AT. JOY BULLETIN MOUNT JOY, PA. © LE SUCHROLL, Editor & Pro's. Subscription Price $1.50 Year Sample Copies......FREE Single Copies. .... 3 Cents hres Months. ...40 Cents Six Months......75 Cents Batered at the post office at Mount Jey as weond-class mall matter, he date of the expiration of your wsubscrip- follows your name om the label. st send receipts for subscription money re ‘vad. rom proper credit. the first of each month. » ¢ were merged with waekly, We do i Whenever you remit, see that you are We ered all subscription | subacription lists of the Landisville Vigil, ine ¥lorin News and the Mount Joy Star and that of the Mount fay Bulletin, which makes this paper's ordinsary STRIPS OF PAPER BOOST TOBACCO YIELD | The possibility of greatly reduc | ing the labor connected with tobacco | growing is seen in an experiment | experiment station of the Pennsyl- | vania State College and the United { States Department | located at Ephrata, in County. By laying two strips of perforated | tar paper, 18 inches wide, between now being conducted at the tobacco | ind allowing this cover EDITORIAL Citizenship An alien does not change citizen over night. his dress may be done in an hour The changing of his speech longer process. And the of his ideas is still longer. Really, to become a citizen of oul country, a man must first turn mind from the old land to the new; he must desire to be In the second place, he must learn how American institutions have grown and how they are carried on; into 18 changin zen’s responsibilities in this land. Constantly on the Job Human wants are constant, hour- ly, daily and continuous. Food, clothing, shelter and theid infinite subdivisions are every day needs. There is not a clock that ticks that does not register a million human wants. The newspaper is the clos- est thing in the world to the people’s daily wants. It is an expression of the ever-pressing desire for news. The advertiser who uses the news- paper reaches people with his mes- sage exactly at the right moment. There is no advertising medium on the job so completely and so close to the people as the newspaper. Stay With It! Here in Mount Joy is where the sky is a little bluer, where the air is a little purer, where it is pleas- anter to live and where you will live longer. Stay with it. You should appreciate the charm of its environments and think of what you can do to make it even better and brighter. Help Mount Joy. Stay with it. The boosters are doing this town a great service which will rebound to their credit for years to come. Join them and stay with it. A roseate horizon is stretched a- round Mount Joy, your sun is just coming up—great progress is just you—Boost and Stay with it. ith our-great natural resources with the Benefits which are nd to come with their develop- t, there is no limit as to what nt Joy can do. Stay with it. his town will grow rapidly, even e rapidly than it has in the past. with it. oday is a great day for our town, she has greater days in store the future. Help her on her —Stay with her! Vandalism outdoors has adorned itself floral raiment of gorgeous hue. woods, fields, lanes, hills, and pys are ablaze with color and ity. Everywhere the little wild- ers rear their innocent heads, green shrubs line the roadsides a The changing of | a » his | an American. | he must understand what are a citi-| and reading: can see that my boy, after six months of your teaching, Is completely igno- Romantic Story of Old banking history Is recalled by the an- ter planting, ing to remain until harvested, an in creased yield of 400 pounds per acre | was obtained and the quality and “burn” of the tobacco was much im- proved. Last year was an exceed- [ingly favorable vear for the experi- | ment because of the dry season and | ‘| the test will be repeated several years under varying conditions be- | | fore definite conclusions will arawn. Ol to eral advantages thod. It eliminates all mi cultivation and keeps the field en- | tively free from weeds. This means 1 great saving in labor. The mois- | ture is retained in the soil as a re- vailable for the crop p. six degrees. This has some bearing on the control of root rot, a serious tobacco disease, temperature tends to check its de- velopment. In the growing of pineapples in Hawaii, the tar paper covering is used on a large scale, and is very successful. Olson believes that the practice might be applied to other crops in this country in which the labor is great and where the returns per acre are large. The cost of the paper to cover one acre is about $100. It can be used at least two years and with a little care would do for a third year. The increased yield and better quality product easily paid for the added expense last year and gave consider- | able profit. because a higher Leacock Tells How to Help Son Get Lessons The greatest nuisance of all to the schoolmaster is the parent who does Lis boy's home exercises and works his boy’s sums. I suppose they mean well by it. But it is a disastrous thing to do for any child. Whenever I found myself correcting exercises that had obviously been done for the boys in their homes I used to say to them: “Paul tell your father that he must use the ablative after pro.” “Yes, sir,” says the boy. “And Edward, you tell your grandmother that her use of the dative case simply won't do. She's getting along nicely and I'm satisfied with the way she’s doing, but I cannot have her using the dative right and left on every occasion. Tell her it won't do.” “Yes, sir,” says little Ed- ward. I remember one case in particular of a parent who did not de the boy's ex- ercise, but, after letting the boy do it himself, wrote across the face of it a withering comment addressed to me “From this exercise you | I rant. How do you account for it?’ I sent the exercise back fo him with the | still standing. Hundreds of names added note: “I think It must be | are written on the insides of the | Freddie missing since 7 last night. hereditary.”—Stephen Leacock, in | walls and carved on the outsides— [No trace of him. Come back at College Days, Detroit News. once. London Jacobite Bank One of the most romantic stories in of Agriculture | Lancaster the rows of tobacco immediately af- be | son, who has charge sult of the covering and the fertil- | izer and plant food is made more a- | The soil temp- | erature is also raised from three to | Celts Visited Iceland x os » Bi THE MOUNT JOY BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, CASTER COUNTY, PRIZES OFFERED FOR SOLUTION OF AUTO ACCIDENT PROBLEM WHE WILL IT END ? | 2000 6,000 700 6000 5000 40m 300 LX 190 BF BO BO M0 BM BC 80 D6 M0 00 OF 08 W 80 0 02 © a! — | } In 1907 there were 598 deaths from automobile accidents in the United States. In 1923 there were 15,700 such deaths. These figures do not include grade crossing accidents, number of automobile acci- H dents in the United States be reduced? This question is being asked of every licensed insurance agent and broker in the country. Not only is it being asked, but one of the largest indemnity com- panies has brought together start ling figures showing the steady in crease im deaths from automobile accidents and, in a determined ef- fort to get an answer to the ques- tion, has proposed a prize contest. Pointing out that high automo- bile liability insurance rates of any insurance company cannot be J reduced unless the number of acci- dents is reduced, Charles H. Hol- { OW ean the ever-mounting | land, president of the De Indemnity Company of Philadel CHARLES H. HOLLAND : i og phia, is offering $1,750 in cash Who Offers the Pri prizes for the three best solutions of the problem. Judges, who will be nationally known authorities in automobile trafic matters, are now being chosen to consider the suggestions and award the prizes. The first prize is $1,000; the second, $500, and the third, $250. The contest will close June 80. Suggestions must not itn , we believe that if the creative rain er of the 150,000 ts and wn can be Bo real solution will be discovered.” According to statistics furnished to Mr. Holland by the Automobile Department of the National Bureau of Casualty and Surety Under- writers, deaths resulting from auto- exceed 500 words in length and must accidents, not: including be « ; ,» those caused by trains hitting ma- : ere is a growing conviction,” (hines at grade cross have Mr. Holland says in his announce- steadily increased from in 1907 ment, “that some way must be found for reducing the appalling number of automobile accidents. We do not know how this can be done, but we elieve it can be done. Further- to 15,700 in 1928, In addition to these deaths ft is estimated hat about 400,000 persons ware ly injured in automobile accid:nis | in 1923. | He says he has clews he hopes [will lead to identity of the kidnap- {pers and their motive. Church at Ft. Randall Built by U. S. Soldiers Fort Randall, South Dakota, has a church called & “mystery church | 1¢ has been accepted by Mrs. Bes- The church, concerning the erection |Si€ Sutherland of Hastings, Minn, of which all records were believed [8nd C. H. Leib of Minneapolis as lost, was built in 1875. Its material [their long lost brother, he said. was chalk rock, quarried out of the | Identified By Moles hills two miles south of the fort by | Mr. Clark told a local banker, an soldiers of the first United States in- | old friend of the Leib family in fan Stationed at the fort at that whose charge the small estate left The central portion of the building [PY Professor Leib rests, that he had was intended for the use of the sec [discovered on his body four moles ond I. O. O. F. lodge organized In |that identified him as the kidnapped the territory, and made up of |boy. soldiers. The east wing was the According to the banker, Mr. church and the west wing the post|Clark said it was by these moles he library. The building was used in this was identified by Mrs. Sutherland. manner until the fort was abandoned The banker said Mr. Clark b in 1892. Th r. Clark bore a The church was well furnished, all striking resemblance to the Leibs. the pews being two and one-half-inch In Death What Life Denied black walnut. There was a large or-| In death, Prof. William H. Leib gan and a large bell that could be |may have acheived that for which heard for miles. All this wds bought [he struggled vainly in life. by the soldiers and citizens employed For if Freddie Leib has come back to life, it was the death of Profes- sor Leib that brought it about. at the fort. The organ is still at the fort in the commanding officer's house, Professor Leib was 29 years old when came that dread message: which is still standing intact. The walls of the old church bullding are Professor Leib had left his home at Quincy, Ill, to go to Chicago for some try-outs. He had finished signing a contract to sing in a church here when the message came Years Before Norsemen So far as known, when the North- men visited Iceland in the Ninth cen- tury, they found no trace of an aborig- inal race. However, the {sland had been previously inhabited by Celts, who settled there before 800 A, D. Some Icelandic historians claim that the Celtic colonists were still living on the island when the Scandinavians arrived. But the question is disputed and the general belief is that these Celtic settlers had disappeared be- bursting buds reveal beautiful ots. > many persons the temptation estroy these pictures is irresist- They find no ecstacy in mere- boking at nature’s spring-time They must loot the mea- and the hillsides, Their cars go home laden with blossoms are not meant for vases in the from his wife. She had delayed it until after the singing test that meant so much to all of them. Back to a frantic mother Profes- sor Leib went. The curious sur- rounded his house. It was from these he obtained knowledge of the disappearance of his son. Five-year-old Freddie had toddled out to play—supposedly in a carri- nouncement that the business of Messrs, Drummond of Charing Cross, the old-established private bankers, has many associations with the Ja- cobites. Indeed, its founder, Andrew Drummond, is believed to have been a Jacobite first and a banker afterward. It is at least certain that he walked from Edinburgh to London, with a price on his head, bearing funds to be used to secure the restoration of the ' 1 PENNSYLVANIA, U. 8. A M A A i Min Bi ate. a Every Motoring Need At Lowest Cost The Ford Touring Car meets every motoring requirement at the lowest possible cost. It is sturdy, depenc- able, long lived; easy to drive; con- venient to park —and possesses the highest resale value in propor- tion to list price, of any car built, Fore flotor Company. $268 wD na Juice Sedan 259% SEE THE NEAREST AUTHORIZED SA nda The Touring Car ‘295 F. O. B. Detroit D. table Rimg¢ bod ie $85 cmp Ey Sr Te A PO fos and ns cay (aye yr the balance, Or r TSCO Cords have established a new standard in high-value tire equipment at a medium price. The new patented latex treatment of the cords gives them strength and wearing qualities that mean many added miles of service. The easy steering, yet sure grip- ping non-skid tread, means ease of handling—traction safety. Made in 30x 3 as well as 30 x 3% inch clincher and in all straight- side sizes. U. S. Tires are the only tives in the world made of cords solutioned in raw rubber latex ~ REAM’S GARAGE, MT. JOY : fore Iceland was discovered by the : i: : : o. Nature provides its own| Stuarts. The Malacca cane with a Norsemen in 850. In any event, books, age yard not far from the Leib €t3 dong the Wissour) ov. be excellent, particularly in southern for these blooms and the 20 Sra which he carried | and other articles found by |home. There he would be, would erywhere along the banks. A. counties where the trees blossomed ers that are plucked from their fu; Su this adventurous Jurasy the early Scandinavians prove that climb over the hacks and busses, a Professor Leib was showered with Jwell. There was no frost damage. g become like orphans, miser-| go i bg ed p y Ina monte Bad wade an attempt to | oo telegrams. Freddie had been found Harrisburg, Pa., Mey 25.—Farm men seed beds were prepared i i : colonize ihe ‘sand. : here, h nd there. He w : dlrs any ar ut 1 , drooping and homesick. The old banker probably thought of The real history of Iceland dates In a few hours, Mrs. Leib looked » had been fou ere 33 | work in Pennsylvania is from ten origin ove a was slow. ewspapers and nature lovers| this journey and of the risks he had | from about 870, when large numbers of the window, expecting to see ughout the land find it neces-| run In taking it, when Simon Fraser, of Norsemen began to settle there |her son running around somewhere. to remind a thoughtless public| Lord Lovat, the “old fox” of the high- | owing to political disturbances In |But he was not there. he consequences of this vandal-| lands, passed the bank on his way to | Scandinavia. Only about one-fourth Night came and she became hys- the tower after the “forty-five.” Lovat, whose gray hairs did not save him from the scaffold, had been on the books of the firm. As he passed the bank windows Rob- ert and Henry Drummond looked out to see him, but Andrew sat still at his desk. “I suppose you would run out of Iceland is inhabitable and the en- tire population is only about 85,000.— Detroit News. Man Appears Out Of Mystery Cloud terical. The police were called, but they were powerless. Then, the next day, she sent the telegram to her husband. Because of Freddie’s beautiful voice, the police were convinced he had been stolen, probably by travel- Vandalism it is, for many per- are not content with the flow- hey must take the stem and the as well. Eventually, of course, means extermination of the wild- er. That point has been reached ome instances. found in Chicago and in Denver, he was seen in Seattle and New Orleans —all the same day. With a prayer some one of them would be true, Professor Leib traced one, and all were empty. ter. where Professor He informed the police and went to the place specified in the letter. But days to two weeks late in southern counties, three weeks late in the middle belt, and a month behind the usual schedule in the northern tier of counties. The nights have been cool and generally adverse to rapid growth. This statement on the outstanding features of the agricultural situa- | tion, as reflected in reports received by the Pennsylvania Department of — Eee DAYS OF DIZZINESS Come to Hundreds of Mt. Joy People There are days of dizziness; Spells of headache, languor, back. ache; Sometimes rheumatic pains; Often urinary disorders. Doan’s Pills are especially for kidney ills. Endorsed in down every Ransom was demanded in one let- That was from Dubuque, Ia., Leib hastily went. Mt. Joy by grateful t open spaces at this time of k, with a cordiality that is un-| akable, her visitors ought to be| enough not to wreck the situation. mt MR mm The Onion Maggot ths in the control of the onion { m got. Sodium arsenite poison | placed in shallow cans about 10}, 5 feet apart in cvery tenth row | In effective control measure. The | pula for the bait is: One-fifth | ¢ of sodium arsenite, one pint | h pound chopped onion. 3 ya April, 211 | lawbreakers | fo This | of 177 eases over the month of last year. s of the pure food laws. s nature invites its people to the] to watch me If I was to be beheaded,” home and make it a desert. Al in production next month, and the] ent’s thought will make a NOT-| wide-awake poultrymen will endeavor person aware of the seriousness, ny ovent this by forcing the flock to greater mash consumption. Grain] fay is one of the most important | oan ior gses, one gallon water, and one-| ye this Foods and Chemistry for viola- | get short and dry. he remarked, dryly. likeness of the photograph among his | when there was much in the news- rn A Irn possessions. The photograph, he |papers about the Italian padrone Egg Production said, was given him by his foster | system, and cases were known of Laying hens will tend to slump off | parents. | circuses kidnapping little boys who lin searching for his relatives. Leib and they identified him. (From Page One) ing Italians. Those were the days {had shown ability to sing and send- {ing them to New York or New Or- |leans, where they were trained to ibeg, and then to Italy. A short time ago, he says, he got touch with relatives of Professor His story is that he was reared in Ro one showed uD, : Agriculture from crop reporters in (friends and neighbors, Ask your Then new kidnapping cases e- all sections, was announced here to- neighbor, : clipsed this one in the public ey , ye Mrs. Mary Shiers, 27 Mt. Joy St. Few dr ine» €V€. |day by Paul L. Koenig, the Federal-|says: “A cold settled on my kidneys ower Jan ower tips” were re-|giate agricultural statistician. and before long I was miserable. As ceived by Professor Leib. But the The report further showed: soon as I started to do my work, my back began to ache and so severe did search was not dimished in the least, the trouble become that I couldn’t and in searching for his son Profes- Corn planting in Pennsylvania is ) | progressi Patil i - | evi lift anything. My nerves x sor Leib was instrumental in hestop. | PYO8Tessing fairly well in the south-| even y ng. My nerves were i » : Pn he State . in bad shape. Dizziness bother £ ing eight kidnapped boys to their |" Part v2 tie State, but is much and my kidneys were me »> j1ater than usual. Not much plowing | ‘When T heard of Dosa's Pi Boot be docyouss it is -{the home of Louis Winter in Nor-| There ve : lanati : : 4 { should be decreased as it is fatten js aos > y i hi jn or There we many explanations, Mrs. Leib, ‘Who never Rad. recov. |? planting for this crop has been |a supply at Garber's Drug Store gE {ing and does not promote high egg a, and was given the many theories, and, possibly, one ered from Freddi 's di "*" | done in other sections and they put my kidneys back in 4 ame 2 rvi '3 he fam. | clew ne n} Tod 5 : re idie’s sé arance, | 7 44 condita “my : Some feed the mash name of Ervin T. W inter. The fam-|clew. One family living near Quin- died in 1885 Fi > : Ae 1 Bare spots in wheat and rye fields | 890d condition. The backache and i oist by mixing a small quantity of {ily abused him, he said, and when | 1d seen an old man drive past o 3.7 ik ourteen years after |e filing in nicely In mary com other troubles were corrected.” | the regular laying mash with skim he was 18 years old he was told by [with a rful little boy in the front| : , y | ties. Many fields that seemed doubt 1S dn St mE as or ST 311 one of children he was ith hin Thon asked who n the late '80s rofessor i . To r=} Yo nn’e Dill = nd ; ilk. Give the hens what they will ne of the Sens eh deen he wa Bt 1 h I When asked why the a g e Js . Dro sso Leib | ful may yet have a good yield. Oats get Doan’s Pills—the same that Mrs. | ean up in 15 to 20 minutes. not a member of the family. {hid Was crying, the man said he|[%?™® to City, still TUNING | seeding is getting under way in all | Shiers had. Forest-Milburn Co., 1 J | Told He Was Kidnanped thad taken him f an orphan’s|down whatever “clews” he could | put a few of ih st th Mfrs., Bugalo N. Y. : hdme and was dri : . 1find, still hoping d alwavs vai Ae Rost Nor ern TT The Dairy Cow He ran away soon after that, ac-|"°M¢ and was driving him to still hoping, and always vainly. | counties. It is late but well along | h : When the cows are turned on past- [cording to his story, and never lived | UN¢l¢’s, and the boy did not wish to| Then Professor Leib went to Jop- in th Ant Faecnose is one of . the most 1 . : P- | in the southern part of the State serious diseases of the ras month, continue to give with the family again. He said he | 2°: lin, where he taught his music class- | ool w e : : > iseases of the raspberry. It {ne g { Cool weather and abundant rain- ean be eradiested only tr them a small amount of grain. If had a tenor voice with range and | That clew, if clew it were, was |es and filled a place in civic life few | fall has been good for grasses: Clo- 5 aad 0 pre you have good cows, they will pay power, but ruined it working in a [Lae last, Then followed a search of his age would. ver and alfalfa were quite badly Te ay sre fully r this feed later in the season by mill. When he was 38 years old he Atlantic to Pacific, from the| And, wistfully wishing for his son, | frozen in spots, especially in heavy Tia fn Citsular No 84, avail 2 prosecuted by the State Bureau a larger milk flow when the pastures attended the funeral of Winter and | Lakes to the Gulf. Tt extended |stacking new hopes against more | soils. Pastures on well-drained lands a . te Bureas of Plast Ju {was told by Mrs. Winter he had been to Europe. Professor Leib’s [than half a century of empty hopes, | have been able to carry stock since bind Dorms) of - fkidnapped by a woman at Quincy, |"¢°™e Was thrown into search as|this man, who from behind his early in May, but on low fiat lands Ew are, Harrisburg, Pa. Subscribe for the Mt. Joy Bulletin |Ill, and taken East when he was a 2 53 he received it. cloud of sorrow had brought the | were still too soft. If you t to suceceed—A. . - on - . . . A U ered It pays to advertise in the Bulletin |child. Since then he has been $ were dragged; river pack- [sun to so many, died.” Fruit prospects were reported to Subse; he Mt. Joy Bullet —