The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, September 07, 1921, Image 4

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S. A

Wednesday, September , 1921,














 




 

































































AND WHAT
DO YA THINK!
aa
’ /!
i
we If
than y™
thous/
5 TIE femme er
1







"the 3,000 acres of hemp being grown |
in Kentucky. The improvement was {rows for seed, but the
obtained through careful
each year. Every plant in the selec-
HEIGHT OF vp DOUBLED
IMPROVED FIBER RESULTS
Developing hemp stalks from less
than 6 feet’ to more than 14 feet in
height, and at the same time more
than doubling the internode spaces—
length of uninterrupted fiber be-
kept. Each succeeding crop is
orown from seed of the best in-
dividual plants of the preceding year.
Festival in the Park
jand those having longer internode | Association.
breeding work at the Arlington ex-
perimental farm. The improved seed spaces are much preferred. The sizes eat will be served.
was used this year for a portion of of stalk mentioned are obtained only in attendance.
AN
EI
Lc aaoou 10
LJ

gin
Dodge Btothers Motor Car is built
for long life and endurance.

TI TO UO
i
|
i
The fine enamel finish, for instance,
is practically indestructible, and sel-
dom require8 more than a good
cleaning and polishing to restore its
original lustre.



TTT TOI
The gasoline consumption is unusually low.
The tire mileage is unusually high.


3 Ein
Ind. Phone 815
Bell Phone 15
P. Franck Schock
Mount Joy, Pa.
Tho
In

TC TO I A AT 0

ra
TIO

LIL

fh Hf
a a i
5 |
- IE i







®
: :
:
Q
3 8
3 §
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> oF io)
in hemp cultivated in drills or check-
relative in-
selection [crease in size of field hemp sown
|broadeast for fiber production with
tion plant is measured and a record [the improved seed is about the same.
cen tl A A ———
A festival will be held in the Park
gween joints—was an accomplish-| Hemp plants produce continuous |on Saturday, September 17th under
ment of the _ United States Depart-|fibers from base to apex, but some, the auspices of the Boy Scouts and
ment of Agriculture in six years|fibers stop or turn off at each node, Camp Fire Girls Recreation Grounds
Many good things to
A band will be
tf
 






MADE FROM DISCARDED TIRE
Swing That Will Be Decidedly Popu-
lar With the Younger Mem.
bers of the Family.
We all remember the swing hung
from a gnarled apple-tree out on the
farm where we spent our earliest
summers. A modern equivalent of the
old-time swing is made from an old
discarded automobile tire provided it
is not in too bad a condition.
The tire forms a more comfortable
seat than the narrow board of our










Boys and Girls Will Get a Lot of Fun |
| Out of a Tire Swing. |
|
parly experiences and the young rider |
aan cling comfortably to the rounded
sides.
Suspending the tire from a single |
SAGE FOUR ie ~-p = THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER CUUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA, U.
LITTLE JULIUS SNEEZER . - - RY BAKER
| vk ECHR TM YA SEZZ 17 DERS A GOOD MANY|[ | WELL FOR BEIN'A oN |[ (No-o0-0-0P!
{2 cap wi! er [vies Tac —| |cooo cov Mavs | ON B TRAIN!
Hossler’s School
An Old Landmark
(Contiuned from page 1)
Reiff’s school, near Back Run.
The old schoolhouse, is pretty
! much the same condition as it appears
now, was occupied for a period of
| three years by the late Benjamin
| Michey a Civil War veteran who oc-
cupied it with his wife and seven
|
Los Angeles Man Has Fashioned a R
MODELS SABER-TOOTH TIGER

production of Most Terrible Pre- |
historic Beast.
Gone from the earth before the cone
tract was let for the Pyramids, the fe-
rocious and all-devouring saber-toothed wife lives happy and in senming con-
tiger that ruled the animal kingdom tentment notwithstanding his affic-
200,000 years ago has no secrets from tion.
the scientists of today, and a Los An- has an excellent memory and when!
geles man even has gone SO far as to
sculpture In concrete what he consid-
ers to be a perfect reproduction of neighborhood
the terrible monster with the sabered
mouth,
The sclentist, Willlam Spalding,
has the sculptured piece in the work- around him and whose
shop at his residence.
dent of the Southern California Acad-
emy of Science for four terms, and In frame building which they pass every
that capacity he had occasion to learn day.
He was presi-
| as much about the saber-toothed tiger |
| as men of today are permitted to
know, i
He was Instrumental in opening the
famous fossil beds at Brea, where the
remains of the tigers were found in
good enough preservation to recon-
struct the skeletons.
From the relics of the skeletons,
uncovered in the Brea pits, he las con-
cluded that the tigers of 200,000 years
ago were similar In size to the Bengals
of
them
the
I enemy could be safe, {
essentially from
feature—
which no
today,
in their
long saber
differing
outstanding
teeth from
With the skeleton remains of the
tigers sufficiently reproduced to out-
line the forms and physical character-
istics of the tigers, Mr. Spalding found
|
{
rope permits of a variety of gym- | little difficulty in making a likeness
| nastics the rotating motion being very | of the animal. In his art work he has
| reproduced the skeleton proportions |
Leon Adelman in Popular Science | and added the external characteris- |
| Monthly. tics of the cat family, whereby he be- |

Too Much for Him,
Little Willie, after flattening his
nose against the outside of the baker's
: window for about half an hour, at
| 1ast entered with his mind evidently
made up.
“I want to know,” he said in a de-
| yet hopeful voice, “how
| much those wedding cakes are?’ {
answered the enterprising
“Well,”
| proprietor, “I have them at all prices. |
do
|
|
|
|
|
| popular with the small boy and girl—
i
|
|
|
| .
| termined
{ Tell your mother that I can
{ a beauty for $20. The cheapest is
{ $10.”
Willle sighed.
“Ah, well.” he murmured, in a re-
| signed voice, “let's have one of those
one-cent gingerbread rabbits.”
| 10 PROTECT SACRED SNUFI

Reason Given for the High Bench B
hind Which Supreme Court Judges
Have Their Seats


The Federal Supreme cou Ss
| brating its cent y of ‘the i
bench.” Originally the justices
behind a long bench on the floor of





| court—on a level with the lawl
| who tried their cases before het
| This straight desk had set into It
| snuff box opposite each justice's s
{ Henry Clay wa ng a case bef
| the court. Dur pause in his ar
| ment one of ti ices reached
| ward, took a | 1 of snuff and setti
ack to weigh the more carefully tl |
| easoning presented, In his ne
» Mr. Clay reached over and witl

paus
| a “Thank you” took a pinch himsel
Il want. That after
| The court was indi
ide what could be |
|

oon they met to de
ot a

lone to preclude the
| second breach of the “et
3 . e
quette of 1








 
 

9000000000000000000000000000C00000000C30
Substantial Reductions In
T-% Ford Cars
Chassis Plain ....... $295
Chassis Str... $365
Chassis Pl. & Dem... .$320
Chassis Str. & Dem.....$390
Touring Pl. & Dem. $380
Touring Str. & Dem. $450
Sedan................... $660
Coupe.......... $595
2 Runabout Plain. .. $325] Truck. ....................
Runabout Str... $395! Tractor...
We would be pleased to take your order of one or two Ford Cars.
in a position to make prompt delivery.
Garber’s Garage
833--845 S. Market St., ELIZABETHTOWN, PA.
Bell Phone 77 Ind. Phone 605A ;
mew HMOOOOOODOOCONN INF NNN


 

 

 


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RAFAT AMI ANA OOOOLOD
We are



OOOO00000
COEO00000000000000000000000000000000000F | Lractitiiner cond td
Mes
he Following are the new prices f. o. b. Detroit, effective
Lan September 2nd, 1921.
bv Touring Plain. ..... $355] Runabout Pl. & Dem. $350
*% Touring Str.,...... .$425| Runabout Str.& Dem. $420






ourt” and decided to have a beng!
| made of such hei that no me
h their pet snul


{ Since then they have sat behind t
h bench that is in use today. -Ne


York Tribune.
Land and Water Ship.
The hippopotamus is now rivaled by
| an amphibious tank that travels equal- |
ly well by land and water. It is a |
| tank only in the sense that it origi-
nated in the fighting tanks of the war,
for it is, as a matter of fact, a pas-
| senger vehicle. When ashore, it trav-
ols on endless tread wheels, and 100ks
motorbus; when afloat, it is
Jed and acts like a launch. It |
invention of a Frenchman, and
v tested, carrying six pas-
Marseilles, the great Medi-
port. The French Zot
lifficulty of giving it an
appropriate appellation by calling It
ind water ship.—Popttar Me-

0000000
like a
one

Japanese Judicial Regalia.
Speaking of that worn by
ne first judge of the Japanese Su-
preme court is a work of art and as
heavy with embroidery as the vest-
ments of the padres of the little San
German church in Portd Rico. "The
color is black and the texture fine.
Around the neck is a collar, woven
into the gown itself and not worn sep-
| arately, as is the collar of the chief
justice of England. The color of the
embroidery of this collar is royal pur-
ple, and is called the ‘crest of the’
seven flowers of ponlownia.” The
cap, something after the order of the
very smart sport hats worn by the
American women, is also black, with
a design of “clustered clouds” around
the top and sides.—New York Trhune
BR -g
Read the Bulletin.
robes,
















| suitable for repeated
| feelin
HERD CARMK TN BI
| HERE FARNID io
lieves a perfect copy has been accom-
plished of the fire-eyed feline demon |
that roamed supreme in the days be-
fore man was.—Los Angeles Express.
DOES AWAY WITH ALL PAIN
Remarkable Anesthetic May Soon Be
Employed in Delicate Dental
Surgical Operations.


A coal-tar chemical for the elimina-
| tion of all pain in dental surgical op-
simple of application and |
universal
erations,
and
use in oral surgery, according to the
Selentific American, Is announced by |
Dr. Klein of New York
city.
This new chemical is liquid in form,
A.
Joseph
is applied on a pellet of cotton to the |
| gum or mucous membrane surrounding
the tooth to be anesthetized or into |
| a cavity prior to excavation where & |
| tooth is to he filled or treated.
produces complete local anesthesia in
from two to eight
inates all feeling for from one to six
{ hours.
Doctor Klein has extracted
and pulps painlessly by the use of this
chemical.
so it may be applied with perfect safe-
ty, regardless of the patient's age or
general physical condition, and it is
| particularly valuable as an anesthetic
| In the extraction of children’s teeth.
It leaves no disagreeable after-effect, |
but because of its long period of ac-
tivity gives the nervous system ample
time to recover from the shock of op-
| eration before the nerves in the area | «
of the operation regain their normal
» or activity.









Ji
Comparatively New Branct f Hort
culture Is Becoming opular
n d
1 0 foubt 1 ( tlc
{ ( Ol
( n the dor f
od: the " mi 1
v., London Tit-Bits state
from having been used ad
medieval th fell it i
repute, and in modern times herbal
reed apart from drugs hic
could be numbered ou the Mngers
one hand, were tabooed, save ba
enlightened few.
Herb farming is a new branch ©
horticulture, writes R. Horwood
F, L. 8, in the Hom th
It is an interesting and intel!
pursuit specially suited for women
Before the war there were nuinero
herb farms run on cominel
by firms of manufacturing cher
But there were nn schools for ft!
training of amateurs. Since the war,
however, a school and herb iarn |

been started at Caalfont St. el
Buckinghamshire, by Mrs. M. Grieve
FR HS
One of the main objects of herb
tarming is to cultivate plants of medi
Jesides the drug plants
as belladonna,
aconite, datura
number of herbs
is known
such
clnal value,
In general use, such
henbane, fox-glove,
and so on, a vast
whose real value
in medicine, including
plants as dandelion, couch
poppy, colchicnm, barberry. chamomi!
ill, fennel thistle, valerian
and male fern.
are used
como!
oT od
grass, red
blessed
eee etl Qe

| children.
Shueman lived in the building and
jafter he left it was occupied by Geo.
{Frey, a shoemaker, who died, and
| Shueman
| mained a short time.
'little building has
is now used as a storage house by
| Mr. Becker, the owner.
‘or has been little changed,
| some changes have been made inside
{the building.
a sentimental
schoolhouse and although he is 79
eo. years old, and has been blind for the
past ten
unaided to the place and examines the
placed
| and one of the most substantial and
| best appointed in the township. The
{grounds are spacious and well suited
| to
It |
minutes and elim- |
teeth |
Its effect 1s entirely local, |
Subscribe for the Mt. Joy Bulletin |
Advertise in the Mt. Joy Bulletin. is read by many hundreds of people
Subscribe for the Mt. Joy Bulletin. each week.
Advertise in the Mt. joy Bulletin. newspaper advertising pay?
Later the peddler George
returned and re-
Since then the
been vacant and
again
The exteri-
although

Mr. Becker, the owner, cherishes
feeling for the old
years, he frequently walks
things which he has stored there.
In 1869 Mr. Becker erected the home
which he still occupies and with his
He possesses an acute mind and
visitors he delights in
of the scenes in the
when, as a child, he
attended school in the same section.
Few of the companions of his child-
hood remain and the people who live
children are
pupils at the new and modern school
nearby, know little about the little
he receives
telling them
Mr. Becker remembers when op-
position to common schools was
strong in that section and he has
lived to see a modern schoolhouse
take the place of the old building and
to know that his grandchildren and
scores of others in the same section
stitute Echoes.
er,
RELIGIOUS NEWS
IN OUR CHURCHES
NEWS PERTAINING TO ALL THE
CHURCHES IN MOUNT JOY
BORO AND THE ENTIRE
SURROUNDING COM-
MUNITY
DorgegagPresbyterian Church.
Rev.) James M. Fisher, Minister
Sabbihth Scho@ . > P- ™-

Church of God
Rev. I. JA. MacDannald, D.D., Pastor
Sabbath School 9:30 A. M.- TS
Hamaker, Supt.
Preaching 10.30 A. M.
Y.P. S.C. BE. 630P. M.
Preaching 7:30 P. M.
Mid-week Prayer Service Wednes- {
day 7:30 P. M.

First Presbyterian Church
Rev. James M. Fisher, Pastor
Sabbath School 9:30 A. M.
Divine Worship at 10.30, Sermon
Theme, River and Rocks.
Divine Worship 7:30 P. M.
The Plumb-Line.
You ann yoir friends are cordially
invited to worship with us.

Methodist Episcopal Church
Rev. Michael Farry Davis, Pastor
9:15 Sunday School.
10:30 Preaching Service, Sermon,
Sermon, “Enlighten the Eyes of the
Heart.”
6.30, Epworth League: Topic, In-
Luke 24:32. Lead-
Herbert Tyndall.
7:30 Preaching Service, Sermon,
education unheard of when he was |Sermon, “What Is That in Thy
a boy. This is probably the oldest | Hand?”
school-house that remains in the Wednesday evening, Sept. Tth,
township and one of the teachers in
the back Run district in those early
days is still living. This teacher is the
venerable Rufus W. Hipple, of New !
town, who spent a few years of his
long career of a half century or more,
as a teacher, in that section. Mr.
Becker speaks of this venerable ped-
agague as one of the best teachers
he ever knew.
The new school house shown here
was erected about ten years ago and
is known as Hossler’s, the same name
by which the building that it dis-
was called. The original
schoolhouse that was erected in 1845
has long since disappeared and the
present building is a brick structure
modern requirements. Some of
{the pupils are descendants of the pa-
|trons and pupils of the old building
{that remains as a silent reminder of
| the period when the common school





 

{system of Pennsylvania was un-
known. >
a > Bp
| What He Wanted.
| A little Washington boy was dinit
| ant a friend's house vith his mothe
| not so very long o when charlotte
| russes in paper collars were one of
| ihie features of the dessert. The fluffy
| delicacies tasted very much like
[ “more” to the hungry little ch
| Is there anything else you'll have
| Joar?” asked the hostess, solicitously
| “Yes, ma'am,” eagerly as ented the
mild. “I want another of then prett)
ittle Charlie Rosse
One of the noveau riche
hich Washington abounds said at a
women witl

ea the other after: with a conse
enti that really her neuritis
was getting so bad she was al her
its end: she'd tried everything ex
‘ept chiropatrick! Did any of u
uve any faith in the ministrations of

chiropatri

t all infrequent to hear
Hotel Raleigh In Washington spok-
as the “Hotel Rall-
candy place
the
en
seriously
or Huyler's
of
edge.” as
Hulyver's.
An innocent hoasts of
{ the bed of scarlet that
bloomed in her garden all through the
local" dame
“saliva”
Prayer meeting at 7.30, Subject. The
Walking on the Sea.

Trinity Lutheran Church
Rev. Geo. A. Kercher, Pastor
Bible School at 9.30 a. m.
Morning service 10.45 a. m.
Evening Service 7 P. M.
Tuesday evening, Sept. 13, Miss
Reba Hendrickson, of Middletown,
Pa., who will shortly be commission=-
ed as a missionary to Japan, will be
the guest of the Women’s Missionary
Society and will speak about her
work in that part of the Mission
field. Miss Hendrickson received her
training at the Baltimore Deacon-
ness House and will have an interest-
ing message. All members and
friends of missions are urged to at-
tend.
—
YOUNG FOLKS ARE
JOINED IN WEDLOCK
NUMBER OF VERY WELL KNOWN
YOUNG FOLKS ARE JOINED
IN THE HOLY BONDS OF
MATRIMONY.

Jackson--Washington.
Sybilla Gantz Jackson and Charles
Washington, colored, both of this
place, were married at Lebanon on
Thursday by Rev. Morton. They will
reside here.
Fauman—Irvin
Fauman, of
M
Frank
Mrs. Milton of Rapho
township, and Miss Alma Irvin, dau-
ohter of Mr. and Mrs. Elam Irvin, of
Penn township, were married Thurs-
day evening at East Petersburg by
Rev. H. S. Hottenstein. The couple
were unattended. A reception was
held in their honor at the home of
the bride on Sunday.
Ginder—Shelly
Irvine Ginder, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Simon Ginder, of Rapho township,
and Miss Minnie May Shelly, daugh-
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Shelly,
of Chicques Church, were married
Thursday at the home of Harry Heis-
ey, Rheems. The ceremony was per-
Mr. and
son

n

Fauman,


autumn.—Washington Star,
ers Use New Method,

An original touch in forgery Is re
| ported by the Paris corre-
| spondent of the London Daily Mail
| Making forced notes dirty in order
that they might look real is said to
have been the method adopted by four
! men who ha just been arr dl t
| Limoges on a charge of counterfeit
the brown one-franc notes
(nominally 10d.) which are in circu
| lation in Paris owing to the shortage
small

of silver ones.
| After printing oft bundles of notes
| of a face value of £7,000, the men, it
{ is stated, buried .them in the ground
for a fortnight. The notes then had a
| crumpled and dirty appearance as if
| they had been a long time in use,
and were readily accepted. In some
| cages the forged notes were accepted
| fn bundles of H0 at local banks,
Whistle Easy to Play.
| “So simple that even a child can
| use it” is a phrase commonly seen and
| heard these days, and which is ap-
| plied with ease to a new whistle in
strument, described with illustration
in Popular Mechanics Magazine, BY
pulling and pushing a lever attached
on’the inside of its barrel to a small
the tones of the whistle are
caused to change. This lever termi-
nates on the outside in a triangular
shaped fnger-piece running through a
slotted plate. Markings representative
of musical tones appear on the plate
{ and as the triangular lever moves inte
place Lefore tl markings, a
spondingly pitched musical tone issues
| from the whistie.
i
piston,
corre


ret rer
An advertisement in these columns
shouldn’t
tf
Then why
formed by Rev. John Brinser, pastor
| of Zion’s Children’s Church. The
{ bride was attended by Miss Katie Bri-
| mer, of Mt. Joy township, as brides-
{ maid, and the best man was David
couple left on a wedding trip to
Philadelphia.
|
| ee ett Gl
|
{ “DEADHEADS” MUST GIVE
SEATS TO PAY PASSENGERS



{
[If you happen to hold a pass from
| the Pennsylvania Railroad Company,
in which case you must be an em-
ploye, you need not feel too badly
about it if the conductor, seeing pay
passengers standing, hand you a
small card, signed by the division
superintendent, bearing this notice:
“PAY PASSENGERS
ARE STANDING”
It, therefor, seems appropriate
to remind the holders of passes
of their duty to refrain from oc-
cupying seats when pay passen-
gers are standing.
Every conductor is provided |with
a supply of these cards, and [their
ressment to him and to pass holders.
The object is to provide passgngers
who pay to be provided with|seats
whenever possible.
EE
Who Wants This Chance|?
I have a 1l14-acre farm| neat
Sunnyside, 10 acres of meadow, sand
land, 2 frame houses, big barnj, tobae-
co shed and cellar. Price $118.00











per acre. Act quick if you can use
jt. Call, phone or write (Jno. E.
Schroll, Realtor. Mt. Jev wf.
or emta— i
Who Wants 0 arm
1 have for sale an 86 acre farm in
West Donegal township, th is, be-
yond a dobut, the best fa of ita
size 1 have ever offered. I )estone
land excellent producer, gdbod build-
ings, excellent location. Mu#st be seen
to be appreciated. J. E. 8 roll, Mt.