FOUR | GET THAT LE] ER E1THER ! ou Hi . THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT 01 LANCASTER CUUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA, U. 8. A BY BAKER «| GO B= GooK INSIDE = == EATS YOUR I HATE To] IN THIS PLACE! THAT ON THIS HEAD OFF! wiLL You | PUT A STAMP WHAT Me PUT \T ON? PUT IT ON YOUR- WHAT YA THINK I WANT TO PUT | — IT ON MYSELF FORT | B Your Wold Sg io i working of your car. Diamond Grid We have been handling these Batteries for a long time and they give good satisfaction, Ratte / Repairing Ee “. i aR a To . 011% y Most remedies, in their action, are only temporary, and tend to aggravate an already dan- gerous condition of Health—in BOSAK’S HORKE VINO you will experience a rapid and sat- gre We stand hack of the guarantee. insures good health. Buy a bottle at your dealeNs today—begin to enjoy good health right away. Used . SINCE 1894. Josak Manufacturing “Co., Scranton, Pa. ! For sale by W. D. CHANDLER, W. Main St., Mount Joy, Pa. "| | | ol BE | a u » El . BW Abram Young, which is done Ki = i" nH Bw ' £ Bl ¥ om He 1 SOOOODOVVVOOOIOTHTIVVOTOV0 3 THE M. A. SHOP: MUMMA & VOGT, Proprs. Building and Repairing Radiators FOR ANY MAKES OF CARS FENDER AND BODY REPAIRING AT PRICES TO SUIT EVERYBODY O8 N. MarKet St., LANCASTER, PA. DOCOOOOO000O0000 4 CARI'S POULTRY FARM MOUNT JOY, PA. by! the E Fipein | lcookine begins. & [method a = 0UR MORTUARY attery Business The Battery is one &f the first and foremost essentials toward the If you want a good battery try a RECORDINGS, (Continued from page 1) Evangelical church. The funeral was held from the church Friday after-| noon. Interment was made at Silver Spring. Mys: Elizabeth B. Forney Mrs. Elizabeth Bollinger Forney, widow of David Forney, residing one mile north of Florin, died Thursday | mdrning, of a complication of dis- pages, aged 81 years. She is survived following David, Mastersonville; Mrs. | wuel Shearer, Mount Pleasant; Mrs. | Elizabethtown; Fla. af home. Sixteen grapdeb®iidren and | 1} great grande¥ildren also survive, allo two brothers, Martin and Joseph Hlinger, both of Lititz. She was a mber of the Church of the Bre- enn. The funeral was held in West en Tree Church. Interment was He in the adjoining cemetery. rr el HP NOT OVERCOOK EGGS TO BE GIVEN SMALL CHILD a pos are especially useful food for Pung children. The chief point to Femember in preparing them for ¥children is that they must not be bvercooked or they are likely to cause irestion, say food specialists in the d States Department of Agricul: Every one “uuws now the heat | cing hardens the egg, and it is| p understand why the digestive | might have difficulty in pene-| such hard substance as the of a hard-boiled egg. Over-| 8 yolks are also thought to be | digest. However, when eggs | ooked in the shell, the heat | p the white before it does the | d there 1s more danger of the] being overcooked than of the! he best ways of serving eggs ren are poached, soft-boiled, dled though they “may be | Wg for a change if one is care- | | ..40 scorch the fat used nor to] s==4k the egg. | jv means have been suggested | ng egos in such |B Eo. A will not a way thot r be ¢ be ne most satisf »d and the One | dd li cup-| AE oked wetory ng follows ful of water t ach egg, bring the water to the boiling point, remove it w [from the fire, put in the egos, cover] the dish closely, and leave the ecos| in the water for about sc ere is od, for egg en minutes. | some uncertainty about this | differ in weight and | temperature at the the On the whole this more time he can han others. depended on | | Good results ean be ob-| {tained by pouring hot water over| eggs, if the same dish with the same | amount of water each cook must male her etn 0 MAILS NOW AUTHORIZED FOR PLANT IMPORTATION is always used, but] own rules. Decision to allow the use of the | mails in the importation of plants and | seeds under cial permits, Reg- ulation 14, Quarantine 37, has been reached by the Federal Horticultural Board of the United States Depart- ment of Agriculture. Heretofore im- portations of plants for propagation except field, vegetable, and flower and importations made by the department, were permitted only by ‘express or freight. Importations made under special permit necessarily are addressed to the board either at Washington, D. C., or at the Ferry Building, San Fran- cisco, Calif and pass through the in- spections offices of the board at these points, where they are inspected and Safeguarded by the agents of the board. In view of this, it was be- lieved™tg be safe and desirable to ex- tend thé, privilege of importation jthrough the“mails to such shipments. Permission for using the mails in this way will hereafter be authorized on request, when warranted by the nature and amount of the proposed hipment. The importer will be obliged to provide merely for customs clear- ance either at Washington or San Francisco, in addition to obtaining the permission of the board. As hitherto, the use of the mails s not authorized for the commercial r other importation under ordinary permits of plants and seeds provided for in Regulations 3 and 15 of the {uarantine, ’ RE —— ee] Good E. Donegal Farm. If any one wants a real good East Donegal township farm, along the Donegal creek, with the best of lime- stone soil, here’s your chance. 107 acres, seven acres of which is good meadow. farm divided into six fields. new barn 48x90, 8 room brick house, summer house, shedding for 10 acres of tobacco running water at the barn and house. Buildings in exceptional shape farm is convenient to markets is an excellent producer and can be bought at $180 an acre. If interest- ed call, phone or write Jno. E. Schroll | Realter, Mount Joy. tf. seeds | | | | children: Monroe,| 5! | sionary eff AMUSING TO WOMEN TODAY What Was Considered Proper in Mid- Victorian Days Seems Some- what Ridiculous Now, mid-Victorian manners In a book written in the proper ears the state days concerning of well-bred w merit that a wo is “hardly respectal without and that the woman of thirty-five whe does not don the cap as signal of the fact of her advanced hing of a “masculine aspect.” nap with graying hair le a cap,” age has some Such statements are amusing and |Philadelphia. ometimes just a little to the annoying— peci woman of thirty-five nave ind that sleader” enough ted seldom to wea hy eighteen-yeuai-ole she is eriticized fo o then. it don’t delnde yourself into thin! ng that all women of thivty-five in mi orian donned the cap o Empress Engenie wasn't mairie mtil she was tweifty-seven, and she to be as one the most charming and beautiful wom en in Europe for many years, It is really no new thing for women of thirty-five, forty or over to retain their youthful charms and change very little their mode of dress or behavior as time goes on. Possibly our present mode of life, our athletics, our style VS Pr) Of continued regarded of clothes, tend more to the retaining ! of youthful appearance and real vouthfulness than did conditions of the Nineteenth century. OF INTEREST TO ALL IRISH In Region Adjacent to French City of Cannes St. Patrick Received Religious Training. “For true appropriateness Cannes might better be chosen for a discus sion of Irish affairs than for an at- tempt to European financial problems,” says a bulletin of the Na tional Geographic society, in regard to the French Mediterranean winter re- sort, meeting place of the allied su- preme council. “Cannes has its tle with Ireland,” the bulletin goes on to explain, “because it was in a monas- tery on one of two little islands just off the Cannes shore that St. Patrick eived the religious training which im with missionary zeal and led to his conversion of the Irish. Honorat founded, in 410, on the of the two islands which Ss name, the monastery in 'k studied. ains solve re years hi which § of the fq of learning and mis- According to a legend, the island was nfested sand . Honorat drove them out—an ex- iis follower, St. Patrick, to have put to good use in St S supposed Erin. “In spite of its many letters Cannes is properly pronounced as d single syl- lable, like the English verb ‘can,’” says the bulletin, Ask Much of Inventor. The helicopter, a of vertical flight, with which British inventors have already attained par- | tial success, has caused plans to be | made by the government for a $200, 000 competition open to the world for a further improved design. The helicopter practical and the science of flying are: its own feet under over a ground object for a half hour in a wind up to 20 miles an hour. It must be able to land safely In any wind up to 20 miles an hour without horizontal motion, and with the en- gine cut off. and must be able to main- tain horizontal flight at a height of 2,000 feet at a speed of not less than 60 miles an hour, A Lost Art With Him, Warren G. Sayre of Wabash, an at- torney and formerly a state repre- sentative, sent a letter several weeks ago to the county clerk of Boone coun- ty, asking for information concerning a divorce suit. The letter was written on plain paper in longhand and sent in a plain envelope. Finally the follow- ing letter was received from the clerk: “Dear Sir: 1 have submitted your letter to every officer of this court- house and we cannot read a word of it. We cannot even read your signa- ture, so I am cutting it and the address off your letter and pasting it on the envelope carrying this letter, hoping that the post office employees are suf- ficiently familiar with your way of writing to assure the delivery of the letter."—Indianapolls News, More Electric Lights. During 1921 the increase In residen- tial electric lighting customers in the ['nited States was 1,001,700, according, to a survey just completed of re- ports from electric light and power companies throughout the country. This brings the total number of resi- dential lighting customers up to 8,- 467,600 or more than double the num- her in 1915, when only 4,006,300 fam ilies had electric lights in their homes me conn tA Ceres Subscribe for the Mt. Joy Bulletin . | -os | It was one | ort during the Middle ages, | machine capable | con- | ditions, which if met would make the | revolutionize ! It must be ! capable of rising to a height of 2,000 | power, carrying one man and one hour's fuel supply. | It must be able to remain stationary | LOCAL DOINGS AROUND FLORIN ALL THE UP-TO-DATE HAPPEN INGS FROM THAT THRIVING AND BUSY VILLAGE Mrs. Susan Faus of Sunnyside, visited her sister Mrs. A. J.: Rineer on Sunday. Messrs. Roy Perris and Stanley Booth spent Saturday and Sunday at Mr. and Mrs. Paul {Run was a Sunday visitor to his dau- {ghter, Mrs. John Martin. Mr. Light Superintendent of the | Nissly Swiss Chocolate Co. now oc- icupies his fine new mansion. Mr. Levi Sheetz of Howard, Pa, {occupied the pulpit in the United {Brethren church on Sunday evening. Mr. Edwin Witmer and family of | Harrisburg, were Sunday guests of |Mrs. Elizabeth Sheaffer and family. Mr. Jacob Sauders of Mount Joy {was a Sunday visitor to his brother | Mr. Benjamin Souders and family. Mrs. Mable Hess and two sons of Middletown, spent several days with the family of Mr. and Mrs. Nehemiah Gantz. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Stokes and daughter Margaret of Laneaster, ‘were Sunday visitors to Mr. and Mrs. {Emlin Buller sr. | Mrs. Harry Keener and daughter | (Mary, spent Saturday at Elizabeth-| town, the guest of her daughter Mrs. | Herman Brinser. | Mr. Emenheiser moved his family jand household effects into his prop- | |erty which he recently purchased of | Mr. Henry Sheetz. _Mr. and Mrs. Henry Sheetz have | gone to Howard, Pa., where they will make their home with their son, Mr. | Levi Sheetz and family. | Mr. Nathan Buller of Harrisburg, was a Thursday visitor to his broth-| er, Mr. Emlin Buller sr., who is con- fined to his bed with sickness. | Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Risser, Mr. | Joseph Risser, Mrs. Barbara Risser | were Sunday visitors to Mr. and Mrs. Harry Stauffer near Mount Joy on | Sunday. Mr. John Gainor and family of | Elizabethtown, Mr. Grant Coble and | family of Elizabethtown were Sun | day visitors to Mr. and Mrs. Harry | Gainor. Mr. Clarence Rothermel of Wom- elsdorf, spent Saturday in our village. Mrs. Nelson Gingrich of Fast Pet- | ersbhurg, spent the week-end with her | parents. Mrs. Nelson Gingrich and her sis- | ter, Miss Viola _Espenshade, Mr. Clar- | ence Rothermel and Simon Tschudy, | spent Saturday at the home of Miss Ruth Shelly. | el Uren \ | S | Haiti's Scrapping Roosters. | toosters that day and night | e the differ- n day and night were re- William Almon Mr. Wolff visited Crow | 1 i [ . ES ! was serving as 1] | 1 | | | ecin to recog ‘ibed by iliers, hile he he marine corps reserve. ites to cock fighting in ites, “the rooster plays ant role. Sunday after- great time for iy you may see ing about with a o under their arms. There in Port au Prince, of men gather there every afternoon and bet on thelr favorities. Haitian cock fighting is a very brutal affair; the birds iren’'t spurred. It is the custom fur tae owner of the losing rooster to ciy quits before much damage is done.” What Next? Paris beauty doctors are now spe- cializing in the reforming of women's ‘ags. Two specialists in Rue de la taix are winning fame by reducing the size of women's ankles and in- :reasing the size of the calf. They ave not, as yet, found a way to take the curve out of bowlegs and some of ‘he ladies of society there are hoping Imost tearfully that something will develop in this direction. game ‘ock or tw are two ings thousands Sunday ot Clear on That Score. “So you played golf on earth?” asked St. Peter of the applicant for a harp and a hale, “Yes.” “Hum, I'll have to look Into your record a little more qlosely.” “I think 1 know what is In your mind,” sald the applicant, “and I can truthfully say I was no good at the language.” [ —— CRIs. A Wonderful Bargain Undoubtedly the best bargain I have had in several years. A double lot, corner, good residential section, with 3-story brick house, modern in every respect, new heating plant, electric lights, bath, garage. Re- placement cost today, $20,000. Will take $7,500 and give possession any time. Now don’t think toe long but act. Call or phone Jno. E. Schroll, eee tee Advertise in the Mt. Joy Bulletin. Gree nawalt, |, « 5” : s anal ly : moved into their ney. urnished msoles herself with the fact that [home on Saturdaz, .- chanced enormously since | Mr. Adem at of Near Back 3 lon» S er OW so k VIL JH Se] that, and | & sporting ¢ NE OL WEDNESDAY, MARCH 22nd, 1922 oe 190-6%-6%-6%-6%.6%.0% 6% 62.4% 6% 0% 9 0 0. 0. 0. 0. 0. 0 0 0 0 0 0000100 Feeder edd ede ede fede eafode fede fo ode dedoded Grossing The Line On March 21st, the sun having “crossed the line,” Spring is officially with us. * CR) Xa Xd 9 * o & 9. WR) aril dodo 9, * 9, 9, * 9 Hg graded 00 00 (00 oF. lo? 2% 96700 07 4 9, * 9, * 9, o 00 * 9, 00, Regardless of the actual day,” Springtime clothes the earth in news colors; the birds sing their songs afresh; and fields\are sown, so that later there may be 9, o ho? 4%! * a harvest. \ % 9 In your life, therh is also a Springtime, beginning / * 9 J ®0.e edededed * when you cross the line%between' extravagance and thrift. 9, Cl) So that there may be 3 harvest for the winter of your % life, cross that line now By opening or adding to an account with us. z\ \ ie 9. 0 ve 9, o oe’ % 90 00. o% o%. Br rede 9, * 0 4% * oo? -~ First National Bank OF Wot ey Boge ‘ THOS. J. BROWN, Pres’t. J. S. CARMANY, V. Pres. R. FELLENBAUM, Cashier. 0, 0. 0 XaX aX 9, + ®. 0. 0 ho %%% & 0 0 0% % io} { 9, bo 9, ho? o XaXa ar \ bo¥¥ CK) Xa) 0 ho? oO to? %e% ® 9, Na Xe) ® eo ¥; 1900%6%06%0-0%06%0-6%-0%0-0%-0% 62-02% 0002-02: % 6% + %-0% + 2 6% +% Co? 09 059059 0500 00000050090 Do¥ 0% 0p 009 059 09 059 050-059 05005904 Soe PIVOLLLVVLLLLOOOOOOLLDDO0OO0O0O0OO0COOOOOOO000O000O0O00 Valley Lime Marl Natures Own Soil Corrective A NATURAL PRODUCT OF LIME CHEAPER THAN HY- DRAGE LIME FOR LAWNS,. GARDENS AND ALL CROPS. PLACE YOUR ORDER BEFORE THE GREAT RUSH IS ON. HAVE ALREADY SOLD TEN CARIQADS. E. H. Zercher Mount Joy, Pa. LOLOL OOOOOO0O0OO00O0OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOCOHOOOODC ED SE EA a) A Big Drop In the Price of Case Tractors $700.00 Buys a 10-18 CASE'CRACTOR with a 7 or 8 foot DISC HARROW or 12 or 14 inch TWO BOY TOM FIELD OR ORCHARD PLOW. No farmer can afford to be with ut a CASE, as this price makes one as cheap as a pair of mules, A CASE TRACTOR gives you POWER where you want it, when you want it, and as much as you wari. i We sell them and if it is a REAL Tractor you are after, we can arrang. the terms. 5 BIG REDUCTION ON ALL“EARM MPLEMENTS G. MOYER Mount Joy, % Pa. In Business Since 1888. nw se Re ed GOOD FURNITURE i he only ¥ud J sell—Furalture that is Furniture Rockers, Mirrors, Hall Racks, Picture Frames, Ladies’ Desks, Extemsion and Other Tables, Davenports, China Closets, Kitchen Cabinets. In Fact Anything in the Furniture Lime "UNDERTAKING AND EMBALMING H. C. BRUNNER MOUNT JOY, PA. OO 1 0 Lo 1 THE QUESTION OF FURNITURE OUALITY few things that quality effects so vitally as furni- people buy fo personal wear and for home te last a long time, but this connot be s2 buy furniture you are buying yous long service. It will if you of quality first. All the furni- to requirements which we And, after all, in the Often things use are not always said about furniture. W something you expect to buy it here, because here we ture we buy must measure exactiy make as to the manner of wor! . long run, well-made furniture is the cheapest sort of furniture to buy. We invite comparison, look around, compare qualities and prices and then come here and see ur vast a ent. n “ >» Westenberger, Maley & Myers 128-131 East King Street LANCASTER, PA. NT OO 0 OL G1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers