WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 11, 1922 ELIZABETHTOWN |[0CAL DOINGS mtapive, spent Sunder wi wo] AROUND FLORIN .. tives in the borough. Mrs. Ralph Meckley, of Atlantic | City, - were guests of Mrs. Emma| ay; THE UP-TO-DATE HAPPEN. INGS FROM THAT THRIVING CEE AND. BUSY VilLace ’ I Mr. and Mrs. Levi Sheetz are here he Better on a visit to relatives and friends. i Mr. and Mrs. George Vogle visited 3 lati t Elizabetht Tues- the Printing Ci ives a iza own on Tues , Messrs. Lloyd and Walter Nissly of your stationery the bett®!and John Stoll spent several days at Meckley, of North Market street. the impression it will creats Philadelphia. Mrs. Jacob Stokes of Lancaster, ing a week here with relatives and spent Tuesday here the guest of Mr. friends. Rd Mrs. Emlin Buller. fr. and Mrs. Charles Arndt spent spent Friday in our village the guest eral days wtih his parents, Mr. of his brother, Mr. Emlin Buller sr. and Mrs. Ephraim Arndt. The Florin Construction Company has broken ground for another double John D. C , along the trolley line. Dale Garber of Philadelphia, spent several days here with his par- and Mrs. A. D. Garber. a Mr. and Mrs. S. Nissly Gingrich ‘eral week’s visit to the former's are spending several days at Pitts- burgh, visiting friends and relatives. Mr. and Mrs, Irvin Ishler, son and’ daughter of Hummelstown were Sun- Brethren church will be continued day visitors to Mr. and Mrs. Jacob every might this week. A special in- |vitationy is extended to all to attend Mr. Henry Young has moved from these services. Mr. Daniel Stark is moving into MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER ¢€ Mr. Abram Buller of Correy, Va. and family. Mr. C. J McLaughlin, jr and Mr. arson made a business trip to the City if Brotherly Love one day last week. Mr. Jacob Zeller and daughter, Miss (Jane has returned home from a sev- daughter, Mrs. Thomas McElroy near New York. The revival services in the United Moral: Have your print. the Stark property vacated by Mr. this place to Mount Joy into the W. The Florin Home Construction Co. ing done here. (Henry Young. Mr. Michael Myers is moving his Street. ey family and household effects from Mr. Harry Grosh has returned to SSE Re ; Donegal to this place. his home at Butler. Po., after spend- DC aa a 2d ddd ded dd ddd bP 9 * 9. 0. 0. 0. 6 6 90 ho? Yt OF 00000000, 9, 9, ete Os oo silridededed 9, * 9* & & & 3 ; MR. FARMERIDO YOU KNOW THAT (5 TO 307% OF ALL ORAINS FED ALONE ARE WASTED. : NEVER FEED GRAINS ALCNE IN RATION--ALWAYS MI by WHY NOT MANUFACTURE YOUR OWN MIX & “DIXIE” > bo Cuts, grinds & mixes all roughage & grains into a fine, nutritious, appetiaiig ig, easily-digested meal No. 144 LETZ DIXIE MIXED FEED MAKER HAS 7 INTERCHANGEABLE UNITS 1. Cutter and recutter on skids. Self feed or plain feed table. Steel truck, four wheels. . NoUAWN a 9, (epee dred 9 * 0, 9 * 0 9, * 9 * 9, 004% 0 9, ® Ca 9, >, 9. 0. 0 0 0 6 * $0. 00.00.00.00.00, o te * 9, * XS $0 o*% J >, / * ) Kala ® 9, 0, * @, & po > WITH ROUGHAGE MEAL. 9, * & Ka) 9, * J * 9, & 00 o% o% oO $000 90.00.00.00, eelelodledloded $9.09, 0 * . 12-inch grinder head and crusher on skids, with hoppex, 14--inch chain carrier, any length up to 24 ft. 36--inch blower with 7--inch pipe, any lenth. 9, * 00 o%% o% o%% AOA A \/ ® . Sacker, wagon box or bin elevator, any length. H. S. NEWCOMER, Mount Joy, Pa. SPEPOPIEIPLLLPPOIIPEOETPEPENY WR) ® Yo @ % 9 Seeiiiirdeideid ded . Chandler apartments on West Main sold at private sale to Mr. Charles {L. Lawrence of Honeybrook, the East side of the double house which they recently erected along the trolley line The many friends of Master Rus- sell Miller, one of the boys injured several weeks ago in an automobile accident at the culvert at the west end of town. arrived home from the General Hospital at Lancaster greatly improved. On Saturday evening while Messrs. Darvin Loraw and Peter McGarvey were returning home with their lady friends Misses Emma Becker and An- nie McCurdy in the former’s buggy, they were struck by a Ford touring car operated by Mr. Clarence Kray- bill of Rheems. They were crossing the State Highway at Garber’s store and Mr. Kraybill was going west on State Highway. The occupants of the team were thrown out and the four wheels of the buggy were com- pletely demolished. The ladies were removed to the home of Mr. Jacob Loraw whre they were attended by Dr. W. M. Thome of Mount Joy. The young men escaped with a few slight bruises. oo... ah + To Give Timber “a Shot” The best method of applying pre- gervatives to timber is by the pressure process which is used by practically all large commercial companies, says the American Forestry Magazine of Washington. By this means the ofl or ‘mineral salt is forced deeply into the tissues of the wood, thus giving a thoroughness and permanence not otherwise attainable There are va- rious processes, but all use large and expensive apparatus by which vacuums and heavy pressure may be applied in large treating cylinders, which are usually six feet or more in diameter and a hundred feet or more in length. Much Timber Decay. It is estimated that eight billion feet of untreated structural timbers decay every year, says the American Forestry Association of Washington. If that whole amount were to be treat- ed we would actually bout four billion feet of lumber, _ That is to say, it would the annual deforestativ hundred thousand acres of land. Th could belo truer or more eff forest conservation, and every home builder who, by the use of preserva- tives, lengthens the life of his house or barn, performs an effective service to the cause of forestry. Dodge Bros. will announce on February 1st, 1922 a substantial reduction in the prices of their cars effective from January 1st, 1922. P. FRANCK SCHOCK MOUNT JOY, PA. Lutheran sary to | aged A church in 4 church, and so pital, but Europ suffer in the trans age American th home” suggests a sober hue, whose lay-sister nis most of them aged and decrepit, with white lawn streamers beneath their | chins, take their ease and spend their declining days puttering around with window boxes and bird cages. All wrong ! Webster's Unabridged fails to en- lighten him, but the National Lutheran Council, with headquarters at New York City, is spreading the definition far and wide. A deaconess home means a social welfare colony main- tained by these women church work- ers. A hospital, clinic, homes for crip- ples and the aged, schools for the | deaf and blind, a day nursery, milk station, and a social service bureau, are the institutions that usually make ap one of these welfare centers. In America there are numbers of them patterned after the models in Europe where they have existed by the thou- sand for many generations. In Euros pean cities of any size they serve the neighboring communities and have closer touch with the people than any other organization. Nobody Is as busy as these hardy, rosy-cheeked women who give their full time from morning Hl night, or from night until morning, managing and running their big plants that take care of people. Leaconess homes over there are not retreats in any sense. They are ac tive, progressive, public places. But even so they are pretty independent of the outside world. They do their own work and have their own food ! supply. The deaconesses make use of thelr varied hobbies, so there are bee specialists, poultry expérts, gar deners, da.ry farpuers, and orchardists who know al about pruning and spray ing, and keep. ng the children from pick ing green fruit. Most of them, of course, do this work during their rec- reation hour after finishing a day of nursing, teaching, sewing, or visit- ing the poor. They are very handy about the place. A carpenters’ strike would be a small matter to them be cause there Is always some demure- eyed sister who can wield an accurate hammer. This sketches the average deaconess home in Central Europe in normal times. Such times are past history to a great degree, antedating 1914. Since then war has cripplyd the work so that It Is scarcely recognizable. Their es were shelled, robbed and burn- [11 were § rd carried captive, But “those who were left kept steadily at thelr posts, and braver, harder work at reconstruction is not being done in the world. Communi- tiles are so wholly dependent upon them. Nobody else knows how to do anything in times of distress. Relief funds sent by American Lutherans have been largely dispensed through deaconesses in each town. By this simple financing they are enabled to handle the emergencies through the channels of their own regular work. Some of the welfare centers have been restored and are doing heavier work than ever before, though with depleted staffs and in bitter poverty. In the World Service Campaign that the National Lutheran Council is to conduct the last two weeks in October to raise $1,250,000 for European Re llef, deaconess homes have a large place in the budget for the coming year. From Petrograd to the South ern Tyrol, and from Cologne to Con stantinople, these colonies of mercy are to be reinforced, so that each in its own sphere can be a healing refuge to the sick, afflicted and oppressed in those war and famine-maimed lands. LONG DIVISION eet A New Problem In International Af. fairs. Ir $200.00 Is sent by courier 700 miles by rall, steamship, and horse cart, and divided among 100 pastors and their families, how much does each pastor receive? The answer depends altogether upon the geography in- volved, This time the pastors happen to be in and around Moscow, so the answer is 200,000 rubles each. Dr John A. Morehead, European Com- missioner for the National Lutheran Council that operates in 17 countries over there, met a Moscow merchant in Berlin in the 1 3 sessed one of the paper in the we the Soviets—and who offered his serv ices as confidential messenger to th Bishop of Moscow. -a passport from Dr. Morehead checked out $200.00 | and by the time the good reached Moscow, by way of Sea, through I and a cart and by foot over tance where the railroad had ru was welghed down with 4, rubles. These were the first gifts or | word from the cutside that the Lutherans had had in three years The money bought one meal a day of black bread and rice, for nearly week, for each family, with a little change left over where they were ex tremely economical, sometimes even enough to buy a candle Remarkable Recovery of Signt, Blind for ten years a Northfield Mass, man awoke one Sunday morn ing to find that he had regained his «ight during the night and could see as well as when a boy. There was no is as to how 'it happened. Colorfu A love or colors must have led Miss White of Hants county, No Scotia, to marry a Mr. te. BH after his death she married Brown. Bhe Is now engaged Mr. go dent, Law Jul and for { 253 Justice ond. Write or Sessions of thé\Peace in and for the County apply to The Great A ic & Pacifie of Lancaster, hu%e issued their precept to me directed, requiring “pe, among other things, tr Tea Company, 1308 Nort ird St., make publie procla: wick, General Jail Delivery, ¥ Rs, Quarter Sessions of theNPeace and Jail De FARM WAN THD. ~Want to hear livery, will commence in the City of Lancaster, in t Pennsylvania, ON THE THIRD MOND wn proper persons, with their rolls, cords | | i >, ud examinations, and inquisitions, and Ythei Florin, Pa. ther remembrances, to do those things §hie: o their oflices appertain in their behalf be F gaint the prisoners who are or then shall be in Moun 1 the inil of the said County of Lancafter | baker, Mount Jo ire to be then aud there to prosecute ags@ns Phen : wm nw shall be just, Dated at Lancaster, Pa., the 1§th Custom day of December, A. D. 1921. i notice” sexed ' NEMAN; lector. \ 4 NTED—A, hustler to establish Coffee Route in Mount Joy, ding territory. Attrac- proposition. Must preas, the Hon. Charles I. Landis, Presi T nd Hon. Aaron B, Hassler, Associate @ 1€a ge of the Court of Common Site in and surr gp county of Lancaster an suist- 4: : of the Courts of Oyer and Ter- [tive somumist eral Jall Delivery and Quarter be able to furni {ion throughout my ball. | Harrisburg, Pa. \ jan. 33t QOyer and Terminer and so a Court of General that a Court ol le Court House, in | f£10ny gwner of a farm for sale, give Commonwealth of lowest price. and full particulars. L. Y IN JAN- |Jones, Box 551, "®ing A Il. T 20 11-1t-pd UARY (The 16th,) §922 in persuance of which precept pute notice is ‘ & nereby given to the Mayor and ANerman of WANTED— A ( oipeten dy 3 he City of Lancaster, in said county and al Book-Keeper and Stendgrapher. Ste! > Justices of the Peace, the Cordger and 1 lovment. st) have i V 4 jonstables of the said City and C..uty $f Lan | AY employment. HY x 3 : ‘uster, that they be then and there, i} thei: | ence, Apply at E N A RENT-—Brubaker’s Ga rg ge, Apply to 4 Bru- and to all those who will pros§rut jan. i 2t Hatching done reasonable pric i - . -% | your orders J: I. C.F. HOMSHER, Sheriff. West Donegal Str 1 8 Place We 0 igen, FARMERS & TRAPPERS | “sosaiex wwe: I wish to notity my friends that I buy FURS at marRet prices and would public th: { ike to have your Business. cane Bring them to me. * St., Mt. Joy. Witmer Eberle Somme Time |? with firg | { used for mark 5 § i dition. Also a” {bell with all fixtu | Dearbeck, No. 656 Wes Mount Joy, Pa. 'mer's good sound Apply to S. NOTIC wish to inform the am prepared to put new i 1 kinds of chairs. ~ Ls Mrs. William Wa o ! WANTED a—— { ANTED—Two or thr rooms, ME r unfurnished. Avdress 52 West Doitmg Street , Mount Hh 102 East Donegal St. MOUNT JOY, PENNA Y . WriteAFor Price List o jan. 1 1-3t You will be in need of |X pe of some kind. | 7} 'hether it be letter. heads, statements wed TTS ding invitations ox [bri Joy public sale bills, re [cha member we can turn [5ppr out the work at the jus lowest cost consistent reduc with good work. jan. \ a | For B IVE Hund lars—C price for sug 1 The Ford C | ar car for fort and d is even price d Order livery.