Eu
rope, and the of our
international responsibilities begotten
ity to extend
temporarily
broader sense
by the world war justifies the general
faith that Americans will
throw off some of their provincialism
attrac
hereafter
and become investors wherever
tive opportunities arise in any part of
the world.
Our
ties are educating unprecedented nun
and young
schools, colleges and universi
bers of children, voung men
n, and the amount
being devoted to education far ex
of money
| wome
now
ceeds the record of any previous year.
millions contributed


| Filbert |
Seventh


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\
TER
Christmas
EE
e and note the fidelity with which they
VICTROLAS

, $1 a Month
Lit Brothers—Fifth Floor
dn
maica ginger that
The millions and
institutions of
the
voluntarily to our
higher learning during last year
or two have evoked the admiration and
the envy of other nations.
Religious animosity is giving place
to religious tolerance and even co-oper-
ation, and, although certain compre
hensive plans to bring about interde-
nominational unity have suffered set-
backs, the trend clearly is in the right
direction.
Although much
“moral slump” having
war, our farewell offerings to the Red
Cross and other philanthropic agencies
have been in volume that mil-
lions children Europe are be-
ing thereby kept alive. And there are
not wanting signs that
great wealth are learning and acting
upon the profound truth that “it
more blessed to give than to receive.”
been said of
followed
has a
the
such
of in
more men of
is
In short, in no other land are the
people of all ranks so well fed, so well
clothed, so well housed, so well em-
ployed, so well blessed
with religious facilities and freedom,
and so able to extend a helping hand
to others, as in this land of ours, so
abundantly favored by merciful
Providence.
Let therefore, face whatever
hardships confront us with strength,
fortitude and faith.—Public Ledger.
All Right, So Far
educated, so
a
us,

Father was hanging pictures, and
little Tommy was watching him. Pres-
ently the small boy sought his mother
in the kitchen.
“Oh, mother,” he
after the cat had stopped playing with
him, “did you hear the step-ladder
when it tumbled in parlor
just now?”
“No, dear,” replied mother.
father didn’t fall, too?”
“Not yet,” was the youngster’s an-
swer. “He's still clinging to the gas
bracket.”
3 asked presently,
over the
“I hope
Steward—“Did you ring, sir
Traveler—“Yes, steward, I—I rang.”
Steward—“Anything I can bring you

sir?”
Traveler—“Y-yes, Bub-
bring me a continent, if you have one,
an island—anything, steward, so
g as it’s solid. If you can’, sink
the ship.”
steward.
or
=
E
3
=
Simpson (sternly)—“Freddie, where
are those green apples gone that were
down the cellar?”
“Freddie—“They are with the Ja-
ras in the closet.”
the |
his own qualities, and thus, perhaps
sympathize
made ea * for him to
with and understand—put more
harmony with him, as it were
final touch of perfection.
I was thinking, when I began
write especially of the relationship be-
i tween the father and the wee
but it is equally beautiful to see
between them
small
grows into a big daughter.
A Bulwark for a Girl
proudly bes
ha al
to contemplate, but 1
father
de
companionship
and develop when a
A mother walking
tall
loved
son is a picture we
companion-piece—the
with pride over a lovely
appaling.
1
il
for a
and more common.
with
anything else
would rather play tennis
father than almost
loved game has grown a deep
ty
think
would
two. Do you any
system
chaperonage prove a
bulwark to girl’s happiness
such a relationship with its inevitable
calling forth the
pride and love? 1 doubt it.
a
wish
Lord Bryce Pictures
World at the Brink
Boston—Lord Bryce, formerly Brit
ish ambassador to the T
the
into
nited
pictured world at abyss
which war
letter
calamity
plunged it” in a to the
Society made public recently.
American and English people
are especially called to try
the world from the danger.
that America’s influence is pi d
od
“she is impartial, raise
cause
this distracted Europe.”
to
atten
Lord Bryson wrote
gret at his inability to
expre
the
ich
nual meeting of the society, whi
year celebrated the tercentenary
the landing of the Pilgrims.
landed in weather on bleal
Plymouth
principles of ordered
which
and
wintry
coast planted among
those freed
and self government have
spread from ocean to ocean
come a beacon light to the
two worlds,” he wrote
their
the
witness to
faith
history is a
The common of
sent their peoples and make

into which war has plunged it.
ica can exert, not only because
raised above the jealousies and
bitions that vex this
rope. In the cordial
these two peoples, animated by
same high traditions, lies the
distracted
co-operation

hope for the futpee peace of
world.”
*
into
is the
to
daughter
the
grow
daughter
i
ae a
stand for, it is
rted Mrs. Catt, *
have to go in with special reservations,
‘even though we
because we are too cowardly to go in
other nations have
as the forty-one
gone in
Mrs. advises all those who
voted Harding, because
thought he would the
of Nations, to write him and tell him
and she advises that all those who
thought
he was more ready the
league than Mr. Harding, also to write
Catt
for they
go into League
So,
voted for Cox, because they
to into
£0


‘Marines Sick and |
yirls go in more for athletics and
the outdoor things I think this
comradeship is going to become more
I know a girl who
her
in
the world, and out of that mutually-
and
understanding friendship between the
Ol
greater
than
to justify his
of Calamity’s Abyss
States,
Of
has
(Colonial
The
5, he said
» added
be
ahove
to Mr. Harding and tell him that.
vines do not attain large size, the seed
pieces are dropped closer in the row
than in the case of the early-planted
potatoes; also the seed potato is plant-
ed deeper than early in the spring be-
cause the oil is often very dry.
Soon after planting and again just
as the young plants are beginning to
appear above ground, the field shoulil
be vith the teeth of tf:
harrow backward. A weceder
en Fre-
cultivation for
harrowed,
inclined
is oft used for this purpose.
quent is necessary
large production.
It the the grower of
to have
intention of
is


FEN
[ired of Their |
Jobs in Hot Haiti|
Port-au-Prince, Haiti.—There ig
fact that
on occupation
the
to go home or somewhere else.
hard life
into mountain
no
doubt of the many of the
1300 marines duty in
Haiti are sick of job. They want
It
for youngsters who are sent
in the North
along peaks as high as Denver. Often
they are away from post for weeks,
is a
regions
1 they declare they undergo many
the least of which
lack of ice in clomate where it is ab-
ane
hardships, not is
solutely essential.
Since the first session of the naval
board of inquiry at Washington (he
marines have been hearing {rom home
p tak-
anxious to know if they are
part in “indiseriminite killin
That charge, first made by Major Gen-
eral Barnett,
mandant of the marine corps, and then
George formerly com-
corrected by him, has gone everywhere
the
overtaken
marines assert, declaring first
statement has never been
by the correction.
This week’s steamship brought hun-
of letters all seeking the truth
about conditions. The
tend that they are on rough duty and
then held up rough
men with the gun.
Major General Neville, a memb
pected
dreds
marines con
are at home as
er of
the naval board of inquiry
part of the fighting plant
found things to comms
every here
and de


“The little band of humble men who
be-
nations of
“Your whole
powers.
American
and English peoples in those principles
1 speak of peoples not governments,
for governments sometimes misrepre-
them mis-
judged—the common devotion of these
peoples to the same ideals of justice
and liberty as the foundation of peace,
mark time out as specially called to
stand side by side in trying to rescue
the world from the abyss of calamity
“Everything depends on their friend-
ship, and we prize the influence Amer-
she
is strong, but because she is impartial,
am-
Eu-
of
the
best
it was not prope
he found,
to hospital facilitie
X-r¢
naval
clared
This, was par
as
machine on the
cha
adequate
an iy
doctors in
provide
Haiti is not a
is much disease
General Neville inspected
bits of
cannot
}
the sick.
und there
built of boards fi
LO Keep out
Field
There was no wa,
ucture
boxes.
in such a s
'e i use generally
the
kitchens
“Put
a WwW
“If
years we
requisition immediately
outfit,” the
we are to be here ten or
least
in a
for cooking said
general.
fifteen might at have
accommodations.”
commander
effort
mairnes
proper
The
staff have every
liquor away the
with almost every shop selling i
task is difficult. Haiti’s principal na
tive drink is rum. It
Marines who have tested
powerful enough to run a
brigade and his
made to keep
from but |
thing
it
is a wild
it say is
motorcycle.
goat tackl the can of
When the
dynamite, you ought to have seen the
butter fly!
Over 2,000,000 children, between the
mous
late-planted potatoes f 1
he plant when frost
th nes Whe this
kills
it Ry time 1
3 per acre i
oil happens
fr
ighth i con-
idered a rms; op. Two hundred
Ss an extra good crop,
circums-
are
and fifty bask
but
stances
favorable
400-basket
under very
300 and crops
grown.
Nearly all of
raise their own seed in this way. Many
our potato growers
acreage
for
of them would increase their
and have good home-grown seed
sale, but in the past there has not been
demand. As the home-grown
more extensively bought
demand
to in-
a great
seed is and
used, its value will create a
which
crease their acreage.
will cause our growers
Charges She Threw
Dishes With Speed
of Cicotte
dishes
the dexterity and speed of
Chicago—*“She threw with
an Alex-
ander or Ed. Cicotte.”
So avers Ben Beiderman, president
of the Metropolitan Custom Garment
tion, who filed
suit for divorce
Mrs.
Her husband, she says,
of at 10
But Beiderman tells a different story.
“Her :
tion,” the husband's bill relates
a cross bill to
in the
Jeiderman char
Corpor.
cir-
ged
his wife's
cuit
desertion.
court.
an income least
aweekx,
conduct caused our se]
Im-
mediately after our marriage she sat
out on a course of cruelty. She ot
Czar, c
of frightful-
children
of
an Amazonian
terrible
making
herself as m
ducting a reign
the
slaves
ness and help-
and honest her govern
ment.”
Left
Pa Strong in spirit, however
in 24
Pennsylvania
Only a Few
York, x
feeble
104th Infantry,
wrote its name in history
body, veterans of the
which
at Antietam,
and Chancelloryville,
thirty-third annual
union in York, Pa last week. The lit-
tle band the most able
bodied of the 124 survivors of the fa-
regiment. Their meeting
held on the fifty-eighth anniversary of
the battle of Antietam.
Mayor E. S. Hugentugler delivered
the address of welcome, which was re-
sponded to by J. C. McCurdy, of Ard-
more. Officers elected are: President,
John R. Maxwell, Shiremanstown:
treasurer, A. L. Fink, Carlisle: secre-
tary, J. E. Hemminger, Carlisle; chap-
lain, J. Gilbert Leber, York.
Fredericksburg
assembled in re-
represented
was
Though the ship's cook may bgast



ages of ten and sixteen work in the

United States.
iis ability to prepare a good meal’ he
kenerally makes a “mess” of it.
h
”