PAGE TWO THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA, U. S. A WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 1922, — MT. JOY BULLETIN] MOUNT JOY, PA. J. E. SCHROLL, Editor & Pro'r.' Year Subscription Price $1.50 a Sample Copies......FREE Single Copies..... 3 Cents fics Months. ....40 Cents dix Months. ..... 75 Cents CEERI - -— Butered at the post office at Mount Joy as second-class mail matter. | The date of the expiration of your subsecrip- tion follows your name on the label. We do aot send receipts for subscription money re- seived. Whenever you remit, see that you are | given proper credit. We credit all subscription ea the first of each month. | The subscription lists of the Landisville Vigil, | the Florin News and the Mount Joy Star and News, were merged with that of the Mount Foy Bulletin, which makes this paper's ordinary Weekly. ELIZABETHTOWN Rev. E. F. Yoder, wife and family | spent several days at Mt. Gretna. D. B. Kieffer, of Middletown, transacted business in town Friday. Mrs. Lizzie Brandt and Mrs. Syl-| vester Gainor spent Saturday in Lan-| caster. James Keller and wife, of New | York, are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Levi | Ebersole. C. C. Witmer and wife are spend-| ing several days at Coney Island | New York. Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Kuhn, of Read- ing, spent the week end with Mrs. Mary Kuhn. Mrs. D. Z. Witmer and Mrs. Ches- ter Witmer visited relatives in Mt. Joy Sunday. J. E. Weidman and wife attended | the Luther League convention held | at Williamson Park. Miss Ardella Brandt has been elected organist of Christ Reformed Church, vice Mrs. O. N. Heisey, re- signed. oa | J. N. Olweiler and wife, and H.| L. Guise, wife and daughter, motor, ed to Chadds Ford and Valley Forge on Friday. Mrs. John Meckley and daughter | Mary and Miss Elizabeth Meckley | have returned from a week’s visit to Atlantic City. Mr. and Mrs. Rhine Smith and Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Leslie witnessed the Motor Cycle hill climb held at York on Sunday. Walter Weigand and wife of Philadelphia and Charles Weigand and wife of Sunbury, spent the week end with H. F. Horst and wife. The Willing Workers of the Re- formed church are busily engaged filling jars with various kinds of fruit for the Womelsdorf home. Miss M. Louise Coble, of the local post office force, with her sister, Miss Emma Coble, is spending her vaca-/ tion at Newark N. J., and Asbury Park. A. L. DeArman, while transacting business in. Philadelphia was struck | by an auto. He escaped with a pair of damaged shoes and badly bruised heels. The Bethel Church Sunday school class taught by Mrs. J. Harvey Buch, motored to Cedar Hill and held their class meeting at the home “of Mrs. Tillman Ebersole. ! The Auditors have completed their audit of the receipts and ex-| penditures of the Elizabethown school district for the year ending June 30th. $24,281.42 has been ex- pended. Of this amount $17,813.00 has been paid out for salaries. On Thursday, August 24, the] friends of the College, former stu- dents and alumni, will meet at the] College to clean the buildings. Prof. J. Z. Herr, the business manager, will direct the work of this annual} event. A free dinner will be served. | A large crowd is expected this year and everybody is invited who is in- terested in the College. The Borough Council has spent considerable time in having plans pre- pared to install a sewarage system within our confines that will, when completed, be the means of making | our town practically 100 per cent. sanitary. The engineers who have made the survey will have the plans | completed shortly, when an estimate will be given as to the cost of in-| stalling the system. neal A I ——— ERISMAN’S CHURCH (Too late for last week.) ! Christ Buch is the first man in our vicinity to purchase steers. Mr. and Mrs. Monroe Metzler were guests of Grandpa Reist’s on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Erb were en-. tertained by Jacob Snyder’s on Sun- day. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Miller attend- ed the Mount Gretna Campmeeting on Sunday. Misses Lillie Bucher and Mary Rohrer spent the past week in Phila-| delphia and Asbury Park. | Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Erb and fam- | ily visited Mrs. Erb’s parents, Benj. Nissley’s at Landisville on Sunday. Mrs. Mary Hess and dav ghter | Mabel, of Millersville, were guests | in the home of A. B. Erb and Elias] Metzler the past week. nd Mrs. Isaac Brubaker and 1 Mrs. A. B. Erb attended | aal services at Kauffman’s | hand visited John Hoover at] Manheim on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Levi Eby, Mr. and] Mrs. H. G. Rohrer, Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Senseng, Mr and Mrs. Phares | Kauffman and your corespondent spent Sunday at Wernersville. Last week one of the ice cream de- livery trucks dropped a five gallon | ean of delicious ice cream along our | highway and as a result a number of our neighbors had a free treat to cream. : Last week a number of our neigh- bors including Harry Brubaker and sons, Levi Brubaker and Mr. Frey, John Nissley and hired man, Martin Metzler, a soldier from Mount Joy, Mr. Irving, Monroe Metzler and sons Norman, Clarence and Harry, and Emerson Rohrer motored to the min- ing regions of Schuylkill County for uckelberries. The abundance of "berries which they picked and the drive through the beautiful mountain scenery and a visit to one of the mining plants of Penna. well The only ex- great paid them for the trip. i citing events of the day were when | the oldest man in the party lost the important part of his trousers and when our soldier boy and the man who carried a gun made a hasty re- treat at the sound of a great rattle snake, the men upon whom they re- lied for protection. RHEEMS Mr. Monroe Zeager has accepted a position with a prominent contrac- tor at Lancaster. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Engle of Mount Joy, spent last Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. S. S. Kraybill. Miss Ruth Smith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John C. Smith, entertained the M. M. C. Society one evening last week. Postmaster B. F. Shank and family spent last Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Shank near Glen Rock, Pa. Thus far Rev. S. S. Shearer has the |largest yield of wheat peracre in this vicinity. Thirty and one half bushel per acre from twenty acres. Mr. Reuben G. Kauffman, Mr. and Mrs. Elam Stauffer of near East Pet- ersburg paid a brief visit to Jos. W. Kraybill last Monday evening. Mr. and Mrs. John C. Smith, daug- ter Ruth and son John spent last Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Kaylor at Lititz. Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Zeager and grand daughter of Pittsburgh, are making a tour in their Automobile through Lancaster County visiting their relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Abram Butzer at- tended the Butzer Reunion at Lititz, last Sunday where there were nearly two hundred big and little Butzers made some noise. Mr. and Mrs. William Hamilton of Florin, spent last Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John B. Henry. Mr. Hamilton is a veteran tax collector of Mount Joy township. Church of the Brethren held their regular evening services in the church last Sunday evening. Sing- ing class will meet at Green Tree church next Saturday evening. Mr. Harvey Floyd, tobacco farmer on the John G. Reist farm, set out four acres of plants on Decoration Day, he has it suckered ready for cutting soon as the weather permits. Enos Floyd fire chief of Rheems and his family made an extensive tour last Sunday in their new automobile going by the way of Harrisburg, Elizabethville, Pottstown, Reading and Lancaster running two hundred and sixty miles. The Rheems Fire Company Com- mittee have booked Saturday even- ing, Sept. 2 to hold a record break- ing festival. The Shawnee Band of forty pieces of Columbia, are en- gaged to enliven the crowd on the Rheems school house play ground | which will be, illuminated with sever:- ty electric lights. The Lancaster County Potato Growers Association paid a visit to the following extensive farmers: Rev. S. 8. Shearer who has ten acres, I. Friday 12 acres, Abner Risser ten acres, M. Ebersole seven. The State College Representatives accompanied the fifty growers claiming a three hundred bushel per acre in several patches of the Russet and Sir Walter Raleigh varieties. SPORTING HILL Miss Anna Kauffman called at the home of John Sheaffer Sunday eve- ning. Mrs. Grant Boyer and son Carl spent Sunday in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Eli Shearer at Mt. Hope. Mrrand Mrs. David Snyder, of Petersburg, spent Sunday in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Miller. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Shenk and family, of Lititz, spent Sunday in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Shenk. Amos Myers and Irvin Tucker, of Lancaster, spent Sunday in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Martin’ Zimmerman. The United Zion’s Children are pre- paring for Children’s Day to be held {September 10th, afternoon and even- ing Messrs. Amos Myers and Irvin Tuck er, of Lancaster, spent Sunday in the home of Mr. Martin Zimmerman and family. Mr. son ville and Mrs. Rolandis Gibble and William spent Sunday at Bart- in the home of Mr. and Mrs. i Nelson Boyd. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hershey spent {Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Allen Hoff- er. Mrs. Hoffer is recovering from ism. Miss Mary Heisey, of Lebanon and Miss Anna Kauffman, of Lancaster, spent the week-end in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Keener. Mr. and Mrs. David G. Miller and daughter Dorothy, : of an attack of rheumat Lancaster, {spent Sunday in the homes of A. H. Degler and H. H. Miller. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Grube and son Wayne, and Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Kauffman and son Wayne spent Sat- urday evening in the home . of Mr, and Mrs. Harvey Johnson, of Florin. Mrs. Arthur Collidge and daughter Mary and Helen, of Lancaster, and Mrs. Vivian Paige and son John, of Washington, D. C., were recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. B. L. Kauff- man. Mr. and Mrs. Cyrus Good, Mr. and Mrs. Francis Earhart and daughters Dorothy and Florence, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Good and children Virginia and Bllsworth and Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Keener spent Saturday at Valle Glen Park, Lebanon county. : BE i —— A Good Truck Farm. I have a 4% -acre truck farm close 0 markets, best limestone land, 9- oom brick house with bath, slate oof; frame barn with slate roof, to- bacco shed, ice house, chicken house and hog pen, fruit wonderful garden,. Property is located on a pike. Will sell for less than it would cost to build a house like the one on the MAYTOWN Squire Charles C. Hicks of May- | town, with his mother, his wife and | his son, are automobiling through the | New England States. | Mrs. John Garber, one of the old- suff- IS | est residents of Maytown, ered a stroke of paralysis. Dr. G. A. Harter is attending her. Miss Ethel Culp, postmistress of Maytown, is on a vacation to State College. Her position is being filled by Miss Grace Henderson. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Graybill, of East Donegal; Miss Marie Harter, Maytown, and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Dulebahn, of Elizabethtown, have returned from a visit at Atlantic City. The Maytown Garment factory closed Saturday for a few weeks in order to make general repairs to its ased. There are about 75 persons employed at the present time. ial Gleeson MEMORY THAT IS MARVELOUS Authentic Feats of Bl!ind Musicians Are Among the Most Remarkable on Record. Remarkable feats of quick memoriz- ing by blind musicians have been recorded by the National Institute for the Blind. Fred Turner, one of the most accom- plished blind musicians in Scotland, recently memorized all of Bach's “St. Matthew Passion” and in four months trained his choir and accompanied the entire work on the organ, while Sin- clair Logan, the blind composer and organist, memorized Somervell's “The Passion of Christ,” a fairly compli- cated cantata occupying 75 minutes In performance—trained his choir and ac- companied a highly successful per- formance in less than two months, dur- ing which he was working under the stress of other heavy memorization work for an important recital in Liver- pool for the National Institute for the Blind, in addition to his normal pro- fessional duties. To carry in the memory Beethoven's 32 pianoforte sonatas, as Willlam Wol- stenholme does, and the entire 48 pre- ludes and fugues of Bach, as in the case of H. V. Spanner—two blind mu- sicians resident in London, would seem no light achlevement, and yet these form but a small portion of the range of works In the mental store house of these men—Westminster Gazette. LIVES OF UNREMITTING TOIL Chinese Coolies Never Know Respite From Labor of Pushing Barrows, for Bare Existence. Labdrers in America who think they have a hard life should see these Chinese coolies. Imagine wheeling a barrow with a four or five hundred pound load for hundreds of miles over roads difficult to travel even on horse- back! Usually there are two men to a bar- row. The one at the handles, by means of a strap over his shoulders, takes much of the weight from his arms, leaving his hands more or less free to guide and balance the load; the one in front drags it forward with a ten-foot rope. Panting and straining, with the sweat streaming from thelr half-naked bodies; pulling through foot-deep yel- low dust, lifting over rocks and drag- ging up hills; at night gulping a bowl of soup or macaronl and, half dead with fatigue, falling asleep on the ground in the Inn courtyard among the pigs, chickens and mules—so they live, day after day, year in and year out, with nothing else to look for- ward to. All this for fifty or sixty coppers a day, or about eighteen cents in Amerl- can money. Is it any wonder they seek oblivion in opium ?—Roy Chapman Andrews In Asia. New Tertiary Crocodile. Exceedingly valuable additions have been made recently to the already ex- tensive natural history collections of the La Plata museum in Buenos Aires, and a vast amount of new Information has been gathered by an expedition that has just returned from a three- months’ geological survey and paleon- tological study of northern Patagonia —that little-known region of Argen- tina that already has shown itself to be one of the world’s richest store- houses of paleontological relies. In- cluded among the specimens brought hack by the expedition is the fossil of a prehistoric monster of the crocodile family which appears to be a species hitherto unknown. This fossil is the almost complete skeleton of a reptile that in life measured more than 40 feet from head to tail. The fossil was found near the city of Rio Negro between the strata of red sandstone of the Crustaceous age, which crop out all over the upper Rio Negro valley and along the Neu- quen and Limay rivers. Two Distinct Tribes in Damara Land. Two distinct tribes inhabit Damara land, in the central portion of what was formerly German Southwest Afri- ca—the Hill Damara and the Cattle Damara. Although they share the same name, they are of different origin and speak different languages. The Hill Damara are negroes with much Hottentot blood in their veins, while the Cattle Damara, who live en the plains and raise cattle, are a Bantu-Negro people, Damara is a Hottentot word mean- ing “Two Dama Women.” The Damara call themselves Ovaherero, “the Merry People.” School Gardens Popular in Hawall. Some 40,000 school children in Hawall are enrolled In garden work as one of the results of the efforts of the local agricultural experiment station of the United States Department of Agriculture co-operating with other territorial organizations to encourage diversified production and the local growing of table produets. Compared with the beginning of the garden work in 1917, a much larger amount of veg- etables Is now grown In the home gar- dens of each community and a wide variety of fresh vegetables is found on‘ the table of the average Hawallan premises. Act quick if you want it. J. E. Schroll, Mount oy tf building, which was recently purch-¥ —>- WkaNCASTER, t= J | 'm $V. W. APPEL & SON Jeweler & Opticians 1 BRACELET WATCHES {OR GIVEABLES \ 5 SAVEYOUR STOMACH JAQUES’ LittleWonder _/| Capsules QuickRelief 5 A few years ago, while the French Social Whirl was & ie, height at Deanlle, 2 Bi rs. Poirel, appeared wear- No Muss INDIGESTION ing a watchupon her brace- NoBother DYSPEPSIA let. \ The Watch’ Breacelet cre- ated a furore among the fas- tidious French, and the vog- ue swiftly swept across the Channel to England. After that, it was only a matter of timg before it crossed the marl: to be wvoars CONSTIPATION On sale at Garber’s Drug Store, Mount Joy, Pa., or 60 cents by mail postpaid for large package from |= Jaques Capsule Co., Plattsburg, N. Y. |! taken up by smartly-dressed women everywhere. There was a timelwhen we were amased at theisight of a watch upon a woman's wrist. Today it amases us not to see one there. We are showing ang num- ber of them now, with the added feature that the wotch can be detached and Worn separately as a chatelaine or as a pendant. \ The prices start as low as $15.00. X 0 131 NORTH QUEEN STREET LANCASTER, PA. 3 \ GET IT AT \DONOVANS THE \STORE THAT PAYS UR CARFARE \ Values the Highest Styles the Latest Qualities the Best EVERYTHING FOR THE FAMILY \ \ and ANTIQUES EVERYTHING FOR THE HOME il vs Re Tore beds e one - pen Evenings We invite you to use bur Mail Or 2 E, Wastingeon St. der Service—When once you try i EANIZABETHTOWN, PA. You'll use it always. \ n m & = - TT WITTLE 1 prices to Sept. 1st Large Stoves, 3 si eninsular Heater, Egg s; Laundry Stove, Gas Range Oil Heaters, Stove Pipe, El- bows, Stove ‘Boards, Iron Kettles, Skillets, Sad Irgns, Brass Kettle, Bar- rel Copper Kettle, Lawn Mowers, No. 6 Pipe Vise, Lanterns, Forks, Hoes, Lancaster, Penna, Garden Forks, Street Lamp, Buck 5 —t | Saws, 5 Ft. Cros&Cut Saw, Baskets, Large and Small; Jugs, Crocks Guns, Rifles, Revolvers,} Porch Curtain : or Shade, Window Screens, Ham- Thg premier stomach remedy— mock, Books, Kitchen Utensils, it rdlieves gassy stomachs and Tin and Enameled Ware, Glass, China Aluminum and Silverware, Lamps, other Stomach disorders. Framed Pictures, Clogks, all kinds; Cupboards, Bureaus, Kitchen Cabi- nets, Tables, Drop Leaf and Exten- A 9 : B AK S sion; Porcelain Top Table, Glass Top ” L Cupboards, Chairs, Rockers, Stands, HOR g VINQ Trunks, Wash Stands, Wooden Bed REG. US, PAT. OFF, Steads, 5 “Nature's Tonic" ash Rigs, 2 Comforts, % uilts, and ot D ads. All dealers sell it : ey Gogds mall articles. Free booklet on request ANTIQUES \ . 10-Plate Stoves, Desk with Bookcase, BOSAK MANUFACTURING CO, Bureaus, Mirrors, Pin TopiTable, 2 Drawer Wing Table, Flowered Rock- SCRANTON, PA RE ER TE RST West End Bakery EVANS & WATSON, Proprs. West Main “Street MOUNT JOY orn FRESH BREAD AND BUNS DAILY ers, and Chairs, Clocks, Walnut Slope Top Sec’y. Inlaid. t b T. F. MCELROY, Prepr. P WEDDING & BIRTHDAY, CAKES A SPECIALTY h \ WE SOLICIT A SHARE OF YOUR PATRONAGE ] Krall’s SPECIAL DINNERS AUTOMOBILE AND PRIVATE PARTIES CATERED LUNCH BAR IN CONNECTION Also Cigars and Tobacco Meat Market Z5 UP-TO-DATE POOL ROOM Room and Board by Day or Week Terms Reasonable Why Not Use The Best Ry, I always have on hand anything ia the line “of SMOKED MEATS, HAM. BOLOGNA DRIED BEEF, Also Fresh Beef, Veal, P H. H. KRAL West Main St. Pipe! Pipel! Pinel! ncom— 4 a . We have all sizes pipe, beams, rails, % 3 angle and channel‘rods, etc., for sale cheap. ISSAC MILLER. SON Prince and Hazel Sta, PENNA. Martin's Sanitary, Dairy West Donegal! St.* \ AND PLAYER PIANOS PIANO EXPE Jorth Barbara St., Corrugated Sheathin Estimates for materials or a sation cheerfully furnished. Phuge. Ind. Phone. 47 Stiegel Street N edi MANHEIM, PA. mar. 15-tf Uompany OLD SHOES MAD 0 LOOK 4 LIKE NEW ON “8S i ON E 50-52 S. Queen St. Lancaster, Pa, N\ Before “placing your order elesewhere see us. ._ ==TRY-w 1 RUSS BROTHERS We have cut prices to pre war Prices. J, N. STAUFFER'& BRO. BRANDT BROTHERS family, 128 Mt. Joy St. MT. JOY, PA MOUNT JOY, PA, SECOND-HAND HOUSE FURNISHINGS . Cushions, | = Other B= 0 A $1.49 For any Straw Hat in the house we don’t have many but what we do have are good hats that sold for $3 and $4, but our policy is to carry none over for next year. i SHOES ‘SHOES 25 Pair of Mens’ Dress Shoes that were $8.50 and $10 a pair, are now going at $2.98 and $3.48 These are real values: New Fall Neckwear 50c to $1.50 Palm Beach Suits as low as, $10.00 Wonderful values and a good help for next year. JD 1 TY :P. E. Getz. Mt. J w ® ® 9 ® u al 1] E40 1 J 0) ENIETY STORES CO{ 3 5 A 2 1 1 1 OL OL u \ Wy 1m (7, : Where Quality Counts and u Low Prices Prevail , MOUNT JOY, PENNA. pkg 6¢ Foot Iron Hpg Trough, | m Asco Corn Flakes A most v njoyable breakfast dish for grown-ups and good for the children ree times a day. h a Gold Sed Sun--Maid Seedless Asco E Flour Raisins Baking Powker as 121b bag 55¢ || big 15 oz pkg 15¢ can5c, 9, 17¢ = 3 or Tasty Saur Krout Regular price, 18e. Partly cooked big can 125c easily prepared. Norway \ Gorton’s Gorton’s Mackerel Codfish Cakes Salad Fish each 7c, 15¢ \ can 14c can 14c Rich Creamy Cheese 1b 25¢ Aged just enough to give it the right “snap.” Try some— you'll enjoy it. g Cooked Asco Asco Corn Beef Pork & Beans Mustard big can 23c cap 10c jar 12¢ Victor Bread | big loaf 6c Made in our own three big gunshine bakeries. It’s good idown to the last wee crumb. A FG OC I JE i 3 £ kr { AscoW.D. Asco Cider Princess ! Vinegar Vineg Salad Dressing 4 bot 12¢ bot 16¢ bot 21c¢ N. Social Teas | Ib 27c P. Tokens \ = ib 21c Very nice to have in the house for §n-between “bites.” F) Asco Asco \ Sunsweet Ginger Ale Grape Juice Prunes bot 10c pt bot 20c 1 Ib 12Y¢, 19¢ Asco Coffee \ Ib 29¢ Try a cup of this rich, rare blend of shodnoss. You’ll taste g the difference ASCO EVAPORATED MILK Tall Can Se} Asco Asco Jelly \ Whole Grain Cornstarch Dessert Powder § Rice pkg 7c pkg 9c 1 Ib pkg 9c Asco Teas a Ib pkg 12¢ % 1b pkg 23c¢, Ib pkg 45c¢ Beat the heat with a refreshing glass of Iced Asdo Teas. Five delicious blends—Orange Pekoe, India Ceylon, Old Country Style, Black and Mixed. ET EE OOO OL 0 Get The Mount Joy “Bulletin” For All The Lastest News (iiiESE Delicious: FT
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